The Commercial Break - ScamcolFM
Episode Date: September 24, 2021Bryan asks Krissy a very important question about the current state of affairs in the world: Why don't people wave any more when you let them cut in traffic?! Where is the decency!? Then the friends r...ecall the time Bryan was asked to start an online streaming radio / TV station named SimcolFM by a man named Simon Guobadia. Simon has made news recently marrying then divorcing and then proposing to a different cast member of Real Housewives of Atlanta, Porsha Williams. Bryan shares his experience dealing with this Nigerian Oil Man and shady ways....buckle up for the TRUE story of ScamcolFM! LINKS: Want a TCB limited edition collectible sticker? Each series sticker is limited and first come, first serve. Click HERE to find out how! Or send a text or voicemail to 661-Best-2-Yo (1.661.237.8296) Watch this episode on Youtube TCBTV-minus Sponsor Streamlight Lending By SunTrust Bank (Use Code TCB for additional interest savings) DBSAlliance For Mental Health Help Magic Spoon (Use Code TCB) FUM (Use Code TCB) Smokeless Pipe for Smoking Sesation MEMPHO Music Fest (Oct 1st-3rd 2021) Castbox is the TCB partner for the Mempho Fest shows Subscribe to The Commercial Break Podcast Youtube Channel New Episodes on Tuesdays and now Fridays everywhere! Text or leave us a message: 1-(661)-BEST-2-YOÂ Â |Â (1-661-237-8296) Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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And welcome back to WSHIT's Dandelion the Movies, I'm Entertainment reporter Dandy Danderson.
Each week we take a look at a new movie voted on by the audience here in Crabapple Township.
This week we asked viewers to vote on your favorite drama, and resoundingly 98% of you
said the venerable Jack and Jill, so wonderfully acted by Adam Sandler and Adam Sandler, and resoundingly 98% of you said the venerable Jack and Jill.
So wonderfully acted by Adam Sandler and Adam Sandler and also Adam Sandler and Al Pacino
and also some of Adam Sandler's friends and Jared from Subway who took a nice little
turn in this movie and then took a nice little turn outside the movie.
But anyway, that's a different story for a different time, let's focus on the movie.
Here I want to show you an important scene in the movie
when Jack played by Adam Sandler and Jill played
by Adam Sandler discussed their twin superpowers together.
Let's listen to that now.
Why are you so brave to admit that we are connected?
Face it!
We shared moms, woo, we were roommates.
Oh, that is just disgusting.
I have an idea. On the show there were these twins
and they finished each other sentences Jack maybe you could start a sentence and Jill you could finish it.
No, no.
Come on Daddy please, please.
Ready to receive mental images. B-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b-b- Okay, ready? Yeah. I'm very tired.
So I'm going to...
Oh, to the supermarket!
No, I'm going to sleep.
Why would I go to a supermarket if I was tired?
That's what I would do.
The cold air always wakes you up.
Isn't it nice when it's just you go over the frozen food texture?
Just listening to this incredible performance by Adam Sandler
and also by Adam Sandler, this reporter has to wonder,
where was the Academy on this one?
Anyway, we'll be back after this commercial break.
So with that in mind, last night we had a little dinner together,
all of us, and I ran into one of your content creators.
His name's Brian Green.
Brian, are you here today? No, maybe not. OK, who cares? Brian was drinking a lot. But I was drinking a lot. We've been together all of us and I ran into one of your content creators. His name is Brian Green.
Brian, are you here today?
No, maybe not.
Okay, who cares?
Brian was drinking a lot.
Brian was drinking a lot.
There he is.
He's great.
He's great.
He's great.
He's great.
He's great.
He's great.
Brian was drinking a lot.
Brian was drinking a lot.
Thank you podcast movement.
One more time for Mark Cuban, Fallon Fudhemi.
I'm Mosul
Ronnie, have a great day you guys!
On this episode of the commercial break.
So now I've learned through my meditation that rather than get upset, I never chase anyone
like I'm not stupid enough to like do any of that shit
I'm not gonna get killed. You're hearing Atlanta people shoot you for less, right?
I mean you don't you don't even have to do anything. There are certain literally certain sections of highways in Atlanta
Where you just drive the speed limit and don't look at it. Don't look at it
It's gonna get shot me looking to suit and it happens all the time here in Atlanta
But what I now do is when someone cuts me off
or they do something stupid or whatever,
I give him the old, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah,
I pretend like I'm sucking a dick.
I don't know why, but I find it hilarious
that it calms me down, right?
And Astro's always like, what are you doing?
I'm like nothing.
Me, well, I'm just praying that the person
is looking in the rear view mirror and seeing this guy go, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, I'm a sexist. The pun is who wants to see me in concert.
Actually, the guy was really good, but he produced one concert film and you're a movie
producer.
That doesn't make any sense.
You're a restaurant tour.
Where are the restaurants?
They're all closed, like they're nowhere.
You're an oil man.
You sell oil.
No, you don't.
There's no oil.
If you're selling oil, you're the worst oil salesman that ever happened because you can't even get a tanker from here to there.
I know. Well, how can you even fact check that? You know, like I'm just gonna start going on me and like I'm an oil.
Yeah, I'm an oil man.
The next episode of the commercial break starts now.
Oh, it's another episode of the commercial break. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. Oh. I do it every time. What is going on out there in the world? It's like you it's like you're entitled to my despot in front of me.
You know I just you know what I say when that happens? What?
Best to you. Yeah, best to you. I would know what I say.
Fuck you!
I can't believe you could alter and say best to fucking you.
I know. I so Astro'd always like make you fun of me because you know, I have kids now.
So I can't be the 20.
I do.
I do know this.
I do.
You do?
You do?
They're so quiet.
I never noticed.
It's like they're not even here.
So I learned through meditation that I just
got to keep it calm.
Keep it cool, right?
Because I have a touch of the rage,
touch of the road rage, I'll just tell you that about myself.
I drive fast, not dangerously, but I like to drive fast
and I don't suffer fools very easily.
Like my least favorite thing would people do
when you're driving is, you're driving down the road,
two lane road, right?
I'm going this way, you're going that way and then people are about to take a right or a left out in front of you
You're the only car
There's seven miles of clear traffic. Yes, and they pull out last minute
They're sitting there for 55 seconds waiting for you to get close and then they pull out and then they drive
15 miles under the speed limit right it drives me fucking crazy
The fuck man just wait until I out and then they drive 15 miles under the speed limit. It drags me fucking crazy. The fuck man, just wait until I go and then go.
That's what I do.
Then go as slow as you want.
Do your own fucking fiddle, ditto on your own.
Don't get miles, shit all crammed up and jammed up.
I feel like I sound like Dean Boaty now.
You crippled, you crippled, you crippled, you crippled.
A little dab of ditto.
So my friend asked me to pick up the drop to the sun off at school the other day.
It's private school, it's a nice place.
But no one ever planned for that many cars
to be in this particular space.
So there are just people all over the place
and they're trying their best to direct traffic.
But it's really relying on the goodness
of the people that are driving the cars
to get this traffic moving in the right direction, right?
There's a lot of places where you have to let people in and all this other shit.
