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 --> 00:00:07,280 Speaker 1: iHeart Radio. Let's talk about the new word content healthcare. 3 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:11,320 Speaker 1: The key is medical professionals and patients sharing their encounters 4 00:00:11,320 --> 00:00:14,319 Speaker 1: with the paranormal. How did you go about finding these people? 5 00:00:15,400 --> 00:00:19,360 Speaker 1: It's not at all that difficult. The folks that I 6 00:00:19,440 --> 00:00:22,400 Speaker 1: do conventions, of course, and give talks and so forth. 7 00:00:22,440 --> 00:00:26,320 Speaker 1: And when people learn that I'm a paramedic, though generally, 8 00:00:26,600 --> 00:00:28,760 Speaker 1: if they have a ghost story, it will segue into 9 00:00:28,800 --> 00:00:32,400 Speaker 1: something that relates to a hospital, Laura a medical experience. 10 00:00:32,400 --> 00:00:38,440 Speaker 1: And I've noticed over the years hospitals and psychiatric facilities 11 00:00:38,479 --> 00:00:40,760 Speaker 1: in the old days, of course they called them insane asylums. 12 00:00:41,040 --> 00:00:43,360 Speaker 1: I seem to happen far more than their their share 13 00:00:43,760 --> 00:00:47,320 Speaker 1: of paranormal activities associated with them. So people would just 14 00:00:47,400 --> 00:00:50,400 Speaker 1: bring me these stories and it continues to happen. Do 15 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:54,440 Speaker 1: you know Sarah Grace Bunny Chance, she's a psychic paramedic. 16 00:00:55,160 --> 00:00:57,560 Speaker 1: She was on the program Monday Night with Us, and 17 00:00:57,800 --> 00:01:00,840 Speaker 1: I've been Sarah, but I don't know her personal If 18 00:01:00,840 --> 00:01:02,959 Speaker 1: she's a paramedic, she's all right. In my book, Yeah, 19 00:01:03,360 --> 00:01:05,840 Speaker 1: it's you know, your first responders are the best. I 20 00:01:05,880 --> 00:01:09,680 Speaker 1: gotta tell you one of my favorite I must sage. 21 00:01:09,680 --> 00:01:11,840 Speaker 1: It's one of my favorite things about America, which is 22 00:01:11,840 --> 00:01:13,200 Speaker 1: my home, and it's been very good to me. I'm 23 00:01:13,240 --> 00:01:16,040 Speaker 1: now a citizen. I'm very proud to do. One is 24 00:01:16,160 --> 00:01:20,560 Speaker 1: that the tradition of volunteerism here in the United States. 25 00:01:21,080 --> 00:01:24,200 Speaker 1: I respect for anybody that works the uniform and serves. 26 00:01:24,240 --> 00:01:27,880 Speaker 1: But it's amazing how many people in these communities are 27 00:01:27,920 --> 00:01:30,880 Speaker 1: willing to do a job, doing something entirely different, and 28 00:01:30,920 --> 00:01:33,200 Speaker 1: then at night they'll go lace up their boots and 29 00:01:33,200 --> 00:01:35,240 Speaker 1: they'll run into a burning building or take care of 30 00:01:35,240 --> 00:01:38,600 Speaker 1: a sick person. So I love that about this country. 31 00:01:38,880 --> 00:01:43,920 Speaker 1: What is your favorite haunted hospital? Probably would have to know, 32 00:01:44,080 --> 00:01:46,320 Speaker 1: not even probably, it would have to be the old 33 00:01:46,360 --> 00:01:50,480 Speaker 1: two Willa Valley Hospital in Utah, right outside Salt Lake. 34 00:01:51,840 --> 00:01:54,880 Speaker 1: It's no longer a hospital, but it has the same structure. 35 00:01:54,920 --> 00:01:57,600 Speaker 1: Of course. It's it's like a Halloween haunted place, now, 36 00:01:57,680 --> 00:02:01,480 Speaker 1: isn't it. It is. It's a full attacked Halloween haunted house. 