Newsom’s Shameless White House Obsession: He Just Won’t Quit His Presidential Pipe Dream
Episode Description
Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Nissum has been a political figure in the state of
California since the late nineteen nineties. He was first serving
on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors from ninety seven
to four, then mayor of San Francisco from four to
twenty eleven. Then he was elected as lieutenant governor, held
that for one, two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight years.
(00:21):
Then in January of twenty nineteen he became governor. Satan
he's term limited out now because we got an election
coming up in twenty twenty six here and the question
is he gonna run for He's been running since guys,
since he was on the San Francisco Board of Supervisors.
(00:42):
Oh yeah, he went. He goes out every summer to
Illuminati Island, gets all polished up. They give him them
what he's got to do for the next year. Oh
he's the he'll be the Democrat choice. Because you think,
how did Kamala get away with like bailing out rioters
but then getting to say yes, I'm all for law enforcement.
(01:02):
You know, they get away with it. The media doesn't
cover it, and the media will cover him just like
well they kind of have out here in California, not
telling the truth. On him. But we the people, we
know it. Everybody in their day to day life in Paducah, Kentucky,
or Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, or Pensacola, Florida. They hear some stories,
(01:23):
but hey, they got their own boogie going on where
there and their life is. They will market him, they
will campaign him, and I'm sure there's some people out
in the backwoods of Tennessee out there, some leftover from
decades ago, moonshine and families that might say, listen to
what this boy's got to say here, I could vote
(01:43):
for this Silver.
Speaker 2 (01:44):
Is one of the biggest dam mistakes as country's ever made.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
I know.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
It's a hold your hand idealistic point of view that
somehow magically, I mean, God bless some of you if
you like me. I've been known to have a glass
of wine and night watching some of the nightly news.
We all need to self medicate periodically.
Speaker 1 (02:00):
Here you go, Well, early days of the la and
a rice anti rice anti ice riots. It's now being
reported Avenue someone was at a wine tasting. No it wasn't.
It was a fundraiser or cancer fundraiser, which he probably
attended an honor of his mother, who died of breast cancer.
(02:22):
That's what his office yelled out. When everybody's like, wait,
day two of the riots, when police cars are under attack.
For the late law enforcement was underttacked. Bausinesses are being looted.
The very next day, Trump was getting ready to call
in the National Guard. And you're at a wine tasting fundraiser. Listen, man,
can you can You can help people raise money. You
(02:43):
don't have to be at the event. You need to
be sitting at your desk. Yeah, Governor, Look there's cars burning.
That is a smooth cabernet, isn't it, Governor, law enforcement
officers are getting attacked.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
Pop another one.
Speaker 1 (03:04):
June seventh, it was the Vineyard Vibes and Event fundraiser
for the Plump Jack Foundation, founded by Newsom's sister. We
had wine, we had live jazz music. They even had
locally made pizza and smash burgers. I love all that.
That's great, and as governor of California, he can indulge
himself in that. Not while La is on fire, you idiot.
(03:28):
He was photographed there walking around just like nothing's going on.
They said he was there for ninety minutes and when
he left he went to a retreat into the inner
rooms of his winery. Three more bottles. Probably well he
did tell us, didn't he? When things get rough man
(03:50):
and you just can't look at the news.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
You know, silver is one of the biggest dam mistakes
as country's ever made. I know. It's a hold your
hand idealistic point of view that somehow magically bless if
you like me, I've been known to have a glass
of wine at night watching some of the nightly news.
Speaker 1 (04:05):
Did that night, didn't kay? Periodically? Yeah, that's what you
were doing watching the nightly news, self medicating. It's not
me saying it, guys, I'm just highlighting how he says
he lives his life.
Speaker 5 (04:18):
Stop it.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
You can fundraise without attending the event at the biggest
city in your state. I don't know, has a riot
going on? Gavin Newsom which his Happy Birthday to first
partner at California. Here's his post with he and is
that Joe Losting's wife? He said, Happy birthday to the
(04:41):
first partner of California, the outstanding mother of incredible loving
Joe all that who calls his wife first partner, Just
happy birthday to my wife, first partner. Yeah, Partners in
crime Bonnie and Clyde. Who's funding all that sharing, your state, governor,
That's what you should be worried about. The Chinese Communist Party.
