2-22-24 Bill Cunningham Show - podcast episode cover

2-22-24 Bill Cunningham Show

Feb 22, 20241 hr 47 min
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Episode description

Willie discusses the issue with the judicial system with Campbell County prosecutor Michelle Snodgrass. Also Steve Goreham gives the latest changes to the climate change narrative.

Transcript

Bill cunning into Great American Welcome this war. It's Thursday afternoon at the Tri State rain is falling, more coming later on. The weather terrorists may have been right, this time is actually going to rain. We'll see what occurs there. Later on, we have Steve Gorm of the Climate Signs Coalition coming up to talk about successes when it comes to climate change, and also the Great Jack Windsor Live from Columbus about what's happening with the gummy bears in Coleraine

Middle School. We had some kids taking some gummy bears that had some THC in them and they got high as a kite. And Mike Dewines trying to stop this from occurring, with little success because the Republicans in the House in Columbus will not pass legislation providing the illegal sale of these items with controlling the content thereof. But until then, I'm watching Fox nineteen last night with my good friend Trisia Macki, and a local Tri State prosecutor is asking the portrait

of a convicted judge on display and the Campbell County Courthouse be removed. A little birdie told me that maybe success has occurred, and judge Timothy Nolan was sentenced to twenty years in prison in twenty eighteen, and he was convicted of human trafficking from the bench. Michelle Snodgrass, Welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all, you have some breaking news about an hour

or so ago. What happened, if anything, with the portrait of this convicted judge human trafficker Timothy Nolan. Yeah, I got word today that after the story last night. Much appreciate, I so much appreciate what Fox nineteen did that the portrait has been removed. I've not seen it myself, but if that is the case, I just want to say thank you. I

think it's the right thing to do. You know, when Courtney King was running the story last night, I watched all local news simultaneously, and I was thinking, why doesn't Michelle Snodgrass get a big ladder, put it up against the wall inside the Cambery Hunting Courthouse, go up there and take it, take the damn thing down. Did you have those thoughts? Well? Yeah, sure, because when I come in there, I come in there to fight for victims, and you see the portrait hanging up there of somebody

who created victims nineteen victims that we know of. Are there more? There? Definitely could be, But I think it's a slap in the face to all of them. I think I shouldn't have been the only one thinking about getting a ladder and taking it down. I think everybody should have what kind of crimes? Because I vaguely recall this happened about six or seven years ago, and as I understand it, Timothy Nolan had only been a judge for a few years. You look like an older guy, but nonetheless he practiced

law and then ran for an office and won. Can you give us a couple of circumstances of the crimes Judge Timothy Nolan committed while on the bench wearing a black robe. Well, the crimes happened after he was a judge, Okay, but this was what's probably most important is that he was a human trafficker for many more years than he was a judge. And I think that's important to note that his crime spree spanned more years and created more victims over

that ten year period of time than he actually served as a judge. So what we're talking about is we're talking about him giving drugs to drug addicts in exchange for sex, him providing housing to individuals properties that he owned, and then threatening eviction if they did not engage in some type of sexual activity with him. And these weren't all adults. There were minor children involved as well. So he was prosecuted for human trafficking. And we have a portrait of

a human trafficker hanging in the hallways of our justice center. You can't make this up. You can't. And you know, when I was first asked about this, this was brought to the attention by people in the community who thought that this was ridiculous, and it was a time for Campbell County to make a decision. Are we going to be a place a building where we come in and we fight on behalf of victims, or are we going to be a place where we honor those who create those victims, who who are

abusing them and did it for such a long period of time. There's only one right answer to that question. And Michelle Schnodgres, you've been at it now for almost a quarter of a century. What kind of judge was Timothy Nolan? Because many times I fortunately didn't appear in front of the guy. But was he a harsh sentence or was he easy? Was he grandpa? Did he have a sword on the bench? What kind of judge was he? Well? Was this was many years ago that he was a judge,

But he had a reputation for being extremely harsh. You know, if you committed the crime, then you had to pay the time. And I think that's ironic now because he's continuing to ask to be released from prison early. And so his reputation was that as someone who hard on criminals, hard on crime, you know. And what is worse is that he used his history, he used his background in order to put fear into his victims. Of course, they aren't going to think anybody's going to listen to him because his

portraits hanging in the courthouse. So who's going to listen to these drug addicts that I'm being sexually abused and that I'm being human trafficked by a former judge. So he used that position of power to manipulate the victim. And didn't this send ripples throughout them? May I use the term drug abusing community that the whole system is corrupt that in order to get favorable treatment, all you have to do is perform a sex act on a former judge Timothy Nolan.

And this is the way the system works, doesn't It stain almost the entire system in Campbell County, Hamilton County, Kenton County when you have a judge taken advantage of their status in order to get sexual satisfaction, and this sends the message to drug users and the drug dealers. This is how our system works. Well, absolutely, and I think it goes back to the most

most vulnerable victims when somebody is a drug addict. And you know this started during the time when the heroin addiction was so bad, when opiates were needed so desperately by the addicts, they would do anything, so they were vulnerable victims. You know, that's what abusers do. They pick on those that

they know will be most easy to manipulate. And now you've got somebody in a position of authority because he continued to refer to himself as Judge Nolan, and he took advantage of that, placing these victims in fear of even coming forward. They were so afraid to even say what happened to them because of his position. And I would think they knew or were told by him. Look, if you don't do this I'm going to call the probation apartment. I'm going to call the cop. I'm going to call the judge. I'm

going to take care of this thing. If you don't do this, and especially younger when and children are extremely vulnerable in that situation. They'll do whatever they have to do to stay out of jail or whatever. So and for those who think, well, maybe it didn't happen, he pled guilty to human trafficking of at least nineteen victims. I guess they were all women and girls. And there's this suspicion that you had in others. There was many

more because many don't want to come forward. Many would say, look, I'm not going to do this. But for those who think, well, did it really happen, he pled guilty. He was given a sentence of twenty years in twenty eighteen, and he's been denied twice. When's his next parole hearing? And I want to be here to help you to make sure he doesn't get out. When's his next parole? He should be treated like he's a tough judge. Let's do some hard time, daddy. But when's

when's his next parole? Hearing? Well, he's alwaigible for parole again in twenty twenty eight. But I always say that in Kentucky, we don't know what's going to happen with parole. They could change the regulations, he could have a hearing earlier than that. But what I like about what the parole board has done is each time he has come up, he's gotten a deferment, meaning we're not going to give it to you, and you've got to

wait a certain amount of time before you can come back. His last deferment was sixty months, so five years, which is the maximum that our parole board can do. And so I think they sent the message to him as well, you're getting as much time as we can possibly give you before you get the option of pearl. I mean, it's crazy that he could even get parole, but at least the Pearle board has done what the right thing

was. Let's let's give him that maximum amount of deferment. Let him sitting there a little bit while longer before we even give him the chance to come and talk to us. No, he's a rapist. I mean he's a rapist because consent was not knowledgeable and given, and it was coercive, but it wasn't just a rape and a human trafficker. He used the power of the judiciary in Campbell County to victimize more and more girls and out Now.

Secondly, when I talked to Melissa Powers, your consort across the pond, and Rob Sanders next door, they tell me each of them have twenty to thirty years in the system. You got about twenty four years in the system. And they each have told me that they've watched the breakdown of law and order in Kent County and Hamlet County. When I talked to Richard K.

Jones and Butler County, same thing. When I talked to Warren County Prosecutor David Fornshell, he tells me the same thing, that people today act differently. Who are criminals. They don't mind having long police chases, they don't mind stealing stuff. Smashing grabs are happening in Hamilton County. No one has yet solved the Louis Vatan smash and grab about four or five years ago.

They got on seventy one and away they go. From your perch in Campbell County, can you tell the American people as far as the last twenty three to twenty five years. What's changed with the quality of the criminal defendant that's come before you in Campbell County. Well, I think it's the attitude that's the biggest thing that I've seen, and I agree with both Rob and Melissa. The things are totally different now than they used to be. There's almost

an arrogance with the individuals that we see that come into the courtroom. You know, they don't really care what's going to happen to them too much. They they there's almost an element of pride with what they did with the crimes that they committed. It's a totally different system now than it was when I first started, and I think it makes it harder to prosecute these offenders. You know, us locking them up and putting them away for a while is

not rehabilitating them the way the system is supposed to work. It's a revolving door. We see them one you know, as soon as you seem to lock them up, they're back out on the streets committing more crimes. You

know, and there is no you know, it doesn't discriminate. These individuals that are committing the crimes come from all different backgrounds and it's just really hard for prosecutors, and more importantly, I think it's hard for law enforcement, including former judges, and Joe Dieters pointed out to me repeatedly that if I could take five hundred individuals off the streets of Cincinnati and lock them up,

the crime rate would go down eighty percent. And when I talked to Rob Sanders, he tells me, look, there's a criminal element in our town that needs to be locked up, and then Campbell County is the same thing. If some magical wand could be could be stretched out, And said, okay, Michelle Snodgress, about how many persons are in that revolving door committing disproportionate amount of crime? Is the number a very small number compared to the

whole community. I think it is. And what we try to do in Kentucky is give as strong of sentences as we can to those repeat offenders. But then they get out on parole and so as soon as you are locking them up, their back out again. So that's why we call it that revolving door of justice. Nothing ever sticks too long. You know, we've got all these you know, it's expensive to incarcerate, So then they look at ways that they can let individuals out early, but the rehabilitation is not

happening. All we are doing is letting them out to create more victims, to cause more havoc and to you know, commit more crimes. And he doesn't stop. And in fact, New York City's about the worst when I look at the way cops are treated. Is it difficult from your perch in Campbell County to hire lawyers who want to be prosecutors? Is it difficult for Campbell County and Newport to hire police officers because of a lack of respect?

