LIVE FROM JACKSONVILLE! with Amadeus

Why “Clue” Feels Like A Musical And George Michael Still Moves Us

Eden Kendall and Amadeus

Jacksonville’s stages are buzzing, and we’re riding the wave from stadium-size announcements to intimate, memory-soaked tributes. We kick off with a rapid tour of what’s on the books: country stars moving pre-sales, amphitheater nights waiting for cool weather, a packed Florida Theatre calendar, and a Broadway in Jacksonville launch that brings a rare straight play to town. It’s a season of choices, and the best kind of problem—too many great shows on the same week.

Then we dive into craft. Actor Adam Brett, who plays Wadsworth in Clue, opens the rehearsal room and explains why this play feels like a musical without ever breaking into song. He studies Tim Curry’s film performance like a score, not to mimic but to honor the energy and timing that fans love. The result is a stage piece with meter, melody, and sly orchestration—Colonel Mustard brassy, Mrs. White like a clarinet—plus moody jazz cues that turn the mansion into a live instrument. If you think you only love musicals, Clue might change your mind.

We also sit down with Craig Winberry from The Life & Music of George Michael, and the conversation swings from Wham to the soul-baring depth of Listen Without Prejudice and Older. Craig talks about carrying that voice with care, the difference between tribute and imitation, and why songs like Spinning the Wheel and Jesus to a Child still stop a room. He shares practical New York ticket hacks and the heart behind his debut album, Sidewalk Survival Guide—an honest, genre-hopping journal about leaving home, finding self, and refusing to be boxed in.

From ticket tips to creative insights, this episode maps the sweet spot where nostalgia meets new work. If you’re picking between Clue’s opening night and George Michael’s return to the Florida Theatre, we feel your pain—and we explain our own scheduling pivot. Ready to plan your night out in Jax? Hit follow, share this with a friend who needs a show, and leave a quick review to help more locals find us.

SPEAKER_01:

Welcome to another episode of Live from Jacksonville. I don't normally date check these shows, but it is Saturday, November 1st, as we head into the end of the year. It's getting really busy here with holiday shows all over Jacksonville. Uh but first let's run down some other things that are going on. Newly announced Morgan Wallen will perform tonight at Ben Hill Griffin Stadium, aka The Swamp at the University of Florida in Gainesville. I believe it's May 15th and 16th. Check out MorganWallen.com for the pre-sale information. That thing's gonna sell out pretty dang quick. So if you're a Morgan Wallen fan, you need to be on that already. Daily's place is kind of shutting down for a while in a few weeks, but they do still have Leonard Skinner on Saturday, November 8th, and Sting, which is sold out on Tuesday, November 11th, and then Daily's goes dark on nothing scheduled at all for 2026 as construction for the Jacksonville Jaguars Stadium of the Future kicks into overdrive. The St. Augustine Amphitheater is pretty quiet too until late November. But rising country star Hudson Westbrook will be at the Amp on Friday, November 20th. And country singer John Party has two Christmas shows Friday, December 12th and Saturday, the 13th. Check out theamp.com for information on those shows. Coming in the next few weeks at the Florida Theater, Wednesday, November 5th, Blank Space, the unofficial Taylor Swift tribute, November 6th, Hotel California, a salute to the Eagles. Thursday, November 13th, Nutcracker, Magical Christmas Ballet, a Friday, November 14th, an evening with Emerson Lake and Palmer, and Tuesday, November 18th, the life and music of George Michael. I recently had a chance to chat with Craig Winberry, who performs as George Michael in that show. That interview is coming up. The Thrasher Horn Center in Orange Park is knee deep in Christmas already. A Charlie Brown Christmas Live on stage is Saturday, November 15th, and a Magical Stir Christmas on Thursday, November 20th. I'll run down the rest of their Christmas shows for the rest of the year on the next episode. But get to thcenter.org to check out the other shows coming up. The newly renovated Pontavidra Concert Hall has the wallflowers coming Tuesday, November 11th, country music icon Crystal Gale on Tuesday, November 18th, Ben Folds and a piano on tour Saturday, November 22nd. And who had this on their 2025 bingo card? Queensrike will be at the Pontavidra Concert Hall on Saturday, November 23rd, PVconcert Hall dot com for tickets and information on those shows. And finally, the FSCJ Artist Series has a number of great holiday shows on the books for the remainder of the year, including Surf Dream Holidays on Sunday, November 30th, Carol Mania, a very, very cool Christmas extravaganza on Friday, December 5th, and Sarah Brightman, a winner symphony on Saturday, December 6th. But before all that, the new season of FSDJ's Broadway and Jacksonville kicks off on Tuesday, November 18th, with six days and eight performances of Clue live on stage. Last week I had a chance to speak with Adam Brett, who's playing the butler in the touring production. We recorded the interview earlier in the morning, and I started out apologizing for disturbing him so early because I figured he was out late the night before.

