Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Now the financial information that just might change your life.
This is the Bloomberg Money Minute on seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 2 (00:09):
Alrighty, we check in with genis Cervetti from our Bloomberg
newsroom in New York City. Wireless companies are spending a
ton of cash these days on promotions there every other commercial.
But apparently one major carrier just reported that it lost
customers last quarter.
Speaker 3 (00:25):
Yeah, you've probably noticed the ads, don maybe even switched companies.
But Verizon maybe losing a step here. The nation's largest
mobile service provider lost wireless phone subscribers in the recent
three month period. Now, all three of the major carriers
have been using costly promotions and incentives to tempt us
to switch networks, but AT and T and T Mobile
(00:48):
added a lot of customers in their latest quarters. However,
we are seeing Verizon shares hire this morning. The company
beat on estimates when it comes to FiOS internet signups
and also its earnings per sh tom.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
Meanwhile, Craft Times results point to ongoing consumer weakness.
Speaker 3 (01:07):
Yes, the maker of Craft mac and cheese and its
famous ketchup is preparing to split into two. But Kraft
Heindes just lowered its sales outlook and it's struggling to
sell investors on these plans to split the company into
two businesses at a time when consumers have been broadly
moving away from processed foods.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
Anyway, Tom, all.
Speaker 2 (01:29):
Right, Gina, and a big day to day. The futures
are right now.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
Yes, we have the FED wrapping up a meeting, We've
got some big tech earnings, and right now the futures
look good. Dow future's up fifty eight, SMP futures up nineteen,
Nasdaq futures are up one hundred and eighteen.
Speaker 4 (01:46):
From Bloomberg.
Speaker 3 (01:47):
Gina Cervetti on News Radio seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
Almost apropos this tune from Genesis misunderstanding, because there seems
to be I don't know if misunderstanding is the right
word in this case, but a lot of sort of
gray area and what to understand and what not to understand,
specifically about this whole sale of th drinks and intoxicating
(02:18):
hemp products which a Hamilton County judge extended a temporary
block against the emergency ban of those, and kind of
enough to join us, and he's got interest in this
whole thing. There's no two ways about it. But there's
nothing wrong with that. Everybody does in some form or fashion.
He was kind enough to send me a message on
(02:39):
x yesterday, and that's Scotty Hunter, co founder of Urban
Artifact Beer and coach Aloe Hemp. Scotty, good morning. Thanks
for the message yesterday and thanks for your time today.
How's everything for you?
Speaker 5 (02:53):
Hey, I'm doing great, Tom, Thanks for having me on
the program.
Speaker 2 (02:56):
Absolutely all right, Look, let's start with what you know
most about in this thing. I don't want to necessarily
get into the whole marijuana dispensary. The taxpayers voted for
that in Ohio a couple of years ago. But there
is a distinct difference between the amount of THC inside
of a hemp product compared to something you might buy
(03:18):
at a marijuana dispensary. Correct, let's start with that.
Speaker 5 (03:22):
Yeah, that's absolutely correct. You know these are low levels
of THHC. And really this all came about through the
twenty eighteen Farm Bill, So hemp has a federal legal
classification here in the United States, where marijuana still does
not currently.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
Okay, so we start with that, now, correct me if
I'm wrong here. My understanding in Governor de Wines wanting
to stop the sale of some of this or at
least move it into marijuana dispensaries. Had to do with
some of the packaging. Let's just start with some of
the hemp products, not the alcohol, I mean, not the
beer part of it with THHC. But as far as
(04:01):
some of the packaging is concerned that it might be
trying to appeal to kids as though it's candy, Well,
would you agree with him on at least that part
of this that that's a fair argument.
Speaker 4 (04:14):
Oh? Absolutely, Tom.
Speaker 5 (04:15):
You know, the entire hemp industry, not only beverage where
I reside, advocates for sensible, responsible regulation. These items should
not be targeted at children. They should have clear labeling
standards and requirements. And we've seen a lot of states
across the country adopt such rules already in the last
few years, and we expect more and more to follow
(04:37):
suit in the coming year.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
So, you know, I think with what.
