Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
Got that excessive heat warning until lateheat index one hundred and ten one hundred
and ten. So okay, sohere's here's the thing. Do you know
what heat index is? I foundthat this out. I was doing my
Iowa show today and I talked toan Iowa meteorologist and she explained exactly what
(00:24):
heat index is. Is it likethe feels like temperature? It is?
And you know why because with thehumidity the way that it is, the
humidity as it goes up depending onthe due point and what the humidity percentage
is, it makes it harder foryour body to sweat. Your body can't
cool itself properly with higher amounts ofhumidity. So when it's humid, you
(00:50):
can tell like we can. Wecan note the humidity, right, like,
that's that's one thing that we Youcan go outside like we in the
Midwives. So you go outside andyou can feel when it's a humid heat,
right. But you feel that waynot because that's the actual temperature.
It's because your body feels warmer basedon the fact that you can't naturally cool
yourself as easily. It's harder foryour body to naturally cool itself. So
(01:11):
the heat index basically is like whatyour body temperature or what your body really
thinks the temperature is. It's asif you were in a normally dry one
hundred and ten degree heat in Lincolnright now. Because of the humidity that
makes it harder for your body tocool itself. Your body thinks, well,
it's one hundred and ten degrees outhere, right, that's tough man,
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Yeah, so be safe out there. So that's Lincoln, al Maha.
It's also, according to this,because of higher humidity one hundred and
ten degree heat index. I mean, how do you even stay cool in
something like this? I talk aboutand I said this, I love the
heat. I really love it whenit's summertime for a ton of different reasons,
(01:52):
mostly because I can do whatever theheck I want whenever I want.
When it's really cold outside, I'mgonna get a frost spider or whatever.
Well, here, it's like,even if you're truly very hydrated, it's
probably super dangerous to be outside doingany kind of hard work. You know.
I was thinking about all of mylawn this afternoon. It's a dumb
idea, Like I know that thereare people out there that do that,
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but for me, it's a dumbidea. I'm not going to go out
there and I'm not going to beessentially mowing my lawn in one hundred and
ten degree heat when I can lookat two days from now when the high
is going to be in the eighties, like, it's pretty for me.
That's what I think. Now,if you've got some thoughts on this,
you can call in four h twofive five eight eleven ten four two five
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five eight eleven ten. This isthe kind of sauna that you just don't
see all that much, even thoughit does get really hot out there.
The fact that you know our highyou know, the National Weather Service high
had this like you know, takenup into the hundreds as well, and
then you throw in the fact thatthe sun is visible and bearing down.
Oh and by the way, ifyou're anywhere near the Missouri River, you're
(02:58):
in a flood warning is well,because the Missouri River, much like most
of northwestern Iowa, dealing with legitimateissues with the incredible amounts of rain that
they took over the last few daysthis past weekend and what residual effect that
might have on the rivers that areflowing out of those spaces there are tons
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of farms, agricultural areas, notjust bridges but regular streets throughout the rest
of the throughout the rest of northwesternIowa, and what that might do for
the Missouri River as the water continuesto flow down into around the Omaha area,
which as you heard in our newscastsfrom Craig that it's supposed to crest
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on Wednesday night. So that's goingto be kind of the real bugaboo point
of that. Again, We're notthe only place in the entire country that's
got super duper hot heat. Mostof the plains has that all the way
down into Texas and Louisiana. Butdefinitely something to keep an eye on.
