Lance Pitts joins to talk Youth Hoops, Financial Literacy, and Takeovers

Transcript

Lance Pitts joins to talk Youth Hoops, Financial Literacy, and Takeovers

The Truth Interviews · Tue Apr 7, 2026

He don't talk like them so stop. He talk like your cousin on one on one seven the truth.

Tori low 40 low show. We got guess. Hey, look, we got landspits in the studio.

Saluto landspits because he does so much for the young people.

Thank you for coming in on this Tuesday.

He has an event, a senior basketball showcase and financial literacy event that's coming up

April 18th, April 17th and it's associated with BMO hairs.

Yes, it is. First of all, thank you, my man.

We go back many, many years and I'm always proud with the loop is back of all

everything. Yep. So we always doing things with sports and everything.

And I try to use sports as a backdrop for everything I do, especially with my nonprofit,

but just continue to I love the way you've grown every year, man.

You always evolving. So I've always been a fan of your work and you know, you always got my support.

Anything. Hey, I appreciate. So, you know, the thing with me is that I think that everything

should always evolve. And I think that many times we forget that we have to add that extra

because we have to be competitive, not only just a lot of people just competitive with

the people down the street. Yes. We have to be competitive with the surrounding areas

and compete as a as a community to stay in the mix. Oh, we're going to get left behind.

So I think that we always have to evolve every six months.

We have to make sure that we check in and see how we flooring with the frequency and

if we're not, then we make the adjustments like that. Hey, that's, that's a great outlook.

It's great outlook. But yeah, we have a great event for those that don't know. I'm Lance

Pitt, some director of the MPBA community cares nonprofit. In short, we just use sports

as a backdrop for mentorship, education, community engagement. April 17th and 18th.

We had this great event that Tori just shared with you guys. It's our senior showcase

last financial literacy. How the event came together was, I was getting calls and I was telling

Tori this before we started. A lot of my friends would call me with their sons or daughters

like, Hey, Lance, you got a college that you can refer me to for my son. You know, it

will kind of go over your head a little bit. I started hearing a question maybe two, three

times a week. And then I had a colleague that I worked closely with and he said something

about his nephew. So I said, Okay, let me connect the dots a little bit. We have a lot

of young men and women who've played varsity basketball at prominent high schools, most

of them, MPS. Right. And as they get ready to graduate, this upcoming May or June, they

don't have any colleges to go play ball at in a sense. Now, these are kids that have,

I've seen great point. I have just 3.2, 3.6. They just didn't make it to that tier where

college just said, Hey, look, cause it's so much going on with N I L and things like that

that they kind of, it's a lot of great basketball players that don't make it to the next

level. Yes. And compared to when I played many, many, many moves ago where, Hey, you do

well. Hey, here's a letter from a school school. That's what they tell you to you get there.

Yeah. And that may not happen, may not happen. But a lot of these guys are young women don't

have the opportunity. So I decided to call a lot of coaches that I know through my basketball

connections and said, Hey, I got this great event coming up here in Milwaukee. We have

Mount Mary University. And they all said, Sure, come scout. We have none to do that weekend.

Couple of them flying in personally. That's powerful. Coming in from Louisiana, Chicago, Detroit,

Iowa, things that nature. So it was programs like this day, how John Mauret got found. Yeah.

I'm similar to like a situation. So we got them coming Friday night where they get a chance

to speak to the young men and women and let them work out that Friday night. But then also

I started getting calls Tori from, Hey, my son's a freshman, my son's a junior. So I said,

OK, let me open up to them because we want to give them the experience early rather than

went to the last minute. And then after that, we have the game Saturday, right after you,

right after you clean up. Yep. I'm going to come down there and help you first. I clean up

is done at 12, 12 p.m. Yeah. And then we start at 12. So I'm going to come down there and help

out and then we jet back to the gym. That's what's up. And then I said to myself, you know,

what else can we do more than just basketball? How can we educate at the same time? We all know

that this generation is everything is quick and instant. I like cash app things that nature.

