00:08
Hey guys, welcome back to Lincoln Bio.
00:11
I'm Jenny and we've got a loaded show for you guys today
00:17
So shocking crime news from Ecuador and Brazil Apple gets in
00:25
00, that's what happened when you mess with Apple,
00:31
how Ozempic works and if you should use it and should I
00:36
be allowed to bet so easily on March madness,
00:39
you see, you see my funds definitely shouldn't.
00:43
And the Baltimore bridge collapsed with journalists from the Baltimore banners at
00:47
the scene and we should jump right into that story because you
00:52
pretty serious. The Francis Key Scott bridge in Baltimore collapsed Tuesday
00:57
after a container ship hit a support column causing vehicles and people
01:01
to fall into the Pottasch River.
01:03
The ship lost power and then literally ran into the bridge because
01:08
it lost power. And thank God,
01:09
the captain was able to send a,
01:11
a distress call out to emergency services and they were able to
01:15
close the bridge down in four minutes and not let anybody else
01:18
get hurt. And this all happened at one in the morning
01:22
Guys, six construction workers who were on the bridge are
01:25
currently missing while two others have been rescued.
01:29
A fellow worker said the missing men are immigrants from El Salvador
01:33
Guatemala, Honduras and Mexico and are in their thirties and
01:37
forties and have families.
01:39
Authorities say one rescued worker refused treatment.
01:43
You know what that means while the other was in very serious
01:47
condition and hospitalized search and rescue operations are ongoing with the assistance
01:52
of the Coast Guard here to talk to us about what happened
01:56
is journalist Clara Longo de Freitas from the Baltimore banner.
02:02
thank you for having me.
02:03
Thank you for coming on and clarifying what's going on right now
02:07
Over there in Baltimore.
02:09
So what happens now since the bridge has collapsed?
02:13
So right now, the the state has started recovery efforts
02:18
They just don't think that any of the people who
02:20
are at the bridge survived.
02:22
They're in the process of looking for bodies and they reached
02:25
out to families yesterday.
02:27
I know that some community organizers and some people in the
02:30
city are trying to find out,
02:32
you know, what are the family needs and just do everything
02:35
that they can to provide resources and help them out at this
02:39
time. So, reports show that the missing men are Latino
02:43
construction workers. Do you have any updates?
02:46
And do you have any information on the two workers that were
02:49
rescued? We don't right now.
02:52
We know a little bit about,
02:53
you know, the fact that they all seem to have spouses
02:56
and Children. They're in their late thirties or some of them
02:59
are in their forties.
03:01
they live in D Dock and Hyman Town,
03:04
which are neighborhoods in Baltimore that are predominantly Latino.
03:09
but we don't know much else other than that,
03:12
we know that the families have been contacted,
03:15
they know what's been going on,
03:17
but they're just not,
03:19
at a place right now that,
03:20
like they can talk about the workers and their family members,
03:24
there was a worker that was rescued and didn't want medical
03:28
attention. Is there any information on him?
03:32
I think we're all kind of trying to figure out the reason
03:35
he didn't want medical attention.
03:39
I think the first thought that we have is,
03:40
you know, whether he might have been undocumented and might be
03:44
scared of looking for all.
03:47
but we don't have a lot of information right now.
03:49
I think this is a community that is very vulnerable in the
03:52
city and they do have the support of community organizers.
03:56
But I think that because of a lot of misinformation,
04:02
they, they don't feel like they can actually reach out and
04:05
and how many jobs will be affected now that the port is
04:08
closed. That's a good question.
04:10
I'm not sure right now,
04:12
I think there's a lot of stuff that that's still up in
04:16
the port is closed indefinitely but shipping will probably still happen.
04:20
I think a lot of us are still trying to figure out
04:23
what routes boats are gonna take.
04:29
if like truck drivers and shuttle drivers,
04:31
they will probably just have to take a longer route.
04:34
So operations are gonna be slowed down.
04:37
So it's not gonna completely shut down altogether,
04:41
but it will impact the economy in some way and we're still
04:43
purporting and trying to find out the exact information in terms of
04:47
numbers and how many jobs we're actually gonna lose with this.
