1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:03,440 Speaker 1: Now here's a highlight from Coast to coast am on 2 00:00:03,560 --> 00:00:07,560 Speaker 1: iHeart Radio. Mister Lobo, what is it about horror films 3 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:12,400 Speaker 1: that people just love they want to get scared? Of course, 4 00:00:12,560 --> 00:00:14,800 Speaker 1: people do want to get scared. I think a lot 5 00:00:14,800 --> 00:00:16,720 Speaker 1: of for a lot of us, it's I think some 6 00:00:16,800 --> 00:00:19,040 Speaker 1: of it's a rite of passage in the beginning, you know. 7 00:00:19,160 --> 00:00:21,560 Speaker 1: I mean, I know that I watched those movies just 8 00:00:21,560 --> 00:00:23,079 Speaker 1: so I could hang out with my dad. You know, 9 00:00:23,120 --> 00:00:27,000 Speaker 1: you watching those movies late at night on TV. You 10 00:00:27,000 --> 00:00:28,480 Speaker 1: know what. I was the same way. My dad liked 11 00:00:28,480 --> 00:00:32,159 Speaker 1: sci fi films and would take me to the movie house. 12 00:00:32,400 --> 00:00:35,000 Speaker 1: You didn't like to go alone, my mom didn't like them. 13 00:00:35,080 --> 00:00:36,840 Speaker 1: I would go with them, you know. We would see 14 00:00:36,880 --> 00:00:40,919 Speaker 1: all those horror things, the mysterions, all those yeah, you know, 15 00:00:41,000 --> 00:00:42,680 Speaker 1: and half the time, you know, I was on the 16 00:00:42,760 --> 00:00:45,480 Speaker 1: edge of my seat, are ready to hiding under the furniture? 17 00:00:45,520 --> 00:00:47,920 Speaker 1: And it was it was, but you know, it was 18 00:00:48,240 --> 00:00:49,920 Speaker 1: kind of a rite of passage. And I do think 19 00:00:49,960 --> 00:00:52,480 Speaker 1: it's like a roller coaster people just you know, it's 20 00:00:52,600 --> 00:00:54,680 Speaker 1: it's a thrill and it's a At the end of 21 00:00:54,720 --> 00:00:57,760 Speaker 1: it all, you get brought back home safe and you survived. It, 22 00:00:59,160 --> 00:01:01,440 Speaker 1: and I think that that's that's that's that I think 23 00:01:01,560 --> 00:01:03,680 Speaker 1: is the thing, And I think it's a it's a 24 00:01:03,680 --> 00:01:05,840 Speaker 1: it's a it's a horror that we can we can 25 00:01:06,000 --> 00:01:07,840 Speaker 1: control and in the end of the day, we can 26 00:01:08,280 --> 00:01:10,480 Speaker 1: walk away from you know, whereas you know, the stuff 27 00:01:10,480 --> 00:01:12,440 Speaker 1: that's happening in the news and the stuff that's happening 28 00:01:12,440 --> 00:01:15,920 Speaker 1: in real life is uh, you know, we can't, we 29 00:01:15,920 --> 00:01:18,560 Speaker 1: don't ultimately don't have any control over it. But a 30 00:01:18,560 --> 00:01:23,200 Speaker 1: movie or a comic or anything, you can feel brave 31 00:01:24,280 --> 00:01:26,839 Speaker 1: in this, in this fantasy world. When I was a kid, 32 00:01:27,200 --> 00:01:31,479 Speaker 1: I went and saw the original House on the Haunted Hill. Oh, man, god, 33 00:01:31,520 --> 00:01:35,319 Speaker 1: that was scary. Ah, we did that live, George, with 34 00:01:35,360 --> 00:01:39,160 Speaker 1: all the gimmicks, did you. We have the registered nurses 35 00:01:39,200 --> 00:01:42,960 Speaker 1: and attendance, and we had all these amplified sound effects, 36 00:01:42,959 --> 00:01:45,319 Speaker 1: and we had a skeleton coming down on a wire 37 00:01:45,400 --> 00:01:48,720 Speaker 1: over the audience, and and uh, I had my puppet 38 00:01:48,720 --> 00:01:52,040 Speaker 1: master rag on where I'm turning the crank and making 39 00:01:52,080 --> 00:01:55,080 