Best of The Roula Show with Eric

8a Garbage Diet, Went Doc For X Found Out X and Scoop 04-02-26

36 min
Apr 2, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

The Roula Show discusses junk foods people eat despite knowing they're unhealthy, then pivots to medical discoveries—callers share stories of going to doctors for one issue and being diagnosed with something else entirely, including melanoma, scoliosis, and sleep apnea. The episode concludes with breaking news on the arrest of a suspect in the 1984 Texas Killing Fields murders featured in a Netflix documentary.

Insights
  • Consumer nostalgia and sensory experience (taste, smell, texture) often override health consciousness when it comes to processed foods, even among informed audiences
  • Incidental medical discoveries during routine check-ups can reveal serious long-term conditions that went undiagnosed for decades
  • Cold cases can be solved through renewed public attention via streaming documentaries, leading to arrests decades after crimes occurred
  • Medical professionals' observational skills during unrelated procedures can catch life-threatening conditions like melanoma that patients themselves missed
  • Sleep apnea and breathing issues may have cascading effects on athletic performance and quality of life that go unrecognized without proper diagnosis
Trends
Streaming true crime documentaries driving renewed investigative interest and public pressure on cold casesIncreased awareness of sleep apnea diagnosis and minimally invasive surgical treatments (balloon sinusplasty) as alternatives to CPAPFood industry reformulation pressure from public figures and social media exposure (e.g., Reese's reverting to original chocolate recipe)Scoliosis detection and spinal fusion surgery advances enabling earlier intervention and better outcomes for younger patientsJudicial accountability movements leveraging social media to expose courtroom misconduct and power imbalancesFair trade and ethical sourcing becoming competitive differentiators in premium chocolate and food marketsMelanoma detection emphasis on irregular mole characteristics (shape change, color variation) as critical warning signs
Topics
Processed Food Consumption and Health Trade-offsSleep Apnea Diagnosis and Treatment OptionsDeviated Septum Surgery and Sinus ProceduresMelanoma Detection and Early InterventionScoliosis Diagnosis, Bracing, and Spinal Fusion SurgeryCold Case Resolution via Documentary ExposureJudicial Misconduct and Courtroom Power DynamicsFair Trade Chocolate and Ethical SourcingMedical Misdiagnosis and Delayed DiagnosisIncidental Medical Findings During Routine ProceduresChocolate Recipe Reformulation and Consumer PressureTexas Killing Fields Serial MurdersAutoimmune Disorders and Dermatological ConditionsCourt Reporter Transcription ChallengesJudicial Campaign Finance and Bias
Companies
Netflix
Produced 'Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields' documentary series that led to renewed investigation and recent arrest
Reese's
Candy brand reverting to original milk chocolate recipe in 2027 after family member exposed cost-cutting measures
Hershey's
Major chocolate manufacturer discussed in context of ethical sourcing and cost-cutting practices in chocolate production
MrBeast Chocolate
Founder discovered high costs and child labor issues in cacao production while launching chocolate business
Costco
Retailer known for affordable hot dogs and pizza that listeners consume despite acknowledging unhealthy ingredients
Whole Foods
Premium grocery chain selling artisanal pork rinds as part of health-conscious product positioning
Annie's
Food brand offering alternative mac and cheese with white powder instead of fluorescent orange cheese powder
Pillsbury
Brand of refrigerated biscuits mentioned as vehicle for canned cheese consumption in childhood
Texas EquuSearch
Non-profit organization founded by Tim Miller to help families of missing and murdered persons
People
Tim Miller
Founded search organization after daughter Laura was murdered in 1984 Texas Killing Fields; made emotional statement ...
MrBeast
Launched chocolate business and discovered ethical sourcing challenges and child labor issues in cacao production
James Elmore Jr.
Arrested Tuesday and indicted for 1984 murder of Laura Miller and 1986 death of Audrey Lee Cook in Texas Killing Fiel...
Judge Nathan Milliron
Subject of viral video and attorney complaints for abusive courtroom conduct and power-tripping behavior toward IT wo...
Jessica Dimock
Director of Netflix's 'Crime Scene: The Texas Killing Fields' documentary series expected to release update following...
Laura Miller
16-year-old murder victim from 1984 Texas Killing Fields case; daughter of Tim Miller; suspect recently indicted afte...
Audrey Lee Cook
Murder victim from 1986 whose death is connected to suspect James Elmore Jr. in Texas Killing Fields investigation
Quotes
"We got other girls to find. We got other girls to find. We got closure to bring more families. And we're not going to quit people."
Tim MillerCold case resolution segment
"I'm not okay with the child labor. So that's why that milk chocolate wasn't 100% milk chocolate anymore."
Eric (discussing MrBeast)Junk food discussion
"Don't joke around. I'm serious about this. It was happening. I can't understand this."
Judge Nathan MillironViral courtroom video
"I've been living with this since sixth grade. Because I remember Rocky was out."
