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dennis rodman, radiation, Michael Mayo, what is stigmata, red wing fans
Neil is back. Miguel gets fired. Bush pardons Scooter Libby. Peace would have a better shot in the world if...poll
Neil discusses WQAM's offer from Greg Reed, More phone trouble, Katie Couric colonoscopy, David Hyde column, John Henry, David D fax, POLL: Do you listen to Marlins baseball?, Short show due to baseball
Hank/Neil crossover: old-school baseball talk, racing talk, ripping Moe. POLL: Who best fits this description: Somebody Neil trashes that I like a lot? Late poll about the Michael Jackson verdict.
This week on The South Florida Roundup, we're joined by the property appraisers from Broward, Miami-Dade, and Palm Beach counties (1:39). We also take a look at some of the local storylines to watch during this year's World Cup, from heat exhaustion to the reactions of South Florida's Brazilian and Haitian communities. (31:23)
POLL: What other show on WQAM do you listen to most often, other than Neil? Lots of bedtime stories. 1-2pm comedy bits hour
Neils B-day, lots of bits
Ryan, Dana, and Nathalie Rodriguez discuss the Broward County School Board's unanimous approval of a new school bus camera enforcement program aimed at catching drivers who illegally pass stopped school buses. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Earl Sims, the head coach of Miami Gulliver Prep, joins Larry Blustein to talk about the program and the culture he's built. Even though Earl Sims is known for coaching the late great Sean Taylor, he talks about the process of the players that have taken what they've learned on to off the field. Dr Kevin Perry of Sound Mind & Sound Body talks about the camp that he's been running. He talks about how huge it is to get Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach County all to agree on this camp. Brandyn Pokrass is a reporter for USF and FAU, and they talk about Brian Hartline's first year as head Coach for the Bulls. They talk about the first full class that Brian Hartline has his fingerprints on as a head coach. Dan LaForest of the NIL Influencer Council joins Larry Blustein to talk about how broken the current NIL financial system is. They talk about everything about the NIL system that you want to hear about. Brian McCartney, the head coach of West Broward, joins Larry Blustein as they talk about the new additions to his coaching staff for this coming year and also recap the past season as they establish themselves as a major threat in the state. They also talk about rebuilding the trenches and what they're doing during summer camp. Former Miami Hurricanes Standout Safety Kenny Phillips joins Larry Blustein as they talk about Miami Hurricanes Legends Camp and why it's important for the former Canes to connect with the current Canes.
Dr Kevin Perry of Sound Mind & Sound Body talks about the camp that he's been running. He talks about how huge it is to get Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach County all to agree on this camp.
Brian McCartney, the head coach of West Broward, joins Larry Blustein as they talk about the new additions to his coaching staff for this coming year and also recap the past season as they establish themselves as a major threat in the state. They also talk about rebuilding the trenches and also talk about what they're doing during summer camp
Al Gore endorses Howard Dean for the Democratic Party's presidential nomination. 1st POLL: In what city in the world do you find the best looking people?
hockey announcing, gun legalization, financing ballpark, no time to care, golf
Boog/Neil crossover: Dave Van Boring talk, Boog isn't taking the job in NY. Screenless calls. First POLL: What is about Hillary Clinton that you dislike the most?
charity scam, life in South Florida, neil's upcoming birthday,
It is Neil's 50th birthday! Cacamoon Lady calls, a Britany Somers (Boca Brian) and Rick Riley story, and an Orlando spy report. Boca calls.