Speaker 1: the skeleton come out. It was great, It was it 40 00:01:55,160 --> 00:01:59,240 Speaker 1: was a blast. What would you say was the for 41 00:01:59,320 --> 00:02:03,680 Speaker 1: you personal your all time favorite horror film? Oh, that's 42 00:02:03,760 --> 00:02:06,440 Speaker 1: really tough, Georgia. Every it is tough because they're all good. 43 00:02:06,960 --> 00:02:10,160 Speaker 1: They're all yeah, you know, as far as the classics, 44 00:02:10,639 --> 00:02:13,360 Speaker 1: I don't know why, but I really love the Invisible Man. 45 00:02:13,480 --> 00:02:16,600 Speaker 1: I really get a charge out of it. I think 46 00:02:16,600 --> 00:02:19,440 Speaker 1: that that the performance of Claude Rains and his voice 47 00:02:19,880 --> 00:02:21,639 Speaker 1: and the fact that you don't see him at all, 48 00:02:21,720 --> 00:02:23,640 Speaker 1: And it scared me so bad when I was a kid, 49 00:02:23,720 --> 00:02:27,600 Speaker 1: because you know, the main character is invisible from the 50 00:02:27,639 --> 00:02:30,120 Speaker 1: start of a movie, so it's just that voice, that 51 00:02:30,240 --> 00:02:33,680 Speaker 1: creepy voice throughout the whole thing. H And then as 52 00:02:33,720 --> 00:02:36,440 Speaker 1: all son of Frankenstein and the Blob of course, you know, 53 00:02:36,480 --> 00:02:39,360 Speaker 1: I mean, I'm the MC of Blobfest and and that's 54 00:02:39,400 --> 00:02:43,000 Speaker 1: by no accident. I absolutely love the Blob, you know, 55 00:02:43,000 --> 00:02:44,600 Speaker 1: in the later films, you know, I mean, I think 56 00:02:44,639 --> 00:02:47,760 Speaker 1: Alien is a really scary film. I think that there 57 00:02:47,800 --> 00:02:50,440 Speaker 1: are some some modern ones that are really truly great 58 00:02:50,480 --> 00:02:53,560 Speaker 1: and are scary. Um. You know, I never really was 59 00:02:53,600 --> 00:02:55,720 Speaker 1: a much much of a fan of I'd never liked 60 00:02:55,720 --> 00:02:57,840 Speaker 1: The Exorcist or any of those ones. I think that 61 00:02:57,880 --> 00:03:01,080 Speaker 1: those ones are a little too there, too corny for you. 62 00:03:01,600 --> 00:03:03,720 Speaker 1: I don't know, I don't know, I just I just 63 00:03:03,720 --> 00:03:06,040 Speaker 1: feel like they're not as not as fun. You know, 64 00:03:06,200 --> 00:03:07,880 Speaker 1: I kind of like a little more fantasy in my 65 00:03:07,960 --> 00:03:10,360 Speaker 1: horror films, you know, I mean, I think you Return 66 00:03:10,400 --> 00:03:12,680 Speaker 1: to Living Dead is fun. And you know all the 67 00:03:12,760 --> 00:03:16,800 Speaker 1: zombies and monsters. You know, when it's people getting possessed, 68 00:03:17,080 --> 00:03:20,440 Speaker 1: it's it's fine. You know, my wife loves all those 69 00:03:20,760 --> 00:03:23,240 Speaker 1: exorcism movies. But that's just not my bag. Let me 70 00:03:23,280 --> 00:03:26,440 Speaker 1: throw some movies your way and give me your critique. Okay, okay. 71 00:03:26,639 --> 00:03:32,680 Speaker 1: The Shining a classic, love it, fantastic movie. Scary still 72 00:03:32,720 --> 00:03:36,280 Speaker 1: holds up a new generation of fans find it over 73 00:03:36,320 --> 00:03:38,560 Speaker 1: and over again. Does not follow the book at all. 74 00:03:38,600 --> 00:03:41,640 Speaker 1: There's not even twins in the book. He's killing people 75 00:03:41,680 --> 00:03:44,840 Speaker 1: with a croquet mallet in the book. But this is, 76 00:03:45,000 --> 00:03:47,800 Speaker 1: I believe, probably one of the few instances where I 77 00:03:47,840 --> 00:03:50,920 Speaker 1: feel the movie is superior to the book. Starring Jack Nicholson. 