Meanwhile, you look over at Utah. A couple of couple of weeks ago,
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at about the same time that Iwas looking at stuff that was super
hot in this area and into thenortheast, there was a place in Utah
that was having a frost warning becauseof like the mountains and stuff. And
that's what I'm guessing. Well todayabout the same spot in western Utah is
now with an excessive heat warning.And if you look at they are dealing
(04:36):
with high temperatures but with much lesshumidity than we do, so their heat
indexes even less than the actual temperature, at least according to the National Weather
Service. So I just find itso fascinating that we can live in a
country like this, that we haveso much different weather phenomenons happening at the
exact same time. So anyway,we'll keep a posting on that, We'll
(04:57):
keep posting on the flooding as thathappens. We're going to talk more about
the flooding and what the potential hazardsof that look like throughout the week as
well. So I don't want youto think that we're not paying close attention
to that. It's not like thetornadoes. It's not like anything super immediate
unless you're already under the water.It's just trying to keep an eye on
it because it is kind of aslowly developing thing when you're downriver like we
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are from where the biggest issue isin very northwest corner of Ia. Two
fourteen is the time. Speaking oftornadoes, did you see the latest news
on the green Field tornado? Idid not. They are saying, based
on this some latest information that thisis the strongest tornado ever recorded. Wow,
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And you might be saying, well, how does that happen? What's
going on there? I don't know. I just like it's pretty hard for
me to tell as a person whojust sees damage to know how strong a
tornado is. But apparently there was. They called that EF four on the
National Weather Service and the damage surveythat they did. But they said there
(06:04):
was a group of people who sawthis on the ground, and they had
like a portable Doppler radar thing atsome point during this tornado it's called Doppler
on wheels or a dow and atsome point towards the end of this twister,
they were able to clock over threehundred mile an hour winds in the
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twister itself. My goodness, threehundred miles an hour. Like if you
can think about this, three hundredlike we talk about damaging winds in the
fifties sixty mile an hour range,and it is, I mean three hundred
miles per hour. So if youlook up now, like they say that,
there's a likelihood that the strongest windsthat were within the actual twister itself
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was probably somewhere more in the realmof like three hundred and fifteen or more
miles per hour. Now, Idon't know if that's going to change the
way that they look at this,because obviously the Weather Service has their own
they have their own way of measurementsand things like that. But the idea
that there are now like instruments thatsaid that there was this was the strongest
(07:17):
win that we have recorded within anactual twister makes it pretty pretty incredible that
that what that town had to gothrough. They're saying the most likely maximum
wind speed is three hundred and thirteenmiles an hour. I mean, that's
just like, it just blows mymind. And obviously the people are still
cleaning up because it's not an easything to be not an easy thing to
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be fixing, but that is justan unbelievable number. And our prayer is
still out to that community as theycontinue to go through the cleanup of that
two seventeen now this time, ifyou got anything on these floods, if
you're listening to us in a spotthat had a little bit of extra water
toward northwestern I would love to hearfrom you. You can call us at
four oh two five five eight eleventen. Four h two five five eight
(08:03):
eleven ten. Also got some morenews that we'll talk about next on news
radio eleven ten Kfab Emery's songer onnews radio eleven ten Kfab. I got
a couple of big trips coming upa month from now. I'm actually going
to be at the National Balloon Classicin Indian. Am going to be there
the whole time. It's nine daysof hot air ballooning, which is my
(08:26):
jam, like that is. I'min my happy place there. And then
we uh, we're going to Spainin September, so you know, I'm
kind of doing the best that Ican to work work, work, work,
work until then. So there wego. So we were talking about
this, we had a caller saysomething about what they're dealing with today.
As we talked about like heat indexand all that jazz, what exactly was
(08:52):
the nature of this? Had acaller say that a prominent warehouse here in
Omaha, YEP is continuing to workdespite their AC unit not working. And
oh what caller said that the thermostatread out at one hundred and thirty degrees
inside the warehouse that they were workingat. You know, I don't want
(09:13):
to pretend like I'm some sort oflegal expert, but I feel like there
are are a lot of grounds ofpotential potential issues with that from the company
standpoint. Yeah, that sounds dangerous. I mean, like the room that
we're in right now, what doyou think I mean, it's got to
be like sixty five in here.It's nice and cool in here. Yeah,
it's on the cooler side, right. I almost wanted to throw the
(09:35):
heater on just to be ironic.You know, we got a little space
heater that keeps us warm, butwe use that quite a bit, you
know, because this room gets cool. It does first world problems when I'm
a little too cold and I havea guy that's working in literally twice as
hot of a temperature right now inthis same city as I am. Yeah,
(09:58):
anyway, you want to talk aboutthe heat or whatever, you can
four two five five eight eleven tenis the number four two five five eight
eleven ten tomorrow. By the way, we want to make sure that you
know you've been hearing some commercials talkingabout the Super Day of super Deals.
