As โA Cup Of Soup or Bowlโ moved to Kooperโs North, Jessica Normington of Blind Industries and Services of Maryland joined Nestor to open his eyes to the many needs of the blind community and how every citizen could help empower the incredible humans who inspire us all on the streets of Baltimore and beyond. And, Maurice, if youโre still out thereโฆ
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
blind community, BISM empowerment, non-visual skills, independent living, Braille education, blind employment, travel skills, blind advocacy, National Federation, Super Bowl, blind experiences, blind training, blind independence, blind support, blind integration
SPEAKERS
Nestor Aparicio, Jessica Normington
Nestor Aparicio 00:00
Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T. Am 15 70,000 Baltimore. Weโre Baltimore positive. We are not wrapping things up. Weโre almost at halftime here. Weโre on the final day of a cup of soup or bowl. Itโs all brought to our friends at the Maryland lottery. Have the lucky magic eight ball. I had a $2 winner here a few minutes ago, Cooperโs north. Weโre in Mayโs chapel. Itโs all brought to you by our friends at the Maryland lottery. In conjunction with wise markets and wise conversations, we try to keep these things wise and learn things, lot of things in this segment, I begin with this. I was out on the oyster tour. I was at Rileyโs oyster Hi, McComas, you should sponsor the show. Delicious bowl of clam chowder on like, day 10 or 12 of the oyster tour. And a very interesting young lady with purple hair came up to me and said, Hey, I hear you do these good do good things, and your Super Bowl week. And I got a story to tell you. And I think youโre like a listener to begin with. Jessica Normington is here. She is the Director of Development and communications for B I S M, and thatโs empowering the blind community. B I S M stands for
Jessica Normington 01:12
blind industries and services of Maryland. There
Nestor Aparicio 01:15
you go. All right, so I, Iโll begin by saying this, I when I see blind people, thereโs something about it that is so inspirational to me. Whenever I see blind people, especially in cities, in New York City, downtown Baltimore, I lived in Baltimore. I think all of us have touched something in an elevator or crossing the street, and weโve all touched Braille things, and Iโm missing a finger, not very few of it. Can you read Braille? I know the alphabet A little bit. Can you read your own card? I know what it says. Okay, right? I mean, but it just goes to show how difficult that would be and but no, I navigating the world. Being blind would be, especially given the current administration, they care about anybody and people in need and people who have inclusion issues that I might add. So thereโs your eye, there is no eye and inclusion. What you do every day, tell me about the ISM but more than that, I know who blind people are, and Iโm a radio guy that had blind listeners in the early 90s, because I was their form of entertainment to call into me. A man named Maurice was a blind caller, one of my first real fans. He called every night when nobody called and there was no nasty Nestor or any of that. And I remember the sound of his voice, and I remember him talking to me for three months, and then one day he said, I want to come to the studio and meet you. And I said, Sure, somebody wants to meet me. It was 1992 nobody wanted to meet me, especially not girls. But this was a dude who was a listener, and he came in the studio, and I opened the door at five light street up on the seventh floor, and he was blind, and he had been talking about the Yankees because he was a Yankees fan for three and a half four months on the radio. Was the first summer I was on. Summer I was on the air, and Iโm like, holy, you know, like, just unbelievable. You know what I mean? Like, it was, that was 33 years ago that I had, I donโt know whatever happened to Maurice, if youโre still out there, God, Iโd love to see you. He was a little older. I hope heโs still here. But my, one of my first listeners was a blind listener, because for radio. Am radio. It was their companion, right? Literally, donโt make me cry. I havenโt gone all week without crying, so I half cried an hour ago, but Iโm not doing it this year. I got a funeral tonight. Iโm gonna cry plenty. Itโll be plenty today. So Iโm saving up for you, shilling your work. And you came up to me and said, Weโre gonna do this. So I donโt know youโre like, listen to the show. Sometimes I think, I think, you know why? What do you do? So
Jessica Normington 03:45
blind industries is a local nonprofit. We employ and train and educate blind individuals. So on one side of our business, weโre the largest employer of blind individuals in the state, and we manufacture office supplies, janitorial supplies and military uniforms, and employ those blind individuals doing that, those jobs. And then on the other side, we train blind individuals from any age. Our youngest is probably five years old, and believe or not, we have 105 year old senior in our program, and we teach them what we call non visual skills so that they can learn to
Nestor Aparicio 04:21
these are people who have seen in their life, yes, up, yes and no, okay. Some have, I cannot imagine what it would be like to have never seen and we have perceived the world or to have my vision taken away.
