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DESTINFM SCOREBOARD SHOW MONDAY APRIL 27TH, 2026 Exclusive Interview with Choctawhatchee Head FB Coach Frank Beasley
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The Destin FM Scoreboard show is a Weekly Show hosted by DestinFM's Sports Director Rich Quinones, who takes an in-depth look at the local HS and College Sports scene, from recaps, to previews to in-depth interviews and breaking news!
Q has you covered! If you are looking for 100% local sports coverage in the Emerald Coast, this is the podcast for you.
On today's show, Q had the pleasure of speaking with Choctawhatchee Head FB Coach Frank Beasley, who opened up about his career, dealing with stress and pressure of being a HC, his love for the community, school and his players and what he fears the most.
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DESTINFM SCOREBOARD SHOW
What's going on, everyone? Welcome to another edition of the Destin FM Scoreboard Show. As always, I'm your host, Rich Canones. You can follow along at Rich Q and of course follow us all over social media and the Destin FM Scoreboard Show, which airs every week. It's a fast-paced, kind of hyper-local sports talk show. We really cater to what's going on in our area. And uh not only do we talk every type of high school sports, but we also not only like to get athletes on, but we also like to get those making a difference in the community on the sidelines, the coaches, the athletic directors, and uh we finally tracked them down. See, this is what happens when you are busy, busy, busy, right? And we got our uh good friend head coach of uh Talk Tall Football, Frank Beasley. By the way, the baseball team, congratulations. They're running through with the regionals. But uh coach, I'm glad we got you on for a couple moments. How are things?
SPEAKER_00Good, good. I actually just wrote down my notes here. Uh let me start by saying congratulations to our flag team who starts um flag football, starts uh their playoff run this week. Um they were state uh runner-up last year. Our baseball team's rolling through the playoffs right now. Got St. Augustine, who is kind of odd to become a big rival for Choctaw. Uh they're six hours away. So that's that's great. Back-to-back suite 16s, right? Back-to back sweet 16. No doubt. So they're doing really well. Our track team uh is gearing up for the state championship meet, and our boys' weightlifting team won the regional meet uh this past weekend at Arnold High School in Panama City. So uh we got a lot of great things going on at Choctaw. Our kids are competing really hard. Uh, and obviously we're in the middle of spring football, so we're excited about that as well.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, listen, I think it's it's a phenomenal time, right? But I also believe you know it could be a stressful time with spring football because we know, like in our area, look what's going on, right? Kind of like a uh uh a coaching carousel, coaches coming and going and and maybe retiring or getting fired or going out of state. I mean, look, you've been able to have that sustainability, right? And I think that kind of speaks to what you've been able to do on the field with these young kids. And think about it, right? I mean, you you found your passion for coaching. What were you 19 years old as a freshman and you took a gig at Florida High?
SPEAKER_00Yes, sir. Yes, sir. That was a long time ago. I think uh it's kind of it is like if you just said six years ago, five years ago that I'd be the senior uh coach in this football, head football coach in this county, I'd have probably told you you were crazy. But here we sit. Um it's not just about me, it's about our staff. You know, our staff has been together for a long time, and we've had to add a few pieces and and gone out and tried to make things a little bit better in certain areas. So uh obviously our administration is really supportive of of having and running a successful football program which starts with a strong infrastructure and which we have. So um, yeah, like here we sit. Uh hopefully they don't fire me soon.
SPEAKER_01Listen, you're building up equity by coming on the Destin FM scoreboard show. So I think I think you'll be safe. Don't worry about it. But you know, it's interesting because I went back and kind of uh highlighted and was taking notes on your career arc, right? So you had that stop at Lake City in Columbia High School, you land your first head coaching uh position in 2005, you were an athletic director, so you kind of understand, right? You're also, I believe, part of FH uh SAA as well. So I I mean, you know, you you kind of know, I hate to say like where the the bodies are buried, so to speak, but you kind of know the lay of the land, how everything works, right? You've been around the block a couple times, and I think you've been able to use that in your coaching and be successful because, like I said, nothing is new to you, really, is my point. You've seen it all.