37 00:02:01,480 --> 00:02:04,600 Speaker 1: So they took this old hospital and the place closed 38 00:02:04,640 --> 00:02:09,680 Speaker 1: down early two thousand and they just left everything when 39 00:02:09,760 --> 00:02:11,880 Speaker 1: they moved out. They didn't take the beds, they didn't 40 00:02:11,919 --> 00:02:14,640 Speaker 1: take the X ray machines. They didn't empty the sharps 41 00:02:14,680 --> 00:02:18,239 Speaker 1: contained which would contain the needle. I mean they left 42 00:02:18,240 --> 00:02:20,960 Speaker 1: pretty much everything in place, And so the people that 43 00:02:21,040 --> 00:02:23,840 Speaker 1: bought it turned it into a combination community center and 44 00:02:23,919 --> 00:02:27,640 Speaker 1: full contact haunted house attraction. Just so happens when people 45 00:02:27,639 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 1: go through on Halloween. Some of them know and some 46 00:02:30,520 --> 00:02:35,280 Speaker 1: of them don't, but the place genuinely is haunted. What 47 00:02:35,440 --> 00:02:39,519 Speaker 1: happened a long time ago to make it so haunted? Well, 48 00:02:39,800 --> 00:02:42,320 Speaker 1: I don't think it's necessarily a long time ago. I 49 00:02:42,320 --> 00:02:46,560 Speaker 1: think most hospitals have their ghosts. Certainly, everyone I've ever 50 00:02:46,600 --> 00:02:49,000 Speaker 1: been in his got a ghost story or two associated 51 00:02:49,040 --> 00:02:53,080 Speaker 1: with it. This one also had, until just a year ago, 52 00:02:53,960 --> 00:02:57,120 Speaker 1: a senior citizen's retirement for Sylvia on the back end 53 00:02:57,160 --> 00:03:01,040 Speaker 1: of it insisted living flash skilled nursing facility. So you 54 00:03:01,120 --> 00:03:03,480 Speaker 1: had people that were living actively in half the building. 55 00:03:03,720 --> 00:03:05,840 Speaker 1: The other half was abandoned, and right next door is 56 00:03:05,880 --> 00:03:10,959 Speaker 1: the town cemetery, which almost sounds too perfect to be true. Yeah, 57 00:03:11,160 --> 00:03:17,320 Speaker 1: that's true. Interesting take. Did you have some stories you 58 00:03:17,320 --> 00:03:20,480 Speaker 1: could share with us about that area? You know? I did. 59 00:03:20,560 --> 00:03:23,600 Speaker 1: I I've in twenty four years of doing this until 60 00:03:23,720 --> 00:03:27,359 Speaker 1: I went to the location is now called Asylum forty nine. 61 00:03:27,680 --> 00:03:30,600 Speaker 1: Until I went there, i'd never seen a full bodied apparition. 62 00:03:30,680 --> 00:03:34,200 Speaker 1: But that is the first and to this point only time, 63 00:03:35,000 --> 00:03:38,160 Speaker 1: I believe at least I've seen one. And I was 64 00:03:38,200 --> 00:03:42,320 Speaker 1: going through the Haunt on Halloween night, which how perfect 65 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:46,120 Speaker 1: could that be? Exactly? And I decided that we were 66 00:03:46,160 --> 00:03:50,000 Speaker 1: going to after midnight, when the customers had left and 67 00:03:50,200 --> 00:03:53,160 Speaker 1: the place closed down. We would be locked in until dawn. 68 00:03:53,600 --> 00:03:56,640 Speaker 1: But before that I wanted to experience what the guests 69 00:03:56,680 --> 00:04:00,160 Speaker 1: the customers experienced, So I went through on my own, 70 00:04:00,720 --> 00:04:04,840 Speaker 1: and you know, even knowing where some of the monsters, 71 00:04:04,880 --> 00:04:07,560 Speaker 1: the zombies and so forth were, I still got more 72 00:04:07,600 --> 00:04:09,280 Speaker 1: than a few scares. I got my heart rates up. 73 00:04:09,320 --> 00:04:13,040 Speaker 1: It's very entertaining. And I saw this little girl dressed 74 00:04:13,320 --> 00:04:15,800 Speaker 1: I would describe her as looking kind of like Goldie Loots, 75 00:04:15,840 --> 00:04:18,800 Speaker 1: you know, or maybe little Red riding a red cape. 76 00:04:18,920 --> 00:04:22,840 Speaker 1: And she was quite happily based on her expression. Pulling 77 00:04:22,880 --> 00:04:25,120 Speaker 1: this lady into one of the side rooms, and I thought, wow, 78 00:04:25,160 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 1: she's awful young to be on the volunteer staff here, 79 00:04:28,440 --> 00:04:31,880 Speaker 1: because the place is staffed by young people that range 80 00:04:31,920 --> 00:04:35,840 Speaker 1: from you know, nine or ten years old, tom in 81 00:04:35,880 --> 00:04:38,719 Speaker 1: their twenties and it's a great place in the community 82 00:04:38,720 --> 00:04:41,440 Speaker 1: for them to go. Anyway, I thought nothing of it 83 00:04:41,480 --> 00:04:43,080 Speaker 1: until I got out at the end and mentioned to 84 00:04:43,080 --> 00:04:46,120 Speaker 1: be older, and I said, hey, guys, you know the 85 00:04:46,120 --> 00:04:49,200 Speaker 1: blonde girl was awfully young, wasn't she. I'm surprised she 86 00:04:49,240 --> 00:04:51,640 Speaker 1: didn't get hurt with Some of the people stampeda see here, 87 00:04:52,080 --> 00:04:54,640 Speaker 1: and they looked at one another and said, we don't 88 00:04:54,640 --> 00:05:00,000 Speaker 1: have anybody that young and old. We think you saw Sarah. 89 00:05:00,240 --> 00:05:04,000 Speaker 1: And they've all seen Sarah, haven't they many of them haven't. 90 00:05:04,040 --> 00:05:06,839 Speaker 1: And it's kind of interesting too. A number of people 91 00:05:06,839 --> 00:05:10,080 Speaker 1: have written and said, as customers going through, they've seen 92 00:05:10,120 --> 00:05:13,440 Speaker 1: the same girl in there. And it seems that when 93 00:05:13,480 --> 00:05:16,560 Speaker 1: the haunt in full swing by Harnt, I mean, the attraction, 94 00:05:17,200 --> 00:05:20,600 Speaker 1: the energy of all those people coming through whose only 95 00:05:20,640 --> 00:05:23,800 Speaker 1: goal is to get scared in a such safe, healthy environment, 96 00:05:24,160 --> 00:05:27,800 Speaker 1: seems to fuel the activity. For eight or nine months 97 00:05:27,839 --> 00:05:30,039 Speaker 1: of the year, the place is not that active. But 98 00:05:30,120 --> 00:05:33,880 Speaker 1: then you get to September, October, November, when the haunted 99 00:05:33,920 --> 00:05:37,560 Speaker 1: in full swing and things just explode. It's terrific. Why 100 00:05:37,560 --> 00:05:42,279 Speaker 1: does it seem, Richard, that children, hauntings or spirits of 101 00:05:42,400 --> 00:05:46,599 Speaker 1: children seem to be the scariest of almost any ghost 102 00:05:46,720 --> 00:05:51,880 Speaker 1: I don't know why, but they just seem strange. Well, 103 00:05:51,920 --> 00:05:55,839 Speaker 1: you know, Hollywood hasn't helped Heather. No, that's true. I 104 00:05:55,960 --> 00:05:58,240 Speaker 1: love a good ghost story as much as anybody else. 105 00:05:58,320 --> 00:06:02,599 Speaker 1: Or don't get me wrong, but Hollywood definitely has kind 106 00:06:02,600 --> 00:06:06,839 Speaker 1: of got the ownership of the creepy child ghost story down. 107 00:06:07,279 --> 00:06:10,280 Speaker 1: Doesn't take that much makeup to make a child scary, 108 00:06:10,400 --> 00:06:12,039 Speaker 1: you know. You watch those kind of movies and you 109 00:06:12,080 --> 00:06:15,880 Speaker 1: see the adult ghosts and summer creepy summer. Not that much, 110 00:06:15,920 --> 00:06:18,880 Speaker 1: but there's something about the kids, the way they move, 111 00:06:19,040 --> 00:06:21,719 Speaker 1: the way that they are that you're absolutely right. And 112 00:06:21,720 --> 00:06:24,919 Speaker 1: I think that as a paranormal investigator, you hear stories 113 00:06:24,960 --> 00:06:29,359 Speaker 1: of children who seem to be haunting a place