Speaker 5 (04:41):
The House passed here last week and that we expect
to kind of go to conference committee next week, is
Ohio was starting to move in the right direction to
get some of those guardrails in place.
Speaker 4 (04:51):
So I do want to go ahead, No, no, no, please finish.
I want to hear what you have to say not me.
Speaker 5 (04:56):
Yeah, yeah, I was going to say. I think I
want to really hit on the fact that it's a
misnomer that this is a completely unregulated market.
Speaker 6 (05:04):
You know, the state.
Speaker 5 (05:05):
Of Ohio has cultivation and processing rules in place. We
obtained the HAMP processing license through the State of Ohio.
We're viewed and inspected by the State of Ohio. The
litany of protocols and tests that we have to go
through to produce our HAMP beverages frankly, far exceeds the
requirements in terms of testing that we have to do
for our beer. You know, we're testing for pesticides, heavy metals, micotoxins,
(05:29):
all kinds of other microbial contaminants and those all have
to pass before we can release and sell that product
into the market. And this is the case in a
lot of states.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
Okay, now help me with this part of it. The
THC drinks. Okay, and you have some of this in
your Urban Artifact beer. Talk to me about regulation in
that regard. Okay. Look, everybody knows you can walk into
a bar. Unfortunately it happens way too often.
Speaker 4 (05:58):
We know this.
Speaker 2 (05:59):
You can walk into a bar. You have one or
two too many beers. The next thing you know, there
are some people getting behind the wheel of a car
and off they go.
Speaker 4 (06:06):
They shouldn't be driving.
Speaker 2 (06:07):
Talk to me about is there regulation Are we able
to tell if somebody has had too much THC inside
of a beer?
Speaker 5 (06:19):
Well, in real quick clarification, Tom, we have clear separation
between our beer which contains alcohol, and then have products
which contains low amount of gage. We can't intermingle those
and we don't. So I think the other thing that
people don't necesarily understand when they're unfamiliar with this category
is because it is still pretty new overall in the
grand scheme of things, is that there's in terms of
(06:41):
beverage specifically, there's a similar type of feedback from your
body when you consume one of these low dose beveragrees.
So you get that lax, calming feeling when you consume
one of these beverage in a similar time brain that
if you drank a beer or cocktail. So in that way,
you know, individuals can say regulate, which I think we're
all a fan of, but also bartenders and staff if
(07:04):
we're talking about a bar restaurant, can observe the behavior
of the patron similar to what they would with an
alcoholic beverage and determine. Hey, that's you've had enough, right
we give that trust to our servers already for adult
use adult products, and the same thing goes with them products.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Why would give me the argument, if you wouldn't mind,
Scottie Hunter, give me the argument of why hemp products
should not be sold inside of marijuana dispensaries if they
have any THC even though it's considerably less than normal
marijuana products you'd buy in a dispensary.
Speaker 5 (07:48):
Yeah, these are products that dispensaries don't want.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
The carries they're not they don't make.
Speaker 5 (07:54):
Sense for the space a setup there. You know, if
you look at national data the whole you know, a
THHD beverage, whether it's hemp based or you know, traditional
marijuana base, it's less than one percent of dispensary sales.
So these products are you know, servicing a market that
doesn't get served under a lot of the state and
(08:17):
you know regulated marijuana programs.
Speaker 4 (08:21):
Is with with with marijuana?
Speaker 2 (08:24):
We read so much about how there would be more
money that flowed back into supporting X, Y and Z,
whether it's local municipalities, mucual towns, whether it's our tax
base in general. Is there anything like that in the
hemp industry, Scott.
Speaker 5 (08:42):
So, And this has kind of been more state by
state basis, but as you put, had states passed regulation
on the distribution and retail sales of hemp products, there
have been tasses that have put into place. So in
the in the bill that passed the House here in
the state of Ohio, on the beverage side, it has
an excise tax similar to.
