We always love getting the word out about great events supporting important causes in Baltimore. Katie Ferrante of the American Diabetes Association joined Nestor at Koco’s Pub on the Maryland Crab Cake Tour to discuss the disease and invites everyone to walk at Harbor Point on May 9th to support those who fight with passion.
Nestor Aparicio discusses his upcoming events, including a walk at Harbor Point on May 9th for the American Diabetes Association (ADA). Katie Ferrante, ADA’s Director of Development, highlights the importance of the event, which has over 500 registrants and significant sponsors like the University of Maryland Medical Center and the Maryland Department of Health. They emphasize the need for better diabetes care and the impact of technology on managing the disease. Nestor shares personal anecdotes about his wife’s diabetes journey and the advances in treatment. The event aims to raise awareness and funds for local programs and research.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Share the ADA Walk with Passion 2026 flyer online so listeners can learn more about the event.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Attend the ADA Walk with Passion 2026 event at Harbor Point on May 9.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Revisit and promote the ADA Walk with Passion 2026 event again in upcoming segments closer to the May 9 date.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Order ADA merchandise for the May 9 walk event.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Invite Todd Schuler to appear on the show to discuss law and order and the Preakness.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Invite Dick Girardi back on the show to discuss the Preakness and related topics.
- [ ] @Nestor Aparicio – Attend the Preakness using the approved press credentials.
Katie Ferrante’s Introduction and Personal Connection
- Nestor Aparicio introduces Katie Ferrante, Director of Development for the American Diabetes Association in Baltimore.
- Nestor shares a personal story about his wife’s battle with diabetes and how technology has improved her quality of life over the years.
- Katie reveals that she also has type one diabetes, and they discuss the unique challenges and differences in managing diabetes.
- Nestor talks about his wife’s daily routine with diabetes, including taking shots and monitoring her blood sugar levels.
Challenges and Advances in Diabetes Management
- Nestor discusses the political side of diabetes, mentioning figures like Bernie Sanders who advocate for better diabetes care.
- Katie and Nestor talk about the complexity of diabetes and how it affects different people differently.
- Nestor shares his wife’s experience with bone marrow transplants and how it has impacted her diabetes management.
- They discuss the advances in diabetes technology, such as continuous glucose monitors and insulin pumps, which have made managing diabetes easier.
Upcoming Event and Fundraising Efforts
- Katie invites Nestor to participate in the American Diabetes Association’s “Walk with Passion” event on May 9th at Harbor Point.
- Nestor agrees to participate and discusses the logistics of the event, including parking and activities.
- Katie highlights the various activities and entertainment planned for the event, such as the Baltimore Elite Marching Band and DC Retro Jumpers.
- Nestor shares his excitement about the event and the importance of raising awareness and funds for diabetes research and programs.
Local Programs and Community Impact
- Katie talks about the local programs run by the American Diabetes Association, including Camp Charm City and Project Power.
- Nestor shares a personal story about a friend’s child who attended Camp Charm City and the positive impact it had on his life.
- Katie explains how Project Power teaches healthy eating and active lifestyle habits to kids, with the goal of preventing type two diabetes.
- They discuss the importance of these programs in providing support and education to children and families affected by diabetes.
Personal Reflections and Final Thoughts
- Nestor reflects on the progress made in diabetes care and the importance of continued research and advocacy.
- Katie shares her personal experience with diabetes and the challenges she faces in managing her condition.
- Nestor expresses his admiration for Katie and others who live with diabetes and the strength they show in managing their condition.
- They conclude the conversation with a reminder of the upcoming event and the importance of supporting the American Diabetes Association’s mission.
SUMMARY KEYWORDS
American Diabetes Association, Katie Ferrante, diabetes research, juvenile diabetes, type one diabetes, diabetes technology, Maryland lottery, Preakness week, crab races, Harbor Point, Walk with Passion, University of Maryland, Maryland Department of Health, diabetes camp, Project Power.