and 114 00:06:29,480 --> 00:06:33,960 Speaker 1: you're instantly just kind of on edge, you are, And 115 00:06:34,000 --> 00:06:36,520 Speaker 1: then you know the saying Hollywood knows how to play 116 00:06:36,560 --> 00:06:38,760 Speaker 1: it up too, with the right kind of music and 117 00:06:38,839 --> 00:06:43,040 Speaker 1: the sounds, you know, you know, just you know, no, 118 00:06:44,240 --> 00:06:47,880 Speaker 1: I mean, it's just creepy, isn't it. Well that's their job. 119 00:06:47,920 --> 00:06:50,360 Speaker 1: I mean, why pay good money to go see that 120 00:06:50,440 --> 00:06:52,360 Speaker 1: kind of movie if you're not going to be entertained 121 00:06:52,400 --> 00:06:57,200 Speaker 1: and scared well, that's true. Who would you say has 122 00:06:57,320 --> 00:07:02,640 Speaker 1: the more of the paranormal experience the nurses, doctors, the paramedics, 123 00:07:02,680 --> 00:07:07,120 Speaker 1: the patients who comes across them more, hands down the nurses, 124 00:07:07,400 --> 00:07:11,600 Speaker 1: no question at all. I think it's because number one, 125 00:07:11,720 --> 00:07:15,480 Speaker 1: nurses have more prolonged patient care doctors, And of course 126 00:07:15,680 --> 00:07:18,520 Speaker 1: I have nothing but total respect for both professions. But 127 00:07:18,680 --> 00:07:21,600 Speaker 1: doctors are kind of very busy. They're bustling around, you know, 128 00:07:21,680 --> 00:07:23,920 Speaker 1: seeing a whole other patients. They're in, they're out, They're 129 00:07:23,920 --> 00:07:27,200 Speaker 1: in there and out. They can be nurses, although they 130 00:07:27,240 --> 00:07:30,080 Speaker 1: do also have quite the loads on their plates deal with. 131 00:07:30,800 --> 00:07:34,120 Speaker 1: Nurses are more likely to spend extended time with individuals, 132 00:07:34,160 --> 00:07:36,680 Speaker 1: and I think they form attachments, They become fond of 133 00:07:36,720 --> 00:07:39,480 Speaker 1: their patients, and I think that plays a role in it. 134 00:07:39,560 --> 00:07:42,720 Speaker 1: But yeah, by father, nurses by an order of magnitude. 135 00:07:42,760 --> 00:07:44,880 Speaker 1: I would say, George, what did some of the nurses 136 00:07:44,960 --> 00:07:49,160 Speaker 1: tell you about some of their experiences? Well, a surprisingly 137 00:07:49,200 --> 00:07:51,600 Speaker 1: common one, because I like to look at the commonalities. 138 00:07:51,840 --> 00:07:54,360 Speaker 1: A surprisingly common one would be that when a patient 139 00:07:54,520 --> 00:07:59,320 Speaker 1: passed away in a specific room, let's say, specific hospital room, 140 00:07:59,600 --> 00:08:02,760 Speaker 1: after would they would hear the coal button being pressed, 141 00:08:02,840 --> 00:08:05,160 Speaker 1: or they would they would hear the sound of footsteps 142 00:08:05,200 --> 00:08:07,680 Speaker 1: moving around in there when they knew beyond all shadow 143 00:08:07,720 --> 00:08:10,280 Speaker 1: of a doubt that this room was empty. And I 144 00:08:10,320 --> 00:08:12,080 Speaker 1: talked to one nurse who they had a room that 145 00:08:12,120 --> 00:08:14,920 Speaker 1: had a reputation for it always at a certain time 146 00:08:14,960 --> 00:08:17,240 Speaker 1: of the morning, usually two o'clock in the morning. They 147 00:08:17,280 --> 00:08:20,680 Speaker 1: would dread getting the help button pressed from a room 148 00:08:20,800 --> 00:08:23,440 Speaker 1: everyone knew was empty, and the nurses would only go 149 00:08:23,520 --> 00:08:25,160 Speaker 1: in cares to go check on the room, and you 150 00:08:25,280 --> 00:08:27,840 Speaker 1: set the coal button. And this was, of course, after 151 00:08:27,880 --> 00:08:31,480 Speaker 1: the electricians had checked the wiring and replaced the components 152 00:08:31,480 --> 00:08:34,240 Speaker 1: and declared that there was nothing wrong with the alarm system. 