Is there in Cincinnati they could use two hundred more cops. New York City could use five thousand more cops. Chicago can hire one thousand more cops. People don't want to do the jobs. Is that the same situation in Campbell County? Without a doubt, I can tell you that the majority of my police departments. I work in a county where we have some small individual police departments, they all have openings. They are desperate to find individuals who want

to be law enforcement officers. They are desperate to find people to sign up. They try to take individuals that have retired to bring them back on a part time basis. Just because they need bodies to do the work. So yes, it's hard for that. It's hard to find prosecutors. You know, when I started, you know, over two decades ago, there was a lot of pride in that, and now individuals don't want to take on everything that comes with this job. It's a hard job, and you know,

helping victims of crime is so important. But we're having a hard time recruiting people. Why because law schoolers will pump on them out. I can recall when I came out of law school, I worked in Toledo for about a year with Schnorf, Snorf and Schnorf and what I which is a great law firm, Schnorf, Snorff and Snorf. And then I interviewed in Warren County. Morris Torkelsen was the prosecutor, and I wanted to come back home. I said to Penny, if I don't, we don't get back down

the ho Chi Min Trail also known as I seventy five. I said, if we don't get down there, we're gonna I'm gonna get stuck here with Snorf, Schnorff and Snorf. And so I wanted to be a prosecutor because I've spent four years as the bailiff and courts who areing and witnesses. But so many college kids today that go to law school come out with an orientation against law enforcement. Something's wrong along with the system, and I don't want

to do that perpetuate that. And so is that part of the problem that kids in college and law school don't come out wanting to in a sense enter public service. Well, I think the whole public service element is just lost on this next generation. You know, I had a father who was a public servant and that was a big part of what I was looking forward to do and giving back to my community. But prosecutors don't make nearly enough money. The stress from the job. We see the worst of the worst.

If I could tell you about all the things I've seen in my twenty three twenty four years, it's appalling, but we do it and we fight for victims because it is that public service, the same way that law enforcement officers see the worst of the worst. But that has been lost on some of the younger generations. And you know, the idea of making more money than what we can pay you, boy, that's a hard thing to pass up

when you're coming out with a lot of school owns. Well, Tony Bender wants to know about out how much if one of his kids wanted to come went to law school NKU Sam and Chase, which is a fine law school. I've spoken there a couple of times, and they want to be a prosecutor in Campbell County. And a bright young male or female walks in and says, here's my jurish doctor. I want to prosecute criminals. I want to do the hard work. About how much would someone be paid first year?

Well, entry level is not very much. You know, each office can kind of establish their own. But you know, you can hear some counties in Kentucky that aren't paying starting prosecutors any more than about fifty five thousand dollars. Some counties have a little bit more money that they can work with.

It just depends on where you're applying to do it. But I can tell you that if you are asking to put away rapist, you are asking to prosecute murders, you are asking asking them to prosecute drug dealers, They're not going to do it for that amount of money. The pressure and the stress that comes along with the job is just too much for some people. And you're watch an autopsy of a child that's been killed. That isn't something

you forget can go home and have dinner. I mean, I've seen a couple of autopsies and they're awful, and for special people like you, I compliment you for doing it, and we'll see what happens. But at least Judge Timothy Nolan's portrait no longer is paraded around the walls of the Campbell County Courthouse, and he's down. Where's the photo? Do you know? Is

it under your desk? Is it in the toilet? I don't know where it is, but I hope that the people in the community recognize that this is that they've seen this, and they've heard from them, which is important. It's important, and they made the right decision. So I'm glad to be able to say that happened. Michelle Schnodgress, thank you again for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, One Little Success. The portrait is down,

Michelle, thank you very much. All right, let's continue if a line becomes available five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven thousand. Bill Cunningham the Great American Live at some of the Reds and spring training first ball game is about two days away. All the news radio seven hundred WULW. I mean, while in the intented forest, a beautiful maiden sits with an evil gnome spinning straw into gold, and I'm getting rich, but he's wicked. He's fine. We does love listening to Eddie and Rocky.

We laugh our butts off. But if you can't guess his name, don't worry. I know his name. I bitched his driver's license. This girl is slippery fingers. Eddie and Rocky give your day a fairy tale ending Eddie and rock this afternoon at three on seven hundred WLW. Prescriptions required an online consultation with the healthcare provider who will determine if appropriate restriction. Ahright, Billy Cunningham, the Great American, And we want to thank Michelle Snodgrass for getting

the porcher removed. It's a small little victory, but nonetheless it's important not to have a human trafficker and a rapist on the walls of a courthouse as representative of criminal justice. That's a bad that's a bad situation. Coming up after one o'clock today will be the Great Steve gorm He's written books, you know. Every now and then, I sit here sided for many years in back, many decades with you, and every now and then you think you're

pounding on a door, no one ever opens it. I'm sitting here in Kenwood, looking right and left. I got six TV monitors up, got the Internet up, and I'm looking right and left. I'm by myself speaking to an inanimate metal object called a microphone, And every now and then I think, okay, maybe there's some positive impact that my voice and yours be goes. I'm here because of you, not because of me, because without you listening radio as we know it today, this station would not exist,

at least in the form it exists currently. And I'm proud of that fact that I don't blow it off. I'd never take it. I don't get up in the morning thinking well, I'm just going to show up in Babbo incessantly. I'm gonna try to put together a show or a program that do

provide some food for your brain, things to think about. And it gets more difficult as time goes by. The sarahcuse you, which, as you know, is along with ou called by ken Brew the Harvard of the Midwest does surveys all the time about teaching journalism, things of that type, and how things have changed. It used to be the loyal opposition if the Republican was in office, then the Democrats where they quote loyal opposition, and if

the Democrats are in power, Republicans or the loyal opposition. I did an interview yesterday, you might recall, at five o'clock with Jason Williams and rock Rocky Boyman. They spoke a little bit about history about John Glenn and I met the man only twice, and each time I was in awe of this guy. John Glenn. Nineteen sixty two, God speed John Glenn run around the Earth for the first time as an American a ten can called Friendship seven

and years later he was offered the Medal of Honor. You know, John Gunn got every honor that could be bestowed upon him as a former marine who shot down the nation's enemies in World War Two and also the Korean War. They wanted to give him the Medal of Honor, and John Glenn said, no, I do not want the Medal of Honor for what I've done as a marine, as a pilot, as an astronaut, one of the original

ones. I don't want it. Guys like Gus Grissom, who gave their life for our country inside of a capsule, who was burned alive over several minutes, Guys like that deserved the Medal of Honor. Not me. I just answered the call of duty from Cambridge, Ohio my Skingham College. And so it was a time in American politics when whichever office was one, that when you were sworn in, you took off your Democratic robes, your Republican robes, and you became an office holder. You're not a politician anymore.

We'll worry about politics down the road which began. The political campaigns used to begin and the Labor Day about two months before the election. And it was perceived the time that you didn't want to look as if you wanted the job. You wanted to be sitting on your porch and the people come to you and say, please do this on our behalf. It wasn't about politics right or left. It was about serving the nation. We're completely away from that.

It doesn't work that way anymore. It's no secret that yours truly and Rocky boymany have given thoughts about running for high political office, at least the US congressional seat. And so when I had those thoughts about twenty years ago, I met with my buddy Rob Portman, who showed me what his schedule was, what he did. And the first person I called was when I thought about running, was Rob, and he said, let's get together and

talk. So I spoke with a Carl Linder, and I spoke to Dick Farmer, spoke to some other so called heavyweights that Joseph Automotive Group and others, and said, what do you think about me doing this? This, and this is what you have to do. And then Rob said get with me and let me walk through what I do and whether you like the job.

And at that point I was practicing still a little bit of a little bit of criminal stuff, and I owned a few restaurants and I was on the air at night, and I thought, okay, my life's pretty good. I had some free time in the afternoon, coach, and give them my time to others. And you showed me what his schedule was in Washington, and the schedule when he came back home, and I said, you know what, I don't want to do that. It's no good you got

to raise money constantly, a two year cycle. You have to meet with people. Honestly, you don't want to meet with You have to go to hearings and sit there for hour upon hour upon hour listening to droning on experts on various topics. And as a freshman, you would have little or no you'd have no panash, no power at all. He said. It takes us about ten to fifteen years to get power unless you're a special person.

I said, I don't want to do that. It's no good because today we don't have politicians who take off the red or blue robes and say, you know what I'm I'm gonna I'm gonna be a politician. That doesn't work anymore. You have to be an idea law, you have to be committed. So according to Syracuse University, just three percent of American journalists identify as