Speaker 4 (09:01):
You know, beer, wine or spirits.
Speaker 5 (09:03):
And I believe on the other categories of products it's
a retail tax that's similar to the recreational adult youth program.
Again not speaking and with the expertise on that piece specifically,
and so there there, there's that aspect of it. And
we've we've seen other neighboring states pass similar legislation with
with tax income. You know, Kentucky is one, for example,
(09:26):
It's had a program for a number of years. They
did make some updates earlier this year to their program.
West Virginia's had one for a number of.
Speaker 4 (09:32):
Years as well.
Speaker 5 (09:32):
Those those states have already overseen had taxes in place
for the distribution sale of products in their state. Well,
I would just haven't gotten to that point, and I
think we're gonna we're gonna get there here before the end.
Speaker 4 (09:45):
Of the year.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Okay, at the end of the day, it seems to
me and Scotti Hunter, you tell me if I'm right
or wrong on this. The bottom line is is that
people who are selling these in wherever it is that
they're selling Okay, the owner of a business, could be
a gas station, could be whatever it might be, they
have to hold up there into the bargain to not
give you guys a bad name by just simply charting people.
Speaker 4 (10:07):
Is that accurate? Is that fair?
Speaker 1 (10:10):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (10:10):
No, that's absolutely fair, And that's you know, that's what
we're asking tom right. You know what, we produce our
products that are nets for people that are twenty one plus.
We treat them the same as our beers when they
come into our tap room, and then when we do
sell into retail accounts, we as we have the same event.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
Well, it's great, s Scotty.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
I can't thank you enough for reaching out and for
clearing up some of this stuff out there, because I
got to be honest with you. I mean, I have
a hard time breaking it down. I think a lot
of other people out there have a hard time really
being able to understand some of the intricacies which you
have been kind enough to clear up today. So Scotty
Hunter can't thank you enough for your time. Hope you
have a great weekend ahead.
Speaker 6 (10:48):
Thanks Tom.
Speaker 4 (10:49):
Yeah, I appreciate the time.
Speaker 5 (10:50):
And you know we'll have to get you some samples
here before too long and you can get that first
hand experience, you know.
Speaker 4 (10:55):
All I need.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
My daughter beat me over the head about drinking it.
All right, Scotty Hunter, thank you very much. It's eight nineteen.
We've had a lot of rain today. We've got some
issues on the roads, Chuck. Are they getting any better
from our last check?
Speaker 3 (11:08):
Not?
Speaker 4 (11:08):
In some spots No.
Speaker 7 (11:09):
In fact, the list of accidents continues to grow. This
from the uc Health Tramfhing Center. With a stroke, every
second counts, and so does your team home to rapid
life saving treatment and clinical trials. You see health is
the clear choice for stroke care. Learn more at UCHealth
dot com. Heavy traffic southbound seventy five out of Westchester
(11:29):
and continuing through Lachland on northbound seventy five, you'll need
an extra half hour out of Florence into town. Cruise
continue to work with the wreck on northbound seventy five
a Deser Charles, and again just after you get past
Town Street, that one's on the right. The latest is
southbound seventy one. Another accident near Fields Eirdle that traffic
(11:50):
slow from just below Western Row and continues heavy to Redbank.
Chuck Ingram News Radio seven hundred wlw OUR.
Speaker 2 (11:58):
WCPO nine first Warning four Castle get used to the
rain at least for about the next roughly forty eight
hours today, tonight tomorrow. Spotty showers hanging around are high
only fifty one. That's ten degrees below our norm this
time of the year. Normally we're at sixty one for
a high. But by the time Thursday night rolls around,
(12:20):
clouds will start to break up. The rain will end
after about roughly an inch of rain, says Jennifer Ketchmark,
and then it's going to be beautiful on Friday, some sunshine,
few clouds here and there, but drying up for Halloween night.