EricMedical discovery segment
"The fastest she had clocked anybody was the average person would talk 275 words a minute. I was talking 375 words a minute."
Roula (discussing court reporter experience)Court case anecdote
Full Transcript
This is Anthony Push, your local personal injury attorney from the law firm Push and Win. Call us today. Consultations are always free. Do not hesitate. If you feel that you've been injured in a car wreck, give us a call. We take all cases big and small. So look us up online at pushwin.com. 104.1 K-R-B-E, a cumulus media station. Good morning everyone. We ready? Lying from the TFC Energy Studio. The ruler show with Eric featuring special K and Sam. All right. The garbagey things that we just can't stop ourselves from eating. All right, that's all. Be honest. What's wrong with us? We'll admit what you say. We'll say yes or no if we've, okay, we still eat the stuff or we have. I already gave you the first one because we all know it's not real and the smell gets us every dang time we walk into a movie theater or a bowling alley has popcorn. Why do we want that liquid plastic butter all over our popcorn? But that's why I wish they put the butter closer to where the people make the popcorn because I'm like, I used to, they used to do that. Now you do yourself. But I used to say, hey guy or girl. Hey guy. Hey pal. Butterpants over there. Do half of it. Put the butter. Give me like four squirts and then put more popcorn on top and squirt me again. Yeah, layer. I have to take a straw and you put it on the nozzle and then you put it in the bag and you go up and down and you butter it that way. That's a butter pants. That bag's not made for that much. They do need to get a better bag that can hold the butter. I guess it's a butter bag. Yeah. All right. So movie theater, popcorn, fake butter. That's a garbage thing we're putting in our system and we are having no shame. I'll never give that up. All right. Slim gyms. What's in a slim gym? Oh gosh, I don't want to know what's in a slim gym. Right. It's like a hot dog. Yeah. Process meat. With a lot of protein people like protein people, people that are obsessed with protein, they think that's a great alternative because there's another, wasn't it like Liam chop or Liam? There's so many caskets. Yeah, the chomp, CHOMP, they have a bunch of those at Costco. And then God all not being wagon. And then Epic is a brand of like jerky food that's supposed to be good for you. Like it's jerky or whatever. But if you're protein in a hurry, if you need something right, I guess. I'm not going to cheese a hot dog. That's right. That's on the list, Kev. No way. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese with that fluorescent orange, yellow color that shouldn't be normal. We know it's not good for us. And I thought that that color is going to go away. No, I don't want that to change. It doesn't taste as good without that color. Okay. Have you guys ever made that? Annie's has a good one. Annie's has a good one. They have a white powder. Yes, the white. I feel better to buy that for my kids than the yellow one. But they have powder. Okay, in one time. Would you grow up with it so you think that it's not as fake? You do. You bring spec memories and you cut hot dogs in it and put hot dogs with it. I don't want cheese and hot dogs. Now listen, I was mistaken once at the store. I thought I was buying a 10 pack of like the mac and cheese for the microwave. And when I opened the box, it was a 10 pack of the boxes. Oh, yeah. And I was like, Oh, man, I wish I made this. So I had kids over one day go, you know what? I make four of these boxes, put them all together in this giant pot on the something is not right with that. I mean, that proves to you why it's garbage food for you because I can boil pasta for kids. Right. And it's a totally different texture and situation going on than whatever's happened that craft box, whatever that little powder is on top of the pasta. What is that powder y'all that thing that it most of eyes? I was like, I was not well after that. I was like, something smells weird now. And why does the pasta? Yeah, what is powder cheese? Other garbage foods that we know are terrible for us, but you will eat it even if somebody shames you. Easy cheese on crackers. I mean, the one that comes that you push the button. No, it comes in a can. The can cheese. Oh, wait. The yeah, the cheese. Like a cheese take with you push that nozzle. And it comes out like a snake. No, I can't hear. Absolutely not. And I wondered why I was fat as a kid. I know you see that when I was a kid. I did that on big biscuits, Pillsbury biscuits. Although Eric, I feel like in our fat kid days, in our fat kid days, even like the bad junk food was better than the news now. They had less preservatives. You see Reese's peanut butter cups, they're going to go back to milk chocolate. I guess they've been cheaping out and not in screwing with the recipe. And one of the Reese's, Reese's family members came out and I guess he's not liked by the family. And so he's like screw this. All right, well, I'll tell you guys and then told them a bunch of stuff about what they're doing to the recipes. So now in 2027, they're going to go back to milk chocolate and original recipes. Because what I learned from Mr. Beast, that's what I talked about in Scoop yesterday. Mr. Beast found out when he did his fake little Willy Wonka world and said, okay, I guess I make chocolate now. How expensive it is to make chocolate. And it's all child labor, pulling the cacao beans out of the plants in Africa. So he is part of that organization that it's a fair trade. And that's why he's trying to make it. And he talked to the other chocolatiers, like the big names we're