SPEAKER_00:

You know, it's a short show, believe it or not, so it it makes um you know, we still don't get up too late. So but you're buzzing after the show, so uh definitely hard to fall asleep.

SPEAKER_01:

We're actually gonna do an after party for opening night here in Jacksville that I'm gonna host. So I'm looking forward to seeing the show that night and then hosting the after party for you guys.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh, that's amazing. Thanks so much for hosting. That's gonna be a blast. Yeah, I'm looking forward to it. We're we're so looking forward to getting down there and uh and and doing the show for you guys.

SPEAKER_01:

So you play Wadsworth and Clue live on stage, and this is the uh character that Tim Curry played in the movie forty years ago. Mm-hmm. What's it like for you? Take you know, stepping in those shoes.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I mean, I can't believe we're celebrating the fortieth anniversary of this movie. I mean, this movie is a touchstone for me. I know. And to play a part that Tim Curry originated is a dream come true and quite surreal. Tim Curry has bled into the psyche since I was a five-year-old kid, you know, watching him in all of his movies and TV shows and just everything he's done, particularly my favorite was always Muppet Treasure Island. Um but he getting to see him and Clue, you know, it was a game I played when I was a kid with my family. And later on I was introduced to the movie and was like, Oh, I know this guy and you know, the kind of back flips and tongue twisters and just the high energy that this man does in this movie is so impressive. So to emulate that in a way and to also make it my own is is just a blast. It really is.

SPEAKER_01:

So you obviously saw the movie, you know, probably long before you got this role. Have you watched it again since you got the role to kind of like refresh, you know, his performance?

SPEAKER_00:

You know, I think a lot of us in the cast who are all exceptional actors, we uh we all have different processes and and some people haven't watched the movie. They they are deciding not to watch the movie because I don't want to kind of put on what someone else is doing.

SPEAKER_03:

Right.

SPEAKER_00:

Um, which is brilliant. Uh you know, those actors in that movie are all brilliant. Uh Madeleine Kahn and Michael McKinnon and Eileen Brennan, so on and so forth. But for me in particular, I keep on watching the movie. You know, I I can't be Wadsworth without without Tim Curry. They go hand in hand. So uh kind of to see what he does and respect it and not not copy it, but respect it and say, Oh, you know, I kinda like the way he uh looks to Mrs. White on that line or whatever it might be. Or I mean some of these lines are so iconic. So you kinda want to deliver it in a way that is similar to how one of the actors delivers it because everyone's gonna appreciate it, you know, because it's it's a fan favorite.

SPEAKER_01:

I was was working in a record slash video store uh when that movie went to video, and it was one of the ones that if it didn't rent out, we would take home on the weekends and just kind of have in the background. But I haven't seen it since, you know, when it first came out on VHS, which tells you how old I am. And I decided not to watch it again before I see the play because I kind of want everything to be fresh and new for me.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, it what Sandy Rustin, who wrote the play and adapted it from the movie, the brilliant movie that was written by Jonathan Lynn, it it honors so many of the iconic moments in the movie and of course references so much from the board game, but it also makes its own kind of uh piece in the in the clue zeitgeist, you know. So the characters are a little bit more in depth. You have a few different, you know, jokes and bits, and because it's a play and not a movie, you know, uh things just read differently. And so it it feels like it's its own different thing, but also completely uh what's the word? Um, takes in what the movie does.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm looking forward to actually watching the movie after I see the play and then kind of connect the two, kind of on the back end of it.

SPEAKER_00:

That's a great way. And then and then you'll have to play the board game after that too.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, let me tell you something, Adam. Growing up, this was my number one favorite board game by far. I was so good at it.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, me too. Although it's been a minute since I've played. I've watched the movie a lot, but I haven't played the game in a very long time.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, me neither. It's probably actually it's probably only been about five or six years for me because we do have it around uh where my parents, you know, and we visit my parents for the holidays, and we always end up breaking out board games. So that's a lot of fun. Colonel Mustard. Uh, yeah. I don't know why, but I'm Colonel Mustard.