So when they go to college, I said, Hey, let's try to partner with BMO Harris Bank. I have

some good, good, good connections down there, especially the one on King Drive, my good friends,

they said, Hey, let's put together something where we'll give them a checking account. We'll

fund it $25 for every scene that we get registered for the event. And we'll help them with that and

be an ongoing financial literacy community. We're going to create why they are now all the way

to an graduate college. And that's financial literacy training. Absolutely. We're taking a

tender, get some kind of focus on finances. And I think that financial literacy is something

that we all need. Absolutely. Many times when we think we know we really don't really don't know.

It's always, and it's always changing too. The financial landscape is always changing.

Always, always. So, you know, we don't want these young men to, it's happened to a,

a neighbor of mine, their son with the college last year. And, you know, we all know what you

want to college, you got financial aid, you got to grant, you know, to pay a grant, kick back.

And they wouldn't fund it because you had cash. You had to have a checking account. Right.

So I was like, okay, it's like the new checking account. Yeah, but they wouldn't upload the money

to a stuff. So I said, okay, let me. Well, they pushing back against cash app too because I think

somebody was like, oh, we take, we don't take cash out. They're not, they're not, they would

take it. Yeah, they're not even accepting it in certain places. Maybe in the hood, maybe

at the stores and things like that. But certain institutions are not taking cash out. Yeah,

absolutely. And then, you know, one thing with cash app, you know, it, you don't have a customer

service number. So yeah, I mean, issues that somebody to go to where if you want to check box,

check box, literally, you know, and then, uh, if you use like a banking system where they have

like zeal, okay, if you need mom and dad to send you some money immediately, it goes that way.

So that way you have a, uh, a track record. And it takes you to if you want to see in something

yeah, you know, you see some of those cash app fees before Tori. I'm just trying to tell you,

like, but I think that now this generation, cause they have to be self sufficient. Cause

sometimes when you have to depend on adults, a lot of broken families, a lot of people felt like

I didn't have to talk to nobody to get this cash app going. Like when you have to go through a bank

structure, usually, uh, when you're young, your, your adult, the adult in the family takes you

in open up the account. Yep. So a lot of, when, in a lot of broken negatives, you don't have,

a lot of kids just don't have that system. Nobody. Yeah. We, we know what we know, and we don't know

what we don't know. And I have to learn it the hard way. I give you and you're listening to

a quick story. Uh, one of my best friends is Dave Shannon Smith, uh, been knowing him for 26

years. I met him when I was like 20 and went to his house. He had a duplex. And I'm like, oh,

spoiled kid. Yeah. Yeah. Your mom lives downstairs live up there. He's like, no, I own this house.

Oh, wow. And I'm like, you can't own a house at 20. You can't. Well, fast forward. I brought my

first house at 25. Mm hmm. All of my friends are homeowners. You know what you know. You don't know

what you don't know. I agree. Yeah. Like I'm the first home in my family, his parents,

and whoever introduced them to the concept. Yeah. Absolutely. Because you got to expose somebody to

the concept. Yeah. A lot of people don't have it because they now, they have never been exposed

to how to actually do it. No one has taught us that, Tori. And, uh, even with, uh, uh, my good friend,

Miss Cassandra at BMO Harris went on King Drive. Uh, we got some projects we're going to do

that want to make sure we have you come in and speak as well too, uh, from when it goes to home

ownership, uh, auto loan credit cards, just the financial landscape that, uh, we need to learn now

because, uh, now that we're parents, it's up to us to educate and pass down to our kids. Right.

So on and so forth because, you know, think about it. Our parents did the best they could. You know,

so now it's like, okay, now we know we have information. We have to be able to share that.

I agree. And it's time to change the next 10 generations. Yes.