That's nine to nine happening tomorrow.So just go to our website. You're
gonna find a KFB dot com.You're gonna be able to find a link
(10:22):
that will send you to the websitethat has all those deals. You're gonna
want to make sure that early inthe morning you set an alarm on your
phone to remind you to do thatso you don't miss out on some of
the deals. So be sure tocheck that out. Also a lot of
fun to save that kind of money. Now, I haven't seen a ton
of this stuff here locally at leastyet. But Holworth Park And is that
(10:46):
Hollworth or Hayworth? I forget.I think somebody told me I say that
wrong. You know Hayworth or I'mnot familiar with that. Where's this at?
This is a campground in Bellevue,Oh I honestly I'm not familiar.
American Heroes Park in Hayworth Park Campground, public boat docks closed until further notice
because of the estimated flooding of theMissouri River. Have you seen some pictures
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of this? Like you need toget on a website not of Bellevue,
but of the flooding in northwest Iowa. This is scary stuff. The frightening
part of this is you just can'tstop water. There are some towns and
I guess I'll share my personal experiencewith flooding and has there been like a
(11:31):
maybe you can tell me a highprofile flooding of like Omaha proper, like
the main areas of Omaha. Well, a handful of years ago, we
did have the It was the earlyspring rains that rained on top of some
ice in our surrounding rivers that createdice jams that just rowse the river levels
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quite a bit, and so wesaw a lot of washouts of bridges around
the alm Hot area. There werethere were a few prominent washouts of bridges.
I want to say more northwest ofhere. I believe in Saunders County,
more located Dodge County in that area. People please correct me if I'm
wrong, but that we did Iremember I was. I was sitting here
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for some of that a handful ofyears ago. So we have had that.
It does happen. You know,It's amazing what water can do.
It scares me, right, Itold you about my little leaky problem.
I have like a window that somewater is running in from my window well,
and it's just, uh, justthat little leak has completely ruined the
(12:41):
carpet that the previous owners of thishouse that we're living in now had put
down there. So now you know, you gotta tear that whole thing up,
and it's just like, why wouldyou put carpet down here to begin
with? That's kind of my thing, but anyway, but the idea is
water is insanely damaging. So Ilived in a river town in southeastern Iowa,
a Tunnel Iowa for those who mightbe familiar, and the Des Moines
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River basically cuts right through what's agood word for that just kind of intersects
it bam, just like like dissectsit right down the pipe. Right.
You got a north side and yougot a south side. Well, the
north side, when you cross theriver into the north side, you'll notice
on every single bridge there is ahill almost immediately that you have to go
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up. The north side almost neverhas flooding issues. But I lived on
the south side, and there wereall sorts of different spots that you kind
of had to be worried about ofhaving too much water get involved, and
now all of a sudden, yougot yourself an issue. So what ended
up happening was the floods of twothousand and eight. I don't know if
you remember two thousand and eight.I don't know if that also happened here,
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but Des Moines was completely flooded,and a lot of this stuff started
trickling down on the Des Moines River. And we knew that our river,
the Des Moines River at our city, was going to cress at a really
high level. And we had acouple of bridges, one especially that was
super low to the river level.That bridge obviously was closed for people to
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travel on, but you knew ifthe river crested just high enough, there
was going to be a problem becausethe water would just use that as a
runway to go down each direction.The north side part of that would go
directly to downtown, the one spotof north side to Tamwa that was lower,
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and then the south side obviously wasalready kind of low and in a
floodplain. And there's a very busystreet in the arena and big convention center
it's right next to that. Imean, it's just a perilous situation.
So what ends up happening is theyput a call out for the community.
Hey, if we can get afew hundred people or a thousand people at
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this spot at this time, weare going to have sand trucks show up
and we are going to sandbag fora couple hours and see how many we
can make. And me and abunch of my classmates, you know,
we were still in high school,but we spent the summer day out in
the heat and a tumn was sandbaggingbecause we knew our town could get hit
with these terrible floods that were seeingup the river. And turns out we
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did enough. There were enough sandbagsand enough barriers that were constructed to prevent
overall flooding in all of a tunnel, which was really nice to see.
At the same time, I justremember how scary it was because a lot
of the adults were telling us aboutthe floods of ninety three, which were
even worse floods than the ones intwo thousand and eight. So I don't
know, man, water, Wedon't talk about floods as much as we
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probably showed as legitimate weather hazards,not just for people, but also for
the damage they can create and howlong it takes to clean up. Raise
on our phone line at four,two, five, five, eight eleven
ten, Ray, you got somethoughts on this for us today? Yeah,
I'm coming down Highway seventy fives fromBlair and in between Blair and for
calm. There's a farm on theeast side of the highway and I'm looking
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over there in his field. He'sjust filling up with water. This is
right now. So it's flooding,you know, up here, just north
of poor Cow. Okay, wow, So yeah, it's closer than we
would expect, not just in northwesternIowa, but just up there in Blair.
