Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hull Hogan passed away. We saw this come across the
news right before I got off the air for my
morning show at eleven o'clock. Is there people in this
country that don't know about how hul Cogan? Say?
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Most people know. There might be some young folks that
aren't familiar. How long has it been since he was
in the public eye as far as you know a
wrestler in movies when I was a kid. When I
was a kid, he had kind of pivoted from being
that big wrestler and you could see him like a
movies and stuff. I wasn't he in a couple movies.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
He was in a couple of movies. He was in
one of the rocky movies he was. That's what got
him famous. Yeah, Yeah, I had one of those.
Speaker 2 (00:36):
I can't remember what they were called, but they were
like when I was real little, my parents got me this.
It was it was basically like a wrestling doll that
was made so that you could kind of wrestle with
it too, and it was a whole cogan.
Speaker 1 (00:48):
A whole cogan. I had a macho man, ready savage
one of those right on. Yeah, So I had a
lot of fun with that.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
As a kid.
Speaker 2 (00:53):
Yeah, you know, coming off the turnbuckle and wrestling. I
won every time, but it wasn't really a fair fight
because it was you know, in animal right.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
Yeah yeah, and he was a lot smaller than real life.
Speaker 3 (01:03):
That's true.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, it was not made yea.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
It costs a lot more.
Speaker 1 (01:08):
I think, well, Hulk, he made wrestling what it is today.
Him an vincming man, and a lot of it has
to do with him showing up in Rocky three as Thunderlips.
Speaker 3 (01:19):
Right.
Speaker 1 (01:19):
But he wins the World Wrestling Federation Championship from the
Iron Chicen like nineteen eighty four, and we're off the
first wrestle Mania, Wrestling goes mainstream. He's in the WWF
even with sporadic movie appearances until like the early nineteen nineties,
like ninety three ninety four, leaves the World Wrestling Federation
(01:41):
to go to WCW, where after a year and a
half or so of doing that, ends up turning heel
and forms the New World Order the nWo. Remember those
guys Scott Hawk, Kevin Nash, Hulk Cogan and then the
rest of the cronies that would join them, and many
call that like a new rebirth of the wrestling boom, right,
and then after that, right, he is who he is.
(02:04):
He's more a legend than he is, you know, like
super duper relevant guy. He did go back to the
World Wrestling Federation eventually and was in WrestleMania a couple
of times. Wrestled to Rock at WrestleMania eighteen. Go back
and rewatch that match. The cop was going crazy for
both guys. It was really crazy. So just seven years
ago that was no, that was two eighteen. Yeah, wrestling
(02:25):
eighteen eighteenth. Yeah, sorry, gotcha, Yeah we were. We were
wrestling forty one this year. He did show up to Raw,
the first Raw on Netflix. He had a guest appearance.
People boot him out of the building. Hulk's legacy has
not aged very well. And that's more so what I
wanted to talk about. It sounds like from the reports
(02:46):
when it was reported that he was dead this morning,
a lot of people are like, wow, that's pretty surprising.
And then we learned that he went into cardiac arrest
this morning, so like he wasn't doing so great and
then went into cardiac arrest this morning, and that's eventually
what ended up killing him. This guy was really hard
on his body, not in the same way Ozzy Osbourne
was hard on his body, but he was hard on
his body.
Speaker 3 (03:06):
I mean bumps.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
If you look at guys that did wrestling for a
long time, like the bumps that they take, and how
much that like messes with their back, how many surgeries
that they'd need to have. I'm sure Hulks had a
laundry list of surgeries. Then, of course, I think, I
don't think I'm spoiling anything for people. He absolutely was
on like roids and supplements like not just supplements that
(03:28):
we take now like fisial oil, on stuff to make
us feel like healthy and good or vitamins. This is
a guy that you know, was doing stuff to make
his body as big and as muscular as possible.
Speaker 3 (03:38):
But that was the era.
Speaker 1 (03:39):
I mean that was if you were going to be
in wrestling or bodybuilding or anything like that at the time.
I mean, you had to do what you had to
do to make it. I mean, he was by far,
he was far from the only guy, especially in that era.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Do you think there was is there wrestlers today that
don't do that or as they say, are natty, you know,
don't I use any yeah, or any.
