Tony and Dwight 7-24-24 Hour 1 - podcast episode cover

Tony and Dwight 7-24-24 Hour 1

Jul 24, 202423 min
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There we go, Baby News ready to eight forty whas Dwhite witting, Dave Jennings off today, Tony Vinetti off today. But my buddy Rick is here. Rick, say hi to me, Go, Hey, how's it going

everybody. We're gonna have some fun today. I got a mint. Look, I'm winning lazy today because well, today is National Tequila Day, so I thought, you know what, I'm just gonna sit in the studio, sip on some Number one tequila and just play some of my favorite interviews from over the years, even going back to when I first started on WHS. We're gonna hear from Johnny Rotten aka John Lyden, I'm gonna hear from Dion Branch and Pat Day. Wow, what a genuine guy Pat Day is and

what a great testimony he has. We're gonna hear from him at nine thirty. But right now I want to go back. Imagine, imagine Lou Graham leaving Foreigner and taking the place of Lou Graham. That happened with Johnny Edwards from Louisville's own buster Brown Bend, and boy, I love that band as well. Let's go ahead and roll it now. This is Johnny Edwards back in the studio years ago. All right, this is ready to wait forty WHS Dwight witting Happy National Tequila Day as I hang out with Rick, Dave,

Jenny's off, Tony Vedeni's off. So I thought, you know what, I'm just gonna go in and sit back and sip some tequila and play some of my favorite interviews from the past. Some'm even going all the way back to the first year when I started WHS. But right now, Rick, it's time now for joke of the day. You ready for it. I've got the music right here. I need the immunity music bad on this one. I'm bad. Here we go, all right, here we go. Hey, hey, Rick, Hey, joy general. Last week,

the man who invented throw lodgages actually died. Oh is it right? Yeah, that's horrible. There was no call into the funeral. I'm sorry. Man. Southern covered Hot tubs, Baby, you're gonna love your Southern comfort hot tubs. Susan and I were in ours just about every night. We love to end the way that night a couple of number one to Kila's getting our Southern covered hot tub, and it's the perfect way to reconnect with the

ones that you love. Here's what you don't want to do. Buy a hot tub from one of these traveling you know, fly by night joints. When they come into town and they sell you a hot tub and then they leave town. What's gonna happen if you have issues with your hot tub? I'll tell you what a whole lot of hurt. Why not buy local and get fantastic prizes? Right now? Southern Comfort hot Tubs has their hot tubs mark down as low as fifty percent off. That's right this weekend next week,

as low as fifty percent off hot tubs. Say you can't afford a hot tub, please think again, loved ones. How about this hot tubs as low as sixty five dollars a month. Susan and I we used twelve months, same as cash, and it made paying ours off within a year. A bereeze, You're gonna love your Southern Cover hot tub or your swim spa deeper than the swim spots. They're deeper than above ground pools and you can swim in it, swim in at all year round and one end serves

as just a hot tub. Southern Covered hot Tub seventy five. Oh what pressing highway. You're gonna love them. Stick around, Courtney dunnahoe, and that's gonna tell us what our news is doing. And then at the bomb of the hour, we're gonna hear it from Pat Day, such a genuine great guy and such a great testimony. Wait till you hear this. It's all on the way. News Radio eight forty whas sorry about that taking anything to work here? Hold on, that's okay, live without a net baby,

Hey, News Radio eight forty wha. S right, there's my buddy, Rick. I'm Dwight Witting, Dave Jennings off, Tony Vananti off. But Courtney Dunnaho, you're here, right, I'm here? Wow, you not get off? What happened? That didn't sound that? Rick? Can you isolate that audio and say, please, hey listen. I don't know how yes yours today? Because well, I know how to do one thing. I know how to turn on the microphone button and that's it. Because

they they gave class on how to work these studios. Okay, and a couple of times in my life I slept through class. That was one of them. So I literally know how to hit the red button. I won't even get behind the board. I just get behind my regular mic when I'm in here. So I don't know how we're going to do really in the years. If we do really in the years, and I'm hoping the red button or whatever it doesn't accidentally launch rockets, I can just see that all

happening. I will say this, Courtney, donaho. There's some other interesting colored buttons in here. I'm seeing a pretty blue one. There's a yellow onet. Okay, well, you know you're a little cat. Don't touch, don't don't go, don't go for the glittering stuff. Just don't press anything. Just keep talking. Well, maybe I guess I could probably sing the songs and you and Rick could play it. Rick's been through it. Hey, Rick, is he there? You gotta do we gotta do it

really in the years, guys. Okay, Okay, Well, well you're gonna you're gonna be the one hosting it, can you? So I picked the songs, right, you picked the year? You picked the songs. Okay, wait, and I will Dwight and I will figure it out. Yeah, how about is that cool with you? Rick? Yeah? I could do an hour to prep for it. You got an hour to prep for Okay, But happy listen, I'm gonna beat you to it. Happy National Tequila Day. I saw that exciting. It's a number and number one

