1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:04,600 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to coast AM on iHeartRadio. 2 00:00:04,880 --> 00:00:07,280 Speaker 2: You threw an article at me at one point when 3 00:00:07,280 --> 00:00:10,720 Speaker 2: it was around Friday the thirteenth, and in the article 4 00:00:11,000 --> 00:00:14,400 Speaker 2: was something you wrote in the Daily Express back in 5 00:00:14,680 --> 00:00:19,160 Speaker 2: twenty thirteen. You've been doing this a long time. Why 6 00:00:19,280 --> 00:00:23,200 Speaker 2: are we so scared of Friday the thirteenth? You know, 7 00:00:23,320 --> 00:00:25,840 Speaker 2: it's still happening. People still feel the same way, and 8 00:00:25,920 --> 00:00:28,440 Speaker 2: I think the reasons that you've written down are pretty 9 00:00:28,520 --> 00:00:31,240 Speaker 2: much the same reasons that people still stick with. 10 00:00:32,000 --> 00:00:35,320 Speaker 3: Oh. Absolutely, we You know. An interesting thing is because 11 00:00:36,280 --> 00:00:40,000 Speaker 3: you know, we've had a Friday the thirteenth already this year, 12 00:00:40,000 --> 00:00:46,120 Speaker 3: and I was speaking to somebody at work and she said, oh, 13 00:00:46,159 --> 00:00:48,440 Speaker 3: doesn't that just come from the film? You know, the 14 00:00:48,440 --> 00:00:51,920 Speaker 3: film Friday the Thirteenth and turned into this big franchise 15 00:00:52,000 --> 00:00:57,120 Speaker 3: and endless she calls all this. And I was quite 16 00:00:57,200 --> 00:00:59,680 Speaker 3: interested in that reaction because I think it shows a 17 00:00:59,680 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 3: little bit of a sort of disengagement from our own 18 00:01:03,760 --> 00:01:07,160 Speaker 3: kind of folk law and that people are just looking at, 19 00:01:07,240 --> 00:01:10,840 Speaker 3: you know, pop culture thinking it comes from that. And 20 00:01:12,720 --> 00:01:15,360 Speaker 3: you know, one of the an interesting little sort of 21 00:01:15,800 --> 00:01:19,080 Speaker 3: factoid is that before they released four, Warner Brothers released 22 00:01:19,520 --> 00:01:22,120 Speaker 3: the film Friday of the thirteen. They did a little survey. 23 00:01:22,640 --> 00:01:24,240 Speaker 3: They thought, oh, are we going to call it this? 24 00:01:24,360 --> 00:01:27,680 Speaker 3: Does anybody know what it means? And so I think 25 00:01:27,680 --> 00:01:29,600 Speaker 3: this was back in before the film came out, in 26 00:01:29,600 --> 00:01:34,600 Speaker 3: like nineteen eighty I think. And so they did this survey, and. 27 00:01:36,240 --> 00:01:39,400 Speaker 4: They didn't really release a great deal of the kind 28 00:01:39,400 --> 00:01:42,000 Speaker 4: of the details of the survey, but you know, they 29 00:01:42,000 --> 00:01:47,160 Speaker 4: act a bunch of people, Friday the thirteenth, are you 30 00:01:47,240 --> 00:01:47,800 Speaker 4: worried about? 31 00:01:47,840 --> 00:01:49,559 Speaker 3: It? Was the kind of the gist of the survey, 32 00:01:50,040 --> 00:01:54,720 Speaker 3: and they discovered that about one in three people admitted 33 00:01:55,040 --> 00:01:58,640 Speaker 3: to yes, having some kind of anxieties around that date. 34 00:01:59,200 --> 00:02:04,720 Speaker 3: So that essentially was how the film Friday the thirteenth 35 00:02:04,840 --> 00:02:08,440 Speaker 3: came about. That they thought, Okay, there's enough actual public 36 00:02:09,040 --> 00:02:14,560 Speaker 3: recognition all this day as being you know, a superstitious 37 00:02:14,840 --> 00:02:19,600 Speaker 3: and potentially a dangerous moment of time, and they went 38 00:02:19,639 --> 00:02:23,240 Speaker 3: ahead with that. And then you know, now forward all 39 00:02:23,320 --> 00:02:26,320 Speaker 3: those years, people are beginning to think that Friday the 40 00:02:26,320 --> 00:02:29,560 Speaker 3: thirteenth invented Friday the thirteenth. So it's a bit of 41 00:02:29,600 --> 00:02:31,799 Speaker 3: a an irony there. 