Speaker 3 (04:01):
Definitely there definitely is.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
There's a lot more smaller guys right that are that
have not turned up the gas, if you know what
I mean. And the wrestling is different. It's more high
like fast paced. There's not as many big, large dudes, right.
And that's not to say that there's not really impressive athletes,
but they do have I think a much stricter testing
(04:24):
because the Federation itself got in trouble a couple of
times for steroid use. That's not to say everybody's clean,
because I don't know that for sure, but it's definitely
not like if you put on a wrestling show from
today and put on a wrestling show from nineteen ninety,
the contrast in the physiques you're going to see are
very different.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Can I ask why would they get in trouble for
that when it's entertainment.
Speaker 3 (04:47):
Well, that's the thing.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
So around the early nineties, hul Covid and Vice McMahon
both were I think the post for the distribution right
if they thought that Vince McMahon and World Wrestling Federation
were like distributing steroids to the talent, which would be illegal. Ah,
you have to get like a prescription and even then, right,
(05:09):
it's just like there was it was a new enough
thing even then that it was difficult to test for
and to legislate. And even then, right go back and
look what Vince McMahon looked like in his fifties, which
would have been in the nineties or so, and I
mean that guy was pumping himself full of steroids. I mean,
the guy was jacked, super jacked, way bigger than a
guy like that should have been. And I don't know
(05:32):
they were able to get off from, you know, getting
jail time or anything like that when it came to
prison time or anything like that. But I think and
then you know, guys dying young. Now the hul Cochin
living to seventy one, and that's not like that that's
a full life, especially for a wrestler. But guys who
were dying in their thirties and forties and fifties like
(05:52):
who were wrestlers, that I think definitely changed how they
were viewing substances and wanted because when especially after Chris
bin Wah and he killed himself and his wife and
his son, that he was working for the World Wrestling
or WWE at that time in the mid two thousand,
so I think The bigger story with that was they
(06:14):
had to correct the narrative because all anybody was talking
about when that happened was first of all, in insane tragedy.
But what role did wrestling play. He had a ton
of concussions. We probably just kept throwing him out there regardless.
You know, we weren't taking brain health seriously in two
thousand and six, two thousand and seven, and then he
was known to also be on routs and what role
(06:36):
did steroids play in him doing that? And so at
that point, especially, wrestling had to find a way to
kind of pivot and try to change what the public
perception was of the product and also of the people
who were working in the product. And that's why it
just looks and feels so different now than it did.
(06:57):
You know, it's very athletic now, but it's not as
strong man and type now. There's not as many guys
like that.
Speaker 3 (07:02):
Does that make sense, Okay?
Speaker 1 (07:03):
And that's one of the reasons why Hole Cogin was
so like remarkable is because he had the perfect wrestler physique.
He was big, he was tall, he was muscular. The
red and yellow, the headband, the shirt that he would
rip off right iconic stuff, and there were just was
not a lot of guys who even to this day
(07:23):
were built like that.
Speaker 3 (07:25):
We'll talk. We got to talk more about this.
Speaker 1 (07:26):
There's other stuff to unpack here, but the complicated legacy
of somebody like hul cokein and we'll get to that
coming up on News Radio eleven to ten Kfab.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
And Marie Sunger.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
The complicated legacy that he leaves behind me. Talked about
the wrestling part of it.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Growing up.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
I mean, everybody knew who hul Cogan was. He broke
the walls of what wrestlers were and turned them into
pop culture icons. He was the guy that was the
first one through the wall. He had one stick, really
that was the each vitamin, say your prayers and what
you're gonna do with whole comania runs wild on you?
