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October 22, 2025 10 mins
Mark as Played
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Twenty right away in the top of the hour, Chuck
Douglas in the Power Hour six ten WTVN. Yeah, I'm
gonna get into the nil in five six seven eight.
But during the break here, you know, going through the Facebook,
and then one of these videos pops up.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
And I love it.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
I love it that, you know, the old the old
guys are still kicking out there. Some of them are
doing it okay, some of them doing it pathetically, and
some of them just absolutely amaze me.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
This is actually, I think about two years old. He
is what is that? Is it the voice that he's on?
Is that the name of the show? Where's he's?

Speaker 1 (00:41):
Well? Thanks, confused because I don't And I think that
is that Blake Shelton that's sitting to his right in
the video?

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Can you tell?

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (00:48):
I don't know who it is, but anyway, go ahead
and hit the music. Here Blake is singing, that's Blake
Shelton singing or whoever. Then Tom Jones takes over his
own song eighty three. Then he stands up and activates

(01:17):
the hips. Holy moly, man, that guy sounds as good

(01:45):
as I recall him.

Speaker 2 (01:46):
My sister, my sister was a big fan of Tom Jones.

Speaker 1 (01:49):
She was, uh, well, she graduated from high school in
seventy one, so that I mean that was about the era.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
She was absolutely nuts about this guy. He's wore the tight.

Speaker 1 (02:00):
Pants and the shirt unbuttoned down to his knees, and
the gold chains and stuff, and I just thought he
was sugary, sappy even as a kid.

Speaker 2 (02:08):
I'm like, I'm not into this at all.

Speaker 1 (02:10):
And but now now watching that, watching wow, he's eighty
five now, I think he was eighty three when he
did that. And you know it wasn't a prepped thing
or whatever. They started messing with him about his song
and the guy on the daist started singing it and

(02:32):
Tom Tom just took over, and I, I don't know,
I'm just I'm.

Speaker 2 (02:39):
Inspired by that.

Speaker 1 (02:39):
Maybe it's because, you know, as I get older, I
don't want to I'm not old. My body may be older,
my knees may feel older thanks to Vanskoy hair, my
head doesn't look as old as it used to look.
But that that is empower powering to me to see that,

(03:02):
to see him still doing it now. Again, there are
some out there who are not even close to his
age that are They're terrible and they should stop. They
should absolutely stop. But when I see stuff like that,
I think that's one of the reasons, you know, Mark
and I like Sammy Haigar so much because he just
refuses to not be able to beld him out like that.

(03:27):
I just, I just I wanted to share that with
you because it was it was inspirational me. You have
no idea who Tom Jones even is doing.

Speaker 3 (03:32):
I know that song I made everybody I have heard
that song and a couple of others didn't he sing tho.

Speaker 2 (03:36):
If it wasn't for Carlton, you wouldn't have heard that sound.
I know that dance came Now he did have a
hit with.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
He's saying She's a lady too, right, yeah, okay, yeah.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
What was it called? Was it Kiss?

Speaker 1 (03:55):
And I think Prince or the Art of Noise had
something to do with it. This was back in the
the nineties, and he actually charted with another one after
all those years, but that was just kind of the
short lived A lot of artists were doing that. David
Cassidy came out with Lying to Myself about the same time,
which was his first big hit since being part of

(04:16):
the Partridge Family twenty five years before that, people were
reminiscing and they were responding.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
To that stuff.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
But that's just that's that's something else, all right. So
I got that out of my sister. Now the NIL thing.
I've been thinking about this and I've said on the air.
I've said to Blazer, you know, people in our business
need to do it too. We need an eel. I
don't want, as much as I love you guys, twenty

(04:44):
five years from now, when I will, you know, likely
be part of the cosmos, I don't want somebody having
me on the air hosting a show, especially if I'm
not being represented. My true words, my true thoughts, my
true beliefs are not being represent Because with AI developing,
is it is you can take my voice, my inflections,

(05:05):
all of this stuff. Somebody can be recording me right now,
feeding it into AI, and they type up a script
that says, I think Columbus, Ohio is the best city
ever if Andy Ginther can be mayor for eternity and
they and you hear me say that on the air,
but it's not really me. I don't want that. But

(05:28):
as I got to thinking about it, you know what
it needs to be nil that we need legislation, We
don't need rules within Ohio High School Athletic Association. We
don't need rules within NCAA. What we need is legislation.
The reason I say this, let's say let's say you

