The conversation takes a deeper turn as it explores broader societal issues such as homelessness and the economic pressures many face today. Listen as the hosts candidly discuss the moral dimensions of charity and support, providing a multi-faceted view of what it means to give and serve in various capacities. Whether you’re considering starting a business or interested in social issues, this episode offers thought-provoking perspectives and practical advice that resonate with a wide array of listeners.
SPEAKER 03 :
I can’t hide myself I don’t expect you to understand I just hope I can explain What it’s like to be
SPEAKER 01 :
Welcome to A Guy’s Perspective, where they discuss real-life topics that men today are dealing with, whether married, single parent, or just single. We invite you to call in to this live program with your comments and questions. And here they are.
SPEAKER 07 :
How’s it going, everybody? This is A Guy’s Perspective at 2 o’clock, and we’re on KLZ 560. Again, you can reach out and talk to the guys at 303- 403-477-5600. Again, that’s 303-477-5600. We also want to take time to thank the upper room. If y’all are ever looking for a church, just remember the upper room is available. One other thing, we’re missing two of our gentlemen today. One’s working and he’s at work today. And Andre, just everybody, you know, keep them in prayer. yeah just lift him up and his family they’re going through some uh some hard times so yeah so so just you know a lot of time of prayer for him um so we’re going to switch up the show i know we were going to do a part two on what we talked about last week but since two of our guys isn’t here we’re going to switch it up to business today and one of our business owners are in the house with us and um we’re going to ask he some questions and we’re going to learn a little bit about his business and if y’all ever need some windshield um work done some um a replaced windshield or a cracked windshield give them a call tell them tell them a little bit about yourself
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, absolutely. Hey, go ahead and don’t even pull your punches, man, and ask the questions, the hard ones. I’ve been at this game for a long time. It’s been 26 years.
SPEAKER 07 :
Yeah, I wish I would have took your advice. That you gave me a while ago about fixing the crack in my windshield, because now I have a complete crack going all the way across, and it’s blocking my vision.
SPEAKER 06 :
Went from a tiny chip to a full crack.
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, let’s ask you this.
SPEAKER 06 :
Do you work with the insurance companies to cover a windshield? You know what’s funny is, I mean, there’s a big, big story about that whole thing with insurance, but… Now that we’re starting to do windshield replacements or have been doing it for the past year, we do accept insurance claims for the windshield replacements. Not for repair, though.
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, I’m starting not to trust insurance companies at all. Oh, boy. I mean, I have… That’s dirty. Write about your own business. No, I’m not talking about your company. I’m talking about insurance companies.
SPEAKER 06 :
Well, yeah, absolutely.
SPEAKER 07 :
Because I have insurance for my house, right, to cover miscellaneousness. Like real small stuff, right? So we got people who are breaking into our… our mailboxes at our our apartment complexes right so they they’re charging everybody that lives there to rebuild the mailbox right when we have insurance for that they told us it’s a thousand dollar deductible and ours was a 500 bill but you’re gonna beat the progress you’re gonna beat the progress some one way or the other so they don’t have to pay out Oh, yeah. Well, I mean, that’s kind of how insurance companies work.
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, when you got the money, man, you make all the rules.
SPEAKER 07 :
That’s a true statement.
SPEAKER 06 :
The funny thing would be it’s about a mailbox. Did they mail you a letter telling you you owe $1,000? Or did they actually give you a phone call?
SPEAKER 07 :
So what’s the best part about having your own business?
SPEAKER 06 :
Oh, man, man. I came up with a saying. It is, I’d rather be self-employed than employed, and I’d rather be employed than be an employer. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Because when you’re an employer, you’ve got a lot of people to worry about. Right. You take on the woes and the worries and things of your employees or your contractors and such.
SPEAKER 07 :
And how long have you been in business?
SPEAKER 06 :
26 years. Wow. Yeah. I was doing windshield repairs since 1996 when I got out of high school with my stepfather. He had Novus windshield repairs since 1970, and he still wore bell bottoms every day when he fixed the windshields. Wow. Yeah.
SPEAKER 07 :
So what do you think, can you recall back to a time where your hardest windshield to fix, like maybe you were working on a windshield and something went bad and…
SPEAKER 06 :
Wow. Yeah. Funny thing. Funny thing was like Bob would like throw you right to the wolves, man, for the for the windshield repairs and stuff. So everything was, well, give that a try and take a crack at it. And so and so one, I remember my brother in law at the time, man, we pulled a. What was it? The antenna down on a car, on his car, and it snapped the windshield, man. It created this thing called a pressure ring, and it made about six rings. And Bob was like, well, that’s stupid. Why don’t you fix that now that you’ve got the skills? And we spent like two hours just trying to fix that thing, man.