78 00:03:50,960 --> 00:03:54,080 Speaker 1: Came out in nineteen eighty, I believe, Yeah, nineteen eighty. 79 00:03:54,120 --> 00:03:57,440 Speaker 1: Shelley Duval was marvelous in the picture. Scatman Cruthers was 80 00:03:57,480 --> 00:04:01,720 Speaker 1: good in the picture. I mean, just a stellar performances, 81 00:04:02,240 --> 00:04:05,400 Speaker 1: chilling Stanley Koprick in his prime, you know, I just 82 00:04:05,720 --> 00:04:08,040 Speaker 1: I mean, I feel like it's a it's a classic. 83 00:04:08,240 --> 00:04:13,160 Speaker 1: Nineteen ninety six The Scream. The Scream, Yes, you know, 84 00:04:13,280 --> 00:04:16,640 Speaker 1: Scream was good. I mean definitely. What I liked about 85 00:04:16,640 --> 00:04:19,920 Speaker 1: Scream was that it kind of acknowledged all of these 86 00:04:19,960 --> 00:04:23,240 Speaker 1: cliches from all the previous horror movies and actually created 87 00:04:23,279 --> 00:04:27,080 Speaker 1: a rule book. It's like, okay, get sixteenagers together, and 88 00:04:29,000 --> 00:04:31,840 Speaker 1: they pretty much broke down all the rules of all 89 00:04:31,839 --> 00:04:34,000 Speaker 1: the slasher movies of the eighties and made fun of them, 90 00:04:34,000 --> 00:04:37,400 Speaker 1: which I thought was fun. It had some satirical qualities 91 00:04:37,440 --> 00:04:43,200 Speaker 1: to it. Nineteen eighty two Poltergeist. Poultergeist is fantastic. Toby 92 00:04:43,240 --> 00:04:46,360 Speaker 1: Hooper and Steven Toby Hooper who did the original Texas Chainsaw, 93 00:04:46,440 --> 00:04:49,920 Speaker 1: and Steven Spielberger of course of Close Encounters and everything else. 94 00:04:50,360 --> 00:04:54,120 Speaker 1: Those two together I think created something that had heart, 95 00:04:54,440 --> 00:04:59,279 Speaker 1: had atmosphere, genuine scares and ghost movies are hard because 96 00:04:59,360 --> 00:05:02,320 Speaker 1: usually happens in ghost movies in the last act. It 97 00:05:02,360 --> 00:05:05,760 Speaker 1: follows apart because once you discover the mystery as to 98 00:05:05,839 --> 00:05:10,320 Speaker 1: why their ghosts are there, it just the mystery is 99 00:05:10,320 --> 00:05:12,640 Speaker 1: the thing that makes it strong, and once the mystery 100 00:05:12,720 --> 00:05:15,320 Speaker 1: is solved, it kind of loses its mystique and it's 101 00:05:15,480 --> 00:05:19,200 Speaker 1: and its power, um, whereas Poltergeist doesn't quite do that. 102 00:05:19,320 --> 00:05:23,080 Speaker 1: You know, the last act is really strong and exciting, 103 00:05:23,160 --> 00:05:26,080 Speaker 1: and that no one could predict the climax of that movie. 104 00:05:26,600 --> 00:05:31,440 Speaker 1: And uh and and it's it's that that that whatever 105 00:05:31,480 --> 00:05:34,160 Speaker 1: that thing is is still with them and still following them, 106 00:05:34,160 --> 00:05:36,440 Speaker 1: and we don't really truly understand it, which makes it 107 00:05:36,520 --> 00:05:41,640 Speaker 1: much more scary. Number nineteen sixty eight year Rosemary's Baby, 108 00:05:42,560 --> 00:05:45,800 Speaker 1: Rosemary's Baby. William Castle wanted to direct that Our House 109 00:05:45,839 --> 00:05:49,039 Speaker 1: on Hana Hill producer, and because he had such a 110 00:05:49,040 --> 00:05:52,559 Speaker 1: reputation with gimmicks, they gave Roman Polanski do it because 111 00:05:52,560 --> 00:05:56,000 Speaker 1: they wanted to make a serious pictures far in that one. 112 00:05:56,200 --> 00:05:59,000 Speaker 1: Mia Pharaoh was in it, and it ended up you know, uh, 113 00:05:59,520 --> 00:06:02,520 Speaker 1: I believe