Republicans in twenty twenty two three percent. So when you hear ABC News, CBS News, NBC News, it's rather the same, the same marching orders and the result because only three and it used to be twenty five percent, according to the survey. In the early nineteen seventies, it was twenty five percent conservative. The rest were liberal. And it used to be thirties, forties and fifties, nineteen sixties it was mainly conservative. Hollywood TV was all

promoting American values. Not anymore. Right now, three percent identify as Republicans, and they will soon be fired. So as a consequence, mainstream newsrooms and radio and television and print are staffed with woke culture warriors from woke university who believe conservatives can actually cause physical harm to Americans, and safe spaces are necessary to cope with what you hear out of the mouth of a conservative. If they're in close proximity, you can't do it. And so garbage in,

garbage out. When you attend almost every university or college, in many high schools, you're pumped with ideological left wing propaganda that you accept as real and true. And so it means that going forward, that's so called conservative media. I'm a conservative slash libertarian. Is the last best hope in America for truth and stories that matter to see the light of day, and the

survivability of this republic depends upon informed Americans. I have a guess coming on after one o'clock today, Steve gorm to talk about what's happened with DEI and ESG that corporate America has fully embraced these principles because those in charge, having worked work for ten to twenty years in those industries, now can act out what they've been told in high school and college about this country. They can act it out, and they're in charge. They have the power when only

three percent identify as conservative. The rest of it is an homogenization of newsrooms. Everyone think you'll never see CBSNBC, ABC, New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune go off the reservation. It's quite rare, very rare for that to occur. And they all think and act the same way. And one of the things, one of the principles, one of the cardinal rules, one of the commandments of liberalism today is in fact, we're all

about to die because we're killing the planet. The Earth is about to develop a cinder like condition and spin out in a space. We're all going to

die. The other day, I'm watching MSNBC so you don't have to, and there was a guest on a female who was twenty one years old, had the multicolored hair and rings in her nose talking about the planet is dying, she will not have children, and she's going to have her female organs removed, so in ten years she won't be coursed by a man to have a child, because you can't bring a child into this world the way it is that the world, the earth, the globe is dying because what we've

done pollution, etc. And as a consequence, we can't survive. And women sign pledges now in college never to have a child because bringing having a family life means there'll be more breadth taken by human beings, and that means there might be more pets in the world who may expose themselves to more CO two emissions, and that the usage of the planet, especially in America, is so great that it's not worth surviving. And I see it in big ways and I see it in small ways. That you have to think an

act a certain way otherwise you'll be ostracized. And you need safe spaces to cope with conservative media and conservative thought on college campuses. You need safe spaces. And without those safe spaces, guess what lies circle the globe before truth can take its first step. That's the indoctrination happening, and that idea is filtering throughout all the newsrooms. They all think alike, ABC, NBC, CBS, Times, Washington Posts all think alike. Which is which is pollution

bad? CO two bad? Actually? CO two is very good. And there was a Senate panel that was asked of so called experts wanting to impose more shutting shutting down of cool fired power plants and natural gas power plants, et cetera, that said, okay, what percent of the atmosphere is CO two? By the way, CO two is not arsenic. CO two is a good thing. It's plant food having temperatures an extra one or two degrees

warmer. That's good. It's not bad. It's good. So they were asked, all right, what per cent of the atmosphere as CO two? Which was re trying to stop CO two emissions out of the tail pipes of cars or out of utilities whatever, trying to reduce it. Well, the answers they didn't want to give answers because they didn't know. A few said it's got to be ten to twelve, ten to fifteen percent or whatever. Now the answer is zero point zero four. Zero point zero four is the

percent of CO two currently in the atmosphere. And we're being told that if it goes to zero point zero five, that's a catastrophe, which is a bunch of bs. But when facts are not given out by the mainstream media to lead you to a particular conclusion, guess what you might accept what you're hearing is actually accurate. You may think, Okay, we're all about to die, when in fact, these are the best times to live relative to

the environment, and at least one hundred and fifty years it's wonderful. As a kid, you could see smog all over downtown Cincinnati. You might recall that Cincinnati's in the bottom of a bowl with the Hills to the left and the Seven Hills to the right. The basin of Cincinnati is a bowl. And every day in the winter there was a smog, a fog on top of the downtown Cincinnati. Coming to Newport area because of all the coal fired power plants, and many American homes were heated by coal, and there was

coal. Lumps of coal were delivered every few weeks down your basement shoot, and that's what you used to heat your home. That's all gone now, pollution is gone. Remember you couldn't eat fish from the High River. Now when I'm down there. I see camp sites where people were fishing, constantly eating. We've cleaned up the environment. It's worked the EPA out to say, you know what, we were successful, We've reached our goals, and we're out of business. No. No, they're doubling and tripling down.

Why because climate change pays trillions of dollars to those who advocated. For those who oppose it, you get nothing. So I note with interest in the New York Times that many Black Rock and many of the big firms have dropped their ESG pledges, which is the heart and soul of man made climate change, and they're saying, well, we can't go down this route anymore.

And there's this I feel a little vindicated. There's a slight turn, just a slight turn toward moderation, toward reasonableness, because every week, somewhere in India, Pakistan or China, there's a brand new coal fired power plan opening up every week in those three countries that harbor, you know, about forty percent of humanity, and they have no problem with it. We can bankrupt ourselves what you're in the process of doing and having no impact on China,

Russia, India and Pakistan. When it comes to power and the earth will clean itself. So my guest after one o'clock's going to deal in those areas, which I think is going to be very lustrative and very good, because, let's face it, we got to have conservative media speaking truth to power.

And when Saracuse University says no more than three percent of journalists identify as conservatives and the rest came out of woke universities, we need the loyal opposition, of which Sean Hannity and myself, Mike McConnell, Scott Sloan, Rocky Boyman are part of that to give you different perspectives that you don't hear from the so called mainstream media. The feeds come in from New York or Washington, and newsrooms all around the country disperse the same idea constantly with a certain

political attitude. Number one Ongeman bad oingeman bad, Donald Trump said, what Ignore the Southern boy, Ignore what's happening with medical care, Ignore the attacks on brave law enforcement being beaten in the streets by illegal immigrants. Ignore the fact the economy is in deep trouble. Ignore all that. Well, you have to remember Number one, onge man, that's bad. Donald Trump that's

bad. Whatever he said. Find something, he said, then get the panel together, and then disperse it to the newsrooms around the country and people start to think the same way. Bidenomics, that's a great thing. It's wonderful. Big tech colluding with the government. No problem there whatsoever. Their goal is to censor and demonize and flat out stop different viewpoints. So I

go back to John Glenn. He said, when I got into office, I immediately had lunch with many of my freshmen Republican Conservative senators, and we agreed on certain things. We move forward. It doesn't work that way anymore. You have to villainize, You have to smear your opposition, raise all the money necessarily to trick you into believing that up is down, left is right, and that the movements by people like Orangeman is bad. Don't put

that guy back in power. Things are going so well, which if you didn't have conservative media giving you the other side of the story, you'd have to think that right now, the economy is in great shape, that the southern border is well protected and there's no crisis, that the economy is booming, and that illegal immigrants enhanced the American way of life, and isn't life good. That's the message in the mainstream media. So sometime today or tomorrow,

Donald Trump will give an interview to somebody. At some point, there'll be some phrase he uses, and the newsrooms will be filled up with all the bad stuff about the Orange Man said this and said that compared to where we were in January of twenty twenty one to February of twenty twenty four, the world is almost in free fall because we listen to the mainstream media telling you that Joe Biden, the chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, we'll

get everything under control. It's going to be good. Look at what's happened in just three years with the chairman of the Foreign Relations Committee who stumbles up steps constantly and can't put together two dispair of thoughts to make any sense. Because you can't listen to the mainstream media, or read the Inquiry or most newspapers and come away with any thought that number one, the planet is dying.

Number two the southern border that's a great thing right there. That abortion is a sacrament, and that the old Soviet Union slash Russia is meaning harmful things to us. And as a consequence, we must consider going to war with Russia? Are you kidding me? That's where we are. So the goal that I've had for many years is to give the loyal opposition viewpoint with guests that know what they're talking about, so that you can base an informed

decision when you vote upon cognitive issues. That's my goal. And every now and then I think I've made it. And when I read the New York Times story about big tech and big corporate America saying, wait a minute, we don't have much of a pollution problem. I'm against pollution. Are you against pollution? Climate change is happening every day, every week, every month, every year, all across the globe constantly. Human beings have little or

no ability to fight climate change because that's the nature of the Earth. There was millions of years the Earth was a snowball, that the equator was ten degrees above zero, and that there were millions of other years when in the Arctic it was a jungle. The Earth is constantly changing and spinning in space. And the ability of CO two, which is a natural emission of the Earth, which is a good thing at zero point zero four, is not

a problem. But you see, there's too much money to be handed out to those who have control of the checkbook, to come to a certain conclusion based upon quote scientific fact, to convince you that Samow having a child is bad for the environment. Let's continue. Coming up next will be that man Steve gorm To talk about the New York Times story and more. It's now twelve fifty six, Home of your Reds and so much more. First spring training game is in two days right here on news radio seven hundred WOW.

A good day starts with a good Morning. Here's Katherine Oh. She's the CEO of an up and coming AI technology company, and she starts her busy day listening to Mike mccon Good Morning. She feeds her hungry head with the latest news, weather, traffic, investment, and international news and more. Plus she loves Mike's sense of humor. She may make money with artificial intelligence, but she knows what she wants in the morning McConnell Intelligence Tomorrow morning at

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turned down by other lenders. Veterans, you can borrow one hundred percent of your homes value and consolidate all your debt locally owned, locally operated, right here in Cincinnati seven seven hundred or bestlow rates dot Com explore the magic of Paul McCartney's songbook in season two of the hit podcast McCartney A Life in Lyrics. Each episode finds the songwriter in conversation about the stories Billy Cunningham, the

Great America and many times. Having done this for not just years, but decades, I like to think all I do is pound on the door, and no one ever answers. I have a sense when it comes to climate

scientist anymore, there may be a slight change in direction of sanity. And no one is more knowledgeable about the green energy collapse about to occur, the breakdown, than the Great Steve gorm He's executive director of the Climate Science Coalition of America, author of four books on energy, climate change, and the

Sustainable Development with over one hundred thousand copies in print. And Steve's new book is the Green Breakdown, which is happening almost as I speak, The coming renewable energy failure and Steve Gorm once again, Welcome to the Bill Cunningham Show. And I see a column in the New York Times which has got to be accurate that talks about large American firms are backing off some of the ridiculous climate change models that they're build into their systems, analytics at black Rock,

etc. So can you inform the American people? Maybe you and I and we're a small part of the whole deal, but our corporate executives now learning that maybe the green energy breakdown is about to occur and that things aren't as good as we think they are. Give us a report to the American people. Steve Gorm, Hey, Willie, thanks for your kind words. Great to join you again. Yeah, just this last week we had a bunch of the Wall Street firms that have decided to pull back from their commitments.

