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Part 2 - Neville James is joined by Dr. Nelson Pizarro of the University of the Virgin Islands, who detailed UVI’s Buccaneers Quest Competition, highlighting how the entrepreneurship program supports student innovation through coursework, pitching opportunities, and grant funding.
The views and opinions expressed on analysed this are entirely those of the on-air participants
and do not reflect those of the station's board management staff or underwriters.
We're back here, analysed this, had a good hour to start to show.
We got the callers on the layout, they didn't call it, okay, we wait for them to call.
So, I was looking up the Grand Combo band members, right, and say 1970 at Grand Combo,
the Puerto Rico featured a lineup of pianist Raphael ETL, who is the one who actually started the band in the 60s.
Key vocalist Andy Montanyes, number he went on his own, he had a great relationship with Alisa Chucky Hansen
when she's a caller, he and he would come up.
And I'm telling Rodriguez, those are the vocalists.
Percussion was managed by Miguel Malarete, Tim Balles, and Martin Kinyones and Oconga.
Well, Eddie Perez played the sax, Herardo, Grigio Cruz played the trumpet, right?
And the bass were Freddie Rivera, the Bongo's, Baby Serrano.
What I named saxophone, Eddie Labala, Perez.
And they had Victor Rodriguez on the trombone.
He was added later in what they introduced the trombone to part of the band, because I'm saying,
that's an orchestra.
And then, of course, after Andy had leave, right, Andy Montanyes and Pelling,
that's when Charlie Apponte came in and that's when they actually reached the absolute apex, right?
Yeah, I think Jerry Rivas and Papu.
Papu was a, that's when they had them three singers there.
So they had, I don't forget this 60th, let me say, 64 years, I don't know.
They had a band form in 1962.
What is this?
Yeah, because they had the 50th anniversary in 2012.
And the group has received the Monica La Universidad, the salsa.
Right?
Yeah, I feel if you're starting in 1962, man.
And don't forget Lucy Lamota had hooked me up.
She had pronounced it right, Lucy.
I done with the previous pronunciation, Lamota.
It's a hard O, right?
She had hooked me up with Cortillo.
nephew, I think it was.
He was the one who told audience that Cortillo, the band, was formed in St. Thomas.
When they were building pile and piercing that in the 50s.
You know what I'm saying?
I'd like to hear a story about that.
You know, that would, you know, that, if there was a door movie about that, right?
About salsa, salsa music, right?
And they include the fact that one of the biggest bands before they broke up,
actually formed, not in Puerto Rico, but in the U.S. Virgin Islands.
That would be awesome.
You know what I'm saying?
Cortillo.
I'm saying Cortillo, I live in St. Thomas, I know.
Cortillo and his combo.
They're active from 1954, right?
Rafael Cortillo.
You know what I'm saying?
Say what to Rafael.
Cortillo and ETL.
And Ismail Rivera.
Right?
Wow.
Ismail Rivera was a lead singer for them, man.
Cortillo won a joke, man.
And they were competing with Machito, Titoraliga, and Tito Puente.
Virgin Ames got a lot of history.
She was batching pile and piercing that in his, his, his, his hoe.
Cortillo was formed.
That's beautiful.
We got to focus on the line for, we got calling the line.
Good morning, Carla, how are you?
Yes.
Good morning.
Good morning.
Yeah.
Who am I speaking with?
Good morning.
Yeah.
It's a nice surprise.
Okay, nice surprise.
Good morning.
How are you?
Good morning.
How are you?
Good.
How are you doing?
This is Neville?
Yeah.
Yeah.
How are you?
And Dr. Worsey joining you?
Are you alone this morning?
I am alone.
Okay.
Okay.
Well, nice talking to you.
Nice meeting you.
Tell me about yourself.
Tell your audience.
Okay.
Okay.
So, I learned the distinguished, a career circle of the
distinguished professor of entrepreneurship and innovation.
And also the vice president of entrepreneurship and
economic development at the University of Virgin Island.
Okay.
Were you from originally?