Speaker 3 (08:02):
Brother? You know that guy.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
And then when he turned here with the nWo, that
changed into a much cooler version of him, you know,
playing the championship belt like a guitar, acting cooler, had
like the five o'clock shadow beard underneath his bleach blonde mustache,
the black and the white Hollywood hul Cogan, completely different
type of guy. And I don't know like he He
(08:28):
was important if you watched entertainment or you watched wrestling
growing up. But in recent years things have changed, things
have gotten more complicated. He got in trouble with a
sex tape. I don't know if you remember the sex tape,
but one of his buddies down in Florida basically paid
him to make one of those with his wife. Very strange,
(08:48):
odd situation, and someone unhappy with hul Coogan leaked that
and it got out. This is why don't film anything
that you do not want to accidentally find itself on
the end Internet. So that was a weird thing. And
then he was on tape saying some pretty dog on
racist stuff about African American people, and you know, we
(09:10):
can blame a lot of different things there, and he
apologized and said there was no excuse for that. That
was back, you know, in the ear in the early
to mid two thousand. He basically was having to answer
for that for the rest of his life. And that's
not to say that that's wrong, because when you say
stuff that overtly racist with racial slurs and things like that,
(09:32):
and it was as it pertained in context, he was
talking about his daughter and who she was interested in dating,
and when that went public, I mean that it's hard
for anybody to come back from that. And then, as
you know, time has gone on, he has lied a lot.
I mean he I don't even know. It goes far
beyond misremembering things, but just true, legitimate fabrications of things
(09:54):
that he had done or was, you know, and there
are different people who have done full on omnibus pot
cast going through the stuff that he has said that
was not true, whether it was him, you know, he
was being offered a baseball career at some point he
had you know, he was in a way like a musician,
(10:14):
but he wasn't like the way he talked about being
connected with certain people. It just wasn't true, right, So
there were different things that people with the Internet at
their disposal can go back and correct stuff that he
was saying and forever sorts. He's not the only person,
especially in the wrestling business, that's ever told a lot
of lies. All those guys are kind of full of themselves.
(10:35):
And then the last one was his turn into politics
here in twenty twenty four, if you remember, he showed
up at the Republican National Convention and gave an old
fashioned Hule Cogan speech endorsing Donald Trump for the presidency,
which if there were any people on the political left
that even kind of respected or liked toul Cogan, after that,
(10:57):
that was gone. Once that happened, the last time he
was in public as far as in front of a
wrestling crowd. He showed up the first Raw, Monday night
Raw of January. It was the first raw on Netflix,
I think it was January second or third, and there
were a ton of people that showed up for that,
you know, the Rocket showed up for that, had a
(11:18):
bunch of old wrestlers, there were actors, celebrities that were
all over that they were showing because it was in
La And he came out his music hit and he
was the one person, the one person that was a
legend in wrestling and especially in the crowd, and he
came out to do a promo for beer. You know,
he's like pedaling what was called real American beer now.
(11:38):
And it was him and Jimmy Hart, the Mouth of
the South, who was his longtime manager and both the
World Wrestling Federation in WCW and a longtime friend and
Jimmy Hart everybody loves, you know, everybody historically said that
that's just a.
Speaker 3 (11:52):
Really nice guy.
Speaker 1 (11:53):
They came out, Jimmy's waving an American flag, and Hogan
is coming out and he's wanting to do a pro
say happy to be here for the first raw on Netflix,
and hey, by some real American lagger. You know, it's
a new brand of beer that I'm partnering with, and
we want to go buy your beer. Right And he
was the only person booed out of the building. I mean,
(12:15):
he basically was booed out of the building. When he
came out, he was booed. You could see on his face.
He was not anticipating that reaction. I don't know what
he expected, especially after his foray a little bit into
endorsement of politics, especially this being a Los Angeles crowd.
It just didn't make a lot of sense that he'd
be surprised by that. But I'm sad that that's the
last time, regardless of legacy, I'm sad the last time
(12:37):
that he was seen by a crowd of people. That
was what ended up happening, and we didn't see him
after that.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
Now is that cool?
Speaker 1 (12:46):
Are we okay with legacies being like an instead of
being able to remember somebody. I mean, I guess the
first time I really felt this way was when rush
Limbaud died a few years back, when he passed this
whole kind of like, oh he was a jerk and
I don't like him from the political left, basically dancing
on the grave. That was when I started feeling uncomfortable, like, man,
(13:08):
are we there now is a society that when somebody
passes away that you don't like, it's not even just
about ignoring it or not like just refusing to say
rest in peace or you don't have to do anything,
or just ignoring it, but instead acknowledging the death and
saying I'm glad he's gone. World's better place. Seen a
lot of that with hul Cogan today.
