John W. Brimer, CPA

John W. Brimer, CPA We are a public accounting firm.

We offer tax preparation, monthly financial services, payroll services Please feel free to contact our office with any questions and we would be happy to assist you.

11/16/2025

If you placed Mount Everest at the bottom of the Mariana Trench, its peak would still be a mile underwater — and something is alive down there. Nearly seven miles beneath the surface of the Pacific Ocean lies the deepest known place on Earth: the Mariana Trench. Located near Guam, east of the Philippines, it plunges to an astonishing depth of about 36,000 feet (10,916 meters). To understand just how deep that is, imagine taking Mount Everest — the tallest mountain on the planet — and dropping it into the trench. Even then, the mountain’s peak would still sit more than a mile beneath the waves. This is a part of our world where sunlight never reaches, where temperatures hover just above freezing, and where pressure rises to more than a thousand times what we feel at sea level — the equivalent of over 15,000 pounds crushing every square inch.

The deepest point of the trench is called Challenger Deep, named after the HMS Challenger expedition that first measured its depths in 1875. The crew used weighted ropes — and their discovery revealed a world more inaccessible than the Moon. For decades, no one dared to attempt a descent. It wasn’t until 1960 that humans first reached the bottom. U.S. Navy Lieutenant Don Walsh and Swiss oceanographer Jacques Piccard descended in a vessel called Trieste. Their thick steel capsule groaned under the crushing weight of the ocean, and a window cracked during the journey — proving how hostile the deep truly is. After spending just minutes on the seafloor, they returned to the surface, unsure if anyone would ever go back.

It would take 52 years before another human dared the journey. In 2012, filmmaker and explorer James Cameron made a solo dive in the Deepsea Challenger, describing the bottom as “like an alien world” — silent, dark, and eerily still. In 2019 and 2020, explorer Victor Vescovo completed several more dives, revealing even more about this hidden frontier. Few places on Earth remain this mysterious, this untouched, this demanding of courage and technology. Even today, almost no submarines are capable of surviving the immense pressure of Challenger Deep — most would be crushed thousands of meters above it.

What makes the Mariana Trench even more astonishing is that, by all logic, nothing should be able to live there — and yet life not only exists, it thrives. Cameras and sampling missions have revealed bizarre organisms that defy the limits of biology. Giant single-celled creatures called xenophyophores sprawl across the seafloor like living sponges. Shrimp-like amphipods drift through the darkness, some glowing with their own blue light. A ghostly species of snailfish — the deepest-living fish known — survives in conditions that would crush human bones instantly. Some of the bacteria feeding on chemicals from the Earth’s crust may resemble the earliest life forms that ever existed, offering clues about the origins of life itself.

These organisms have adapted in extraordinary ways. Their bodies contain specialized molecules that prevent their cells from collapsing under pressure that would liquefy human tissue. They live in a world without sunlight, relying instead on chemical energy. Their existence suggests that life on other planets — particularly those with oceans buried under ice, like Jupiter’s moon Europa or Saturn’s moon Enceladus — might be more likely than we ever imagined.

But amid the wonder lies a disturbing truth: humans have already polluted this untouched world. During his descent, Victor Vescovo found something that shouldn’t be there — plastic bags and candy wrappers on the ocean floor. Even here, at the deepest point on Earth, we have left our footprint.

Scientists continue to study the trench because it may hold answers to major scientific questions. Studying subduction zones can help us better predict earthquakes and tsunamis. Exploring hydrothermal vents provides insight into how Earth recycles its crust. And understanding deep-sea organisms may lead to breakthroughs in medicine, biotechnology, and the search for life beyond Earth. The trench is not just a hole in the ocean — it is a high-pressure laboratory shaping our understanding of land, life, and evolution.

Despite our advances, more of the Moon’s surface has been mapped than the world beneath our own oceans. The Mariana Trench reminds us that our planet is still largely unknown — mysterious, extreme, and full of secrets waiting to be discovered. It is a testament to the resilience of life. Even in a place where the Earth itself seems hostile, where darkness and pressure create one of the most extreme environments in the universe — something survives. Something endures.