04:51
Gotcha. Is there any way we can support the victims and
04:54
their families right now?
04:55
Yeah, there are a couple of community organizations in Baltimore that
04:59
are raising funds. One of them is,
05:00
is Latino racial justice.
05:03
They have a gofundme.
05:05
I know that some other organizations like Casa are figuring out
05:09
housing and any other assistance ma which is the Mayor's Office of
05:13
Immigrant Affairs are context as well trying to figure out what the
05:17
family needs and Clara,
05:19
where can people find you and stay updated?
05:21
Well, we are covering this right now.
05:23
The Baltimore Manor is doing great about trying to cover as many
05:27
angles as possible. But I just,
05:29
you know, encourage everyone to check out other local media.
05:33
The Baltimore so is doing a great job.
05:35
I'm sure the Baltimore beat is covering next week as Well,
05:38
once they have an issue of local TV stations just,
05:41
you know, definitely support local news right now because we know
05:45
the community and we're always investing in the community.
05:48
So make sure to just bring the news.
05:51
Well, thank you so much Clara.
05:53
We really appreciate you coming on and taking the time to speak
05:57
with us on what's going on and giving us all those resources
05:59
on how to help the victims.
06:02
And yeah, thank you.
06:04
Thank you so much guys.
06:05
I really appreciate you guys for reaching out.
06:07
Bye bye. The Department of Justice has filed an antitrust lawsuit
06:17
against Apple. They say Apple has used the iphone to build
06:21
a monopoly, increasing costs for users and boxing out competitors.
06:27
Basically, they make it difficult for iphone users to switch to
06:31
another kind of phone.
06:32
And according to the DOJ,
06:33
Apple is sneaky as hell about it.
06:36
Nothing new. The doj claims that Apple uses the green versus
06:42
blue text messages to discourage users from using other phone brands.
06:48
They say the effect is particularly powerful on teenagers.
06:53
It is even you have green text.
06:56
I'm not gonna answer it just ruins the whole like the whole
06:59
Yeah, I can't even put you in a group chat
07:02
They also say Apple block super apps apps that offer
07:05
a wide range of services like China's wechat to keep their monopoly
07:09
The DOJ also mentions how Apple watches only work with iphones
07:13
keeping people in the Apple universe.
07:16
Oh, well, I like to match.
07:19
And we have a small sketch to break it down for you
07:33
you can stand on this line right here,
07:39
What about me? Are you kidding me?
07:40
You look good on that line.
07:42
you gotta go on that line.
07:43
You gotta go online.
07:44
You freaking kidding me?
07:45
So guys, you guys together.
07:47
Nice. So both of you could go on that line.
07:50
Don't worry about it.
07:52
Jump over. You did what you do?
07:58
Good of you. Thank you.
08:00
Is this your home girl?
08:01
Yeah, this is my girl right here.
08:03
She's with me. I got you.
08:11
Hey, what's going on,
08:11
doj shit? What is this?
08:15
We're talking, we're talking,
08:18
like you know I'm gonna sue you,
08:19
right? Brazilian police arrested three individuals including a federal lawmaker and
08:27
a former police chief for their alleged involvement in the 2018 murder
08:31
of Rio de Janeiro council member,
08:33
Marielle Franco and her driver,
08:35
a congressman, his brother and a former real police chief were
08:39
detained by federal police.
08:41
The woman who was murdered,
08:43
Maria Franco was actually investigating police brutality and violence so they probably
08:48
wanted to cover it up.
08:49
Yeah, she was catching them like so investigations revealed that the
08:55
Braza brothers ordered the hit while Barbosa who assumed the role of
08:59
police chief at the time just before the murder,
09:02
aided in planning and subsequently obstructed investigation efforts.
09:07
Can you imagine that you,
09:08
you're doing your job and you're fighting police brutality and violence and
09:12
you lose your life because of it.
09:16
after all those years,
09:17
at least the family and the community can have closure now and
09:21
and knowing, I mean,
09:22
justice was served in her name 27 year old Bridget Garcia Ecuador's
09:28
youngest mayor and her communications director Heo Lure were found shot dead
09:34
The shots were fired by someone inside the vehicle.