(05:50):
are you're you're an overweight woman. Okay, you're walking down
the street and you are. You're an attractive woman. Just
because your overweight doesn't make you unattractive. But let's say
you're walking down the street and they go, wow, look
at her, she'd be a great model for our our

(06:11):
I don't know lposuction or weight loss or whatever we're
pumping out here. So they take video of you, and
there you are in a television commercial and they've got
a spokespirston going if you use we know that beautiful
women are everywhere, and you're not getting paid, you're not
getting compensated. You on a public street. They just use
public stock video of you walking down the street. They

(06:34):
didn't claim you endorsed the product or represented the product.
You need to stop that. They didn't claim you were
affiliated with the product. They just used an image of you,
an attractive large woman captured walking on a public street
where you have no expectation of privacy, your background, But

(06:55):
they used you. You should get paid for that, shouldn't you.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
I believe you should.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
This is why I'm thinking we need legislation NIL for
all Americans. Your name, image, likeness should not be able
to be used without your permission, written permission, and acceptable
compensation to you. So that's why I wanted to expound
on it because I've been talking strictly about high school

(07:22):
because it's in the news now because of this high
school kid who is you know, he's a heavy recruit.
He's going to be probably making a lot of money
in college, but he's in high school now and there
are people who are willing to pay him as a
high school student to use his name, image, or likeness
to sell their product. Think about Lebron James. I mean

(07:45):
we were talking about him in high school. Everybody knew
who Lebron was before he even got out of school.
Was he was he going to come to Ohio State University?
Was he going to be he went straight to the pros?

Speaker 3 (07:56):
Well, that became a parent pretty early on. I do
remember him like his mom got a hummer or something
and people are like, I can't believe it. I'm like,
really yeah, Because if I was his dad, I would go, look,
you know, my kid is like, I'll pay you back. Yep,
Like why would the dealership would be crazy not to
just give it?

Speaker 1 (08:13):
You know?

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Absolutely? But are you? Are you in agreement with what
I'm saying here?

Speaker 1 (08:17):
I mean, if somebody decided to use your picture for
something or video of you on a public street, no privacy, Yes,
you should get you should get recognized, compensated. Your permission
should be required for that. And right now it's not.
You have to go to court and fight and hope
that the judge and or jury sees things your way.

(08:40):
There's no guarantee. I think all Americans should have an
IL coverage.

Speaker 2 (08:45):
I really do.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
The more I've thought about this, the more reasonable I
think it is. Or maybe that's just me. I don't know.
Julie's been standing by. I'm not real sure why. But Julie,
you're on the Legacy Retirement Group dot com phone lines. Hi. Hey,
I think he also saying what snoop pushy? Well, yep,
I remember that, and Delilah. Wasn't that him? Or was

(09:08):
that Ingelbert humperdink s Odd? Yeah? Well, I mean it
was a different era though, But I mean, Julie, were
you impressed with it.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
Eight I mean eighty three years old with.

Speaker 1 (09:24):
Yeah, yes, and he's and he sounded exactly like he
did back then. I can't believe. I couldn't believe he
saved his eighty three yeah, I know, not a big, full,
powerful voice, just like he was back at you know,
thirty years old. Again.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
It was great, Yes, it was.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
I hope, I hope I'm like that in like twenty minutes,
much un less eighty three. I appreciate the call, and
thanks for the reminder on that what's new pussy Cat
and Delilah, and it's not unusual. And I mean the
guy was. He was a hit maker and women loved him.
I did see him interviewed once, and he did, he
said he'd one of the things he didn't like was
the fact that women it was the seventies again, remember

(10:02):
you know, they were burning brawls and women's lib and
all this stuff, and what the tradition at his concerts
women would throw undergarments at him. And I saw him
interviewed because I really didn't like that much. I don't
know what that's been.

Speaker 3 (10:20):
I mean, you don't know.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
At least he was honest about it.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Yeah, but you know, he played the role, and he
sold records and and you know, here we are fifty
years later talking about it. So he must have done
it right, really already. So I can't talk about five.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
Six, seven eight, No, I mean there's things that we
have plenty of time. I just like to get out
of here. I you know, his good Tom Jones net
worth is like two hundred million bucks.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Yes, yes, he made a couple of dinner right, fair enough,
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