(05:07):
We should all be worried about this. The tax money
that has gone out regarding this government watchdog open the books.
So California handed out seventy three point six million to
anti deportation om groups in just twenty twenty three and
twenty twenty four. The Coalition for Humane Immigrant Rights of
La Churla chi r LA. You might have seen that
(05:30):
in the news. CHURLA big organization. They got about half
thirty five million. So what we're doing, we're going to work.
We don't even like to look at the tax it's
just just direct deposited. I don't even need to see
a receipt of those taxes. Just put it in there, right.
But yeah, the money that we worked for is now
(05:53):
being used to destroy parts of our state. It's that simple.
Churla's public funding went from twelve point four million in
twenty twenty two to thirty four million in twenty twenty three.
According to churla's tax filings, ninety percent of the revenue
(06:13):
comes from California taxpayers. The immigration related services. What are
we funding Warriors for Justice a deportation defense squad. There's
also a program called Wise Up exclamation Point. It teaches
school students, high schoolers to become activists and the removal
Defense team. They get out there and they block immigration enforcement.
(06:37):
So our tax dollars contracts signed voter on do approve
right up in Sacramento. Didn't that just make you just
want to scream out loud on a Friday? Hey, if
you're a loan right now, just let it out, let
it out. I'm going to turn the mic off and
do it. That hurt. Before Trump cut them off, Department
(07:03):
Homeland Security had given TURLA one point two million for
Citizenship Instruction and Naturalization services. TURLA gets funding from multiple sources,
state grants, federal contracts, private folks, those you know, wine
tasting kind of things. Newson was that so, yeah, there's
(07:25):
I'm glad this is being exposed. But just because things
are being exposed, don't you It's just so much going on.
So if I sat right here and thought about everything
that's waiting on the tarmac that needs attention by the
Department of Justice, man, I don't know if he saw
(07:48):
any of it in Portland. Last night they had a
little brew ha haa. But boyd is it different than
the last Summer of love? George Floyd brew haha? They
actually they had these dumpsters Antifa of it. Why can't
we get these guys? Why are they allowed to run
(08:09):
around our country for this many years? Why can't the
FBI right now? Why can't they Why can't they go
in and just decimate them, take them out, lock them
up as domestic terrorists. Is it because they wear masks?
Is that why we can't find them?
Speaker 5 (08:22):
No?
Speaker 1 (08:22):
We could, We could, we could get I don't understand.
It blows my mind, but at least I saw a
step in the right direction. I can't believe we got
it to the point so that five or six federal cars,
police cars could come out of the Federal building in Portland.
Obviously they were taking a group of people somewhere. There
(08:44):
weren't a whole lot of vands. It was more just
you know, black, looked operational. And first of all, they
had to clear out the Antifa mob up there. And
they love to get these big blue dumpsters on wheels
and roll them and block the front of it so
that these cars can come out and did you see
this at all? Director? Ride nunch Okay, you're in the break,
(09:05):
you're going, okay, I'm gonna show you this video over here.
But anytime when of them got close to pushing that thing,
you just saw like, where's that coming from? It was
shots being taken. It was rubber bullets, but boy, they
had an impact. Nobody wanted to get it was some
of the bullets actually looked like they rolled the dumpster
a little bit and they were high, high velocity. If
(09:29):
that had hit you, you would have been on the
ground crying like a little baby. And so but they did. Okay,
so three of them come up. And then and the
guy that's filming it, he's actually sitting up there going wow.
They're on the roof, snipers are on the roof. Let
me play it for you, and the.
Speaker 3 (09:48):
Driveway full upward vehicular traffic, and remain on the sidewalk
or across the street. Any wanted to include the trespassing
on litteral property get subject into a record.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
Wait listen, here comes here.
Speaker 6 (10:06):
Do you hear that?
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Pop? Pop?
Speaker 3 (10:07):
Pop?