Speaker 3 (13:27):
I do.
Speaker 2 (13:29):
Just my initial blush reaction is those two there feel
like apples and oranges.
Speaker 1 (13:32):
They are they are, but it's but it's the same
type of thing, right, It's like I want to go
on social media to tell people that I am happy
this person is dead.
Speaker 2 (13:41):
Essentially, I mean, one of them made his career like
with a political talk show that was all about dividing
people and hating people who are different than you.
Speaker 1 (13:51):
Well, and I mean entertainment wise, Yes, one percent. I
totally understand what you're saying. But that was the first
time I saw it, and it's happened several times since.
But today is another example of like, there's a guy
who made a career entertaining people, right, and he had
major flaws, and he had moments the sex tape, the
(14:11):
racial outburst that was released by Gawker, that you know,
led to a big lawsuit in his political foray that
people will say, well, I disagree completely with his politics,
and now I don't like him even more. He dies,
and instead of just like not acknowledging it, they acknowledge it,
but they say like they're they're celebrating him being dead.
That's weird to me that we're there, And I don't know,
(14:33):
maybe that's just me. If you got some thoughts whole
Coger memories, or just thoughts generally on legacy and how
a person's legacy can be so complicated that people feel
one way or the other that they have to acknowledge
the death, whether it's in commemoration or in celebration of life,
or just trying to celebrate the fact that they're gone.
I don't know, call me at fourho two five five
(14:53):
eight eleven ten four H two five five eight eleven
ten it's news radio eleven ten kfab and RaSE songer
Ozzy O for we had Hulk Hogan, who is the third?
I have two answers because now there's a fourth?
Speaker 2 (15:06):
Well, and I would, okay, you go ahead, but I
think you're gonna miss one, and so I'm gonna add
a fifth.
Speaker 3 (15:11):
What if I say the one that you're thinking of
knock him?
Speaker 1 (15:14):
Jamal Warner passed away. I think that's number three. I
think that's the third one. And that was before, right,
so so Hulk would have been the third guy, and
then Chuck Man Jony.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Okay, I didn't expect it, People of Earth, I didn't
expect that. Okay, that was that was gonna be my
good to see Chuck getting some run.
Speaker 3 (15:33):
He's dead. You found out he died two days ago.
Dang it.
Speaker 2 (15:38):
I wasn't supposed to laugh at that, all right, P
to one of the greats. Does it feel so good? No,
it doesn't. It's sad, but he's feeling good right now.
The angels are hearing that song. I'm looking forward in
the system.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Hold on, don't give me a second now the people
are clamoring.
Speaker 3 (15:53):
They're not clamorating for anything. Chuck Jones, I don't know.
I don't know if they do.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
I don't know if they do anyway, Chuck man Joni
passing away.
Speaker 3 (16:03):
He was eighty four. By the way, I did you know.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
My experience with Chuck is a bit different than I
think most people because Chuck Mangoni was the theme of
my freshman year of high school's marching band show. Like
we did marching band stuff and it was nothing but
Chuck Mangioni songs, which at the time, fourteen year old
me had no idea what this music was, and the
(16:29):
drum parts were pretty hard. I had not played anything
like that before, but since then I was like, oh, man,
I kind of like Chuck at Manjoni and the music
that we played in that show. He takes me back.
It's nostalgic for me.
Speaker 2 (16:40):
Why don't we just get the time machine and reminisce
on what exactly it sounded like when little Emery Songer
was learning that song in Drum Corps.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
This is the thing everybody's talking about, Like when the
eagles all finally die and people stop beating. Sued for
trying to use their music and YouTube videos right, because
they were notorious just like you can't use our music.
They're super protective. They were the guys that were super like.
They didn't care how much it like strangled the growth
of their music that they didn't want to be super
(17:26):
available on streaming platforms. They just didn't want their music
out there and you would have to like buy the
album if you wanted their stuff. And I think finally
some people got to them and said, people just are
not doing that anymore, and eventually now their stuff is
popping up on the streaming services.
Speaker 2 (17:42):
Is that why the dude hated the Eagles?