If you're out trick or treating or going to high
school football games or whatever it is that you're doing,
(12:42):
you'll be able to do it and not get rained on.
That sounds like a good deal. It is eight twenty one,
we have the news coming up. Then at eight thirty
eight we'll visit with Pastor Chad Hoven and we're going
to talk about parenting, slash coaching, the role of emotional
closeness and structure. This is seven hundred WLW Cincinnati.
Speaker 4 (13:06):
Money, Money, Money, Better, Get ready.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
It's time for a big old wad of business news.
This is the Boomburn Money Minutes on seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 3 (13:17):
The Conference Board reports that US consumer confidence fell this
month for a third month in a row, as consumers
worry about what's ahead. Confidence remains stuck below levels seen
last year as Americans worry about their jobs and making
enough money to get by. Apple is preparing major changes
to its MacBook Air, iPad Mini, and iPad Air lineups,
(13:37):
with a plan to give the popular devices higher end displays.
People familiar with the plans tell Bloomberg Apple is testing
new versions of each product with OLED screens. The technology
delivers richer colors and deeper contrasts than the current LCD displays.
The shift is also expected to bring higher prices. Stock
start out at new record highs today on Wall Street
(13:58):
after yesterday's gains across the board. Tech is helping to
power those gains, and investors are betting on an interest
rate cut from the Fed today when it wraps up
its meeting. They'll also be paying close attention with Chair J.
Powell holding a press conference afterward from Bloomberg Genus Cervetti
on news radio seven hundred wlw.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
Our podcast presented by our friends from ae Dooor and Window.
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(14:41):
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it every single Wednesday. We get together with our buddy
pastor Chad, the lead pastor at the Horizon Community Church
in Newtown, right on the banks of Little Miami River.
Speaker 4 (15:01):
Good morning, sir, how are you today?
Speaker 7 (15:04):
Yeah?
Speaker 6 (15:04):
I'm doing great. How about yourself?
Speaker 4 (15:06):
Doing all right?
Speaker 6 (15:07):
Little rainy day, but had some wonderful crisp fall days
coming up. Doesn't get knife last couple of.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
Weeks, absolutely, and it looks like we're gonna have some
good ones over the weekend after some rain today and
tomorrow and clearing up apparently tomorrow night. You know, in
the news a lot lately, and there was a big
story that's on going up in Waynesville, Ohio about a
man who's been an administrator there, a coach for forty
seven years, or an athletic director, and now all of
(15:34):
a sudden, people sort of I guess, for lack of
a better term, coming out of the woodwork some thirty
plus years later about inappropriate behavior. Whether it's true or not,
we don't know. But it is an ongoing, big story
in Waynesville, and it brings to mind the role of
not only coaches, but also parents. And you know, let's
start with parents, because I heard a lengthy what's a word,
(16:01):
a sermon for lack of a better term, I think
it was from Chip Ingram the other day talking about,
you know, structure in the household and closeness.
Speaker 4 (16:09):
So let's start with parents.
Speaker 2 (16:11):
It seems to me a lot of the parents that
I'm around right now, Chad Hoben want to be a
friend of their kids can be friends of their young kids.
Speaker 6 (16:25):
Well, I guess it depends on how you define friendship.
I mean when I first had my kids, when I
were first born, my vision statement for my parenting was
a fifty year friendship with my kids. However, that doesn't
mean every stage you're accommodating to them or acting like
they are moral equal. But my goal is to raise
kids who would be you know, responsible adults, would have
(16:47):
the tools they need for that and have the emotional
closeness so that we would have a fifty year friendship.
So I'm not sure it's either or, But if you
define friendship as a lack of structure or lack of discipline,
that I'd say you're missing out. It was a study
in years ago called the Minnesota Study, and they raided
on an X and Y axis what's needed for parenting,
for coaching, for mentoring, in any relationship, and that was
(17:09):
structure on the Y axis, and it was emotional closeness
on the X axis. And strangely, they found that parents
and coaches who had high emotional closeness I care about you,
I love you, I appreciate you, they had all emotional closeness,
but no structure, no discipline, no calling to accounts, no accountability. Strangely,
(17:32):
the parents who had the most emotional closeness but the
least amount of structure, without any at all. On the
other side, they raised the most insecure kids, which you
think would be the opport Now, the other contrast was
those who had high discipline. I'm not listening to your perspective.