POLL: What South Florida athlete was the biggest stiff? (John Bosa, father of Joey and Nick Bosa, appears on the list)
Did you know the Everglades generates $9.2 billion in annual real estate value alone?On this episode of RWorld Talk, Dr. Paul Hindsley, Chief Economist at the Everglades Foundation, explains why environmental health and South Florida property values are more connected than most people realize.Dr. Hindsley breaks down the economics behind the largest ecological restoration project in the world, why the Everglades is considered a trillion-dollar asset, and how clean water infrastructure impacts real estate, tourism, insurance, development, and everyday life across South Florida.The conversation also highlights the solutions already underway, including major restoration projects like the EAA Reservoir and regional water storage systems designed to improve water quality, reduce harmful discharges, recharge aquifers, strengthen flood protection, and secure South Florida's future water supply.Dr. Hindsley also discusses how the Everglades Foundation works with scientists, policymakers, business leaders, Realtors®, and elected officials from both parties to advance long-term restoration efforts that are already creating measurable economic and environmental benefits.We Covered:➡️ Why proximity to clean water adds 7% to single-family home values and 14% to condos➡️ How the Everglades generates $9.2 billion in annual real estate value➡️ The $330 billion clean water economy that depends on Everglades restoration➡️ What restoration projects and policy initiatives are underway to improve South Florida's future➡️ How Realtors® can use environmental data as a selling point and advocacy tool➡️ and more…Whether you are a real estate agent, broker, investor, developer, policymaker, or homeowner in Palm Beach, Broward, Miami-Dade, or anywhere across South Florida, this episode shows why Everglades restoration is not just an environmental issue. It is directly connected to the future of Florida's economy, infrastructure, and real estate market.Chapters:00:00 Welcome and Guest Intro00:50 Economist Meets Everglades03:32 Why Restoration Is Business06:10 The Trillion Dollar Asset08:46 Real Estate and Water Value11:51 Flood Drought and Resilience15:26 EAA Reservoir Progress Update18:01 How Realtors® Can Help27:43 Clean Water Economy Numbers29:54 Florida Bay Favorite Spot31:52 Wrap Up and ThanksFOLLOW US:Instagram: @rworldtalkLinkedIn: @rworldtalkpodcastWebsite: https://rworld.com/LISTEN ON AUDIO:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6TFUYs7cTWw539wUD7aLkE?si=79cdc73ede2f4828Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rworld-talk-south-florida-real-estate/id1671206655#Everglades #FloridaRealEstate #CleanWater #SouthFlorida #EvergladesRestoration #WaterQuality #Infrastructure #FloridaEconomy #ClimateResilience #Realtors #Environment #Economics #RealEstate
Tomorrow is Jorge's birthday! Audio cuts in and out a bit. Michael Jackson and Rush Limbaugh bedtime stories. First POLL: Whose credibility took the biggest hit in the past 5 years?
charity math, walter payton, golf a sport?
It's Opening Day! Someone calls into Moe's show to ask if Neil is gay and Moe replies "He admits it!" POLL: What actor or actress best fits this: I won't ever see a movie if (blank) is in it?
On this week's edition of The South Florida Roundup, we talk to Tom Hudson, host of The Florida Roundup, about the financial impact of hosting FIFA World Cup games in Miami (1:05). We're also joined by special guest Corey Shearer, President of the Black Democratic Caucus of Broward County, to talk about the history of the 20th Congressional District, Black representation in Congress and the candidates running for office in the district (18:25). Finally, a sit down with Jacqueline Charles of the Miami Herald, for a talk about what's happening in Haiti (35:20).
POLL: On a personal level, how do you feel about George W. Bush?
racism, CenterOne fraud
Ryan, Dana, and Nathalie Rodriguez discuss crews battling a fast-moving wildfire near the Broward and Miami-Dade county line.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The last day of Neils regular schedule. Neil leaves at 1:00 for his vacation. Jorge finishes the show. Which TV Dad would you have preferred as your own...poll
POLL: What's your take on Pope John Paul II?
Ryan, Dana, and Chris Trenkmann discuss a cyberattack impacting the Canvas platform used by thousands of schools, including Broward, Pinellas and Hillsborough counties.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ryan, Dana, and Chris Trenkmann discuss a cyberattack impacting the Canvas platform used by thousands of schools, including Broward, Pinellas and Hillsborough counties.