winning then Oscar and I believe you know 114 00:06:03,040 --> 00:06:07,000 Speaker 1: again they did get the prestige. They wanted to make 115 00:06:07,040 --> 00:06:10,279 Speaker 1: that that film work and h you know his eyes, 116 00:06:10,360 --> 00:06:13,080 Speaker 1: what have you done to his eyes? I think she 117 00:06:13,160 --> 00:06:16,840 Speaker 1: was married to Sinatra at that time too, probably right 118 00:06:16,880 --> 00:06:20,040 Speaker 1: around there. Yeah, she had that mod haircut. Everyone was 119 00:06:20,120 --> 00:06:22,640 Speaker 1: trying to look like her. I mean, it's a it's 120 00:06:23,160 --> 00:06:25,400 Speaker 1: my faves, but it's definitely a solid movie in a 121 00:06:25,400 --> 00:06:29,640 Speaker 1: classic twenty eighteen one. I did not see Hereditary. I 122 00:06:29,680 --> 00:06:31,480 Speaker 1: did not see it. You didn't see that either. That's 123 00:06:31,520 --> 00:06:33,839 Speaker 1: supposed to be pretty good. She enjoyed it, she said, 124 00:06:33,880 --> 00:06:35,800 Speaker 1: She said it was good. I haven't seen it yet, 125 00:06:35,839 --> 00:06:38,240 Speaker 1: but I do plan on watching it. I think. I 126 00:06:38,279 --> 00:06:42,920 Speaker 1: think from all i've heard, it's very well done. Seventy 127 00:06:42,960 --> 00:06:48,839 Speaker 1: three The Exorcist, again not my bag, but definitely classic movie. 128 00:06:48,880 --> 00:06:51,160 Speaker 1: And there are what's neat about The Exorcist is to 129 00:06:51,200 --> 00:06:53,520 Speaker 1: look for the subliminal messages in that movie. There are 130 00:06:53,560 --> 00:06:58,840 Speaker 1: a couple of placements of a ghoulish face just one frame, uh, 131 00:06:58,920 --> 00:07:01,720 Speaker 1: And if you look for it, it's there. And I 132 00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:03,760 Speaker 1: think that that punctuates a lot of the scares in 133 00:07:03,800 --> 00:07:06,640 Speaker 1: that movie, or some of those subliminal effects. Nineteen eighty 134 00:07:06,680 --> 00:07:10,680 Speaker 1: four A Nightmare on Elm Street. Nightmare on Elm Street. 135 00:07:10,760 --> 00:07:13,400 Speaker 1: You know when I saw that, I thought right after Dreamscape, 136 00:07:13,440 --> 00:07:15,760 Speaker 1: and I thought, all these guys are just ripping off Dreamscape. 137 00:07:15,800 --> 00:07:19,800 Speaker 1: Do you remember that movie? Yep, we're trying to assassinate 138 00:07:19,840 --> 00:07:21,920 Speaker 1: the president through his dreams. I thought that was a 139 00:07:21,960 --> 00:07:27,360 Speaker 1: brilliant script. I like Dreamscape better, but you know, Nightmare 140 00:07:27,360 --> 00:07:29,840 Speaker 1: in Elm Street gave us Freddy Krueger, which is probably 141 00:07:29,880 --> 00:07:34,960 Speaker 1: one of our more enduring modern monsters. Nineteen seventy eight. God, 142 00:07:34,960 --> 00:07:38,440 Speaker 1: I can't believe it was that long ago. Halloween. Halloween, 143 00:07:38,640 --> 00:07:44,480 Speaker 1: Oh my goodness. I originally titled The Babysitter Killers John 144 00:07:44,520 --> 00:07:47,480 Speaker 1: Carpenter's kind of breakthrough film. He had done Assault On 145 00:07:47,520 --> 00:07:54,800 Speaker 1: Precincting thirteen before, I believe, But Halloween definitely is a 146 00:07:54,840 --> 00:08:00,240 Speaker 1: modern classic. I think the remake that they did, or 147 00:08:00,240 --> 00:08:01,840 Speaker 1: the reboot, or I don't know what you want to 148 00:08:01,840 --> 00:08:03,600 Speaker 1: call it. The thing they did that came out last 149 00:08:03,680 --> 00:08:09,760 Speaker 1: year was fantastic, truly great performances by Jamie Lee Curtis. 