We got to get them into the entrepreneur financial understanding because you're falling behind

if you don't know. Other cultures are teaching their kids how to run stores and things like that.

I go into other financial ideas with other people that don't look like me and their sons are 10

years old running the store. Like, you know, running a, uh, automotive idea, you know, if they have

like somewhere where they're dealing with cars, the, the kid is at the register learning how to do

business. And many times we come from a, uh, a space or an area where we can't even go to the

corner store and see a black owner, you know what I mean? I'm just saying right. So we have to make

sure that we implement or hit the reset button and just teach and not assume that people know.

I like that. I like that. I think those are some of the gems that we, like you said, we have to

continue to share not only with our family, but also our community as a whole. Um, I'm, I'm,

I'm always for higher education. Um, I'm always for picking up a skill at trade, but, uh, always

educate everybody say, Hey, you got to learn something, right? We have to learn some kind of skill

or something. If you want to be successful in society, moving forward. And so look to BMO, you know,

for actually being involved in this. And many times when we talk about the young people, we have to

equip them for the future. Um, a lot of times they have to find out on their own. I mean,

I had to find out on my own. I, I didn't know until I got there and then I, I was around my,

this is why I say I had to get around other people who are doing it to learn because where I came

from that wasn't, it wasn't like they didn't know they just, they wasn't doing it. And this wasn't

the environment that I came from. But then I, I got out there and I had a few friends that

they daddy owned the farm. And so when I couldn't come home because I, you know, I couldn't afford it,

I had to stay out there for the holidays. I went over to the farm area in small towns and their

parents was doing things and teaching me things, how to handle certain situations financially. Uh,

you know, where I wouldn't have got that from grandma. We wouldn't have got that at all. You know,

it's, uh, the irony is, uh, a lot of financial literacy in our communities. We kind of learn

the hard way. Uh, yeah. I, I was, uh, I was telling my wife this a while ago. Uh, my first financial

advisor I had out of college and, uh, you know, I'm working, saving money just at third. And, uh,

you think that, hey, man, eight, nine thousand dollars is a lot of money. It'd go very quick. You

could blow nine thousand dollars on a couple of weekends. Right. Never realized it. So it's like,

okay. And sometimes us as a community, that's our biggest teachers. Okay. You had it. You lost it.

If you ever get it back again, here's what you need to do. And they make it seem like you get it

back loose. You will never get it back. You know, so yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So I'll tell everybody.

But that's not true. Yeah. It's just wisdom. You know, and, and, and my first

idea of financial literacy came from my friend. I had a friend in Iowa that I met in college.

His name was Luke and his dad was a stockbroker. And when he got into college, he had a trust fund

from all of the investments. So he was basically well off from his dad being a stockbroker. And

by the time he got, he drew, he drove up in like a Marseille. He, he had money from his parents

understanding how to work the stock market. Right. And so his dad became my first person to introduce

me to those concepts of buying stock investing, uh, bonds, I didn't know nothing about that from

coming up on the block. Yeah. So I just kind of changed my life by just knowing that. Yeah.

There was a different side of life that I had no clue about. But he was, his dad was willing to

teach me if I was willing to show up and learn about. Yeah. I mean, think about most of our,

our lessons growing up, uh, come on, especially from inner cities. Hey, we know it.

If you do, if you don't, you don't maybe, hey, hanging with Tori and his family, we can

someday, they taught us can rub off on everybody, but I saw that.

That's it. So I think you, you said some earlier that, um, this next generation and

generation move forward, we have to equip them, uh, with the knowledge and skills that we've

learned so we could pass down. Mm hmm. Well, look, when we come back, Lance, I want to hear more

about the senior basketball showcase. Mm hmm. And how, is it, how can the community get involved?