42 00:02:32,639 --> 00:02:38,160 Speaker 2: But yeah, I'm not from that group at all, because, yeah, 43 00:02:38,160 --> 00:02:42,160 Speaker 2: I remember Friday the thirteenth before that and without the movies. 44 00:02:42,200 --> 00:02:44,600 Speaker 2: But you're right, there are people that totally think that 45 00:02:44,680 --> 00:02:48,840 Speaker 2: you're right. They even have some true crime shows Friday 46 00:02:48,960 --> 00:02:54,040 Speaker 2: the Thirteenth Murders where there's only deaths on Friday the 47 00:02:54,080 --> 00:02:58,560 Speaker 2: thirteenth that they cover, So probably people think about that too. 48 00:02:58,680 --> 00:02:59,639 Speaker 3: So yea. 49 00:03:00,120 --> 00:03:03,480 Speaker 2: So, so you have a whole bunch of reasons that 50 00:03:03,600 --> 00:03:07,320 Speaker 2: go way, way way back, and they're very interesting. I 51 00:03:07,400 --> 00:03:09,320 Speaker 2: never knew it about Jesus, by the way, I never 52 00:03:09,360 --> 00:03:12,720 Speaker 2: knew with the Lord's Supper there, right. 53 00:03:13,560 --> 00:03:19,040 Speaker 3: That's I mean, that's super interesting. You know. I think 54 00:03:19,040 --> 00:03:20,600 Speaker 3: when you when you were talking to Tom, he had 55 00:03:20,720 --> 00:03:22,160 Speaker 3: he had a few of the facts I was hoping 56 00:03:22,200 --> 00:03:26,400 Speaker 3: to throw at you tonight, but he didn't have these ones. 57 00:03:26,960 --> 00:03:30,560 Speaker 3: And yeah, so the you know, where did it come from? 58 00:03:30,639 --> 00:03:30,679 Speaker 5: That? 59 00:03:30,880 --> 00:03:32,760 Speaker 3: I mean, that's the kind of the next question, isn't it. 60 00:03:32,760 --> 00:03:35,360 Speaker 3: We thought it's okay, it doesn't come from the movie franchise. 61 00:03:35,920 --> 00:03:39,440 Speaker 3: It was around before then, And what's it all about? 62 00:03:41,480 --> 00:03:43,360 Speaker 3: If you if you look at the kind of the 63 00:03:43,400 --> 00:03:45,200 Speaker 3: strict history of it, you know, when was it first 64 00:03:45,240 --> 00:03:49,400 Speaker 3: mentioned and all that, it's relatively recent. And then although 65 00:03:49,440 --> 00:03:54,000 Speaker 3: it was an an English language biography of an Italian 66 00:03:54,040 --> 00:03:58,880 Speaker 3: composer called Rossini, and he died on the Friday, the 67 00:03:58,880 --> 00:04:05,400 Speaker 3: thirteenth of November eighteen sixty eight. And he apparently he'd 68 00:04:05,440 --> 00:04:08,840 Speaker 3: always thought that, you know, Friday and thirteen were unlucky, 69 00:04:08,840 --> 00:04:10,840 Speaker 3: and that he was going to have something unfortunate was 70 00:04:10,840 --> 00:04:14,560 Speaker 3: going to happen to him on those dates, and something did. 71 00:04:14,560 --> 00:04:19,479 Speaker 3: He actually shuffled off his mortal coil on that date. 72 00:04:20,080 --> 00:04:23,159 Speaker 3: And then there was a novel a few years later 73 00:04:26,680 --> 00:04:31,560 Speaker 3: about non scrupulous stockbroker who exploits the superstition to trigger 74 00:04:31,680 --> 00:04:34,000 Speaker 3: Wall Street panic and all that kind of thing. So 75 00:04:34,680 --> 00:04:37,800 Speaker 3: I think both of these sources, although they seem quite recent, 76 00:04:38,200 --> 00:04:42,760 Speaker 3: you know, they're both talking about a pre existing idea, 77 00:04:43,279 --> 00:04:45,760 