So, I don't, I've never been to the, you know, I don't normally do this,
so I'm like, I'm gonna just play a good citizen.
It's early in the morning and I'm fucking cranky, but I'm gonna play the good citizen, right?
And I'm just gonna let people in.
Four people I let in in different places in the parking lot,
and now one fucking person waved to me.
Really?
One.
They're all just like,
eww.
Just going, if you had let me in in traffic, I would be kind enough to waved to you. Exactly. I would say best to me. That's one. They're all just like, ooh, just going. If you had let me in in traffic,
I would be kind enough to wave to you.
Exactly.
And it's just a short wave.
It's just a hand.
Or you even give me like a wink.
Yeah, I'm not of the head.
I'm not of the head.
Yeah.
Show me your scrottle.
I mean, I don't know what the fuck,
but ask for the hint.
It's an acknowledgement.
So now I've learned through my meditation
that rather than get upset,
I never chase anyone.
Like I'm not stupid enough to like do any of that shit.
I'm not gonna get killed.
You're hearing Atlanta people shun you for less, right?
I mean, you don't, you gotta do anything.
You don't even have to do anything.
There are certain, literally,
certain sections of highways in Atlanta
where you just drive the speed limit
and don't look at anybody.
Don't look at anybody.
Yeah, just gonna get shot.
Be looking to shoot.
It happens all the time here in Atlanta.
But what I now do is when someone cuts me off
or they do something stupid or whatever,
I give him the old,
ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah,
I pretend like I'm sucking a dick.
I don't know why,
but I find it hilarious that it calms me down, right?
And Astrid's always like,
what are you doing?
I'm like nothing.
Me, well, I'm just,
I'm just praying that the person is looking in the rear view mirror and seeing this guy go, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah there's a lot of red things. Getting it shot and it's still very racist out there.
So be careful, 2021, nothing has fucking changed.
TCBpodcast.com is where you go.
You can read more about Chrissy and I.
Find all the show notes, watch all the video,
listen to all the audio, all from one location.
That's tcbpodcast.com.
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We move on to the next sticker.
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Or you can go to the website
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I will let you know again,
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sell your information to anyone.
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We don't give it away, we don't sell it.
We'll never do that.
That's junk, that's bunk, I won't do it.
Fuck off.
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We can send the actual sticker to you. We need it. And I'm also going to send a sticker to you.
Snail mail. Get there in six to twelve weeks.
Hey guys, I want to let you know that this episode is sponsored in part by DBS Alliance.
I've told a lot of stories about when I was younger. I worked in the restaurant industry
for many years. The restaurant industry is full of characters and oftentimes can be rough
around the edges when it comes to drugs and alcohol, which can take its toll
on your mental health. But it's also a place where there's a lot of love, and oftentimes
a restaurant crew can be considered your second family because you spend so much time there.
That's exactly what happened with a dear friend of mine that passed away just about a decade
ago from suicide. He actually jumped off of a building and I kept thinking to myself and I keep thinking
to myself if I just had had the opportunity to sit down with this young man and have
one more conversation, I know for a fact that I could have talked him out of jumping off
that building.
We were that close.
DBS Alliance is trying to bring awareness to this fact.
Suicide is the 10th leading cause of death in the US, amongst all age groups.
It's estimated that one in five Americans may deal with mental illness problem, and about
20.9 million Americans have a mood disorder.
Depression and bipolar support alliance provides free support groups, wellness tools, and inspirational
stories to guide you on your path to holistic
mental health wellness.
My friend is not alone.
On average, there are 130 suicides a day.
Think about that, 130 people, and it's probably more during the pandemic.
Middle-aged and older adults have a higher rate of suicide than adolescents and young
adults, but it's a problem amongst all age groups and growing amongst younger children.
Women are 1.4 times more likely to attempt suicide and men are 3.6 times more likely to
die by suicide.
So how can we help?
Well there's a couple things that we can do.
First of all, if you think something is off with one of your friends or family members,
reach out and say something.
If you feel like something is off with yourself, reach out and say something.
And reach out to learn more about how you can start conversations about mental health and
suicide in your community by visiting dbsaliance.org slash suicide-prevention.
That again, dbsaliance.org slash suicide dash prevention. I know a lot of us out there
feel the same way. If we had just had one more opportunity to talk to that person, we might have
saved our lives. This is your opportunity to start that conversation. dbsaliance.org slash
suicide dash prevention. Thanks so much to dbsaliance for being a sponsor of this program and please reach out if you need help.
Hey Brian. Yes. Knock knock. Knock who's there? Hey are your credit card
pulls piling up and those interest rates keeping you up at night? That is
strange that you ask my friend Chrissy Holi because Lightstream a
division of SunTrust is actually a brand new sponsor of ours here on the commercial break.
And by the way, yes, thanks to your question.
Yes, credit card bills keep me up at night.
Oh my gosh, I think during the pandemic,
things were really crazy.
Some people lost their jobs and needed to
supplement with credit cards.
Now maybe they've got another job again
and they're looking to kind of pay things down
and those interest rates make it so hard to do,
really make any headway at 19, 20, 22%.
It's crazy.
Some of my credit card rates start at like 13 or 14%.
And I mean, I'm not, I don't have 900 credit score,
but I also don't have a bad credit score.
And these fixed rates for people with excellent credit
start at 4.98% and the interest rate
is fixed for the entire life of the loan, which is the best about in my opinion that's the best part about it because you never have to worry about fluctuating rates
Or maybe you know you have a bad month and you pay a bill late and then all of a sudden you're paying 5% more on your credit cards
Then you were before light stream knocks all that stuff away it basically locks in your rate at very low rates now
I think we should also tell the listeners, this is not a payday loan,
this is not for people who have checkered credit history,
this is for people who have been financially responsible
otherwise, and maybe hit a little bit of a rough spot
during the pandemic.
Yeah, you know, you might have two or three credit cards
that you've been kind of spacing things out
and now you're trying to pay one down
and you're paying minimum payments on the other
and it just, it keeps, it feels like you're spending your wheels and not
getting anywhere.
So I think this is a great option as far as being able to consolidate everything into
one place with one monthly payment.
I agree with you 100%.
I do have to say that one of the things that causes so much stress in everyone's life
is concerned about money.
And so I think the people at Lightstream honestly are trying to help by offering these low
rate loans from $5,000 to $100,000 so that you can get a little bit of relief and specifically,
probably consolidating your credit card debt.
That good people at Lightstream are offering a discount to TCB listeners. If you go to Lightstream.com slash TCB, that's
Lightstream.com slash TCB, L-I-G-H-T-S-T-R-E-A-M.com slash TCB. And if you do that, you get a special
rate discount because you're a TCB listener and because the people at Lightstream are a sponsor
of the show. So we encourage you to.
I'm already thinking about doing this.
I honestly am.
I'm thinking we were talking to the people at Lightstream
and we were both like,
oh, this is a great idea.
Yeah, just a count of we do it.
And it does.
Yeah, so the good people at Lightstream
are offering these locked in low rate loans
from $5,000 to $100,000 for people
with good credit or better.
You can visit lightstream.com slash TCB. That's L-I-G-H-T-S-T-R-E-A-M.