Tom Jicha article about the ratings, checkout lines, driving thru school zones, 25mph in Hollywood, raw wiener, tipping
The national average F&I per copy in powersports is $370. Alex Reyes and his team are targeting $1,000 as their floor, not their ceiling.Alex is the General Manager at Broward Motorsports Treasure Coast in Hobe Sound, Florida, part of an eight-location group. He has spent the better part of the last decade building and running the F&I operation at one of the most active powersports dealer groups in the country. Three-time PSB Magazine 40 Under 40. MPN author. Featured on Auto Finance News with Synchrony. And he came from automotive at Hyundai Motor, which gives him a benchmark most powersports F&I people never had.This is the most comprehensive F&I conversation we have ever done on this podcast. We go from the product menu all the way to pay plans, lender strategy, the digital customer, and what metrics a GM should be watching every single week.What we cover:Why the $370 powersports average vs $2,500 automotive F&I gap comes down to habits, training, and focus, not talentAlex's first career move into powersports and why the emotional nature of the purchase changes the entire F&I conversationWhy financing is still an afterthought at too many stores and the simple script to shift that conversation at the point of saleThe 400% rule: offer every product, every customer, every time with 100% effortThe two non-negotiable products in any powersports F&I office and why ESC is not an upsell, it is a safety netWhy 85% of powersports repossessions trace back to mechanical failure and what that means for every service contract conversationThe GAP math: when to offer it at full LTV, what to say at 70% or under, and when to leave it outPrepaid maintenance as a VIP retention tool, saving customers 30-40% while bringing them back to your service bayHow Alex built a near-prime and subprime lending program at Broward from scratch and why a single-lender strategy is a one-hand-tied-behind-your-back problemThe Synchrony Outdoors card as a cross-departmental revenue tool that works across sales, parts, and serviceThe used bike lending reality: LTVs are different, CITs need to move fast, and MotoHunt helps you buy right in the first placeAlex's unorthodox F&I handoff: the business manager gets involved the moment credit is submitted, not at the endThe "tour de ride" concept and how Broward turns the wait time before the box into a dealership relationship builderHow to handle time in the box without killing the customer experience and the Jimmy at school storyThe baseball farm league approach to building F&I talent from the ground upWhy pay plans based on product mix produce better behavior than pay plans based on sheer PVR volumeThe three numbers a GM has to watch every week: cash to finance ratio, penetration by product, and CITWhat an F&I training program actually looks like and why Rob Greenwald gets the call when Alex needs outside helpThe CRM cadence for declined deals and why a no today is a lead for laterSoft pulls, VIP appointment setting, and where Broward draws the line on digital deliveryWhat Alex looks at first when a GM suspects their F&I department is underperformingWhy penetration rates tell a better story than PVR and what to do when they are out of balanceWatch on YouTube: https://youtube.com/@dealershipfixit?si=xGw636a89UUDAK20Connect with Alex Reyes: https://www.linkedin.com/in/alex-r-a97a321a0/Broward Motorsports Treasure Coast: https://www.browardmotorsportstreasurecoast.comPowerSports HQ (Alex's YouTube): https://youtube.com/@PowersportsHQAlexConnect with Jacob: https://linkedin.com/in/jacob-b-berryFollow the Fixit Online: https://linktr.ee/dealershipfixitMotoHunt for Dealers: https://dealers.motohunt.com
He came to America from Cuba at 5 years old. His mom cleaned houses. His dad drove trucks. And somewhere between working 3 jobs, going through EMT school, and becoming a Miami-Dade firefighter — Lazro "Laz" Gonzalez decided he wasn't built to just survive. He was built to be Legendary. Laz is the founder and majority owner of Legendary Fitness — one of South Florida's fastest-growing gym brands with 4 locations across Miami (Doral, Kendall, Cutler Bay, and Legendary Pilates) and a 5th on the way in Broward. He started with $15,000 in savings, a shady business partner who was stealing from the gym, and COVID shutting his doors just months after he took sole ownership. He didn't quit. In this episode, we break down every stage of his journey — the hustle, the betrayal, the pandemic grind, the culture he built, and why he believes there's only one real secret to winning in business: your people. He also gets into relationships, mentorship, franchising, the "pillars vs fillers" philosophy that runs his entire company, and the one piece of advice that's followed him since his 20s. This one is for the builders, the grinders, the ones who refuse to let the ghost of their potential haunt them.