I was born in Columbia, originally.
Okay.
What's the name of the town?
It's called Dorada.
How does?
Dorada?
Dorada, yeah.
Hold on.
Let me look it up here.
Let me see if I could find it.
Dorada.
And I was born in a mini 30 days, actually.
Oh, yeah?
Okay.
Yeah.
Okay.
Hold on a second.
I can see it here.
La Dorada.
All right.
And it's a town at municipality in the Colombian Department of
Caldas.
That's right.
And I said it is the seat of the Roman Catholic diocese of
La Dorada, Guabas.
Yeah.
And see.
I didn't know about you about me.
Yeah.
Okay.
Also, you didn't live there for a long time.
You moved from Dorada?
Yeah.
I moved from Dorada when I was, you know, I got to 40 years
all, and they moved me after my dad to Bogota.
Bogota?
Okay.
How big is Bogota?
Bogota right now is, I think, 10 million people.
Wow.
Wow.
Yeah.
It's a big city.
Back then, it wasn't that big.
It was probably four or three or two million people back then.
Wow.
Wow.
Wow.
And I see that Colombia.
Colombia is the country in South America that's connected to
Panama and the Panama Canal.
But the Panama used to be part of Colombia and the U.S.
purchases.
Okay.
Okay.
There we go.
So you studied where?
Where did you study at?
You studied in South America or you went to the United States?
No, I studied the States.
I did my bachelor's in Washington State University.
Oh, yeah.
And then I did my MBA University of Florida and my PhD.
I did a Grenoble, they call it France and Grenoble, France.
Oh my gosh.
That's a lot of history in Grenoble.
A lot of history.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Now, let's start with Washington State.
I believe that's in Pullman, right?
Pullman.
Okay, good.
Because I know University of Washington is in Seattle.
And I've been to Seattle three, I've been to Seattle three times.
It's one of the most beautiful cities in America.
Seattle, Washington.
Yeah.
Yeah, correct.
Is Pullman beautiful as well?
It's just much more than in town.
I mean, it's closest to me.
It's more like a desert type because it is desert around it.
But if it's in Seattle, you have the water and the mountains.
I mean, you have everything in Seattle.
And Pullman is different.
Pullman is more out in the country.
Correct.
Okay.
Okay, that's Washington State University.
I mean, you said you went to University of Florida.
That's in Gainesville.
That's correct.
I went to University of Florida and Gaines to Florida that.
And you got your actual second degree there.
And then you studied in Grenoble.
Yeah, Grenoble friends.
Yeah, Grenoble friends.
How do you?
How do you get my doctor there?
You did your doctorate in Grenoble.
Now, you know, you know who is the most famous person
from Grenoble?
No.
You ever heard of the wrestler by the name of Andre the Giant?
No.
Well, it was a wrestler.
He was about seven foot six, maybe four, five.
Oh, yeah.
I remember him.
Yeah.
He wasn't there.
A lot of movies.
A lot of movies, yes.
And when they used to announce him in the ring,
and they say in this corner,
from Grenoble friends in the Alps.
Apparently, it's in the Alps, right?
That's what they said.
Yeah.
Yeah.
They say they say the eighth wonder of the world.
Because he was so big.
He was so big.
They would say Andre the Giant.
You know, he's from Grenoble.
And he's been in a lot of movies,
a great wrestler.
What have you.
So, yeah.
So, from the photos that I saw,
Grenoble and the Alps.
That's some of the most beautiful landscape in Europe.
Yes.
You're right.
It's beautiful.
I mean, it's very,
yeah.
It's amazing.
It's the mountains and all that.
It's just amazing.
Did you ever ski?
Right.
Did you ever do any skiing in the Alps?
No, no, I never.
I never.
I asked him yet.
You know, we have this one.
The bottom down the meter.
The ocean.
Oh, okay.
Okay.
Good.
So, when you left Grenoble,
where did you go to?
You came back.
You came back to the Western,
the Western hemisphere.
Yeah.
So, I worked in a small school in
Olympia, Washington,
and worked there for five years.