SPEAKER_00Well, I had the opportunity to learn from Mike Hickman at Florida High when I was fresh out of high school, and uh obviously Coach Fayard here taught me a lot, and um then I had the opportunity to go work for Danny Green, who was the exact opposite of Coach Hickman at Lake City, and he's won over 250 games as a head football coach. And uh unbelievable. I got to learn from a lot of great people, and then uh was a head coach for a long time and took the job at FHSA, and then I learned a lot about how to interact with people in more of a um, I guess, business type setting. Uh, it helped me learn a lot as far as listening and how to run an organization and how to deal with people um outside of the coaching arena, if that makes sense. So I I learned a lot there, really, uh did a lot of self-reflection on myself. And then this job came open, and uh it's been a really good fit for me and my family, and um just really excited. I grew up here, played here, so um it's been really good for us, and and we've obviously had quite a bit of success, which is based on good players and good coaches. So um I'm glad I made the move and uh have learned a lot throughout my career, and um this is we're doing pretty well.
SPEAKER_01Coach, interesting, you mentioned too when uh you know athletes have great success in high school and or college or the pro ranks, and then they come back and they're a coach, right? Because the community is kind of yearning for it. They want that familiarity, they want that familiar name. Oh, he was an you know all state, you know, they won state championships, they got a ring, or she was a great hoops coach and she scored over two thousand. But with that also comes the instant gratification where you have to win. Did you feel with you that there was pressure early on?
SPEAKER_00Well, they had gone through some struggles before I got here, but I also knew that number one, there was a really strong infrastructure uh and people in the building that could help us build really quick. And number two, there was really good players. Uh, one of them, uh his name was Cole Tapp, and he was a freshman, and the other one was Jesse Winslett and Jonathan Boyd. Uh some of those guys I knew and had watched on film, thought we could build our program around them based on the things I knew about them. Uh, and that's what we set out and did. And um, I've always been a line of scrimmage guy, and we got to be really good up front. So trenches. Uh I felt like we could really build that here with our weight program and do all those things which we have. So, yeah, there's a lot of pressure, I guess. Um and and really, if you're a good head football coach, the pressure comes from within. Um, what are you gonna do and how are you gonna function? Because uh the outside pressure is what it is. Uh there really wasn't any when I got here, and then you start winning about year the second year I got here, uh, we had high expectations, and we started one and four. Uh and it was there was a lot of pressure to to get that thing going, and we did, you know, we ended up third round of the playoffs and lost in overtime to Lake City. But anyways, pressure is what you make of it, you know. I think internally I deal with that daily and um just gotta learn how to manage it.
SPEAKER_01Uh coach, you you mentioned you know, the success, kind of the turnaround that the athletics department and and the football team has had over the last several years. And I know with you know, kind of uh, and I say it as delicate as possible, we're seeing some coaches down south where maybe they think the grass is a little more greener. Let me go make more money if I can go into uh Georgia or the Carolinas or Louisiana and and we're you know, maybe they're making a better payday or they're jumping. I know a lot of times with these spring practices and you start to get into the players can transfer and you want to keep everyone happy and you know your job's on the line, and okay, is this the right fit? I mean, how do you compartmentalize all that, knowing that at the end of the day it it's all about wins and losses on a Friday night or Saturday afternoon?
SPEAKER_00Well, number one, Okaloosa County puts a premium on uh taking care of its coaches. And uh I I'm fortunate that I have a pretty large uh I think it's the highest uh supplement, uh football, head football supplement in the state of Florida from a public school, along with my other colleagues in our county. So uh Okaloosa County takes care of our coaches, uh, and our assistant coaches have the highest uh supplements in the state of Florida for assistance. So we're very fortunate to be in a county like this. And um, you know, the player movement transfer, it's all about relationships. Uh, it's all about kids understanding what their role is, how they fit. Um, when you reach a level that we've reached and you're starting to compete on a really high level, it creates a lot of depth. You've got to really do a good job of making sure your younger guys understand how that fits. Um, I actually had two meetings with two kids last week that were sophomores last year that are gonna be juniors next year that are phenomenal players, uh, but wondered where they were gonna fit and how that. Well, I had to remind them, you know, Tristan Jackson plays the University of Houston and Isaiah Johnson plays the University of Cincinnati. They didn't play much as a sophomore either. Well, now they're going into their junior years, like it's turnup time. Like, are you gonna come out this spring and get it done? And uh it's time to grow up and take the next step, and this is where you fit for us and how we envision using you. But hey, there's other guys behind you that are gonna be doing the same thing. So uh, you know, you it you got to compete here, and you you're gonna play with the best, and you're gonna compete on a really high level. Uh, you've got to uh make sure you have a purpose every day. We talk to our kids about that all the time.