.com slash TCB for your special rate discount.
We'd like to say thank you to Lightstream.
Thanks, thank you.
I came across the craziest thing the other day.
You did. Well, actually, a friend of mine sent me a text message.
Do you know this show, The Real Housewives of Atlanta?
Well, of course I do.
I think you'd have to have your head in a fucking hole.
I was a long time watcher.
I haven't watched the last couple of seasons.
Oh, Real Housewives of Atlanta or some other version.
All of them really, but Atlanta, I watched pretty regularly
until the last couple seasons.
How many are there?
Are there like five or six different cities they do this
in now?
New Orleans, New York, Los Angeles?
No, I mean, yeah, it's like Orange County, Beverly Hills,
New York, New Jersey, Atlanta, Salt Lake City.
Salt Lake City?
Salt Lake City, that's going on right now.
It's got to be a snooze fest.
Not.
It's not?
Oh, really? Oh, the Mormons are just as dramatic as snooze fast. It's not. It's not.
Oh, really?
Oh, the Mormons are just as dramatic as the rest of us.
Oh, they're a vile.
Yeah, I got a few friends.
Oh, yes, they are.
Like, at least not be fooled by any kind of pretense.
Those Mormons, they get down.
They know how to party.
They do.
What do they call room-springer?
Oh, no, that's not, no, that's not the, that's room-springer.
Room-springer.
He's springing someone from the room. No
Pinch springer
Felt alone H springer. Uh, no, it's the the um, Amish they have room springer
Which is basically a year when you're a teenager like I think it's at 17 you can go do room springer
Which means go fucking get down get why okay give you a year to go drink and drug yourself
fucking silly and then they hope that you come back they hope that that
sleeping in the gutter for a couple weeks with a bad arrow and have it
brings you back there are many documentaries we should do one we should do a
an episode on room springer and I think I actually might be able to get a
hold of of a next Amish guy who might be able to tell us more about room springer
So, but I think the Mormons have something. Oh, no, you know what they ride their bikes and they teach you teach people
They do, they go on the mission. They go on the mission. Yeah, which is much different than doing heroin in a gutter. Yeah
Anyway, back to the real housewives of Atlanta
So the real housewives of Atlanta has had a cat rotating cast of characters if you don't know what the show is
I mean, I don't know how it's played here.
She's probably one of the most famous.
Neenie Leaks.
Yeah.
And so I think that real housewives of Atlanta
was that the first one or was it in New York?
No, it was New York.
It was the first one.
No, I think it was actually Orange County.
Oh, Orange County, that's true.
I mean, New York, they're kind of neck and neck.
But yeah.
Orange County, New York, and then came Atlanta.
Atlanta became a very popular version of this show.
Very.
Based on some of the personalities that are there.
And it's a rotating cast of characters. It's been going on for like 10 years now. So all the old, I don't even know on some of the personalities that are there, and it's a rotating cast of characters,
been going on for like 10 years now.
So all the old, I don't even know
if some of the old characters were involved in it.
I don't know the first thing about Real Hospital
Atlanta anymore.
I watched like the first 12 episodes,
and then I was like,
this is really making our city the very floor.
First of all, none of them live in Atlanta.
They're all outside of Atlanta.
Second of all, I'm pretty sure none of them are rich,
they're just pretending to be rich.
But I don't know. A lot of the homes are rented.
A lot of the homes are rented.
It's all just for show.
Right.
I think the people in North County and New York
are the only ones that actually have money.
Right.
Pretending to have money.
Well, Beverly Hills, they have those bitches got some money.
But listen, you got to give it to Andy Cohen,
who is this?
Oh, he's a mastermind.
Mastermind behind all this.
He knows what people want to watch. And it's just trash I can produce it. Oh, he's a mastermind. Mastermind behind all this. He knows what people want to watch,
and it's just trashy television.
Yep.
And he's done a great job.
Great.
Yeah, putting this all, he's right.
And he's done a great job putting it all together,
and I gotta give the guy,
Krezzi, he also did,
he's done a lot of shows that you would know.
He's like an executive guy at Bravo.
Anyway, Real Housewives of Atlanta starts,
and I have not kept up with the seasons,
but the other day I get a text message from a friend
with a picture of a guy named Simon Guabadia.
And Simon Guabadia, it's talking about
the real Housewives of Atlanta,
and how this guy Simon Guabadia
went from one housewife married to one housewife
to married to another housewife named Portia Williams,
who you may or may not know, she's like semi-damous, okay.
She's got some famous radio show or something.
Yeah, but that came I think after the housewives.
Well her grandfather was Hosea Williams.
Her grandfather was Hosea Williams.
Is that true?
Oh really?
I did not know that.
So she's from that family.
Yeah, so she's like an old Atlanta family.
That's weird.
I used to serve Hosea Williams in a restaurant
that I worked on. He's a very nice guy.
Anyway, he's like, Jose Williams is like a legendary in Atlanta.
Yeah, he's a civil rights guy.
He was a mayor for a long time.
I think he was the reason why, part of the reason why the Hartz Field Jackson Airport got
built so big as big as it did.
But anyway, so his daughter is on this program.
And this guy, Simon Gawadi, is talking about how he went from one housewife
to then married married to one housewife, married into
forced to another housewife.
scandalous scandalous.
And now this Portia Williams, they actually married or they engaged
they're engaged right now, but they're putting on a big show.
Yeah, you know, apparently there's like a three part special
that's coming about Portia Williams and I don't know.
Sam and Mary may or may not of course there is.
What's interesting about this is,
do you remember a little streaming or radio streaming
television station,
Rysosho radio station called,
Sim Cole FM?
I do, Brian.
Legendary and song in history.
I was a guest on there.
You were up at times.
You're a guest and then you were up there drinking
with me, maybe.
Yeah.
So let me give you this story for those of you that don't know.
I'll go back a little bit and Brian history.
In 2000 and something, probably about tech going on a decade now,
I got invited by a coworker friend of ours
to a meeting with a rich,
oil person that wanted to start a streaming radio station.
And because of my experience at Clear Channel
with streaming radio, she felt like I was going to be the man for the job.
Well, thanks a lot for that. Thanks for going right into the lion's den.
I appreciate it. I didn't, at the time I already had the job,
I was doing well with the company that I owned, and I refused the meeting a number of times.
For months, until she's like, listen, he really, he'll pay you to do this.
And I'm like, he'll pay me to do this.
Like, street, there's no money in streaming radio.
Yeah, that's right.
I mean, before there was, my...
Yeah, there was a, I mean, podcast that just come along.
Yeah, it was just like a, it seemed weird, right?
It seemed odd, but at that point, I was like,
well, if someone's gonna offer me a pile of cash
to do something, I might as well go take a...
And it was like a brand new studio.
He was building out everything.
Well, we haven't gotten there yet, right?
So I take this meeting at a restaurant
that he supposedly owns.
I take this meeting, he shows up.
He is this larger than life,
like literally Nigerian oil guy.
Yes.
He sits down, he shows up in a Rolls-A-Royce,
he sits down, he's smoking a cigar.
He's got an axon.
He's got an axon, you know. He's always lendsce, he sits down, he's smoking a cigar. He's got an accent. He's got an accent, you know.