talking about. And they go, that's just how it is. That's just how it is. He makes 100 million plus off his chocolates. He said once he gets to the big boy numbers, like Hershey's and Reese's and all that, like the billions, that's when those guys said, now then you're going to see why you're going to be okay with the child labor. And he's like, I'm not okay with the child labor. So that's why that milk chocolate wasn't 100% milk chocolate anymore. He needs to go to the right side of the Twix factory and see if they'll do it. The left there, I hear they're cheap. Okay, other garbage foods we eat, even though we know they're terrible for us. But depending on your diet, some people said, this is cool now. Pork rinds. No. You tell me pork rinds, I'm like, I can stereotype you pretty easy. Too embarrassed to buy them in the store, but they are delicious. No. There is a brand called something at Whole Foods. They were doing a trial test. And at Whole Foods, it makes you feel like it's bougie to eat a pork rind at Whole Foods. I'm missing it. They're doing a sample and they go, this is a, I know you guys have seen this. It's the worst smell ever. And it leaves a slick on your tongue. But people love it. When you open that bag, you just smell it. It's like, it's good for Atkins diet. Like, wasn't it good for protein people? Like no carbs. Right. Yes. Absolutely. Yeah. And then they crunch up pork rinds and put them in poke bowls. Because they're trying to hide the flavor. Okay. How about this one? This one, Eric, it's all you. Me and Sam and Kevin will shame you and have for this. Let me see. The McRib. Oh, yeah. No, I've never even tried that. I will say the last COVID times. It seems like the last six years I haven't had it. I just like that sauce, man. I realized it's the sauce that I like with the nuggets, not the nugget itself. No, it's the McRib. That's not a nugget. But that same sauce with the barbecue sauce. Oh, oh, oh. So I always use barbecue sauce. I can fry. I just love that barbecue sauce. If they show you. I try to do it without the, without that sauce once. I was like, oh, don't like it. It's like a ground pork sandwich. Is it? Because what they've done is they've shaped it into a slab of ribs. Yeah. It is. It's not bad. Fake slab of ribs. It's meat of some sort. The bread's good. The bread's got that like sand dust on it. There's sawdust. Sand dust. Sawdust, yeah. What are you saying? This is not sound good. Like cornmeal? I like to picture them as putting them in a mold. Like taking this squeeze of meat and putting it in a mold. Oh, then freeze it in and then make it mold. Yes. To make it look like a rib and then just like passing it down. Well, since we're shaming it, you've got his choices. You should like that. There's no ribs. You don't like these bones. It's not a bone, but it's shaped into bones. That's what throws me. I can't. And in that same breath, it's the Costco hot dog on the list. One person says, I will eat that thing like a rabid wolf right there in the parking lot. Every day I get somebody listed in this show. Rula will send me videos of Costco dog. The Costco dog. There's all these inventions people have that connect to your belt or the cart that you can eat while you're at the tray. Now, I've seen this one for years where they take the pizza and then you take the hot dog, you throw the bun away and you just take the hot dog and you roll it up with the pizza and it's. Oh, I can't. That's way too much. I see when you take the cheese out. I can't. That pizza is really good. The pizza is very good. It's a great price. It's 999 for that giant pizza. It's such a great price. If you're having a party, I would highly recommend like getting those. That's the ones that are in the back where you can have to reheat. No, like at the front. Yeah. They have cheese and pepperoni. The fresh pizzas. That's good for parties. This texture says, you bougie people need to stop with the pork skins, especially you, Eric, judging me for eating my pork skins. Yeah. They are yummy and they don't have that much fat in them in the calories. You all just stop it. They smell like butt. They don't smell good. I will agree with that. However, that is a shame food that I'm like, I really want to eat that. I went to a restaurant one time and the fancy, like the new, the new way thing to do was cheech adonis right there, like fresh cheech adonis that they were like making the real deal like fresh pork rinds. And because they're in a restaurant, they were supposed to be more acceptable than if I bought a bag of pork rinds. They taste better. They might, maybe they taste better. They tasted good. But listen, I was raised on my dad making like a pork roast where he had the magic touch to crisp that skin in the most amazing way. And since my father's passing, it has not been the same. It doesn't matter if my brother's trying to make it, my sister tries to make it, my husband tries to make it. We cannot recreate Papa Love's pork skin majesty on that pork loin. I don't know what it was about that skin. It's like so freaking amazing. I don't know how he did it, but it's like listening dark brown, amazingness. I think he rubs movie butter on it. Maybe try it. You did not. Y'all can leave a listener line on the food that you know is garbage and maybe you're shamed for eating it, but you're not stopping anytime soon. Never. 