Jessica Normington 04:33
So we have a varying degree of that. We have students of ours who were born blind and want to go to college or be employed, and so they come to us, and we give them the skills, because maybe they were mainstreamed, and mom and dad held their hand and guided them, but they want to go on a college campus and be independent. So we provide those we teach those skills, so travel skills, independent living skills, financing, both. Budgeting, cooking, spend five
Nestor Aparicio 05:01
minutes with anybody who is blind, and you will be you wonโt think your life so bad. You wonโt think you wonโt think that you canโt do something or canโt figure something out. You
Jessica Normington 05:11
know, I work with blind individuals on a daily basis, crazy, inspirational, and nine times out of 10 at this point, I forget theyโre blind, theyโre just you and I right? And the only difference is they canโt see so you just have to. When you walk into a room, you introduce
Nestor Aparicio 05:27
the first thing people should know, letโs start with that, see somebody blind. They canโt see you. They donโt might not know youโre there unless you make a sound. And you can come up to someone whoโs blind and say hello and Hello, introduce yourself, because they cannot see you. And they, you know, if you donโt go up to them, theyโre not going to come up to you because they need something, right? Yes,
Jessica Normington 05:45
and ask them if they need assistance. Donโt assume they need assistance.
Nestor Aparicio 05:50
Hey, how you doing? Can I help you with anything? Yep, like I did the little lady who was here, pushing the walker through here, trying to navigate, getting out that door about an hour ago. Because I had good parents. You know, thanks to my parents, I think about these things, and I try to promote these things on more than one occasion. But I your job every day is training folks to get out into the workforce, really. I mean, thatโs not my job, but, but my organization, your organization, that is, though, thatโs a pretty good Guiding Light, right? Thatโs a pretty good place to start. Who employs people who canโt see? Well,
Jessica Normington 06:25
I know we do, yeah, but I donโt you know thereโs, we have a board member who is a chemistry professor at CCBC. Okay, thereโs other they do accessibility training. So what is Braille
Nestor Aparicio 06:39
enabled? I mean, Iโm thinking in my life, you know, elevators, Iโm just thinking of things that I see that are overtly when youโre in hotels. Floors. I spend a lot of time in hotels, at least I used to before the Ravens threw me out. But I travel a lot. Iโm trying to think of places where Braille is ubiquitous, and places where itโs really troublesome when people come and they canโt, like, just ramps for folks with mobility issues. We never had those. We had curbs, right? So we sort of worked around that. What would be more helpful in the real world for blind people to have Braille or have museums?
Jessica Normington 07:18
Would be amazing. Okay? And I think weโre working towards towards that having more Braille in museums that are visual, right?
Nestor Aparicio 07:26
Having Braille people. I think if I was blind, I would gravitate more toward audio things, yes,
Jessica Normington 07:32
and museums these days, you can have the audio recorders, the headsets, and walk around to describe the paintings and the exhibit, okay, but you know, this is my first experience in the disabilities arena. How
Nestor Aparicio 07:44
long have you been working at BIS? Three years. Okay, so Wow. You have that thing I have right now, which is the wow factor of the minute you started working there. So what have you learned in your last three years? Jessica Normington, please tell me. Well, Iโll
Jessica Normington 07:57
tell you. When I started part of my onboarding was for three weeks. Our students all wear sleep shades so they see complete darkness, because blindness is a spectrum, and so part of my onboarding was becoming immersed in the with the students and wearing those sleep shades for three weeks. And thatโs where I learned basic Braille. I learned to walk with a white cane and travel. Iโm scared to admit this, but I went on a public transportation, on a bus for the first time in my life, blind.
