Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bill Cunningham, the Great America. Welcome with Wednesday afteroon in
the Try Shake and the Super bowls coming up by
course in four or five days. Bengals should be there.
But nonetheless, Liz Bonus' is a medical wellness reporter of
Channel twelve WKRC. Lots of good information about what to do,
what not to do on the Super Bowl and so
much more. And Liz Bonus, welcome again to the Bill
Cunningham Show. And first of all, all of us are
(00:28):
very upset with the fact that Bengals are not there.
Maybe one day they'll be back, but who knows. But
let's face it, I read so much about Super Bowl parties,
what not? D What is your research shown, if anything?
Speaker 2 (00:42):
All right, So we got two cool things on the
Super Bowl. We need to start with one before the other,
because I don't think you're going to want to hear
about this after food. Have you heard about this whole
pe anxiety thing.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
I've read it. I kind of disregarded it, but you're
in disposal. Pee anxiety is a real thing. I know.
Tony Bender tells me he often has the same issue
during the game. Explain what that is.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
So they said that about a third of us they
go to the bathroom at halftime, and then they map
out a game strategy for when to go to the
bathroom and as a consequence for like holding our bladders,
and it gives us pee anxiety. We actually will not
go in the last two minutes of the game. And
it's so much so like I'm talking to the Eurology
group about this today because they really say, this is
(01:30):
not good for any of us, that we should be
sitting around worrying about when we can pee in a
game that the Bengals are not even in.
Speaker 3 (01:36):
Don't you think that's true.
Speaker 1 (01:38):
I don't have it myself when the Bengals were in
the Super Bowl. Yes, when Coop and others were making
those catches against the Rams, yes, I had pea anxiety.
Not had it sense, But it's a real thing, correct, Yeah,
I didn't.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Realize that there was a name for it. And they
say that more than half of us feel anxious when
we're stuck in a situation that keeps us from using
the restroom, and we consider Super Bowl Sunday in the
game one of those pee anxiety times. I'm like, my goodness,
who knew?
Speaker 1 (02:11):
What about the caloric intake? I know many of us
are concerned. You're binging before, binging, during, binging after and
this Super Bowl because the Chiefs and Eagles are involved,
which they've been involved too in the last three I
understand that the ticket scalping's way down, the viewership maybe down,
who knows, But what about the diet? What about what?
Speaker 4 (02:29):
What not?
Speaker 5 (02:29):
Dat?
Speaker 1 (02:29):
How much caloric intake? Should you schedule? Things like that?
Speaker 2 (02:34):
So I honestly think that this year the most exciting
thing will be the food. Make a good Super Bowl
party because I can't tell you that the game's going
to hold your interest, you know, especially we.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
Don't have a stake in it. But it just feels like,
I don't know.
Speaker 2 (02:48):
I know some people want the Chiefs to have the
third repeat and other people don't, and you know, so
focus on the food.
Speaker 3 (02:55):
It's a good thing.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
But what's interesting is when you start looking at surveys,
we get as many, according to some as eleven thousand
calories that day, and it's recommended you get no more
than about two thousands of a day. So second biggest
eating day after Thanksgiving, where do you think most of
the calories come from?
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I would think they come from chips and popcorn and
drinks and beer and guacamla and all that stuff.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
So the topper is our pizza and wings get literally
you get about ten grams of fat in every wing,
which means you get one hundred calories per wing. And
you know, I have spent years researching this. I think
I told her I got my first radio job because
they were like, tell me something interesting about food. And
I was like, did you know that last year we
ate enough chicken wings that if you line them up,
(03:46):
they would stretch from New York to Disney World. And
they're like, you should be on the morning show translation
you have no life, you know. And I'm like, it's true.
We don't realize, like they just kind of suck them down,
you know, and you have the I don't know whether
you like the tops or the bottoms of whatever. Those
things can kind of slide in. You don't even realize
you got thousand calories and wings before you even started
(04:09):
the den. You know what else will do that to you?
Which is fascinating to me? And I love these deviled eggs.
Did you ever notice how you can eat like sixteen
deviled eggs, but you could never eat sixteen eggs in
an omelet.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
No, why is that?
Speaker 3 (04:22):
I don't I don't know.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
I've been actually fascinated by that. Like I love deviled
eggs and I can suck them down, like you know,
why is it that like it does that? And yet
I would never like open a dozen eggs and make
them for my omelet. They're so good. I think they're
just they're like slithery and they just go down easy,
And I justify it because it's time protein. But I've
(04:45):
been working on the deviled eggs, perfecting recipes. The secret
is you need to put a little mustard in the
inside egg, you know, when you make them filling little
male little mustard, little bill pickle fee seasonings.
Speaker 3 (04:58):
Oh the bot.
Speaker 2 (05:03):
Either way, do you know why we eat so much
on Super Bowl Sunday Because we drink so much?
Speaker 1 (05:08):
So eating is not drinking. If you if you don't
want to eat a lot, don't drink a lot.
Speaker 2 (05:16):
No, this is actually fascinating. So I always thought, like,
you know, when you gain the freshman fifteen when you
go to college, it was because like y'all start drinking.
Speaker 5 (05:22):
But actually what.
Speaker 2 (05:22):
They found is that when you start drinking, you don't
care what you eat. So most of us start drinking
like noon and the games at six thirty, and so
you know, you have a couple, then you have a
couple of Pretty soon you're like, I don't care.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
What I'm eating. I'm seating because I'm eating, you know.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
And it's fascinating when you actually have less alcohol. I thought, oh,
fewer calories, but that's not what they say makes the difference.
What makes the difference is that you just lose all
your sense of judgment and do.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
Things and eat things or whatever.
Speaker 2 (05:50):
That you wouldn't so really do so if you want
to cut down the calories, which I find fascinating because
this year they're actually having oh, zem pick Super Bowl parties.
Speaker 3 (06:02):
Did you know that?
Speaker 1 (06:03):
I never heard of that one.
Speaker 2 (06:06):
Yes, ozempics. So many people are on these weight loss
medicines that for the first year, year to year obesity
stats are down, and it's sad. It's not because we're
eating less and exercising more. It's because we're all taking drugs.
Speaker 3 (06:18):
So a lot of people are on these.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
They don't want to blow the whole day and you're
not really supposed to have much alcohol with the ozentpic thing.
I know everybody does, but it delays the gastric emptying,
so putting alcohol in there is not a good fit.
You can like pass out and stuff. But so they're
doing like a lot more non alcoholic drinks to get
you started, which you can do with sprinzers and all that.
(06:40):
They're doing more high protein foods. You know, if you look,
you'll see all kinds of Super Bowl recipes now for
the high pro, the zero the ozepic.
Speaker 3 (06:48):
Diet, whatever it is.
Speaker 2 (06:49):
And then a lot of people are just saying like, Okay,
we're not starting our meal until four pm, because what
happens is that as you eat for six hours, you
lose all sense of your hunger signals. And the whole
point of ozembic is it makes you less hungry because
it's delayed the gastric empty. So just the thought if
someone in your circle is trying to watch it, a
few things that could help. I personally think, if you
(07:11):
want to eat what you want to eat on one day,
that's not usually the problem. It's what are you doing
the other three hundred and sixty four.
Speaker 1 (07:17):
Right and the other thing you've done? This topics on
when to eat, and I try to consume food before
six or six thirty or seven. I go to sleep
maybe at midnight or one o'clock, but if you're filling
up your belly at the end of the game, which
is like ten PM or ten thirty, you may have
a rough night.
Speaker 3 (07:35):
Yeah, I agree with you on that.
Speaker 2 (07:37):
I do think eating earlier is once gentler on the
whole system, and I think you sleep better. And you know,
it's kind of like giving your car full think of
gas after you've driven the long trip. You don't really
need it at midnight. But I also think it's interesting
that sometimes how well your team is doing will influence like,
oh well, I might as well just eat because my
(07:57):
team's going to lose anyway.
Speaker 3 (07:58):
Which I think is really fast. That connected.
Speaker 1 (08:03):
Yeah, with the Reds and Bengals, we've all been there. Now.
The issue to the rage the last couple of days
is the new pain medicine has been approved by the
FDA that doesn't involve opioid, does involve some sort of
addiction issue, and it really attacks the pain sensors at
(08:24):
the side of the pain instead of going to your brain.
Could that be a game change? You're about people that
using various drugs to get high or low, and that
this new pain medication could be really a plus, you know,
from the.
Speaker 2 (08:37):
Research that I'm reading, it could be. It's called Vertex
and it's the non opioid pain drug, And as you said,
what it does is it goes to the signals and
the nerves, which is usually where you're having pain, you know,
your hip, your back, whatever, not in the brain or
its reward pathway. And the reward pathway is the secret.
The question I always have because they say that like
about one in three who tries an opioid for search
(09:00):
will get hooked. The question I have is, you know,
are those same people still going to be in search
of something because you know, you probably had surgery and
had taken a couple of days and you didn't get hooked,
and you know, there's a tendency for us to want
any escape. So what I think it could be a
game changer for pain. I hope that it's not just
(09:21):
like okay, now we look for the next sentinel or whatever.
You know, people that want to find something to escape
usually do you know case in point, have you seen
the psychedelic conferences now they're having, you know, yeah, and
like people say, it helps me forget I don't have PTSD,
and all that, and that's great, but like you know,
we tried that years back with LSD and it didn't
(09:45):
go so well. So I worry that, you know, we
we like to think that, wow, we'll change the opioid
structure of a pain pill and people won't get addicted.
But I actually think that most of us in life
now are looking for some kind of an escape, at
least a little while. And I found that out because
I was looking at doing some research recently on the
(10:07):
whole generation, like the millennials, they say are so addicted
to things that they're actually using on the job, like
you know, keeping alcohol in the desk and keeping drugs
you can't tell for, you know, pain killer, poppers and
things like that, and it's so prevalent. And it wasn't
(10:28):
just like an addiction to those things like you know,
a drug or alcohol. It was even like addictions to
pornography and gambling and they can't cope during the day
and they're using it work. And it was like this
whole thing about how it's sort of maybe more acceptable
to use a crutch. And then it's really also very
sad that we just want.
Speaker 3 (10:49):
Some kind of an escape.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
And so I hope that this game changer for pain
really works. And you know, if you have pain, it's
a bad sign that your body's.
Speaker 3 (10:57):
Telling you something. But clinical trials of that drug showed.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
It worked as well as the opioid based product. So
we're going to find out. We're going to find out
if this really was all hype and we were making
people addicted, or if people just wanted to escape and
it was a very convenient one.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
That's what you've done reporting on this before. About gambling
in the super Bowl, it's the number one gambling event
of the year. A lot of the websites are encouraging
people to put up a few bucks. You get two
hundred dollars in this and that, and everyone almost gambles
on the Super Bowl constantly. And the receptors in the brain.
A lot of young males, say between fifteen and thirty
years old, use porn instead of dating because you can't
(11:36):
deal with a real woman. Therefore you have some fantasy
land that's a problem. Are the same receptors in the
brain that deal with porn and gambling and alcohol at
work for those different elements, But for those who want
to gamble in the Super Bowl, I can gamble and
just walk away and don't do it ever again. Whatever.