Speaker 1 (10:07):
Pop pop? That's because their hands went by the dumpsters
just to move it.
Speaker 7 (10:13):
It's like there's there's some sniper from top of the room.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
That's unbelievable. We're shooting death.
Speaker 7 (10:21):
It's the dumpster.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
You're still doing that right now.
Speaker 3 (10:24):
They're shooting from the roof.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
Right now, you're shooting from the roof. Wow. But no,
let's go to a wine tasting ceremony. Now that was
in Portland. I can't blame Newsom for that. But in
that just it's just so Gavin though. And then come on, guys,
it's just it's just how Gavin is.
Speaker 3 (10:47):
This is the Trevor carry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
I don't know how many individuals out there were aware
that during the I'm any may trying upstage Pride Month?
How dare they? It's Black Music Month? Sure it was
Black Music Month. Wait before it was ever Pride month.
And you know when people try, when they try, it's uh.
(11:18):
I don't make fun of people when they're trying to
do something like learning to play the guitar and they
can kind of know some court, you know, you don't
make fun of them, or you know, even I don't care,
you know, I don't care. How old are you? Well,
you don't do that to the little kids, people say,
But it's okay with your buddy or something. Now not
even then. If they're trying, they're trying, give me, give
them the thumbs up. Man, keep practicing. But when you
(11:41):
mix in anti Trump into it, then I'm gonna make
fun of it all day long. This is Democrat Congressman
Hank Johnson contribute to Black Music Monthy. Let me just
let him introduce this here.
Speaker 5 (11:56):
This is hello, ladies and gentlemen, Congressman Hank Johnson Hill
with my Fender stratocaster. Just recently picked it up, thought
I would try it out. I hate to hurt your
ears and everything, but you are I'm just learning to
play guitar, and it happens to be Black Music Month
of uh twenty twenty five, and so I'm compelled with
(12:18):
a new guitar and with some thoughts about that old song.
Uh hey, Joe, you know, to give some commentary on
where we are now. And if y'all don't mind, I'm
gonna just strum a little bit, please, uh, don't hold
it against me.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
I will alright. I if that's my eight year old nephew,
(12:57):
I'm gonna I'm gonna listen to the whole song and
appla and go man, just keep trying. That's good and
not bad. But when you're the age of Hank Johnson,
at that point, I would have been like, hey, hey, hey, no, no,
but no, don't don't send that out on social media.
Don't know. That's not a good idea. Hank. Keep practicing, though,
keep practicing. When you get better, then then honor Black
(13:18):
music month, being a black man and all. Hank, that's
a get better at it. That's not good. He went
on for about four minutes of this song. I'm not
going to put you through it. I just thought i'd
grab the ending here where Hank really brings it home. Man,
he trump.
Speaker 8 (13:42):
We won't let you take out the muckras it down,
burn it down to the ground.
Speaker 5 (13:54):
That's it.
Speaker 3 (13:54):
Job, Thank you, go home to mom.
Speaker 1 (13:58):
Wasn't that bad? Guys? It was four minutes of that
bad woo. Somebody needed to say something to the congressman
there not not don't send that. Don't send that out.
Yeah you might go viral, but for all the wrong reasons. Congressmen,
Well they told me to go. I'm gonna give him
(14:18):
my fender count Ah. You want to hear one of
the best ideas I've heard all day today, and I've
heard some good ideas today in Florida. This is really
because I played you the sheriff. Sheriff Ivy, Well, let
me just give you a little taste of him in
case you missed him.
Speaker 7 (14:37):
Go ahead, Sheriff, Well, I'm gonna I'm gonna break it
down for you, all right. And if somebody wants to
know what I mean by turn violent, all right, this
is what I mean. If you resist law florders, you're
going to jail. Let me be very clear about that.