153 00:08:35,000 --> 00:08:37,559 Speaker 1: Did you ever have any nurses, Richard, to tell you 154 00:08:37,600 --> 00:08:41,720 Speaker 1: that they were petrified scared by some of these things? 155 00:08:41,720 --> 00:08:44,440 Speaker 1: Not too many. And I think it's because nurses are 156 00:08:44,760 --> 00:08:46,760 Speaker 1: in order to do that job, you have to have 157 00:08:46,920 --> 00:08:48,560 Speaker 1: quiet the spider, you know, you have to have the 158 00:08:48,600 --> 00:08:53,720 Speaker 1: backbone you do. I mean, it's a job that takes 159 00:08:53,720 --> 00:08:56,120 Speaker 1: a toll on you as a as a human being. 160 00:08:56,200 --> 00:08:59,319 Speaker 1: So they're professional. There's some of my favorite people in 161 00:08:59,360 --> 00:09:03,319 Speaker 1: the world, and so I almost would rather get on 162 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:07,839 Speaker 1: the bad side of a spirit than I wouldn't nurse well, 163 00:09:07,840 --> 00:09:10,600 Speaker 1: I'd like you say, nurses are there all the time. 164 00:09:12,400 --> 00:09:15,640 Speaker 1: They are. They are the NCOs, aren't they of the 165 00:09:15,720 --> 00:09:18,520 Speaker 1: medical world? And they really no disrespect to doctors, but 166 00:09:18,559 --> 00:09:21,520 Speaker 1: they really make things happen. Did they ever talk about 167 00:09:21,600 --> 00:09:25,400 Speaker 1: witnessing somebody dying and then maybe seeing the ectoplasm leave 168 00:09:25,520 --> 00:09:28,400 Speaker 1: or anything like that. You know a number of nurses 169 00:09:28,440 --> 00:09:30,560 Speaker 1: talk to me about the fact that they've seen some 170 00:09:30,640 --> 00:09:34,400 Speaker 1: kind of light leaving the human body after death, and 171 00:09:34,480 --> 00:09:37,960 Speaker 1: it's something that they would talk about amongst themselves or 172 00:09:37,960 --> 00:09:42,200 Speaker 1: at least amongst colleagues that they trusted, which was not everybody, 173 00:09:43,000 --> 00:09:46,200 Speaker 1: but they often describe seeing a light, kind of globe 174 00:09:46,200 --> 00:09:48,920 Speaker 1: of light who seemed to leave the body, I rise 175 00:09:49,040 --> 00:09:51,720 Speaker 1: upwards and then disappear. I encountered that a number of 176 00:09:51,760 --> 00:09:57,360 Speaker 1: times interviewing nurses. Why are hospitals and asylums seemingly the 177 00:09:57,480 --> 00:10:02,600 Speaker 1: most haunted. My theory on that is that if you 178 00:10:02,640 --> 00:10:06,480 Speaker 1: look at what causes a haunting, generally speaking, obviously it's 179 00:10:06,520 --> 00:10:10,560 Speaker 1: all down to energy, isn't it, George, And you tend 180 00:10:10,559 --> 00:10:16,880 Speaker 1: to find very positive and very negative emotions are predominant 181 00:10:16,880 --> 00:10:19,199 Speaker 1: in places where you get haunting. So if you look 182 00:10:19,240 --> 00:10:21,800 Speaker 1: at what a hospital is it is all of human life, 183 00:10:22,200 --> 00:10:25,600 Speaker 1: all of human drama, played out on a very small stage. 