Well, Ray, thanks for theupdate. If you see more stuff
(16:23):
happening there, just let me knowit. Feel free to call us and
keep us posted on that. Okay, all right, have a good one.
Yeah, thank you. Okay,Well, Blair, Nebraska. There
you go. So something that we'redefinitely keeping an eye on is the potential
for flooding here in the next fewdays, and fingers crossed that our infrastructure
holds up. If you want tobe a part of the conversation, you
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want to talk about floods, youwant to talk about this particular situation,
especially if you're up by Blair orsomething else that you're seeing, you can
call us four oh two five fiveeight eleven ten. Four h two five
five eight eleven ten. We canalso share some flood related stories like the
one I just shared. If youlike to do that you can call in
as well again the number four ohtwo, five, five, eight,
eleven ten more on the Way onnews radio eleven ten KFAB and Marie Songer
(17:08):
on news Radio eleven ten KFAB.In an hour's time, I'm going to
have a live instio guests and learnmore about that here coming up as well.
Did have a couple of interesting emails. First of all, Matt Brian
emails in and says, you sayHayworth Park, Hayworth. Okay, gotcha.
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Now this is this is my thing, and I'm not getting mad at
whoever decided this stuff, because wealready did that exactly a year ago.
Today really is like June twenty sixwas my first day last year, but
it was the last. It wasGame three of the College World Series last
year was my first day on thejob. Huh. So basically we can
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be talking about the one year anniversaryof me being here. I guess what
did I learn in a year?I learned how to drive my car to
and from work with a couple alittle like short cuts built in if I
need them. Yeah, yeah,there you go. We'll do more of
that later and probably on the twentysix, which when it actually is my
(18:11):
one year anniversary at least three hundredand sixty five days. But anyway,
Hayworth is spelled ha wr th hawo r thh Okay, it looks like
Halworth, so you'd think it's Haworth, but it's Hayworth. Yeah, why
drop the y, you know,or just call it Hallworth? Like?
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What are we doing here? Youknow what I mean? Don't you just
hate that? Yeah? And likeit? It? It tricks your brain
because you see ha, you thinkha, you know, And let's be
honest, I'm not trying to bea jerk about it. But what do
we gain by doing that? Justlike another way to make fun of the
people that are from here. That'swhat it really is, isn't it.
Like you see, there are acouple of really good ones, like the
Norfolk one is hilarious. They'll neversee this coming. It's even spelled the
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same way as all the other ones. Yeah, that's just a mess.
What are we doing here? Comeon? Anyway? Rob emails in and
says, the last time there wasmass flooding in Omaha nineteen fifty two,
you might get a few basements floodedin low lying neighborhoods, but nothing like
it was seventy two years ago,and he shows he sent a picture from
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a long time ago, and youcan see like the water just kind of
burying a bunch of like residential neighborhoodshere. That's man, that's tough.
That's really tough. Dave emailed inEmrie at kfab dot com and said,
FOYI I twenty nine and many manyside roads are completely closed from North Sioux
City down the Highway fifty and intoVermilion in South Dakota, which Vermilion is,
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you know, a college town.That's where the University of South Dakota
is in southeastern South Dakota. Soanything that direction just steer clear. If
you're needing to head that direction,you're going to need to be thinking about
another way because of the flooding.And then on top of that, I
had Arnie email in and said everyoneknows a tumble because I remember I said,
I if you know a Tumla,which is my hometown, because I
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was talking about the flooding that aTumbla has because they have the one river
just cuts right through town. AndArnie says, everyone knows a Tumbel Iowa
geesh Emery Radar like the guy frommash Yeah. Oh yeah, Radar O'Reilly
classic character. He is the charactersfrom a Tumbel Iowa. Oh right,
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not the actor. So now Ihave to ask you this because I did
some research on this matter, becauseagain, you ask people of a certain
generation who the most famous person froma tumbel Iowa is. Radar O'Reilly is
going to be the guy. Buthe's not a real guy. Okay,
not a real guy at all.So his character was from a Tumla,
correct, And they probably just pickedthe name because it was fun to say.