SPEAKER_00:

Such an iconic character.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh I picture in my mind who I am as Colonel Mustard, and I get to work when I get to play in that game.

SPEAKER_00:

I'm sure you have a big, fluffy golden mustache too, right?

SPEAKER_01:

Absolutely. And it's ironic because I can't grow facial hair. So you mentioned a few a few minutes ago that this is a play, and and this is something I'm excited about because we mostly get Broadway musicals come into town as part of the Broadway and Jacksonville series, and I don't know when I've seen a straight-up play here in town. So I'm really looking forward to that too.

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah, I mean, musicals are amazing, and uh plays sometimes get um, you know, just not as produced as much. But um what's so fun about Clue is that it is a play, but it also feels like a musical because there is such a rhythm and a meter to how we speak, and each character has a kind of a different melody. They almost sound like a different instrument, you know. Colonel Mustard might sound like this brassy trombone, and Mrs. White dances like a like a clarinet or something, you know. So it's really fun to kind of hear these almost songs, which are really just bit, but it it is a play, and it it it's so much fun. And and there's some uh really uh beautiful scoring done that uh, you know, honors the movie and some unique and spooky jazz and it it it's it's really uh it's a it's a great show for being a play that also almost feels like a musical.

SPEAKER_01:

As a performer of stage, do you prefer like a play or do you prefer a musical? Because I know you were in like the music man, right?

SPEAKER_00:

Mm-hmm.

SPEAKER_01:

And also were you in a version of cabaret?

SPEAKER_00:

Yeah. You know, I love a really good musical that has a really good script. And the music man and the cabaret are two amazing um musicals that just have a really great book and the and the dialogue is sharp and it's witty and you know, and it's and it's it's deep. I mean, those are two very different but beautiful musicals. But uh, you know, I I trained as an actor. I I uh have a lot of Shakespeare training. Um so I you know, plays is is my jam just as much as musicals are, but you know, uh it's it's fun and it's and it's quite a joy to kind of be a a a versatile actor in that way where I get to dip my toes into all different mediums.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm sure that's gotta be whatever you're doing has gotta be great because it's such a it's such a high to be on stage and doing that kind of thing. That's I get the same feeling being on the radio, just every morning when we go to work, it's like uh this is what I live for.

SPEAKER_00:

Yes, I agree. I'm I'm so happy to hear that. And I I feel the same way. It's it's a hard industry being an actor, uh when it when it's working and and it everything is just really magical and everything really does pay off.

SPEAKER_01:

All right, Clue live on stage. We'll be here in Jacksonville, Broadway in Jacksonville, part of the FSCJ Artist Series November 18th through November 23rd. Adam Brett, thank you so much for your time. I cannot wait to see you at the after party and share with you how much I love the play.

SPEAKER_00:

Thank you so much for having me on your show, Amadeus. This was a pleasure talking to you today.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh tickets for Clue and all of the upcoming FSCJ Artist Series, Broadway and Jacksonville shows, are available at FSC Artistseries.org. Now I mentioned earlier that the life and music of George Michael is coming to the Florida Theater on Tuesday, November 18th. Several months ago, it seems like I had a chance to speak with Craig Winberry, who is one of the George Michaels in the show. There's two guys that uh that perform as George Michael, and I started off telling him that I was at last year's production. I was at the show last year and I had so much fun. It moved me. I was crying, I was laughing, I was dancing. Oh, well, it's good. I'm I'm glad you've seen the show. That's uh that's fantastic. Hey, uh, just to let you know, I properly creeped all your socials before we chatted. So Okay. The first thing I want to do is ask you about bubbles.

SPEAKER_02:

Bubble. I think you're the first interview that I've gotten a question about bubbles. Um, but bubbles is my best friend, obviously. Um, she's wonderful. And oh my god, I'm gonna miss her when I'm on the road. I literally have my family send me like pics of her all the time.

SPEAKER_01:

Is she a Maltese? I couldn't quite tell. I don't think I saw a face picture.

SPEAKER_02:

She's a shihtsu, she's the runt of the litter, but um, you know, people ask us that all the time. Uh she's uh more predominantly a shih tzu, but yes, we think there is a little we think the breeder wanted them to be a little bit more white because shihtzus have that natural, like I don't want to say brindle, but patches. You know, they're not all they're not one solid color. Yeah. And um bubbles is pretty much white, and she does have a little there's like a little like black hairs from there and like gray or whatever, but uh we think there might be that there might be some something else in the bloodline.