184 00:10:25,920 --> 00:10:29,800 Speaker 1: In other words, you have people dying, whether it's in 185 00:10:29,800 --> 00:10:32,320 Speaker 1: the emergency room or up on the floor. You have 186 00:10:32,520 --> 00:10:35,679 Speaker 1: new babies being born, new families being made. You know, 187 00:10:35,720 --> 00:10:38,200 Speaker 1: you have people being given the best and the worst news. 188 00:10:38,559 --> 00:10:41,680 Speaker 1: You have happiness, sadness, all at the same time, the 189 00:10:41,880 --> 00:10:45,040 Speaker 1: entire gamut. And if you look at the amount of 190 00:10:45,160 --> 00:10:49,120 Speaker 1: energy emotionally speaking, that that must create, you know, I 191 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:52,199 Speaker 1: believe that that leaves a star, a psychic scarf, or 192 00:10:52,240 --> 00:10:53,760 Speaker 1: want of a better term. I'm sure there is a 193 00:10:53,760 --> 00:10:57,800 Speaker 1: better term, but certainly a residue which is reflected in 194 00:10:57,840 --> 00:11:01,040 Speaker 1: the paranormal activity people experience after wards. And you know, 195 00:11:01,200 --> 00:11:05,280 Speaker 1: something else that I found very encouraging was that medicine 196 00:11:05,320 --> 00:11:09,319 Speaker 1: in general, but especially nursing, is it's a it's a calling. 197 00:11:09,760 --> 00:11:12,240 Speaker 1: You won't hear that. Many nurses refer to it as 198 00:11:12,280 --> 00:11:15,120 Speaker 1: a job. You know, they feel that they were called 199 00:11:15,160 --> 00:11:19,040 Speaker 1: to do this. And I ran into quite a lot 200 00:11:19,120 --> 00:11:21,959 Speaker 1: of accounts of phantom nurses, nurses that appeared to be 201 00:11:22,440 --> 00:11:25,800 Speaker 1: still doing the job long after they passed on. They're 202 00:11:25,840 --> 00:11:29,920 Speaker 1: still hanging around the hospital well or dropping back in. 203 00:11:31,040 --> 00:11:34,520 Speaker 1: I'm not sure we've got this this conception, don't we 204 00:11:34,600 --> 00:11:37,640 Speaker 1: that that spirits just hang around waiting for something to happen. 205 00:11:37,720 --> 00:11:40,280 Speaker 1: I think I suspect some of them come and go 206 00:11:40,840 --> 00:11:43,400 Speaker 1: that they're not, you know, in residence all the time, 207 00:11:44,080 --> 00:11:47,520 Speaker 1: that they might go wherever it is, that whatever awaits 208 00:11:47,559 --> 00:11:49,559 Speaker 1: us after this life, and then drop on back when 209 00:11:49,559 --> 00:11:52,280 Speaker 1: it suits them. There was a good example in a 210 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:55,520 Speaker 1: historic London hospital, for example, of a nurse who very 211 00:11:55,520 --> 00:11:58,400 Speaker 1: tragic story. She had been in charge of her own 212 00:11:58,440 --> 00:12:02,600 Speaker 1: fiance and had accidentally overdosed him morphine and he died. 213 00:12:03,720 --> 00:12:08,000 Speaker 1: And you're sure it was accidental, right, They're absolutely sure, 214 00:12:08,000 --> 00:12:12,280 Speaker 1: because she was heartbroken and destroyed her emotionally speaking. And 215 00:12:12,800 --> 00:12:15,400 Speaker 1: after her death she would come back. And what's interesting 216 00:12:15,480 --> 00:12:19,080 Speaker 1: is nurses would say she was only ever seen when 217 00:12:19,320 --> 00:12:22,880 Speaker 1: pain medications were about to be administered, almost as if 218 00:12:22,880 --> 00:12:25,440 Speaker 1: there was a warning, you know, hey, make sure you 219 00:12:25,520 --> 00:12:29,000 Speaker 1: double check correct dose of this medication. Don't let what 220 00:12:29,120 --> 00:12:32,160 Speaker 1: happened to me, don't make the same mistake. I mean, 221 00:12:33,080 --> 00:12:35,240 Speaker 1: but they all have a sense of beauty, is what 222 00:12:35,280 --> 00:12:37,760 Speaker 1: I've seen with nurses, George, and I love the fact 223 00:12:37,840 --> 00:12:41,200 Speaker 1: that they see that seems to apply after they leave 224 00:12:41,240 --> 00:12:44,280 Speaker 1: the physical party. Listen to more Coast to Coast Am 225 00:12:44,400 --> 00:12:47,840 Speaker 1: every weeknight at one am Eastern, and go to Coast 226 00:12:47,880 --> 00:12:49,680 Speaker 1: to Coast am dot com for more