Speaker 3: even though we don't really have very many written sources 78 00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:48,520 Speaker 3: for it. But if we do kind of like go 79 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:51,920 Speaker 3: back and think, okay, why Friday, why thirteen? What's going 80 00:04:51,960 --> 00:04:58,279 Speaker 3: on there? We will get to as you mentioned, Jesus. So, 81 00:04:59,720 --> 00:05:02,640 Speaker 3: you know, one of the biggest things in Christian symbolism 82 00:05:02,760 --> 00:05:05,760 Speaker 3: is that there were thirteen guests at the Last Supper, 83 00:05:06,440 --> 00:05:14,000 Speaker 3: with the thirteenth being Judas. And this was on a Thursday, 84 00:05:14,040 --> 00:05:17,440 Speaker 3: according to your tradition, and you know, the day before 85 00:05:17,480 --> 00:05:20,400 Speaker 3: he was Jesus was crucified on the Friday. So it 86 00:05:20,440 --> 00:05:24,640 Speaker 3: brings both the number thirteen, which was inauspicious then, and 87 00:05:24,839 --> 00:05:28,560 Speaker 3: Friday into very close alignment, although we don't really know 88 00:05:28,640 --> 00:05:32,760 Speaker 3: that that's what cemented it at that time. And you know, 89 00:05:32,800 --> 00:05:37,800 Speaker 3: we can look in you know, more kind of European 90 00:05:37,839 --> 00:05:41,839 Speaker 3: pagan traditions. So if you look at Norse mythology again, 91 00:05:41,920 --> 00:05:46,080 Speaker 3: it's a story about a banquet and a thirteenth guest, 92 00:05:46,480 --> 00:05:49,479 Speaker 3: so it's an interesting comparison. So it turns out that 93 00:05:49,480 --> 00:05:53,080 Speaker 3: the god Loki was an uninvited thirteenth guest at a 94 00:05:53,080 --> 00:05:56,839 Speaker 3: banquet in Valhalla. And you know, Loki has the reputation 95 00:05:56,880 --> 00:05:58,320 Speaker 3: of being the kind of the tricks to God, a 96 00:05:58,440 --> 00:06:03,240 Speaker 3: kind of devil type figure in Norse mythology, and his 97 00:06:03,360 --> 00:06:06,200 Speaker 3: presence there at this banquet ultimately led to the death 98 00:06:06,800 --> 00:06:12,800 Speaker 3: of the god Balder, who was you know, very much 99 00:06:12,839 --> 00:06:15,039 Speaker 3: a kind of beloved figure and so on. So this 100 00:06:15,560 --> 00:06:19,800 Speaker 3: sets off a whole chaine events in Norse mythology and 101 00:06:19,839 --> 00:06:22,040 Speaker 3: all the rest of it. So there was, again, you know, 102 00:06:22,080 --> 00:06:26,960 Speaker 3: a banquet thirteenth guest and bringing up that idea that 103 00:06:27,080 --> 00:06:31,040 Speaker 3: somehow thirteen was just going a bit too far beyond 104 00:06:31,320 --> 00:06:33,760 Speaker 3: that magical number of twelve. And I think we have 105 00:06:34,120 --> 00:06:37,440 Speaker 3: thirty twelve signs of the zodiac. And you know, it 106 00:06:37,480 --> 00:06:40,120 Speaker 3: has a sort of a certain resonance, the number twelve. 107 00:06:41,640 --> 00:06:43,279 Speaker 6: And I know you're going to want some after hearing this. 108 00:06:43,279 --> 00:06:44,320 Speaker 6: This is an amazing story. 109 00:06:44,400 --> 00:06:48,920 Speaker 1: We've got Stephen and Malachi Gregory in Nelson, New Zealand. 110 00:06:49,000 --> 00:06:51,640 Speaker 6: Now I understand that Malachi, who is eight almost nine 111 00:06:51,720 --> 00:06:55,159 Speaker 6: years old now, was suffering with not just one or 112 00:06:55,160 --> 00:06:57,920 Speaker 6: two warts, but I mean a significant outbreak of warts 113 00:06:57,920 --> 00:07:00,640 Speaker 6: all over his body, so significant it impacted his ability 114 00:07:00,680 --> 00:07:01,960 Speaker 6: to really function. 