SPEAKER_01:

I was wondering if you were able to take her on the road or not, and so I guess not, huh?

SPEAKER_02:

No, uh I would love to, but um there's a couple people in the band and that one's allergic and the other one was like, I don't want a dog. I was like, it's bubbles, she doesn't bark.

SPEAKER_01:

Also, I I gotta tell you, I loved, I think there was a video on YouTube that you did it must have been during the pandemic, a cover of Madonna's Sooner or Later. And I'm a huge fan of the Dick Tracy soundtrack. And as soon as I saw that, I'm like, I'm like, that's gotta be that song, and it was so good.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh, thank you. Yeah, it was, you know, and uh everything kind of switched off to and everybody had to go from live entertainment to digital. Uh I sing at um Stonewall occasionally, and um we have like a some monthly, you know, where like singer-songwriters get together, and uh and then there's Madonna worship that I do too, the same kind of guy that puts it together. And Madonna and I share the same birthday, so I've always been, you know, I grew up on Madonna. She's highly influential in my life, and I that's Steven Sondheim, so you know I I love that album. It's f it's a fantastic album.

SPEAKER_01:

I was in New York over the summer to see um well I was there to see Orville Peck in Cabaret, but I ended up I ended up I did I I saw um Eddie Redmane, but I didn't get to see him. Well I didn't get to either because we were standing in line and the Usher walks out and said, It's you know, Orville's not gonna be in the show tonight if anybody wants a refund. I stayed, but I was really disappointed because I planned the entire vacation around seeing Orville. But we ended up seeing the last night of uh Bernadette Peters in that Sunheim play that is that was playing. Oh yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh my you know, if that happens, I I tell mostly anyone that's visiting New York, when you come here, if that happens, the person that you're here to see, if you go to the box office and tell them I want my money back, or can you give me another ticket? They'll usually give you a ticket upgrade at no charge. So it's just you know, you have to be nice though, and not freak out on them. But yeah, most of the box offices want people coming back and and to see the performer that they want.

SPEAKER_01:

So unfortunately, I was flying out the next morning, and now you tell me.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, no, I you know what I've lived in New York now over a decade, and there's little tips and tricks, especially uh rush tickets, and if you can get to Midtown by nine or ten o'clock in the morning when they open up, those rush tickets that they give out in the morning are phenomenal seats. Well, that's good to know, too. The one I love right now, if you ever i if it's still open next summer, uh maybe it is, it's gaining popularity, is maybe happy ending. It's just it's just a lovely show. The music is great, the story it's innovative, it's new, it's a a new story.

SPEAKER_01:

It's uh it's really cool. I'll definitely have to put that on my list. Thanks for the suggestion. So you are in the life and music of Georgia Michael. It's coming to the Florida Theater on Tuesday, November 18th. I want to talk about that show, but first, can you quickly tell me about your debut album? Is it called Sidewalk Survival Guide? It is.

SPEAKER_02:

Sidewalk Survival Guide is my debut album, and I say this to people it is music and also an opportunity to journal. I don't know if you write or um journaling has helped me get through things, but it's uh music for somebody that's on their way finding themselves and and ending up somewhere else. And um I'll probably jumble that up, but yeah, it's uh it's uh kind of uh a little bit of my life story, and it starts off off with uh more than enough, and the title track kind of speaks for itself, or the opening track speaks for itself is the once you decide you want to change your life or move and go forward, you first have to realize that you're more than enough. You don't perfection does not exist. Sometimes you just have to go. And uh then, you know, the next songs kind of it was my next step in life. And goodbye, baby brothers about me leaving, you know, small town, Arkansas, and all those small-minded people, and you have to say versions of yourself goodbye to them, and I'm no longer that person, but thank you for getting me to this point. And then City Limits is coming out and going to the city and doing all those things that they tell us are gonna that aren't good. And anyway, I can go through each track, but that's just kind of what it is. It's uh um an opportunity for if if you are wanting to change something in your life to know that you can do it, and yeah, all that it takes is just a step is moving you forward to where you want to be.