I don't have the problem. But many Americans, whether it's porn, drinking, drugs,
(11:59):
or gambling, they start and they can't stop.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
You know. It's interesting. I am working on a story
like this. We're airing it six on Local twelve. And
they're the lender Center of Hope has a a guy
who deals with nothing but addictions, Internet addiction, porn addiction,
gambling addiction, you know, and he actually said that there
is a higher suicide rate in gambling addiction than in
(12:25):
some of the others. And they do think that, especially
with pornography and gambling, there's a center in the brain
that gets so hooked that without it you cannot achieve
the same high. And he was actually telling me that
there are guys now that if you know, if you
get so addicted to porn, it plays with the dopamine
(12:46):
in your brain, and your wife who isn't dressed up
in some weird, wacky outfit that you know, or borders
on violence or something like that will not get you
turned on. And they actually said that there's a higher
rate of the use of like ed drugs and erect
all this function and these guys because unless they can
get that high, they can't achieve whatever does they want
(13:09):
to achieve. And he's he really thinks there's a similar
correlation in gambling, like it's a different kind of high,
but I don't know if we know why. And what
was so interesting to me was that he said, you know,
the problem. One of the reasons that the suicide rate
is higher with some of these is that they involve
your money, maybe even more than a drug or alcohol
addiction would. And so that means you've spent your kids
(13:29):
college education, you've mortgaged your house, and quite often you
think if you take your own life that people will
get insurance payments and it would cover you, which isn't
often true. And so there's a lot.
Speaker 3 (13:40):
Of education that we need to do.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
But I don't even know if with gambling we know
the extent of the addiction, because it's so much like porn,
it's done in secret. You don't like I mean, you
might drink with your friends, or smoke or do whatever
drug with your friends because it's a friendly thing, but
you don't go, hey, let's all pull out our phones
and check out porn together.
Speaker 3 (13:59):
Not used.
Speaker 2 (14:00):
I mean, maybe you do, but I don't know anyone
who does that. I've never met a person. It's usually
done in secret. So same thing with gambling. You're not
like you might put a dollar here, a dollar there
with your friends, but you're not really telling them that
this is a that dollar.
Speaker 3 (14:12):
You just put the whole mortgage payments.
Speaker 2 (14:13):
Down, you know, because it's yeah, it's kind of an
embarrassing thing. So I think the real message is if
you talk to the people with gambling hotlines, and they
are very passionate by helping people. They want people to
know there really is help for whatever the other addiction is,
you know, porn gambling. You don't think there is because
it's not openly shared. But just like you can interrupt
(14:36):
an alcohol addiction or a drug addiction, you can really
interrupt these and they do it usually with a variety
of techniques, you know, sometimes avoid and sometimes medication, sometimes accountability.
It's never easy, but you can't kind of start gambling
your whole future either, you know.
Speaker 1 (14:52):
Gambling I've been involved with. I represented some gamblers and
criminal charges and they have to lose. Winning does and
satisfy them. They have to lose because they have such
a poor self identity. They have to be at the
bottom of the well. They can't succeed. They keep gambling
until they lose. Many people who might hit the roulette
wheel at hard Rock may walk out the door with
(15:13):
three hundred dollars thank you. But a true gambling attic
has got to stay there until they lose as much
as they can lose, because it solidifies the view of
themself as a piece of human excrement, and they want
that confirmation that they're a loser. That's why they gamble,
you know what I'm saying, that's really sad.
Speaker 2 (15:30):
I would believe you on that. I also know that
the way you hook people is through what they call
intermittent reward, and gambling is very high on that, meaning,
you know, you win a little bit and then you lose,
and so it's very hard to break that because you
keep getting the intermittent reward. And it's like being in
a bad relationship. You know, the guy, like you know,
(15:50):
breaks your ribs and then he apologize and.
Speaker 3 (15:52):
Gives you flowers or whatever else.
Speaker 2 (15:53):
It's like the intermitt rewards, but they're so nice and
so normal in between, you know, and you feel like
that niceness and the normalness come back when you.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Win a little bit.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
And so not that I say in those kind of relationships,
but if you talk to anyone, that's usually why you
stay in something abusive, you know. So I do think
you're right that probably sadly, you know, you have to
hit rock bottom. Lots of things in life are like that.
But the message is you really don't have to if
you can get someone that can help you. Kind of
(16:22):
in the meantime, you know, it's sad. It's sad that
like we're taking a really fun game and this is
what it's become. And they said sports betting really did
push it over the top.
Speaker 1 (16:32):
Yeah, Lis Bonus, you're the best health medical reporter. You're
on top of all this stuff. Get ready for the
Super Bowl. We have about thirty seconds remaining. Who do
you like Sunday? The Chiefs who I don't like at all?
Tay Tay Taylor Swift drives me crazy now and there's
a rumor of an affair with Joe Burrows. You may
sweat size and come to the Bengals, in which case
the Bengals are going to win or fly Eagles Fly?
(16:54):
What does Lis Bonus say?
Speaker 2 (16:57):
You know, I don't really feel strongly about either, but
I'm kind of always for who hasn't.
Speaker 3 (17:02):
Won the Super Bowl because I think it's fun to
see that. I'm told the Eagles want it.
Speaker 1 (17:06):
Have they won it ever one time?
Speaker 2 (17:09):
Or have it one time? Okay, So it's just been
a very long time, so I'm kind of rooting for
the underdog.
Speaker 3 (17:13):
In this one.
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Plus I'm so tired of the Chiefs, like they could have,
you know, made it to the Bengals stayed in the
playoffs for a while, and they wouldn't even do that
for us, So I'm kind of.
Speaker 1 (17:22):
Merrying them now. The Chiefs lost on purpose in Denver
so the Bengals would not be And because the Bengals
can beat them.
Speaker 2 (17:28):
Right, they didn't. Yeah, they knew the Bengals could beat
them and they didn't want to play them. So just
on principle, I'm kind of rooting the other way at
this time, but not because I honestly have a preference,
you know, just.
Speaker 1 (17:39):
Liz Bonus, you're the best Super Bowl gambling porn and
so much more. Liz Bonus, thank you for coming on
the Bill Cunningham shown lez You're a great American. Thank you.
Speaker 2 (17:49):
Hey back at you, And I want to know if
you feel the p anxiety in the game.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
Okay, I'll be texting you constantly.
Speaker 3 (17:58):
Those are the kind of facts that you've got to
I got to pee.
Speaker 1 (18:02):
Is I gotta pee? I gotta be all right, Let's
thank you very much. All right, let's continue with more
Liz Bonus News next and more. It's your home of
the Reds News Radio seven hundred WLW BHI Billy cunning
in the Great American Little nasty weather maybe coming a
(18:24):
couple hours north. Stay tuned to Brian Combs, Jack Crumley
and Moore to see what's gonna happen. But there's going
to be sixty degrees in a day or two, so
we'll see how that develops. After one o'clock today we'll
be Brian Hambrick of the Power of five about what
happened yesterday on City Council. But this Joe Burrow thing
continues to fascinate so many. I talked to law enforcement
official this morning and he said, what occurs on these
(18:45):
high end burglaries, and let's face it, Brian Combs talked
about what's happening in other parts of the city of Cincinnati,
is that these groups is one hundred or more groups
of four to ten from Chile that are dominated by
gang members, and because of the Biden administration APP they
were able to come into the country as a tourist.
(19:05):
It was burglary tourism, but they said instead of that,
they said, well, I want to look at the Grand Canyon,
I'm going to spend time on the beaches of California.
I'm want to see a Broadway show. And so from
the APP they were granted permission to come here for
up to six months. And it was all a ruse.
It was all a joke because what it was was
large numbers of gang members actually doing what gang members do,
(19:25):
which is steel rape, robin pillage. So I asked this
law enforcement official with the federal government, how does it work,
like with Joe Burrow, with Patrick Mahomes or Travis Kelcey,
how does that work? He said, what occurs is that
they determine a place likely to be burglarized because of
the number of good items they will have in there.
(19:46):
There are this research done by the home the Big
Boys in San Diego, Chile about who has what. They
might go online to see what accounts someone has. They
might talk about purchases of items diamond gold, he watches
of one type or another and say, you know what,
that's a person that looks interesting. Then then we'll put
like a deer camera and a bush or a tree
(20:07):
out front to monitor activities for two or three days
to make sure that no one's going to be in there.
The cardinal rule of these gangs, thank God, is to
cause no harm to a human being physically. That is,
don't shoot anybody, don't fight anybody, don't beat anybody, don't
do that that's stall too high profile. And just steal
everything you can. And when Joe Burrow was playing in Dallas,
(20:28):
it was obvious Joe Burrow was not there, and it
was somewhat shall we say interesting. He had his friend
who was an influencer. I'm sure she was influencing a
lot of things at the age of twenty three, and
also at a deputy sheriff parks in the driveway. So
they made their way to the back and came in
through a rear window, which is where where the master
(20:48):
bedroom is. They always go to the master bedroom first
because that's likely to where the safe's going to be.
Then to go to a TV or a trophy room
to take whatever they're going to take. So in Joe
Brow's case, similar to other high and robberies, there's like
a captain of the group. And what the captain does
is make sure that the audems get back to where
they belong. And it's not unusual when they have a
(21:11):
particularly big hit for them to send back to Chile
through fed x ups or the postal service a box
of something full of all the goodies, then keep some
for themselves. So in Clark County, what about a week ago,
you know, there's four individuals who were arrested wanting to
see snow heading north from Clark County, and they said,
(21:32):
after a little bit of an investigation, the state police
had been watching them for a while, they put a
tag on the car and they found some LSU and
some Bengal stuff not of great value, but they found
a punch tool in the glove compartment behind the gloving department.
And so what occurs then after you get a particularly
good hit is they send the goodies back home, but
(21:53):
they keep some for themselves. So what occurs then, if
you're a Chilean criminal gang member, you have permission to
be in the country. So if you stop you can
show your papers, you can rent, you can lease a car.
For example, is that there are individuals in that business
in the Diamond District in New York City, and I've
been there many times. It's fascinating who under the table
(22:15):
they can fence the diamonds there get twenty five to
thirty cents on the dollar, and then the fence inside
the Diamond District puts the diamonds to watches whatever in
circulation and doubles the money quickly. And so this has
been going on for a while. The FBI at the
rank and file level is very good, Yeah, Marshall, service
very good. And so from this raid and I saw
(22:36):
it last night out of a New York station, there
were dozens and dozens of boxes being walked down the
steps of a storefront in the Diamond District, high rent
Diamond District, very close to Rockefeller Plaza. And it's anticipated
that Joe Burrow will get back some of what was stolen,
but not completely. And so what's going to happen now
because the Trumpster Donald Trump said no more of that.
(22:58):
You can't go online and say who you are without verification,
simply fly into the country, stay here for a while Burglar, Ice, rape,
rob Murder, Lake and Riley, etc. Then go back home.
That's done. Why we put up with it as long
as we did is beyond me. I don't understand how
we put up with it for as long as we did.
But come November fifth, we said, you know what, we
can't take this anymore. So the Trumpster's now in charge.