But before I got my education,
I was an entrepreneur for about 12 to 40 years.
Oh, really?
I started,
I started multiple business.
Yeah.
I came into the state in 1980,
and two years later,
I started my first business.
Okay.
That's cool.
That's cool.
So now you're at,
how did you end up in the Virgin Islands?
I saw the profession
and I was very curious about the islands
so I applied.
And yeah, they hired me.
But the whole was the president back then,
and they hired me to do the job.
What was your first impression
when you came to paradise,
when you came to the Virgin Islands,
and you saw that Heaven
literally exists on Earth.
What was that like?
Yeah.
I felt very familiar when it is.
Two places that I have felt very familiar when,
when I arrived,
when I still felt,
you feel it in the body.
You know,
it's a physical sensation
that is positive.
The first time I was in Washington,
in Seattle,
and Olympia,
the area I felt very familiar with the area,
and my physical feelings were very positive.
And the same way it was here,
I felt very familiar with the area.
So it was very nice to feel that.
How long have you been in the Virgin Islands now?
This is my third year,
I'm finishing my third year.
Okay, that's good.
That's good.
Talk about the people,
talk about your experiences
with the beautiful people here in the Virgin Islands.
Yeah, so one thing that was interesting
was that I was telling my daughter,
my older daughter that I was coming here.
So I think the island is gray,
and I know I work with people
from the Virgin Islands,
and they're excellent workers.
You work with them,
teaching the mainland,
and they're all really,
and she wasn't proud.
I think that the people here are very driven,
and they have very sharp holes
and resilient,
smart people as well,
so you can feel that
in the community, really.
That's awesome.
Now talk about,
are you a professor?
You teaching any classes?
Yeah, I teach two classes as well.
Talk a little bit about that.
Yeah, so I teach and run
the entrepreneurship program.
We teach three classes,
and those classes,
when you take them out there,
you have less certificate
in entrepreneurship.
The certificate is open
just to students from the business school,
but also for the students
that are in other disciplines,
like teaching or computer science
or environmental science.
But we also created the certificate
in a way that any member
of the community can also take it,
so they only need to have a high school degree
and just apply for the certificate.
So students that might be doing
prominent or contenting,
or any other of those traits,
still that they can be,
they can also get the certificate.
The first course is
an introduction to entrepreneurship.
And this course is designed to,
not necessarily to open a business,
but to teach the person
the soft skills that entrepreneurs need,
like understanding failure,
for instance, then we tend to think
that failure is a bad thing,
and from the perspective of entrepreneurship,
failure is a learning process.
You learn through failings,
so you fail your way
through success.
They learn concepts
like affordable laws
where you release
what you can afford to lose.
You learn the concept of books,
chapters, where you start
with where you have
and build from there,
rather than thinking
I want to have a million dollars
to start a business,
you start small
and move up,
and like that,
you learn about growth,
mindset,
all of these psychological minds
that are collaboration,
for instance,
the social and other concepts,
and very important,
and we promote that,
and the students,
shout out that they can see
is a psychological concept
that they help the students
and the person
think about what they can do.
A lot of times,
what
helps us to do something
that is our own thinking.
And so self-ethics
is a way of believing
that you can actually do something.
And in the class,
we do the classes
are very much learned
by doing an experience
you're learning,
so they get to
all the theories,
all the videos,
they watch the videos
in the classroom,
we do workshops
and exercise,
practice and practice,
so they get to
experience these concepts
and learn them by doing them.
Then we have the sign thinking
in the sake of course,
which is to find
the problem
we're solving
and that is an interpreter problem.
It's not just a complaint,
a problem that people
are trying to solve,
the pain for solutions
that don't work,
and that they will be willing to pay for them
if somebody comes out
with the right solutions.
They work
and deciding that
is very human center.
It's not product center
and by that we mean
we understand the needs
of the person
and then we decide something
to meet
So one, it's rather than creating the new computer
and then looking for people who want to buy that computer.