SPEAKER 07 :
Wow. Just from the antenna of the car?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, so there’s a ball on the end of the antenna, and when it hit the windshield, then it created like Saturn. Wow. Yeah, it was all this pressuring. And so that’s one type of brake that you can fix is you’ve got your standard chip, which people think is something that has the potential of cracking, but that’s just a surface chip. They’re usually white, and they’re all right. But if you have like a stone break, then that has potential of cracking. So if it’s got black or darkness in it, this has air in it and it can crack.
SPEAKER 07 :
But usually when the rock hits your windshield, you should pretty much know if it’s going to cause a crack throughout the windshield. Usually if it’s loud enough.
SPEAKER 06 :
I mean, once you understand what is capable of cracking, yes.
SPEAKER 07 :
Because any one of those chips will eventually cause your windshield to crack.
SPEAKER 06 :
Especially in Colorado. Hot and cold temp changes. And as I stated, the darker blackness in a brake is air. It’s kind of like mirror looking or dark or black. And it’s a pocket of air that expands and contracts. So think of a hot day and you wash your car. It’s going to crack.
SPEAKER 07 :
think of a cold freezing day and you turn your defrost on it’s going to crack yeah that’s exactly what happened to my windshield it turned cold and i my crack began to form yeah so so would you say you cover all of the denver metro area like where do you not do work at in colorado
SPEAKER 06 :
We do work all the way down in Colorado Springs. I’ve got a guy down there, Milko, and we have several accounts that we handle down there. And then up here in Denver, we go everywhere from Castle Rock all the way north to Longmont, as far east as Bennett, and we’ll go up to Lake Vail.
SPEAKER 07 :
Really? You go all the way to Vail, huh?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, we cover a big distance.
SPEAKER 07 :
What if somebody from Rifle calls you up and says, hey, man, I need y’all to come up here and fix my windshield.
SPEAKER 06 :
And it’s just one windshield. You know what’s funny? You know what’s funny is my wife and I take Mondays off. So what I typically do is if somebody does arm wrestle me for getting their windshield fixed and they’re really far away, we like going for drives. So I make it worth it. So I’ll tell them, yeah, you know, it’s $150 or something like that, and I’ll be there tomorrow. And me and my wife will go have a drive, and we’ll have a good time. And, you know, the fuel is paid for. Gotcha.
SPEAKER 07 :
Yeah, and that price beats, you know, installing a brand-new windshield.
SPEAKER 06 :
Absolutely.
SPEAKER 07 :
I mean, I need an OEM for my Lexus, and they want like $600 or $700.
SPEAKER 06 :
$600 or $700? Which is probably right. Yeah, absolutely, because yours has ADAS, Advanced Driver’s Assistance System, and that’s a camera that’s inside. It’s technology to keep you from running into things, and so it has to be recalibrated.
SPEAKER 07 :
Oh, all those have to too, right?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah.
SPEAKER 07 :
So are windshields just continually getting more expensive with the way cars and vehicles are just continually being upgraded?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yes, absolutely.
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, so which is the most expensive? The windshield, the back window, or the sides?
SPEAKER 06 :
Tell me you haven’t locked your keys in your car one time. Oh, my goodness. And which window do you break? Which one? It’s always going to be like that. The smallest one?
SPEAKER 01 :
Yes, the smaller one. The smallest one, right? That little triangle one? Yes.
SPEAKER 06 :
That’s the most expensive one. It is? It is? Yeah. why in a lot of cases because it’s because you got to think of it what breaks more often windshields right so windshields are um you know more uh it’s supply and demand gotcha so when you break that little tiny one on like the side corner of your prius or something oh yeah you’re gonna get got for that one man yeah really probably because they have to take off a lot of stuff like your paneling or something Well, there’s, yeah, and I’m only learning about install. Braden, your nephew, is actually, he’s my installer for Clearview Venture Repair. So he knows more than me, and I’m learning. But, yes, there’s the taking apart part of the vehicle in order to pull the glass. But because that glass doesn’t get broke often, except for when somebody wants to break into your car. So do you do a good job with the IRS?