09:37
Garcia was a teacher who was elected mayor of San Vicente.
09:41
Last year. President Daniel Noa declared a state of emergency in
09:45
January due to the increased violence extending it this month.
09:50
The government has condemned the killings of Garcia and lo and vowed
09:54
to work with law enforcement investigation.
09:56
No arrests have been made yet.
09:59
If you want to know why this is happening and what's going
10:01
on in Ecuador, you can watch this video here.
10:10
Yo, serious. I'm serious right now,
10:13
when I realized that I was addicted to online gambling,
10:16
when, when I was up on a Tuesday morning because it
10:19
was 4 a.m. gambling on a Russian basketball team.
10:23
Russians have basketball teams.
10:24
They have a whole league over there and your boy was trying
10:27
to flip $5 to 5000 my God.
10:30
Since the Supreme Court,
10:31
let States legalize sports betting in 2018.
10:34
Studies show gambling addiction is on the rise in young people.
10:37
Wait, like, how old do you have to be,
10:39
to be able to bet online?
10:41
Some states is 18 and others are 21 but a lot have
10:47
Mm. I wonder why the majority of online bets are young
10:51
men and half of them feel like they bet more than they
10:53
should. Yes. Is that you?
10:55
Yes. What's the most you've ever won?
10:58
I won $1500 on a $5 bet.
11:02
Pedro ask me how much I've lost.
11:05
Well, in New Jersey help hotlines have tripled.
11:10
Like the hotlines, family.
11:12
I need help. I need help and,
11:14
and the main age range is like 25 to 34.
11:17
But I have a theory.
11:18
I'm like the real people calling it is like those dudes that
11:21
are gambling like their spouses and partners.
11:24
or they're making them call making.
11:26
I mean, experts say gambling is increasing in young people due
11:30
to developing brains. So my brain is still Avita developing.
11:35
I gotta take care of it.
11:37
I got one more year.
11:39
What it says 34 still growing.
11:42
So like studies show too that it may be happening more in
11:46
the black and Latino communities like they're the ones that are like
11:49
mostly like over betting.
11:52
Yeah, I clearly I'm an over bet.
11:55
Well, hopefully, hopefully you get better at betting.
11:59
Well, I I can't online gamble out here.
12:01
So, so here to speak about the current state of online
12:04
gambling is Professor Brett Abarbanel,
12:07
executive director of the UN LB International Gaming Institute.
12:12
Hi, Professor, welcome.
12:14
Hello. Thank you for having me.
12:16
Thank you for coming on.
12:17
We appreciate it. So it feels like there's new ways to
12:20
bet on games every day is sports booking just going to keep
12:24
growing or what you're right.
12:26
It does feel like that doesn't it?
12:28
They're always coming on.
12:30
There's all these new areas that are showing up in our everyday
12:33
lives and something really important to,
12:35
to realize is this concept that betting and sports have actually been
12:40
tied together way before this current growth in the United States.
12:44
This goes back hundreds and thousands of years.
12:47
We have tons of examples from history.
12:49
There's North American tribes,
12:51
for example, that would bet on lacrosse matches that they'd have
12:55
between the tribes. They would pile up all of their like
12:58
beautiful ostentatiously, gorgeous valuables on the side of the pitch and
13:03
then they tie them all together with rope.
13:05
And then this would,
13:06
this would sit and loom over the players while they played the
13:09
match. On the flip side,
13:12
we also have historical instances where betting actually has helped lead to
13:17
rules and creation of parts of the game.
13:20
So for example, some of the earliest rules in cricket and
13:23
in golf were actually written to resolve betting disputes,
13:27
you know, 100 plus years ago.
13:29
And today, all of this history is compounded by something that's
13:33
tracked across pretty much every single one of the episodes that happened
13:38
on this channel, which is technology,
13:41
the ways that we can be tracked and offered all sorts of
13:44
different personalized things, right?
13:45
Like personalized bets come up all the time.
13:48
This also exists in betting.