(20:47):
Yeah, and you wanted a guyfrom Iowa. I mean, you
know, James Ryan, James FrancisRyan from Saving Private Ryan. Oh,
the guy they're going to go after? Was that the guy they were trying
to save? Yeah, James FrancisRyan of Iowa. You always won an
Iowa. You know why? BecauseIowa was quintessential Midwest that was Yeah.
Why isn't that Nebraska or South Dakotaor Kansas. I don't know, Probably
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because it's quicker. Yeah, youknow, it's easier to say Iowa than
Nebraska. Iowa, Nebraska up.There's the same amount of city. Yeah,
but it's just like Iowa was seventyfive percent. Vows does that have
something to do with it? Yeah, like why is that? Yeah?
Why is that Hollywood? Yeah,what's what's going on there? Anyway?
Radar O'Reilly was played by a guywhat was his name, Gary Berghoff,
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that's his name, and Gary Berghoff. I mean a Tumbela owned that like,
God bless my hometown. Not alot of great things since the flood
of forty seven, which is theflood that everybody talks about. In a
Tumbloy was being the real bad onethat like totally took down town out and
they never fully recovered after that.I mean, what are we talking here?
A big boat two by two?Big boat two by two? Yeah,
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you know, like Noah was alwayswhat I was. When I think
of a I would think of aflood. Nobody forgets march them in two
by two. Yeah, no,well they were. There are videos like
old nineteen forty style videos of peoplelike messing around with kayaks down Main Street
and downtown a Tamwa. Did ithave that old school narrator over top it?
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Yeah, you can find some thatwas like Iowa Public Television. Yeah,
there you go. But you know, when you're a kid, they
tell you about the flood of nineteenoh nine, which was a decently sized
one, but then a tumwall likeblew up and became like a solid Southeast
Iowan metropolis because of the river,and there was a train station through town,
and then the flood of forty sevencame. Downtown was never the same
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after that, and it's been dyinga slow death in various ways since.
Yeah, small town America at itsfinest, right, not that the town
stinks or anything. I'm just sayingthere's not a whole lot to grasp onto.
There's probably a plenty of Nebraska townsthat that, you know, you
could you could say, oh yeah, you know, that's us too,
kind of thing. Lots of hiddengems out there, though sure, I
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wouldn't say a Tom was that.It's unfortunate, right, it almost try
to grasp onto a lot of differentthings over the years. Tom Arnold's rise
to fame in the eighties and ninetiescertainly helped. Tom Arnold is a real
guy from a Tumbel, Iowa.Really yeah, yeah, maybe he fits
the bill. He and Roseanne Barrgot married and they bought a house just
on the outside of a tamwaw.Yeah, Chris Farley impersonated him on Saturday
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Night Live. That's all I reallyremember him at that relationship. And this
is this is just goes into theautumnel thing, right, like the people
that we want to like to cheeron's you know people. Now, Tom
Arnold has been very gracious to Tumwoy. He's donated a lot to Indian Hills
Community College, which is there andall that stuff. But all this to
the point of Radar O'Reilly's actor aguy named Gary Berghoff. Do you know
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anything else that Gary Berghoff ever didin his entire life? I got the
wiki up as we speak, Okay, and what does it say? Well,
is there anything that you've heard of? Besides mash He is known for
originating the role of Charlie Brown.Oh please, you're a good man,
Charlie Brown. He was an offBroadway musical. Okay, there you go.
(24:00):
I mean this is what we're talkingabout here. He was a regular
on the television game show Match TheMatch Game. Okay, now see this
is all I need to know.This guy has nothing going for him except
he was a big match guy.Okay, he was. He was born
with something called Poland syndrome. Hedoes he like Polish jokes. People.
(24:21):
While I'm mid joke, he says, save your jokes people, No,
okay. So the reason I bringthis up is Gary Berghoff was invited over
and over again by the people ofa Tumla who just wanted him to come
and hang out and be seen andcelebrate like radar O'Reilly day. And he
never wanted to show up. Reallynever one time was he like, yeah,
(24:41):
I'll come. I'm sure that'll befun and people, can you know,
like, celebrate this great achievement thatI had in my acting career.