And again, this first course and the second course
are not necessarily just for the startup businesses
because the skill of this, I think it is useful
for existing businesses and as an employee,
you can work in a company and use business skill
to help the company be successful.
But then the last course is divided into two ways.
One is using a simulation game
that we have where it mimics the condition
of launching a business and running a business.
Hold on one second, hold on a second,
let me stop you right there.
We can pick up the conversation that we're talking
in El Song bizaro, the Buccaneer's Quest competition.
This is the third year that they're doing it.
So what we call back, we'll get into details
about the competition.
Be back right after this.
How's it going, okay?
Thank you.
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And we're back here and analyze this.
And we got Mr. Nelson Pizarro from the University of Virgin
Islands.
There's got the Book of New Year's Quest competition that's
coming up the third edition of it.
Good morning, Mr. Pizarro.
Glad to have you on.
Yes.
And you were talking about the third level
with the Entrepreneurship.
Yeah, so I'm going to go back.
I'm going to go quickly to the Book of New Year's concept
competition.
But the third level is also very useful,
because we teach the students either in real life
or in a simulation game to launch the business.
And all of these courses include the Book of New Year's
competition, or actually the first two courses
include the Book of New Year's competition, which
is for the students, to be able to teach their ideas
and bring up to $1,000 in a prize.
So they got four prizes, one for $1,000, another one for $760,
another one for $500, and another one for $250.
This money is being donated by a certain research
company that is located here in the US, the United States.
And they've been very generous with the programs
of entrepreneurship here at UBI.
And so the students only get to take the class,
but they get to win some money to test their ideas.
So at the end of the last course,
we have a bigger competition, which
is the 13D milestone competition, where the students
can win, or they can get up to $40,000
and to launch their business to achieve a specific milestone
in their business.
It's not necessarily a competition.
It's more about getting funding to achieve a specific milestone
in their startups.
So they say they need money to launch their website
to promote their business, and that's
going to cost them $5,000.
So they can teach that to the judges.
And if the judges see that it's possible,
they will give them the $5,000 to do their website.
So the three competitions are the three courses
that have access to funding.
And they are open to students, to any UBI student.
You don't have to be a four-year student.
You can be all-assured, taking the certificate program.
You are already a student and can participate
in that type of funding.
Talk about this particular competition and the history of it.
I know it started in 2024.
Talk a little bit about that.
Yeah, so we started incorporating this competition
in the courses instead of having them upside the courses,
because a lot of our students, they work,
and it's hard for them to participate
in the extra-curricular activities.
So we made the competition, the bookerners concept competition,
out of a course, and is done with the class period.
So we're not adding additional work for the students.
In addition, the competition is open to students
from any field.
They can be computer science, education,
environmental science.
They can also participate.
That's why we make it very easy
to compete.
They only have to have a show up problem,
a solution to the problem,
and why you will work, meaning,
to support evidence that they need for that problem,
solving that problem, and what they will do
when they're the maximum price, which is $1,000.
A three-minute pitch finds a slide.
So a student or any discipline,
they can participate in the program.
So we spend, we invest, I would say,
that are about $7,000 every year, and those prices.
We want to invite the community,
because members of the community are attending,
and listening to the students' speech,
who will reinforce the learning process
where they can practice in front of a larger audience,
and also that they can feel supported by their community,
just by listening and supporting them to be there.
I think it has a lot of values.
So I appreciate the invitation to share this
with the community, because I think it's very important
for the students to see that support.
How many participants have you had in this competition
over the last couple of years?
Well, we have a total of over 100 students
have a unique application, but we only select,
as a finalist, six to piece their ideas to the judges,
and in a public setting, we do it at the 13D Innovation Center.
On this one, you're going to be of April 28th,
from 7pm to 8pm,
April 28th at the Innovation Center.
We always do it there.
We have the space and all the equipment
to be able to have a good presentation.
Okay.
Talk about that relationship with 13D.
I think that's the tech.
The RT Park has a relationship with them as well, right?
Yes.