713278 vent coming up next. Eric found what? You went to the doctor for one thing and then they told you something else. Eric has had this happen to him now and it's something he's been living with for what decades since sixth grade. Oh my gosh. And you realize that until Monday or Tuesday. Oh my God. Thursday, yeah. Tuesday, I found this out. I've been living with this since sixth grade. Because I remember Rocky was out. Does it explain a lot now? Well, we're going to find out. And we can take calls because we're going to bring it back. We have fun every time we do it. Would you go to the doctor for and what did you find out? 833-39-OK-RBE. You thought you had this problem, but then they told you have this problem. I love bringing this back. Outside of being told you were pregnant because then the phone lines would be full of that one. Okay, you went there because you had a cramp. You found out you're having a baby. Okay, we got that story down. Check the box. 833-39-OK-RBE. We'll talk to you next on The Rural Show with Eric. Hi, I'm Joe Salci. Hi, host of the Stack in Benjamin's podcast. Most economists agree small amount of inflation is actually good. 2% is what you're going for. But why is everybody freaking out? Oh, because it's the fallout. People don't track their budget. You have this slow slipping that happens every month. To all of a sudden, you go, man, I don't have any money. The reason is now two people go to a restaurant. The bill is 60 bucks for two. Two guys walking to a restaurant. They start screaming. Get the hell, Larry. It's $60. Stack in Benjamin's. Follow and listen on your favorite platform. Oh, Taylor Swift. That is the fight of Ophelia. No, it's not. It's Opalite. But you know why I said the fight of Ophelia? Because I'm doing this. Somebody just texted me, next time you do roses, use Ophelia. I will. Do it. Be Ophelia next time. Hi, this is Ophelia calling you from Rosia's Cretivaganta. If you missed roses 9 o'clock this morning, you get to hear that again. But let's go to the phones at 833-390-KRBE. And then Eric's going to tell us what did he find out that he's had since sixth grade. He didn't know he had. Do you want to do that first, Eric? Oh, let's take the calls first because I don't know. People have been waiting a while. I want to get them on. That's true. Let's go to La La. L-A-L-A. Is it La La or La La? Like La La Land. Hi, La La. Hi. Hi, good morning. It's La La. All right. Cool. Got it right. All right. You went to the doctor for one thing and you found out what? I found that I went to the doctor to get a biopsy on my leg for my skin and I found out that I had melanoma. No. On your leg or somewhere else? No, somewhere else. Since April of last year, I've been swelling and for a long time nobody knew why. And I just recently found out just a few weeks ago that it was actually an autoimmune disorder. And along with that, my body has been turning red like a sunburn and it feels like a sunburn. And so they sent me into a dermatologist to get a biopsy on that part of my skin that's turning red so that they can figure out what is wrong with it. And while I was sitting there and she was looking at my leg, she turned and looked at the side of my face and she said, how long have you had that mole on your face? And I thought she was talking about a skin tag that I have on my forehead. And I said, oh, my whole life, but you can remove it if you want. And she said, not that one, this one. And it was a freckle on my jaw. And she took it off and they tested it and found out I have melanoma and I went back yesterday and they took off another one and she found another freckle in my ear that she thinks she might need to take out as well. Oh, my gosh. So you go through your leg and you find out you have melanoma in your face. Wow. Yes. Not even close to the same area. So what's the, educate me better because melanoma, that means skin cancer for sure. That's the word for skin cancer, melanoma. It is the word for skin cancer and I'm just learning myself, but it really depends on how deep it goes into your skin. And she was telling me that it was mostly on the surface. So she thinks and hopes that she got it all. They send you to a plastic surgeon and then the plastic surgeon will check. And if it is deeper, then he will try to remove the rest of it and you go back and basically have a checkup and they check to make sure it's not coming back or it's not spreaded anywhere. Okay. Wow. But it's, that's scary. It started out as a perfect little circle freckle on my jaw back like where you can't really see under your jaw. And then I noticed over time that the perfect little circle started to slowly change shape. Okay. That's some science. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Wow. I've always definitely learned that. This is the shape you have, the shape and stuff. Her color. Oh my gosh. Well, let us know what happens. LaLa, thank you so much for sharing your story. That is really something you went in for the leg. That's so scary. And she looks at your faces. I don't even have that. Yeah. Morgan's up next. We're asking the question. You win, what did you find out? You went into the doctor for one specific thing and you were surprised by the other thing they found. Hi, Morgan. Hi, good morning. Hey, Morgan. What's the story? Hi. So I was in fifth grade and I got sent to the nurses office because I had like a really bad headache. Well, she just told me to lay down. So I was setting my backpack down and stuff and she started kind of like panicking and she called my mom to come pick me up and told me I needed to go to the doctor immediately and I was like, okay. So we went to the doctor and turns out I had scoliosis. Whoa. Oh, wow. A headache produced the revelation of scoliosis. How? How was that connected? Yeah. I guess you're spined to your, the back of your, I don't know. Yeah. It's like, I would get really bad. Yes. I would get really bad headaches. And then bending. So when you bend over and you have scoliosis, what they look for is called a rib pump because your curvature of your spine pushes your ribs closer to one side. And