Definitely. With what you're doing, because you do so many things. You organize around the youth,

ever since I met you, you've always been organizing around the youth and also want to talk about

what you feel about the takeovers and what did that mean? Tell your plans and dealing with the

youth. Definitely. Hey, look, when we come back, we'll have more conversation. We got Lance

pits and studio MPBA community director in studio. Oh, one of one seven, the true Tori,

low Tori, low show. We got Lance pits in the studio MPBA community director and he deals with a

lot of the community ideas around the youth. Uh, he has an event coming up, the senior basketball

showcase and find financial literacy event. Yes. Tell us a little bit more about the senior basketball

showcase. What we expect when we get to. So the first thing, uh, that I use the word community,

right? And we're all part of the community. I'm part of the basketball community. Uh, I grew up

playing John Marshall High School UW Walk Show where I played ball at graduate of accordia. Uh,

so I know it is to come back play ball with everybody and give back to the next generation. Uh,

for me, it was as simple as I wanted to connect high school seniors, boys and girls with college

coaches. So they have opportunity to play next, uh, fall. And these are college coaches, Tori,

that so this is a scouting event. Yes. Yes. So these are, these ain't just coaches coming in because,

hey, I know Lance, I'm hanging out. These are coach coming in like Lance, we need boys and girls

for next season. Yes. They're available. We would love to have them play for us next year. So

that way, uh, and they flying in flying in. So like, yeah, you just gathering the kids hoping

somebody coming. Yeah. The scouts are going to be there, you know, looking at the kids evaluating

a lot of these kids that didn't get looked at, um, may get this second look that they desperately

need to continue their careers. In basketball. Absolutely. And think about it, they'll be in the gym.

And the cool thing about this event is, uh, only the players with parents get a chance to meet

them face to face. It's one thing for guys like myself for Tori to say, Hey, this coach says this

or this, but now you could chance to meet them face to face and learn about not only the program

that they run from a basketball standpoint, but also the education component as well too.

One of my good friends, uh, coach posed at East West University downtown Chicago,

not even an hour or 20 minutes from us, uh, right there on Michigan Avenue, uh, around a quarter

from Nike store, they have like loft apartment dorms, beautiful campus, right down the street from

us literally hour and a half away. Um, and it's a great school where he wants to create a pipeline,

uh, for players from Milwaukee to come here, come to his school. Oh wow. To the point where he's

he, Milwaukee got some athletic talent. Yeah, we're doing good, doing well. We got a couple, uh,

recent, uh, entries in the NBA, NBA as well. Yeah. Yeah. So going back to coach Posey,

this thing was Lance, I can call UW Parkside, I can call Concordia and have home games against those

guys. So that way your kids can have like a homecoming game a little bit rather than just playing on the

road. So, uh, that's a cool thing about it. Just, uh, interacting and just making that conversation

between parents, players and coaches. And these are like, uh, these are good friends of mine as well too.

These are what's up. Uh, there was no cold calling, no cold calling like, Hey, I'm Lance Pizzer,

coach Dalio at a Highland University. That's in Chicago as well too. Uh, my good friend coach Longhorn,

he's in Iowa Central coming in, uh, coach Kair from Southern University. That's what's up. You

know, these guys that I'm flying in and driving in just to help out with you. And let me tell you

this, when you talk about giving these kids that opportunity, that's powerful. That is powerful.

Because I remember when, um, I had to go off into college and, uh, Iowa, uh, this college in

Iowa was like, Hey, Tory, we want to come and look at you and I didn't even know how to catch the

greyhound. I didn't, I didn't, I just had to, I just had to figure it all out and I had to talk

to one of my counselors. I, my grandma, you know, I was living with grandma grandma ain't never really

don't know nothing about that. Yeah. So the fact that you're there and you're trying to guide them

to the next level of life and as a mentor and as a person that they can kind of get an understanding

of what's going on. That's, that is powerful. Yeah. And that's what we want to do is, uh, I want

thing for the listeners to, um, uh, I'm big on affordability. Uh, you see an event like this throughout