13D, the CEO, Chair, is Mr. Curiel Sakhalov,
who I bear in his name of my title.
He is the founder of that company,
an investment firm, research firm,
in that has donated quite a lot to the university
and support the educational process here,
the UBI.
In fact, my pay comes from an endowment
that they donated over $5 million.
The earnings from that investment paid for my salary,
they also donated for the Innovation Center,
and they do a lot out of the themes
that out of that endowment includes the prizes
for the UConnaires competition,
the prizes for the 13D milestone.
So they are very supportive of their community,
and the UBI, and the students at UBI.
Interesting.
Do you, does your, the division that you're dealing with,
do you work in conjunction with any other universities?
Because I know we're doing a lot of work
with conjunctively with other universities
and other programs at UBI.
Yeah.
So, out of the gap that we do it is,
building the culture of collaboration,
and we want a grant with the NSF National Science Foundation
to promote collaboration in the Virgin Islands.
But that we mean that we should work more together,
and we did what we call an Innovation Studio,
where we invited members of the community
to talk about problems in the specific areas
like environment, education, housing,
workforce development, all of that.
And we have already, like, seven groups
working with different problems.
But we are also working right now
in a project with,
I forgot the name of the organization,
an nonprofit that I remember her name,
the person that rose that in money, Adanio,
and we working with her to do the next step
of the Innovation Studio,
where we aim to first recognize members
of the community that have done
for many years good for the community,
whether it's in the environment,
in healthcare, and education, and agriculture,
we want to make sure that we recognize our own.
I think we do very little about that.
And so, that is going to be something
that we're going to do in August 8th.
And then we're going to connect those members
of the community to do the existing groups
that we have right now in the Innovation Studio
and see how we can continue
or work in on problems that the community is having
that hasn't been solved,
that we can work as a community to solve them.
And so, it's kind of like trying to create a structure
or create a structure for collaboration.
Not necessarily the UVI will lead control of these,
we are more likely as another actor
in the way that we do it in supporting,
providing a structure and providing a faculty,
students, things like that,
where we can help solve problems
that the community that we need.
And we are working with other universities,
R.T. fireworks,
with I believe the University of Michigan.
And so, we did other colleges that working
with other universities.
I think we're working in other aspects
with NOVA University, and so there is a lot of things
going on right now
that I don't even know how that is going on
and they're doing a lot of work as well.
I see, I'm going to say that Imani Daniel
she has a company by name of Vision.
Yes, and that's a no problem.
Yeah, Vision, isn't it?
That's the company you're talking about?
Yes, that's correct.
Okay.
She's a graduate leader in the community,
she's doing a lot of good work,
so we are, it's that collaborated together,
making sure that we support any,
any, whether the social entrepreneur
active this or something that we can help,
whether we're the structure with research or training.
So, we are building that kind of a structure
together and making sure that people know about that as well.
Okay, good.
So, have the application,
has the application window closed for the competition?
Yes, it is already, we already selected the up six students,
how students ideas, we are just reviewing them
and helping them to prepare for their final pitch.
Again, we should solicit it through the 28 from 7 p.m.
to 815 p.m.
Is that open to the public?
It's open to the public, yeah, we really love to have
members of the community attended
and watching the students present it.
Okay.
Well, congratulations on the, this is the third annual,
Buckinghurst Quest competition.
That's correct.
And the prizes, you said,
will start at $1,000 and work its way down?
Yes, at 1,000, 715, 500 and 250.
Okay.
And hold on a second here.
You say, Buckinghurst Quest provides a unique opportunity
for UVI students to step outside of their classrooms
and put their knowledge to work practically and meaningfully.
This competition filters an entrepreneurial mindset,
encouraging students to identify real world challenges
and develop innovative solutions
that can have a tangible impact.
We're excited to see the creativity and innovation
that will come out of this competition.
And this was your, this was you and the career,
Sakalov, distinguished professor of entrepreneurship
and innovation and special assistant
to the president of the university, that's you, right?
Yeah, yeah, my title, my second title,
changed from a special assistant to vice president
of the Entrepreneurship and Economy Development.