They were part of a group called Climate Action one hundred that has been urging financial organizations to adopt environmental governmental and ESG what my environmental, social and governmental standards and also go after companies to try and get them to stop with coal, oil and matro gas. That's really been the big push for ESG. But they just announced this week this was black Rock, JP Morgan, Pimco, and some other Wall Street firms said they're going to pull out of Climate

Action. One hundred and about fourteen trillion dollars in total assets have disappeared from that effort, and maybe this is one of those first signs of a green breakdown. They mentioned a couple things. First, they've been getting pressure from states West Virginia, Texas, and I think Florida have said to them basically, you know, if you keep pushing this ESG stuff, we are going to not let our pension funds invest in any of your funds. So that

was a concern to them. But the second factor is that their renewable energy companies are doing terrible in the markets. There's an index called the Rennix Index ri NIXX that's been in place for about twenty five years. A trakts the top thirty renewable companies in the world. That's down about fifty percent in the last four years. It's been dropping three four years in a row, and so you know, they're finding that if they promote these green companies, their

investors don't do as well as if they promote other companies. So maybe one of the first signs of the green breakdown. You know, Steve Gorham, all of us are in favor of clean air and clean water. The smog and the pollution is one thing, but esg DEI and these other things. The technology. You know more about this than about anyone. But we don't have the technology presently. Maybe in ten or twenty or thirty years, when we have the technology, when di lithium crystals are discovered, we might be

able to get to that point. But you and I everyone's against pollution. I don't want to walk across the Ohio River. I don't want to breathe terrible air. And I said years ago that when it comes to the EPA, the out of disband because they've been successful. Cincinnati used to have smog all over the place. We have none, La used to be encapsulated in smog, largely non existent we have right now because of all the epas and

all the lawsuits being filed. Every American wants to breathe clean air and drink clean water. So this is not about more pollution. Explain why the differential between pollution on one hand and the climate change models on the other, and that most reasonable Americans are in the middle because I love to live a twenty first century lifestyle with lights that turn on, the cell phones that work,

with low electricity bills, my twoke energy bills through the roof. And I love to live in a society with clean air and clean water to pass on to the next generation a better environment than we have than it was given to me. And we've done that. But why can't they accept the idea Steve Gorm, that we're successful, We've won. The air is clean. Coal burning utilities are almost going out of business. They're getting cleaner every day.

Power is waiting to be energized. Bill Gates and others want to use these small nuclear power generation units for elect electrical purposes. Explain why we're not saying we need more pollution. Well, you're right. One of the great untold stories of our age that you don't hear in the press is how clean our

air is now. The six major EPA pollutants carbon monoxide, sulfur dioxide, nitrous oxides, ozone, particulates, lead, those are all down more than eighty percent since nineteen eighty and probably about ninety five percent since the nineteen fifties. But what the ep and others have done is conflated carbon dioxide, which is an odorless, harmless and visible gas that is plant food with pollution, and they're mixing it in with all the other ones, and they're calling it

dirty and saying we have to eliminate it. That's where we've really gone off the rails, and we need to stop messing with that. We need to continue to use pollution as we have been, real pollutants, not carbon dioxide. We need to We need to stop putting so much plastic in the oceans, although that's that's usual a little bit overstated around the world, not in the US or Europe. They have a big problem with discharge of untreated wastewater

into riveters, oceans and streams that needs to be cleaned up. Well, let's work on those real problems and not carbon dioxide. But unfortunately the world is spending at trillion dollars a year un renewables trying to reduce carbon dioxide emissions, which which isn't changing pollution levels at all. In fact, CO two

is not pollution. Can we say a thousand times that the composition of the Earth's atmosphere is about zero point zero four percent CO two zero point zero four is CO two, and so what's behind is really is socialism controlling the American economy giving billions of dollars to your friends and family who contribute to a campaign. Am I in the right track? There? Yeah? COO two is plant food. Hundreds of purviewed studies show that plants grow bigger and faster at

higher levels of atmospheric CO two. They get thicker tree trunks, they get bigger root systems, they're more resistant to drought. But you're right. The theory of man made warming, the ideology which I call climatism, is being used by many, many groups for many objectives. Of the United Nations is one example. They've had two long running objectives. One is to have create a world government. Jack Sharrock, president of France, a number of years

ago, said the first Climate Conferences were an example of world government. They also want to redistribute wealth from the United States and Europe into the developing nations, and climate change is a tremendous way to do that. Today, twenty five percent of all four and eight is tied to a climate objective. It used to be about about four percent, And we have people like India two years ago asked for a trillion dollars a year to become necessary twenty sixty a

small sum, so it has become a big, big issue. And also get rid of the goal and gas companies. A lot of people don't like them when to get rid of them, despite the fact they drive our modern society. So you know it is a massive, massive mistake in many, many ways. Well, let's get some headlines, follow the money. Secondly, CO two is plant food and part of God's great design that the atmosphere

is zero point zero four percent is CO two we're trying to stop. I'm going to zero point zero five or six and that CO two is not pollution. A little more CO two is good for the growing of plants and vegetables. Now. Secondly, I saw a report from Hillary Clinton and she has she's called out the beginning of climate related deaths. We have to keep the

game alive, got to keep the money flowing. Explain what Hillary Clinton, who may be the Democratic nominee in November, who knows about Joe Biden's tripping up steps constantly, what's going to occur? They may turn to her or Gavin Newsom. What is she saying about beginning to count climate related deaths and keep the scare tactics. Yeah, yeah, she wants to count climate deaths.

And I've called this. I wrote an article and published in the Washington Examiners saying that this is the next big climate scare, the counting of climate deaths. If you remember, during COVID nineteen, you could look every day online and see deaths or cases of COVID for every state, every country around the world, and it was a great tool for driving COVID nineteen policies.

But now the climate folks want to do the same thing. So missus Clinton wants to start counting climate deaths and claims that we have many, many deaths from heat waves. There was an article also written in the last two weeks that was published in Nature Medicine by a guy by the name M. Colin Carlson, and he claimed that there were one hundred and sixty six thousand climate deaths per year since the year two thousand, a total of about four million.

But if you look at what he's counting, though, he was counting malarial deaths from malaria and deaths from diar real disease in developing nations. He was even counting deaths from cardiovascular disease. And you know, if you count a heart attack as a climate death, you can count anything as a climate death. So that's where we're headed, I'm afraid. But you know,

if you look at the evidence first, the number of deaths. There's an outfit called m DEBT, the World Disaster Database that has been tracking deaths from disasters for more than a century, and those include floods and droughts and famine and all sorts of things, and those deaths are down ninety percent in the last century. Famine itself deaths are down about ninety eight percent. We used to have about ten million people a decade that would die across the world from

famine, and now that's down to under five hundred thousand a decade. So and by the way, warm temperatures are better for people. So this is gonna be a very very tough case to make by upcoming Climate Desk. But we'll see if they try to do this. Steve gorm I watch MSNBC now and then, so you don't have to. I know, Tony Bender, my producer, loves MSNBC, loves Rachel Maddow, but that's a different issue.

And I'm watching this when climate activists talk about not having children, and there's a movement of foot on college campuses controlled by people like Cloudine Gay, etc. That are telling young women do not have children because you're contributing to global warming and you're killing the planet by having a child. Now I hear this climate activist and I'm thinking this is crazy, but it's mainstream thinking among the elite that that's why the birth rate among Americans is two point one percent,

which is barely keeping our population current. But explain how having children will not just roid the planet because having a child is about the worst thing you can do for the planet. Very very sad, and we're going to have we have many many young people think that today they're afraid that the pliant the planet won't be around or it won't be livable. No, and and there's even an article that came out was in the New York Post about a month

ago that said humans may be fueling global warming by breathing. What don't hold my breath? That's right, Well, we need text sail about two pounds of carbon dioxide a day. Oh No. When I wrote an article a number of years ago about about the the Keystone Xli pipeline. If you look at the emissions that they were expecting from that pipeline and then you look at housecats, turns out house cats to a whole lot more carbon dioxide emitting than the pipeline. So in the US, how about a dog. I mean,

I've had dogs most of my life. Should I tell schnor from the painted head to skip of breath every now and then? Yeah, we got all these crazy things going on. There was another article in New York's Times that's that you should mate with short people to save the planets. There was a there was a mate with short people. There was an article in the Miami Times a few years ago that said that that couples are unfaithful because of global warming. Well now you have an excuse. Yeah, global warming made

me do it. My wife. You know, so my wife like five foot five. Should I encourage her to maybe lose some lose some vertebrus so it should get a little shorter to I mean, Steve, we're dealing with This is utterly ridiculous, but it's being peddled as real science. That CEO two is like arsenic and that it's all about paying off people who contribute to political candidates, and no one is worse about this than the UN, the U N and what they're doing is utterly absurd. So I can't breathe.

I have to mate with short women. I can't have pets, and UH can have children. I can't have kids. I'm gonna die and I can't breathe. Only young women. It's gonna be very very sad about thirty or forty years when they get to be older and they don't have a family, and then they realize this is all a bunch of nonsense when the world says, Okay, never mind, we aren't changing Earth's climate. It's nominated by natural factors. That is what is going to occur. And it'd be very

very sad for many many people believing this stuff. Well, they do, and it's an article of faith that cannot be questioned. And if you individuals like you and indirectly, I continue to put the truth out to the American people that somehow we're part of a holy cabal representing coal and natural gas. I can't imagine a world without electricity, can you kind of break down for

the American people electrical power grid, which is constantly having problems. Nonetheless, what is the breakdown of coal approximately, natural gas, oil, and nuclear about America's power grid right now, kind of break it down just in rough terms. Well, in America, it's about forty percent gas, it's about eighteen percent coal. I think the total is about sixty percent that are coal and natural gas, nuclear about eighteen percent. But you make an interesting point.

John Kerry, our climate envoy, made a statement a couple months ago saying we need to get rid of all coal fired power plants. There are sixty five hundred of those in the world, and the world is building or planning another thousand, and they provide thirty five percent of the world's electricity. Yet we have probably hundreds of hospitals and poor nations that don't have electricity.