He's always lensed to the credibility.
Yeah, he's got affectation.
Well, lens to the credibility or the non credibility,
depending on which way you're looking at it.
Right.
When you hear Nigerian oil man,
you probably think of many emails that you've deleted
or go straight to your fan box, right?
So I'm like, wow, okay.
Take the meeting, the guy says, I wanna do this, right?
You know, you do it.
I give you the money, you do it.
And I'm like, you give me the money, I do it.
Put together a budget, I do that, you know,
tell me what you need, I'll take care of it.
And I'm like, this sounds too good to be,
I've been in a lot of these meetings.
This sounds too good to be true.
Let me explain it a little bit for those of you
that do not live here.
Everybody.
And I mean everybody is a producer, a rapper,
an executive producer, a director, a famous photographer,
a musician, they're soon gonna be selling out
Madison Square Garden.
They've been at the Fox, they've sold out two nights
at the Fox Theater, everybody.
I'm on Real Housewives of Atlanta.
I know somebody who's on real housewives of Atlanta.
I've been in two reality shows. I'm about to do a third. Well, think about it. Is it half of it
is true? Well, that's true. You don't know who really is. That's right. What is real and is not?
What has happened is because there is a lot of legitimate, legit, fame going around Atlanta and
money going around Atlanta that the people who are really doing it when they talk about it,
you don't know the difference between the people who are really doing it, when they talk about it, you don't know the difference
between the people who are telling you a fucking fish tail
and people who, but everybody claims to be doing the same thing.
Everybody is famous, just like us here at TCB.
I'm a fun guy.
I'm a fun guy.
I'm a fun guy.
That's true, you are a funny.
We're now saying it around town.
One person noticed me one time.
Are you Brian Greene? you I owe you money?
Are you serving me papers? Right. So it's hard to tell sometimes what's real and what's not.
And I took, I took this meeting with a grain of salt. But at the advice of the friend,
quote unquote, that we have quote unquote, she says he's, he's real. He's the real deal put together a budget, a plan, and he'll write the check, which is
exactly what I did.
And what I thought to myself was, I don't know the first thing about starting a streaming
radio station.
No one did at the time, like a streaming radio television station, put some cameras, do
this whole thing.
But I know it's going to cost a lot of money if you really want to do it the right way.
Like not just a couple of guys doing it on their off hours,
but if you wanna, he literally was like,
I want this like the best that's ever been, right?
I'm gonna put billboards, I'm gonna have a plane flying,
you're gonna be on MTV.
I mean like the whole nine yards.
So I put a budget together that's rather
that would have shocked me.
Like it was expensive because I put it together
the right way as asked to do.
And he literally rubber stamped it one night
at his restaurant, like, you know, nine o'clock at night.
You get a radio station and we get a radio station
and we get a radio station together.
And he already had a cast of characters.
He kind of assumed would be good for the streaming radio station
to have shows on the streaming radio station.
He asked me to kind of lead the chart.
He didn't, he asked me to lead the chart, right?
And I said,
I said, you were running things.
I said, if I'm gonna do this, you gotta pay me.
This is a full time job.
Like I'm not gonna go and manage a radio station
to try and sell ads and put it all together.
I'm like, I can't do that on my off hours.
I already, I'm already running a business over here.
You have to pay me to do this, right?
And he literally rubber stamped payment for me
and everybody else at the radio station.
I put it together and I followed that budget to a tee.
We got a studio.
A very nice studio.
It was very nice I remember coming over
when you get it all set up.
It was unbelievable.
Like he literally was like,
Here's your space.
And a cool part of town.
Lovely, right?
Yeah, I have a mile from my house. Did you watch Anchorman being filmed there? believable like he literally was like here's your here's your cool part of town lovely right now
I have a mile from my my house. Did you do you what you watched Anchorman being filmed there?
I watch Anchorman to being like what are part of it being filmed right down the street
so
I so he
A week later were in this studio and he's blank and he's like this is yours
What do you tell me what you need you put it through through my lady and she'll buy all of it, right?
She'll get it all set up.
I was at his office one day and this penthouse suite
at the top of this fancy office tower
and he was calling lawyers like,
sin call FM, setting up, you know, Brian Green,
pay it, yeah, get him what he needs.
Pop up, you know,
da da da da da da da, me why?
The entire office was empty.
X, I mean, it was like 10,000 square feet
of which 1,000 square feet was being used
and one lady sitting outside the door
who looked quite frankly scared of everything.
She was like, and he was like, paper-ung green.
And she's like, which account?
We don't have any money.
Yeah.
Paper.
We need furniture first.
Can I get a chair?
Can I get a stapler?
If I pay Brian, can I get a stapler?
Also, something was off, but I didn't know what at the time.
And the things were just moving fast and furious.
People can be like that.
I mean, that is exactly why there's tons and tons of examples
of people getting hoodwinked.
Hoodwinked, that's right.
Hoodwinked is the right word,
that's good one.
So the next couple of weeks or months,
we set a target date and then we go to work
building this studio.
Nights, weekends, 24 hours a day.
I am literally living at this studio,
getting it right, getting it set up.
Yeah, I would come visit you and bring you food.
That's right, you would.
I remember that, like, and we had a bunch of lovely people
that were helping us to such like people that just...
Oh, there were some cool people.
Oh, everybody was cool.
Everybody was cool.
And I have a bad thing to say about anybody that I've worked with.
I'm not sure that that's the same thing.
I'm not sure that they feel the same way.
But listen, I had nothing bad to say about any of those people
that worked with us.
I mean, the guy named John was in there like we were literally ripping this old carpeting
out and you know, building new studio equipment and running wires every which way to Sunday
setting up the computers and networking them.
And it took a lot of a lot of a lot of time and a lot of effort to make this thing go
because it was a professional streaming radio station.
We wanted it to sound and look like a radio station that you were just getting offline. Meanwhile, there were so many promises being made. We're going to have billboards and we need
photo shoots and we're going to do, you know, I don't know. You're going to have, we're going to do a
super bowl ad. Don't worry about it. It's on its way. Super bowl ad. So, around that, so, and now I have
hired all of these people to come and work for us.
Me, with the promise they would get paid from this man.
So, right around, like, right as we start getting going,
right, he also had a furniture store,
he sent over a bunch of furniture, like new age furniture,
right about the time we started getting going.
Something happened that kind of freaked me out a little bit,
right?
I'm like, we need two TVs or three TVs or whatever it was. I forget what the equipment
was, but we need this, right? So I call the lady who I call and she says, well, can I get
back to you on that? She never said that before, right? Can I get back to you on that? Do
you really need it like today? Can I get back to you on it? And I was like, no, I like
it, but I guess it's not, I guess it's whatever, we'll make it work without it, right? And she goes, okay, because you know,
we're like, we're waiting for a payment, right? And I was like, oh, you're waiting for a payment.
Like, that's what I do. That's not what he does. Like, I wait for payment. He doesn't wait for
payments. I'm waiting for payment. He is the payment. And it starts to snowball a little as we ramp up to get the station going.
The string starts to get in pole, right?
And I'm paying ever so close attention, but now I'm so baked into the situation.