150 00:08:09,800 --> 00:08:13,240 Speaker 1: And she was in the original too, wasn't she. Yeah, yeah, 151 00:08:13,280 --> 00:08:15,160 Speaker 1: Jamie Lee Curtis was in the original and she was 152 00:08:15,200 --> 00:08:16,920 Speaker 1: in this one that came out last year, And it 153 00:08:16,960 --> 00:08:20,120 Speaker 1: was interesting the way that they sort of ignored the 154 00:08:20,120 --> 00:08:23,720 Speaker 1: whole rest of the series and basically just this happens, right, 155 00:08:24,240 --> 00:08:28,160 Speaker 1: This happens basically forty years after the first one, and 156 00:08:28,160 --> 00:08:31,200 Speaker 1: in the new one, it kind of shows what that 157 00:08:31,280 --> 00:08:33,240 Speaker 1: event did to both of them and how they kind 158 00:08:33,240 --> 00:08:37,120 Speaker 1: of both became dependent on each other or almost that 159 00:08:37,240 --> 00:08:39,640 Speaker 1: they're not. I don't know if they're the same person. 160 00:08:39,679 --> 00:08:42,400 Speaker 1: It's kind of interesting how they kind of tied those 161 00:08:42,400 --> 00:08:44,600 Speaker 1: two characters together in the new one. I don't want 162 00:08:44,640 --> 00:08:47,040 Speaker 1: to spoil it, but but the original, of course, is 163 00:08:47,080 --> 00:08:49,160 Speaker 1: just a classic. You know, it's it's, it's, it's the 164 00:08:49,240 --> 00:08:52,480 Speaker 1: camp fire Tale of the babysitter alone in the house 165 00:08:52,520 --> 00:08:54,640 Speaker 1: with a serial killer on the loose, and the and 166 00:08:54,720 --> 00:08:58,040 Speaker 1: the mask, which is which? Which? Which was terrifying? Is 167 00:08:58,120 --> 00:09:03,960 Speaker 1: really just William Shatner two two twelve one. I don't 168 00:09:04,000 --> 00:09:07,280 Speaker 1: remember the Cabin in the Woods? Do you remember that one? Yes? Okay, 169 00:09:07,320 --> 00:09:11,160 Speaker 1: I saw it at the drive in Believe it or not. Yeah, Yes, 170 00:09:11,320 --> 00:09:13,040 Speaker 1: it was a lot of fun. You know. It was 171 00:09:13,120 --> 00:09:15,720 Speaker 1: another one like Scream where they kind of are poking 172 00:09:15,760 --> 00:09:20,000 Speaker 1: fun at all the cliche um horror films of the eighties. 173 00:09:20,000 --> 00:09:22,360 Speaker 1: But what was interesting is that there was a not 174 00:09:22,559 --> 00:09:25,959 Speaker 1: really conspiracy, but there was a government funded kind of 175 00:09:26,679 --> 00:09:31,800 Speaker 1: experiment where they are um deliberately doing these different things 176 00:09:31,840 --> 00:09:34,320 Speaker 1: to these to these kids who go out into the 177 00:09:34,360 --> 00:09:37,000 Speaker 1: woods and get murdered in these dumb movies. So there's 178 00:09:37,000 --> 00:09:40,679 Speaker 1: this whole underground base where they're there's all these different 179 00:09:41,320 --> 00:09:45,439 Speaker 1: monsters and serial killers and demons and everything. You can 180 00:09:45,520 --> 00:09:50,440 Speaker 1: think of in cages waiting to be uh released in 181 00:09:50,520 --> 00:09:53,280 Speaker 1: these experiments. It was really funny. It was very The 182 00:09:53,360 --> 00:09:55,839 Speaker 1: humor of it was great because for the guys working 183 00:09:55,880 --> 00:09:58,360 Speaker 1: in this government installation, it was just another day at 184 00:09:58,360 --> 00:10:00,760 Speaker 1: the office where they're torturing these t teenagers, you know, 185 00:10:00,800 --> 00:10:02,760 Speaker 1: and it was it was funny. It was very self 186 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:05,160 