(23:22):
Kick an ass like mister ass. And one thing that's
come to fruition is the spending by US AID, which
is an aid agency, an independent agency. Now it's under
the Secretary of State Mark Rubio, but their goal was
to disperse money all over the world by needy causes.
You've seen the one with a shrimp on a treadmill underwater.
(23:44):
That was one of the projects they funded. Give you
some idea in twenty twenty, not exactly the dark Ages
twenty twenty four and a half years ago from now.
There's been a forty five percent increase in federal government spending,
forty five percent increase. It's exploding. Give you another idea
in twenty seventeen, at the end of Joe Biden's at
(24:08):
the end of Trump's presidency, and the start I'm sorry
at twenty seventeen, the first year of Trump's presidency, USAID
spent approximately twenty billion dollars in handing out goodies all
over the world twenty billion, and by twenty twenty three,
that twenty billion had become forty two point four billion dollars,
one hundred and ten percent increase giving out money all
(24:31):
over the world. And they do not respond to Congress.
Marco Rubio, of course, was in the Senate and he
accused USA to rank in subordination through the use of
taxpayer dollars. And to give you some idea where the
money went. This is money that you sent to Washington.
I know, really soon you and I are going to
pay our taxes goes. I think taxes are rent to
live in the greatest country in the world. How about
(24:52):
this fifty million dollars to fund condoms in Gaza, And
the argument was made, well it wasn't fifty million. Well,
actually it was a h undred and two million. It
was paid from us AID to the International Medical Corps
to provide Gaza with medical services including abortion and birth
control condoms IUDs and more so, we spent at least
(25:14):
fifty million dollars to buy condoms for Palestinian men. I
assume their men in gossip, which they used a little
bit to inflate, and then to put improvised explosive devices
in this inflated condom and send it into Israel to
cause mayhem. How about one point five million to advance
DEI in Serbia's workplace? One point five million Serbia to
(25:36):
advance DEI in Serbia. How about seventy thousand dollars for
the production of a DEI musical in Ireland? Dublin, Ireland
received seventy thousand dollars for a DEI musical, whatever the
heck that is. How About forty seven thousand for a
transgender opera singer in Colombia, forty seven thousand, thirty two
(25:57):
thousand for a transgender comic in Peru, thirty seven million
dollars to the World Health Organization, including the Wuhan Lab
who received six point six million dollars. So if you
listen to doctor brad Winster but all with me. He's
head of the committee in the House. Before he retired
a month ago, he said, we funded the creation of
(26:17):
COVID nineteen. The American taxpayer did, and then add thirty
seven million more to the Wuhan Lab, sixteen million in
funding for institutional contractors and gender development offices all over
the country. Six million and non emergency funding to provide
evaluation services for planning and learning and for preventing pregnancies.
(26:39):
Six hundred thousand dollars to fund technical assistance for family
planning in Latin America. All told. The International Medical Corps
wrote in a press release in twenty twenty three that
it had received seventy eight million dollars from you USA
to support its operations in Gaza since October the seventh,
(27:02):
twenty twenty three, that's when AMAS invaded Israel. Seven eight
million dollars of your money went to Gaza. Now, we're
told by the media repeatedly, you know what we taxpayers don't.
We don't mind you watch the media, listen to media.
Everything Trump does is wrong, whether making Gaza look like
(27:23):
the Riviera, whether it's what's going to happen in Panama.
By the way, Panama recently canceled their contract with communists
Red China and then Greenland. Those who live in Greenland,
forty five thousand strong, don't consider themselves to be part
of Denmark, so that's up for grabs and So a
day or two ago, CNN put out a poll, and
(27:46):
this was taken on January thirty first and February first,
the first say, two weeks of the Trump presidency. By
watching media coverage, you would think things Donald Trump is
doing to eliminate this kind of crap is extremely unpopular
with you. Here's Harry Entton with a morning anchor who's
giving us information every morning about how bad things are.
(28:07):
But Harry Entton, who has more lucid moments than many,
actually did the following presentation a couple of days ago.
Dave Keaton hit.
Speaker 6 (28:15):
It, look the American people really like what they're seeing,
at least compared to where Donald Trump started eight years ago. Right,
all right, This is Donald Trump's net approval rating. This
is Reuter's zipsos. It's among adults. It was taken the
first few days of this administration. Look here back in
January twenty seventeen, Donald Trump became the first president history
to start his presidency with a.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
Net negative approval rating.
Speaker 6 (28:35):
Look at where we are now in January twenty twenty five,
considerably better at plus six points. That's up nine points.
To borrow a Donald Trump praise, This is big Lee
This is a sign that the American people, at least
initially like what they're seeing. And so you see right here,
more Americans approve of Donald Trump's job than disapprove. And
that is very much, very much unlike what we saw.
Speaker 1 (28:59):
Eight years ago.
Speaker 7 (29:00):
So compare the rating now to the entire first term.
Speaker 6 (29:03):
Yeah, so it's not just that he's doing better than
where he was doing eight years ago.
Speaker 1 (29:08):
It's that he's doing.
Speaker 6 (29:09):
Better than he ever did during his entire first administration.
Speaker 7 (29:13):
So I again, he never was He never was over
plus three.
Speaker 6 (29:16):
He was never over plus three. The highest rating he
ever his highest ever net approval rating was plus three
in March.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
Of your choice of photo.
Speaker 6 (29:24):
Is he quite he likes what he's seeing. He's smirking
at the American at.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
The American media doesn't like you.
Speaker 6 (29:30):
Maybe not, although he should like these numbers in the
way I'm presenting them. You look at January twenty twenty five.
Look at that again, you get plus six. So Donald
Trump isn't just in a better position than he was
eight years ago at this point, he's in a better
position than he was at any point during his entire
first term. Things have very much turned around. This is
a very different Donald Trump. He's eating a very different
(29:50):
administration in the way he's attacking things, and the American
public is very much more in line with him than
they were at any point during his entire first term.
Speaker 7 (30:00):
One I would say, correction, this is not a very
different Donald Trump. This is a very different Donald Trump
as being viewed by voters in this.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
In the way he's going about things.
Speaker 6 (30:09):
With Susan Wild's leading things, I think he is, you know,
going at things in a much less disorganized fashion, much
more organized.
Speaker 7 (30:15):
Take me back in history, Take.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
You back in history.
Speaker 6 (30:18):
So it was so interesting to me that Donald Trump's
first net approval rating of his second term is higher
than his entire first term, And I was interested, has
that ever happened? Has the second term net approval rating
in the first month? Have you ever had a higher
rating than any net approval rating during the entire first term?
Donald Trump is the only hard time believing this. This
is one hundred percent you I went back.
Speaker 1 (30:38):
I love spreadsheets.
Speaker 6 (30:40):
Donald Trump's is the first guy ever who's netipproper rating
in the first month of his second term is higher
than any rating that he had is an entire first term.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Cap Baldman this is true.
Speaker 6 (30:50):
I don't make stuff up the numbers of the numbers.
Speaker 7 (30:53):
I believe you in nothing except when you have it
in the wall, and then I believe everything that's exactly right.
Speaker 1 (31:00):
Well, there you have it. CNN admits that what Donald
Trump is doing is kind of like tr Roosevelt manifest destiny,
expanding the power of the United States, getting rid of
all the waste, fraud, and abuse. By the way, chew
on this number for a while. Social Security administrators admit
that every year, at least for twenty years, that Social
Security sent bogus checks to dead people who others shouldn't
(31:23):
have gotten it. Over one hundred billion dollars every year
is sent to individuals who have either died or not
entitled to it. One hundred billion. And the Department of Education,
for example, has grown to something in the range of
ninety one thousand federal employees with a budget of eighty
five billion dollars a year. And the Trumpster says, enough
is enough. We've got to return education to the states,
(31:46):
which means the Department of Education in Kentucky, Ohio, in Indiana,
it's going to have more money to spend locally, not
on salaries and benefits and buildings in Washington, d C.
My gosh, we've only just begun. But do not buy
in the notion that what Donald Trump is doing is
particularly unpopular because it is not first time in US
(32:07):
history a second term president is more popular than he
wasn't any point in his first term, and that goes
back a long way. Let's continue with more. Brian Hamrick
is coming up from the Power of five Many issues
yesterday on City Council Michelle lemon Kearney, I think indirectly
or directly wants to encourage more illegal migrants to live
in the city of Cincinnati because it is a sanctuary city.
(32:29):
And will she be in the crosshairs of the US
Attorney's office when a US attorney's appointed. Plus we'll talk
some more about the Big mac Bridge, which seemingly, according
to Brian Hambrick, might be some good news and more.
But do not believe that somehow you and I paying
in Ireland some fifty thousand dollars to advance transgender rights
(32:50):
in Ireland is a good use of your money. They've
more than doubled the spending on US eight in the
past four years, more than double the spending and somehow
it's got to stop. So let's continue with more. Bill Cunningham,
the Great American. By the way, the Xavier fan who
got sideways with the head coach of Georgetown is a
prominent financial planner who maybe have some difficulty in the future.
(33:12):
He may be banned from the Xavier Games. Bill Cunningham
with you every day your home of the Reds. He's
Radio seven hundreds. Wow, Billy Cunningham, the Great American. And
all hell's breaking loose everywhere, more high speed chases on
the rims. We have schools being shut down, mainly in
(33:33):
northern Kentucky. We have immigrant rights groups showing up in
the city Hall eight o one Plum Street demanding their rights.
In fact, one of the lawyers said, quote, no legal
way to come to the US. There's no legal way
to come here, so you have to come illegally. And
Michelle let me Kearney, the vice mayor kind of the
vice president, is having a form for those individuals. And
of course Brian Hamrick is on top of all this,
(33:55):
and Brian, welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. But
first of all, this afternoon the issues, knowing that Kentucky
and it may spread across the tri state give the
American people a full report.
Speaker 4 (34:07):
Well thanks again, mister Cunningham. Well, I think one of
the things we're seeing a lot. I was seeing a lot.
Speaker 1 (34:12):
Of flu out there.
Speaker 4 (34:14):
That's the flu has flown into the area again. And
well they get schools shut down in Newport, Edward's schools
up in uh up in Trenton are closed, just a
number of people. I just talked to a doctor Robert
Cincinnati Children's Hospital, and he tells me that they're seeing
(34:34):
an uptick. In fact, they're saying, if and unless you've
got an actual emergency, do not come to the emergency
room because they're just jammed. They'll take you, but you're
gonna wait for a long time. And uh, they're they're
suggesting they got this, They've got an app and then
they've got another link you can get and do a
virtual visit, you know, if your kid's just sick and
(34:55):
you want, you know, see if you can get a
prescription or whatever, and they can visit that way. And
they say that's a real shortcut. So that's what I thought.
That was a real good tip if you wanted, you know,
if you're thinking about going and you got a sick kids,
and you're like, I don't want to go, and then
you got to sit in the waiting room and then
you don't know what else everybody's getting. That's a real
good way of doing it. So that's what's happening out there.
(35:16):
As far as that goes. They're seeing some other things
out there. There's you know, nora virus or some covid
still floating around with the big things. Just a regular influenza,
but apparently it's a nasty one this year if you
get it.
Speaker 1 (35:29):
Well, we had bad weather for so long everybody was inside.