Imagine no air electricity for air conditioning in an operating room, and then we have about two We have seven hundred million people that don't have access to electricity, and we have about two billion people that have blackouts or brownouts every single day. So your air conditioner in Ohio, if you have one, and most people do, uses more electricity on average than a third of the people

in the world get to use every day. So you know this this statement that we got to get rid of all the power plants is just nuts. The elites are very far from anything that's realistic, and we need to get

back to what makes sensible energy policy. Lastly, I see every day there's literally thousands and thousands of illegals pouring into this country, supported completely by the liberals, the progressives, the Joe Biden types, the John Podesta types, who's taken over from John Kerrey. And according to US Census Bureau, we're going to have by the year twenty fifty, which is only twenty six years away, which seems like forever, but let's face it, we're as close

to twenty fifty as we are to nineteen ninety nine that we're going to have an additional one hundred to one hundred and twenty five million persons living in America. Now, the liberals say, keep them wide open, keep them coming from all over the world, the largely unattached single males that are wreaking havoc in our major cities. If the liberals are so curious about fighting so called climate change, which we cannot fight because the world's going to do what the

globe wants to do, what happens to America. When we take the liberal position that we need another one hundred and twenty five million persons living in America, what would that do for pollution inside of this country. Well, again, that's another thing that's being blamed on climate change. Kamala Harris, yeah, has said this is due to climate change, and President Biden I think

as well. And they were talking about about the Central America. But you know, the funny thing is if you look at temperatures in Central America, they haven't changed very much. The warming that's occurring in the world, the gentle warming, is almost nothing near the equator in the United States, it's about a degree in one hundred and forty years of degree celsius. And then it's more up near the Arctic region. So the area is where a lot

of the people are coming, the immigrants, the illegal immigrants. It's not warming much at all. No, climate change is not the answer. No, But you know that's a that's a whole other topic. You need a different expert for you to get into that. Steve Gorham, thank you.

You're the executive director of the Climate Science Coalition of America, author of four books and Energy and maybe our words are having some marginal impact, and I hope the American people embrace it. But once again, Steve Gorham, thank you for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. With your permission, we'll do it again. Thank you, Steve, Thank you Bill. All right,

God bless you. Let's continue with more Bill Cunningham the Great American Live at Drome of the Reds, starting in about two days right here on news radio seven hundred w W. Hello, Hello, hello client, and I'm broadcasting seg Man history of former Reds broadcaster Al Michaels. That is forty four years ago today, well today, forty four years ago the Lake Placid Winter Olympics. The USA defeats Russia four to three. Now that was just a semi final. They had to play they had what was it, Sweden? I

think they had to play Sweden for the gold medal. People thought they won it all right, they were that high. But then but they beat the Russians. Herb Brooks, the whole team got it done. And you may recall about two months earlier, Herb Brooks put the team together of college kids, correct, and they played the same Russian team uss R at that point, right, and Madison Square Garden as a warm up right well before the

Olympics and final score ten zip Communist. It was then Herb Brooks went back and made some adjustments and looked what happened like my speech at the Holy Grail every year, right, and suddenly the team did the Texas l passed. So what was the final score? Was it three to two two ones? And what against Russia? Yeah? Four to three to three? Yeah? And uh and Mike Erosioni by deer Park High School. Correct, Mike Erousioni raised lots of money for deer Park athletics. So no boy or girl at

deer Park pays a nickel to play sports. None of the school Board of Education moneys used to fund any athletics that's done by deer Park faithful like Harry Yagey at all. And as a consequence, Mike Erusione said it was one of the best presentations he's ever had, and that came from the captain of the nineteen eighty US Olympic team about three years ago, because of Jim Stall. That's correct. Well, and you were you there for that? It was too late? No, No, I think I think I missed that.

One people had hockey sticks signed by Mike ERUZIONI right, pretty and he was wonderful. So at President there you just go to Roger Stabach. Oh, I remember I was at mister Stallbach. Pretty great stuff there. Yep, you had Tony Perez, Tony Perez not bad. Yep. Who's next? Well, we had how about Keikley? You forgot about? That's right? Keikley was like the first one and we got a bigger one. I can't say whose. Can't say next until the contracts are signed. What it's

gonna be as a local guy or national national can't say. I'll say what sport believe it's the NBA. Let people speculate and all the money goes to Deer Park Athletics, to those kids. Bront better get into the plugs. Will he the stood reporters pro service of your local tame Star Heating and air Conditioning dealers, Tamestar quality you could feel in beautiful Milford, the home of one main gallery called Baker Heating at five one three eight three one fifty one

twenty four. Thank you Roxy. We also want to thank Ron's Roost Restaurant and Bar. Willie our lunch today thirty eight fifty three Race Road at five one three five seven four two two two Ron ronsroost dot net on the world Wide Web. Pam, one of the princesses of Ron's roos, brought our lunch down today. And Olga, who's that check? Olga just turned ninety six? Nice week going up and down those steps? Is Ron larka? You're gonna get going to give his mom a raise? I don't know or

no, that's all up to him. She needs a lass. She's only making four ten an hour. He needs to make a little more money. I would say. So. Now, how about last night's college basketball? What can you tell me about that? Losers? Losers, losers about Xavier and losers? How about Xavier? Well, for you want to go uc first, let's go U see. Oklahoma State downs the Bearcats eighty to seventy

six. The Bearcats are eighteen and ten more tonight on that Wes Miller Show, Live for the Orige of Montgomery in at eight oh five after Sports Talk, can't wait, youse, He's seventh, Big twelve loss by five or less points. They're close. They can't get it done. Only counts in slow dancing. Providence defeats Xavier at Centas Center seventy nine seventy six, and Sean Miller went a little crazy, didn't he At the end. The Musketeers are now thirteen and thirteen and not good. I guess, Dave, the

bubble might be bursting. I guess Kentucky one correct. George Mason upset number sixteen, Dayton seventy one sixty seven. That's because the Mason Boys went twenty four to twenty nine. From the line, Well, how about Kentucky at least day won? Right? Nope, Tyrell awards floater in the in the paint as time expired, sends Lsu to knockoff number seventeen Kentucky seventy five seventy

four. When's the last time? On the same night, Xavier, you see Dayton in Kentucky and Louisville beaten by name right handily handily ought to compliment the rock on that Notre Dame did beat Louisville those seventy two to fifty. Louislle is eight and nineteen. Where's Daryl Griffith when you need them? Where's Denny Crumb? And need them to come back? So right now we have Louisville loses, right, Dayton loses. Indiana is a mess Indiana loses purdues

third in the nation. They're you know, they got beat the other night, but they're playing very well for due an account in Lafia and Indiana. But local teams have taken it in the throat. Will there be anybody in the NCAAA tournament, Probably Dayton in Kentucky, and that'll be it. Usually we got what eight and seven of the teams are on our stations. You know, sometimes we don't have it that we we got more games and stations around here, not anymore, that's for sure. We have. We're of

the most popular talk show in Dayton. You were that Dayton the gym city. Really how about that? And when you talk about aviators, you take the right brothers, right, Take John Glenn yep. Take Neil Armstrong yep. What state has lining up against those three? I'd say nobody, No, nobody, No. Cleveland State at NKU tonight six thirty, ESPN fifteen thirty, Wright State in Detroit, Mercy, Ohio State Minnesota, and Rutgers at number two. Perdue story to my left on CNN about Commander Biden's German

Shepherd now be at least twenty four. Another somebody else geez, can you let me ask you what talk about the mainstream media bias? The great majority of people Commander bid were black. What if Donald Trump was in the White House and he had a German shepherd right fighting black staff members at b it what would happen? He'd be in peach for the nine millionth time. But if it's a or another state attorney general would sue him. If it's a

Democrat, the media couldn't care less. If it's a republic limits, it's the lead story. Soccer. Will the FC FC Cincinnati tonight against Cavalier FC first round of the CONCACAFF Champions Cup. That game will at match will be played in King's in Jamaica, and we'll have the action international wise on eight thirty on Fox Sports thirteen sixty. And as you know, FCC opens their

MLS campaign Sunday t QL Stadium against Toronto FC. Now, the Reds are going to open up against those Guardians on Saturday in Cactus League Action two thirty

five RNL Carriers Inside Pitch on Fox Sports thirteen sixty. Twenty six year old South Carolina native right handed pitcher Carson Spires will be the starter for the Reds in the opener, and then they'll go with the Hunter Green against the Angels on Sunday, Andrew Abbott and Nick Martinez in a split squad day on Monday, and then Frankie Montass on Tuesday. Well, and Jeff Pickler, who was the team's infield and game planning coach last year, has a new title.

What is it? He's a he's a bench coach. So now the Reds are gonna have two bench coaches fast Freddy Benavides and Pickler. David Bell is gonna have. It's gonna be like Yalta and the Dugout, except for like there's gonna be three instead of four. It's this Pickler related to Kelly Pickler. I don't think so, the country star. I don't think so. How do you know, though? Oh I don't know. I gotta ask him. We'll ask him, Kelly Pickler. Let's see what else is

he used to wear those red shoes? You know what I'm saying? Yeah, very well, Yeah, let's see what else is going on here? Oh? How about this? You know? They're the Powers that Be discussed the idea of a fourteen team playoff twelve starting in twenty twenty six fourteen. Yeah, it's all about the dough, the ray and the mee. Thank you some serious jack, thank you. Would you agree? I think they're gonna I think pretty soon college football they're gonna allow everybody in like Indiana football

segment. About four years ago, there was a county prosecutor in Georgia named Richard of Paulden County or Dale Donovan. They're related the automotive genius of the tri State. He was indicted as the prosecutor and forced to resign for lying about and using his authority as a prosecutor to benefit a woman in his office with whom he had an undisclosed personal relationship. Uh oh, Now, Richard Donovan was a white male, he's not related to David Willis in Georgia.