so when I bent over to set my backpack down, she saw my back. I had a rib pump and so she called my mom. So that's a good nurse. Yeah. Be careful. Right. That's good. And scoliosis is an abnormal sideways curvature and rotation of the spine. Yeah. You were wondering. Correct. Correct. Did you have to wear that brace for like a year? Yeah. So I did the brace. They try to put you in a brace when you're still like growth pace, place, arm close to try to correct it. But I did it and it wasn't really helping. So I'm 28 now and I had the spinal fusion surgery. Oh, really? Wow. Okay. I'm very interested in this Morgan because somebody that I know has scoliosis and she has not had to have surgery yet. But we talk about it all the time because you can absolutely see the curvature and there's like a certain threshold. I think the doctors want you to get to before they tell you the surgery. But and she's over 28. So I'm surprised. So if you had the surgery, what was the like, we down and out for two months, two weeks? What happened afterwards? Yeah. So normally they are depending on what surgery you go to or doctor you go to, they try to wait till your curves are about 35 degrees. I had three of them. That's what you're supposed to do. Yeah. So they it's recommended by some doctors and then some chiropractors and stuff don't recommend surgery. But once you have like have the surgery, I have two titanium bras and 26 screws and I was out for I couldn't bend or twist at the hips for six months. Six months. Wow. Okay. Now hold on. Let's go back here. You were fifth grade when they realized you you had the beginnings of scoliosis and we're fast forward to 28. When you got the surgery. So over those years, were you in pain? Could you not do stuff because your spine was curving because you got the surgery. So you must because of that degree. She said that's why my friend doesn't have the surgery is that degree has to be painful. Is it painful? Right. Yeah. So starting out in fifth grade, you don't start out with 35 degrees. It was like a low. I only had one curve in fifth grade. But doing physical therapy, the different braces I tried, I did a scoliosis chair, which kind of looks like an electric chair. I tried everything in the handbook and over the years, it just nothing was working. My spine was getting worse. So I actually called a couple weeks ago and y'all did like what you wanted to be grow up and what you do now. And I'm a hairdresser. So going into this industry, I didn't. I didn't want to have a crooked spine and be in more pain, which to be honest, it was it's not really painful like to have scoliosis for some people. But because mine was like an S curve, it evened me out. So looking at me straight, I didn't look like I had it. But inside it actually is pretty bad. Wow. Wow. We have got an education on scoliosis today. And I'm amazed that like how doctors figure stuff out to fix it and do that. Right. Like how they have the technology to do that. And how do you even get that by like, okay, boss, I have this idea. How do you get from that to that? Like the doctors created like a pig's heart. I got this pig's heart. I think I could put it in a human. How do you talk them into, we have trouble in our business just to get money to do a prize or something. It's all trials. All trials. So what did you find out, Erickson, sixth grade, you've been doing what? What tell us the story? Well, I went in, I'm talking about my snoring. I hate snoring so much. My poor wife, I feel bad for her. She'll record it. We've played it on the show. And I went to this place, not this two weeks ago or a week ago. And they go, oh yeah, you're a small, but your tongue's regular size, but your jaw's smaller. And it definitely falls back there. And they did tests. And then they said, we'll get you for a CT scan this week on your nose. This is Erickson snoring. So I got sleep apnea. And I don't want a CPAP, that's my last resort. So I went to this place, to the CT scan, and they looked at my nose. And he's like, yeah, inside you broke your nose. The nose is like, my whole left side, I can't even breathe. What? I never noticed that. And then he's like, did you ever, yeah, some people are born that way, but this one you can tell was broken. Whoa. And I'm like, then I started thinking about in sixth grade. I remember Mike Rakes threw a gym bag. And I had like, I remember I had brute cologne in it. And I had a bar of soap. And I remember that when it hit my nose, I remember the soap broken half. And I had blood gushing everywhere. Oh my God. I remember just stuffing it. And then I played a basketball game. I remember I went up for a shot. I got hit in the nose and bleeding everywhere. I remember that time in sixth grade, but no one ever, I never worked that time. So you broke your nose in sixth grade, and you're just not realizing it now. So I'm like, because I'm going to get the surgery, or were they going to put that balloon? Did you get it set down? Yeah, did you get it straight again? Kevin had it done. Were they take the polyps off or something? They'll go, well, they look for polyps in your sinuses. But they'll go in and basically move the cartilage, which is shaped in an S. They're going to move it to an I shape. So it goes up and down. And then they're also going to go in with a balloon sinusplasty. So they're going to put a balloon deflated up into his sinuses. Then they're going to inflate the balloon. Oh. Yes. They'll make room. And possibly break some bones and open up your sinus cavities. I had this done, and it was the best thing I ever did. Thank you, Dr. McCutcheon. I know you have your good doctor as well. Because you told you could breathe better instantly after it was done, Cav? The first time you can't, they