The Mariana Trench isn’t just the deepest point on Earth. It is proof that life refuses to give up. Even seven miles down, in a world that seems impossible, the story of survival continues — reminding us that the most alien place in the cosmos may still be right here on our own planet.

11/15/2025

Tom Selleck was 35 years old, and he'd just made the most painful decision of his career.

Steven Spielberg had cast him as Indiana Jones in Raiders of the Lost Ark—a role that would obviously become iconic, though no one knew that yet. It was the big break Selleck had been working toward for fifteen years.
And he had to turn it down.
His contract with CBS for a new detective show called Magnum, P.I. wouldn't let him out. The network refused to release him. Spielberg waited as long as he could, but eventually had to recast. The role went to Harrison Ford.
Selleck was devastated. He'd just turned down what could have been his shot at movie stardom. Instead, he was locked into a TV pilot that might not even get picked up.
He had no idea that decision would make him one of the biggest stars on television—and that Magnum, P.I. would run for eight years, win him an Emmy, and earn him more money than Raiders ever could have.
But before that bittersweet moment, there were fifteen years of grinding.
Tom Selleck grew up in Southern California, a decent athlete who played basketball at USC on scholarship. He was tall, athletic, conventionally handsome—the kind of guy who could have coasted on looks.
But acting wasn't easy for him. He was nervous in auditions. Self-conscious on camera. He froze when he should have been charming. Early in his career, he bombed auditions that should have been simple.
The rejection stung. But instead of quitting, he doubled down. He took acting classes with Milton Katselas, one of Hollywood's most respected teachers. He studied craft, not just charisma. He worked on becoming an actual actor, not just a handsome face.
In 1967, 20th Century Fox signed him to a talent contract—one of those studio deals where they basically own you, giving you a salary while grooming you for potential stardom. It felt like he'd made it.
Then Fox dropped him. No significant roles materialized. The studio decided he wasn't worth the investment.
Back to square one.
Selleck took whatever work he could find. He modeled—most famously becoming a Marlboro Man in cigarette commercials, his rugged features perfect for the cowboy aesthetic. He appeared in countless TV commercials selling everything from Pepsi to Right Guard deodorant.
He even appeared on The Dating Game—that's how hungry he was for any exposure. A tall, mustachioed bachelor trying to win a date on a game show while hoping someone in the industry might notice him.
Through the early and mid-1970s, he ground it out with guest spots on TV shows: The Rockford Files, Marcus Welby, M.D., Charlie's Angels, The Streets of San Francisco. Small roles. Forgettable characters. But he was working, learning, staying in the game.
He got close to bigger breaks several times. He was cast in a show called The Young and the Restless but left after a short time. He landed the lead in a pilot called Bunco that didn't get picked up. Then another pilot called Boston and Kilbride. Also didn't sell.
By the late 1970s, Selleck was in his mid-thirties—old for a TV newcomer. Most actors who were going to break through had already done it. He was starting to look like a career journeyman: good-looking guy who'd work steadily but never quite become a star.
Then came Magnum, P.I.
The show was created by Donald P. Bellisario and Glen A. Larson for CBS. Thomas Magnum was a private investigator living in Hawaii, driving a Ferrari, wearing Hawaiian shirts, and solving crimes with charm, intelligence, and that magnificent mustache.
Selleck auditioned. He got the part. CBS ordered a pilot for the 1980-81 season.
And that's when Spielberg called about Indiana Jones.
The timing was brutal. Selleck wanted the movie role desperately. But CBS wouldn't budge on his Magnum contract. Spielberg needed to start filming. The role went to Harrison Ford, who became one of the biggest movie stars in the world.