SPEAKER_01Uh Indians head coach, head football coach, Frank Beasy kind enough to join us. That's an FM scoreboard show. Rich can you unus here, and you talk about playing at that high level, 12-2 last year, 3-0 districts, 6-2 at uh home away, 6-0 Road Warriors, right? And and I saw you guys put up a lot of points offensively, right? You had that defensive affair, that first loss of the season against Enterprise 20 to 16. Then you come back against American Heritage. I believe that was in the playoffs. That was a very competitive contest as well. You said you like to muck it up in the trenches. That's my kind of head coach, right? Because the game is won and lost in the trenches. How much emphasis do you put in on, all right, you know, let's win that battle, right? If we're talking about run blocking and pass protection, get those hogs up there. And then defensively, we got to figure out a way to stop the run and get to the quarterback. Talk a little bit about, you know, winning that battle in the trenches. And is that um, you know, where does that philosophy come from?
SPEAKER_00Uh, I from Mike Higman, Danny Green, uh, Lionel Fayard. Uh I cut my teeth coaching the offensive line when I first started, and that's just what I've always done. Um, we pride ourselves in making, you know, we have some undersized guys. We we have uh two guys right now that we project are probably going to be Division I offensive linemen, and uh that's the first we've had since Brian Grant uh signed with Tennessee back five years ago. So uh we we usually have some undersized guys that overachieve, we like to say, but they're super strong weight room guys, and um it starts in our weight room with them. Um we put on as much mask as we possibly can from January to April, uh, and then you know they'll they'll continue into summer, but we start doing a little more agility stuff with them. Anyways, you know, we we really are we build a physical brand to practice, and that's why uh we feel like we're really successful is you know you see a lot of uh staffs or you see a lot of programs now are throwing it all over the place, and we we like to throw it too, but we really build our brand on um running the football, being able to run the football, being able to stop the run, and that just doesn't happen by talk. You argue your kids got to believe in it. We go out there and practice it. Uh we do a lot of uh half-line one-on-one. Um we do it all the way into the playoffs, and our kids believe in it. Our kids understand the physicality of what it takes to win at a very high level, and um there's other programs in our area that do an outstanding job of that as well. So um, you know, we we that's where it starts and stops for us is number one in our weight room, number two up front.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, you mentioned Brian Grant, what was he about 6'7, 6'8, 270? So, I mean, you get a bunch of those old school Washington hogs on the line, you're gonna be able to open it up right all day long and run that football right down the gut. You don't even have to worry about uh, you know, running off tackle, just run it straight in the gut with those big things.
SPEAKER_00Well, yeah, but our fans like to call it wad ball. Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Uh I I am uh I'm curious, you know, you mentioned that you want to have this offense kind of predicated on the ground game. I do see some of these games, they're high scoring, they're wide open affairs. Is is that more or less of the big playability of some of these kids in the region? Is it, you know, um, some kids kind of grow in their position, right? I mean, at the end of the day, it's just you know, you you might get beat for a big play, you might get beat over the top, you you know, the fundamentals might not be there. As you mentioned, it kind of all comes back to coaching. But I've gone through a list of all these regional high schools over the last you know several months and looking at some of these games, and and some of them, I mean, you're you're talking a lot of athleticism, you know, big time scores, runs off tackle, you know, you know, highlight plays, right? Eye-opening plays. I kind of it to me it speaks to the talent that's in the region, in the area.
SPEAKER_00Oh, yeah, well, there's a lot of talent in the panhandle. It's kind of overlooked quite a bit, but uh we we've had the opportunity to get a bunch of colleges that come through here and to make sure that our guys get looks to go to other places, as has other schools in our area. Niceville's done an outstanding job over the years of moving their guys, and the biggest thing for us is making sure that our guys are prepared once they get there. And um we've been really fortunate. I'm really proud of the fact that our kids have had quite a bit of success when they go into college. We our strength program obviously is uh pretty difficult and tough, but we teach them how to lift, and uh Coach Kendrick does a great job. But we also have an academic advisor who oversees all of our players and makes sure that they understand what goes into all that, and um, there's a lot of accountability in that area. Uh so our kids are held accountable in a lot of different areas and it's transferred over to uh their success at the college level. But I think there's other programs in the panhandle that have elite athletes that do a lot of the things uh that we do, and um obviously a lot of the programs around here have had a lot of success, so um absolutely there's great athletes all over the place.