SPEAKERS
Nestor Aparicio, Katie Ferrante
Nestor Aparicio 00:00
Welcome home. We are W, N, S, T. Am 1570 tacit Baltimore. We are Baltimore. Positive I am wearing I think it’s a 26 I need the 27 we’re about to go to 28 years. My thanks to Dr Steve for stopping by, who was a $20 winner here in the Maryland lottery. I have the Maryland treasures, whether it’s Key Bridge or whether it’s the asset T courses or the herons and the very popular, so popular I don’t have one in front of me, the key the boardwalk setting all available right now at all the Maryland lottery retailers. And I’m putting these things together today. I’m here pizza John’s on the first seventh. We’re going to be a planet fitness and tremonium on the 13th, we’re back down, and faintly it likes in the market. Ivan Bates is coming by. We can talk about law and order. Also. We’re going to do the crab races that day, because it’s Preakness week. And then we’re going to Catonsville for the grand opening of the fishmonger’s daughter on May 21 I’m really excited about that, right? Everybody state fair. So my thanks to everybody that puts this thing together, from GBMC and foreign and Dermer that puts a sat on the road, and Marcella is going to be here. You know, I usually get a Greek salad, and they get, like, bowl of soup. And then Steve wanted to come by, and his mom and I’m getting our crab cake. And I love Mildred. And things happen quickly when I put this show together, because the folks at the American Diabetes Association were trying to find me. And I don’t, like, I said to my wife, I’m like, I’m the easiest guy in the world, fine. Like, I’m really, I don’t hide, you know? And there was something like, you had an event, you want to be the MC, and you couldn’t find me, and you already have an MC. And I’m like, Well, you know, my wife’s diabetic, right? Did you know this? Yes, all right, so I didn’t know this. Katie Ferrante is here, and I have your title here on your LinkedIn, at least I had in a moment ago.
Katie Ferrante 01:51
I am the Director of Development for the American Diabetes Association in Baltimore. What does that mean? It means I am responsible for the funding for our local programs and research for the ADA in Maryland.
Nestor Aparicio 02:03
Well, we’ve been doing things in regard to juvenile diabetes and diabetes long before my wife had cancer and was a 911 a person and the two bone marrow transplants. Thank you, Neil’s, don’t make me cry in this segment. But you know, the first night I went out with my wife and met her at a hockey game, and later that night, she’s like, go get me something to eat. And I’m like, What do you want? She’s like, just get me something to eat. Get me some orange juice. Give me some. And my son’s mother’s father was diabetic, and I saw him like coma out back in the 80s, when I mean meters and like my wife’s battle, is so inspiring to me in many ways, but to see the technology come along in 23 years of being married from where finger pricking and meters and pumps and dexcoms and all of these things have made her quality of life so much better. As a diabetic, we’ll get to the political side, and you know, people like Bernie Sanders fighting for people and just yelling and screaming about the issue of diabetes and what it costs in our culture to be diabetic, and how it keeps my wife up at night, knowing, believing she’ll always be diabetic and always be beholden to pharma, hospitals tethered to all that long before the cancer thing, we did a lot in the diabetes space, because I think it’s misunderstood. I’m married to a diabetic, and if you held a gun to my head right now, offer me a million dollars like Regis Philbin and asked me 10 questions about diabetes, I would get at least three or four wrong. Yeah, like I, because I just and I live with it, but my wife is almost private about it, right? Take care of herself, and I understand spikes and things and orange juice and like I do, but I don’t, I’m squishy about blood. You know what I mean? You know? So that’s me, well, so, and
Katie Ferrante 04:05
I’ll share, I haven’t told you this, but I have type one as well, and so does my husband. And I always say it’s so interesting, because for the two of us, it’s so different. Like, we can eat the same meal and have completely different blood sugars afterwards, or he hates being low. I hate being high. Like it’s just it’s so different for each person. So even if you knew your wife’s diabetes, I don’t know that you would know diabetes. It’s such a complex disease. So that’s definitely one of the challenges. And like you said,