Ever wonder why power lines are in certain places in south Florida. Easy answer...the surface road the run along was meant to be an expressway. Why did all these super highways never get built? Community opposition and an environmental awakening. We discuss that this week on the podcast.
Go to a live Miami Comedy Show by visiting https://miamicomedy.comThis week we went live and talked about what's really going on in the 305: from the Miami-Dade Fire Rescue recruit photo that got the internet heated, to drones delivering Publix brisket pub subs to your Brickell balcony, to a Broward politician getting fined four grand for doing a podcast on the county's dime. We also broke down what's happening in the city this weekend: F1, Cinco de Mayo, the Space Symphony, and more. Same vibe, same city, just your boy talking shit and letting you know what's trending. Hit the notifications so you don't miss the next one.
Hank/Neil crossover: Moe is mad about him being on a poll earlier in the week and is reportedly looking around town for a new job. Neil is headed back in town this weekend. Trends come out today. POLL: Other than FL, where in the world would you most want to live?
Neil reads Barry Jackson article about Moe Howard David. First POLL: What was your take on George W. Bush's surprise Thanksgiving visit to the troops in Iraq? Ted David from CNBC calls in at 56:00
800 line troubles, 1700AM, no $$ for CenterOne, blacks tipping
Ralph welcomes Professor Nicholas Chater, co-author of “It's on You: How Corporations and Behavioral Scientists Have Convinced Us That We're to Blame for Society's Deepest Problems.” Then, as most of the media turns its attention to Iran, we return to the ongoing genocide in Gaza and welcome back Dr. Feroze Sidhwa to break down his three-part series published in Zeteo called “The Truth About Gaza's Dead.”Nick Chater is Professor of Behavioural Science at Warwick Business School. He has written and co-written more than two hundred research papers and six books, including It's on You: How Corporations and Behavioral Scientists Have Convinced Us That We're to Blame for Society's Deepest Problems (co-written with George Loewenstein).I was on a UK government committee as the representative of behavioural science for six years, where my role was (at least I understood my role to be) coming up with smart-aleck ideas about what individual nudges or bits of useful information we could give to the public—how that would help people reduce their carbon emissions. And I came away from that experience extremely chastened. Because almost all the interesting issues were nothing to do whatsoever with individual behavior. They were all about big systemic changes… And the shock for me was realizing that the tools that I was hoping to wield were in fact completely ineffective.Nick ChaterI think it's absolutely true that many of the things that behavioral scientists are supposedly “discovering” [are] the things that campaigners and activists and indeed people in the political world generally and journalists intuitively have long known, and indeed probably have good evidence for. It's simply— it's sort of a sad process of trailing-along-behind which I think the academic world has been engaged in, where we've been slowly realizing that things that everybody else knew initially are actually true after all.Nick ChaterOne of the most powerful things that each of us has is the ability to propagate our own perspective and to campaign for change…I think getting people pulling together and pushing for change can be incredibly powerful. So seeing ourselves as citizens who are actively able to have our voice, make our voices heard, I think that's where the real power lies. And I think that the campaigners and political activists and so on have always known this. And of course, also, big businesses have always known this too. And they certainly don't want us to be doing too much of that. They want us to be focusing on quite the opposite. They want us to be focusing on our own gardens and not worrying about the big picture. They don't want organized opposition.Nick ChaterDr. Feroze Sidhwa is a general, trauma, and critical care surgeon in California. He is also a humanitarian surgeon who has worked in Palestine, Ukraine, Haiti, Zimbabwe, and Burkina Faso. He most recently volunteered at Nasser Medical Complex in Khan Younis, Gaza. He was blocked from entering Gaza by Israel's Shin Bet intelligence service in November 2025.In the first 25 days of the assault on Gaza, more children were killed than in the entire worst year of conflict that Airwars had ever studied previously, which was Syria in 2016. In the first 25 days in Gaza, between 2,200 and 2,600 children were killed in Gaza, compared to 1,900 in Syria. So again, if you adjust for the size of the population (because Syria is a much bigger country than Gaza is a territory), the