Been a little better recently my right now it's cold,
a little bit of maybe freezing rain later on. But
people get together and that's what happens human beings, and
you're developing immune system and away you go and I
think I had something, and what do you do? You
just ride it out after three or four days, stay liquefied,
(35:49):
and the way it goes, so about.
Speaker 4 (35:52):
All you can do. It's a virus. There's really nothing
they can help you with. You're just kind of on
your own with it.
Speaker 5 (35:58):
Now.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
Two issues are percole One. You're on the big mac
bridge big time, and I can recall about two or
three months ago your governor of mine, maybe not your governor,
my governor Mike the Wine because you live in Kentucky,
announced that he believed, according to Brian Combs, you ran
the piece a couple of days ago, that the bridge
would be open more or less the middle of February.
Next week will be the middle of February, and Brian Hamrick,
(36:22):
how are we looking.
Speaker 4 (36:23):
Well, it's kind of like forecasting, you know, the weather
two or three weeks from now. It's a little it's
a little murky when you get that far out. But
I talked to some of these folks yesterday I think
it was Monday maybe that we talked about where they
are and there I had a schedule, and the schedule
(36:45):
that O DOT had given most recently was early March
on that but being ahead of schedule and then listing
out the things that they had to look at, like
they still got to wait for the concrete secure and
the last of it was poor I think over the weekend.
So that's seven to ten days, so you're in the
(37:06):
middle of next week, you know, for that year, they
still have to do the inspection. That's another two days
of inspection and then there's some ancillary things they've got
to They've got to groove the pavement, they got to
put striping on it, they gotta put up some signs
and some fencing and it. You know. So but the
time you calculate it out, you know, I don't I
don't have you know, the inside meeting schedule here, But
(37:30):
I'm thinking maybe two weeks on that. That's kind of
a prediction. So I'm thinking maybe we will be somewhere
around the middle of the middle of February, maybe pushing
a little bit to the end of it, but I
think they're going to get it done ahead of that
early March day.
Speaker 1 (37:50):
It's amazing what you can do. When I watched the
oven they put around the poor of that concrete and
these these men are up there in the it's an
amazing scene to watch. And you were right there and
in the epicenter. Unbelievable.
Speaker 4 (38:02):
Yeah, we got to go up there, you know, and
kind of look down through and see this thing. So
that's basically what they've done. They've they've made like an
easy baked project out of this because it got so
cold and this concrete has to be between light and
they got seventy and one hundred degrees to cure properly,
and it wasn't going to be even close to that,
you know, it was in that thirties and even with
(38:22):
the nice day, we didn't hardly get up to seventy.
So what they did is they put these massive heaters
down there that you know, like frank out, you know,
hundreds of thousands of BTUs and they got a bunch
of them just baking that under there, keeping it in
exactly the temperature they want. They've they got basically what
amounts to a meat thermometer going into the submit, so
(38:44):
they know what the temperature is and then they can
control that exactly what they want and they cover it
and so it's just kind of in there like you know,
like you put biscuits in the oven and it's just
baking right now. And the main part is done. That
that huge part that you see that we're going to
drive one that's done. There was another like a connecting
layer and that was the last piece that they put down,
(39:07):
so that has to cure. There are also some side
places that got damage and they had to take those out. Yeah,
so those are still curing. But all in all, that
should be done because they have complete kind of control
over how long that takes now because of that kind
of oven situation they set up there.
Speaker 1 (39:28):
It's amazing. No one saw this one coming on Halloween night.
This was like impossible and all of a sudden out
of nowhere, kind of like the brent Spence Bridge. Yet
about a week ago when that knuckle had stuck underneath
the bridge. Now last night you had another knuckle head
driving on rims on the Brent Spence Bridge. Unbelievable.
Speaker 4 (39:46):
What is that a magnet for criminals all of a
sudden turned on the criminal magnet. I mean, how long
has it been the bridge been there? I can't remember
the last time we had a criminal on the bridge
at the bridge at the same time. So I was like, oh,
that was really weird. The guy goes over there like batman,
trying to get over the side and then get you know,
underneath of it, and you know, it's like, well, that
(40:07):
was really weird. Then what we got a week or
so later, we got more people going across trying to
run from out in Deerboyne County, and they got them.
They finally caught up with them. They're trying to drive
with these stopsticks apparently wound up around the wheels. I mean,
uh yeah, so I don't know what's going on over there.
What how come they all think they got to go
(40:28):
to the brit sprintce Bridge. But you know, it's the
worst possible place to have a crime scene because everybody
in town then has to be affected by it. You know,
if you're driving north, you're driving south, they got jammed
up either way. Then you're what are you going to
go over to four seventy one. You can't even get
south found over there. Then you go through town, then
it jams up all the other bridges. So everybody in
(40:51):
town gets affected by a couple of knuckleheads that you know,
decide they're going to run for police and go right
toward the Brince sprintce Bridge.
Speaker 1 (40:58):
You know, stupid criminals. But right the main reason I
called you this afternoon, it's about your story on Channel
five about Michelle lemon Kearney bringing in immigrant rights individuals.
And I've said many times and I'll keep saying it,
if I was in Mexico or if I was in Peru,
I would do my damnedness to come into the United
(41:18):
States of America. I would absolutely do my best however,
the law must be followed. And so when I speak
to democratic politicians, and I have many friends, I wouldn't
call me yesterday kind of said, how, well, get off
the record. I won't give the name, of course, how
we're going to handle this because I don't want to
get in the crosshairs of Donald Trump's Department of Justice
and explain what happened yesterday. One of the lawyers for
(41:42):
the immigrant rights group said, there's quote no legal way
to come to the US, which I don't think is accurate.
How to describe you were there what happened?
Speaker 4 (41:50):
Well, yeah, I think so they had a lot of speakers.
Everybody who spoke was, you know, kind of in favor
and support the immigrant community this out there, and so
you didn't have you know, you didn't have you know,
you're talking about something that happened in downtown Cincinnati. You know,
you don't have kind of Trump supporters or far kind
(42:13):
of the more right wing part of the country that's
down there speaking. So you had mostly the folks that
are from the city that are talking, and and there's
a lot of support for the measures that they're talking about.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
But what they're talking.
Speaker 4 (42:29):
About at this point, what jam Michelle Kearney, the Vice Mayor,
has proposed it is an outreach that at this point
is just in terms of information, just letting the folks
that are immigrants know they're legal rights within you know
what they you know, there's they have rights, they have
(42:50):
their legal courses that they can take, and they're just
trying to say, hey, look here's what you can do.
So they wanted to have a system run through the
city gives them that information, whether it's a legal advice
or legal options, financial options that they might have that
are already out there. That's where they were yesterday. That's
(43:11):
what went through the Neighborhoods, the Healthy Neighborhoods Committee passed
out of there. It's going to full council today. But
I talked to some of the folks on council and
they are saying, you know, we might be looking because
I said, there were folks that spoke. You know, you
(43:31):
sign up and you speak ahead of time. There were
several folks that spoke and some of them mentioned, hey,
there needs to be a financial component to this to
help some of these families that are struggling here and
are having to you know, go through and jump through
different hoops because of what's happening at a federal level.
That didn't get any traction yesterday, but it sounds like
(43:53):
it might get some traction as they discussed this farther
and there may be an effort to see if there
are funding sources in the city that could help out
some of these families. That's a whole different level to
this that they You know, so far, it's just been
outreach and giving information. But you know, if you start
spending money, where's that money going to come from? You know,
(44:16):
what's going to happen to the program that you're shifting
that money from. You know, how can that be done?
And I think those are some of the questions are
going to answer or try and answer, and see what
the feasibilities are and what's the appetite for that down
at city Hall.
Speaker 1 (44:31):
And you know, popularity wise, I cannot conceive of anything
more unpopular than assisting career criminal aliens that are here
illegally committing crime. Cincinnati doesn't have nearly the problem that
other major American cities have, but we have a small difficulty.
I know in Boone County. I think that's where you
hail from. Brian Brian Hamrick. The jail has got thirty
(44:54):
to forty illegal immigrants, Butler County has a bunch to
be shipped out. Now, the issue becomes when you're arresting
a career criminal or rapist or murder a child trafficker,
and there's two or three other people there, and the
coup will say, ice will say do you have your
can I see your ID? And from that begins the
process of saying I'm here illegally. Now that's the problem.
(45:15):
I don't think it's a problem because you came here
illegally and if you want to make refugee claims, do
it from your home country, which is the way it
ought to be done. But to have Democrats on council
act as if Trump is not enforcing the law when
he is first president in a long time. I think
to spend city money, I think the city taxpayers would say,
wait a minute, what the hell are you doing spending
(45:36):
our money to provide thousands of dollars of aid to
illegal immigrants that are here and should not be here.
How popular would that be among the people.
Speaker 4 (45:46):
Yeah, that is the question that they're going to have
to find out. You know, it would certainly be you'd
have a lot more opposition if this were to happen,
you know, in Boom County or in Grand County, or
I think any of the outlying counties, you know, Warren
or even you know, Butler County, in Hamilton County or
(46:06):
in the city of Cincinnati, there may be more, uh,
there may be more support for something like that. But
I don't think it could go in any of the
outlying counties, but but certain maybe not even in parts
of Hamilton County, but in uh, you know, in the city, Uh,
there may be more. There may be more of uh
(46:27):
more support for something like that.
Speaker 3 (46:28):
I will have to see.
Speaker 4 (46:29):
I think that's part of it that, you know, part
of this kind of new world that that you know,
everybody's living in is that they're trying to find out,
you know, what is the stable ground here, what can
we welcome I And you know, I've talked to some
of the folks down there as well who are concerned,
you know, about they don't want the city to become
(46:52):
a lightning rod. It's already a sanctuary city that hasn't changed,
and so there's certain things that you know, the Trump
administration has said that is not going to happen if
you are, you know, kind of the I think the
way they look at it is you're aiding and abetting
some of these these folks that aren't supposed to be here,
(47:13):
and they're gonna, you know, tighten down the the uh,
the purse strings. And that's the main thing.
Speaker 8 (47:19):
I think.
Speaker 5 (47:20):
It's money.
Speaker 4 (47:20):
They're concerned about federal funding, and so how do you know,
I know, the mayor spoke out, you know, he said, look,
I'm a son of immigrants, and I think I should
support immigrants. But he was also saying, I'm going to
follow the wall.
Speaker 5 (47:34):
We're not gonna do.
Speaker 3 (47:35):
That, he goes.
Speaker 4 (47:35):
So he's basically saying he's in a spot where he's
got to protect the city in terms of getting the
federal funds, even if he supports some of the things
that would require not getting federal funds. So that's the
kind of situation that he's in. And I think the
city council is going to find themselves in that same
position as well.
Speaker 3 (47:55):
And I think.
Speaker 1 (47:56):
Everybody's aware of that.
Speaker 4 (47:57):
It's just they don't, like I said, they don't want
to create too much attention. You don't want to draw
attention to yourself. But I think they still want to
try and do some of the policies that they said
they supported. So it's we're going to see where it
come down here before long.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
Yeah, we got to run, Brian Hamrick. But I'll tell
you what. The Democratic politicians that have sanctuary cities and
provide protection for illegal is going to have a major
problem when we have a new US attorney to be
appointed in the next month. But Brian Hammrick, we have
to run once again. Thanks for coming on the Bill
Cunningham Show, and let's do it again.