115 00:07:02,440 --> 00:07:05,120 Speaker 5: Yeah. Yeah, he was having trouble even holding a pencil 116 00:07:05,200 --> 00:07:07,919 Speaker 5: to right. It was Tie's book actually that got me 117 00:07:07,960 --> 00:07:08,680 Speaker 5: thinking about it. 118 00:07:08,720 --> 00:07:12,280 Speaker 1: I'm not surprised. It is an amazing immunal modulator, and 119 00:07:12,320 --> 00:07:13,800 Speaker 1: so I can see that it would work. 120 00:07:14,480 --> 00:07:17,040 Speaker 6: And so at what point did you see that there 121 00:07:17,080 --> 00:07:19,360 Speaker 6: was actually improvement it's really going to work. 122 00:07:19,520 --> 00:07:22,080 Speaker 5: Well, we really started to notice it around twelve weeks. 123 00:07:22,800 --> 00:07:26,440 Speaker 5: You can see these things actually getting smaller and smaller 124 00:07:26,480 --> 00:07:29,440 Speaker 5: and then going down to the with just little red marks. 125 00:07:29,480 --> 00:07:31,679 Speaker 5: The whole things are gone and we're talking about what's 126 00:07:31,760 --> 00:07:33,520 Speaker 5: you know, one the size of the warner. I thought, 127 00:07:33,640 --> 00:07:37,240 Speaker 5: no way, that's gonna Wow. It's just been miraculous to 128 00:07:37,240 --> 00:07:38,760 Speaker 5: see him get into a pair of shoes. 129 00:07:39,000 --> 00:07:42,560 Speaker 6: Yes, how wonderful. It's great to see him so happy 130 00:07:42,600 --> 00:07:44,840 Speaker 6: and yeah, confident, absolutely wonderful. 131 00:07:45,120 --> 00:07:47,000 Speaker 1: Friends that have seen it, that is blown away. 132 00:07:47,280 --> 00:07:48,320 Speaker 3: TI, this is awesome. 133 00:07:48,440 --> 00:07:49,240 Speaker 1: Yeah, this is awesome. 134 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:53,320 Speaker 7: Another amazing story. Why we're talking about Carnivora. Call them 135 00:07:53,360 --> 00:07:56,400 Speaker 7: to awaken your immune system and protect yourself now called 136 00:07:56,400 --> 00:07:59,680 Speaker 7: one eight sixty six eight three six eighty seven thirty five. 137 00:08:00,080 --> 00:08:02,920 Speaker 7: That's one eight six six eight three six eighty seven 138 00:08:03,080 --> 00:08:06,760 Speaker 7: thirty five. Or visit Carnivora dot com c A r 139 00:08:07,000 --> 00:08:11,280 Speaker 7: niv O r A carnivora dot com. 140 00:08:11,320 --> 00:08:15,680 Speaker 3: There's also another interesting coincidence possibly and this is sort 141 00:08:15,680 --> 00:08:19,920 Speaker 3: of a bit hotly debated whether or not it's entirely true, 142 00:08:20,440 --> 00:08:24,200 Speaker 3: but this days back to the thirteenth of October thirteen 143 00:08:24,240 --> 00:08:27,760 Speaker 3: oh seven, and this was apparently a Friday, and King 144 00:08:28,040 --> 00:08:31,480 Speaker 3: Philip the fourth of France ordered the arrest of the 145 00:08:31,840 --> 00:08:35,600 Speaker 3: Knight's temperar. And you know, this was a massive action 146 00:08:35,720 --> 00:08:42,440 Speaker 3: against them for worshiping you know, heathen gods and so on. 147 00:08:42,640 --> 00:08:45,960 Speaker 3: We supposedly had this image of Baphomet that they worshiped, 148 00:08:45,960 --> 00:08:48,600 Speaker 3: and they did all kinds of weird stuff, which it 149 00:08:48,679 --> 00:08:53,359 Speaker 3: kind of it's a bit sort of prototypical of witchcraft. 