say the first night's going to be swollen. It's swollen. It's very swollen. But I will tell you, a week later, I breathe easy. And I don't get sinus infections anymore, really. Because they open up your sinuses so much that now you can finally train and breathe. So maybe think about like, I made the basketball team in high school. Like, I only went freshman year or sophomore year. I didn't do it. But I'm like, maybe that extra, just one nostril kept me from keeping my, you know, trying to breathe and trying to run. My god. And he's going to have stints inside of his face that are probably about the size of a small kitty pancake from McDonald's. McDonald's. Yeah. McDonald's world. Like a hotcake. They're huge. I don't know if you guys remember when I had them pulled out of my face, I brought them in and threw a match all. Yes. I remember them. I was like, that was in your nose. Those are huge. I was going to put that in the Mr. Box. I was about to say, oh. I know. Ew. Oh my god. Eric, so you broke your nose and you had no idea your nose was broken. My whole life, I've never been able to breathe all this nose. Because it obviously healed itself? Like, it's hard. It's hard to breathe. Is that you breathing? Yeah. I'm trying to breathe through my nose. I'm closing my mouth. Here we go. You're trying to breathe out of that side that he told you he had your broken nose. It's hard. I mean, I could do it fairly. I'm sorry. I thought our bodies heal. Like they just, they repair themselves. Well, they healed, but it didn't heal straight. But they healed wrong, obviously. Yes. So your nose was broken when he threw the gym bag at you. I just thought when you broke your nose, like you, you know, swell up. Yeah. People get black eyes with a broken nose and their face looks like Lion King. Swallow in the face. Oh man. That's really crazy, Eric. Oh, but Chirps covers it, right? Well, they'll cover what? 20% of it right now. And then once you hit the deductible. I already hit the deductible. Remember when that ice cream place almost killed my kid by giving them walnuts? Yes. It was mint chocolate chip. That was an expensive trip. Yeah, they're paying for it, though. Oh, they are? Yeah. They were shot that we didn't want to sue them for damage or something. But I'm like, no, I'm not that type of person. Wow. Thank God, now, something happened to my kid, yeah. Right. Wow. But that was like $5,000. So my deductible is paid. So this should be what? 80%? Is that how it works? Yeah, 80%, bro. You'll be fine. Hell yeah. If people want to know. If people want to see you, they get you, Owen. Yeah, yeah. 100% of that is the channel. It's like 20 minute surgery. Yeah. If people want to know, is it going to change your voice? Did it change your voice? That's why I asked them. They said I'll have a little more reverb or something. I forget what he said. Vibrato? Vibrato? Vibrato or something. Vibrato or something. Oh. Me, me, me, me, me. So I was hoping it would. I was hoping it would change my voice. My husband's voice changed when he had his surgery. But he had a lot done. He had the tonsils out. Yeah, yeah. I didn't know him before his voice changed. And when I heard a recording of him before his surgery, because that's before I knew him, I was like, who's that guy? He's like, that's me. I go, what? I'm like, we're going to have to, that week, I'll probably take a day off or two. So we'll have to record a few things. Yeah, you'll want to. Wow. Yeah, you'll have a few. Make it nice. Clean it up. There you go. See that? See that? Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You're in a real show there. We are going to enjoy hearing your calls on the listener line since we're out of time. It's 713-278-VENT. That's 8368. If you're just tuning in, what did you go to the doctor for originally? And then what did you find out? Eric found out that he's had a broken nose in sixth grade. Yeah, I'm finally getting it fixed. Now what's your doctor a few years ago for lumpy? And the ENT guy goes, oh, you have a DVA acceptable. I'm like, oh, is he just trying to sell me a nose job? Oh, a nose job? I love my nose. I might be married to a Persian, but I don't need a nose job because my wife's so family has no jobs. Just get out. OK, moving on. Scooping like you said, no jobs. There is no jobs. A Netflix crime series that has finally gotten a closure conclusion right here in Houston. We'll talk about it next on KRBE. All right, so Leber's News was brought to you by Taqueria Arrandas. This is a Houston news story that's also parlayed with Scoop, because Netflix in 2022 released the three episode series about the killing fields here in the Houston area. And that is a field where more than 30 bodies had been found over the years in the 80s and 90s. It was like a dump. And then there was a lot of people who were found over the years in the 80s and 90s. It was like a dumping ground for murder victims. Is it still just a field right now? I've never, I never saw the documentary. Yeah, the Texas killing fields. Yeah, it's still just a field. Yes, I'm pretty sure it's just a field between the 70s and the 90s. Over 30 women's bodies were found there. Yes, over 30 women's bodies. It was it's a three episode true crime docu-series on Netflix. It investigated Calder Road. The Calder Road murders in particular revolved around four young women found in that area and the impact on their families. One of those women is the daughter of Tim Miller, who founded Texas Equo Search. Now, the reason he found it is because of the murder of his child. And Tim has helped hundreds of families find their loved ones who have gone missing, been murdered. Laura Miller, excuse me, was one of the victims that was found in the killing field. She was 