SPEAKER 07 :
Because you probably have to pay your own taxes, right? Oh, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER 06 :
People have to pay their taxes. Why are you bringing that up on national… Maybe he owes you taxes. You wouldn’t be wrong.
SPEAKER 07 :
That’s some funny stuff right there, man. I brought it up because I thought about owning my own business. And then I thought, man, I don’t think I can save the money to pay the IRS. Well, what business are you trying to start? You know, plumbing. Plunger. Oh, you’re trying to plunge people’s toilets all day long?
SPEAKER 06 :
Man, there you go.
SPEAKER 07 :
Hey, I’m telling you what kind of business he ought to start since he’s talking plunging. You know those little outhouses out there and they got the trucks going by sucking all that crap out? That’s just… Dude, I actually seen the… I’m telling you, man. What’s that show on TV about the dirtiest jobs, right? The dirtiest jobs, yeah. That’s got to be one of them. Yeah, so they had the guy go into the tank where all the… Sludge. The sludges. It was rough, bro. It’s so nasty. I’m on the job site, and those dudes come rolling up, and they’re sucking those toilets out. I mean, you could smell that stuff down the road.
SPEAKER 04 :
Lunch is done.
SPEAKER 07 :
Lunch is done. You’re evacuating the area. It’s bad.
SPEAKER 06 :
So then to your question, Brian, yeah, the reason why, first of all, before you go into business, you got to think which type of business do you want to do? You want to deal with that crack or crack windshields? I made that decision earlier. That’s the truth right there. I’m telling you. No, the thing that a lot of people don’t understand is that we get taxed harder when we are employed. than we do when we are self-employed because everything becomes write-offs. Everything becomes tax-advantaged opportunities. So you get to write a lot of stuff off. Tax write-offs, tax shelters, yeah. So I make about $150 a year, but I really only make about $50 a year because what Clearview pays me, Actually goes to pay my car payment, my cell phone, my Internet, my everything. Gotcha. That’s how you do it. And you’re able to write everything off. And there are – obviously there’s parameters and there’s things that are legitimate, legitimate write-offs and stuff. But, you know, you don’t want to tango with the IRS and do things that are wrong. So you need to be on the up and up.
SPEAKER 07 :
No, I was just talking about the money you need to save to put aside.
SPEAKER 06 :
Well, look at here. Okay, so we’re all paying a fifth of what we owe here, right, for the radio show. Right. So that’s $200 a month to me. But do you think that comes out of Heath’s money or do you think that comes out of Clearview’s money? This is marketing. This is advertisement and marketing to me.
SPEAKER 07 :
Oh, so I could write this off myself. If you start that crack business. And if anybody wants to chime in about business and ask Keith a question about windshields, give us a call at 303-477-5600. Wow, we’re already 15 minutes into talking about windshields.
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah. I’m writing a book. Really? You are. Tell us about it.
SPEAKER 07 :
Tell us. Man, now we got an Arthur. A business owner and Arthur. Yeah. I’m like, really? Come on.
SPEAKER 06 :
So this is the reason why it is. It’s great to be an entrepreneur because what happens is you start to see all these endeavors and avenues that you can, you can find ways to either monetize or capitalize on and stuff like this. So yeah, I’m certainly, I’m capitalistic, not capital, like a, capital pig you know what i mean like right like where i’m just a hog and i’m tearing through america and getting money wherever i can which probably isn’t a bad thing though to get money wherever you can get it i mean you know what i’m saying i mean okay yeah yeah i’m trying to take your money i mean might as well get a little bit where you can i want to be i want to be the sleepy pig I want to be the sleepy pig. Oh, you want to be the one that’s just… No, like I’ve empowered and employed and lifted up others. Oh, okay. But I still take a piece of what they do.
SPEAKER 07 :
I thought you meant the one that just ate first and then crashed out to sleep. That’s a good way to look at it, man.
SPEAKER 04 :
Yes, yes.
SPEAKER 07 :
So has this book been in progress for a while?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, tell us about it. Yeah, I started writing it last year, so it’s probably been about eight months. And then I needed to get somebody who could be an editor for me. And my friend Mike Mraz down in the Springs, he’s really good with words and he’s very analytical. And so he looked my book over and he sent it back, checked it up just like a – a teacher would with your grades you know where you cross that out and you need a comma here and everything so um so i’m in the process of finalizing that and then i’ll i’ll go to print i might go to amazon prime because it just uh there’s amazon direct publishing well okay so tell our listeners a little bit about you um so you’re a business owner you’re an actor yeah
SPEAKER 07 :
You’re on the radio. Yeah. You’re in the process of remodeling your new house and all the property you brought. Yeah. You bought, actually. You didn’t bring it today, but you bought it. So tell us, what’s the hardest thing to do to juggle in your life, being a business owner? Wow.