Well, you're into it at that point.
I'm like so excited about it now.
And you don't want to even admit to everybody and be like, cause you've announced it to everyone.
Hey, the guy who's paying us,
he doesn't have any money.
He's waiting on a payment.
Remember this whole thing we put together
outside of you got new quit your jobs and all that shit?
We're waiting on a payment.
But it gets worse.
Oh.
So we start the radio station.
It starts and you know,
you had guests, I was in a moment with the rappers.
For like, I would say for about four months.
It is.
Kimmy was in co-hosts.
Oh my God.
Okay.
So we start, I'm doing the morning show
and then we have a number of people
that are filling out the day.
Lovely people, really talented,
doing what they do, right?
Now, the station starts off strong.
There's a lot of people, I think,
because there's a lot of general interest.
And like I expected to, kind of like kind of plateau
is a little bit.
I didn't know all the things that I know about,
podcasting or how to get an audience
or all that at the time.
I was just kind of relying on the fact
that there was a marketing person
who was the friend who introduced me
to the situation that was going to be helping out with this.
Thanks for the help. Nothing fucking happened. There's no billboards or no ads. Super bowl ad. There's nothing. Nothing.
You know, okay, so we get started and month number one, there's just so much excitement about all of this.
The stations going, people are coming in and working. They're literally clocking out nine to five. They're staying late hours.
They're everyone's excited about putting this together. And now we have it humming.
We have a control room, we're setting up clips,
we're storing all the information,
we're running commercials, we're doing,
I mean, we're just doing everything, right?
I think I got it, I'm going.
Like there's a lot of stuff that we need to clean up,
but we got this thing going.
There's guests, there's celebrities that are coming up there,
I'm like, wow, this is the real deal.
Like we really did this.
We pulled this shit off and man, maybe we only have a couple thousand people listening,
but yeah, give it some time and it'll, it'll keep going, right?
So I'm doing a four, and on top of running everything,
I'm doing a four hour radio show starting at six in the morning.
Like, it's crazy.
I'm getting up early, I'm staying late.
Ba, ba, ba, payday comes.
First, first payroll is delivered a couple days late, but as promised, everyone's
excited. Second payroll comes. Couldn't pay it every two weeks. Couple days late, but
as promised, but one of the checks bounces, one of the checks to someone bounces. And now
I'm like, you meanwhile, I still need some extra equipment and I need things, right?
Yeah.
So the lovely lady that's sitting outside of the desk
with no chair, no stapler, and no furniture,
who's my now, my contacts to get all this stuff
is like, do you think you could maybe you can buy it
and then like submit it to me
and then I'll do my best to get it paid.
I'm like, do your best to get it paid.
And yeah.
But at that time, I'm in.
I'm all in.
I'm 100% in the deep end. So I'm like, I guess, yeah, I'll like, do your best to get a paid. Yeah. But at that time, I'm in. I'm all in. I'm 100% in the deep end.
So I'm like, I guess, yeah, I'll take,
you know, I'll go get some stuff.
And that's exactly what happened.
Yes.
That's the how the scam happens.
That's how it happens.
That's how it gets you.
Things happen at first.
Yeah.
There.
There.
Now it starts to unwind.
A little problem over here.
A little problem over here.
A little paycheck bounce over there.
Yeah.
But it's all just papered over with, you know,
oh, it just came out of the wrong, oh, it's a da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da da at this point. Not that I know it, but I'm suspecting something. But I am so excited about this that I keep going.
Yes.
Meanwhile, other people are starting to know this stuff too.
Now we're on month number two, right?
And month number two, all of a sudden,
the lady is like, I can't issue checks today.
And I'm like, what do you mean you can't issue checks today?
It's like, you know, it's the 20th,
we're supposed to get them on the 15th.
And she's like, yeah, we're waiting on a payment.
And I'm like, waiting on a payment,
she's like, we're literally waiting for a boat
from Nigeria to come in, so sell the oil or something.
She's like that.
And I'm like, there's no money in like a bank account somewhere.
You don't have like a, there's not a savings account.
You mean this guy signed off on all this money
and he didn't have the money at the time?
He told me to go have people quit their fucking jobs
and he didn't have any money at the time.
And she says, well, that's kind of
the way we operate around here.
I'm fucked.
I am fucked.
So month number two or three, people start like, now I am putting on a show.
I am like, guys, don't worry.
The every once in a blue moon, this guy Simon shows up.
He'll show up.
He's smoking a cigar.
The don't do everything.
Rolling up in the white rolls.
Yeah, rolling up in the white rolls, Royce,
or the fucking $300,000 my-box, right?
He's rolling up to it and he'd show up
and he'd walk around and everybody would kiss his ass
and then he'd leave and he'd go,
don't do it, we'll get that baby to you, don't worry.
Yeah.
He'd give me the whole fucking spiel
and then, because no one would dare ask him directly about the paychecks now
I became the guy and everyone was like so when do you think it's gonna get paid?
And I was like, you know, I'm confident that Simon's gonna come through any day now
But now people vote is about to be here
Coming on his way from Nigeria a little storm in the ocean. We got a little Rocky Rolly, really.
Right?
But don't worry.
Literally millions of dollars on the way from Nigeria.
At any moment, it's going to show up.
The FedEx man's our coming is right.
It's exactly what I was waiting for.
Nothing.
The guy never had the money in the first place
and he told me to go and do this.
Month number three, now many people, now people
have left their pissed, now people are pissed pissed, now everyone's like loaning each other
money just trying to get through because we're all doing this as a full time job now because
that's what we were told to do. Promise that we would get a year worth of runway and we're
now three months in and nothing. It's stopped after month number one and a half or something like that.
So now I'm getting nervous
and I am trying to not piss off anybody
but communicate gently that things are really
falling apart over here.
Like I cannot keep people happy and working
and I cannot keep the station online
if they're not getting paid.
This lady would dull out a little bit of money here and there.
You know, like us, like one check.
I thought it was like the Ponzi stuff.
Oh my God, I hope that it's like one tenth of a paycheck.
Pay a little bit here.
One tenth of a paycheck.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here.
Pay a little bit here. Pay a little bit here. Pay a little bit here. Pay a little bit here. Pay a little bit here. the Entrez. Month number four. Now you're hungry. Now I have had three different people sitting
in the chair where in on my particular show, right, all promised to pay none of it coming.
So now I've had, you know, Kimmy, I've had other people sitting in the chair. At one point
on my show, in my morning show, I literally got approval because that was the payment that
he was getting. I literally got approval to bring somebody here from Denver every single week to do the
show for three days and then fly back to Denver.
That's right, I know who you mean.
Yes.
And it lasted for about a month and a half and then all the sudden the money stopped flowing
and it was like, I don't know what to do, bro.
I don't have any other options.
I'm not really sure. Simon, at one point, asked what to do, bro. I don't have any other options. I'm not really sure.
Simon at one point asked me to reduce the payroll.
I did that.
I let people go and it was so fucking difficult to do that
because it's like, I promised you this
and now I gotta let you go.
I was the bad guy.
I was turning into the bad guy.
Now, I would have been willing to be,
that's sometimes management is the bad guy, right?
You have to play the bad guy.