16 years old. They had moved to the area. And this is in the 80s when you had to get your phone reconnected. They never had landlines, no cell phones. And their landline was not connected yet. And she wanted to call her boyfriend. So she said, I want to go to the convenience store down the street and use the pay phone. She never came back. They never saw her again. It's awful. So the reason this is topical today is because James Elmore Jr. of Bakeliffe has been arrested Tuesday. The Galveston County Sheriff's Office shared that the grand jury indicted him with manslaughter and tampering in connection with the 1984 murder of Laura Miller, as well as tampering with evidence in the charge of the 1986 death of Audrey Lee Cook. Tim Miller made this statement. He's creepy looking. He is. He is. Oh, I just saw the photo. He kind of looks like Robert England from Freddy Krueger. Oh my gosh. Yeah. Tim Miller has been on the news for so many other people's stories. What this man's organization has done to help families of the missing and the murdered has been immeasurable. This was his emotional statement yesterday in the news upon the indictment of this man. Don't think Tim Miller's going to walk away from Texas Equal Search and quit helping families. No, I think we're just getting started again. Again, I don't want to say anything about this investigation. After 41 and a half damn years, I'm not going to jeopardize anything that all of us have worked for out there. We got other girls to find. We got other girls to find. We got closure to bring more families. And we're not going to quit people. All these yellow shirts out here are the people that believe in what we do. And it's only because of our girls that were found out there. We made a promise that God and Lord never leave a family alone. We're not going to break that damn promise. We got work to do people. Thanks for your support over the years. So this guy, when he was doing this, he was like only 21. The man who was indicted. The killer. Because it was 86, right? And he was 61. 84 is when Laura was killed. 84? 1984 is when Laura was killed. So he was not even 20. He was 19. There's going to be an update to that Netflix series. 165, I believe. That's for sure. He was 61. Crime scene, the Texas Killing Fields, 2022 three-part Netflix documentary series. I'm going to guess that the director, Jessica Dimock, is going to be like, excuse me, we need an update now. We're going to have to update that. Did they say how they caught him or what made them indict him? What evidence? I know, right? I didn't see the details. I'm looking at it standing here. Tim Miller said he doesn't want to say anything else because we don't imagine there's a jury, a potential jury person listening. You don't want to taint them, right? I'm looking. I don't see anything. So I don't say nothing. Let's just wait and see what happens here. But I'm just so glad that at least- It was Charger's Bandslide, like you said, and felony tampering with evidence. So what's the evidence? What did they do? Right. It's so odd. To be continued is what I'm going to say on that. To be continued for sure. It's time for What's Going Down in H-Town. I'm a ruler show with Eric. 104.1 K.R.B.E. It is brought to you by Easy Fiber and the attorneys of Houston are rallying together to take down one judge that for a very long time has been inappropriate and on a power trip, so to speak, according to some of them. District Judge Nathan Milliron demanded that a defense lawyer who spoke out about a video where he is reprimanding a man in I.T. just trying to help him out said, you're going to appear in my court April 9th to address your opinion. And he goes, no, I'm not. Not appearing in your court to address my opinion. Right. Am I under arrest? Yeah. District Judge Nathan Milliron is of the 215th civil court. He- the video that has gone viral and is national now on the news circuits. Speaks with an I.T. worker who is helping him with a computer issue. After the employee tells the judge that the remedy would take, quote, five seconds, the judge returns to his seat as the employee makes light of the tech problem. False negative question mark says the worker as he giggles. And the judge says, don't joke around. I'm serious about this. It was happening. I can't understand this. And he loves to hear, do we have a clip of him? Yeah. Okay, listen to this clip. He don't. And you're disjoint from the audio here. Yeah, it should be. Let me see. Sorry. Sorry. Mariah, did I make this up? No. Five seconds. One second. You don't have to go far. I see you got it. You're disjoint. Okay. Yeah, you're good. Okay. False alarm. No, it wasn't a false alarm. False negative. All right. You guys. Don't joke around. I'm serious about this. It was happening. I can't. I understand. I'm just saying I can't see a sir. We're good. Thank you. Get out of my courtroom. Fine case supervisor. Jesus Christ. Second time. That's the judge saying that. Supervisor. Like the dude was getting you back online. Yeah. Yeah. But you know what is when you're frustrated with stuff not working and you're trying to do your job and then some people do that job. Snarky. Yeah. Yeah. The bedside manners. You want chocolate? Or they make you feel dumb. I will say that a lot of attorneys and it never works. The story came out. Are saying this judge in particular power trips a lot in his courtroom. And one thing I learned about being in a courtroom as a defendant in a civil court case. The judge is the all omniscient, all powerful God in that room. Whatever they want is whatever you do. In my court case, the judge did not want the attorneys to stand up while they are cross examining. Like you know in television we're all trained the cross