SPEAKER_01:

I can't wait to listen to that. I I've been, like I said, I worked in a record store in the 80s. I've been a music lover my whole life, and looking back on my life now and a lot of the artists that I follow, like I'm a big Taylor Swift fan. I'm not ashamed to admit it. And it's like me neither.

SPEAKER_02:

No, I I love what she's doing. She's not my like favorite, but I've like I'm not I ne I'm not gonna hate on good music.

SPEAKER_01:

Right, exactly. And I feel like Taylor is basically writing her diary, and she'll look back one day at all these albums and be like, I chronicled my life this way.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, that's kind of what Sidewalk Survival Guide is. But when people find it, I want them to take whatever they get out because this the music, it's not one specific, like there's rock, and then the next track, it's like gospel organs, and then then there's the third track, City Limits, is like a dance track with like pop vibes to it, and then you get to deep cut and it's this EDM crazy, and that I, you know, that point in my life of the story is like, I know what I wanted to do, but it was crazy because everybody's coming at me, and then, you know, um there's some like 80 cents in there, and then there's a good old country song, Sidewalk Survival, that closes the album out, and there's Boss Nova, some jazz. I mean, there's all kinds it's it's uh you know, I I'm sure and I did this independently, and when we were wrapping up last year's tour in in November, I just had all these ideas for these songs, and I looked at it and I was like, You got an album. And I you know, I'd been writing and producing music with a friend of mine here, uh, who's a Broadway producer. We did bass suite, and that's just like dance club music. You know what I mean? Uh anthem for anthems for the boys out there shaking it and having a good time. Um and you know, it's a dance influence, but this of my uh solo debut was more of a okay, I want to do all the genres of music I want, but let's put them all on the same one. That sounds like a lot of fun, actually. I kind of solely tease, but I like like you know, like when you're listening to more than enough, I just like you can sit there and journal and think, like, okay, tell yourself that. Like, what are you good at? What are you proud of? What are what are you what makes you you, you know, and and then goodbye, baby brother. You know, what version of yourself did you say have to say goodbye to? Was it the people pleaser?

SPEAKER_01:

Was it someone that was locked in fear?

SPEAKER_02:

But that that's what the album's for.

SPEAKER_01:

I love it. I'm gonna recommend an album to you when you have some spare time. It's by Baz Lerman. It's called Something for Everybody. Yes, I love Baz Luhrmann. I think you'll I think you'll love this album. It is literally, like you just said, all over the map with genres and ideas, and it's Does he sing? Uh no, he produced it. But it's a really good director, and um I mean brilliant. I loved the Elvis movie. It goes way back in his catalog, but it's it's a mind-blowing album. So what was it again? Something for everybody. That is kind of like Sidewalk Survival Guide. There's there's something in there for everybody. Yeah, as you were describing it, I was thinking about that Baz Lerman album, which I haven't even thought about in 20 years, probably. I know you've got other people to talk to, and I have limited time, which I hate, but let's talk real quickly about the life and music of George Michael. Sure. You know what?

SPEAKER_02:

I'm uh I'm feeling generous today. So um yeah, the my I had somebody like cancel on me that sitting in the Zoom and nobody got in there, so I'm gonna give you the their time.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, okay. Awesome, awesome. Yeah, oh so let's talk about the show. I was there last year, blown away. Like I said before, I'm a huge George Michael fan. I didn't realize there's two singers that take on this this whole project, right? Yeah, the Wham era George and then the Sola, Solo Era George, which is me. And I was a big fan of everything from Listen Without Prejudice on. Like I love the Wham stuff, of course, everyone does. But George got so introspective, and his writing became so amazing from Listen Without Prejudice on, and I love that stuff.

SPEAKER_02:

He literally held a mirror up to society's face. Yeah. Whether it's social injustice, LGBTQ rights.

SPEAKER_01:

One of my favorite songs of his overall is older. Anytime I listen to that, I it moves me. And I was wondering, do you have a favorite song that you perform or songs?