I would have been willing to do that.
Had someone actually stepped up and decided to live up
to their end of the agreement.
I say this, I am only telling you my point of view, right?
There are many sides to every single story.
But I think this is the clearest picture I have now
a decade later.
Yeah.
That after four months, I finally called one day.
I had been calling multiple times a day for like weeks
and I just was not getting any response.
I was calling our friend who was telling me
whatever she needed to tell me to make me shut up
and go away, which was fucking bullshit.
Yeah.
Fucking bullshit.
I think she was get hustled too.
I am not 100% convinced about that,
but I'll just say, you know, that's my point of you.
That's the way that I saw it.
Okay.
After four months, after multiple times of calling a day, I called and I was like, we need payment
or this is all stopping right now.
Yeah.
Right?
And he said, okay, I'll get it to you.
I'll call you back in a couple of hours.
And I was like, well, all right, there we go.
Now we're getting somewhere.
Now we get it.
Fantastic. Yeah. That's awesome. just in there. Now we got it. Fantastic.
Yeah.
That's awesome.
Look at me.
I'm all excited.
I'm running around my apartment like, I can pay my rent.
Yes.
Right?
Uh, then I get a phone call an hour and a half later from one of the guys at the station.
Simon was just up here.
You're not allowed in the building anymore.
I'll get your stuff and put it outside the door.
Oh my God.
Is that how it ended? That's how it ended. That's how it ended. And
if you come up here, I'll have to call the police. That's what he told me to do. And I was
like, holy shit. So Simon walked in there and told them all the fish tail. He told them
that I was the one who was problematic and that he would get them the money that was
owed. Don't worry about it. Blah blah blah. Brian's not allowed up here anymore.
Close and lock the door and call the police
if he shows up.
Geez, that's unbelievable.
And so for the next and our friend quote unquote,
went right along with this whole fucking song
and goddamn dance.
It was really disappointing like at the end,
I lost a friend because I believe that,
I believe what I believe, right?
Yeah.
I lost a friend and then I got made to be shit on
by this guy who pulled a scam basically
and then made me look like the guy who made it all.
Not that scammer, but the guy who was the problem.
Right.
If you guys would have gotten paid,
had Brian not been here.
What's that?
That's Brian not been here.
Brian was the guy who put it all together.
Right?
But I'm not looking for any credit.
I'm just telling you what happened.
By the way, those people never got paid.
They got like, they got like, you know, $300 a piece
the next week and then they never got paid.
And then after another month and a half,
I heard this from somebody.
Guess what he had the audacity to do.
What?
Charge people to do their radio show.
He started to charge people to do their,
so now not only was he not paying them,
he was asking them for money.
That's a really.
So when he became into like rent for hire.
It was a rent for free.
It was a yeah, a simcole FM, which was by the way.
I mean, listen, let's be honest about it.
Simcole FM was a really bad radio station.
Even though there were some good programs on there,
it was a really bad radio station.
My idea was, we had a lot of people
from a lot of different points of view in places.
So I called it genre-free radio.
Black is not white, it's not yellow.
Everybody's here, everybody's doing it.
Whatever you like at some point during the day,
it's gonna be tuned in.
You want the goofy, you know,
zoo crew, morning crew radio show in the morning.
It was like a really bad version of the commercial break.
Or maybe it just was the commercial break, much longer.
Yeah, it was like three hours.
Oh my God, four hours.
Four hours.
And after I stopped getting paid,
I would like flex on the hours.
Like it was supposed to start at six,
but sometimes I would start at eight and 30.
Because I was just tired and hung over.
We got the brewery down the street to give us.
Oh my god.
I went down there and convinced them to give us a cake every week.
Like after we started getting, we weren't paid.
I was like, listen, I'll shout you out and you can be a cake every week.
They literally rolled that thing up.
We had to like get the go up a flight of stairs to get in the studio and just sit and get
shit-based.
All morning, I was literally,
I was, for like six weeks,
I was just morning drunk all the time.
I could go home and sleep away,
but hoping that's a paycheck would show up in my account.
So worst, it was the worst.
It was such a stressful.
I wanna bring this back around to say
there are a lot of people speculating online
and I've heard the name SimCole FM a number of times. This is the reason why I'm addressing it here on the commercial break
I've heard that what have people been saying about simcol people have been they've been saying that simcol fm is one of the things that
Simon owns even though
It's administratively dissolved the company is along with many other companies that he owns are administratively dissolved
Okay, and that he's a TV producer and that he's a restaurant tour.
All of his restaurants are closed.
I only know of, this is just me.
I'm only sharing my information.
I'm not saying that this is fact of your own research, you know, because I also know that
this, whatever.
Anyway, I do know for a fact that he did produce one video, one time, right?
Because I remember doing promotion for it when we were over at SimCole FM.
But people are digging through the history of his corporations and they're saying,
oh, there's this SimCole FM.
SimCole FM is no longer it was for a very short period of time.
And people did not get paid.
That's what I know.
People did not get paid.
They got promised to be paid, but they never got paid. And in the end, he just
Songed and danced it out of the out of the back door. Do do do do do do do do
See I'm taking my my back and I'm going home
Guys, I'm really sorry about all that payment. I didn't give you, but did you see my new my back out front?
Fucking asshole.
Unbelievable.
That's the part that really got my hide.
And by the way, I think he was on wife number three
when I knew I think he's been married
and divorced six times.
Six times.
Five or six times.
Isn't that crazy?
I think that that's what happens.
I think it's just a repeating pattern.
Oh yeah. Is that he pretends to be this,
when he gets found out to be that,
he literally distances himself.
He pushes everybody away,
he says, is there a fault,
and he moves on to the next thing, right?
And I don't know what's that.
That's the textbook definition of a scam artist.
It is the textbook definition of a con artist,
of a psychopath, of someone who just does not care about other
people's feelings, they only care to get through the next thing, right?
They want to look and listen, if this guy had come to me initially and said, I don't have
this money, I don't have it, right?
It's not in the budget.
Something fell through.
But can we start off small?
Do you think you guys could like put, can I pay you to put something together?
And then we can just kind of do it on our time.
See if it works and see if we can get viewers
so we can get some advertising revenue.
I made a budget for a year before dollar one came in the door
because I knew that's what it would take.
Just like the podcast.
I never had any expectation we would make dollar number one
for at least one year after we got enough viewers
to sell advertising because I'm smart enough to understand
that businesses don't work like that.
Most businesses, you don't open up the door
and start generating a profit,
especially when you're creating content
because people gotta find you,
it doesn't, I don't know if they're gonna like it
or they're not gonna like it.
It's a process, yeah.
Process, Chrissy, you're so right about this.
I love that you're right next to me in this conversation.
Because you know, I was tormented at this time.
I hated that for you.
Yeah, I was, you're right, it was about 10 years ago.
It was 10 years ago.
I remember I was talking to you out for Margaret.
You were taking me out for Margaret as you were paying for my,
I think you loaned me $200 one time.
One time one of the little producers who was much better at saving money than I was.
A guy that we had known for a very long time
saw that I was like, I was really struggling
because I paid for all this bullshit.
I had given people money out of my own pocket
to make sure that they didn't leave many months earlier.