If you block an intersection or a roadway in brevarc County,
you are going to jail. If you flee arrest, you're
(14:59):
gonna go to jail tired, because we are going to
run you down and put you in jail. If you
try to mob rule a car in Brevard County, gathering
around it refusing to let the driver leave in our county,
you're most likely going to get run over and dragged
across the street. If you spit on us, you're going
to the hospital and in jail. If you hit one
(15:22):
of us, you're going to the hospital and jail and
most likely get bitten by one of our big, beautiful
dogs that we have here. If throw a brick, a
fire bomb, or point a gun at one of our deputies,
we will be notifying your family where to collect your
remains at because we will kill you graveyard dead. We're
not going to play. This has got to stop. You're
(15:45):
watching what's taken place out there. You're seeing police officers
that are being attacked, being spit on, being put in
harm's way just for doing their jobs. You're seeing ice
agents that are being targeted for doing their and you're
seeing obstructionists that are doing all of this standing in
(16:06):
the way of law and order.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Oh of this, you think that's something. Now, we got
the Attorney General Florida, Attorney General aut Meyer. He now
is a place where they're going to take illegal aliens
that are waiting to be deported at detention holding center.
And that the concept is it's cheaper because you don't
(16:31):
have to pay for perimeter security. Said an old airfield
in Florida, surrounded by the swamp, alligators and pythons.
Speaker 3 (16:40):
This is the Tremor Charry show on the Valley's Power.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Talk, minding it out. Probably already be on vacation, Lord Willing.
December twenty first will be the shortest day of the year.
I it's so funny when we're talking with Squires and
director Ni until they're like, I can't wait for it
to be sunshine when we get off the air and
light when I get home. And it's probably two three
(17:06):
weeks ago, I said to Squares one morning, I'm kind
of now looking forward to it being dark when I
get off where I don't know see how we see
how we are, But it's gonna be link aty split,
It's gonna be here. The fourth of July is gonna
be booooo here gone. Then we'll be talking about what
personal state football? Yeah, August twenty third, Yeah, that's the
first first game.
Speaker 8 (17:28):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (17:28):
Then by okay, then we'll be like, okay, one more
month of heat, then the heat to be kind of
bouncing back and forth, and then I kind of start
to go, okay, we're gonna quit right before Halloween, and
then you better start gewing your Christmas shopping because it's
it's so fast. Everything is so fast. How do we
slow it down? How do we live longer? I love
(17:49):
to see things like this study finds dot Org lonely
older adults may actually live longer. Study shows yeah, they
told us red wine's good. Then it's not than it is,
then it's not. They tell us all these things like, no,
having people around you on a rich fulfilling life is
(18:12):
longer life. No, No study shows loneliness kills. We heard
it's like smoking twenty five cigarettes a day. You know,
it's it's what I thought loneliness did. Haven't we all
been kind of taught that right?
Speaker 4 (18:25):
Right?
Speaker 1 (18:26):
No, they said. In his study involving four hundred thousand
older adults cross three countries, turn the assumption upside down.
Lonely older adults actually less likely to die within a
year compared to their non lonely Pierce. That's because just
because you're not lonely that I don't mean there's somebody going.
Would you stop it? I said, put that down for
the third time. All right, I know, quack, get off
(18:48):
my back.
Speaker 8 (18:49):
You know.
Speaker 1 (18:50):
Think of George Costanza's parents on Seinfeld, Right, Yeah, they
weren't lonely. All right, Maybe that's it. No drama around
I it's just a study. It's just a study. But
when these studies pop up that I've never seen before,
I have to share them with you. You know, Happiness,
(19:10):
the Bible assures us that joy is what we get.
Joy a little different than happiness.
Speaker 5 (19:17):
Right.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
The Constitution assures us life liberty, and the pursuit of
happiness doesn't assure us, So pursue it. We gotta pursue it,
which leads me to the suicide hotline operator encouraging a
disabled Canadian to consider assisted suicide. On the call, Amy,
(19:39):
she's a Canadian woman. She's disabled with PTSD from childhood abuse.
So it's not like she is paralyzed from her nose
to her toes and just can't livel it's something you
know some of the I'm sure her PTSD from childhood abuse.
It's what she wanted to find reason, and she reached
(20:01):
out and the operator told her about medical assistance and dying.
It's legitimate and it's a legal option. Wow, this is
where we are now. This is accepted across the world
in so many places. We're not guaranteed all the time.