Nestor Aparicio 04:31
regimens changed a little bit after her bone marrow transplant, just in like when she takes her shots and what they represent. And you know, almost every night at 1030 she takes a 1030 shot, she’ll wake up, set her alarm, feed the cat, and take a shot. And I’m like, Man, that’s, do you know what a sissy I am? I mean, yeah, I’m going to GBMC next week. And, like, I just got the email, and they’re my sponsor. You know what? I mean? Like, I had, I don’t I. So I had that procedure back in November that people my age should all have. Am I gonna talk about it? Because we’re having coconut shrimp here today, which I could not have the night before. Had this was a drink. And you know what I’m talking about. So now I’m going back for, like, my checkup, checkup, and like the thought of getting a shot for this or that, or Coke, and I’m not anti, listen, I’m going to do all my vaccines. If it’s vaccines, I’m down, but I’ve never had a flu shot because, like, I don’t like shots, and I don’t like doctors, and I don’t like going and you know what I mean, and my wife’s been tethered to it with a box of needles and alcohol swabs, and, like, all of these things that are these anchors to her diabetes that she battles, that number 24, hours a day, seven days a week, when she’s a little inebriated or not, when she’s tired, when she’s in Italy, six hours ahead, and her pub still thinks she’s in Italy, right, like so, I mean, I live with that as the husband, but I have such admiration for you, your husband, for anyone, when my wife sees people, they’re like twinsies. Are talking, and it is amazing how many people in our culture that it’s not as I don’t she wasn’t the first girl I dated who had diabetes, maybe the second or third that I knew about. But like, I had not. I had only had one other instance at that point in my life of knowing people. Now it’s like, sort of like, yeah. Well, there’s somebody else in here for sure, yeah.
Katie Ferrante 06:33
So there’s 40 million Americans that have diabetes. Wow, yeah. And if you add pre diabetes to that, it’s 155 million. So that’s nearly one and two. We got to take better care
Nestor Aparicio 06:45
of ourselves. You might want to step out and walk
Katie Ferrante 06:47
a little bit. Yeah, yeah. I always say, I love it. I’ve done this before, yeah. I always say I love that about the ADA. Like what we do is impacting our mission. You know, we are out there walking, you know, it’s come out in the
Nestor Aparicio 07:00
morning. May 9.
Katie Ferrante 07:03
May 9. Yep, Harbor Point.
Nestor Aparicio 07:04
So it’ll be beautiful. Snooker me into this is what you’re for sure. You make me come out Monday,
Katie Ferrante 07:10
Saturday morning, absolutely. Well, do this. They always have a 4pm game. So I’m trying to make it a whole day in Baltimore. If you come to our walk, you get $10 parking in the garage at Harbor Point for the full day. So you come out, you walk in the morning. Go have lunch, go to ceremony coffee. They’re giving us 10% of their proceeds that day. And then go to the O’s game. Take a water tax.
Nestor Aparicio 07:30
We have a whole lake civic thing going to Harbor Point. Alright? So may 9 is the date. It’s sponsored by the University of Maryland medical center, the Maryland Department of Health. It is walk with passion. 2026 I got the little I got the flyer right here, and I’ll share this out online as well. And Katie’s here, so people time give me like, What am I gonna find when you make me come down here and do this on a day when I have nothing
Katie Ferrante 07:57
going on at all? Yeah. Beautiful open calendar. We love that. So Beautiful day, May 9, we’ll be there. Boring man, we’ll be there starting at 830 checking people in. We have the Baltimore elite marching band will be there. We have DC retro jumpers.
Nestor Aparicio 08:12
They’re gonna let me, like, do that for a minute. Marching Band, John would let me do that.
Katie Ferrante 08:18
And then we have, if you’re, you know, looking for some entertainment, we have the DC retro jumpers. They are double dutch, so they will be performing with the jump ropes.