Nestor Aparicio 08:27
Iโve been on a lot of busses, so Iโm good with busses, but, yeah, that is a place that Iโll be honest as a boy, I rode busses everywhere in my life, but itโs thatโs a place I saw blind people. Yeah, I saw blind people get on busses because they thatโs all they had,
Jessica Normington 08:40
I mean, but itโs empowering, because these people, if they have lost their vision later in life, theyโre taking the next step to making empowering themselves. So theyโre not sitting home depressed that they lost their vision. Howโd the bus ride go? Luckily, I was with other students. If I was by myself, I think I would have freaked out more.
Nestor Aparicio 08:59
So blind leading the people that could see. No, you werenโt blind. Blind, leading the vision. No, no, we were all
Jessica Normington 09:06
blind. So all our instructors are, but youโre not
Nestor Aparicio 09:08
blind. But I would blind leading you
Jessica Normington 09:12
is what it was. It was so wasnโt the blind lead. It was a fun experience, because temporarily blind, yeah, I guess, I mean, it was a kind of a fun experience, because Iโve never really been on Baltimore. Itโs
Nestor Aparicio 09:22
fun for you, because youโre gonna get your vision back in an hour, and they werenโt, and you were gonna appreciate it a whole lot
Jessica Normington 09:27
more. But it was right. Itโs youโre understanding what theyโre going through. And, you know, people grabbing you, thinking you need help. Thatโs why I say Always ask if they need help, right? Because they donโt. I donโt want to be grabbed. Well, Iโm
Nestor Aparicio 09:39
a man, an empath, right? Just in a general sense. So I donโt mind helping. And if people ask for help, and if somebodyโs older, elderly, thatโs my role. You know, can I help you? Can I get you? Can I get you? But there are, there are more elderly people I encounter every day than blind people, so I canโt say that. I have a lot of I told you my Maurice story, Iโm sure Iโve had. A lot of other blind people in my life. I had another listener who was blind that I remember, that I donโt remember his name, but on a daily I canโt remember the last time I had a conversation with someone whoโs blind. You know, other than NFL officials, Iโm just making that up. Itโs just my little kick for today. Had to throw that in. Today, our friends at bis M are here locally. Jessica Normington is the Director of Development and communications empowering the blind community. You can reach them at B, i, s, m.org, youโre on the west side of town, Washington Boulevard,
Jessica Normington 10:29
yep, about a mile
Nestor Aparicio 10:32
away from get us. Now, people, when I drive through the tunnel, I see the blind. What is that? Thatโs the National Federation of the Blind. Now, there was a gentleman that was always on the television commercials, that was always a part for many, many, many years, who ran that Federation when they were spending money and like, on TV, and you drive by and you see it, thatโs it. Thatโs a big thing, right? The National federate. Give me what they do or the so
Jessica Normington 10:55
theyโre rolling all of that. So theyโre there. Theyโre national headquarters. Are here in Baltimore. Thereโs a thing, yep. Yep. They are. Theyโre an advocacy organization, policy driven, working with DC and lawmaking, trying to change laws around blindness. So what
Nestor Aparicio 11:11
does that mean? What, because I like fighting the power they havenโt heard or havenโt read. So what? What would be an advocacy issue that they would fight for that needs to be done in regard to include So some states
Jessica Normington 11:26
donโt allow blind individuals to raise their children. So changing the law because they find them in a inadequate to raise children. So changing the law that, let me guess theyโre red. I honestly donโt know what state, but I learned this over the summer, and I was, like, blown away by it. You know, with the electric cars, you canโt hear them. Oh so legislative around car manufacturing and making some kind of sound. So they know that, because thatโs how they navigate traffic is listening.
Nestor Aparicio 11:58
Theyโre kind of like owls, right? Yeah, cars, theyโre flightless or soundless, right? So the
Jessica Normington 12:03
little bit. But they also have training centers like ours across the country that train non visual skills. Well,
Nestor Aparicio 12:11
I guess if you know, you spend five minutes blind, you start to figure out what your needs would be. You know, whatโs missing in navigating things. But Iโm always inspired, you know, by by all of it, and Iโm glad you came up. I am really sorry about Tuesday. Iโm gonna apologize. Youโre the first person have to apologize. No worries. Tell me where you were Tuesday, where youโre supposed to be, and what I did. And by the way, tell me about your partner that was gonna come. They couldnโt make it. I want to give a shout out, because I screwed that up. And Iโm gonna tell you the
Jessica Normington 12:38
whole story. No worries. Dr Goss, Michael Goss, our president, CEO, was going to join me on well, can
Nestor Aparicio 12:43
he come next time? Definitely. Iโm sorry, Doc,
Jessica Normington 12:48
itโs fine. Heโs good.