SPEAKER 06 :
Um, you do have to be a master scheduler. Okay. So you think scheduling is the toughest thing? Yeah. Yeah. Which, which ends up being like, you know, you have integrity and honesty and a lot of these virtues of like, when you say you’re going to be somewhere, you be there. Right. I mean, right. Here’s the, here’s the fact.
SPEAKER 07 :
Like I’m feeling in that in life. I tell people I’m going to be here and be there, and I never show up. You’re here at the show every week. I call people and tell them I’m tired. But, I mean, I’m serious. I’m not lying to people when I tell them this stuff.
SPEAKER 06 :
But that’s one of the leading things, man. 50% of the job is just showing up.
SPEAKER 07 :
Right, right. Because I think in order to be great at something, you just have to… Have to excel?
SPEAKER 06 :
Yes. Not necessarily.
SPEAKER 07 :
No, no, no. I was going to say, in order to be great at something, you just have to apply the best ability you have.
SPEAKER 06 :
Yes. You have to show up your 100%.
SPEAKER 07 :
Right. Whether anybody else does or doesn’t.
SPEAKER 06 :
Because when you do show up, you’re 100 percent. That means you’re open minded. That means you’re ready and willing. And that person is the one that gets fed and grows and becomes that fat pig.
SPEAKER 07 :
So I guess the early bird does get the worm. The early bird does get the worm. So. Juggling your business and all these other things you have in life, do you find it difficult to be a business owner while you’ve got so much on your plate?
SPEAKER 06 :
You know, sometimes, like a Monday, when I take Monday off with my wife, it’s been made clear to her that, yes, I still have to answer the phones at this juncture. I still have to answer the phones via text and set up jobs for my guys to keep working. Thus, we end up making money. Gotcha. They make money. I make money. Win, win, win. And the customer gets served. So it’s it’s agreed upon that on Monday, I’m still answering these things, though I try to make it as discreet as possible and not as much of a nuisance as possible. But you do you have to put the job first, the business first. But as an actor, when I’m out in like Grand Junction filming with Hank Braxton. Dude, I’m out there making $100 or $200 a day as an actor, but I’m still answering calls and getting business handled here remotely. So do you fix more cracks than… Replacing windshields up until. Yeah. Up until eight months ago, it was all crack repair, chip repair, crack repair.
SPEAKER 07 :
No, I’m saying you get more calls now. Do you think people just, you know, they’re too busy in life, you know, with their job, with their kids, and they just let these cracks go and go for weeks on end before, you know, the cracks become too big to repair. So now they have to get a whole new windshield.
SPEAKER 06 :
Um, yeah, I, the thing is like, well, I’m sorry, I missed the question.
SPEAKER 07 :
Do you think you’re getting more calls for, to replace windshields instead of fixing cracks because people let the crack go for too long?
SPEAKER 06 :
Here’s what’s funny. There’s something called reticular activation, and that is when you have this bottle of water, this arrowhead, then you start seeing everybody else with bottles of water or a vehicle that you didn’t have, and then you see that vehicle on the road. You know what I’m talking about? Right. You got your Chevy, and then you start seeing it. So reticular activation or manifestation is… I never realized the amount of windshield replacements that were on the table because I wasn’t serving that market niche. And when I opened it up, just like floodgates, man, they just started rolling in. So I was getting more replacements on average, like five to 10 calls a day that would convert to a customer. Well, I’d convert like 50% of them to a customer.
SPEAKER 07 :
So what’s the number one way you get customers?
SPEAKER 06 :
Oh, man, I was hoping it’d be radio here.
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, you’re new on the radio. We’ve only been here two months.
SPEAKER 06 :
Right, this is true.
SPEAKER 07 :
As time progresses forward, that’s going to change.
SPEAKER 06 :
But as of now, what’s… The leader in all of it is Google Maps. Really? Yeah, it’s fast and simple. It’s free. You just have to do things like ask for reviews. You have to respond quickly. Remember that response time is imperative. the analytics of Google pick up on your response time. And the only bad publicity is no publicity. So even if somebody says that they didn’t like your service or something like that, respond in a kind manner and address that issue because when people read your Google review, they’ll see your character shine through.