This guy came and he was like,
I can like loan you $300.
And I was like, 300.
That's all I ever risk.
I was a grown man. I should have been asking for 300.
I should have had to take $300 from the guy
who was producing my show downstairs,
but you know what?
I took it because I didn't have any fucking money
because someone kept promising me the payment
is right on the corner.
Should be in today, we're getting it tomorrow,
couple of weeks, it just went on and on, should be in today. We're getting it tomorrow, a couple of weeks,
it just went on and on forever.
It never ended.
Oh, and in the meantime, I watched other businesses
of his clothes, they just closed.
And other people in those businesses say the same fucking thing.
Same fucking thing.
Well, I'm waiting on payment.
He says he's gonna pay us.
After it's closed and he sells all the,
he had a furniture business, went out of business, right? And he promised this person,
I don't have permission to say their name, because I haven't talked to her in years. But, you know,
she said, oh, they're gonna pay us once they sell all this extra furniture. I know, at least I was told,
that never happened. No one ever got paid. And if he had come to me and said,
I don't have the money to do this,
but if we kind of put it,
like I got a little bit of money.
If we kind of like,
peace it together, yeah.
Peace it together, yeah.
Appreciate it.
I'll give you a studio.
I'll pay a little bit of money to put it together.
I'll buy the equipment.
Can you-
Let's do this together.
Let's do this together.
Yeah.
Right, keep your day job.
Right, right.
But if you want to do this,
and I can give you a little bit of money here and there for
this isn't that, we can do this together.
If he had taken a collaborative, he said, let's do this together.
You do the work, I'll pay you, and then he never lived up to his end of your agreement.
So I can tell you right now, at least from this perspective, from Brian Green at Commercial
Break, a decade later, which by the way, I might have a podcast five years earlier, had
I not been through this experience,
it really scarred me.
I can tell you right now that this guy straight up told us
he was going to pay us money and never did so,
and many, many, many conversations just blew smoke
directly up our asses.
That's what he did.
So, I don't know, Portia Williams,
I don't know who she is, never a matter.
I'm sure she's a lovely lady.
Hear me, hear what I'm saying.
That's all I gotta say, hear what I'm saying.
So now she's on this real housewise of Atlanta.
He's flying her around on private jets.
He's got multi-billion dollar houses.
I guess the boat came in.
I guess that boat came in.
I guess that little tiger finally hit show up.
Just took a while.
With like a billion dollars.
You didn't hold on.
Yeah.
Just held on for two.
Some people say like he's a billionaire, a billionaire.
He's got multiple houses around the world. I can guarantee you. My opinion is, I shouldn't say I guarantee you. My opinion is, all of those houses are extremely leveraged or rented
for short periods of time. It's a matter of fact, it's a fact that when he got on real
housewives of Atlanta with his first wife, he went and rented a huge mansion
out in the suburbs of Atlanta. Like a 12,000 square foot mansion. But he bought it with a mortgage,
with a very large mortgage, right? And then he sold it as soon as Real Housewives of Atlanta
stopped filming. I mean, this is what happens, right? So don't believe everything you see, it's the game.
So I am sharing my own personal experience.
I think a lot of other people online,
now if you Google this guy's name,
and then you put in, if you Google this guy's name
and you go to YouTube,
you will see that there are so many vloggers out there
who are already on the disguise.
Like I'm not saying anything
that anybody's not already caught onto,
or at least people who are paying attention.
He's trying to get his PR machine
to send out a bunch of, you know,
oh, he's a philanthropist or philanthropist.
He's a philanthropist, is what he is.
Like a flappin' is my, I love that.
Yeah.
But there's like, there's a bunch of people out there
who are onto this.
They've uncovered much more than I have.
I'm just sharing my little tiny piece of the world,
but I thought it needed to be addressed from a guy
because I imagine that my name somewhere out there
is still attached to SimColeFM.
I don't think there's any more,
I think there's a couple of YouTube videos out there
because we weren't in the habit of putting them on YouTube.
And I think I have some like,
material on a CD or something, I'm not gonna play it here
because I don't know, yeah, that's what I can play here.
Best left unsaid.
Best left unsaid even though I just said it for 45 minutes.
Do you still have it on your LinkedIn?
Yeah.
No, it was like a breakup when it happened.
It was like a bad breakup.
I just like deleted it all.
Everything.
Yeah, I deleted the Facebook page, which was under my name.
I just went and did it.
I was just like, fuck that.
I was so hurt, man.
My feelings were so hurt.
Because you put all your heart
and your soul into something,
and then it actually started.
And it was exciting.
It was.
It's like a dream to be funded
and just have free reign, get paid, start your own thing,
go for it.
I did not.
I knew I always wanted to be on radio
or have some kind of behave behind the microphone,
but I never even imagined that a streaming radio station
would be something until that opportunity was presented itself.
I did not come to the opportunity, the opportunity asked for me.
And then just to have it ripped out in such a manner where it's like,
yeah, you know, we'll pay you and then we can't pay you.
And then we you start paying for stuff.
And then never come back.
Lock the door. Don't come back. I'm calling the police. That was a balky fucking move on that
guy's part of a balky fucking move, but I had no power because I had no money. Well, I was
gonna say if you had the money, then you could have sued him. I talked to attorneys and they were
like, good fucking luck. We could fucking luck bleeding a rock. Basically, like, you know, good luck.
Some some guys went into it and they were like,
you're not gonna get anything out of this guy.
You know, at the time, you know,
there were other things out there in the universe with him
that, you know, I don't know anything about,
but the turn was like, good fucking luck there.
Good luck, you're gonna bleed a rock,
you're gonna bang your head against the wall,
you're not gonna make any money.
So I know this is not a particularly funny episode
of the commercial break, but I did wanna make sure
that it got addressed from my standpoint because I hear the name Sim Cole F.M. out there,
and I know at some point that my name will be attached
to that in some way, shape, or form,
and I wanted my side of the story,
my side of the story out there in the world.
So take it or leave it for whatever is worth.
That's it.
I feel like we could turn this into a show.
Like I just watched a show about scammers,
scamming people.
Well, they could be an episode of that.
He's like four episodes.
Yeah, because he's done this,
like this is good, he's like nine lives.
The guy just keeps on going and keeps on reappearing.
He keeps on reappearing.
He is literally falling upward, right?
He went from, you know, nobody who owned a kind of subpar
fucked up restaurant, right?
To then, you know, oh, now I am a TV producer.
You producer show about dogs.
I mean, come on, man, a film producer.
You've produced a live concert film from a saxophonist.
A saxophonist.
I'm a saxophonist. who wants to see me in concert.
Actually, the guy was really good, but to produce one concert film and you're a movie producer,
that doesn't make any sense. You're a restaurant tour. Where are the restaurants? They're all closed.
Like, they're nowhere. You're in an oil man. You sell oil. No, you don't. There's no oil.
If you're selling oil, you're the worst oil salesman that ever ever happened because you can't even get a tanker from here to there
I know well, how do you how can you even fact check that you know like I'm just gonna start going on me and like I'm an oil
Yeah, I'm an oil man. I got tankers in the sea right now
Listen the old tanker ran out of gas the oil tanker ran out of gas
Listen, the old tanker ran out of gas. The oil tanker ran out of gas.