150 00:08:53,480 --> 00:08:58,280 Speaker 3: All of those elements said into later witchcraft persecutions, the 151 00:08:58,400 --> 00:09:02,200 Speaker 3: phil of theoretical movements. So they were accused of whole 152 00:09:02,440 --> 00:09:08,760 Speaker 3: load of things, they were tortured and eventually executed. You know, 153 00:09:09,640 --> 00:09:12,120 Speaker 3: historians will argue about it whether or not it's true, 154 00:09:12,400 --> 00:09:15,880 Speaker 3: but it's become a kind of another fixture as to 155 00:09:15,920 --> 00:09:19,680 Speaker 3: where we get the idea of Friday the thirteenth, those 156 00:09:19,720 --> 00:09:24,440 Speaker 3: two things being unlucky. Apparently Friday has always been a 157 00:09:24,440 --> 00:09:29,000 Speaker 3: bit of a an unlucky day. So it was, you know, 158 00:09:29,200 --> 00:09:32,560 Speaker 3: going back to the UK where I come from, apparently 159 00:09:32,880 --> 00:09:35,400 Speaker 3: this was it was known as hanging Day because it 160 00:09:35,440 --> 00:09:41,360 Speaker 3: was a traditional day for executing criminals and the condemned 161 00:09:41,440 --> 00:09:46,200 Speaker 3: prisoner supposedly climbed thirteen steps up to the scaffold, and 162 00:09:46,240 --> 00:09:50,120 Speaker 3: the hangman's noose was supposed to have thirteen turns in it, 163 00:09:50,880 --> 00:09:54,760 Speaker 3: and the hangman himself was paid thirteen pence and a 164 00:09:54,760 --> 00:09:58,079 Speaker 3: halfpenny for his work. So there was you know, you've 165 00:09:58,080 --> 00:10:00,280 Speaker 3: got Friday and you've got thirteen all coming together, they're 166 00:10:01,360 --> 00:10:07,840 Speaker 3: there and a flurry of incidents. So yeah, there are 167 00:10:07,880 --> 00:10:15,760 Speaker 3: lots of folklore and traditional and religious and mythological elements 168 00:10:15,800 --> 00:10:19,240 Speaker 3: that really all cool answer around these two things, the 169 00:10:19,320 --> 00:10:23,560 Speaker 3: Friday and the thirteenth being you know together, a sort 170 00:10:23,600 --> 00:10:26,640 Speaker 3: of double flammy of superstitious bad luck. 171 00:10:28,600 --> 00:10:30,840 Speaker 2: Why do you think this stuff kind of happens? Is 172 00:10:30,880 --> 00:10:34,240 Speaker 2: it just people just wanting to jump on getting dramatic 173 00:10:34,280 --> 00:10:36,000 Speaker 2: and then jump on and add some more, and then 174 00:10:36,040 --> 00:10:38,559 Speaker 2: add some more and make it deeper and deeper. I mean, 175 00:10:38,600 --> 00:10:41,000 Speaker 2: you even see that in today's world with any of 176 00:10:41,040 --> 00:10:43,400 Speaker 2: the subjects that we talk about, you know, they get 177 00:10:43,400 --> 00:10:48,160 Speaker 2: embellished more and more and more, and people don't even 178 00:10:48,200 --> 00:10:49,439 Speaker 2: know where it comes from anymore. 179 00:10:49,480 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 3: Some of this stuff, well, well absolutely these it's a 180 00:10:53,800 --> 00:10:56,440 Speaker 3: bit sort of like a you know, snowball going downhill 181 00:10:56,480 --> 00:11:00,480 Speaker 3: or whatever. It accrues more instances, and I think we 182 00:11:00,480 --> 00:11:04,000 Speaker 3: can go back to essentially our ancensors in the way 183 00:11:04,040 --> 00:11:10,400 Speaker 3: our brains developed as pattern recognition machines, you know, so 184 00:11:10,480 --> 00:11:14,920 Speaker 3: they were constantly scanning the environment looking for danger, and 185 00:11:15,400 --> 00:11:18,800 Speaker 3: one of those things could be a coincidence of events 186 00:11:19,400 --> 00:11:24,840 Speaker 3: that you know, would be inauspicious or dangerous in that context. 187 00:11:25,160 --> 00:11:28,640 Speaker 3: And I think when you get these coincidences, people remember 188 00:11:28,679 --> 00:11:32,280 Speaker 3: them because of the Friday, because of the number thirteen. 