13:50
Sports. Betting really feels like it's growing because it's growing so
13:55
much more in our public awareness and it's evolving with this new
13:59
technology. The activity itself has been around a really long time
14:03
but it's never really been so pervasive in our lives,
14:06
especially in America as it is now.
14:09
And that really makes it feel like this growth is just astronomical
14:13
Professor can professional sports survive the temptation?
14:16
I don't know if you were aware last week show he got
14:20
yesterday there was an NBA player,
14:23
like, are we gonna be seeing this trend with players getting
14:25
tied into, you know,
14:26
rumors of online betting or is it,
14:29
is it, is there gonna be a divorce?
14:31
Eventually? I would say that the answer to,
14:34
to your first question,
14:35
right? Can sports survive these temptations?
14:39
professional sports will survive.
14:41
And my answer is driven by history.
14:43
There's been legal sports betting all over the world for a very
14:46
long time and there have been scandals all over the world for
14:53
the basketball referee, Pete Rose in baseball betting,
14:57
the Black Sox scandal in 1919.
14:59
Right. If we go back over 100 years now,
15:02
eight members of the Chicago White Sox were accused of purposefully losing
15:07
the World Series and this was tied to the mob,
15:11
this was tied to gambling scandal.
15:13
So corruption throughout sport can become self reinforcing.
15:17
It can just keep going and going and going if nothing is
15:19
done about it. And that means we really need to have
15:22
good governance that comes from so many different parts of sports that
15:27
comes from the sports organizations.
15:29
It comes from the players,
15:30
it comes from the gambling entities,
15:32
it comes from the general public,
15:34
it comes from people like us holding these different groups accountable when
15:37
we start, see these sorts of things occur.
15:40
And then also at the same time protecting those that are getting
15:43
harmed by it, right?
15:45
Like you were talking about,
15:46
right? So he is getting caught,
15:47
caught up in all this.
15:48
We also have somebody who from what we can tell has a
15:51
gambling problem and needs help on that front as well.
15:54
Thank you so much professor and just a quick question.
15:58
Who's your pick to win?
15:59
March madness? That's not fair because you and Elfie really fell
16:06
on this front, but appreciate you coming on and breaking down
16:11
the, the the online betting laws and,
16:13
and the current state of online gambling.
16:16
Thank you. I learned a lot professor.
16:18
So did I, so did I thanks so much for having
16:21
me take care. Thank you too.
16:27
Ok. So everyone is talking about the new diet drug Ozempic
16:32
which is actually meant,
16:33
it's meant for diabetics technically.
16:35
But people are using it for weight loss.
16:38
the people that have used it have said that it's been very
16:41
effective and it's helped.
16:43
Have you heard of it?
16:45
Oh, yeah, I've heard of it everywhere.
16:47
I feel like for the last year,
16:50
I won't expose them exactly who,
16:53
but the doctor told the nurse the wrong dose and she ended
16:58
up overdosing on OIC,
17:01
do that apparently. Yeah,
17:03
we've never heard of on the news but it happened to my
17:06
t thank God she's ok now.
17:08
But the dose that they gave her was over 100 times the
17:12
dose it was supposed to be.
17:14
So, yeah, she ended up in urgent care real fast
17:17
and she's all good now.
17:19
But that was her first experience with it and she was she
17:22
using it for like diabetes or weight loss.
17:25
No, she was doing what she was trying to get snatched
17:32
there's a lot of thoughts on the drug and thankfully we have
17:36
a doctor here with us who's very,
17:37
very, very familiar with Ozempic.
17:40
We have Doctor Rocio Salas Whelan to help us understand Ozempic.
17:46
Hi. Doctor Hi doctor.
17:48
Thank you for having me.
17:49
Thanks for being. Yes,
17:50
thank you for coming on.
17:51
So, can you explain how Ozempic works for weight loss?
17:56
So, Ozempic, the drug is sema tide and they're synthetic
18:02
hormones that we also make in our gut.
18:04
They're called G LP one.
18:06
And the way that they work for type two diabetes,
18:09
they increase insulin production in the pancreas and makes the insulin that
18:13
the patient makes to work better.