rate of killing of children in Gaza was 71 to 142 times higher than it was in the worst year on record for children in conflict—Syria in 2016.Dr. Feroze SidhwaGaza is a place where infants freeze to death if they are not sheltered. Well, there are no sheltered infants in Gaza for any practical purposes. They're all unsheltered. So we have a list of the actual names of a dozen or two dozen children who have actually frozen to death…And there is shelter—ready-made mobile shelters for hundreds of thousands of people right outside of Gaza. It's in Egypt and it's in Jordan. The only thing that's stopping anybody from bringing it in is the US and Israel…This is just dastardly. We should think about it for a second—we (meaning Americans) [are] living in a country where neither political party seems to care that we are freezing infants to death.Dr. Feroze SidhwaRight now, the Israelis are blocking cough medicine from going into Gaza. And the reason (they say) is because it contains glycerin. Now, glycerin, in theory, can be used to make explosives. But it's one picogram or something—it's just part of a pill or the syrup that goes into it, right? This is children's cough medicine. The idea that Hamas or Islamic Jihad or anybody else in Gaza has the laboratory equipment and facilities that would be needed to extract the 0.01% of glycerin that's in a pill or a medical syrup to then make a bomb is beyond idiotic. Furthermore, we all know that there's (and I'm speaking literally) hundreds of tons of unexploded Israeli bombs—actually I should say unexploded US bombs—all over the Gaza Strip. That's where Hamas gets all of its explosives from. It just repurposes unexploded Israeli munitions. So all of this is just sheer nonsense.Dr. Feroze SidhwaNews 4/24/26* Our top stories this week have to do with people losing their jobs. First up, Apple CEO Tim Cook – the handpicked successor of Steve Jobs who has led the tech giant for the past 15 years – announced this week that he would transition away from the CEO role. While he will remain on as Executive Chairman, John Ternus, the company's head of hardware engineering, will take over at the helm, PBS reports. Cook's tenure at Apple has received mixed evaluations, with many applauding the steady handed executive for adding an estimated $3.6 trillion in market value to the company, while others have critiqued his supposed lack of innovation compared to his predecessor. Some hope his more technical-minded successor will put more emphasis on product development moving forward. Like many tech CEOs, Cook went to great lengths to ingratiate himself with President Trump in his second term, donating $1 million to his inaugural committee and gifting Trump a glass plaque set in 24-karat gold last August.* Meanwhile, Secretary of Labor Lori Chavez-DeRemer resigned this week amid “an internal investigation into her conduct,” which included “instructing staff to buy her bottles of sauvignon blanc on work trips… [stashing] liquor in her office, [encouraging] young female staffers to ‘pay attention' to her father and husband, [having] an affair with a member of her security detail, and [arranging] work travel to visit family and friends,” per Vox. For the time being, the Labor Department will be headed by Keith Sonderling, whom POLITICO calls a “quintessential Washington insider who is well-connected in the capital's Republican circles and his home state of Florida.” Sources quoted in this piece identify Sonderling as a key behind-the-scenes player in the administration whose accumulated influence “extends well beyond DOL.” The choice of Chavez-DeRemer, a former Congresswoman who was seen as perhaps the most labor-friendly Republican in the House, was supported at the time by Trump-aligned Teamster boss Sean O'Brien; her ouster therefore, represents the latest humiliating setback for his strategy of cozying up to Trump to win favorable treatment for his membership. In the words of a recent Current Affairs piece published before the downfall of Chavez-DeRemer, “Sean O'Brien Sold Labor to Trump, and Got Nothing.”* In the House, Rep. Sheila Cherfilus-McCormick resigned her seat this week, just minutes before the House Ethics Committee was set to weigh punishment for the Congresswoman, whom the panel had previously found guilty of “a slew of ethics violations, including accusations that she stole millions in pandemic relief funds and used it to bolster her 2021 campaign,” according to CNN. Cherfilus-McCormick was one of the four Members of Congress included in the proposed bipartisan expulsion deal some weeks ago, along with Representatives Swalwell, Gonzales, and Mills. With the first two gone, a tremendous amount of pressure is sure to be exerted on Congressman Mills to resign as well. Prior to resigning, Cherfilus-McCormick was already facing a stiff primary challenge from young progressive Elijah Manley. Now, it seems her seat – representing hundreds of thousands in Broward and Palm Beach counties – could remain vacant until a new member is sworn in next January, with Florida Governor Ron DeSantis unlikely to call a special election before then.