Every time they asked, he showedabsolutely no interest whatsoever. What does that
tell you about a guy? Andthis is the debate that I'm gonna have
very briefly here is if there issomebody like, like, why would you
why would he turn like what wouldhe have against? Like they would fly
(25:02):
him out, he would have topay for anything, He would be the
star attraction. Did he really hatebeing the center of attention that much?
I hardly believe that, because hewas on television every single week in people's
homes right Anyway, if you gotthoughts about that, you can call in
four h two, five to five, eight eleven ten News Radio eleven ten
Kfab and Maurice Sunger on News Radioeleven ten Kfab. Radar O'Reilly from my
(25:30):
hometown of a Tumbel, Iowa.Apparently there was a guy originally that was
the inspiration for Radar O'Reilly and hisname was Donald Shaeffery passed away in twenty
twenty two, and he's from aTumblah. So I'm somehow I'm guessing that
they connected the dots when they wrotethe book Mash, which led to the
(25:52):
TV show Mash, and they keptthe Atumble part for Radar O'Reilly. So
that's that explain why they selected aTumble as a town. Right, But
what do you think about Gary Berghoffsaying what are we doing here? Like,
Gary, what did you have goingon in your life that at any
point for the last gosh what Mashwas like done in the mid by the
(26:18):
mid eighties, right, dude?Got you still have that up? Yeah,
let me take a look here whenwas match because Mash was huge while
it was going on big time.Yeah still, I mean every Super Bowl
they always talk about it, right, because they'll never beat the record of
the most viewership in America. Yeah, like, no matter how many people
(26:40):
are actually watching in terms of theactual rating, more televisions per percentage that
like, we're tuned to the Mashfinale than we'll ever be able to watch
the same thing. Ever. Again, there's too many options, you know
what I'm saying. Yeah, themovie came out in nineteen seventy. The
show had two hundred and fifty sixepisodes from seventy two to eighty three,
(27:06):
So it was based off of amovie. I did not know that the
movie came out in seventy. Yeah, and the movie was based on a
book. Okay, So I meanthey had a whole world with these guys
and all that stuff put together.But I'm trying to figure out why Gary
Berghoff wouldn't want to come to town. Yeah Gary, I mean Atumbaway itself
(27:26):
was trying to take advantage of theradar O'Reilly thing, and they were kind
of slam shut on that sometimes.You know, like the people in that
made the show and all that stuffwere very protective of the likenesses like a
tumb would. No, you can'tmake radar O'Reilly search and then sell them
to people kind of thing. AndI get that, Okay, I understand
that. But the idea, becausethat's a money making venture, right,
(27:48):
but the idea that we couldn't haveGary Berghoff get paid some money to show
up and like celebrate the fact thatRadar O'Reilly is a like, I don't
know, you know what I mean, doesn't it isn't doesn't They just reek
of Hollywood elitism? Yeah, youknow, some people they how big of
(28:10):
a deal could that have been forthis town of a Tumulua to sell mash
Day or Radar O'Reilly Day and havethe guy who actually was Radar O'Reilly in
the movie and the show be inattendance. That'd be such a big deal
for the town. And he's justlike nah, and it doesn't work without
him being there. Maybe he wasembarrassed of his humble roots, humble roots.
(28:30):
He's in the most watched television showof all time as far as the
ratings go. He got too bigfor a tumblat Yeah, well that's the
problem when when the Hollywood at leastget too big for the things that like
actually make them. I mean,this is my this is my hope if
a tumblad still happens to be atown someday and I get like super rich
and famous somehow, Like, Idon't know what we gotta do. Maybe
(28:52):
we need to start a YouTube channelor something. Maybe that's the next version
of this. Pranks I've heard thoseare huge. Yeah, yeah, you
and me just like prank each otherand we get we go viral, and
then I want them to make anMemory Day in Autumua, and you know
what, I'd go back. Now. Obviously that's different than being a Hollywood
elite, but gosh, like,what kind of jerk does that just doesn't
(29:15):
go back, take their money andget put up and get celebrated like a
hero. Nope, not interested anyway. Two fifty five, we're gonna come
back. We're going to talk tosomebody from the National Weather Service about the
potential for flooding in the Omaha areathat's going to be coming up right after
this stick around. We'll keep youupdated as we always do while having a
ton of fun on news radio elevento ten kfab