Nestor Aparicio 08:28
Yeah? Jump ropes, yeah. Oh, my wife
Katie Ferrante 08:31
a few weeks.
Nestor Aparicio 08:33
Yeah?
Katie Ferrante 08:34
Hopscotch, absolutely jacks, yeah. Sure. Anything family friendly? It’s a one mile loop. So very accessible. You can do it one time. You do it three times, whatever you want along the water. It is, I’m walking a mile. That’s all I’m doing. Well, you can walk through if you want, but you only have to do one.
Nestor Aparicio 08:51
I went to New York on Monday just to walk around. It was, it was like in the 50s. It was, wasn’t perfect, but, you know, you take I’m alive. Air was fresh. It wasn’t wet. Springsteen was playing, why not go to New York? And I looked down. Dr Steve, when he adjusted me last night, I looked on my fitness thing, like, you know, I don’t feel like I did a lot of walking on Monday, not my normal amount. We’re like, I do 1315, 18 miles in New York. I looked down. I did 23,000, steps. So like, and when I looked at my on my fitness app, yeah, it like, it’s just off the charts. It’s like, I love
Katie Ferrante 09:26
when it tells me, like, you’re doing more activity than normal, right?
Nestor Aparicio 09:31
Like, literally, we know, for moving, there’s, there’s my Monday, I mean, like, that’s literally it right there, you know? And so walking a little bit and getting out making me do this, you know, I’m helping you really. Whoa. I just got back from Medellin, and everybody was walking in front of my hotel, and dogs and people and musicians, and it was just like, this cultural thing they do every Sunday, Toto Domingo, you know? And I’m like, Oh yeah, man, you know, let’s get out and do this a little bit walk with. Question. So you
Katie Ferrante 10:00
do this every year. We haven’t done it since 2019 okay, it’s our first year back in Baltimore since pre covid. So we had this event for many years. As you know, 2020 came, and we had to cancel some events. And so this is our first year back in Baltimore, which is really exciting. And we have over 500 people registered. So a lot of great momentum. We have great sponsors. You’ve mentioned University of Maryland and Maryland Department of Health. We have life bridge and Hopkins and MedStar and care first. We have lots of great partners. So everyone’s excited to
Nestor Aparicio 10:33
bring it back. So the ADA and the modern Ada, I don’t know the last time, I do a lot of causes, I do a lot of issues. I do a lot of things I don’t know. The last time I’ve taught I’ve been doing cup of Super Bowl now, like five years since Chad still threw me out, and I don’t know that I’ve even done any of the associations about diabetes. I don’t know. I feel like the last time I had this conversation about my wife sticking herself and needles and all the things that she does to stay alive. It’s been a while. I can give you the updates on where she is, and even in her latest of seeing her doctors that they believe that she may be able to go off of shots like she’s had. She has her body produces some insulin. For those in the nerdy space, that’s all I know about it.