And because he used his office to have sex, sex, and more sex with a female subordinate upon whom he showered gifts that resulted in his indictment and resignation from office. Wow, that's an inconvenient truth when talking about Fanny Willis. Would you agree? Yes? If the shoe was on the other foot, And let's say there was a white guy who was the prosecutor having sex with a black female subordinate upon who me showered gifts of money? What would

happen to that white male prosecutor? See you would want to be But Fanny Willis has played the race card, the gender card, and the gray goose card. Country is in a mess. And therefore, let me read to you some headlines, if we may, from the AP which sends out this information Joe Kap all over the country. This is just the headlines. Quote from the associated presses like objective and independent right correct. Quote Fanny Willis's testimony

evokes long standing frustration for black women leaders. Secondly, New York Times why the case against Fanny Willis feels familiar to black women? Atlanta Journal Constitution quote, as Fanny Willis shows dominant, ambitious women leaders pay a price. That's the objective independent media. But when it was Richard Donovan, guess what nothing look into your lefe picture the pant leg a dog took a chunk out of

the day, and you think it. You think it's funny. They have a large German shepherd bite, white house staff commander ran toward the direction of a post booth and bit special agent and seeing at anchors right now are kind of smiling. But imagine at least twenty four times, which, by the way, is a crime. And Joe Biden did this at least twenty four times with that damn dog and nothing occurred because, let's face it, it's Joe Biden. We'll get him, get that dog from guidance or something.

Can't you take him to dog school? He did, he failed, brought him back. Then he kept biting White House staff And like the media smiles about this about poor commands walking that dog. Nobody they just let it go pound German shepherd running in the White House fighting people. Was he just run around like no leash on or nothing? Ap says, I dare you to talk about the judgment of Joe Biden. He is the president of the United

States. By the way, segment orange Man bad Orangeman Trump bad commander agents were worried about escalating behavior. Wait wait till he takes a chunk out either one of those two. Then he's had it. By the way, dog bites are serious. So you're wearing a large dog? Yeah, choose on got a bit in the face when I was little by a German chef. Did you laugh about it? And not much? I thought I was going to be disfigured and ugly, like the hunchback of Notre Dame. Now look

at me, I look like Kerry Grant for Omar Sharif. I mean Curry Grant currently because you might. But one agent was left with gaping wounds. And it's like, ha, no, what what if Trump had a dog? That be it? But the media will say, well, not funny, It's not funny. It was probably funny a few years ago when he was little. Now he's like now he's a full grown dog and a German

shepherd one hundred and twenty five pounds with the bite power. Chokes out it right, and uh, it took two and a half years to get rid of this damn dog. Was it still a round or is it out? I think it's been put to some camper. If it was a regular case, he would have got the needle after the second one. Right, it's unnoying to tell you, all right, second man, Now we got to

worry about a dog biting people? Well, I don't anything else, anything else we can get at and t you can't make a call with them. Quote it's severe, deep open wound in the arm. Pece hah, that's funny. Yeah, CNN's laughing a lot of German shepherd gnawing here for a while and see how you feel about it. I felt it not good. No, just laugh some more. If it was Trump, the media would

have completely different take. Dog wouldn't be around segment. Get me out of the Stude's report, please, will Hey and utter of the Red Legs opening up on Saturday and the pitching staff staying healthy career be something and get some help for commander No, put him under the needle, and the poor thing needs to meet the canine God. We leave you with the immortal words of the Stooge report. Laadio? Is that righty? Yeah? I think Tommy

Thrall and who else is doing the game? Is all the Cowboys doing it Saturday? How about Sam? I think they're gonna do it. I think they're gonna do the game in Spanish. I think Brantley's not gonna arrive for another couple of weeks from somewhere in Mississippi. What's he driving on Route sixty six to get there or something? Tell you what I'm gonna do during the break. I'm gonna call Jeff Brantley, have him wanted two thirty you think, yes, if he'll come like where's he at? Like an Amarillo or

something? Amilla by morning by George Straight one of my Is he standing that's one of my favorite songs? Or is he standing on the corner and winslow Arizona. What a fine sight to see. I don't know I'm saying, but George Strait and Marilla by morning. Maybe that's where the cowboy is everything that I own having some Mexican coach. We may play some George Strait later on. We got the rock too. Is he gonna show up now?

Notre Dame beat Louisville. He might show up. Well, Steve and A didn't have too much goods to say about the Irish, And of course we got the tape. We need the tape see segment Did you get me out of the suture point? Yes? On seven hundred WLW, don't drop the ball, get to Miami Valley gaming on ten thousand hots you, I'll break a thousand more baby being to the bone, bad of the bone, bad

of the bowl. Now let you and I break something down as Americans to tail of the tape and UH to give you my analysis of what's happening with the presidency with Biden, what's happening with the orangeman bad at be Donald Trump and the media coverage that is ninety three percent negative, ninety three percent negative about Orangeman bad, and sixty one percent positive about Joe Biden, who's tripping and falling and not mentally alert. Boils down to Fanny Willis, And I

know her name is when I was Fannie Willis. I like Fanny better because of the Beg song. But that's a different story. Step back a little bit. I went to YouTube and looked at some of the campaign materials put

together by Fanny Willis. She had been a municipal court judge and that she went to She's fifty years old, and she wanted to, in her view, move up the ladder a little bit to become the prosecutor elected criminal prosecutor of Fulton County and it would be the first female elected African American prosecutor in Fulton County history. She found that attractive. Whatever, that's fine. So she had a campaign, and I guess the previous prosecutor or two had some

dalliances with the staff that was sexual and problematic. So she repeatedly made promises about running a professional office, and she promised never to have an affair with any of the employees or SECO fans in and around the Fulton County Prosecutor's office, and she'd said that repeatedly. YouTube is ripe with examples of Fannie Willis talking about how the office had to be running a professional way and she would

do it. And at that point she was single, she was married for a bed, got divorced, whatever, had one child, a girl, and she wants to run for the office. And so she wins, which wasn't much of a shock because once you get the nomination in Fulton County on the Democratic side to be the prosecutor, that's tenement to election. Hamlin County hopefully will be a little bit out of the mainstream. Of the top fifty cities in the fifty largest counties, there is one Republican female prosecutor, and

that's Melissa Powers right here in Hamley County. All the rest have gone to George Soros route. But I regress. So she's elected, and within two months of her election in February, she begins a campaign to indict Donald Trump. Orange Man Bad. She makes a few trips to Washington, She then hires her lover, Nathan Wade, to be the point man on this multi year investigation and possible indictment of Donald Trump, which we're bringing the hands of

Nathan Wade. Well over a million dollars might be two million dollars. She approved a contract of paying her lover two hundred and fifty bucks an hour and then extra time for trials courtse many times that number will be close to one thousand dollars an hour. So Nathan Wade and hersh I always had a personal relationship. Over a seven month period, they took five luxurious vacations to places such as Aruba, Jamaica, the Bahamas, the wine country in California,

et cetera. They were wine dined in pocket lined using moneies from the Fulton County taxpayers. Prosecutors are paid, at least in Fulton County one hundred and sixty five thousand dollars a year. You paid tax and all that stuff on it, you get paid about one hundred and ten thousand dollars a year net. Those five trips cost a minimum of forty thousand dollars. Now, how

does that happen on a prosecutor salary? Well, it doesn't. She concocted a scheme in which she would appoint her lover boy Nathan Wade, to be the point man, and not just some local case involving corruption somewhere in Fulton County. Her goal was to indict the former president of the United States of America, the head of government and the head of the country, on numerous criminal charges that would lock him up in state prison in Georgia for the rest

of his natural life. Now, you would think if that was the goal of Fanny willis to have a good prosecution of a former president, you would hire the best in the brightest because you know what's coming on the other side. Number One, Donald Trump is not a wilding flower. He's going to hire the best in the brightest anywhere in the world to attack the charges with alacrity. He's going to go after it hard. You're going to have a

well financed defense. So what you want to do, is County prosecutor, if you're stepping over your skis a little bit kind of OutKick your coverage. You better get the best in the brightest because you know it's going to be tremendous public scrutiny. Her judgment was so bad. Despite her numerous trips to

Washington, didn't to coordinate with the Department of Justice to prosecution. She just happens to hire, of all the thousands of lawyers in Fulton County, her lover who, by the way, had never tried a felony case in his life, and Nathan Wade is forty seven years old, he had not tried one felony case in his life. So just so happens to pick the lover boy to be paid so far six hundred and fifty thousand dollars, of which she participated in the dispersal of those funds to Jamaica, Aruba, Bahamas,

a wine country in California, and more. Living high in hog on the on the County dollar wine dined in pocket line. Now she alleges that she had lots of cash. She would get it was a black thing to have lots of cash in your home because no reason other than it's a black thing. So at a minimum she would need at least twenty thousand dollars in cash to quote reimburse Nathan Wade for the expenses. Did that happen? I very

much doubted, But it doesn't make any difference. It is illegal to have a public contract in which the prosecutor has a personal interest in the outcome of the case. The longer the case went, the more indictments were charged, the more persons indicted, the more money indirectly would flow into the purse of Fanny Willis. So this went on for about a two year period the investigation and budgeted well over a million dollars is due to be paid to Nathan Wade.