day. Right, Oh my gosh, I've never loved you more. No, you know what it is. It's a wonderful day. How about this exactly? Yeah? No, I love my number one tequila. So happy sitting in your Southern Comfort hotels. Put your shady rais on. Damn right. Just about every single night, just about every single night. I got to get you a bottle of Number one and some shady rays. Yeah, not a hot tub too. I you know, I need something in the backyard. I just actually did some work on my backyard. I decided to

change around some of my flowers. I did some nice new plantings and things. It looks really pretty back there. It looks super cozy. I hung these lights and everything. Oh I want the backyard light. Yeah. Your backyard lights are key, the little ones. Yeah that's what I'm talking about, the one that you kind of line the yard with and some people string them over their head and all this crap. It looks so good. I have that now hanging over and so my cousin. My cousin came over to

visit and he was. He was like, Oh, your backyard looks so good. It looks so cozy. So yeah, I'm pretty excited about some of the changes. The neighbors directly behind is to the left. They have so many lights on in their trees and stuff. When they turn them on a night, it looks like a used car lot or something. Oh no, no, it looks like the circus in town or something. You only all go up in the air and rectangles. But no, there's a limit

between something really good and something really not so well. And this might explain a lot. Too much of a good thing is not never a good thing. The grandmother on my mother's side, Ava Yoder, she had a saying, and this might explain a little bit about me. She always told me, if one's good, two is better. M yeah, one good to better, but like ten, maybe take a pause on that. It's kind of like Coco Chanel. You don't add, you know, just take away

if you think you should put on, just take that accessory off. So yeah, take that take that seate ofllites down. Frank or Joe whatever. Frank. I feel like all my neighbors are Frank. So it's like Frank take it's where every one of my neighbors is like Frank, Joe or Phil them. Yeah, no, my neighbors are Oh, my neighbors have wonderful They've been so so helpful to me and the kids over the past year. I mean, it's unreal the amount of food that we ended up getting.

I was actually laughing with a couple of my neighbors because during Christmas week people just kept dropping off so much food and so many cookies and so many different things. But the problem is I couldn't give them away. I couldn't eat all the cookies because they were like, no, you can't have it.

My father has diabetes, can't You can't have the cookies either. So but you can't put it on like the local giveaway sort of sites, because everybody's like, well I brought you that set of cookies, where are you just giving them away? So, oh my goodness, I ended up with way too many cookie platters. I could have opened up a cafe or something like that. But anyway, let me give you the markets because they are at the open. We talked about ups yesterday. They had a horribly rough day.

They saw their worst stock to climb in twenty five years. Yesterday they said their package delivery volume wasn't enough to offset higher labor costs. You know, they have a new Teamsters deal. It's all front loaded, a lot of money they said right now they have to give away, but it should

peter out a little bit toward the toward future years. But it weighed on the overall markets yesterday and this morning, we are seeing stocks falling once again, and it's really led by the tech heavy Nasdaq, which is down one point four percent. We have shares Tesla lower, Google parent Alphabet falling. Both reported underwhelming earnings data. So we do see the S and P five hundred down nine tens of a percent, the Dow falling one hundred and forty

points at the open. So it's looking like a tough day for everybody. With the news radio eight forty wha s Bloomberg Money Report, I'm Courtney Donaho and I heard, as it were, the noise of thunder, one of the four beasts saying come and see and usow and the hold a white horse. Now news Radio eight forty whas sound wide. That's rig rolling on through

your Wednesday, Hey listen. So I'm just basically going back and playing some of my old favorite interviews today and I talk openly about everything on this show in my life, everything's including sometimes my faith. I'm a Christian. I know I got plenty of faults, but I'm a Christian nonetheless, and thank

God for grace. Well, last week when I was down with the flu, somehow I got put on my heart to reach out via text and thank others that have been a positive influence in my life when it comes to Jesus Christ, Greg, get your Brad McMahon. Lots of influences. Well, one of those influences in a big way is my friend Pat Day. Huge influence. I don't know if you've ever met the man or seen him speak,

but wow, it doesn't get any more genuine than that. So I thought, you know what, I'm going to replay the first time that Pat Day ever came in my studio. This is way early in my career, and I dug this up. I'm going to play it now. I know I'm going to enjoy it, and I hope you do too. Here's Pat Day Day. How are you, my friend? I'm doing excellent? Thank you? How are you doing to see that I'm doing great? Listen?