Nestor Aparicio 12:50
I needed a doctor on Tuesday, let me tell you that. So heโs a doctor of
Jessica Normington 12:54
engineering. Iโm a Doctor of computer science or something like that. Well, what
Nestor Aparicio 12:58
happened? What what happened was, I did the show Monday at Costas. I canโt believe Iโm gonna admit this to you, because I feel I havenโt admitted this out loud, because itโs so stupid that I donโt want to. Youโre already laughing, so Iโm already headed I canโt wait I went to Costas on Monday night. I came home, I have a backpack with this computer and the stuff that I need to get the videos and audios to all of the social media and Baltimore positive and YouTube and the radio and all the places that I that all 10 of you follow me. So I came a month a little fatigued, came in the door, put my bag down, did my thing. Tuesday was the one day this year that my wife had to go to Silver Spring for her all in Verizon executive meeting with her new VPs and like all that. So she had to do her hair up, look nice, pretty. Sheโs always pretty hair, like all that. And it was the one day she needed a car to go to silver spring. Weโre one car family, because we live downtown. We donโt We both work from home, right? So put everything down, packed everything up, went to bed, get up three in the morning like I always do, do what I do. My son was off Tuesday. He was gonna drive me. Were to be boys day, you know, weโre gonna have fun fatally, and heโs gonna pick me up. 1015 weโre gonna get downtown. 1045 have a crab cake and wait for nice people like you and host a cup of soup or bowl, shower, shave, get out of bed, put my belt buckle on radio station, everything, 1015, I reached into my bag and I went, put my laptop back in my bag. I put this headset that was in that bag. Iโm like, I want to take this headset and put it in my bigger bag. And I said, pack the bag. And I got my lottery tickets here, and I put them in the bag. I know where this is going to look down, and if I have it underneath, I would show it to you, but I have a big briefcase that all this equipment sits in, and I have a big duffel bag, and both of those things were in the trunk of the car, which would be fine if the trunk of the car was in Towson, but the trunk of the car was in silver. Spring, yep, at an executive meeting. And I realized this at 10:18am, when I was literally last step, getting my wallet, putting like my kid was at the house. Weโre ready to go. He literally just walked in the door. Iโm like, Dude, weโre not going anywhere. So what do you mean like this? Just not good. Let me give me a minute to text fadelies. Jessica Mike, everybody that was the guest. Youโre the first. Youโre the only one that made it this week. So American Cancer Society and Hope Lodge. I love you, Jessica, or excuse me, Megan first, and then Jessica. Megan was my guest from Enoch Pratt library in live, Baltimore. Sheโll come. Make a McCorkle, so I rebooked all of you. None of you were mad at me. I even my two police officers from preparing youth for tomorrow. Theyโre gonna come back out two weeks from now. Do you know what a jerk I felt like at 1030 you know, like Iโm texting all of you, and itโs like it was like the plane left and I wasnโt on it, and it and it was nothing I could do about it. And it just, if you stand in there and youโre like, well, the showโs not gonna happen today. And I said, Well, letโs pretend it snowed, or letโs pretend there was a water main break, or, like, brain fart, you know, I donโt know, you know, but I locked my equipment in the car, and I donโt know what else to say, so I apologize. So Iโm gonna buy you a beer here. Make it right at Cooperโs. All right. Well,
Jessica Normington 16:23
thank you. Weโre all human. It happens if I really screwed you and I really felt
Nestor Aparicio 16:27
bad, I buy you some gumbo, but thatโs so good, you can buy it yourself. Jessica Norman did is here. She was supposed to be my Tuesday guest, and she keeps stepping out of my shot, and thatโs all right. They watch for my hair. B, i, s, m empowering the blind community. Her card is, is Braille. It has, like,
Jessica Normington 16:46
itโs raised dots, yeah. And I, I,
Nestor Aparicio 16:52
I have been inebriated enough on the road in hotel rooms to try to play with it a little bit, and, like, when Iโm in the elevator and just try to like, I wonder what it would be like close my eyes and say, could I find my floor, and would I know my floor if I was on it, and if I landed on the eighth floor, the ninth floor just to touch the gnome on the right floor that Iโm not trying to break into somebodyโs room in 812 instead of 1012 because Iโm freaking blind, and I wonโt be able to see and I donโt know how to read Braille. So feeling like, at some point this moment of reading braille might be just a good idea to learn how to do it.