Speaker 4 (48:34):
Thanks again much for Cunningham.
Speaker 1 (48:36):
God bless America. Let's continue. News is next to More,
It's your home of the Reds. News Radio seven hundred WLW.
No great nation will beat us. We will fall from
within like a cancer with radiation and chemo. We're going
to have all kinds of difficulties. And it worries me
that will grow throughout the body politic and that will
be left living in some sort of escape from New York,
(48:57):
It'll be escaped from Cincinnati. Yes, I'm concerned, and yes
I'm pissed off, and yes I want to do better.
Let's talk about Halloween. Oh hello, quiet, and I'm Scots.
I'm broadcasting. I don't. I have no idea whether it came.
(49:19):
I think about this, and then let's talk about Halloween.
What what Halloween? AI? That's all AI, that's all segment.
How close are we now to red spaceball? This this afternoon
is going to be rough on the highways. Cold temperatures
may be freezing rains in Middle Tucky. Talk about the Reds.
Give me into the Stooge report.
Speaker 9 (49:36):
Please, will he the stuture reporters approach service of your
local Temestar heating and air conditioning dealers. Tamestar quality you
could feel in beautiful northern Kentucky called Johnson Heating to
COOLi at eight five, nine, four, seven to two sixty
fifty one spots.
Speaker 1 (49:53):
Thank you, Roxy.
Speaker 9 (49:54):
It's fifty days, will he fifty days until opening day?
Reds pictures and catchers are sport to spring report to
spring training camp on Monday.
Speaker 1 (50:04):
Seven weeks and one day.
Speaker 9 (50:05):
My speech is getting ready and happy birthday to Nicolodolo today.
Speaker 1 (50:09):
How about that? We need them bad?
Speaker 9 (50:11):
College basketball tonight though Cincinnati Bearcats out to snap a
four game losing streak. They're on the road in UCF
tonight six thirty seven under WLW Cleveland State and NKU
at six thirty on Fox Sports thirteen sixty Tennis News Willy.
The twenty twenty five edition of the Cincinnati Open be
the largest in the tournament's history, with more players, matches,
(50:32):
days of competition, and entertainment. The Attorney takes place now
over fourteen days, up from nine. The men's and women's
singles field increases from fifty six to ninety six players,
and the Cincinnati Open is going to begin on Tuesday,
August fifth and run through Monday, August the eighteenth. How
about that two weeks of action, just just like the uh,
(50:55):
you know, just like the US Open.
Speaker 1 (50:59):
Sounds good. Let's see what else?
Speaker 3 (51:01):
Oh?
Speaker 9 (51:01):
In high school basketball, Wes say, congrats there. Winton Wood
senior guard Christian Wilkins fifty two points Tuesday night in
the victory he had including twelve three pointers.
Speaker 1 (51:13):
That's pretty good segment. Pretty good. Sounds like you kind
of ignoring the fight. Was there a fight last night
with Georgetown's Ed Cooley and a dedicated Xavier fan under
the basket? What can you tell me about that?
Speaker 9 (51:26):
I guess there was some kind of incident, Willie, I guess,
so I don't know too much about it.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
So I don't know.
Speaker 9 (51:32):
I mean, all I worry about is Xavier winning, and
you know, whatever happens happens.
Speaker 1 (51:37):
Can you see when tonight and then marshed for glory
and regain what happened to them? Two months ago? They
were top fifteen in the country, yep, and now they're
like bottom fifteen.
Speaker 9 (51:48):
U c F is sixth and the Big twelve at
four and six, and they come in at thirteen and eight.
They've dropped two in a row. U SE's dropped four.
And then of course Xavier won last night over Georgetown.
Miami wins on the road at Central Michigan. Old miss
defeats Kentucky. That's two losses in a row for the Wildcats.
Speaker 1 (52:09):
Willie Kentucky's going the wrong direction segment.
Speaker 9 (52:12):
Dayton Bete Davidson. So you know, I mean, you got
to have some winners and losers, and right now some
are losing and some are winning.
Speaker 1 (52:21):
You know, you don't care about the NBA, but Luca
is gonna maybe play on Saturday with B Jay. Last
night's game with the Lakers was unbelievable. Beat up on
the Clippers by like thirty points. You're not much of
an NBA fan, No, I like to watch everything.
Speaker 9 (52:35):
Apparently the I guess the Dallas Mavericks are giving I
guess their season ticket base has gone to you know where,
and they are they're giving I guess rebates to people
who are giving up on their tickets.
Speaker 1 (52:48):
Kind of text here from Mike McCall, the great Xavier player,
who says UCLA won again last night. Mick Cronin. Maybe Martin,
how about that?
Speaker 9 (52:57):
He was you know, he wasn't doing who good a
few weeks ago, and now they're playing.
Speaker 1 (53:01):
Well, playing well, they'd beat usc Right, what's in better
more shape? Gaza or parts of Los Angeles Gaza or
lost Goza? Nothing less?
Speaker 9 (53:11):
I mean, what the Trumpster wants to make Gaza like
the Middle East rivi Era?
Speaker 1 (53:16):
Right? Good luck?
Speaker 9 (53:17):
I mean, I'm thinking, what what what? That'll that'll go over?
Speaker 1 (53:22):
Big? What's a big strip of land right on the Mediterranean?
It could be fabulous? Was it gonna be like Las
Vegas or something?
Speaker 5 (53:30):
Man?
Speaker 1 (53:30):
It would take a couple of years just to get
Bulldozer's in there and phill it. And where did two
million people live in that rubble that I don't know? Somewhere?
King of Dula coming next week to meet with the
Trumpster to kind of work things out a little bit
here it's not good segment. And right now the Trump Store,
he wants to expand to Greenland, the Gaza's trip, the
(53:51):
Panama Canal at all and maybe Mars, maybe Venus, I
don't know, maybe Mars. I the guy's an expansion this
mode right now, gotta expand. I say, somebody send somebody
to Mercury. And what about Joe Burrow is some of
his stuff was located with a diamond merchant in the
Diamond District of New York.
Speaker 9 (54:12):
I guess they're dumping it off all over the place
and they are.
Speaker 1 (54:18):
Joe Burrow may get some of his stuff back. Have
you picked a winner for the Super Bowl? I went
Philadelphia Fly. Eagles fly too. That's what I say too.
I can't take it anymore, yep, I say that Eagles win,
and so much for the Chiefs. Well, I hope Xavier
doesn't come down too hard on this fan. There was
no fisticuffs, nothing physical. This fan was yelling out a
(54:41):
Georgetown player, Which doesn't the fan have the right to yell?
I mean, assuming you're yelling and not getting in into
the court or or not physically doing something, and like pushing,
that's different. But this fan did not physically do a
damn thing. And Ed Cooley, the losing coach of Georgetown,
comes over to pick on the fan. And I hope
Xavier doesn't overreact to this thing. The Big East may
(55:02):
get involved.
Speaker 9 (55:03):
But I mean, I think I think, well, I don't
think he was yelling at Ed Cooley. I think he
was talking yelling at a player, and uh, you know,
I don't know. I mean, I I don't know anything
about it, Willie, So I don't know.
Speaker 1 (55:16):
Aren't you supposed to do that if you're a fan,
to yell what? What the hell?
Speaker 5 (55:21):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (55:21):
Whatever? Whatever he was yelling.
Speaker 9 (55:23):
Ed Cooley didn't like it, So you know what I mean,
it's after the it's after the fact, after the battle.
Speaker 1 (55:29):
Everybody's hyped up.
Speaker 9 (55:30):
They either win or lose, and you know, you you
you yell that stuff and people are.
Speaker 1 (55:36):
Going to react, you know, Sam. I stand with the
Xavier faithful. I stand with the Xavier fan who has
every right to be in a seat that they probably
paid thousands of dollars for to yell, scream, holler, and shout,
don't go on to court, which he didn't and don't
do anything physical, which he didn't, so Ed Cooley. They
had had basketball coach of Georgetown took umbrage at it,
(55:56):
and I think that's ridiculous.
Speaker 9 (55:59):
Welly, hockey to downtown in the ECHL the beloved Cyclones
their home against the Iowa Heartlanders.
Speaker 1 (56:08):
All right, segment, give me out of the student's report, please, Welly.
On this day of it's happy National Weather Person Day.
We got pickleball coming up segment pickleball.
Speaker 9 (56:19):
And also National Girls and Women's Women in Sports Day today.
Speaker 1 (56:24):
How about men pretending to be women? Can they play too?
Trump's Trump said? Trump's said the Olympics, the Olympics. He
said good. He said men should be with men and
women should be with women. You know what I'm saying.
I got you.
Speaker 9 (56:37):
We leave out, We leave you with the immortal words
of the stood report.
Speaker 10 (56:42):
We have the chance for severe weather this afternoon. Main
impacts will be damaging wins.
Speaker 6 (56:47):
Have you rain and can't rule out the possibility of
seeing some hell?
Speaker 1 (56:53):
Wow, it's going to be bad. Then I'm going to
see hell? Okay?
Speaker 9 (56:57):
And was that Jennifer No? That no forgetting brave and Richard,
I don't know where she's at anymore.
Speaker 1 (57:03):
I think she's left. Yeah, I think she left. Nine
or nine stands for news hell hell, all right segment,
Thank you very much. Coming up next to pickleball. What's
happening in the Tri State with pickleball and more at
show them the Reds, the Bengals and the Bearcats and
God blessed Daver University fans out to be able to
yell their heart out doing nothing else wrong, no profanity,
and Ed Cooley got all mad. Bill Cunningham with you
(57:25):
every day. You're home of the Reds Deuce Radio seven
hundred WL. Bill Cunningham, the Great America. Of course, I
got a press release here about a new pickle ball
opportunity segment and Brian Combs go nuts over pickleball. It's
called the Pickle Lodge and Aces Pickleball are teaming up
with others to acquire the Eastern Hills Indoor Tennis Club.
(57:46):
And the co owner is Mitch done with us? Now
Mitch done? Welcome, I think for the first time to
the Bill Cunningham showing, first of all, tell the American
people that probably the fastest growing sport in America is pickleball.
Why is that?
Speaker 5 (58:01):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (58:01):
So It is absolutely the fastest growing sport because anyone
can play it, so it has a much gentler learning
curve than a sport like tennis. And so you see
twelve year olds playing with their, you know, seventy five
year old grandparents all the time, and that makes for
a really social, cross generational experience that people really get
(58:24):
addicted to.
Speaker 1 (58:26):
Can you tell us how it started the history of pickleball?
It goes I now watch indoor pickleball, there's professional pickleball, pickleball, pickleball, pickleball.
How did it begin? How did it get his name?
That kind of stuff.
Speaker 5 (58:39):
Yeah, great question.
Speaker 8 (58:40):
So it started in nineteen sixty five on Bainbridge Island
out in Washington. It was started by three dads who
were dealing with some board kids when they were out
for summer break. And they did what a lot of
dads do, which is they created a game from scratch
for these kids to play on Bainbridge. And they have
to have a badminton court in their backyard which measures
(59:05):
forty four feet long by twenty feet wide. And they
created a new sport on that badminton court, and they
named the sport pickleball after a concept called the pickle boat,
which is kind of like the worst boat in a regatta.