examination. Yeah. They walk over to the jury and then they. She said you will not leave your seat. What? The attorneys on both sides had to be seated. Oh my god. While they were doing their cross examinations. It was the weirdest thing. And she would do this. Please stop. Stop right now. Please stop. She'd snap her hands like this, clap. And she'd look up. Miss Christie. Miss Christie. Please. You are talking too fast. Even to our attorney, she would do this. Please stop. She would do this whole thing. And then I was like, oh my god, this is the weirdest thing I've never been in court before. And then this lady's power tripping. So she would make desserts for the jury. She came every morning with some sweet dessert for them. Some of these people do feel like they're, they think they're better than everybody. It was really a trip. They're very judgey. It was a trip. So a lot of attorneys apparently have been. A fire back at the firing squad of Judge Nican Beleyer. Are they put their names out there? Yeah, I don't know all their names because they're on my Instagram. But they're putting their names out there. They say, hey, I'm sitting up for this attorney that got this. I'm sitting up for this person. This guy has been doing this for a long time. And then all the commentary is like, well, they're elected positions, right? You can also unelect them in the next roundabout. And Eric, you've had unfortunate experience with a bad judge. Who was absolutely not doing the right job. I mean, it's sure she didn't get elected. She screwed over my sister-in-law. You can't do, you cannot have favoritism. It comes to family court. And it's just because the other guy was getting, she was getting a lot of money from the other lawyer. That's a trick that a lot of these lawyers, they give to both sides and they pay a lot of money to these people. To their campaigns. They're going to realize it. Yeah, of course. It's human nature. Wouldn't you help somebody out that gave you a lot of money? Scandalous. Oh, God. And you know, actually, speaking of a court case, can I say, I don't know if she's listening right now, but the court reporter of that court case. Oh, yeah, that lady. I wish I remember her name. Was it Gloria? I can't remember. She was a huge fan of our show. And she told me, and when we had to take our lunch break, she complimented me and my husband really sweet way about how we're handling ourselves during this case. And she says, you know, I listen to you every morning and I always thought to myself, man, that would be my nightmare if she was ever in my court and I had to be her court reporter. And here you are. And it is a nightmare. This poor woman, y'all, when I was on the stand talking, she'd be at the court reporter thing and she'd make these faces like she's trying to keep up and she's out of breath. And were you monologuing? Or did you follow the lead of the lawyer? Like, let's rule a monologue. Let's explain what that is. Explain what that is. It's like, they go up there and they ask you a question. And you have to go on. So, Ms. Christy, what happened on that day of the 15th when he came to your house? Well, what happened was when I was 12 years old, I saw some paint cans somewhere one time. No, I was not monologuing, but you're so hyped up emotionally and I talk fast anyway. And when I was so mad at being accused of doing something that was an absolute made up lie, He's gonna prove. I was talking faster and faster. And that woman told me that the fastest she had clocked anybody was the average person would talk 275 words a minute. I was talking 375 words a minute. And I asked her, what happens when you can't keep up with me? She goes, it's a bunch of dot, dot, dots, dot, dots. And they have to go back into the court audio because they record you as well to go back to hear it. Oh, man. They still use a human today? I don't know. Thank God, I don't know that for real because I'm in court in long time. I know AI took that over or just recording it. Yeah, was it baby human? Is there still court reporters? I think you need to give me a journalist is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is is What is it? Recivicism? What does it even mean? Recivicism, that's when you know what that is. What is it? No, what is that? You know, Rue, you know what that is. It's when you take it back? No, no, no, no. The rate of recivicism is, if you go in and you're convicted of a crime, how often will that individual come out and do it again? Yes, recivicism. Crime, crime and again. Okay, crime and again. Now we learned all the things. You can't say that. Now we have a court reporter coming here one time and just do the whole show and see how big the stack is and who talk and like, I'll clock all you guys. No. Of course I'm going to beat you guys and now that I've learned, but just clock to see how fast do you talk. Sam, I have four sentences. That's it. Right. Okay, y'all miss what happened on Roses? I'm okay. I'm going to be a court reporter for Roses sometimes. Roll that back. What did he say? Roll that back. Taylor was suspicious of Evan's love for the apartment complex laundromat all of a sudden. And the things that we found out, if you miss what happened on Roses, you're going to get it next on The Rural Show with Eric and KRBE. Hey there. I'm Paula Pan. I help people make the smartest money decisions possible. Do not ever worry about your salary. You need enough to make sure that you aren't in a bad financial position. Once you have that, your salary becomes moot. What matters from that point forward, upside gains, any type of ownership stake or ownership potential, that's the money. Remember, you can afford anything, just not everything. Or anything. Follow and listen on your favorite platform.