18:16
But for weight loss,
18:17
what it does it increases your satiety hormones when you start eating
18:21
and you're using this medication.
18:22
So basically you get fuller with half a portion or a third
18:26
of a portion of what you normally would need to get full
18:30
And then in between your meals,
18:32
it suppresses your hunger hormones.
18:34
Really. You feel hungry at one point,
18:36
but you eat a small portion and you're physically satisfied and content
18:40
until your next meal.
18:42
And then in the brain,
18:43
we have receptors for these hormones and they take away the reward
18:48
of food or certain beverages or including alcohol,
18:52
right? So let's say somebody who goes for sweets or carbs
18:57
for some sort of relief or anxiety,
19:00
boredom, depression, it just takes it away.
19:04
So there's no drive for that anymore.
19:07
You eat when you're hungry,
19:08
you enjoy it when you're eating,
19:10
but then you get fuller faster and then the food is out
19:15
Wow. I never thought about the logistics behind it,
19:20
but that makes sense why you would lose weight.
19:23
You're eating a lot less than what you usually would be eating
19:28
what are the risks or side effects that could occur?
19:32
Always say the benefits or the effectiveness and the safety is going
19:37
to depend on who is giving you the medication.
19:41
How much expertise that physician has on using these drugs?
19:46
Because when they're used by the right person or the right doctor
19:50
they're very minimal side effects.
19:53
Right? Sometimes there's a little bit of nausea and that's just
19:56
what, while patients get used to the fullness feeling that they
20:00
weren't used to anymore,
20:02
but really side effects that will make the medication be stopped or
20:06
like your aunt that need to be taken to the hospital or
20:09
go to urgent care can be prevented if who's giving you the
20:15
medication has expertise on these drugs.
20:18
And, and how long does it take to see weight loss
20:21
result on Ozempic? Really?
20:24
In the first few weeks,
20:25
we can see significant weight loss.
20:28
Now, we're not whenever we're doing weight loss treatment and this
20:31
could be with medications with our medications.
20:33
We're never looking for a quick,
20:35
rapid weight loss, right?
20:37
Weight loss should be more of a marathon and not a sprint
20:42
And the ideal weight loss is anywhere from 1 to £2
20:45
per week again with medication or without medication because more than that
20:51
the person is losing muscle mass and we don't want that.
20:55
We don't want the person to lose muscle mass because the muscle
20:59
loss is what slows down the metabolism when somebody loses weight.
21:05
That definitely makes sense.
21:06
So recently, I feel like it's been super popular and on
21:10
the news maybe because of celebrities or whatnot.
21:13
But is the drug new or has it been around for a
21:17
while? It is not new and OSMIC became the poster child
21:21
of this class of drugs.
21:23
But we have the first FDA approved in its class was in
21:26
2005 by the name of Valera.
21:29
Then it came as Picosa in 2010 and then Osmic in 2017
21:35
And then most recently,
21:36
we have Monro and Zon which is Tide and I like to
21:40
explain them as iphones,
21:42
right? We have the iphone 13 that is Zenden VSA.
21:46
We have the iphone 14 which is OS and now we have
21:49
the iphone 15 which is Monro and Sepa,
21:52
right? So every generation of them will come safer and we
21:56
see more weight loss on the newer drugs and different drugs.
22:02
So they they're the same drug.
22:06
But you see like example Ox Osmic is Sema Osmic has the
22:11
FDA approval for type two diabetes.
22:14
But Sema Tide also named as WO is FDA approved for weight
22:20
loss without diabetes. So they're not exclusively type two diabetes drugs
22:25
Now they are FDA approved for weight loss.
22:27
They just changed the name but it's the same drug,
22:30
same dosing, same pen same effects,
22:33
but they still call it Ozempic porque.
22:36
It's the craze. Got it,
22:40
for the newest form of Ozempic,
22:42
is that the same form of injection?
22:46
It's a once a week injection and it's tide as the drug
22:51
And that medication definitely,
22:53
we're seeing significant more weight loss and less gastric side effects.