And as I said here this Thursday afternoon at two seventeen pm, Nathan Wade is still charging the county at least two hundred and fifty bucks an hour for everything relative to the case, including his own testimony. So about a week ago, Fanny Willis took the stand in her misconduct trial, which was explosive testimony. I could not imagine Joe Deaters or Rob Sanders, or Michelle Schnodgrass or David Fornshell or Mike Moser put on her oath in their own criminal

case against a defendant to testify. I've asked a few well heeled attorneys and law professors. No one can find any record anywhere of an elected acting county prosecutor on the witness chair in her own case house is possible. It's possible because the defendant said, including the Trumpster, that you can't have a prosecutor prosecuting me when she is a mark in the outcome of the indictment. She

benefits by the indictment of her lover, Nathan Wade. So she was under fire for inappropriate, slightly inappropriate allegations from a personal relationship she had with the special prosecutor that she appointed and directed and paid. Well. Things got ugly in a hurry because there was some doubt whether the judge even would allow McAfee, would even allow the prosecutor in a criminal case to testify in her own case in their conflict of interest. Somehow, Fanny Willis gets all urinated off.

She hurries down to the courtroom and insists to be put on the stand. Surprisingly, so, she gave explosive testimony for hours upon hours, lying under oath, committing various criminal acts in what she's profiting by the prosecution of a person who just happened to be the leading candidate to become the next president and the former president of the United States. She talked about she likes gray

goose vodka and not wine. She was not going to emasculate a black man and seemingly admitting to keeping cash from her first campaign and holding on to it for personal use, which is again serious felonies. Not surprisingly, the mainstream media i e. The usual suspects have jumped into the quote protect Fanny mode, treating us to one analysis piece after another as to how this is all caused by sexism and racism, that she did nothing wrong. Three headlines have

gleaned based upon my research from the Associated Press. The AP is allegedly an independent, objective source of national information that is fed every day to radio, TV and print newsrooms. That's the Associated Press. Here's one headline quote, Fanny Willis testimony evokes long standing frustrations for black women leaders. The New York Times all the news that fit to print, I say, all the news that fits their bias they print. New York Times quote why the case against

Fanny Willis feels familiar to black women? The AJC, the Atlanta Journal constitution as Fanny Willis shows, dominant, ambitious women leaders pay a price. The crux of the argument is this that being a woman and a black woman is being subjected to race based tropes as well as double standards that would never apply

to a white Christian male in similar powerful positions. The AP and this is the independent news source that according to many Georgia law professor, she violated numerous civil and criminal statutes in Georgia. But quote the AP said, quote for many black women, the inquiries in the Phyllis's romantic and financial life were rife with tropes and accusations, often unfairly leveled at black women. I guess they forgot about Clarence Thomas. Of course, Clarence Thomas was conservative, so the

normal rules about block folks don't apply to him. So it took a little bit of research for a law professor to find the case of a guy named Richard Donovan, who was a white, married Republican prosecutor in a Paulding County in Georgia. Four years ago, he was indicted and forced to resign for lying and using his authority as the county prosecutor to benefit a woman in his

office with whom he had an undisclosed personal relationship. Because this happened in twenty nineteen, because he was the first time offender, approbation white Republican male married prosecutor was given much more harsh treatment than Fanny Willis ever received. Also, the courtroom drama points to the pressure and microscope under which female leaders work, especially black female leaders. Another one said, why make a black woman live

up to the same ethical standards as a man? Is that unfair because of the history? In other words, in other words, Fanny Willis did nothing wrong. So I guess when Fanny Willis, who needed money, hires her lover and pays her lover about three quarters of a million dollars and takes the advantage of that by taking trips all over the world, we should look the other way regarding her alleged criminal and civil offenses simply because she's black and she's

a woman. I guess advocating for a double standard is racist in and of itself. As a great American and I say, hold Fanny Willis, hold Melissa Powers to the same standards you would hold Joe Deaters or Rob Sanders.

It's unbelievable in the world today, In fact, yesterday, I'm looking at the hearing I think it was on Fox nineteen of the hearing in juvenile court involving the fourteen year old autistic kid who had a plan to shoot up Marymount High School, and they did not show the face of the fourteen year old, but on the bench was a female Judge Bloom, the prosecutor in court was a female, and the fence counsel for the fourteen year old was a

female. One might add, who's the chief judge in the state of Ohio. Well, that would be Sharon Kennedy. She's a female. Who's the chief judge in Hamiony County Commonplane's Court be Melbura Marsh She's a female. And every branch of government in Hamlton County has females dominating every branch. By the way, what gender is the police chief of the City of Cincinnati? What gender is the sheriff of Hamlin County? Which gender is all three Hamony County

commissioners? There are all women. So can women and blacks who do things wrong, criminally illegally get out from under by playing the gender card or the race card? The answer is yes. To reiterate a point that I've made before, true equality will happen when in the working world that men, blacks, whites, Asians are treated equally, not based upon race or sexual orientation,

but based upon their behavior their acts. Everywhere I look in my life, I have dominant females who tell me exactly what to do how to do it. Everywhere I look, women are in charge of the legal system in this state and largely in this country. Sexism and racism is the vestige of

things that have passed. They're not here anymore. If you permit Fanny Willis to play the race card and the gender card and then she can pay her lover almost three quarters of a million dollars and benefit from that personally, that is an intafada. That is wrong, And I would hope black folks will stand up and say to Fanny Willis, you can't do that. Stand up on your own. Take the slings and arrows which comes to everyone. They

women, blacks, Asians, whatever, has to learn. Take professional lumps and criticisms, just like we've men have taken over the and should stop automatically, assuming every slide is based upon race or gender and not misconduct. One will a mail a white Christian, straight male get affirmative action benefits in this world to twenty seven home your reds News Radio seven hundred WLW Skyway is back

at Skyline Chili for two weeks only. Order a Skyway today and get fifty percent extra cheese at no extra charge on your regular or large, three, four or five way at participating locations for a limited time. Bill Cunningham the Great American for Joseph Chevrolet and col Raine. As you know, Chevrolet is the best selling car brand in America. Chevrolet is the most honored car brand in America, and his top dealer in the Tri stat is Joseph Chevrolet.

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the free you talk about. You have no sympathy for Notre Dame. Why are they even relevant? Can somebody answer that question for me? The Notre Dame fighting Irish in college football has not won a championship since nineteen eighty eight when they won in the Fiesta Ball. I think it was against West Virginia. They's a gentleman off. My math is correct. That's thirty six years without a national champion ship. I know they went to a national championship game.

I remember when Brian Kelly was coaching them and he took them to the national championship game against Alabama. What happened to that game? Baul? What happened in that game? They got bump worth so badly? We don't They got annihilated, Okay, I mean Brian Kelly was probably planning his exit from Notre Dame at that moment. Okay, this is an annihilation that took place. They have not won a national championship game since nineteen They have not won

national titles in nineteen eighty eight. That is thirty six years. Hello, quiet scows I'm broadcasting Rockey your response to the irrelevant of that little leopard. First of all, Steven A. Smith hasn't been relevant in years either, so but he keeps in the platform. What about the comment of this throwne of your guys, this don't care, this drunk dwarf that represents Notre Dame running around the field, and it's whenever I want to see if Big ten

gets together with the se we better talk to swar Brick. Is that his name, Swarbrick? Or that guy is yeah Jackson, Yeah, we about to get a hold of him to make sure that Alabama lit ti roll Tide. But does that not show you how much power even still? And you can't deny what he said. Notre Dame has not won a national title since eighty eight, yet they are still very relevant because every time, just like yesterday, when there's a discussion about the college for the playoffs, you got

to talk to Notre Dame, guess who's at that meeting? All the what four Power five conferences and the the G five conferences and Notre Dame, Notre Dame say who was president school was singled out? None eighty eight? I can't what what did you say president, are you responding who was president of nineteen eighty eight? I don't know. I'm thinking about something else. No twice, who was? What? Right? That's what I was gonna say.

But why would the system say, well, we got Alabama, we got Georgia, we got U c l A, we got a highs date, we better talk to Notre Dame. Get that get that dwarf in here, little get the little get runny what what? What rules everything in life? Money? So Notre Dame still brings it in. So that's why, for various reasons, and history is important. When your history one of the most historic program it doesn't matter. Obviously he still moves the needle, or

they wouldn't invite him to these these big meetings. You know, my microphone needs the viagrant. I think, look at this. I duct tape that thing two days ago, and I think they fixed it now. It doesn't good thing. We take century. iHeartMedia, the microphones. And at that same meeting, they're now talking in twenty twenty six of a fourteen team playoffs. We haven't even had a twelve team per off. We need a fourteen and that is because seg the sec Yes, money the SEC and the Big

ten. They want more automatic qualifiers, they want more Big ten and SEC teams put in there. Because all the discussions when it comes to the college football twelve team playoff is, well, how do we get a group of five team in the SEC? And Big ten? Say, don't give a damn about the group five? About that. They don't move any needles when it comes to money. Iowa States, we did win the national title, right, the cyclone's got no shot? What so right now Iowa States in

the in the Big twelve. But but how can we get you know, two lane in? How can we get a liberty in liberty? Get in? Uh liberty? Well, what happened to the PAC twelve? They don't exist, right? Or did that exist? Teams left packed technically Pack two? I think right? I don't know. Isn't it Washington State and Orange State? That I guess? The Beavers, the Ducks, yeah, the other the rest have gone to the Big twelve, Big twelve or Big ten. Yeah, and right now there's no Big there's no Pack ten, Pack

twelve, Pack fort that doesn't exist. But all due respect, but they said, right now the PAC twelve or whatever it is now, still has a seat at the table for the next two years and determining. But no

one's going to talk to them about it. They don't care. Now they're they're going to say, Okay, there's your We care about the University of Houston, to care about UC, to care about Iowa State, No, No about Alabama, l s U, Alabama, l s UH State, Georgia, Michigan, Penn State, Notre Dame, See Washington doesn't fit there. Well, they're not in the SEC or Big Ten. But as I stated earlier, they still have a big seat at the table. Everyone still

wonders, there's still things that are adjusted. So what Steven a power broker ESPN County do row elbows with him in the ESPN. You guys have been there together and share a town. But I'm appalled by his appalled comments this Northwestern belonging to Big Ten? Now, what about the other issue? Does