SPEAKER_01Listen, I mean, look at you know what just inspired uh in the NFL draft, and you look at a lot of the players that were drafted coming out of the state of Florida, right? I mean, it is it is a hotbed. I mean, everyone talks about what goes on in New York or PA or Ohio or Texas Friday night lights. I mean, my goodness, you know, Friday where you guys are, or Saturday afternoon, I mean, those those stadiums are absolutely packed. I mean, it's a rabbit fan base, right? The community's all in. And I'm glad you mentioned, you know, the whole academic, because at the end of the day, you know, coaches are leaders of men, and they're trying to get these young men, you know, get them to where they want to be. I mean, how much of that emphasis do you also put on, look, you know, you got to hit the books, gotta see the grades. If you're gonna commit to the team and you're gonna commit to playing and commit to the weight room, I need that same commitment in the classroom.
SPEAKER_00Oh, yeah, our guys know. Uh we have this, uh, we have an accountability system. We have a we have for lack, we have this thing called the wheel that our kids partake in. It's a little extra activities. Um, it's like the wheel of fortune. If they're not doing well in something, uh they don't want to do that. And uh our uh academic advisors over the years, um Lindsay Vincent and Lindsay Jones have done an outstanding job. If they call our kids in and make sure if our kids need more help, uh we get them more help and that uh, you know, tutoring and that kind of stuff. Uh we put our money where our mouth is. If they have need to mispractice and go to uh teacher, we get that done. Uh but if they're just being lazy in class, we're gonna figure that out too. So um our big thing is making sure our kids, our seniors, they we call it the three E's, like they enlist, uh they're employed, or they're gonna go into education, right? So there's one or three paths that we we really encourage our kids to take. And we understand that not everybody's gonna play college football, so what are our other guys gonna do? One of our best players last year uh is we've got him set up with an apprenticeship to uh be a plumber. So um he's really excited about that. That's just one example of the things that that go on that no one really sees. Um everyone sees the signing days and all those things, but there's a lot of other things that go into this as well.
SPEAKER_01Uh when when when you were in your teens, um, you know, what made you gravitate or even younger, what made you gravitate to the sport of football?
SPEAKER_00I think the team part, the camaraderie, being a part of something that that's bigger than yourself, uh, and it's pretty it's a pretty powerful thing, and um just the dynamics of of uh everything and being around that and what it meant to our community playing here uh was something special that I always wanted to be a part of. And uh then you just get into the leadership part of when you start coaching, and Coach Fayard obviously was an outstanding leader, and uh he was super intense, and that was uh drew me to this, and then I just learned from so many different people throughout the years. And I I take a lot of pride and I really like the uh the challenge of building a football team from January to August uh and seeing what you can get out of it and putting the right pieces in the right places and the putting the puzzle together and not just from a player perspective, from a coaching staff perspective, and really dialing it in, tapping in on our players and our coaches' uh strengths and weaknesses, and being able to do that myself as well. Where are my where are what are my shortcomings and how can my my coaching staff help me through that? So um it's really I just like that part of it, is weaving through the whole thing, and um it's exciting to me, and every January is brand new.
SPEAKER_01Well, you know what they say, right? I mean, even on on any level, whether it's high school, college, or uh especially with DNFs, right? You're you're not you're not gonna win uh a Super Bowl in in February and March. But if you don't plan ahead, you can lose it, right? You you might not even have that opportunity to get there. Um, was there ever a point in your coaching career, say over the last 15, 20 plus years, where you kind of sat down or you were driving back from practice, maybe it was a tough loss, and you were thinking to yourself, you know what, just just maybe this isn't for me anymore.