the country from $200, $300. Uh, we only charged you $50 for seniors, freshman,

junior years, they only paying $35. And with the seniors, remember, they get a checking account

through BMO Harris. That's already funded. Ready to go. So that's us giving back to saying, Hey,

we want to help with this journey from now until you guys graduate from college. And how do people

sign the kids are always, do they have to have a certain basketball history? Or is it just any

senior in it? You know what? It's going to be any senior now. First, we want to keep, keep it only

for high school basketball players, which we have a good pool for them. But I've also had other kids

hit me up. Hey, I love to play sports. I didn't have an opportunity to get signed. So you just

anybody that can ball like, you know, if you can play ball, who makes it on to the court for the

scouts? I mean, that's what Friday night is for. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. So Friday night will be important.

Kids come in. And so how does this work? Yep. So Friday night, uh, we'll be at Mount Mary where

events take place Friday night and Saturday afternoon. Five to nine will be in the gym. Uh, we have

the coaches introduction. I don't even mentioned there. Get a chance to talk about their schools and

universities, but also players and parents can do themselves as well too. After the introductions,

now we want to court Tory. Now we get a chance to see who could do what? Okay. And then for the game

Saturday, we'll place everybody we need to be. Uh, also we have uniforms for the games too. So

parents, uh, your son, a daughter, we have a uniform. So how can they tap in? What's what,

what's the information they need to tap in? Where can they go? What website they can go go to what

phone number? Yep. So you can feel free to call the text me directly at 414 807 2740 414 807 2740.

You can follow MPBA community cares on Facebook. Uh, the flyers going everywhere. Um, feel free to

inbox me. We have a registration, uh, QR code, but the flyers all over Facebook. I'll share it with

you. Text me, direct me. I send it to you directly. Now there's a recent incident with takeovers

that everybody's been talking about, but you deal with the youth. How does that make you feel

when you see something like this going on with the youth right here in the city of Milwaukee?

You know, I, when I first saw it, the first thing we tend to do is, you know, we tend to take

blame. Who's responsible for what? Right? Uh, I think these are what we call a teachable moments as

well too, uh, at the same time. Uh, do a lot of our youth, especially in Sydney, Milwaukee. Um,

I think we struggle with identity in the sense, especially the law of our youth. Um, not knowing that

some of the activities they may partake in are borderline, if not full blown criminal activities.

Right. And the worst thing to find out is when you have cuffs around your wrist at, oh,

I didn't know it was just that it was that serious, right? Or someone gets hurt. I think

starts with parenting. Obviously first, um, we have to tell our youth, especially our sons,

daughters, just nephews that, hey, you love you come from a family. This last name means something.

Um, they have to have a sense of purpose. Um, I will say this, Tori, every generation is

responsible for some positive they contributed. It's some negative contributed. And I think we

need to have those honest conversations well too, uh, rather than just, you know, being the old man

on the porch, right? Have to be able to use that time to teach like, hey, we did this. Um,

our listeners, your listeners, we remember Capitol court, remember the Capitol court,

riot. You remember that, Tori, you remember the Sherman Park cruising. You remember that

cruising on Sherman Park and a lot of the youth was getting in trouble for that. We remember

those days vividly, right? So I don't want us to be the guys to say, oh, this is just out of control,

right? Every generation, we have to say, hey, if we don't take care of it,

lock them up and throw away the key. Yeah, we can't, we can't do that. That's, that's, it's not

the fair. Um, the, the, the narrative that was going on, and you remember this Tori was,

well, it's not for each kids to do. I mean, that's a false narrative. There's a lot of things for

the kids to do. It may not be what they particularly want to do, right? Look at the skating situation.

Remember skating university, right? That's close now. Uh, Butler has it where they actually

terrorized some of the kids. Yeah. Well, some of the kids are complaining that, you know,

they not want it there or something incidents have taken place to show a little, uh,

yep. You make you raise a night brow on what took place? Yep. So to the point where, hey,

they want one adult per kid or two kids, right? So these are kind of things we have. Like, hey,

if we can't control how we interact, then it's going to be limited things that you guys can do.