Jessica Normington 17:25
So itโs a sequence of six dots, so itโs not even close to English. So itโs, itโs the most challenging.
Nestor Aparicio 17:34
Well, the other part is ways they are and yeah,
Jessica Normington 17:38
the feel the sensitivity on your fingers. So I
Nestor Aparicio 17:40
would tell you, like my buddy Paul LaMantia, who was the guitar player my band and and my fantastic hair stylist at gentlemanโs gentleman he his fingers have Cal, you know, from playing the guitar like and weโve talked long and hard about how Iโm tender footed to play the guitar, that I would bleed before I could learn how to play. I just think all of that callous, this different things that would, yeah, just be, wonโt be so hard to be blind, you know, like, itโs not that hard. Well, God bless them all. Letโs bring them all along. Letโs, well, I mean, you watch them every day, right? I do so, you know, itโs, you know, itโs possible. Oh, itโs 100,000% were you the way I was before you worked there? Not necessarily.
Jessica Normington 18:20
I just didnโt know I wasnโt educated, and thatโs
Nestor Aparicio 18:23
why wasnโt so Morris walked into my radio station when I was 23 years old. Iโm like, wow, thatโs why Iโm here my listeners, wow, right?
Jessica Normington 18:30
Because the misperceptions out there is, you know, blind people canโt do anything, yet. They can do everything, everything. They could do everything. Itโs just they do it differently, all
Nestor Aparicio 18:40
right. Well, I have a blind listener out there who wants to go to rock and roll show with me. So Mark, Iโm looking for you. Even though you canโt see me, you can hear me. Heโll laugh at that. So Mark, Don heโs my dude, so Iโm gonna work him. All right. Well, you know Mark. I do know Mark.
Jessica Normington 18:55
I know Mark. I see him every day.
Nestor Aparicio 18:58
I feel Can you apologize to mark for me not going to Iron Maiden with him, sure, because he wanted me to go to maiden with him and I didnโt have the Mojo that night. I will let him know Iโm gonna take Monday. I email him all the time, and weโre gonna do a show. I know his brother, Glenn, he did my kitchen years ago. So I do know someone blind. Iโm an idiot. Mark, sorry. So he works in our custody. Well, you inspire me, but you know that, so how about that? Is that good? Awesome? Well, thereโs a guy with a hell of sense of humor mark on you. You know, Iโve known him a minute. Tell him sorry about the Ravens too. I will. Yeah, is your hair purple for the Ravens? Yep.
Jessica Normington 19:35
Well, it started that way. Now itโs just part of my calling card. So when we first the year we won the first Super Bowl. Do you have purple hair for 12 years? Iโve had it for 12 years.
Nestor Aparicio 19:43
Well, I should give you a copy purple ring too for that, right? I mean, if nothing else, my kid go and his wife, um, they have their you folks, the people that do the hair, and people come with my like, what color is your sonโs hair? And I was with him, I think itโs pink right now, but it. Was orange before. Itโs definitely been blue. Hadnโt been purple in a while, since Chad Steele threw me out. Heโs not like being purple.