(20:23):
I'm actually I'm just gonna tell you right now because
I asked him before the show. The hour before the show,
I have a friend from high school that reached out
to iHeart and Sacramento called and said that he let
the voicemail there and he left one here at our
offices and it's a friend from high school and he's
on the baseball team with me, and the message was,
he wants to talk to you. He's dying. So I've
(20:46):
been talking to him in the last few weeks, and
over the course of the conversation it has led to,
you know, him having conversations and thoughts about he just
can't handle he has lyme disease. He's had a stroke,
he's had heart attacks. There's nothing that can help his
pain whatsoever. He's basically saying months maybe he has maybe
and no pain medication. And if you call that story
(21:10):
of line disease, it was JV and iHeart DJ that
I used to work with back in San Jose days,
the doghouse in San Francisco. He had line disease. He
went missing, he committed suicide, jumping in the bay. It
affected his brain. And that's what my friend has told me.
And he said his story though a reaching out to
friends like myself. We hadn't talked in a long time.
He said, his story is led somebody from high school,
(21:32):
a girl on the phone. His story of his Jesus
is by my side led her to Christ his example
and he doesn't want to live, man, he doesn't want
to live. He and he doesn't feel like it's suicide
to say he doesn't want to live. He doesn't want
to because of the pain that he goes through. So
(21:54):
I said to him today, I'm like, would you want
to spread that message that touched that girl's art? And
I just said and I said it, and then I
was quiet. I said, could I interview you? Yeah? Yeah,
I could do that, he said about that long of
a pause. I was like, yes. I looked at it
(22:16):
as hey, give him something to live a few more
days to try and get through. So we're gonna hit
here from my friend Mike next week. I don't know
what day it's going to be. It'll be. He has
periods where he has energy to talk, barely enough energy
to talk. I mean, he's audible, you can understand him.
And a year ago he was working. So this hit
(22:37):
real quick. He knew he had it for twenty years.
Lime disease. Lime diseases. Man, that's way rougher than I
ever ever knew. So the fact that you know, how,
how's he happy? He's not happy. But when he said
Jesus is next to me, that's some joy. And when
(22:58):
he tells a story like leading somebody to Christ with
his story, that's that, you know, that's joy that he
made me. You know, yeah, it made me happy. But
you know what I'm saying, that undercurrent even though you're
in the deepest mire depression, you know. I told him,
I said, man, because I don't you know, it's not
too often we have to have these conversations. I said
(23:20):
to my dad on the phone. Being a pastor, you've
had many of these bedside conversations with people, you know.
It's it really makes you not talk about anything about
yourself a lot of times though they want to do
hear what's going on in your world, to just kind
of feel normal, have a normal conversation, but just very heavy,
(23:41):
very heavy. And I told him, I said, man, I
don't know if I were in your shoes, because I
fled out, asking do you have anger toward God at all?
Is that? Have you gone through those periods? And he
said no. I said, man, that's like living Christ on earth.
Jesus didn't want to die. He was you know, sweat
and blood. He wanted to get away from it, but
(24:03):
he his will and you know, for all of us,
he knows the day that he created us. That's why
I'm so against abortion, and he knows the day that
we're gonna be called home. And there's really no control
that we well, we got control of what we decided
(24:23):
to do in between those two goal posts there, indeed.
But what Mike is going through in the way he's
doing it, I told him, I don't know where I
would be. I'd probably go through real periods of some
really deep anger. Like every time I looked out of
my sick window in my house and saw some guy
(24:43):
riding a bike, I'd be like, what God, why? Why me?
Look at him? What did I do? All Right? I
didn't even wasn't even prepared to share that. But when
I saw that suicide hotline story there, remind me of
somebody that's fighting fighting, and yeah, those thoughts, those thoughts
(25:06):
are there. They have to be to escape that pain.
A lot of people go through life ending stuff with
morphine and the pain, you know, medicine helps. He doesn't
have that. Well, Okay, I'm gonna come back and talk
to people out there that say I can't buy a
I can't buy a house in California. It's so expensive.