Okay, that's good.
Well, congratulations on that.
Yeah, thank you.
Thank you.
And congratulations on actually getting entrepreneurship
in the minds of our young people.
I wish when I was coming out of college,
I got into a business mentality
instead of thinking, well, you know,
I just want to work for the government
and you know, hard days work for hard days pay.
I wish I had an embrace entrepreneurship at a young age
and we need to do that with a lot of our young people
right now in this ever evolving technological world
that we're in.
Yeah, we are promoting a lot done
in the spite of the mission of the school
and also the university and also the school of business
it has because one skill, which is adaptability,
we teach them the students to be adaptable.
As you know, and you just said,
to your point, technology is going to be changing so rapidly
that you need to be able to adapt quickly
to the new things coming out.
And so we are aiming to be able to,
and we've been teaching high school students
also summer programs, the school of business
and the Department of Management
in San Croia actually has been doing that.
And we just lost the funding
but we're seeking for more funding to help us
to continue doing that.
We've reached out large number of high school students.
And we also aim to train
the teachers that want to incorporate
the entrepreneurial mindset
that TVT is in terms of curriculum
because none necessarily just to open a business
but to think as an entrepreneurial
and having that entrepreneurial mindset is very important
because it's going to help them to be more successful
in whatever they do.
None necessarily to open a business.
Nelson Pizarro from the University of Virgin Islands
Buckenair Quest competition, Tuesday night,
seven to eight, 15 at the 13D Innovation Center
over on St. Thomas, congratulations.
And looking forward to talking to you again in the future.
Thank you so much for inviting me.
I really appreciate you taking the time to talk to me.
You got it, not a problem.
And congratulations.
And keep up the good work, okay?
Thank you.
You got it.
Nelson Pizarro from the University of Virgin Islands
of Vice President, Entrepreneurship.
We'll take a break, come back and put up a tie
on the show, final segment, you back right after this.
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Welcome to Fire Politics, where we prepare you for your next political conversation.
I'm Karoni Mukartina, and I'm Brandon Roddinghouse.
Each week we break down what's happening.
In Texas, nationally, and why it matters.
What?
I need to know.
We don't tell you what to think.
We help you think it through.
Once again, Texas is the center of the political universe.
Yes.
Join us every week for a product politics, because politics never stops and need to do it.
Friday's 8.30pm on WTJX Business, 12.3 and 92.
And we're back here, and I like this, a great show to this point on beautiful, beautiful
day in paradise.
It is a good thing to be in paradise.
Let me get out of the music.
We can't be playing everybody.
You can't have music.
I mean, in Brianna, at least one quelbec.
Tomorrow is I'll, I'll root match music tomorrow.
Oh, yes.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, man.
Yeah, man.
Nice.
This.
This for all of it.
Look at that sunset here.
This for all the music lovers, man.
I'm not sure my name changed.
It's my name is Nevelito, because I like, I like salsa music.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Wow.
I did another.
At any time.
I could reach up with that music.
Okay.
I like to hear the salsa voice, huh?
I love my joke.
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
You're not she from me?
Yeah.
Yeah.
My name is Padamba.
It's my name, man me.
Open it door unless you come in.
Yeah, man.
It's your type.
Hey, don't school, then.
About me.
That y'all know.
Yeah, man.
You know that.
Anything wico.
We could reach for something like this.
Just to keep that minus.
Not saying they are never.
But.
Yeah, we got a restaurant.
Yeah.
Yeah, we got rascreds tomorrow as both Pata
Lolo Willis
And then I'll talk school affectionate. I love you. We're gonna do a
History thing. I was doing much a big tune
Somebody the late seven piece after the now come here with his actual food man
Yeah, what's he?
Well, the music
Okay, that's it. Hey, I'm all of Hendricks
affectionately known as uncle Bronco
That's what Lirietta Cali uncle Bronco
Right, but he'll say that no, but they live from ten cooling out now
Here the saxophone for Halloween come back again. G.V
Yeah, what is it?