Jessica Normington 20:08
I always have some purple. I put some green in for Eagles this weekend because my husbandโs an Eagles fan, so I had to support him a little bit. Heโs
Nestor Aparicio 20:17
not gonna be all greasy climbing a pole or anything Sunday, I
Jessica Normington 20:19
sure hope. All right, all right, heโll be sitting on the couch in our family room screaming at the TV. Are
Nestor Aparicio 20:25
you rooting for him or again? I guess youโre trying to help him out. You donโt care at this point. I
Jessica Normington 20:29
honestly donโt care. But of course, I have to root for the Eagles. Heโs my husband. Happy wife, happy life, happy house. What
Nestor Aparicio 20:35
if theyโre playing each other? I
Jessica Normington 20:36
would root for the Ravens. It would be a very divided house.
Nestor Aparicio 20:42
Well, heโs an Eagles fan. Thereโs no halfway, but
Jessica Normington 20:44
he would, you know, heโs lived here 24, five years. So heโs as much as a Ravens fan as he one of my favorite be happy either way about
Nestor Aparicio 20:53
Billick being my business partner. Back in the day was we would go out and do these speeches with corporate. You know, we come down to the ISM and speak peopleโs Brian like doing that kind of thing. And Brian would come in, and heโd get everybody together, and he say, how many people got here? Redskin fan, how many people here? Steeler, you know, talk to you later, you know, whatever. And he say, how many Eagle fans you got here? He goes. He said, I want to show you something youโve never seen before that, you know, he would hold his ring out. They canโt do that anymore. I already admitted the young lady here, Kate from Reedโs rescue, the dog rescue. Sheโs an Eagles fan. Sheโs from Allentown. Thatโs where my husbandโs from, yeah, well, I admitted to her, you know, like, and I was at the team party, eagles party in 17, and that was a night. I mean, that was a kicker. I didnโt go to the Ravens party when Beyonce played in 13. I went to the Eagles party. I donโt, they didnโt have any enter the entertainment was Jason Kelsey, I think, that night, but with the night the Eagles won the Super Bowl, I was at their team party, and it was on, like, Donkey Kong. It was fun. Oh, they party. It was good times. I mean, I had more fun at your party than I had at the Eagles party than I had at the Ravens party. Iโll tell you that. Yeah, I really did. I mean, and I didnโt have a dog in the hunt, and I didnโt really like the Eagles, but I had like 10 friends working for the Eagles. Then I think seven or eight players I knew on that team. Corey Graham was on that team, Tory Smith was on that team, Timmy Jernigan was on a lot of Raven players on that team, Jimmy Schwartz, Joe Douglas down the line. Iโve
Jessica Normington 22:18
always been a Ravens fan. I was an intern the summer that the stadium. Iโm not
Nestor Aparicio 22:23
borrowing the Eagles for a Sunday, even though I love Buddy Ryan, Iโm not so I donโt care who wins. The Ravens didnโt win. I kind of wish buffalo would have won, just to get it out of there, you know, just get it done. Just get that done for the buffalo. Iโm never going to want the Washington team to win. And now theyโre trouble. Theyโre going to be a problem for a
Jessica Normington 22:41
little while. Theyโre a great story. For whom them?
Nestor Aparicio 22:46
You know what Iโve been telling everybody is, if they win, Iโm going to call imma, call them the Maryland commanders. Iโm going to claim them, not 30 of me. God, I feel Iโm editing that. I didnโt really say that Jessica Normanton is here. Her card is in Braille because she works at B I S M empowering the blind community. I didnโt know you. You know what marks emails always come in bis I sort of knew he worked there. Iโm sorry. I didnโt know. Why donโt we bring him today or see where are you here?
Jessica Normington 23:15
He didnโt know I was coming today. Iโll rub it in his face on Monday. I think I already
Nestor Aparicio 23:18
took a picture with you. Weโll do that. All right. The magic eight ball is here. You get one number 98 thereโs Timmy jernigans Number. There you go. He was he 97 Thatโs Tony Sarah. Go sit there. 99 is that good? Sure. Anthony Weaver, 98 trying to get all the 98 out of the way. Here works for me. All right. The magic eight balls are out. Weโre here at Cooperโs north. Please support our friends at BIS. And what can people do to help you?
Jessica Normington 23:39
They can support us through donating. We have an event coming up on March 29 at checker spot brewery. They can come drink some beer. Support us, beer, beer. We collaborated with good beer. We collaborated and brewed a beer with them called Blind Spot.