anyone care about Minnesota football? Wisconsin? They arguable Luke fickle, But let's face it, you could say the question, if you can, if you can, if you can bring teams into the conference, can you also tick teams out? What about does Rutgers belong in the Big Ten? Along with that? Especially eventually, this has got to get to a scenario where there is college football and then there's every other sport, and college football is different

because it's largely the only sport that brings in money. We've got to treat that differently in terms of conferences and all that stuff and everything else. Over here. You guys can be lumped together because you're more or less the same. So now U sae's finally, could someone be a could could Purdue or not Purdue? But let's say Northwestern? Could they be in the Big Ten and compete in all the other sports, but maybe not in football? Not

in football? Not Fitzgerald. How's that lawsuit coming? Your buddy, Fitzgerald? That's another one. You don't know? Urban Meyer. A couple of guys you run around with. How's urban Meyer? I think Pat Fitzgerald is

an honest man, and the truth will set everyone free's sake. The Student Reporter is a service of your local Temestar Heating and air conditioning dealers Tamestar all that you could feel in beautiful Western hills called Durbin Heating and Cooling five one, three, five nine, eight eighty four forty nine, Or go to Durbinheating and Cooling dot Com Sports. Well, ye, let's see right hander Carson Spears Spires excuse me. Carson Spires will start for the Reds Saturday and

their Cactus League opener against those Guardians. Does he have a shot at making the roster? I don't know. Hunter Green will go against the Angels on Sunday. How's his car window? Uh? Probably fixed by Safelight put up today in like a white beat up truck. Right didn't have a car up because Dela Cruz put a ball through it. High School baseball Ohio state champion Moler ranks seventh in the nation in the Prep Baseball National High School preseason rankings.

That's good FC Cincinnati and Cavalier FC. Tonight in Kingston, Jamaica. I said this to Tony Bender about two hours ago, when FC was up to nil over K almost to win the title. I could sense everything was changing on professional sports in the River City. I'm thinking, Okay, FC's going to lead the way at that point. Did you get on Twitter and

ghost how good they are? And that's what happens. FC the first championship since nineteen ninety and I've been behind them all the way the whole time, one all of a sudden, three unannounced goals and guess what, So what

happened? In your opinion? What is your your theory? My theory is the promises I made to God Almighty in nineteen ninety that if you let the Reds sweep the Bash Brothers and the rest of my life, I will never ask for any favors on any professional team, and that my wish was granted. Now look here, now we're dealing with the consequences thirty four? How

long ago? All that scene? Nineteen eighty eight? Another incident where I guess Notre Dame beat West Virginia to win the title when it was mythical there was no playoff, right, simply a beauty contest. How does Notre Dame win a beauty contest with the ugly women that go to Notre Dame? Can you tell me? I wish I could tell you a lot of experience answers, no go aheads. They're just there to not be in sororities. But like you know, become doctors and lawyers and doctive members of society. They

don't shave their arm pits. How do you know I've seen a lot of arm Pits. The soccer action Tonight from Jamaica comes to you on at a thirty on Fox Sports thirteen sixty. College basketball Tonight Cleveland State at NKU at six thirty on ESPN fifteen thirty The Home. Momo, Momo mo. That's another one of my stable of stars that worked out, by the way, unlike one of them having a Xavier and U see basketball? What's going on? What everybody lost last night? Can they still make the tournament? No?

I don't think so. Mathematically impossible, they'd have to win the Big East Championship, which is possible. Xaviors thirteen and thirteen. Uh, you see as eighteen and ten they've got Ye, we're living how hard it is to competing in this nil age. How about Kentucky last night? LSU did you see the tip in last second? Bask Kentucky down? How about Dave Dayton? They lost because George Mason went twenty four to twenty nine for the from the line. How about Indiana they got beat? They got swamped by

Nebraska. How about Nebraska and when the corn huskerspeach you in bask how about you seeing Xavier? Nobody won? No, how's that possible? State, right, Yeah, it was eighty five, eighty five to seventy Nebraska, and then Notre Dame whipped Louisville seventy two to fifty. Say that again, thank you sake, Louisville that one again more time. Louisville's eight and nineteen. There are a traditional powerhouse traditional Yes, not now Louisville, Yes,

oh, Notre Dame. In basketball, yeah, bring back tracks and the women's NCAA tile three four years ago. There were four years ago, that's good, and once back in two thousand and one or so. But that's the ping pong team, right, ping pong team played balls that I cannot vouch for the winter national title that's soon. I just I just rattled off all the names of the recruits and players we have. But their fathers, their fathers are good something. Maybe their fathers will play got Riley Leonard in

a quarterback. Pay him a million and a half bucks. He's the real deal. Million and a half dollars play quarterbacks. The word around the campra one one season, million and a half. Maybe you open your wallet for once. Butterflies didn't come out of it. A dust came out of it, and he has no wallet at the Amazon truck when he said daily stop at our house. That's another issue. Little Rock is ordering stuff online. That's right, that's a problem. That's right. By the way, talk

about our just to that point, but our instant gratification society. My son did he and for chores and stuff. He has a little bit of money and he wanted to get a basket on NBA basketball card. So he orders it and then like ten minutes later, goes, d do you think that thing will is here yet? I'm like, what a half hour ago?

He's like, check your phone. But but I'm like, you realize this isn't how this used to be. You said, I have to get in your car and go to the store and then if it wasn't there, and then you drove around to another store, maybe found what you wanted. Now it's like kids are used to you order something from Amazon in that in your house for the next morning, it's there. Right. Two weeks ago, I noticed our wine cooler is on the fritz. It says seventy five degrees.

I opened up, pull it out, plug it back in seventy five degrees. I said, I don't want to go to Best Buy. It's gotta go up there, gotta get out of a car, gotta go, I gotta, I gotta get the model. We gotta get out of the car. We're gonna do walk around a sales tam where now is a wine cooler? Where's it? And he says, stop all that, I'll have it here tomorrow. I said, five minutes. She goes amates on Amazon Plus or Amazon Prime er Amazon Prime. She go up, did do it

within within five minutes. It's ordered one hundred dollars less than Best Buy, and it'll be here tomorrow by noon. I said, what by noon tomorrow? The box showed direct open it up, split it right in there. It is plugged, it in fifty two degrees. I'm thinking the world has changed, and I don't know how brick and mortar ever makes it. But it's also the reason why people are hurting for money because it's so easy, so easy. I can sit on my phone right now and order ten thousand

dollars worth of stuff. Used to you had to do something. Now I should be like, I really want that that thing, But God, I gotta get in my car and I gotta go get there. But now it's like my birthday, my birthday and order a car if I want it. You can get a car online, right, Yeah, you can get a house online. Amazon sells a house for like twenty thousand dollars. That's like it comes in a huge box and it opens up and you move this wall, you move that wall. I swear to God, put water and water.

I'm gonna order a house washing the bike. I've seen that. It's not a big house now, but you can live in. Delivery the house and you open you open it up and put the walls up. Yeah, you're going to order a house online? About what a rock? My birthday's coming up. You want to get me something? Think about it. Do you want the blue and the green or the red one? Say the gold one? By the way, are you learning the Trump gold shoes for three

ninety nine trying? I'm trying to take the red ones. Have you seen the red Trump shoes? I like that. I told him I sent somebody a text to it. If you get them, you'll sign them. I said, great, I'll put them up and make money on the deal. What do you think sign red sneakers? Sike? What's on the Big Show today? Well, Dona d is in with me today? Actually three days. I like Donade as well. I like she's very very good at what she does, and we're gonna have a good show. We got James Orpene,

right, they get at three Talk a little Bengals. What's the situation with t Higgins? Don't sign them most What are the Bengals going to do? I say, you franchise Tagum and keep the band together for one more year. See what happens. See what happens, and they franchise him one more time after that, but it gets real expensive then its yeah, believe, So what to do with you? A Mixon? The little draft preview, see who the Bengals may take. A couple of months of a lot

of offensive lineman was a JC Latham from Alabama. A lot of folks are talking about that tight end from Georgia, one of the Georgia Bowers. He ain't gonna be around at eighteen. Yeah, come around, nobody from Notre Dame. Right, No, Actually, one of their offensive tackles should probably be the number one tackle in the draft. He's smart. And we've got PJ. Stree, our health and fitness guy at four o'clock, and the

topic is is health genetically related? Is it the reason you can't lose weight, a reason you're too heavy is because of genetics or is it your own damn fault. He's going to fear this up. Controversial topic, very controversial, So get me out of the stewog's report. Stephen A. Smith laying down the smack, Willie and honor of the Reds opening up, and good luck to FC Cincinnati tonight get that win in Jamaica. Two nothing for the

title. Three unanswered. We leave you with the immortal words of the stooge report. Hunter Biden, the sun of President Joe Biden, who was a former crack attic. Let's just call it what it is. Yes, he was on crack. I said it that way about La Modem. I can see it that way about the son of the President of the United States. He was on crack. They recently found cocaine in the White House, by the way, no evidence that it was hit, no evidence, no evidence.

Although old you matter the dog, I've not heard of cocaine being in the White House. This is the first time. And the dog that choose on co two times. I mean it's serious. When dogs bite you like that. I's not good with kids or dogs. I'm starting to like Stephen A. Smith. Do you like him? I can't say. Seven hundred

wolver you. Inspiration grows here. The Cincinnati Home and Garden Show, presented by the Cincinnati Northern Kentucky Honda Dealers February twenty fourth through twenty fifth and February twenty nine through March third at the Duke Energy Convention Center, six days only for great deals, new ideas, and practical advice with trusted local experts. Leave to spring as you tour the beautiful feature gardens from kitchens and baths to

landscaping and more. Don't miss the Cincinnati Home and Garden Show. Save on tickets at cincinnatihomangardenshow dot com. Discount courtesy of Ray Saint Clair Roofing your furnace could be costing you in repairs and high utility bills. Replace it with Logan AC and Heed some

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