22:57
So, almost no nausea compared to older drugs also.
23:01
Who do you think should be taking these drugs for weight loss
23:05
is patients that have a BM I of seven or above and
23:10
one comorbidity from their weight.
23:12
So high blood pressure,
23:13
sleep apnea, joint pain or patients that have a BM I
23:18
equal or greater than 30 we're moving away from the BM I
23:22
slowly but unfortunately, insurance still will make their decision according to
23:28
BM I. So insurance covers these,
23:32
these weight loss drugs.
23:34
Most commercial insurances, Medicare is starting to cover with ob and
23:39
osmic for type two diabetes right now.
23:41
So slowly more insurance are starting to implement them in their plans
23:45
Well, how much is it without insurance?
23:47
It's around $1100 for a month supply or if the person has
23:53
commercial insurance and it's not approved by the insurance,
23:56
there's coupons that the pharmaceuticals have and it comes to about 500
24:01
per month. So half of what out of pocket costs I
24:05
learned a lot. I did too and you explained it so
24:09
I love how you explain everything.
24:11
Thank you. Thank you so much,
24:13
doctor. We appreciate having you on the show and really giving
24:16
us a breakdown of how Ozempic works and where can we follow
24:21
you? Where can people find you?
24:23
Well, on Instagram is at Dr Sala Whelan,
24:27
Drsalas Whelan or also on tiktok.
24:31
It's New York Endocrinology or my web page is ny endocrinology.com.
24:36
Thank you so so much for informing us and having this conversation
24:40
with us today. Doctor.
24:41
Thank you. You're very welcome.
24:47
Summer is right around the corner and I'm actually trying to be
24:50
social this summer and here to help plug me into the party
24:53
scene is DJ Que Madre from Corridos to hip hop.
24:58
How you doing? I'm doing good.
25:00
How are you? I'm good.
25:02
the, the bota chugging videos.
25:04
Can you, can you explain to me like where,
25:06
how that came about?
25:07
Where's that at? Where can I go do this at?
25:09
Where, where can I check a boa,
25:13
It's called every first Fridays.
25:15
It's gonna be every first Friday of the month.
25:16
I do it at La Paz de Cultura.
25:18
I art in downtown L A.
25:21
It's with, I love Michelada and we have DJ
25:26
S we have food trucks.
25:30
So that plays every month it started because yeah,
25:33
we played this song Banda Mexicano.
25:35
It's called La Bota and basically it says to take off your
25:37
boot, put it in the air.
25:38
So all of a sudden I started taking off my boot and
25:40
throwing up in the air and everybody started doing it.
25:43
Yeah. And then all of a sudden I think someone just
25:45
grabbed their boot, put their beer in their boot and started
25:48
chugging it. And so now it's the thing,
25:50
definitely need to go experience this.
25:52
And you said it's the first Friday of every month,
25:53
first Friday of every month in downtown L A.
25:55
So that means I get paid,
25:57
I'm gonna be, you're gonna be paid money to chug these
26:00
beers. So there you go.
26:02
Is there a preferred beer for the bota when I go?
26:04
Like is there a certain beer you think I should put in
26:09
you know, chugging Michelada.
26:11
a good lager and a Cold Michelada mix and there you
26:14
go. And as far as getting the crowd pop and what's
26:17
that one song that you play that just gets everybody like active
26:24
I mean, once the Tambora plays,
26:26
but it's any Corrido,
26:29
anything from Man Mexicano,
26:30
I think just like really pops off.
26:32
I always do La Chona,
26:34
obviously, we do Cel Dorado.
26:37
And you just see like a sea of people just like
26:39
dancing Caval Dorado. So,
26:40
it's really awesome. What do you think of DJ S that
26:42
have premixed sets? Premixed sets?
26:46
you know, I think everybody DJ is a little bit different
26:49
sometimes I'm the type of person to just be
26:51
like, know what the vibe is gonna be.
26:53
I like to know what the vibe is gonna be.