189 00:11:33,679 --> 00:11:37,760 Speaker 3: And the more things you remember that we're unlucky in 190 00:11:37,800 --> 00:11:41,400 Speaker 3: connection with that, the more real and more tangible it seems, 191 00:11:41,840 --> 00:11:46,800 Speaker 3: and that tends to overpower all those Friday the thirteens 192 00:11:46,800 --> 00:11:50,560 Speaker 3: in which nothing happened, or you know, the thirteenth floor 193 00:11:51,320 --> 00:11:54,480 Speaker 3: where nothing happened, or the Friday where nothing happened. And 194 00:11:55,360 --> 00:11:58,360 Speaker 3: it's a kind of it's a I'm gonna say that, 195 00:11:58,480 --> 00:11:59,960 Speaker 3: is it a flaw? Not really, It's not just a 196 00:12:00,080 --> 00:12:01,960 Speaker 3: quirk of the human brain, because, as they say, it 197 00:12:02,000 --> 00:12:07,880 Speaker 3: developed with this survival evolutionary instinctial aspect to it. That 198 00:12:07,960 --> 00:12:11,560 Speaker 3: you know, we look for patterns because we're looking from 199 00:12:11,640 --> 00:12:15,480 Speaker 3: meaning in the environment, and even though these things are 200 00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:21,600 Speaker 3: quite abstract, we're still wired in this very basic, basic way. 201 00:12:22,080 --> 00:12:27,400 Speaker 3: So e jus, my boy, my voice always seems to 202 00:12:27,480 --> 00:12:28,200 Speaker 3: run out a bit, and. 203 00:12:30,600 --> 00:12:33,320 Speaker 2: I'm leaving you. Hang in there, let me let me 204 00:12:33,679 --> 00:12:35,760 Speaker 2: I'll talk a little bit here. But we got about 205 00:12:35,800 --> 00:12:38,480 Speaker 2: a minute or two before the break. It's all good. 206 00:12:39,200 --> 00:12:41,280 Speaker 2: I want to ask you this, the fear of Friday 207 00:12:41,360 --> 00:12:44,360 Speaker 2: the thirteenth thousand name, and you are the doctor. I'm 208 00:12:44,360 --> 00:12:46,120 Speaker 2: going to let you say it if you can. 209 00:12:47,760 --> 00:12:49,320 Speaker 3: Okay, So I think we need to do a bit 210 00:12:49,320 --> 00:12:53,840 Speaker 3: of a practice first. So okay, everyone knows this. It's 211 00:12:54,040 --> 00:12:59,040 Speaker 3: super califragilistic. I thought that too. That's what I thought. 212 00:13:01,160 --> 00:13:03,080 Speaker 3: If you say that a few times and I'll just 213 00:13:03,080 --> 00:13:08,040 Speaker 3: get I'll just loosen at me your tongue. So far, 214 00:13:08,200 --> 00:13:13,160 Speaker 3: Friday the thirteenth, it's called paraskevvy decca tria phobia. 215 00:13:14,200 --> 00:13:16,520 Speaker 2: There you go, say it real fast, three times. Come on, 216 00:13:16,679 --> 00:13:17,560 Speaker 2: bring it on, let's go. 217 00:13:17,880 --> 00:13:21,800 Speaker 3: Paras heavy Decca tree of phobia, paraskevy Decca treeophobia, paris 218 00:13:22,160 --> 00:13:23,640 Speaker 3: heavy deca treeophobia. 219 00:13:23,800 --> 00:13:28,440 Speaker 2: That was it was getting where Yeah, good job, good 220 00:13:28,559 --> 00:13:32,880 Speaker 2: job man, that's good stuff. I knew you could pull 221 00:13:32,920 --> 00:13:33,160 Speaker 2: it out. 222 00:13:34,640 --> 00:13:36,520 Speaker 3: It's a combination of a bunch of Greek words that 223 00:13:36,600 --> 00:13:40,560 Speaker 3: mean Friday and the thirteenth and fear off. So phobia 224 00:13:40,679 --> 00:13:43,640 Speaker 3: was no, you know, fear off, and then I think 225 00:13:43,679 --> 00:13:47,680 Speaker 3: paras skeavy is is Friday, and then deca tria is thirteen, 226 00:13:48,280 --> 00:13:51,480 Speaker 3: and then you have, you know, Friday thirteen fear off. 227 00:13:53,480 --> 00:13:56,360 Speaker 1: Listen to More Coast to Coast, a m every weeknight 228 00:13:56,559 --> 00:13:59,040 Speaker 1: at one a m Eastern and go to Coast to 229 00:13:59,080 --> 00:14:00,800 Speaker 1: coast am dot com for more