How does that have?
Can't you just like pour it back in the...
Listen, Brian, payments coming.
We just had a little bit of an issue.
I had to return the rental tanker back to next year.
Didn't get here in time.
So now I'm renting a new oil tanker
and then I'm sending it over, right?
Please, you know, I understand there are people who do trade oil
like they actually say.
Yes.
Yeah, that happens.
It's whatever, a commodity strainer
that actually takes hold of the commodity
and then sends it from here to there.
I mean, I think I never got to the bottom
of exactly what the oil business was,
but I will tell you this, it's, yeah.
I think I knew more about the oil business than this guy did.
He was like, it's on its way.
What's on its way?
The tankers for to wear, not sure.
Lake linear.
Lake Michigan, got no oil tanker coming right to Michigan.
Un, but leave it.
Well, there you go.
There's the saga of Sim Cola family.
I thought we had a looped to it before,
but I thought it was best that I say it out loud.
And there you go.
If you have any questions you can comment directly to me,
I'll be happy to answer anything that I can.
Now, I'm sure there's going to be a retort to this.
I'm sure there is.
Yeah.
I just think that's the way it is.
I'll probably get served papers.
First slander.
Only, it can't be slander.
Then you could count or sue for your back pay.
Oh yeah.
Well, I mean, it's many years later.
I don't think I can count or sue for my back pay.
But it was a lot of money.
I will tell you that.
It was a lot of money back then
when I was making this much money and it's a lot of money back then when I was making this much money,
and it's a lot of money now,
and I'm not making this much money.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The commercial break is headed the same direction,
I just want everyone to know.
Only now I'm the oil guy, telling holdly,
she's gonna get paid any day now.
Only now I'm the oil guy telling holdy she's gonna get paid any day now
Chrissy
Buddai it's gonna be our sponsor any day now I just talked to
Thanks I appreciate and you help me out like so much during that time I just I want to say that I'm so grateful. I know, but you know, it was it. And you helped me out, like so much during that time. I just, I wanna say that, that I'm so grateful.
I know, but, you know, it was a really tough time.
That's a good friend, too.
The post six months to that was a really tough time.
Wow, that's true.
And my friend Raphael really helped me out, too.
I mean, that's what we do as friends, shit.
Let it.
You have your ups and you have your downs.
But I mean, at the time, I felt like such a fucking moron.
I'm like, I left this fucking great job
that I had, this company that I had.
I left it in order to pursue Chase Paper Dragon.
But hey, you're not the only one in history.
This has happened.
Oh, no, no, no, no.
By any means, and people much, much in different areas
of society, this happens to.
Yes, there are lots of people that this happens to,
and I feel for all of you.
And here's all I gotta say, if someone comes
wanting to fund your dream, do your homework.
And here's the one thing that I never did
that I should have done.
Even though he signed at the bottom of the Excel spreadsheet,
or the PowerPoint presentation that had all the budgets on it,
I asked for a signature.
I never got a contract.
Contract. Never got a contract sign.
Never got a contract sign.
I took it on good faith that this would be enough
until the lawyer told me Excel spreadsheets
are not contracts.
Yeah.
You dumbass.
One lawyer said, how are you going to pay me?
I said, I thought you could take it on contingency.
It's like contingency.
What do you want me to think? Is rented my box?
The least office space you'll be like the radio board worth $12
But for a month it was a fun time for a month it was a great time. I had a really good time.
I was.
I never forget.
I'll never forget.
I remember who I was dating at the time.
I was dating a person at the time.
And it was also what.
I think that contributed to the roughness of the situation.
It was a rough, rough relationship.
And I will never forget one time she called me.
Then we got in a fight and she was screaming at me,
she called me and the phone was left on air.
Oh, it was a tough time.
It was a tough time.
Anyway, Sim Cole, if I'm checking out, nowhere.
Yeah.
I think you can find a few videos and that's it.
I'm not even sure.
I think I have maybe.
I've got some old pictures in the Facebook
from us in the studio, me drunkenly taking pictures
like the rappers.
It's like, yeah.
I don't even know who they are.
We had the reads, Antonio Reed and Ashley Reed.
Okay.
L-A-R-E-D.
Yeah, who L-A-R-E-D's kids, who were great.
And they did this show every Friday night.
We had so much fun.
We did have a lot of fun.
I was like the white boy in the make.
I'm sure they hated me.
They were probably like, we don't need you up here.
But I'd be up there all drunk like, so what do you think about this?
And they'd be like, so it's our show and you're white.
So Jenna, but we would have like 30 people in the studio every Friday night.
And who the fucking what was going on?
Yeah, it was awesome.
We had such a great time. That was the first day in Jeff Tim. I know. I know. I know. And I was going on? Yeah. It was awesome. We had such a great time.
That was the first day in Jeff,
too, I'm just sending pictures.
And I was like, look where I am.
Look how I'm wearing these.
Like, he's cool.
Yeah, he's cool.
Yeah, Jeff, who really knows what the,
what the business is all about was like.
Yeah.
I remember him talking to me one time,
like when you guys first started dating
and he was like, it's just on the sound right.
Something about it that doesn't sound right.
Do you have a license for that music you're playing?
I'm pretty sure Simon got one.
Pretty sure, Askep, I'm gonna show up at the door
any moment, shut you down.
Then we had a pro wrestling show on us.
It was so weird.
I was doing nothing but talking about the girl I was dating.
From six to 11.
From 11 to two, there was some crazy man upstairs dancing
in Christopher Martin, the fashion play.
Love that guy.
The fashion play, I don't know.
Then the reason would come on
and we had Anvou talking about relationships.
And it was just a total fucking cluster fuck.
Listen, it was fun.
You live, you learn, you move on.
That's exactly what I did.
Yes.
But be careful out there.
That's my side of the story.
And there you have it.
And you're welcome to use clips from this.
Any of these vloggers out there,
you're welcome to use clips from this.
Just make sure you contact me and let me know
that you're going to do so.
OK, so I'll say this to you.
What else can I talk about?
I think we covered it.
That's a pretty big chunk of my life right.
I mean, a year of my life right there was rough
that I shared with the world.
Oh, no.
So there you go.
It's being vulnerable.
I love you.
Best to you.
Best to you.
And best to you out there.
Oh, let me say this, www.tcbpodcast.com,
where you can go to find everything.
Find the audio, find the video, get your stickers,
and read all the show notes more about Chrissy and I.
Mempho, Fest.
Well, actually, I'm not gonna say that
because I don't know that that's gonna appear before I have it.
We might have just been.
We might have just been.
But here are the beautiful stickers
and you can get yours, go to the website
and go to the Get Your Sticker tab
or send us a message to 661 best, the number two,
yo, that's 661 best, the number two,
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using one of our sponsors, products, and services.
Okay, that's it, that's all I can do.
Until next time, I must say,
bye!
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Each episode is written and produced by Brian Green, co-hosted by Chrissy Hodley, with The I'm going to be a little bit more careful. I'm going to be a little bit more careful. I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful. I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
I'm going to be a little bit more careful.
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you