26:54
Yeah, you read the room,
26:56
but I do know people who also,
26:58
like, plan their sets,
26:59
which is cool, you know,
27:00
everybody's different. But it's just really,
27:02
at least for me personally,
27:03
it's like you have to see what the vibe is coming
27:06
in and when people are dancing and then that's how I
27:09
kinda curate my music.
27:10
What's a dream gig for you?
27:13
Is there like somewhere you wanna be at that open for somebody
27:19
Oh man. Dodger Stadium opening day is coming up
27:22
So that would be awesome even though I've done it
27:24
before, but maybe like in the mix would be really
27:28
And is there anything you wanna tell us that you have going
27:31
on outside of first Fridays?
27:33
I have a lot of events going on all the time.
27:37
I usually put like a calendar of monthly events that I'm
27:39
gonna be at so folks can catch me where I'm gonna be
27:42
playing literally like every week of the month.
27:45
So, so I know you've been a DJ for a while
27:47
What's like the worst party experience you've had?
27:51
there's not that there's so many but there's,
27:56
actually, one of the first times that we were doing,
27:58
this first Friday's event,
28:03
all the power for the speakers and the DJ booth
28:06
And so, like mid song,
28:08
like the power would just kind of go out and so everybody
28:10
would be dancing and then it would just be like,
28:12
what's going on? All the lights would turn off.
28:15
that's happened. What else?
28:19
just sometimes the vibe,
28:21
you know, people want people,
28:22
people think they want a certain vibe and then all of a
28:24
sudden they're like, you know,
28:25
can you play something that's totally,
28:27
completely different, you know.
28:28
Oh, the request people I know don't do that.
28:32
That is so disrespectful to put your phone in someone's face,
28:34
you know. And if you're gonna do that,
28:37
you know, just slip,
28:37
slip them a big t there's 100 it's happened before.
28:43
Yeah, it's happened before and I'm like,
28:44
you know what, I'll play Bad B for you,
28:47
which I do love playing Bad Buddy.
28:49
But yeah, and what's one of the most like memorable
28:52
moments that you had?
28:54
there's also so many,
28:55
you know, I think that those times when,
28:57
you know, you connect with people,
28:59
when you connect whoever is booking you or like,
29:01
you know, I've done private parties,
29:02
I've done weddings. I've done like bar events,
29:05
you know, I think what's really special is like sometimes when
29:08
you can connect with someone and it hits like nostalgia in
29:12
my mom used to play this,
29:14
you know, or my grandma used to listen to this song
29:16
or this song reminds me of this,
29:20
so I think those are always just like really special moments to
29:22
me and it just kind of like grounds me and being like
29:24
damn like, you know,
29:26
it's really special when stuff like that happens.
29:28
I think I'm gonna have a list summer if,
29:31
you know, I think I'm definitely gonna follow you.
29:33
Thank you. I'm gonna,
29:34
I'm gonna lock in my cal with your part.
29:37
I think next Friday is the first Friday.
29:39
Next Friday is gonna be first Friday.
29:41
everybody on the Mitu theme you guys get you guys get
29:44
so just let me know,
29:47
just shoot me the names.
29:49
it's super awesome. So hope to see you there.
29:51
Thank you so much for coming on.
29:53
thank you. And where can we find you.
29:55
Yeah, you can find me on my Instagram.
29:57
It's qui Madre or on tiktok as well.
30:00
And yeah, thank you.
30:09
All right. So it's been a great episode.
30:11
Once again, I'm Jenny.
30:13
I'm J and thank you guys so much for watching this episode
30:17
of Lincoln Bio. By the way,
30:20
I know his mother fucking name.
30:21
His name is Benito Antonio Martinez,
30:23
oas, I'm keeping him out of my motherfucking mouth.
30:26
You remember her? That was a girl from the bad bunny
30:29
concert that we were asking people for his full name.
30:31
How did she find us?
30:33
I don't know but damn redemption.
30:36
What, how is she doing here?
30:39
They were mean in the comments about people that don't know the
30:41
name. Well, she knows the name now.
30:45
Like chill out? She had,
30:47
she found us who she found us,
30:49
ok, guys, we gotta go because y'all are finding where
30:52
we're working and, and I'm scared.