SPEAKER 07 :
Oh, wow. Have you ever had anybody give you a bad review? No.
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, I sent them people packing. Actually, no, no, no, no. I sent them people to Safe Flight. Yeah, I sent them to Safe Flight sales. Yeah, forget all that. Here’s a Safe Flight card. They’ll take care of you. Right. Because you don’t want to deal with that. Okay, so back to Brian. Why it’s imperative, why I think it’s much better to be self-employed is, yes, you trade from having one employer to having many employers. Everybody that I serve is my employer, technically.
SPEAKER 02 :
Right.
SPEAKER 06 :
If you’re going to pay me, you’re my employer. Oh, yeah. But what is beautiful is you get this confidence about yourself being a business owner where you just won’t put up with people treating you like trash. You’re like, thank you, see you, have a good day. You’re not my customer. Move on.
SPEAKER 07 :
You know how you hear people say that when you’re a business owner? Because I’m not a business owner.
SPEAKER 06 :
No. I mean, we’re trying.
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, technically, I am now.
SPEAKER 06 :
Guy’s perspective is business.
SPEAKER 07 :
Yes. But do you know how you hear the phrase that as a business owner, you’ve got to work harder in your business than you would working for somebody else? Is that true? Or does an employee work harder for that person?
SPEAKER 06 :
I’ll tell you who will succeed, man. If you’re pulling 40-hour work weeks somewhere, if you did that in any endeavor, you’ll succeed.
SPEAKER 07 :
You’re looking for a job if you – If you needed a job today, if you spent 40 hours looking for a job, you’re going to find one. I hope all our listeners heard that at 303-477-5600. We’re talking about business. If you want to call in and talk with the guys about business, do. But you just heard them say that if you’re unemployed, throw 40 hours in of applications, you’ll probably get a job. No, you will.
SPEAKER 06 :
Most definitely.
SPEAKER 07 :
You fill out 10, 15 applications a day, you’ll get a job. You’ll get a job. Yeah. Somewhere, or start your own business, you’ll do something.
SPEAKER 06 :
Yeah, and not to bash the homeless, but I mean, because I used to be very philanthropic here, pat myself on the back. I’m not giving a homeless person no money. It ain’t happening. But here’s the thing. I’ve seen so many homeless people put in work, put in hours. Now, they probably wouldn’t put in them hours if they weren’t getting paid. Well, no, no, no. You’re making a good point. Tax-free, baby. They’re working on the corner. That is a job. Yeah. It’s a job. And so that’s the thing is like my question to that is how can you call that freedom if you’re actually bound to that anyway?
SPEAKER 07 :
Well, that’s good you brought up the whole homeless thing. I don’t know how we’re going down that road. But when’s the last time you gave a homeless person some money?
SPEAKER 06 :
Oh, man. Well, I’ll answer that. It’s been a good 10 years or so. Yesterday. Yesterday?
SPEAKER 07 :
Yeah, man. I have sympathy for them. I could be in their same situation. Well, first I look at them and I say, I read their sign, right? If they say anything about God bless, you’ll get my money. You got God on your, you know.
SPEAKER 06 :
It could be a manipulation.
SPEAKER 07 :
Oh, for sure. Because they’re feeding on people like that.
SPEAKER 06 :
Wait, you love rap, right, Bri? Yeah. What if they were like, bless Tupac, man. Tupac is great. You’re going to give him a 20.
SPEAKER 07 :
Okay, so it’s crazy because I never give homeless people money, right? This was probably six months ago. I walk out of 7-Eleven, and there’s some dude there. He’s like, hey, man, do you got any change? And I’m like… I’m like, listen, man, I really don’t give people money. But I’m like, you know what? Like Brian’s words came to me like, oh, you don’t know their situation. I turned around and give the guy. So I’m like, OK, I got like two dollars change. I was going to wash my work clothes. I’m like, here you go. And the guy was like, oh, now I can go buy a joint. I was like this fool. I turn around and give him some money. And he talked about buying drugs. And that is the reason why I don’t give no homeless mug, no money. So you just got confirmation. I don’t care if you got your. Your kid’s on the corner. I don’t care if you got God bless you on the corner. You ain’t getting no money. Period. I think you can tell.
SPEAKER 06 :
No, you can’t. No, you can’t. No, you can’t.
SPEAKER 07 :
Look at their clothes. Look at their shoes. No, granted. You can probably see their situation.