Your voice hasn't heard. I'm not trying to understand the
(17:53):
whole side, but just disciplined discipline, discipline. I'm the authoritarian.
I make the rules and you obey it. Those parents
raise the most rebellious children because they had all that structure.
But the minute that structure was gone, there, out of there.
And it's actually a little verse in the Bible that says,
where the law increases, send increases even more. You've probably
(18:13):
see in your own life. You're walking along on a path,
don't you see a sign that says stay off the grass.
I wasn't even thinking about stepping on the ground, show,
but I see the sign. I'm like, well, maybe I
want to. So really, the key is not rules for
rule's sake, But how do you teach principles? I would
say all the time, I got a little inner rebel
(18:34):
in me. I've never found a rule I didn't want
to break, but a principle I don't want to love.
So part of coaching and part of parenting is trying
to teach this principle behind this application is so important.
It's important to your life. It's going to serve you well.
And so what we want to do is we want
to combine emotional closeness and the structure and discipline, because
(18:55):
those who actually combine both of those raise them most
secure children. And same thing. In a boss situation, you say, Wow,
my boss really loves me, but man, this place is
run an incompetent way. People getting away with murder around here,
and there's no accountability. What you're calling for is some
degree of structure increase. Other times, you have a boss
(19:17):
or situation where it's like, man, you know this place
is run well, but I think I'm a cog in
the wheel and no one cares about me, No one asks
about me, No one ever says anything nice about my
contribution except the once a year when I do an
annual review. So it's how do we combine both those things?
And I think if you are a person who's been coached.
You realize the benefit of coaching. You know, whether your
parent did well or coached well, or the other side,
(19:40):
you weren't coached well, or you weren't parented well. You
felt a deficit of that. You went, man, you know
what I want to do better than what was trusted
to me. That's really what a coach does. It creates
a whole environment in a family, all environment in an
area of your company. You can't control the whole environment
in your department, you see. I want to coach people
(20:00):
who can coach people to coach people. I think what I
like of parenting. I want to coach my kids so
they end up being able to coach my grandkids, so
they can coach my great grandkids. It's a culture of humility.
It's a culture of teachability. I mean, I've been a
public speaker now for I don't know, forty five years.
If you take the time back when I was on
(20:20):
stage and doing plays and stuff. To be a professional communicator,
and every week I have six people to teach me
because I watch my videos every single week, because I
want to be communicating and doing my best work next week,
next month, next year, not last week last month. But
that requires humility. It's not well, you know, I've got
a covered bob. You know, I've learned a lot, but
(20:44):
other people are going to see things I don't see.
Doesn't mean I always jump at all the feedback on
hundred percent, but I want to be open to feedback.
I want to be open to other perspectives so that
I can be my best. By having the little proverbs
in the Bible, sysm sharpens iron. We need other people
to sharpen us unless we get dult.
Speaker 2 (21:05):
You know, one word, and I've read that Minnesota study,
one word that seemed to creep into the conversation quite
a bit. That seemed to be, if not the most
important word in all of that. Now, I'm going to
talk specifically for a second and ask you about parenting
has to do with the word obedience, and how you know, Look,
(21:28):
you're trying to raise your kids, and look, whether you're
a deeply spiritual person or not, is to get them
to understand. And this is where we see in society
so frequently now where either parents aren't doing it, parents
aren't around, and all of a sudden, kids just don't
understand the importance of obedience. As they are growing up
(21:50):
and then perhaps from a more spiritual standpoint, then obedience
to how they live.
Speaker 4 (21:58):
Is that fair?