I imagine that boat that's just made up of you know,
(59:25):
kind of the has beens, the extras, it's got broken
parts hanging off of it, and that's called the pickle boat.
So when they were looking for a name for this
new sport they created, they called it tickleball.
Speaker 1 (59:36):
Did they trademarket trade name it? Are they making money
off this or is it now ubiquitous?
Speaker 8 (59:42):
Well that's a great question. They did actually start a
company called Pickleball, Inc. And they sold the very first
pickleball set starting in the early seventies, and that company
is still around, believe it or not. But as you
can imagine, tickleball has changed quite a bit since and
so there are a lot of companies that are into pickleball.
Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
So tell me about the Pickle Lodge and Ace's Pickleball
Court Eastern Hills Indoor Tennis Club. Tell me what you've
done there.
Speaker 8 (01:00:12):
Yeah, so we are bringing sixteen individually fenced, cushioned courts
with a full bar championship court with seating on three sides,
a private event space, a kitchen, and expanded parking to
what is one of the best indoor facilities in the
whole city. That the Eastern Hills Tennis Club has been
(01:00:34):
owned by the Clark family since the seventies and they
have created a real tradition down there in a culture
that we plan to continue. So it's going to be
a different sport, obviously, but we're going to, obviously with
open arms, welcome both the current members of Eastern Hills
and lots of new people who want to play pickleball
(01:00:55):
in a dedicated pickleball facility.
Speaker 1 (01:00:57):
And is tennis going away there only pickleball or both?
Speaker 8 (01:01:01):
Yes, tennis is going away at Eastern Hills. The good
news is, though, there are lots of other indoor tennis
clubs around the city, like Camargo Racket Clubs for instance,
which is just about ten minutes away from Eastern Hills,
where people can still play really high level indoor tennis.
Speaker 1 (01:01:18):
All right, And so when will it be open, if
at all? When's the month of the grand opening?
Speaker 8 (01:01:23):
Yeah, so we hope to be opened by late summer
or early fall. We do have some fairly significant construction
to do inside the building, but when we open, it
is going to be one of the best pickleball experiences
in the country. You know, we are players ourselves. We
are we are among the pickleball addicts. So we're basically
(01:01:44):
just creating the creating the place that we want to
play ourselves.
Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
And in fact it's a great sport of community event.
As you say, you can play with your grandkids, and
men and women play together. Orthopedic surgeons tell me it's
good for business, and that's a good thing. And is
it going to be a private or public deal? How
does someone get in? If at all?
Speaker 8 (01:02:05):
Anybody can play at the Pickle Lodge. We welcome, We
welcome anybody from the public. We do have memberships that
bring the costs down for people though so so for
us fanatics who like to play a lot. We have
memberships that make their visits less expensive, and we also
give them longer access windows to reserve courts, which bill
(01:02:26):
as you can imagine this time of year, our courts
are in great demand. The weather in Cincinnati is it's
not very kind to outdoor pickleball, So that's why we
started indoor pickleball to begin with.
Speaker 1 (01:02:38):
Well, Mitch, don may you have great success and fuel
this great economy. It's great to invest in a project
that gives a lot of hope and gives a lot
of physical benefits to those who play. But once again,
look forward to the opening August or September. And Mitch Dunn,
you're a great American and thanks for coming on the
Bill Cunningham Show and informing the American people about the
future of pickleball. Thank you very much, Bill, Bill, thanks
(01:03:01):
for having me. God bless America. Let's continue with war
news next to Hrome of the Reds News Radio seven
hundred WLW. Billy Cunningham, the Great America. Of course, free
speech is the elixir. It is the fluids, the water
that makes our democracy work. Practically every country in the
(01:03:25):
world does not give to individual persons, citizens the opportunity
to practice free speech, and America is alone in that
regard because, according to our founding documents, God Almighty gave
us the right of freedom of speech, and government's role
is to unclutter the paths so we can exercise those rights.
(01:03:45):
I'm not sure that's happening a lot, but Trump's getting
so much done. A New Media Research Center study shows
that Wikipedia is blacklisting of right leaning media for being
a cited source, contrast to eighty four percent of leftism
media deems is reliable. So all kinds of activities by
so called conservative media is ignored by Wikipedia. And joining
(01:04:08):
you and I now is Dan Schneider, Vice President the
Media Research Center, And once again, Dan Schneider, Welcome to
the Bill Cunningham Show. So which so called conservative right
leaning media is barred from Wikipedia as a as a
good source.
Speaker 5 (01:04:23):
Bill, the basic rule here is if you're a right
of center media outlet, and now, of course that does
not mean that you're that you're wrong. It just means
that you know you've got to write a center point
of view. But if you're a writer center media outlet
with any significance at all, Wikipedia has you on their blacklist.
And by the way, Bill, I'm not using that word
(01:04:45):
on my own, that's the word Wikipedia uses. They literally
have a blacklist where they say, if you know that
you cannot be included in any stories about people that
are on Wikipedia.
Speaker 1 (01:05:00):
Well let me give you from your column. The following
media outlets are blackballed by Wikipedia. The list includes not exclusively,
but includes Breitbart, The Daily Caller, Daily Mail, Newsmax, Christopher
Ruddy's organization a n N, and the Media Research Center,
which is your group leftist media like The Atlantic or
(01:05:23):
Mother Jones, Pro Publica, the Guardian, NPR are given the
green light. And so Wikipedia, as I understand it, is
a private organization. But however, they fashion themselves as a
source for information and they bar conservative media from being reliable.
And what impact does that have on the American people
getting needed information upon which they can cast an inform ballad.
Speaker 5 (01:05:47):
Yeah, well, you've just nailed it. You know, we're not
saying that Wikipedia can't exist. Yeah, they've got pre speech
rights too. They want to be a left wing news outlet,
left wing information site. That's fine of the legality of it,
until they start engaging in election interference, you know. And
and companies can spend money on elections, but they've got
(01:06:09):
to report with the FBC. But what they do is,
you know, if they want to have a Wikipedia page
about you or Donald Trump or Dan Schneider or anybody else,
the only information that goes on on those pages is
what is cited in the media. You've got to be
a media outlet. So if Donald Trump is only being
(01:06:31):
described on Wikipedia pages by the Washington Post or the
New York Times or np R, then of course it's
only going to be nasty horrible stuff about Donald Trump,
and that's what's going on and built to make things
even worse. If you do a Google search for say,
Donald Trump or anybody else or any other singer idea,
(01:06:53):
one of the first results the Google will give you
is a Wikipedia page. So the worst social media platform
out there, Google is in cahous with Wikipedia to make
sure that people are only giving a hard left wing narrative.
Speaker 1 (01:07:08):
Well for Warren is forearmed, and I know that's happening repeatedly.
I look at my Wikipedia page every now and then.
There's some of it's accurate, a lot of it is not,
and I will not go through the process of engaging
with them and talking about what's in accurate. I just
don't want to do it. But when you go to Wikipedia,
understand what you're getting is often left wing news, left
(01:07:29):
wing propaganda, and conservative media is ignored. So when you
go to Wikipedia, that's what you're getting.
Speaker 5 (01:07:37):
Yeah, And the way they've got it structured is that
if you try, even if you try to amend your page,
say and you decide to write a center media outlet
that might actually have something nice to say about you,
if that outlet is on their blacklist, you can't even
offer the amendment. It is automatically rejected. It's spit out
(01:08:00):
what like like fiddle. You know, they want to make
sure that only the most pitful things are said about
you on your own Wikipedia page.
Speaker 1 (01:08:11):
Let's move to issue. To Tim Graham this morning a
post that PBS and NPR should be defunded. Five reasons
to defund public broadcasting, and we as taxpayers, have paid
for bad radio for a long time. It's very leftist.
And he makes the point on your website that eleven
percent describe themselves as conservative, twenty one percent of the
(01:08:33):
listeners and viewers as middle of the road. Sixty seven
percent of the listeners said their very or somewhat liberal,
and they should pay for it. But Republicans are attacked
by NPR and PBS regularly. We shouldn't have to pay
for that, especially someone like Donald Trump. And I've heard
this for the last twenty or thirty years whenever there's
a Republican president, Dan Schneider that we're going to get
(01:08:54):
rid of the public funding of PBS and NPR. First
of all, tell the American people about the funding for
these organizations and why they should not be publicly funded.
Speaker 5 (01:09:06):
All right, So there's this congressionally created corporation called the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting. If you ever watch PBS or
NPR goes into the MPR, you're going to hear some
little things that says paid for by the corporations and
public broadcasting. No, it's not, that's your tax dollars. The
Corporation for Public Broadcasting exists because Congress and where you
(01:09:32):
know pay uses your taxpayer dollars to subsidize this propaganda media.
They don't even have the courtesy of saying paid for
by your tax dollars. They why and stay paidful by
the Corporation for Public Broadcasts. But we have got to
end the existence of this thing, the Corporation for Public Broadcasts.
If there are these radio stations and TV broadcasters out
(01:09:53):
there are called NPR stations and PBS. You know, no,
again we're not saying they've got those have to be eliminated.
You know, any left he's got free speech rights too.
We just shouldn't have to.
Speaker 3 (01:10:04):
Pay for it.
Speaker 5 (01:10:05):
But right now, over half a billion dollars of our
tax dollars every year go to subsidize these things. And
Bill what's also dolling is that NPR will falsely claim
that no more than one percent of its operating expenditures
come from taxpayer dollars, and that is just an absolute lie,
(01:10:27):
because the way it's structured is that that corporation to
public broadcasting, that vessel that's all about our tax dollars.
It goes to a lot, you know, over one thousand
public radio stations across the country that automatically then kick
back those funds, do you know, the big NPR home office.
So it's more like fifty percent of NPR's revenues come
(01:10:49):
from our tax dollars, not one percent. They can't even
tell the truth about how much money they take from us.
Speaker 1 (01:10:55):
Well, Dan Schneider, if it's only one percent, it should
be easy to privately finance it. Accept the number. Okay,
it's under one percent, we'll get rid of all the
five hundred million dollars of public subsidies directly and indirectly.
If it's under one percent, what's the big deal privately
finance it the way you go? How about that argument?
Speaker 3 (01:11:15):
Right?
Speaker 5 (01:11:15):
But exactly right. But of course as soon as we
make that argument, then they try poverty and say, well,
it's closer to fifty percent, you know, if they're new outlet,
you think that they would actually present facts honestly, But
of course they don't, you know, And this is ultimately
what's so wrong about uncrmpds. They are just radical leftling
(01:11:35):
propaganda mouthpieces, and our tax dollars should not have to
have to subsidize their political agenda.
Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
You can only imagine the outcry if news Max and
Breitbart and Daily Caller and and other so called conservative
media we're being subsidized to the tune of five hundred
million dollars a year. Number one and never would have
existed for the last forty years. But number two, there'd
be such an outcry, But it goes. I'm reading the
column from Tim Graham. There's about one thousand and eighty
(01:12:04):
five NPR stations in America. The state of New York
has seventy three, California sixty to one, Alaska fifty three,
and legislators in every state are likely to have public
stations lobbing them for funding. So when this happens, maybe
the whiz kids with Elon Musk hiding in an executive office
building can do it quickly. But can you imagine what's
going to happen? Can you imagine what's going to happen
(01:12:26):
when all of a sudden, guess what, we have a
situation now where NPR and PBS is defunded. What the
hell's going to happen? Then?
Speaker 5 (01:12:35):
Well, the great Tim Graham has been exposing the radicalism
of the NPRM can gests literally for over three decades,
and every time he writes a story about this, we're
accused of advocating for censorship because the left thinks that
if we are not required to subsidize their speech, but
that is censorship. The absurdity of the left they.
Speaker 11 (01:12:59):
Feel, how would they what would they think if if, uh,
if we've told the liberals in America that their tax
dollars have to subsidize say Fox News or or your
radio station.
Speaker 5 (01:13:10):
I don't think they lefton like that very much. But
they they insist that our tax dollars go to fund
their efforts.
Speaker 1 (01:13:18):
That's a terrible problem. But uh, why do I have
more hope today this is going to be defunded than
I had before? Because I heard the same things out
of the first Trump term, heard the same things under
George Bush, who was a terrible president Bush forty three,
and all of a sudden the vines, much like us
AID is encircling the globe and they have all these
(01:13:40):
special interest groups. They're raising money all the time to
put some begs singing, uh singing, staying alive. And you
got to contribute money. And if you contribute money, you
get you get, you get an album or something. Are
they going to go quietly into the night.
Speaker 5 (01:13:55):
Well, but it'd be easy to give an answer of
the one wartine dose. But the reason those is having
to kind of impack it is having today. And the
reason the Media Research Center is having the kind of
impact that we are today and trying to influence Congress
sending exectivation is because the Biden administration was so gross
(01:14:18):
in their overreach in censoring speech, and because then dr
PBS and all these outlets were so disgusting in how
biased that they were. That the average American has woken
up and said enough enough of this, and as people
learn more like how USAID has become so radicalized, where
(01:14:40):
the American public is saying, let's fix it. It's about time.
Speaker 1 (01:14:46):
Some of the ridiculous spending we have in the media
doesn't deal with the ridiculous spending. I watched CNN, so
you don't have to. And most evenings they're talking about
the USAID is keeping alive Africans, Asian South Americans and
if we get rid of transgender show somewhere in Haiti,
that that's going to destroy the health of the entire world.
I don't think.
Speaker 5 (01:15:05):
So.
Speaker 1 (01:15:05):
There must be some good programs at USAID, but that
the ones I've read about are ridiculous. It can't continue,
and Media Research Center is there to keep an eye
on it. You also have a column up a Media
Research Center, which is very interesting that Colbert and Power
avoid USAID's problem and attempt to save it from Trump.
And so the media now is in a full panic mode.
(01:15:28):
I watched Maxine Waters the other day, and I watch
a couple of Senators AOC lose their minds over the
fact that we're not going to have shrimp on treadmills
running anymore underwater. We're not going to have that anymore.
And basically Donald Trump wants Africans to die. He wants
Asians to die. The worst kind of rhetoric. Ad on
top of that Gaza when the President came out and said,
(01:15:49):
you know what, that's great, great real estate. Make it
the riv era of the Eastern Mediterranean, the media continues
to go crazy. I'd look at the rubble there. I
can't imagine two million people living there. Something's got to happen.
Of course, the otherwise is to walk away and lead
to your own devices, in which they'll be massive famine.
On the other hand, you'd have to get to tie
(01:16:10):
in of the imperants in other states. But is the
media covering any of the moves in Greenland, Panama Canal
or Gaza. Are they covering and objectively or she's simply
making fun of Donald Trump?
Speaker 3 (01:16:22):
Bill.
Speaker 5 (01:16:22):
This is maybe the thing I hate most about legacy media.
When a Republican, a conservative, Donald Trump, anybody on our
side of the aisle does something, the legacy media's first
story is it's outrageous that this one individual is going
to be harmed by this action, as the post to
(01:16:44):
the first story being, oh, this is why Donald Trump
is taking the action. He is taking their day true story.
They run on day one, Joe Biden does something, and
for three days we hear about all the loverbole things.
Joe Biden is Finally on day four, on page a
twenty two, you get some little squib about how conservatives
(01:17:06):
don't like it, but they completely ignore the day one
story and immediately go into attack moments.
Speaker 1 (01:17:12):
Nothing's going to change with that, is it. I don't
see the media saying, you know what, Trump was right.
I'm willing to bet a hot fudg Sunday with somebody
that NPR and PBS will be gone within two years?
Am I right about that?
Speaker 5 (01:17:26):
From your lips to God's ears? And the reason the
media today is doubling down on this isn't they can't reform,
But it's because of that. When I say they can't,
because their leadership, they're employees, they are all radical, and
because they refuse to reform, they're being replaced. They're being
(01:17:46):
replaced by podcasts, conservative media. Despite all the radical left
efforts to shut us down, regular Americans are saying no more.
Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
Can't take it. And if regular Americans knew, they subsidized
bad radio and bad television to the tune of five
hundred million dollars a year, So for the last ten years,
we're talking about five billion dollars, probably tens of billions
over the past thirty or forty years. And if Kamala
Harris had won the presidency, I guarantee you these things
would be doubled and tripled. This censorship would continue, and
(01:18:18):
PBS would be even better funded, and the newspapers would
still be trying to exist and sites like yours who
have more work to do. But the plan, the plan,
hopefully is they have a cogent, functioning country that stays
within its budgetary limits. And that's Donald Trump. But once again,
Dan Schneider Media Research Center also a NewsBusters dot Org.
It checking on every few hours great stuff up there
(01:18:38):
and informs the American people what's happening when many times
they don't have that information. And Dan Schneider, vice president
of a Free Speech America with MRC, thanks for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show, and Dan, we'll do it again.
Thank you very much. Thanks Bill, God bless America. Let's
continue with more. We have in Cincinnati some pretty good
(01:19:00):
NPR stations with bad ratings, and every city in America
where there are some fairly good NPR PBS stations that
if you want to watch that stuff, do it, but
don't let us pay for it. Five hundred million dollars
a year is ridiculous. I'll just continue with more. Bill Cunningham,
the great American with you every day, your home of
the Reds News Radio seven hundred WLW. Hello, quiet, and
(01:19:27):
I'm I'm broadcasting. You know, Rocky, I know you're a
great fan, a great fan of Xavier basketball. You know
what I'm saying. Yes, did you see last night as
Xavier fan got into the face of Ed Cooley, who
acted like a clown. The guy never left his seat,
yelling and screaming at Georgetown players. Ed Cooley came over
(01:19:50):
and ostracized him. I don't like that at all.
Speaker 10 (01:19:52):
I think you're supposed to show up and be loud
and scream and enjoy your team.
Speaker 1 (01:19:57):
Yeah, he didn't get on the court, he didn't use
for vanity, and he said he was insulting one of
the Georgetown players. So off he goes.
Speaker 10 (01:20:03):
By the way, Tony Pike was spite spotted at the
Xavier game. He may have may have teams.
Speaker 1 (01:20:11):
How did he get in?
Speaker 10 (01:20:13):
He's Tony Pike.
Speaker 1 (01:20:14):
I don't know. Yeah, but I mean the guy he was.
You're sitting with Scott Wolf.
Speaker 10 (01:20:20):
He's a great man.
Speaker 1 (01:20:21):
I don't know.
Speaker 10 (01:20:22):
Maybe they're talking about n I L. Maybe who knows?
Who knows?
Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
I don't know. I know Little Rock wants some ni
L money to go to whatever it's school. He wants
some money, all of it, all of it, all of it,
all of it. No college sports is so screwed up
now I can't stand it.
Speaker 10 (01:20:38):
Go it's you wonder how it's going to be around.
I mean, you wonder how the you know, the MAC
and the you know those kind of conferences, those G
five teams, how are they going to be able to
survive in this world? Because you're damned if you do, Dan,
if you don't, you in order to survive, if you're
a MAC team, you got to take a risk on
a kid who's maybe he's not a four or five star.
(01:21:01):
You're probably not gonna get that kid. You got to
take a risk on a three star that but you
do your homework and you find maybe the okay, move
this guy if we can develop and he can turn
into something while you do the developing, and then the
guy leaves. I saw a stat uh in some of
his graduation. But of the twenty nine football players who
were who who got first team All MAC last year,
(01:21:22):
only four are coming back next year.
Speaker 1 (01:21:25):
Now.
Speaker 10 (01:21:25):
Some of them have graduated right because they were seniors
or six of year seniors, but a lot of them
are guys that have simply gone to bigger schools.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
Believable, unbelievable, well ninety back. I don't know what to say,
but you see about five years ago when you when
Dan Hord had the Bengals in the Super Bowl and
the Bearcats in the.
Speaker 10 (01:21:45):
Final, we were living large, weren't we?
Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
Uh bigger than Montana now and not so much. Plus,
we got a news report that Senator Mitch McConnell tumble
down the marble stairs. I saw him the Senate and uh,
he needs to step down and give it to Rob Sanders.
How about so I'll.
Speaker 12 (01:22:01):
Get behind that right now. Let's go at dinner. Yes
he does, That's what I thought. Well, Walt's hitching Post
is Rocky's favorite places place. Yeah, segment, get me into
the stud's report, please.
Speaker 9 (01:22:12):
Will heave The Students Reporter is a proud service of
your local Tamestar Heating and air Conditioning dealers. Thamestar quality
you could feel on the beautiful east Side called Clement's
Heating and Air nine three seven.
Speaker 1 (01:22:25):
Four four four forty four.
Speaker 9 (01:22:28):
Zero one spots. Will you college basketball tonight? Those Bearcats
are out to snap a four game losing skid. They're
on the road against the UCF Knights not good and
six thirty here on seven hundred WLW. Cleveland State meets
NKU at six thirty on Fox Sports thirteen sixty. Reds
Pitchers and Catchers reports a spring training camp on Monday,
(01:22:51):
fifty days, fifty days until the opening day against those
San Francisco Giants seven weeks to one day. We also
say a happy birthday today the Reds pitcher Nicolodolo, how
old to say.
Speaker 1 (01:23:05):
About twenty five, twenty six. But he's healthy. That's all
we care about.
Speaker 10 (01:23:09):
That's all it needs to happen. This thing stays healthy.
They have a shot.
Speaker 1 (01:23:13):
They don't.
Speaker 10 (01:23:14):
It'll be like last year, in the year before and
the year before.
Speaker 9 (01:23:17):
Let's see twenty twive. Twenty twenty five edition of the
Cincinnati Open be the largest Attorney's history, more players, matches, entertainment,
days of competition. The Attorney will take place now over
fourteen days, up from nine. Men's and women's singles field
increases to fifty six from fifty six to ninety six players,
and the Lindner Tennis Center is like tripling in size.
(01:23:42):
And the Cincinnati Open begins Tuesday, August fifth, with tickets
on sale sometime next month.
Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
It's fabulous. A lot of money going into this thing.