Speaker 3 (17:44):
I always wondered why he hated the Eagles so much.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Well, I think he hated him for a different reason,
but you're talking about the big Lebowski. Yeah, yeah, I
just think he was just not vibing. He wasn't matching
their energy level.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
It's just interesting to me. But maybe they were too
on the nose. Maybe too many people thought he liked
the Eagles and that annoyed him.
Speaker 3 (18:04):
Yeah, it's possible.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
They're not really a hippie band and he's kind of
a hippie himself, so you know, it's just like.
Speaker 2 (18:09):
I could see that being offensive either way.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
Right, So, but just on that front, just to wrap up,
why I would, you know, be a little bit concerned
about the estate is when Don Henley passes away, and
that would basically be and Joe Walsh. I think it's
pretty cool, So I'm not too worried about him and
his family. But when Don Henley passed away, I'm afraid
in his will he's going to strangle even more like
the music and his estate will be enforcing fair use
(18:35):
for all of the Eagles songs that people are trying
to use in YouTube videos. Even though it's fair use,
it's difficult, it's tough, it's wild, and yeah, I just
don't want to open ourselves up for that sort of thing.
Speaker 3 (18:47):
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
What I'll do when I put it on the pod,
I will edit out the song and I'll just do
a a cappella interpretation rendition, if you will.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
I can do a pretty good mouth trumpet, can you. Yeah?
Well you know, are you gonna? Oh you want me
to do it? Now? Well? Yeah, if people are going
to listen to this pod, I haven't even warmed up.
I got it.
Speaker 2 (19:08):
There's a whole process. I need some salt water. I
need a salt water.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I feel like you're just making stuff up now, I
got water up the pipes. Is that how that happens?
If you drink saltwater or you just gargle it. I
feel like drinking saltwater is bad for you. Although a
little bit of salt in your water isn't bad for you,
but actually, especially if you know you're gonna sweat, it
actually like helps the water in your hydration like stick.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
Oh, sodium is an electrolyne.
Speaker 1 (19:33):
Yeah, there you go. I don't know why we're talking
about this anyway. Rest in peace, Chuck BANNGIONI as well.
Here's two forty five more coming up on news radio
eleven ten kfab.
Speaker 3 (19:40):
And raised on there. Krug Park.
Speaker 2 (19:43):
I think that's Krug I'm got that right, krue par Park. Yeah,
you're in Omaha or Gallagher Park. It was an amusement
park in Omaha. Oh oh yeah, there's actually a bar
is it in Benson that's called the Krug Park.
Speaker 3 (19:57):
I think that's still there.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
And I looked this up because I saw that apparently
in nineteen thirty, the deadliest roller coaster accident in American
history took place at Krug Park on this day in
nineteen thirty, ninety five years ago.
Speaker 2 (20:10):
I saw the same thing on Facebook. I knew nothing
of it until today. Okay, let's talk about this a second.
Speaker 3 (20:15):
Now.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
I don't imagine that there's any living people who may
have well, maybe I'm underestimating, like how old would you
have to be to have ridden on a roller coaster
at Krug Park?
Speaker 2 (20:25):
And there also is I was right. There's a bar
called Krug Park sixty second in Maple there in Benson.
So I just wanted to clarify that I was correct
on that. So I give myself an ego boost.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
Good job, ego boosts, you need dose.
Speaker 1 (20:38):
July twenty fourth, nineteen thirty, the most deadly roller coaster
accident in the United States to that point had happened.
The park's Big Dipper roller coaster crashed after six pm.
A bolt worked loose. Four cars full of children and
teenagers plunged to the ground. Oh Four people, a fifteen
year old, a twenty two year old, twenty nine year old,
and a thirty four year old were killed. Seventeen additional
(21:01):
people were injured, and the Omaha City Council immediately afterward
passed an ordinance banning roller coasters in the city of Omaha.
Kreuk Park stayed open, but business declined and it closed
ten years later in nineteen forty. A bit over and
overreached there banning roller coasters because of this accident.
Speaker 2 (21:16):
Well, think of the context, that's the worst that's ever happened.
Speaker 3 (21:20):
Still, yeah, but I mean it was an accident.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
This is nineteen thirty. This is I would think that
roller coasters are not all that is old at that point.