Yeah
Terry P
Well, the music
Yeah, man for West. He's a grainy Kennell Henry
Caliki. See
He's a well-being
I know he like his actual food come again, man
Okay, that's Saksweeta, Harry, Freeman, Quilbe, Eddie Bruce, you really believe Dr. Saks
wants a piece of this thing, haven't you?
Sade Dasha, Michael, Malone, thank you for the legislation.
Okay, I've listened to the song I like a lot.
Now, this is a Rufus.
This is, we all get this one, actually.
It's a great thing for the ladies.
Angie in Canation, in Maryland, good morning.
Today, we're at the A-Lem to play with the music.
Great.
And then I go get a show, don't you?
The lovely Suzy.
And then he's seen Jan.
You should have seen her Saks dakika forl, damn it, I'll be back.
Oh, yes.
Listen to the band, zona.
Whoa-oh-oh-oh-oh.
A-na-na-na.
Oh, yes.
That's all the volume.
Scratch-a-oh-oh-oh.
I've been here a month for all of our e-mail authors, all of our company's street
in Christian sense.
Let us know that we know about our culture and about our culture, as we say from our
brain and state village.
I've heard about music since we came.
Oh gosh.
Danny Challenger, thank you very much for manning the boards.
So, Danny, anything you want?
Here, man, you want to put in a request, man?
I'll list the yellow bear.
I don't be sending you and Glen Roy and Jabbar.
My music.
Put in a request, now, man.
Tell me, ask me if it's OK if I could play something.
You know what I'm saying?
Can you get rid of laughing?
Yeah.
I can't be just telling you, I'll play this, play that, no, I can't, that stuff.
You know what I mean?
I got to get the ability ever so often to say, hey, boss, I want play this, yeah.
Glen Roy don't know.
He'll just point what he wants.
You know what I'm saying?
And you could do it like that.
Yeah, I love that.
It's a team thing.
You know what I'm saying?
I get a text message.
What text me?
Oh gosh.
Leslie, say half great.
Leslie.
Leslie, check this out, right?
You say half grain and I say at three quarters.
So we're going to compromise, right?
Because half is 50% three quarters is 75%.
So that's what we're going to do.
We're going to do our five years, which is 62 and a half percent.
OK?
So we're going to do our five years, grain.
I like that one.
And I always say he can't help himself.
He walking up well sitting down.
Then there's the best.
Yes.
Don't take the best, man.
That's quite bad music.
Yeah.
Oh, yes.
Yes.
My sick.
Good looking out to me, man.
He said, bless it, man.
You and the family.
What about the Miller brothers?
Yes, sir.
Yes, sir.
I kindly beg your pardon.
Definitely go.
Go put them in.
Have to put them in.
You don't know about that.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah, man.
Is that time of the year carnival week next week, you know?
OK?
I don't know how I've received it.
I got a request coming in.
Talk to me.
It's on the man's side.
You got midnight groovers from Dominica.
Bring it in, man.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Action.
Uh-huh.
You're going to be ready for tomorrow, man.
Get the boys a big day.
I hope we're as rich as both.
Dog school and Lolo Willis.
Right?
I hope I'm ready for tomorrow.
OK?
Uh-huh.
Midnight groovers.
OK.
Shall I get up here, Slime?
Uh-huh.
Uh-huh.
Daddy, daddy, daddy, what are you saying?
Translating for what are you saying, man?
I finished still in the top one, oh, yeah.
South Dover.
South Deyet.
Yours in front, my direction.
May be behind you.
Yeah.
OK.
Well, you know you don't need to be on the back.
I like that.
And this midnight groovers classic.
That, that, that, that, that.
That, that, that.
I actually be ready to have a beach.
Why they why they beach why they beach lame?
Right are we dancing in the sun?