Katie Ferrante 11:23
Don’t ask me. I’m also
Nestor Aparicio 11:24
not a medical Exactly. But there is a point where, like, I feel like the funding, you know, I feel like the damage that this clown running the country is doing to research and medicine and just in every single way, is really counterproductive to all the things I think we’ve seen modern medicine. My wife’s a miracle. Just you know, this German guy saved her life with DNA. It’s crazy. What’s possible, but the thought that she might not have to take shots anymore, yeah, that’s amazing. Yeah, it’s crazy, right? Crazy. So like you were, I know we’re making progress. I know, yeah. And you were
Katie Ferrante 12:02
mentioning the technology advances, and that, to me, is huge. I was diagnosed. I was 14 years old, wow. Okay, pricking my fingers, give myself shots, all those things. And now, like, my blood sugar’s on my watch, you know, like, I I know, I know my blood sugar every minute of the day. It makes things like walking a lot easier. You know, used to stick your finger and you’ll go for a walk. It would say, you know you’re 100 but you wouldn’t know you were 100 and going down. And now we have that technology that tells you you’re 100 going down. So you might need
Nestor Aparicio 12:29
something before you go for 330 this morning, I got awakened, not just by my kitty cat, but my wife’s when her meter when she’s low, definitely it makes this and she changed the sound of it on me on Italy, so it’s making a different sound. But it was a definite, it was like, when you lost on The Price Is Right? You know? It wasn’t, it wasn’t anything like dollars, you know. It wasn’t that. It was definitely an alert, you know? And I don’t know what the sound is. I can’t even, I can tell you what the other one, but a three this morning I got so, I mean, like, literally, I mean, it’s all, you’re diabetic, like, so 24/7 Yeah, but I’m not it, but I live with this diabetic who’s insanely strong and independent, in a general sense that I always have to say when I hear the womp, womp, like, we’re making dinner, or she eats something that’s just gonna take an hour for her body to, like, get the starch going, like some pasta or something like that, and she’ll start to go, womp, womp, like, 715, eight o’clock. I mean, it’s like a sound, yeah? And she’d be like, Nah, you know, I’m okay. Make it a little bit orange juice, little bit of this, or that, sometimes might be a margarita, whatever. But, you know? And the weird thing is, and this is sort of weird, dumb stigma thing, but when she was in Italy all last two weeks, people think like she can’t eat dessert, she can’t eat anything sweet, that like they’re there. They just don’t know. I only know because I’m married to a diabetic. They didn’t know I’d be like, What are you eating? What’s that watch, you know, like, all these weird things. But I’ve watched it all kind of come along. And the fact that, like, she can eat anything, you know, anything Marcella pulls out, that’s dessert oriented, she could eat, but, but it’s just about measuring and math.
Katie Ferrante 14:34
We are smarter than we think, because we have to do a lot of math to keep ourselves alive.
Nestor Aparicio 14:39
Yeah, you know, how many, how many carbs she I mean, literally, 22 years ago, everything we did in a grocery store, yeah, she would turn over and say, that’s got 38 grams of carbs. Or, you know, like, especially with pastas and Rices and different starchy things, breads, very different. And then things like that are just no nos for her, like banana. Bananas, bagels. Yeah, heartbreak. He’s real dense yo carb fronted things that she just can’t have them right now that but, but a piece of cake, a little bit of pie, some ice cream, like cookies. You know? She’s into all that. Well, it’s like that
Katie Ferrante 15:19
goes back to I was saying earlier. It’s different for everybody, like my husband, can eat a bagel. Like my husband can eat a bagel. And I’m like, What do you mean? You can eat a bag? I could never, like, it kills me. You 800 Yeah, and he’s just fine with it. So it’s so different for everyone, which is, I think one of the challenges with it, I feel so terrible for our doctors. They have to work so hard, because that’s not like they can just treat us by the book. You know it’s you really have to know your patients and know what you’re working with.
Nestor Aparicio 15:43
Katie Ferranti is here. She’s with the ADA that is the American Diabetes Association here at Koco’s. It’s all brought to you by the Maryland lottery, our partners at GBMC, yes, I’m going through with my appointment next week and back to, like, taking shots every day. Like, I think I’m gonna get some sort of needle next week. They’re gonna take my blood. They’re gonna do you’re gonna do things to me, poke and prod, and you know, if I had to do that two, three times a day? Yeah, that would really, I
Katie Ferrante 16:13
always say I need a full time job for that would be tough for me, scheduling my appointments, like just the maintenance of living with diabetes, like the doctor’s appointments and the calling to reorder your supplies and fighting with insurance and all those things. I always say, I wish I could hire someone to just do that for me, like I’m good, but I hate being on the phone. I hate remembering when I need to order my supplies, when I need to, you know, go to the doctor and all those things.