Nestor Aparicio 23:53
What kind of
Jessica Normington 23:54
beer is it? Honey? Kosh,
Nestor Aparicio 23:56
Iโll drink it. Oh, I love honey. Kosh, yeah, I thought you say itโs a hazy IPA, itโs
Jessica Normington 24:02
a honey Kosh. And the the beer cans are brailled.
Nestor Aparicio 24:06
IPA, I puke something I donโt, I donโt like IPA. Itโs not my thing. Itโs a very drinkable. Iโm stouty, Iโm lagery, Iโm pilsnery, a little bit. Iโm cold, definitely coal.
Jessica Normington 24:16
She Yeah. I mean, really nice. Youโre in Germany. No,
Nestor Aparicio 24:19
so, man who saved my wifeโs life from Germany. He lives near Gelson, kierchin and Dortmund up in the northwestern corner, but heโs close to Cologne. Hour from cologne. Cologne is like one of the great places ever. Cologne is the place with all the beer halls. When you go in and they bring the beer in, the in the milk crates, and they cut, they cut the suds off the top, and you get them in these little glasses, little thereโs like Richie Cunningham, little eight ounce glasses. And this stays colder longer that way, and itโs kolch all kolsh. My favorite culture in the world is zuner kolsh, and Iโve been trying to get Furman to get that down at Maxโs on tap for me. Then. They donโt have it. They have everything else. Oktoberfest. They get it every like other year, and the year he gets it. Iโm just going to be down there. I mean, like a kegger, kegger, yeah, old school, man. Old school, all right, bi SM, my thanks to, uh, hi Mark, come do the show. And I donโt know, weโll go see priest or something, right? Heโs a metal head.
Jessica Normington 25:20
I donโt honestly know, but sure, Iโll take your word for it. Heโs a music guy,
Nestor Aparicio 25:24
yeah, classic rock guy. So sheโs the Director of Development communications, and I screwed up on Tuesday and itโs Friday. So the good news is, Iโll have you back to fatales for a crab cake, you and the doctor. And the really good news is, you get gumbo thatโs better than the gumbo in New Orleans here. So even if the Ravens would have won, youโd be purple hair, and then you and your husband would have like this. But we will get better gumbo here. Sounds like, I mean that weโre Cooperโs north. See a couple Super Bowl. We have bags of stuff. Lots of folks have brought things here. One brought wise markets banks. Iโm appreciative of that, because wise markets is our sponsor, putting us out on the road doing this, it is the final day when I reconvene. I have letter raskins coming by. Greg Landry, who did my documentary last year, is coming by its first time heโs been on the show since the documentary. Terry Beck is here. Heโs the general manager of Coopers North. He is a two time cancer survivor lymphoma, so weโre gonna talk to him about that. And this is sort of like when art Donovan would show up at Channel 13 with John burin, the great Luke Jones is gonna be here my Kimo Sabe and partner from Shrewsbury across the border. Heโs like, itโs Timonium. I wouldnโt come to Essex for you. So heโll be here today. Weโre gonna break bread and have some fun and have some fun and probably talk some baseball as well as other things. So a couple Super Bowl is here. Itโs all about charity. Itโs all about the Maryland Food Bank. We have donations coming in. My friend at the Chesapeake Emergency Assistance Center, Caitlin Kirby, yesterday, Iโm gonna give her a whole bunch of bags of stuff. Today, Iโm driving over there giving it all out. So a lot of itโs gonna wind up in Catonsville, on behalf of the Maryland food bank. So my thanks for that. Plenty of activities here, plenty things for you to find out at Baltimore positive as well as weโre now, I think youโre my 24th piece this week. My goal was so humbly about 30 or 40. Iโm going to get the 30 before the week is over, and I have other people from Tuesday that Iโm going to have back. Weโre going to be at fates on the 18th. Weโre going to be on Wednesday at libs grill in Bel Air with Nick and we have Harford County Executive Bob Cassidy coming on on Wednesday as well. From noon till five, will be at libs grill in Bel Air. I am Nestor. We are wnst Aim 1570 Towson, Baltimore, back for more from Coopers on a cup of Super Bowl. Stay with us. You.