* Also in Congress, Axios reports Representative David Scott of Georgia, a powerful Black Georgia Democrat who served in the lower house for over 20 years, passed away this week at age 80. Scott, who rose to become the first Black chair of the key House Committee on Agriculture, had filed to run again in 2026 despite rumored resistance from his colleagues. His death leaves Georgia's 13th district without representation in the House and amounts to a stunning fourth death-based Democratic House vacancy in the past year. Like the ones that preceded it, this must be seen as a bright red warning signal to Democratic leadership.* In DC more broadly, the employment picture looks even worse. According to a new report in the Guardian, the combined purging of 300,000 jobs from the federal government – the piece notes this is the “region's largest employer” – by Elon Musk's absurd Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE) initiative, with another 13,000 job cuts in the private sector, has left DC with the highest unemployment rate in the nation at 6.7%. With little sign of increased hiring in the public or private sectors, there is no indication this trend will reverse itself any time soon.* Elsewhere in the DMV, this week Virginia voters approved a referendum to amend the state constitution allowing Democrats to redraw the state's congressional districts in their favor. Currently, Virginia Democrats hold six districts to the Republicans' five; under the new map, Democrats are poised to hold 10 districts and the Republicans just one. This is the latest episode in the mid-decade redistricting fight begun last year, when Texas Republicans sought to redraw the Lone Star state's maps to be more favorable to the GOP. This set off a stampede of states seeking to redraw their district lines. Now, in light of the Virginia referendum passing, Florida is threatening to redraw their maps to the detriment of Democrats there. The Hill reports House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, taking a sharper tone than usual, responded to news of the Florida redistricting attempt with a statement reading “If Florida Republicans proceed with this illegal scheme, they will only create more prime pick-up opportunities for Democrats, just as they did with Trump's dummymander in Texas…[he vowed] maximum warfare, everywhere, all the time.”* In California, the downfall of Eric Swalwell has resulted in the unexpected rise of another candidate – former Congressman, California Attorney General, and Biden-era Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra. Between April 10th and April 22nd, Becerra surged from a polling average of under 4% to an average of 13% – and in some polls, even moved into first place. While Becerra seeks to consolidate this spike in support, progressives are airing long-held grievances. David Sirota, former Bernie Sanders campaign advisor and founder of the Lever, cited that publication's 2021 report on how “As California AG, [Becerra] demanded the HHS secretary use existing law to lower medicine prices - and then he became HHS secretary & literally refused to do that.” Others have pointed out that, according to Transparency USA, Becerra's campaign has received massive donations from the likes of Chevron. Progressive billionaire Tom Steyer on the other hand this week received the endorsement of Our Revolution, closely aligned with Bernie Sanders, which noted that “Yes, Tom Steyer is a billionaire. But it matters what he is doing with that power: pushing for taxes on the wealthy, expanding universal programs, and dismantling corporate influence in our politics.”* In another case of politics making strange bedfellows, the Chicago Tribune reports the political arm of Planned Parenthood is making an endorsement in the race to succeed retiring Rep. Jesús “Chuy” García in Illinois 4th congressional district. Except, in this case, the reproductive rights group is not endorsing the Democrat in the race. Listeners may recall that Congressman García was sharply criticized for his maneuvering to ensure his chief of staff Patty García would be the Democratic nominee. This has forced other potential aspirants to run as independents. These include DSA-aligned Chicago Alderman Byron Sigcho-López and activist Mayra Macías – the latter of whom won the Planned Parenthood Action endorsement this week. The Tribune notes that Macías served on the board of Planned Parenthood Action until the beginning of this year. In a statement, Planned Parenthood President Alexis McGill Johnson called Macías “a proven leader,” who “will be unrelenting in the fight to protect access to sexual and reproductive health care.”