SPEAKER_00Well, yeah, uh, absolutely. Uh you I think the biggest thing and the hardest part is the stress and the uh internal stress that that us coaches that do it at a high level put on ourselves, and sometimes that becomes very overwhelming as far as like your body breakdown, and you gotta make sure mentally that you're on point, you don't get too negative, and you don't I'm a guy that's I get really emotional and I can't get too high and too low. And if I do that, then um you know some days it's just not good for my health. But uh I've learned as at his at an older age how to deal with the pressures of that come along with this job and about the internal pressures that it puts on that I put on my own self and how to deal with that. So uh my wife Jen helps with that a lot too.
SPEAKER_01So uh it's just yeah, I mean that with a big grit on your face.
SPEAKER_00I mean, it's not even like everyone makes it for what it's worth. Everyone thinks it's about like the losses on on a Friday night. Well, yeah, that that hurts, but like think of the other thing, it's like when when stuff's not going well and something's not happening well at practice, or you gotta do this or deal with you know, this kid's you know not doing what he's supposed to be doing in the classroom or home, or it's it's the daily grind of making sure everything fits together and making sure everyone's rowing in the same direction and doing what they're supposed to be doing, and that wears on you after a while. So, yeah, there are some days you drive home after practice and you're like, Woo! Yeah, all right, you got to get up in the morning, give yourself a pep talk.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, but then you walk in and you see the missus and she flashes that grin and all as well, right? I mean that's that's how it should be at the end of the day. Leave that at work, leave that at work, put your phone down. Uh, that's fantastic. But you also strike me though, from a coaching standpoint, you know exactly the buttons to push, right? Like you have to know your players, you have to know which one you have to put your arm around and which one you can push a little more that's gonna respond, right? Because every player, every kid is these are kids at the end of the day, so they all respond differently to criticism or not saying you gotta placate them, but you gotta reel them in, maybe put the arm around them and you know, reassure them, right? So uh you you you're dealing with a lot of personalities, and with that comes stress.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, we have a hundred players and they're all different. And um we have 20 staff members and they're all different, you know. And sometimes I have to, you know, at practice last Thursday, I I went Beasley on them. Like you know, everybody.
SPEAKER_01Is that what that's called? Is that what that's called? Go ahead.
SPEAKER_00You know, things aren't something didn't go right or something was on the schedule that uh I didn't like how we did it, and you know, I lost my marbles a little bit. And that's okay to do that sometimes. I keep people on edge, but man, I love them hard. I tell everybody I love them hard and I coach them hard. And I and I love our staff, uh, but I'm as hard on them as as anybody. But I love their families and I I care about their families deeply, and uh, I care about our players way more on a level than just running around and scoring touchdowns. Um, and I believe strongly that that's what this whole thing's about. Um, and all that's a microcosm of winning.
SPEAKER_01Listen, I can't wait to have an opportunity to come out to these games and I see you having a tension tantrum on the sideline, I'm gonna be like, hey, listen, I interviewed Coach. He told me that's going Beasley on him. Uh what are you uh and two more uh for you, and I greatly appreciate the time. What do you look for uh in a player where you believe that not only can he be successful in the classroom on the field, but off the field in life in general? What are you looking for?
SPEAKER_00I think every kid is different, just like we talked about. And and success looks different for a lot of different people. Um you know, uh we've had players that are uh battling for jobs and that are role players that uh everybody's skill set differently. Um I think the the what are we looking for in a player? You know, obviously we could I could give you the canned answer of um you know, do right in the classroom, do right here, do right there, they work hard. But you know, the reality is this we have some guys that work uh that love the weight room and will do that. We have some guys that um get by and do it, uh, but they're excel in other areas of their life. So you really have to pinpoint um the things that they do really well, highlight those things, talk them through the things that they don't do well, and make sure that uh we're doing everything we can uh to you know get them through that process of what we expect and how we win. Uh so every player is different. I don't know like if there's a perfect player out there that I could tell you, you know, everybody has their their negatives and everybody has their positives. So uh we'd love all our guys to come in and be perfect soldiers, but that's just not the way it worked. But I don't know that it'd be fun that way either, right? Like, so it's just uh building what what we hope to be the perfect guy at the end of the process.
SPEAKER_01Uh coach, I know you're uh an alum, right? That graduating class of 95. Uh, I know you had an opportunity many moons ago. You interviewed for the head coaching position, you were the number two pick. Uh, Coach Thomas got the job, you know. It's a lot of different, like myself from a broadcasting standpoint. To me, I'm interviewing for an on-air gig, I'm going somewhere familiar, I don't get it. Years later, I get it. My personality is being a New York guy, I have a little chip on my shoulder, right? I want to kind of prove, you know, with you, you kind of come full circle. Was there a chip on the shoulder where you got to prove it? I didn't see it. Um you don't strike me as that.