Selleck had to watch from the sidelines as Raiders of the Lost Ark became a phenomenon in 1981. He'd been that close to movie stardom, and contract obligations had blocked him.
But Magnum, P.I. premiered in December 1980.
And it became a massive hit.
Audiences loved Thomas Magnum. He wasn't a typical tough-guy detective. He was charming, vulnerable, occasionally goofy. He lived in a guest house, drove a car that wasn't his, and had a complicated relationship with a character named Higgins who viewers assumed was human but who Magnum sometimes suggested might be Robin Masters (a running mystery throughout the series).
Selleck's performance made it work. He brought warmth, humor, and humanity to what could have been a generic detective role. The mustache became iconic. The Ferrari 308 GTS became one of TV's most famous cars. The show's Hawaiian setting was gorgeous and escapist.
Magnum, P.I. ran for eight seasons—162 episodes from 1980 to 1988. Selleck won an Emmy Award in 1984 for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Drama Series. He became one of the most recognizable faces on television.
And financially? The show made him wealthy. Series lead salaries, especially for hit shows that ran for years, were substantial. By the final seasons, Selleck was earning enormous per-episode fees plus syndication royalties that would pay for decades.
Losing Indiana Jones hurt. But Magnum, P.I. became the role that defined him.
After Magnum, Selleck transitioned successfully to films—Three Men and a Baby (1987) became one of the highest-grossing films of the year, proving he could carry a movie. Quigley Down Under (1990) showcased his Western bonafides.
He later found another iconic TV role as Frank Reagan in Blue Bloods (2010-present), playing the New York City Police Commissioner in a show that's now in its 14th season. At 79 years old, Selleck is still working, still respected, still bringing that same professionalism and warmth to his roles.
But here's what makes Tom Selleck's story so valuable:
Success didn't come easy. It came after fifteen years of rejection, dropped contracts, failed pilots, and game show appearances. It came after he'd been told "no" countless times. It came after watching other actors get the breaks he wanted.
And when his big break finally arrived, it looked like a consolation prize—TV instead of movies, Hawaii instead of global adventures, losing Indiana Jones to Harrison Ford.
Except that "consolation prize" became one of the most successful TV shows of the 1980s and made him more famous (and wealthier) than most movie stars ever get.
Selleck's lesson isn't just "persistence pays off"—though it does. It's that sometimes what looks like failure or second-best is actually exactly where you're supposed to be.
Losing Indiana Jones felt like the worst thing that could happen. But if he'd done Raiders, he wouldn't have done Magnum. He wouldn't have had eight years of steady work on a show that millions loved. He wouldn't have built the career that led to Blue Bloods decades later.
The "failure" was actually the success. The detour was actually the destination.
Selleck himself has reflected on this with remarkable grace. "I don't think you can second-guess things," he's said. "What happened happened, and I'm grateful for the career I've had."
At 79, still working, still beloved, Tom Selleck represents something valuable: the long game. The understanding that a career is built project by project, year by year, with patience and professionalism.
He didn't become a movie star like Harrison Ford. He became something arguably better: a TV icon who's been welcome in people's living rooms for over 40 years, through two legendary series and countless other roles.
The mustache is iconic. The Hawaiian shirts are memorable. But the real lesson is simpler:
Keep showing up. Do the work. Trust that the path will reveal itself, even when it looks like you're headed in the wrong direction.
Sometimes the role you don't get leads to the role you were meant to play.