Think about the mall. You used to be able to walk through the mall with no problems. Now,

you have to have, it's a curfew at the mall, uh, movie theaters. You know, so we have to share

everyone that, hey, if we don't control how we interact or our behavior, it's going to be limited.

Are there enough programs for the kids? Like the kids are saying that there's nothing to do.

But if you listen to the grownups, we got programs. Yes, there's, there's what is the, what is the

disconnect? The disconnect, Tory is how I want to be entertained. That's the disconnect.

Uh, outside of sports, entertainment, uh, music, uh, things that nature, there's always tons of

boys and girls, club, wives, yays, uh, running rebels. I had that when I was a kid. Yeah,

we had that, right? But is that, uh, we upgrading the ideas to fit the needs of the youth today?

Are we keeping current? No. No. Uh, think about it from a parent standpoint,

uh, I have a 16 year old, uh, at Mesmer. Shout out to my son, Scott. Um, he's in activities,

he runs track. The young man, the young woman that doesn't do sports. Well, we have to tap in

and find out what's their knee sugar interest in. We have to find out. Okay. Yeah. Facebook,

TikTok, Instagram, but then maybe we, we, we need to say, Hey, let's create a, let's create a

podcast studio and teach them how to do this stuff. Because if they want to be entertained,

that way, then, you know, for sure, I'm how to build those technologies as well. There you go. Uh,

anything that can monetize and they can make money. Oh, they're all in. They're, they're all in,

they're all in. So, but like you said, 100, 200 kids argue in fighting. It's just a matter of time

for something happens. And that's the safety part that we try to steer them away from. Like,

hey, 200 kids at one spot at one time is probably never a good, a good idea. Well, I'm going to give you

your last words. What do you want the community to know about what you're doing? How they can help you

lands. And many times when we talk about people that are out here organizing with the youth,

a lot of those flyers don't go viral. Right. Like to take over fly. Yeah. Yeah. And we just

talked about that off the, off the air. It was like, Hey, that thing got to circulate. I'm like,

oh, this is where it came from. Uh, I think, uh, I always work from a solution based, uh, this summer,

I'm selling Tory for the listeners that, uh, we will put together a probably late June. We're

going to do a safe summer charity basketball game. Uh, we need Tory to lace them up. You got

to put your shoes on. Here we go. You got to put your shoes on. How come I can't coach? You know,

I've been the coach. I've been the coach for the last five, six years now. Well, you know what?

I, you got to jump shot at two of you. I know you demand. Even if you got to play the four

four, I got, I got, I got to lay up. I got a few lands. I got a jump shot of layup. Yeah. So I

want to get together with a lot of community, uh, partners organizations. Uh, I've talked to some of

the MPD fire department, uh, paramedics, um, about putting together this safe summer game we're going

to do. But then also, um, I'm putting together, uh, some kind of summer program. I'm still putting

the, the, the kinks together. All I want to do, uh, it will be something with podcasting just to

keep everybody busy, uh, that way they can tap into their social media and keep them busy that

way. So I've got a couple of projects working on that. Uh, be come back share with your listeners.

Um, and also, um, just want to get your flowers, uh, tomorrow. Uh, I share with your listeners. Uh,

you got a award that my organization gave you. Oh wow. Community spotlight for the work you've been

doing. And, um, I want to bring it today. But y'all gonna, we're gonna come back through, uh,

tomorrow on the show. I'm, I give it to you. Yeah. I'm gonna give it to you. Yeah. Oh wow. Yeah.