So my wife and I we go to Cabo every single year and we're down there for Sammy Hagar's birthday party and we get up early before anyone else does. But it's a party place Cabo, and said, we're having our coffee. One morning. I look across and I said, hey, honey, that looks like Pat Day. And she said, well, that's because it's Pat Day. And I walked over and you invited me us down and we

sat down. We had coffee with you, Inkabo, saying Lucas. Since then, we've crossed path about three times since October, and I said, man, I've always wanted to just a guest. And I reached out and I said, gotta get him, and you came on. So I thank you for coming on. Well, I thank you, And it was a pleasure to meet you in Cabo. We were there actually celebrating my wife's birthday.

Yeah you guys, you were in Cobbo with a ton of family or something, right, Yeah, yeah, Well you got such an interesting story. That's one of the reasons I wanted John. But let's let's go back to the very beginning. You've won the Kentucky Derby, You've got so many records out there in the horse racing industry. I mean, you're locked. You're etched in stone in the horse racing history books. But going back to the beginning, you didn't even know anything about horse racing. As a matter

of fact, you wanted to be a world champion bull rider. So how do you make that transition from being a world champion bull rider to jockey? And why would you even want to be a bull rider? That seems even more dangerous. Well, I guess I'm a bit of an adrenaline junkie. But it was, you know, rodeo was a summertime pastime for people growing up and kids in my neighborhood up in Colorado. The nearest racetrack was in Denver, and I think we went to Denver two or three times, you

know, during my childhood, and never went to the races. So, you know, I believe, Dwight, I believe my steps were being divine directed. I'll be very honest with you, you know, I obviously I got involved with rodeo's had a desire to be a professional bull rider. I had a very limited amount of ability and subsequently success as a bull rider, but it had done a couple of things to further my career as a jockey. Number one, it helped me. It taught me how to fall oh

really, oh yeah? And I believe that that ability played me well in my racing career. It helped me to avoid serious injury throughout my racing career. But more importantly, it got me in front of people that knew about horse racing and given my small stature, small size, inability to ride bulls, they suggested or recommended that I should be a jockey. Guy gave me his name and number, said, if you have an interest, give me a call. I did. He got me a job on a thurbrid farm

in California in January of seventy three. And the rest, as they say, is history. Yep, I heard, is that the same range? And maybe if I'm off on a let me know. But I heard that you get to a ranch and they said, look, to be a successful jockey, you got to be here for two years. You've got to learn the whole thing. You say, yeah, yeah, I'm in, and after a month you walk away from it. Is that that same ranch? Yep? Riverside throwbread farm. So how do you go from walking away from

it to becoming a jockey. Well again, I think my steps were being divinely directed, because when I left the farm, I had no intention of pursuing a career as a jockey. Everything in my mind at that point was

what can I do to further my career as a bull rider? And I went to Las Vegas, Nevada, with the intention of getting a job doing something for the winter months, and when springtime rolled around, I was going to try to get a job with a stock contractor that would give me the opportunity to practice through the week and work on the weekends rodeo on the weekends. Couldn't find a job. Somebody said they've got a little racetrack on the

outskirts of Las Vegas here called Las Vegas Down. They was trying to get it started. A couple of people out there using it for a winter training track. Going and apply for a job, and I did. A fellow named Steve Talbot befriended me. He had three horses. He said, you can exercise my horses. I'll give you two dollars ahead, And so for two months I got on his three horses every day for two dollars ahead. Then he departed Las Vegas and went to Arizona where he was the clerk of

scales. Who is He's the one that oversees all of the activities in the jockeys room and make sure everybody's carrying the right weights. He was the clerk of scales on the racing circuit in southern Arizona, and so I followed him down there. He said, I'll introduce you to people, have you to continue with your pursuit as a jockey. Still wasn't sure that's what I wanted

to do. I stopped in Wickenberg, Arizona. Had a cowboy friend of mine living there, and so I stopped and visited him for a week and finally said I better go join Steve. I did. Went to Southern Arizona. I got hooked up with Steve, started getting on horses on the fair circuit. They were just running on the weekends, bottom level racing. The circuit moved to Prescott Downs for the summer. I went to Prescott got introduced to a fellow named Carl Pugh. He was a professional cowboy team roper turned

horse trainer. Him and I hit it off right away, became the best of friends. He started letting me or paying me to exercise his horses. I believe he was giving me fifty bucks a week and he had thirty head of horses. Wow. But I just loved it. I loved getting on the horses and around and by the end, by the middle of July, I said Carl, I want to start riding, and he said, I'll

let you ride a few my horses. Subsequently, on July twenty ninth, nineteen seventy three, seven months after I was on the farm, I won my first race. By January the following year, I was the leading rider at Turf Paradise in Phoenix, Arizona. Testimony to the fact that God had endowed me with tremendous talent and ability. I was an absolute natural. Didn't know what I was doing, but I was doing it and being highly successful. That's incredible. And what drew you to wanting to become a jockey?