Nestor Aparicio 16:36
So I believe in you for what you do. And fundraising. Give us where the money goes and give us where the focus right right now is, yeah, because I think it has been a long time since I’ve talked diabetes in that 50,000 foot level to say, All right, we got this. Now, we got that. Now we have all these cool things. Now, what’s what are
Katie Ferrante 16:54
you focusing? Obviously, research, advocacy, lots to do in terms of accessibility, affordability, all of those things, but also the things I’m really proud of are the things we’re doing locally. So we have our camp Charm City at Johns Hopkins University every summer. So that is for kids living with type one a week long camp for them, kids like seven to 12 ish, my
Nestor Aparicio 17:18
wife and I had a really dear friend reached us 20 years ago. We were newly married, but they knew my wife was diabetic, and they literally called in tears from the hospital. Oh, yeah. And they their boy was maybe seven at the time, six or seven, and he’s got to be all a 28 now, you know, 2527 Yeah, whatever I mean, live well, whatever. Had a twin sister that was not diabetic, but, like, now, like, they became, we have to give you shots, you know, like, man, seven year old kid, wow, right? Yeah. Like, yeah.
Katie Ferrante 17:52
So, yeah, we have a camp. Yeah, we have a camp. It’s great for them. You know, they get to see other kids with their meters and everything, and they get to celebrate having diabetes instead of, like, I think a lot of times kids are times kids try to hide people, yes, yeah. So it’s very fun. That’s very fun week. A great program that we do. We also do something, cry like a baby
Nestor Aparicio 18:10
if I got diagnosed tonight, would suck.
Katie Ferrante 18:13
Yeah, yeah. But then we also do something called Project power. So that’s a program that we do right now we’re doing at the crossroads school, and it is teaching our healthy eating, active lifestyle curriculum to kids. And so that is, it’s kind of a diabetes, a type two diabetes prevention program. So we’re doing that, hopefully with a couple schools in Howard County this year.
Nestor Aparicio 18:39
So diet, exercise, right? Take care of
Katie Ferrante 18:43
the kids, and so then they can go teach their parents, right? The ripple effect of that program is incredible. So we are doing both of those locally, which is really exciting. That’s what this is funding, making those things.
Nestor Aparicio 18:53
Last segment, I admitted to Dr Steve, when he just me over to Elliott chiropractic, that he’s got a little candy jar there, you know, and I get into the caramels and, you know, I get into so and, you know, sometimes I need that from going to working out or getting hit and playing fitness or hitting the yoga mat, as I do. But yeah, my, you know, my wife, I live with it. I see it. I want her to get to pills and off of shots, right? And I guess for people to can, we can graduate in the science and get better at this, and also in the educational part of just like take better care. You don’t want to have to give yourself shots based on something that’s lifestyle oriented. For sure, definitely. Sometimes I’m getting older, man, I feel like my sugar starts to crash a little bit, and that’s why I have to stop and see Dr Stevens. I’ve actually pretty sugar laden today, and I’m not all wired from I didn’t stop up here at Zeke’s to get full test, but they did give me Shirley Temple. So like I this is, this is full test Shirley Temple. Probably a lot of sugar in here. Keep me going walk with passion. 2026, it is step out. Walk Baltimore. It is at Harbor Point. It is May 9. I’ve got all the digits here. You can learn more at the American Diabetes Association. You can also contact Katie Ferrante at the diet K ferrante@diabetes.org and is there anything else I need to
Katie Ferrante 20:18
give out? Yeah. I mean, the website is just diabetes.org/step, out Baltimore, that’s where you can find everything. I realize just has a QR code. It’s not too helpful.
Nestor Aparicio 20:27
See, we’re recording this. We’re Koco’s right now. We’re a couple weeks out on this. If I were 1012, days out, I would be like getting the forecast. Yeah, and when I did, why did the Safe Walk last week? Walked a mile in their shoes at GBMC. It was Friday afternoon. It was April whatever the date was, April 17. Yeah, okay, there you go, yeah, because we’re doing the NFL Draft here. So you looked at you’re like, you know that could be 48 and cloudy. It could be 38 and windy. It could be sleety. It could be it was like 76 and it was like 10 mile an hour. Breeze was so was like California, perfect, and, and so, like, I ordered that. Oh, you ordered
Katie Ferrante 21:11
for grand spring. I’d like you to put it in for the May 9 one as well.