SPEAKER_02:

Well, I, you know, it changes like right now, of course. I'm rehearsing, and I have I I mean, so you fought you worked at a record store, and I'm sure you'll probably know this. Do you Fantastic was their first album? Yeah, of course, yeah. And it really wasn't it wasn't big, but it was, I mean, oh obviously it was big. It had some uh hits on there. But Love Machine, do you know that song on there? Yeah. Okay, so when I first time that I heard that, uh when I first started doing the show in 2022, I was I I didn't even I I was like, that's not George Michael. And I was like, wait a minute, that is George Michael. He sounds like uh an RBE guy, and I it just blew me back because in that fantastic is so crazy because if you really sit and listen to it from not necessarily like a critic's viewpoint or whatever, but just someone that's like, okay, I'm studying how they developed the wham sound. Like there's there's the wham sound is there, but there's other different types of sounds that he could have gone into, and it's so fascinating to see like when they did put out the next album, like, oh, it was solidified. Okay, this is what we're doing, this is the sound, this is the style, this is who we are. We're young kids having a fun, you know. Yes. But then I also let, like you said, listen without prejudice, um, the waiting reprise, uh, hand to mouth. I mean, that's I see people reference that a lot online right now. Uh yeah, that whole album's great. Older album, I mean, if you know what he was going through in his life at that at that time, there's just so many life-defining moments that George went through around, you know, 90 95, 96, 97, 98, uh in there, and that music is just still holds up today. Star people, I love singing that. I would love to throw that in into the show.

SPEAKER_01:

I mean, I could go on and on about his catalog. Another one of my favorites is spinning that wheel, and every time I listen to that one, I'm like, man, this guy was putting it out there, and I hope everybody was like picking up what he's putting down because that is a brilliant, brilliant song.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't think they got it at the time when it came out, and I think that if you were to introduce that to the LGBTQ community today, you know, uh if you were to introduce it to them, it still describes how a lot of people operate.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, absolutely. But going through the, you know, that time that he he came up through, you know, when HIV was like really prominent and and there was that fear factor, and that song just really yeah for people that were in a relationship, that song just really nailed it. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

Uh I mean he had a his talent and genius, and this is true when you know Taylor Swift and other amazing songwriters, is they can take a consciousness that's in society and in the world of what people are feeling. And then they craft poems that tell the story so effortlessly that when you hear the story and then the music, you know what I mean? Like it's like you you're drawn in by the music, the sound, but then when you find the lyrics and you're like, oh, wait a minute. Oh, and it's like the whole package. I mean, that's George Michael right there.

SPEAKER_01:

Yep, I agree. It's so funny that we talk about Taylor too, because I think with George and with Prince, both of them signing their deal so young and getting screwed over so badly that I'm surprised someone like Taylor coming along had the same situation. And I hope that future artists can look at these cases and learn from them.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, when he had that kerfuffle with Sony music, I mean, he didn't want to make another face album and they're like, please make another face album. He's like, No, I want to sing big band. Yeah. He's like, I have them now. They want my art, so I'm gonna give them art. And they're like, No, no, no, no, no. We need you to be commercial and keep cracking out the same kind of thing. And he was a true artist to the core.

SPEAKER_01:

Yes. Gosh, I'm so happy to talk to you, Craig. Like I said, I enjoyed this show so much last year. I cannot wait for it to come back around. I'm gonna be there with bells on and singing and dancing, and I'm taking tissues this time because I know I'm gonna cry. Jesus to a child and older. I mean, that will get you. Yeah, absolutely. This show is the life and music of George Michael at Tributar Party, an epic show. Tuesday, November 18th at the Florida Theater. Tickets are available at Floridatheater.com. Craig, thank you so much for your time. I like I said, I I was creeping your socials and I'm like, this guy looks so cool, I can't wait to talk to him.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, well, thank you. Thanks for uh getting the word out about the show. Uh we're excited. We had a great time when we were there last year, and looking forward to uh to seeing everybody. And yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, give Bubbles a big old hug before you leave town. I will. Thank you for asking about her. Absolutely, man. Safe travels, and we'll see you in November. All right, take care. See you soon. Thanks, Craig. All right, the life and music of George Michael will be at the Florida Theater on Tuesday, November 18th, FloridaTheater.com for tickets. You may have heard me mention on that interview that I was gonna be at the show, and also on the previous interview that I will be at Clue. As it turns out, those shows are happening the same night, and being invited to host the after party for Clue. And because I had already seen the George Michael show, I've decided I'm gonna go to the Clue premiere. So if anyone heard that and put that together and thought, wait a minute, you can't be at two places at the same time, I thought I should uh disclose that information. Okay, thanks for listening. I'll drop another episode in a couple of weeks to let you know what's going on for the rest of the year. Once December hits, I get super busy with our toy drive at the radio station, so I probably won't drop another episode then until the new year. But again, thanks for listening and keeping up with what's happening live from Jacksonville.