* Turning to international news, in South Africa, leftist politician and leader of the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party Julius Malema was sentenced to five years in prison this week for “firing a rifle in the air at a party rally,” Al Jazeera reports. Unsurprisingly, given that the EFF is the fourth largest political party in South Africa, this case has become a rallying cry for Malema's supporters, with those same supporters accusing the prosecution of being politically motivated. Presiding Magistrate Twanet Olivier disputes this, contending that it “is not a political party who has been convicted here … it is a person, an individual.” Malema's lawyers immediately applied for – and were granted – leave to appeal, but if these appeals fail Malema could be barred from serving as a Member of Parliament.* Finally, in more positive news from abroad, Reuters reports that the much-trumpeted summit of the global Left held in Barcelona this week – designed to help progressives rally their forces to defeat modern reactionary Right-wing nationalism characterized by figures like Trump – drew over 6,000 attendees from over 40 countries. Headline speakers included Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, Brazilian President Lula, Mexican President Claudia Sheinbaum, Colombian President Gustavo Petro and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa. From the United States, an ecclectic group addressed the summit, ranging from video messages of support from Hilary Clinton to Bernie Sanders to Zohran Mamdani, with an in-person address by Minnesota Governor and former Vice-Presidential candidate Tim Walz. A recurrent theme, hammered home by Isabel Allende, former Senate president of Chile and daughter of Salvador Allende, Chile's leftist president ousted in a U.S.-backed coup and replaced with the dictator Augusto Pinochet, was that the left has become too distant from the daily concerns of workers, stating in no uncertain terms that “It's unimaginable to fight against the right if we can't get closer to ordinary people.”This has been Francesco DeSantis with In Case You Haven't Heard. Get full access to Ralph Nader Radio Hour at www.ralphnaderradiohour.com/subscribe
Jorge complains about The Sopranos season finale. Could you have a relationship with a girl that had sex with you on the first date...poll
Terry Schiavo passed away this morning, she was included in today's poll because Neil posted it before she died. Neil says they have run out of cleb nudes, so today it is a nude that is not famous, and the Boone in the Box as a bonus. He plays audio of Moe Howard complaining about Neil, and yesterday's show and poll. Taking calls, and the Rev. Jones got through. Plays a couple of really old bits.
This is the episode we have been waiting years to make.On this episode of RWorld Talk, host Chris Krzemien sits down with RWorld President Jonathan Dolphus to share major news: a historic merger between Miami REALTORS® and RWorld. 93,000 members. $69 billion in sales volume in 2025. One organization.They talk through what actually happened, what will change for members, and what this opens up for agents across South Florida and beyond.We Covered: ➡️ How a lunch between two association presidents turned into a historic deal➡️ What will change, including full data access and no longer needing two separate MLS feeds➡️ What 93,000 voices speaking together mean for property rights and local legislation➡️ and more…This is a big moment for South Florida real estate. As we finalize the merger, the next step is a Special Membership Meeting. Register for the April 30th meeting or submit your proxy by April 29th at MiamiandRWorld.com.FOLLOW US:Instagram: @rworldtalkLinkedIn: @rworldtalkpodcastWebsite: https://rworld.com/LISTEN ON AUDIO:Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6TFUYs7cTWw539wUD7aLkE?si=79cdc73ede2f4828Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/rworld-talk-south-florida-real-estate/id1671206655#SouthFloridaRealEstate #MiamiRealtors #OurWorld #BeachesMLS #OurWorldTalk #RealtorNews #RealEstateMerger #GlobalRealEstate
First POLL: Who do you think was the most exciting athlete ever to play for a South Florida team? POLL #2: In what city in the world do the highest percentage of very ugly people live?
Payne Stewart, are famous people more important? radio ratings: Brooke, Rick and Suds, and WAFN, model eggs, Dave Caprita calls
Hank/Neil crossover. First POLL: Which of these do you care about least? Second POLL: Which of these apply to your morning listening habits?
The Summer Book is coming, Steering Column lock, Jim Gray interview with Pete Rose, disco, Payne Stewart, ripping Tom Jicha
Neil and Jorge's second day on WQAM. ~11:30 - 12:30 Some regulars call. What is going on with Rick and Suds, and Super Talk? Paul Harvey Jr calls.