SPEAKER_00I tell everybody it's God's plan, you know, like everybody walks their own path, and everybody, everything happens for a reason, and uh in your life, you know, you just deal with it as it comes, and sometimes because quite honestly, looking back, like, and now that I've sat in this seat, like I wasn't ready for this. And God, and there was a divine intervention that said, don't put him there right now. Um, Danny Green used to tell me when you go back home and you're the head coach at at the school that you graduated from, it better be your last job. Uh so because there ain't nowhere else to go after that. Um so you know, I looking back, Greg Thomas was an outstanding choice. He did some outstanding things here, had a great run. Uh, 13 years is a long time to be a head coach in one spot nowadays.
SPEAKER_01Especially in high school.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, it really is. Um, especially at the level that the expectation is here. So I, you know, I learned a lot from things that he did. Um, I learned a lot of things from not getting that job back then to, you know, coming now. Uh, there's so many things I learned from at when I was at FHSAA that helped me with this job that I wouldn't have had those experiences if I wouldn't have. And I I really think that that's you know why we've been successful, one of the reasons we've been successful here. So no, there's a chip on my shoulder to to be good. And there's a drive every day of the fear of failure. Uh, and that is what drives me personally is is failing and letting people down. Uh, and I know that's that's pretty open to say. I've never really shared that with a lot of people, but um, you know, that's what drives me every day, honestly, is is getting this thing and and keeping it at a level that we can all be proud of.
SPEAKER_01I appreciate your honesty and and your candor. Thank you. Um, and then lastly, what's the message you're conveying out there to uh Indians uh faithful? I mean, you got the spring practices now. I'm sure you know you want to enjoy it, right? But you also, it's okay, hey, let's speed this sucker up and get to late August and September. What can we expect from you guys?
SPEAKER_00Okay, the first message I have is that to run an elite program, it costs a lot of money. So let's donate, donate, donate. There you go.
SPEAKER_01There's the political side. There you go.
SPEAKER_00Yeah. No, our fans have been outstanding, and um I you know it the the support here is unbelievable in our community, and I know they support Fort Walton Beach Vikings also in Fort Walton, and Knighville's got a great support system as Crestview, and now Destin and E.G.'s done a good job out there. So, you know, we we're fortunate here. But what can our big green fans expect from this football team is number one, they're a blue-collar group, they're extremely hardworking. Um, you know, I was a little worried that this group wasn't gonna be as edgy as last year's group. And I say edgy, I mean kind of, you know, confident and da-da-da-da-da. And with the first few days of practice, they've shown that they're they have that in them as well. So uh they compete really hard, they know how to practice, and it's gonna be a really physical group. Uh they they run and hit uh and they're fast and they're big. And um I really, really like this group. We've been working a lot of uh leadership stuff this off season trying to get our guys to be a little more vocal and how that looks and what that so we work really hard on those kind of things, but uh this is a good group of guys that are um that have sold out for Choctaw and um we're gonna continue to do great things, hopefully have a good rest of the spring, summer, and into August.
SPEAKER_01Coach, great stuff. I I can't thank you enough for making time. I know your schedule is so busy and hectic. I appreciate you jumping on board for a couple moments on the Destin FM Scoreboard show. Thank you.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, I love it. I appreciate it. And uh good luck to our baseball and track and flag football uh and our softball team tonight and our weightlifting team in a couple weeks at the state championship meet. Thank you for having me. My pleasure.
SPEAKER_01And that's gonna do it, everyone, for this edition of the Destin FM Scoreboard. We want to thank everyone to remember get social with us. Follow us on Facebook, Destin FM on IG at Destin FM, X at Destin FM, and of course uh Destin underscore FM, TikTok at Destin FM. You can follow me at RichQ and Q. Don't forget, every Tuesdays and Thursdays, you can wake up with uh surfs up in the morning, Billy Surfed. You can catch the 60 seconds scoreboard. And as always, I'm RichQ and it's get to date us by downloading the free Destin FM app in the app store, Google Play, or at Destinfm.com.