It's going to be wonderful.
Speaker 9 (01:23:52):
Cincinnati place to be great event EHL Hockey Tonight our
beloved cyclos are in town to battle the Iowa Heartlanders tonight.
Speaker 1 (01:24:02):
Rok. What do you think about city council like Michelle
lemon Kearney putting together symposiums on what to advise illegal
immigrants to do when law enforcement arises and how much
money do we have to spend on them when we
have needs in the own city ourselves. What about that one?
Speaker 10 (01:24:16):
Clean the streets? That's what I wonder. That's not your job,
it's political grand standing. Have on instead, have a symposium
on what we can do to better clean up the streets,
to make sure our equipment is not outdated and broken.
That's what the taxpayers want. That's your job as city council,
not to talk about rights for illegal immigrants.
Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
It's not your place. Segment your reaction.
Speaker 9 (01:24:39):
I agree wholeheartedly, will you? I mean, city's got to
clean off the wiel from the streets. They didn't touch
Mount Adams.
Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
It can't. I mean, you know, I'll just do something.
How about rock spending fifty million dollars to fund condoms
so the gods and men can have sex with women.
Fifty million. How about one point five million to have
Dei in Serbia's workplaces for seventy thousand for the production
of a Dei musical in Ireland Dublin. Seventy thousand dollars
(01:25:08):
to a Peruvian transgender opera dancer seventy thousand. I like that?
Is that the US eight thing? Yeah?
Speaker 10 (01:25:17):
USAID, you read of them, and more came out today.
Joni Ernst, the Senator from what Iowa right, uncovered some more.
She is going into it. So there was a two
million was spent by USAID to promote tourism in Lebanon. Now,
how many people want to go go vacation? Come on, rock,
(01:25:37):
let's go to USAID spent more than two million from
Moroccan pottery classes. USID fenerled nearly one million into battery
research on coronaviruses at the Wuhan Institute of Technology Virology.
Excuse me, and then you see this one. This is
a big breaking one. They've uncovered that eight million dollars
(01:25:57):
of tax payer money went to Politico just last year. Now,
what would I think we deserve eight million bucks if
they're subsidizing radio companies and media companies. Where's my money,
where's your money? Where's sex money?
Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
Yeah? What's the politic?
Speaker 5 (01:26:12):
Goal?
Speaker 1 (01:26:12):
Was the website where Washington Post New York Times reporter
went to work when they lost their jobs, and so
the government gave them eight million dollars to get out
the word about Joe Biden and Hillary Clinton.
Speaker 10 (01:26:23):
Makes perfect sense. Let me ask you this. Here's an example.
I was trying to think of a way to like,
if say you had a store, you had a business,
right and people were breaking into it. Okay, you hired
a security company to come in and monitor the place
and take video and all that sort of thing. Okay,
and they find out who the criminals are.
Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Who would you be mad at?
Speaker 10 (01:26:46):
Would you be mad at the security company for like,
you know, doing their job of like finding where the
problem was, or would you be mad at the criminals themselves?
Speaker 1 (01:26:56):
I'd be mad at the criminals. Yeah, we just had
it report. Still right, it only makes sense. Fifty million
dollars went to the New York Times. Now, how in
the world are taxpayers paying the New York Times?
Speaker 10 (01:27:09):
And Chuck Schumer is out there losing his mind and
Elizabeth Warren I got a soundbye, I want to play
on my show. I mean absolutely losing their minds at
people looking for government waste. They're they're blaming musk must
doesn't have any power, he doesn't have any legislative power.
He's simply been tasked by the president. Okay, and we
knew this, by the way, Okay, it's not like this
(01:27:30):
is something that came out of clear blue to find
fraudulent spending, find waste. He can't do anything about it.
He's tasked to find it. So they're they're crying about
oh and unelected this and that it's simply a tool
that the president is using. Why can't that this makes
sense to me?
Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
Why does it make sense to these guys? And the
other issue, the US Senate repeatedly asked USA and for
its specific information about where the money's being spent. They
were an independent agency now under the Secretary of State,
but they were funded completely by we taxpayers, and they
wouldn't respond to su poenis. They said, no, we're not
going to tell you how we're spending your money. And
(01:28:08):
now when the trump Ster locks them out of the building,
they have a conniption fit. Where's the money for the bridge?
Speaker 10 (01:28:14):
They better strap it in. It's gonna be a long
four years, maybe eight twelve years, but it's gonna they
better strap it in because and also, I guess we're
turning the Gaza Strip into mar A Lago, Mara Gaza.
How about that one that came out yesterday. It's hard
to keep up. It's just like boom boom boom boom boom.
Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
Trump Hotel Magaza Gazza, Trump Hotel Magaza CA. I don't
know what to tell you. I'm betiful, beautiful. Well, we're
going to expand to Greenland, Panama Canal, now Gaza and
more to come. How about Madagascar in.
Speaker 10 (01:28:56):
Your lifetime, my lifetime, there's like luxury hotels and golf
courses in the Gaza Strip. I mean, it probably ain't
gonna have it, but it'd be it'd be hilarious if
it did, and I wouldn't totally bet against it.
Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
You know, how many years have we spent talking about
America's decline. Now we're talking about American expansion because the
one man, he's only been there like two weeks and
two days, and now we're expanding all over the world.
And I guar I wouldn't bet against Trump and Gaza. No,
I see it. But Greenland wants Greenland wants to join us.
They're heading up with the Dutch. They don't care about
(01:29:30):
Denmark and Greenland's forty five thousand people. Canada expand to Canada.
There's the same number of people live in the whole
nation of Canada live in California. So we're going to
take over Canada, Greenland, the Gaza Strip to Panama Canal.
We're expanding. We're not contracting manifest destiny.
Speaker 10 (01:29:47):
That used to be something that was looked upon with
America manifest destiny right kicking ass like, mister ass.
Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
Now we're doing it. Now, get rid of the Department
of Education, sending the money to the States, and locally
determined how the money shows. Did you say? He said?
Speaker 10 (01:30:03):
He told, he said, I've advised onto him man to
go in there to shut down the Department of Education.
But then I want you to put yourself out of business.
I want you to make yourself irrelevant. In other words,
do the job and then get out of there and
quit collect and checks like most of the bureaucrats down there.
Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
I can't take you any more. And she's still getting
checks in the w w A and Vince mcmichley likely, Yeah,
a lot of money, a lot of money. Right segment.
What else in sports?
Speaker 9 (01:30:29):
That's about it, Willie, super Bowl coming up Sunday.
Speaker 1 (01:30:33):
Let's see what else that nobody cares? Nobody, I don't
think so, rock what's on the big show this afternoon
with you? If anyone?
Speaker 6 (01:30:39):
Well?
Speaker 10 (01:30:39):
Well, first of all, so Eddie is still on vacation.
He is on a cruise somewhere. Jason Williams, the Great
Jason Williams was with me yesterday and he'll be back Thursday.
But today Catherine Nero will be like her, Rocky and Catherine.
Right out of the gate, we got Scott Wartman going
to join us to talk about your boy, Mike dwines
proposal to increase the the.
Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
Gambling that the sports books.
Speaker 10 (01:31:05):
What the percentages they take up to I believe forty
percent to pay for your stadium?
Speaker 1 (01:31:10):
How about it? And also the marijuana situation, which is
going to all these guys and men and women invest
a big time in marijuana. They want a fifty percent
increase in the state tax. Instead of going to local communities,
it's going to go to the general fund that's got
people panties in a wad.
Speaker 10 (01:31:26):
So between the doesn't at some point make it so
expensive that people just go back to buying marijuana off
the street the way they have for years and years
and years.
Speaker 1 (01:31:33):
Yeah, and the last year three hundred million dollars has
been taken out of the pockets of drug dealers. Three
hundred million. But the state wants to be greedy and
take more money, which raises the price, which means users
of marijuana like a WEBN, those characters are going to
be welcome to their friendly drug deal I'm just saying
they're going to go back to their marijuana dealer and
(01:31:55):
not use the state. So don't kill the goose that
lays the eggs. Don't don't be an.
Speaker 10 (01:32:01):
You can share a sheep many times, but you can
skin it only once and looks like they're trying to
skin people.
Speaker 1 (01:32:06):
They're trying to skin it. And just let it happen
for ten years and see what happens. The state's making
millions and millions of dollars otherwise wouldn't have thousands of
people are working. Three hundred million dollars taken out of
the drug market illegally and put into the legal drug market.
Now the state wants to be uh more. We didn't
want more. A fifty percent increase of this, no more
(01:32:27):
local government funds. It is ridiculous.
Speaker 10 (01:32:30):
And then also at four o'clock we have Chris Katz
from KMBC Kansas City going to talk about the Chiefs
and the Super Bowl and the Eagles and SEG's girl Tate.
Speaker 1 (01:32:42):
Well, she's coming to Cincinnati. She's going to pick up
Joe Burrow's diamonds from the Diamond District in New York
and bring them here.
Speaker 10 (01:32:48):
So what I mean we need something like that to happen.
Speaker 1 (01:32:50):
We need that. Yeah, she needs to come here for
Freday about that other UC grad All right, segment, get
me out of the Students Report, please, Pully.
Speaker 9 (01:32:58):
We say, on this happy National weather Person Day. Oh
and also National Girls and Women in Sports Day?
Speaker 1 (01:33:07):
How about that?
Speaker 10 (01:33:08):
But that has extra meeting today, doesn't it.
Speaker 1 (01:33:10):
We leave you with them. We leave you with the
immortal words of the stood Report. I was a Deer
Park High School, which honestly is not the strongest academic
institution in the Tri State.
Speaker 9 (01:33:25):
What a minute, the investigation there some old cuts.
Speaker 1 (01:33:36):
No, Rocky, you told me the little rock may want
to go to Deer Parks good academic and how much
we got to talk to a few people, and Jim
Stall is now in charge of Deer Park and we
have Bengal players like Trey Hendrickson began to come to
Deer Park to raise us some money, which I like,
and we're going to do that in about two weeks.
It nonetheless segment. Thank you, Rocky. Thanks your whole career.
(01:34:00):
You have had so many great people help you win.
So who is your favorite? Ref all the rest, all
the rest to.
Speaker 3 (01:34:11):
Do the best?
Speaker 1 (01:34:12):
They call the game right away? Is there one that
you give a Christmas card to you every year? Possibly?
I'd love to talk to some of my teammates and then.
Speaker 5 (01:34:24):
You've tind of figured it out.
Speaker 1 (01:34:27):
How about that static of the last eleven pass interference calls,
ten have been helping the opponent of the Chiefs of
the last roughing the quarterback, only two against the Chiefs,
but nine in favor of the Chiefs. The NFL wants
Taytaya win. Want to beat the best.
Speaker 10 (01:34:43):
You gotta knock them off their pedestal and then they'll
quit gritting the preferential treatment.
Speaker 1 (01:34:48):
Joe Burrow get his diamonds back and you'll be dating
Taylor Swift by the start of the Bengals.
Speaker 10 (01:34:53):
How about so many different I have a like A like,
dua lipa or something there.
Speaker 1 (01:34:57):
Now that would be some.
Speaker 12 (01:34:58):
You don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:35:00):
Live actions on seven hundred WL