Speaker 1: aware funny. And the last one we'll talk about here 187 00:10:05,520 --> 00:10:08,200 Speaker 1: nineteen sixty eight, hard to believe fifty one years ago, 188 00:10:08,640 --> 00:10:11,800 Speaker 1: Night of the Living Dead. It's the one that changed everything, 189 00:10:11,920 --> 00:10:14,960 Speaker 1: you know. I mean before that, zombies were always you know, 190 00:10:15,360 --> 00:10:20,199 Speaker 1: voodoo zombies, and this kind of basically kind of transformed 191 00:10:20,200 --> 00:10:23,160 Speaker 1: the whole zombie genre. You know, there would be no 192 00:10:23,200 --> 00:10:26,520 Speaker 1: Walking Dead without Nine of the Living Dead, and it 193 00:10:26,080 --> 00:10:28,880 Speaker 1: is it is truly a classic. I think it had 194 00:10:28,920 --> 00:10:31,520 Speaker 1: some poignancy with what was happening in the sixties and 195 00:10:31,640 --> 00:10:35,200 Speaker 1: civil rights and and how there was kind of a 196 00:10:35,280 --> 00:10:37,920 Speaker 1: revolution happening, and I think there were a lot of 197 00:10:37,960 --> 00:10:42,400 Speaker 1: parallels with that where the the whole, our whole society 198 00:10:42,559 --> 00:10:45,440 Speaker 1: was turned inside out by the events of the sixties, 199 00:10:45,440 --> 00:10:47,679 Speaker 1: and I think Night of the Living Dead definitely reflects that. 200 00:10:48,400 --> 00:10:52,679 Speaker 1: I think that in the cynicism I mean that ending 201 00:10:52,840 --> 00:10:59,960 Speaker 1: is just a downer's let's know what, the mister Lobo movie. 202 00:11:00,679 --> 00:11:03,720 Speaker 1: Mister Lobo movie. We're it's very bizarre. I met with 203 00:11:03,760 --> 00:11:07,040 Speaker 1: a cinematographer. We were going to try to make our 204 00:11:07,480 --> 00:11:10,600 Speaker 1: Halloween special a little more special this year. I wrote 205 00:11:10,600 --> 00:11:13,480 Speaker 1: a Werewolves in which is special, and when he read 206 00:11:13,520 --> 00:11:15,760 Speaker 1: the script, he said, you know, I think there's a 207 00:11:15,840 --> 00:11:18,200 Speaker 1: mister Lobo movie in this. What if we just not 208 00:11:18,320 --> 00:11:21,840 Speaker 1: show a movie and just expand this to feature length? 209 00:11:21,920 --> 00:11:23,960 Speaker 1: So that we're going to try and do that this year, 210 00:11:24,000 --> 00:11:26,080 Speaker 1: and I'm very excited about it. And you're showing some 211 00:11:26,120 --> 00:11:28,640 Speaker 1: of your shows are on right cool, aren't they? Oh? Yes, 212 00:11:28,760 --> 00:11:31,480 Speaker 1: I have my own channel. It's called OSI seventy four. 213 00:11:31,600 --> 00:11:34,520 Speaker 1: A lot of a lot of kind of cheesy UHF 214 00:11:34,679 --> 00:11:39,600 Speaker 1: kind of stuff on there, and Cinemon Sami. There's two 215 00:11:39,640 --> 00:11:43,640 Speaker 1: seasons of Cinemon Sanni up there right now, with more 216 00:11:43,679 --> 00:11:48,320 Speaker 1: to come. And so we're just yeah, streaming has been 217 00:11:48,360 --> 00:11:50,439 Speaker 1: good for us. We've got a whole new audience, about 218 00:11:50,440 --> 00:11:54,960 Speaker 1: one hundred and fifty thousand plays a month. So we're 219 00:11:55,000 --> 00:11:58,400 Speaker 1: it's we're excited about the world of streaming because I 220 00:11:58,400 --> 00:12:01,160 Speaker 1: think it's a good way to to find people. Listen 221 00:12:01,200 --> 00:12:04,280 Speaker 1: to more Coast to Coast AM every weeknight at one 222 00:12:04,360 --> 00:12:07,360 Speaker 1: am Eastern, and go to Coast to Coast am dot 223 00:12:07,400 --> 00:12:08,160 Speaker 1: com for more