(25:26):
How can and I say about it feel bad for
you know, people in their twenties and thirties and all
the how can the first time home buyer make it happen?
And I'm going to one of my good friends in Fresno,
who I do have to say is a fighter. He
worked here at iHeart for sixteen years and now he's
a real estate agent, Jose Roebliz. He's gonna explain how
to buy your first home in Fresne.
Speaker 3 (25:49):
This is the Trevor Cherry Show on the Valley's Power Talk.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
I gotta tell you, man, I actually think it would
be horrible being in my twenties. I would love to
be young again. But being in my twenties trying or
even thirties now trying to buy a house in California,
I don't know how one does that. I don't know anything.
I bought one house in my entire life. But I
know people, and I happen to know a real estate
(26:16):
agent who happened to work here at iHeartMedia for sixteen years.
He no longer does because, as I said, he's in
real estate. Jose Roeblaye. Jose, welcome, sir, Thank you, Trevor.
How are you you missed the old radio station around here.
Speaker 6 (26:28):
As a matter of fact, it brought back a lot
of memories walking in the field.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
Oh you're seeing people he used to know. Oh, Jose,
give me a give me a hug man. Now you're
you're born and raised right here in the valley, aren't. Yes?
Speaker 6 (26:39):
Yes, I was born and raised here in Fresno.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
And how may Youngin's you got here? You're supporting in
this valley?
Speaker 6 (26:43):
Uh? Six?
Speaker 1 (26:45):
He beat me by one. Look at that we could
fild the football team. We pretty much ken six and five.
That's eleven, Jose. We're talking real estate. The market up
and down. People always do all their investments for a
one k stock market. A lot of people realize what
a great investment real estate is. But how does one
do that at a young age in California? Now it's
(27:07):
not like when we were in our twenties.
Speaker 6 (27:09):
Well, there's a lot of opportunities that a person could take,
especially for first time buyers. I mean, there's a lot
of grants out there that would help out people.
Speaker 1 (27:17):
How does one know what situation you got to be
in to get a grant? There certain age or income.
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Income level, and then on top of that, your credit
score as the minimum has to be like around six't eighty,
and then we could go from there and just see
if you qualify, and then there's grants that they will
help you out with the down payment, and then you
just go from there.
Speaker 1 (27:36):
Well, because I mean just hitting that down payment nut.
These days with the home prices. I remember when I
first moved to Fresno ten years ago, even looking around
like the Tower area, figure over that way, some of
the older homes. Then they seem real affordable back then, Boy,
I tell you, home prices they've just gone up because
you could get one two, three hundred thousand in that range,
(27:57):
right can you still? No?
Speaker 6 (27:59):
Not no, no, Right now, the average you're looking at
probably like about a three bedroom. Too bad, they're running
around three twenty three forty depending in the area.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Okay, So if you're a young person or if you're
an older person that knows a younger person that is
fighting so hard, give us a ballpark if they sit
down and talk to you and you go find them
a grant out there, how much would you have to
have in the pocket to hit a three hundred thousand
dollars house, He stays.
Speaker 6 (28:23):
Average, you're looking at probably about a good twelve thousand,
give or take.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
Well, that's doable.
Speaker 6 (28:29):
Yeah, it is. It's very doable.
Speaker 1 (28:30):
And then the grant adds on to that exactly. And
they haven't been cutting back grants at all. It's it's
still all out there.
Speaker 6 (28:37):
There's a lot of grants out there, but it's on
a first come, first serve, So if there is, you
got to jump on them right away and then take
advantage of them.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
So it could maybe take years for your name to
come up on the list.
Speaker 6 (28:47):
No, you apply for it and if you qualify, then
you just go from there.
Speaker 1 (28:51):
You get it there. I never hear grants and any
real estate ads anywhere. I never hear anybody saying that
there's actually help out there. So say, left iHeart here
last few years, he's been at all state homes. That
can come by your office and sit down. You can
show them the grants and all that kind of stuff.