Nestor Aparicio 21:15
Please. Outdoor things, man, I just, it’s like every merry weather concert, just don’t, Don’t Rain on me. You know, don’t drop a thunderstorm on me. No thunderstorms. May 9, we’ll be walking down at the harbor. One mile track right and then, yep, one
Katie Ferrante 21:35
mile loop right along the promenade, waterfront promenade. Man, I showed you.
Nestor Aparicio 21:38
I walked 20 miles to New York. What excuse do I have to not walk one month in Baltimore? I don’t know. All right, gets me downtown’s a good idea. We’re here at Koco’s. I’m giving these up. So are you? Are you Heron blue crab? Are you acid tea courses? Hold on. I have more. Let’s see. Well, Steve Elliott took the Bay Bridge. And he won 20 bucks with the Bay Bridge. So maybe I want to show that we have that. So which one do you think you like the best? I’m a blue heron girl. Heron, okay, okay, Heron, it is top price, $10,000 these are the Maryland treasures. I’ve been giving these away freely. We will be next week at Pizza John’s in Essex. And I just say Essex and Todd Schuler pops up from blonde alberna Schuler, damn good lawyers, located right in Essex, Maryland, even though I’m on the Dundalk side, we’re gonna talk about Essex. We’re gonna be in Essex next Friday. We’ll be pizza John’s. We’re also gonna be on the seventh at Planet Fitness in Timonium, or they say, the spa, and right across street from the spa, we’re also going to be at fatal ease on the 13th doing the Lexington market Preakness crab races. And then we moved to Catonsville, to the fishmonger’s daughter for proper cocktail. I right there on the Frederick road. I had a proper cocktail last week with chips enough from enough’s enough there at the Morse burgers. Man, we’re rocking over Catonsville, use of town now. I’m gonna be over there may 21 Todd Schuler is gonna come on here. It’s gonna be like that scene with Jack warden and and justice for all there’s law and there’s order, and Todd Schuler is gonna give us law. That’s Dundalk in order, he’s Essex. And more than that, we’re gonna talk about the Preakness and his crawfish thing. I mean, you should just get some crab cakes mirror Koco’s If you knew what was right, and if not, the coconut shrimp for sure, and a bowl of cream of crab soup. But Todd Schuler is gonna come up and talk some Preakness and selling the race off to the gypsies. And I don’t know I had, I had Dick Girardi on this week, and I’m gonna have to get Dick back on. And I did, this is breaking news. I got it right on my phone. I’m approved for Preakness press credentials back in the media Shuler. I don’t need to call my lawyers over in Essex and say, Is this lawful? What they’re doing to me? But no, I have credentials. I’m gonna I’ll be one of the few to attend a Preakness. So your events, not on your events week before May 9, that’s between the Derby and the Preakness, and they’re gonna move the Preakness back up weeks. I’ll be talking about this. I’ll be talking about Raven draft picks. Be talking about new draft picks. All that brought to you by cold roofing and Gordian energy. If you’re on our W N, S T tech service, you’ll get that. Marcel is your sling crab cakes. I’m gonna get a Greek salad at some point. Todd Schiller is gonna come over to talk law and order, and also it may be some Oriole baseball too, Orioles hovering around 500 by the time we get down to fays, Yankees will be in town. Hopefully the pitching will get in order, and hopefully they’re costing John Martin a whole lot of money with more grand slams. My thanks to you for stopping by. Cam, did I get everything in diabetes.org? All you need to know, step out, walk. That’s it. That’s it simple. May 9, we’ll see that at the heart back for more Koco’s. We are Baltimore positive. Stay with us.



