11/15/2025

Doris Day once lost everything but she didn't give up! She always believed the worst surprises came with loud noises — a door slammed, an argument, a harsh word. She never imagined the quiet would hurt more. The morning her lawyer arrived at her Beverly Hills home, everything felt peaceful. Sunshine through the curtains. Her dog sleeping at her feet. A cup of tea cooling beside her. She opened the envelope he handed her, expecting routine paperwork.
Instead, her whole world fell apart in one silent breath.
“Doris… you’re broke. More than broke. You’re in debt.”
$450,000. Gone. All of it.
Her husband, Martin Melcher, the man she trusted with every contract, every dollar, every step of her career — had destroyed her finances. He had signed her name to deals she’d never seen. Poured her money into failed investments. Hidden everything behind reassuring smiles. And now he was dead.
Doris stared at the letter as if it were written in a foreign language. For twenty years, she had been America’s sunny girl — the voice behind Que Sera, Sera, the radiant star of Pillow Talk, Move Over, Darling, Calamity Jane. People thought she had a dream life.
She had no idea she was living inside someone else’s lies. Then came the second blow.
Her lawyer told her she was already committed — legally, fully, and without her permission — to star in a television series. A show she had never agreed to. A show her husband had sold behind her back.
The Doris Day Show.
She felt trapped inside a life she didn’t choose.
But Doris Day was made of stronger stuff than people realized.
She didn’t scream. She didn’t collapse. She did what she had done her entire life:
She smiled… and went to work.
Every day she walked onto the set, her heart still bruised, and pretended everything was fine. Viewers saw a warm, cheerful sitcom. They had no idea that behind every joke, every scene, every sweet smile was a woman fighting for her future.
She performed not for fame, but for survival.
Slowly, the show became a success. Slowly, she regained control of her career. And when she was steady enough to stand tall again, she turned and faced the men who ruined her life.
She sued Jerome Rosenthal — her late husband’s business partner — the man who had helped drain her fortune.
People told her it was hopeless. Too big. Too complicated. Too powerful an opponent.
But she had already lost everything once.
She wasn’t going to lose twice.
The courtroom battle lasted years. Then more years. A decade passed. Then another. But she kept going — patient, determined, quietly fierce.
And in the end, Doris won. Almost $22 million.
Justice delivered, finally.
When it was over, the world expected a grand return to Hollywood — a comeback, a spotlight, something bright and glamorous.
But Doris had learned what fame really cost.
So she chose a different kind of life.
She moved to Carmel. Bought a small home. Filled it with dogs. Built an animal rescue that became her heart’s work. Instead of red carpets, she walked shelter floors. Instead of applause, she listened to the soft breathing of animals she’d saved.
When someone asked her if she ever missed Hollywood, she smiled gently and said:
“I like being the girl next door.
I just wish I’d known what the neighborhood was really like.”
Her story isn’t the story people think it is.
It isn’t about a sunny blonde in pretty dresses.
It isn’t about perfect songs or perfect smiles.
It is about a woman who was betrayed in the most personal way — and still found the strength to rebuild.
Doris Day lost her fortune.
She lost her trust.
She lost the illusion that the people close to her were always honest.
But she never lost herself.
In the end, she didn’t just survive Hollywood.
She walked away from it — stronger, wiser, and finally free.
And that may be her greatest triumph of all.

02/24/2025

It's that time of year....TAX SEASON!

09/20/2022

Final tax deadline is just around the corner! Get your tax data in ASAP!!!

Sharon Perry                                        4/7/43- 4/9/22                      Memorial Services for Sharon Per...
04/25/2022

Sharon Perry
4/7/43- 4/9/22

Memorial Services for Sharon Perry will be:
Saturday, April 30th @ 12:00 PM
First Baptist Church
220 S. Bell Street
Hamilton, TX 76531

Final tax deadlines are quickly approaching.  Please contact our office or drop by with your documents as soon as possib...
07/15/2021

Final tax deadlines are quickly approaching. Please contact our office or drop by with your documents as soon as possible. Don't wait!

It’s that time of year again. Tax organizers have been mailed to you. We are here in the office Monday-Friday 8-5.  Plea...
01/27/2021

It’s that time of year again. Tax organizers have been mailed to you. We are here in the office Monday-Friday 8-5. Please let us know if you have any questions. We look forward to seeing everyone soon!

BEWARE!!
01/04/2021

BEWARE!!

Our office will be closed December 24 and will reopen Monday, January 4. We want to wish all of our clients a very Merry...
12/22/2020

Our office will be closed December 24 and will reopen Monday, January 4. We want to wish all of our clients a very Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.

***UPDATE*** Due to Covid-19 our office has decided to begin to work remotely.  We can still accept your data via email ...
03/21/2020

***UPDATE*** Due to Covid-19 our office has decided to begin to work remotely. We can still accept your data via email or by mail. Please feel free to contact our office with any questions.

John Brimer 817-366-2385
[email protected]

Cheryl Halbert 817-528-9318
[email protected]

Just wanted to let everyone know that we are currently still open. Feel free to stop by and drop of your data to us.  Yo...
03/20/2020

Just wanted to let everyone know that we are currently still open. Feel free to stop by and drop of your data to us. You may also email or mail your data into us as well. At this time we are not doing one on one appointments out of abundance of caution. Because of the Covid-19 pandemic the government has extended the Tax deadline from April 15 to July 15. Please feel free to contact our office with any questions and as always we will be happy to assist you.

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