Speaker 6 (29:08):
Yeah, we could sit down and we'll talk and see
what's available for them. I mean there's all kinds of
there's FH loans, the USDA First Time Buyer grants that
are out there that for everybody, and then you just
see what you qualify for. And like I said, based
on your credit so anything above six't eighty, you should
be able to qualify.
Speaker 1 (29:27):
Well at least this might give people some hope to
make a plan like do a three year plan, get
your credit score back up, save up twelve grand. It
might be fifteen grand in three years. You never know,
but it actually sounds doable, it really does. Now, what
about those that do not need a grant situation? I
know my neighbor, he's got a couple houses that he
(29:49):
owns and keeps up and rents that potential for investment
income as well.
Speaker 6 (29:54):
Yes, and especially in our office, we have loan officers
that'll help you out. Basically for people that are looking
into invest there's many options that you can go into it.
There's one program that we have where you can basically
go off of the rental. So let's just let's say,
for an example, there's a house right here on First Cintillary.
(30:16):
The rent runs for about eighteen hundred and the house,
if the mortgage comes out to eighteen hundred, it'll it'll
it'll balance out, and that's how you'll be able to
use that as your income. And you don't have you
just put down twenty percent.
Speaker 1 (30:30):
All right, because you don't want your mortgage to be
twenty three hundred and your rent eighteen hundred and you're
having to come out five hundred dollars a month exactly.
Speaker 6 (30:37):
And if it matches, then you could turn around and
use that as the income to pay for it and
it'll just pay for itself.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
We'll look get that. That's the American way making money.
As you're sitting on your couch there you go, Jose
as people out there are looking to actually get out
there and invest into the market. I watch all these
home flipping things. You go buy a house or three
hundred grand, you flip it. You can sell it for
four h five. Make it a lot easier on TV
to do, isn't it? Or what do you tell people
(31:04):
when they come, I want to buy a house and
flip it. I mean that's a whole that's a whole
list of things maybe they're not thinking about.
Speaker 6 (31:09):
Yeah, And I think before you decide to get into that,
I think your best bet is to do your homework
and then you have to remodel it. You look at
your expenses, and then to make sure that you're able
to get some investment out of it, you get some
gain out of it. Because a lot of the times,
a lot of these homes that are like these new
investors that are trying to get involved, they might just
break even, or they're barely making enough, or they still
(31:33):
they fall under the red line.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
Yeah, you have to have a lot going to take
that kind of bump there as well, Jose Rod Blaze.
If people want to come in and find out about
these programs where you can actually get some grants, and
it's good to hear that, it's not impossible in California.
It's the first time home buyer appoint us in that direction.
What's the best way they could get a hold of y'all?
Speaker 6 (31:53):
Yeah, you could give me a call. Five five nine
two eight eight zero four three four once again five
five nine two eight eight zero four three four.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
All stayed homes Jose Roebliss, Jose, keep selling man. We
got to make California grade again. And it is a
great place. And that's why it's so expensive out here.
We always say the weather right, yes, Hey what about
Harbor Chargers head coach saying he loves Fresno and did
you see that?
Speaker 6 (32:18):
Yes, I seen that yesterday.
Speaker 1 (32:19):
He wants to come up here and do their sp
training summer camp up here.
Speaker 6 (32:23):
I was watching a clip about that yesterday. I guess
I think in twenty fourteen he came and he did
some camp at Roosevelt High School. Yeah, and he was
very impressed with everything that was going on there.
Speaker 1 (32:33):
So well, it's a good place to buy Jose Roebliss
two eight eight zero four three four two eight eight
zero four three four. Thank you, sir, Thank you very much.
Speaker 6 (32:42):
Chevy. Give me.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Then you can go over out there, ladies and gentlemen,
big I give him a call, give him a call.
Get you hooked up, y'all, because we know California. It's
a good place to be. We got our we got
our faults out here a little bit.
Speaker 4 (32:59):
But you know, and what am I saying, nobody, I
mean nobody, no things about going out the California. I
mean I used to land the fruits are nuts, and
every approach a little nutty, and every nuts a little fruity.
Speaker 3 (33:17):
Assistant Trevor Carrey shown on the Valley's Power Talk