What was the lure for you? What did you want actually to start off with? It was just a job, okay, But I loved horses. I loved being around the horses. And then of course when I went to Arizona on the fair circuit, even though it was bottom level racing, to be around the thrill, you know, when they jumped away from the gate

and the race, and I mean I started getting very enthused. And we went to Prescott and Carl I started taking the horses to the starting gate in the afternoons as well as getting on them in the mornings and watching the races and just around that. It just, man, I want to ride. It was a thrill of participating, but to win, I mean, obviously that was a home run. So okay, So let's fast forward now, and you're on top of the game. You're on top of the racing world,

and me outside looking in and I'm seeing Pat Day. He's winning all these races. You have the fame, you have the fortune, You've got a beautiful wife, Sheila, who got the house. I'm thinking, this guy has it all. He's got everything anybody once, but things are kind of dark for Pat Day. And take me back to that night in Miami. What happened and what broke you well, what happened to just lay the groundwork for that I had. You know, through the course of my early

part of my career, I'm having success and I'm winning races. I've got a beautiful wife. As you said things obviously looked like they should be okay, like I should be happy, content, overflowing happy. You know, I was successful by the world standards, but I'd gotten involved with drugs and alcohol. I was a stone alcoholic drug addict, if you would, and testimony to the talent that I've been blessed with. I was continuing to win

races. In nineteen eighty two, I won the national writing title, and I thought, you know, the missing piece to the puzzle, I thought was that level of success. I thought, man, you know, if I could be the leading writer in North America, if I could get my name up in some national acclaim, I'll never have another bad day. So I wrote hard, won the national riding title, went on a two week bender. When I came out of that, the fleeting feeling of succeeding had

gone, It dissipated. It was tremendous accomplishment, but I discovered that it didn't fill that void in my heart, and that sent me searching. I remember screaming into heaven, you know, walking outside, looking up into the sky and saying, what am I here for? Wow? And I wasn't getting any answers. As the Lord would have it. In nineteen eighty three. I was the leading writer again, tremendous accomplishment, but I knew that

it wasn't going to fill the void in my heart. January twenty seventh, my wife, Sheila, and I are vacationing in Colorado with my family, and she drove me into Denver. I got on a plane flew to Miami, Florida, where I was scheduled riding a race at highly a park the next day. I got into Miami late in the evening, checked into a hotel near the airport, got my room, turned the TV set on, which is a habit just for noise company started getting ready for bed. The

program on that particular channel happened to be a Jimmy Schwiger televised crusade. Now, when I'm already forbid, the last person I wanted to listen to was some television evangelist. I didn't think that he had the answers to my deliver I thought that Christianity or religion was for women and children and whims. It wasn't for a successful man like me. And I was looking for answers. And so when I'm all ready for bed, I ran through the dial through

the channels on that TV set. It was one of the old before the days of remote control. Yep, yep, yep, got all the way around the dial back to Jimmy Swigert, Nothing got my attention. I went to bed soon as my head hit the pillow. I went sound asleep, and slept so soundly that when I awoke, I thought I'd been sleeping for six or eight hours. But I awoke to the distinct feeling that I wasn't by myself. I set up right in bed. I looked around the room.

I couldn't see anything, but I could feel the presence, and I believe that at that moment the Lord prompted me to walk over and turn but I walked over it turned it on. As the picture materialized on the screen, I realized, I've not been sleeping very long. Jimmy Schwiger is still on TV. Just completed delivering these message of salvation through belief in the Lord Jesus Christ, and he was extending the invitation to the viewing audience, to

any and all that would care to receive Christ as our savior. And at that moment, Dwight, it was like the scales were removed from my eyes. I recognized, realized the presence there with me was the spirit of the Living God, and this was my ultra call. And I fell on my knees and wept and cried, invited a Christian in my life, never to be the same again. Wow. Okay, Pat Days joining us when we

come back. I want to talk to you about winning the Kentucky Derby and there's a story to that that I think is incredible and can you stick around with me? Absolutely? All right, more with Pat More with Pat Day when we continue on news radio eight forty WJ. Unfortunately that's all we get with Pat Day because I couldn't find the second segment to that. But man, if you ever get a chance to see the guy speak, what a genuine guy. And hey, let me tell you about my Shady Rays.

I got him on right now. As a matter of fact, you're gonna love your Shady Rays. If you're a golfer. I want to recommend the Shady Rays Greenwolf. This is a series of golf glasses and every golfer I've recommended to they absolutely love them. I love the color Rush, particularly in the aviators and those are brand new right now. But go buy the Oxmore Center try on a pair of these Shady Rays and they're idiot proof. If you lose them, scratch them, break them, even if they're stolen,

they replace them. And if you use code whas that's in store at the Oxmore Center. Online at shady rais dot com fifty percent off two or more pair. I love my Shady Rays. You will too. Go to shadyrays dot com. More on the way to the top of the hour, including Wednesday's Hero News Radio eight forty whas

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