That's a pretty new technology. Yeah, I mean some of
it is.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
I think that there have been different types of roller
coaster styles, and you can go to the East Coast
and find some really old ones from the turn of
the century. I just wonder, you know, again, this is
not maybe I'm overreacting to that part of it, but
I mean it's tragic. Obviously, it's tragic, and I'm sure
that they didn't have the technology or the inspection type
(21:56):
of thing at the time to make sure everything was good.
Speaker 3 (21:59):
Right.
Speaker 1 (22:00):
Fact that a bolt work loose and it created that
problem happening, I mean, what a terrifying situation for everybody involved.
But people have been dying at roller Coast like amusement
parks in years past, I mean over there to Adventureland
a few years ago. Do you remember that when an
eleven year old kid died on a raft ride? Yeah,
it's just awful, right, So I mean now the raft
(22:21):
ride hasn't been opened since, and it but it passed
inspection the day before. And what do you do in
that situation, right? I mean, are you supposed to just
know something bad is going to happen? Now, in hindsight,
there are a few different things that could have been
done to help probably help prevent that from happening to
that young person, and you feel terrible about it. But
(22:42):
Disney's had problems, I mean, universals had I mean different
things happened at different places. All I'm saying is I
had absolutely no idea this even existed. I had no
idea that this thing even was a thing, Right, And
it's kind of creepy thinking about something from that long
ago because I just didn't even know like this area
ever had something like this.
Speaker 2 (23:01):
Yeah, it's crazy that I've lived here as long as
I have, and I don't know how I didn't know
about this.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
This would also have been right, so you would need
to be Like, if you went to Kruge Park and
enjoyed the roller coaster in nineteen thirty, you would have
probably needed to be born around nineteen twenty, right, So,
I mean you'd have to be a centenarian right now
if you were listening to this show and have any
experience on the Big Dipper roller.
Speaker 2 (23:25):
Coaster when park KFAB came around in the nineteen Yeah,
it's one hundred years so it came around, So KFAB
likely would have reported on this horrible tragedy. Yeah, it
would have been around. I would have been a radio
station for five years at that point, yeah.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
And it definitely would have, right, because that was what
radio was for. Then beyond, you know, some of the
musical entertainment that you know would have graced the airwaves
back in the day where it was a lot harder
to I just would love to be in a radio
station at that time, like all of the different pieces
and the different people that had to have a job
to get the station to operate. Nowadays, most of what
(24:01):
we do is in a computer. You know, there were
people that had to do a lot of that stuff.
And then think about like the musical performances and things
in the way that they would set it up and
have to perform like live entertainment plays like radio plays
and stuff.
Speaker 3 (24:15):
Crazy stuff, man, Yeah, they'd read all the commercials would
be live. Yeah yeah.
Speaker 1 (24:20):
I mean, just go back and listen to some of
the early baseball broadcasts that have been saved from like
the thirties, and it's eye opening stuff. It is crazy
how different things were.
Speaker 3 (24:30):
Anyway.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
Yeah, So Krug Park Amusement Park in the Benson neighborhood
of Omaha, ninety five years ago today, deadly roller coaster
incident who claimed the lives of four young people. Wild anyway,
two fifty five. Let's go ahead, and I got a
couple of pairs of tickets to give away. Let's just
go ahead and do one right now. How about the
thirty eighth caller? You know, because Ronnie van Zandt the
(24:54):
former lead singer of Leonard Skinner legendary lead singer.
Speaker 3 (24:57):
His brother is the lead singer now.
Speaker 1 (25:00):
But their other brother, the third Van's Ant brothers the
lead singer of thirty eight special. So there you go.
You have a little bit of a super connector there.
Let's go ahead and do caller thirty eight. If you
are the thirty eighth caller, you will have a shot
at two tickets to go see Leonard Schinner at the
Iowa State Fair. All you gotta do is call in
at four oh two five five eight eleven ten. Four
(25:20):
oh two five five eight eleven ten. That is the
phone number, and the thirty eighth caller will win the
two tickets to and that'll be on Monday, August eleventh.
So call us now at four oh two five five
eight eleven ten and we'll give that thirty eighth caller
the two tickets. Thanks for listening to news Radio eleven
ten KFAB