I want I want to dance or not and I know rule that they make me a cup. I need some give
This ain't cadars. This is our temple type of thing ever
And and those cadars okay, okay, okay, okay
Uptempo cadars, there we go. I know they'll they'll play the camp the camp will be the camp on
Compa that's in order to hit you right that I hit you, okay
This is cadans lips okay good thing
So what can I say I don't play it's a separate this is
Zook here we go. Zook cadans lips. So compa right okay good
Yeah, but see education I get it. Oh
And you're on your local NPR station and yet education with it
They like to feature the guitar
Like the guitar the feature
Oh
Hey doctor believe soul release all connectes out man
If we tell so if we tell so
You know then you know that you know it's a second feature incident
In an accident the comel
That's that's French or that's
Okay
Oh, yes, I like the harmonies
And then
Don't turn then thank you very much. Don't you say
Donnie said that's a catcher. We said yeah, man. You got the day that way though. You know he's saying so he's all good
You're we getting ready for um
For carnival
I'm saying and I haven't played one of my favorites from since I must for the week for the week yet
They can't see even everything for tomorrow. I don't know how I have resist how I've resisted myself
From doing it, but I had to do it like I told the boys
We're doing it follow-up
Village opening. I believe Monday night is when the village open. I know Sunday on Monday
I believe it's Monday night Sunday they open Sunday. Okay
You know the good thing with the village when the village good right
People going there for a man and they open up their boot
For a man is a people going there to buy lunch
Right and staying up until two
two
Three o'clock in the in the night during the village go home get a couple hours sleep
Got prep food and arcade and stuff to come back again
To start it to start up the action. That's it. That's a beauty or carnival man. I'm saying so
We are we open for an incident free
Right carnival 2026
in
Rax city. I'm not saying so
We're gonna be good man. We're gonna be good. We're good and I noticed like I said
The visibility in the region right now is good. I struggle for months for months and in that weeks for months
To see the outline of of the tool and seeing John
from my perch here in the studio and
Um
I could see it now man and they're going to get nice and clear
Like I don't say uh over there. Let me see if I can find a piece more quelbee
Uh, a quadril. Yeah, let me play let me play this bad manja
Let me um, let me send bad manja
To um to Danny so you get a piece of it that quelbee got to get some action quadril not just quelbee quadril
Got to get some action
Okay, so bad manja
You know that that they got to play
So I'll just record here record here the saxophone
Here we go
Me neither me got to send me. Me neither me got to send the sound to me
I send the name
Right? So the cohere banjo. Hey, Masek
The here the banjo uh, uh, we know the sax
The sax the sax pockin
But the cohere banjo, the cohere soar of
The cohere soar of foam in
Yeah, man
Ladies for our
Toot
Okay, I see the banjo
I got to record my turn at the time I got banjo
I got to record here my banjo
Yeah, man
Yeah, man
I got to record my turn at the time I got to do one
I got to record
Turn it down one
I got to record
I got to record it
And I got to record
I got to record
Okay
Right?
Kaya, playing the skill, and then a man named Milton Meg,
playing an opera piece in Quellebex.
Oh, yes.
Harry, I come, Harry.
Ladies, forward.
Two, three, balance.
Here, here.
Come and relax, man.
Come and relax, man, come and relax.
Relax, relax, relax, relax.
Let's go, come and relax, man.
Here, man.
This is the best guest of good news.
Yes
I just guess I'm good news
Turn it down from the cycle spreads I'm good news. Yeah Monday
What we doing our six anniversary show
Right that's Harry Freeman
Baudi
Not gonna be Harry Freeman 93rd birthday, so we got couple Baudi's we got me being away that Monday
Harry Freeman out of the West
I mean out of St. Thomas. I mean out of the out of the country side right
93rd birthday
Enjoy
Boots
Thank you very much
Tomorrow
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When you travel the world becomes a smaller place
Pretty incredible stuff when you explore with friends like mine that are outdoors cinematographers
Destinations definitely come to life
Okay, I was loud. I'm Jeff. I owe a little ridge
And this is outside beyond the lens. It's not always about their obvious big view behind you sometimes the prettiest things are at
Refillated feed
Tune in Saturdays at 5 p.m. on WTJX TV channel 12