SPEAKER 06 :
Granted, I do think it’s good when any of us are moved in the Holy Spirit to give something that you go ahead and do so, right? And your left hand doesn’t know what your right hand is doing, and so you don’t hold yourself accountable. But when I was listening to Dave Ramsey, what I came to the conclusion of is that I’m just enabling them. Therefore, I’m actually…
SPEAKER 07 :
hurting them i’m leaving them right where they are so there are so many there are so many programs that are there to help them right and why is it that every homeless person when you’re like hey i’ll get you some grub let’s go to mcdonald’s they’re like nah forget you man give me the cash right now like give me the cash you know what i’m saying it’s always like it’s always the same response it’s universal and where do they get the cardboards from that’s got to be government issued man But, yeah, I mean, you’ve been in this situation for so long, you become accustomed to it. It’s like anything in your life, bro. Like, you know, at home, you become accustomed to the same job, this, that, the other. So if you’re living on the streets for 10 years, you become accustomed to that. Do you really think they get accustomed to being on the corner? It gets cold in Colorado. There’s been some negative 10 nights, and you can’t tell me they get accustomed to negative 10 outside. I’m saying living out on the streets.
SPEAKER 06 :
But here’s the thing, though, man. Here’s the thing, though. There’s people who have either, A, come up and out of homelessness and into great wealth, or, B, there are people who have found the hustle right there in the dirt.
SPEAKER 07 :
They found the hustle.
SPEAKER 06 :
They’re selling those signs to somebody. Oh, I’m telling you.
SPEAKER 07 :
I’m telling you, man. i remember watching the oprah winfrey show when it was on right and so they were going around helping homeless people so they they did a test and gave this guy like 200 you know i was reading i read about all this wait so he ended up in a hotel but instead of sleeping on the bed he slept on the floor because he’d been on the floor for so long what do you guys think the number one reason for people homeless
SPEAKER 06 :
I think addiction is one of the leaders, man. Oh, for sure. Alcohol, drug addiction. For sure. What about mental illness? PTSD, mental illness, and the like. Yeah, for sure. Yeah. Now, some people claim there’s just some freedom. We only got like two minutes.
SPEAKER 07 :
Um, yeah, I, I, that’s a deep topic. I can’t believe we, we transitioned to that talk, but I’m just, for me, I’m sorry. If you’re on the corner, if you’re Jose out there washing windows, dude, you’re not washing my car window. You’re not getting no cash.
SPEAKER 04 :
Any of them.
SPEAKER 07 :
No, indeed not. Maybe I just took my car.
SPEAKER 04 :
I just turned around and took my car to the… No, no, no.
SPEAKER 07 :
I just took my car to the car wash and they tried washing my windshield. They ain’t getting no more cash. They’re trying to work.
SPEAKER 03 :
No, that is not working.
SPEAKER 07 :
At least they’re trying to do something for some money. No. What they’re trying to do is hustle me out of my windshield.
SPEAKER 06 :
Hey, they could give out Clearview windshield repair cards. Capitalists.
SPEAKER 07 :
I’m just saying, for me, I don’t give any homeless people no money. I don’t care if you got… You don’t give your friends money. Yeah, well, you’re right. Because my friends ought to be self-sufficient. You know what I’m saying? But this is the thing. What I’m saying is if you’re on the corner, and I think some parents do this on purpose, they put their little kids in the stroller on the corner and they try to ask for money. Playing the violin. Yeah, playing the violin. You know what I’m saying? Those are the ones I avoid the most, actually. Those are the ones I do not give my money to. Oh, man. I just want to say that this is a guy’s perspective, and you can always reach us every Saturday at 303-477-5600. Here in two weeks, we’re going to be going in hours, so you guys will be able to chime in and listen to everything we have to offer. This was a good topic today, boys. Send us some money. Yeah, we’re not homeless, but you can send us some money. And to give a shout out to Andre once again. Praying for you, buddy. Praying for you.
SPEAKER 03 :
What you provide inside that home.
SPEAKER 05 :
is what you make it you can’t always live up to expectations you try to please everybody while you struggle so you fake it and end up out of balance compromising situations as a good man
SPEAKER 02 :
The views and opinions expressed on KLZ 560 are those of the speaker and do not necessarily reflect those of Crawford Broadcasting, the station, management, employees, associates, or advertisers. KLZ 560 is a Crawford Broadcasting God and country station.