Yeah. That way I can, I can, uh, here we go. I got my, I got my phone. So I'll make sure that I

record everything. So, you know, but for the work that you guys do, man, and it's, it's amazing,

man. So, well, I'll tell you this, you know, I think that many times when we out here, selfless,

we deal with the, what they call the, the financial issue on the back end, because sometimes I,

I, I, I, I ain't never got no support. So I, what I'm saying is sometimes I don't think about

the cost. I just try to get the event or the idea implementing. Yeah. And then I'll just have

to pay for it on the back end, maybe move some things around so I can make it happen. But I think

that many times when we talk about the front lines, we learn how to manage in the moment. Yeah.

And without a lot of the fanfare or the support that we should be getting, but many times we find

a way to make it happen. And we organize with the best intentions of getting the positive outcomes.

Definitely. I mean, that's why I appreciate you by the lens, because that, that's, that's what I know

about knowing you. You've always been like that, trying to find different ways to help with the

youth, you know, through athletics, which is something that affected your life. Yeah. Definitely.

I made so many relationships through basketball. And a lot of lessons that, it's

I'm gonna need you to join the celebrity basketball. I'm gonna play next year. I'm playing next year.

We got to put him down on the, uh, because we can't lose another game. I'm playing next year.

I promise you'll play next year. I need to help. I can't wait a minute to the, to the, to the, the

brothers on the front lines ain't got time to be out there playing basketball. So I got, I,

I kept it honest. I got the brothers that do the work, but that didn't translate to the who?

Well, we got to use you as a secret weapon. So that last two minutes or fourth quarter,

Tori goes to the back, get dressed. You know, he come out, because guess what? Nobody planned for

you. You're not in the game playing. You know, it's got a report. And you know, that's it.

Two, three is in a corner. That's a game right there. You didn't plan for it. That's it. That's

what happened with Ken of lock pass out of the evolved church. Yeah. They stuck them in the,

in the fourth quarter. He hit two big three. That's, that's why I played against pastor

locking college. It's funny. We, we, we talked about. Oh, wow. Wow. Okay. I didn't know that.

Yeah. He was good. He was good. That's what's up. I didn't know that. We didn't say that.

When he was on the show, he didn't tell me that he was a basketball. Yeah. Uh, for y'all to know,

pastor talked a lot of trash back then too. So it's, it's kind of, you gotta look at him sideways.

Like, remember what you said to me on the court that day? Oh, wow. Well, now he's,

I mean, now he's, you know, the chapter of the walking bugs and things like that. He's good

people. He's just in the studio. But I didn't know he played bass. And next time I see him,

I'm gonna, I'm gonna say, yeah, I thought Jesus was with that job. Yeah. Oh, really,

he, he, he, he actually played it. He can play, man. Oh, he can play very strong. I thought the

greatest guy got it that three point shot. Yeah. Very strong guard. It was, it was kind of tough

to, uh, to guard back then. You know, he had some muscles on him too. You know, he still,

he still got a frame on him. Okay. Yeah. He was good. Now I got some, now I got some

ammunition. Thanks, Lance. I appreciate it. I appreciate it. I appreciate that. Yeah. Thank you.

But look, salute to you, everything that you're doing and anything I can do to help,

just let me know you already know. I appreciate it. Man. Hey, for all your listeners, like I said, uh,

I, you know, if Tori can continue to help share the flyer, my biggest thing I'm doing now between

next week is just make sure that everybody's aware. Right. I bring it to awareness.

Is the information again for those that want to participate? So, uh, you can follow my page,

Lance Pits or MPBA community cares page. Uh, all the flyers are on there. Uh, I got videos of

stuff that we made. Uh, if you need to reach me for your son, the daughter registered,

no matter if they're freshmen or senior, four, one, four, eight, zero, seven, two, seven, four, zero,

or contact Tori. He can reach me as well. All right. So thank you. When we come back,

thank you, Lance, for coming on. When we come back, we have more conversation, truth, nation.

Stay locked in right here on Tori. Look.

You are listening to the Tori low show on 101 7 the truth, the truth app at 101 7 the truth dot com.

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