Speaker 6 (22:00):
I think it's very fair. In fact, I always say,
you don't break God's laws, you discover them. You want
to say, in the same way, it's not just spiritual things,
but you don't break the law of gravity. You discover
the law of gravity when you think a step off
of a building. And so the same way. If a
child doesn't learn that there is structure and there's truth,
and there are things that you need to submit subordinate
yourself too, then you're going to be in trouble because, hey,
(22:24):
I finally got rid of mom and dad. Well you
still got a landlord. Oh I've covered my landlord. Well
I guess, but you still have roommates, you still have
a boss, you still have These are principles that apply
in every area of life. And if you think you
can circumvent reality like the hang glider can temporarily circumvent gravity,
but you're eventually going to go down. And so you
(22:44):
want to say, I'm teaching my children how to deal
with life. Part dealing with life is dealing with truth.
The part dealing with truth is understanding. I need to subordinate,
subordinate myself to the truth here. And so as a parent,
you want to teach first time obedience. Yes, there's a
place for negotiation. Yes there's a place for appealing and
what we can talk about that too as a parent,
(23:05):
But we need to start with if dad or mom
tells you to do this, I want your first thing
you say is I'm gonna do it. I'm gonna call
you to first time obedience. Now, of course none of
us are really good at that, and that's why as
a parent, you're a teacher. And I think a lot
of people think of themselves as you know, generals or
drill sergeants's parents. But the primary role you want to
(23:25):
see yourself as a teacher. So if your child is
not giving first time of obedience, how can I teach
them that? How can I show what the consequences that
they don't but also lovingly teach what it looks like.
Then also say, now, when you're characterized by first time obedience,
there is a place to respectfully disagree, But we don't
teach that either. How what does it look like to
(23:46):
respectfully disagree? Well, after you say, dad, I'll do it,
it's okay, the next day an hour later to come
up and say, can I talk to you about something dead?
Or even in the phrases we taught our kids is
can I appeal? Sometimes answer is no, you can't.
Speaker 4 (24:02):
That's not on this one, yeap.
Speaker 6 (24:03):
Other times it's yes, you can appeal. On this one,
I'm willing to listen. I'll give it a second listen.
And many times I came back and changed my mind.
I came back and apologized by the way I handled
it because I wanted to demonstrate to my kids not
only do I want them to be teachable, but I
want to be teachable, and so I think you can
combine both those things. The question you want to ask
yourself as a parent, to coach a boss, is am
(24:26):
I living an imitatable life? Like when people see how
I'm leading, how I'm acting, how I'm parenting, would your
kids say, you know, Dad's not perfect, but he owns
it when he's not. That's an imitatable life and that's
what a coach does.
Speaker 4 (24:42):
All Right.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
Before I let you go, though, I want to ask
you. You know we get into vicious cycles, right, you know,
over and over. Okay, let's assume for a second that
you were a kid who didn't grow up with a
lot of these things. Maybe you didn't get a lot
of love, Maybe you didn't have a lot of structure.
How do you change so when you become a parent
it's different.
Speaker 6 (25:04):
Well know, I just read a great story the other
day about the movie Maverick with Jodie Foster and Mel Gibson,
and Mel Gibson kind of lost his temper on set
and and Jody took at this good chemistry. If you
saw Maverick, it was pretty cool. A little movie with
James Gardner, and he gets all upset, and you know,
he comes back to the next shot and he knew
he'd stepped in it, and he bought her some flowers
(25:24):
and he wrote her a note and he said, I
was raised by a man who taught me to fight first,
but I'm trying to be a better man. I'm sorry.
There's somebody who acknowledges I didn't come with all the
tools I needed, and certainly may gives them got the
whole train wreck of bad decisions. But he's trying to
make progress. And I think that's what you want to
do as a parent, to say it's not perfection. I'm
pursuing progress, and I tell you that grace goes a
(25:48):
long way. When you come back and your kids for
the first time in a long time here you say,
you know what, I could have handled that better. So like, oh,
my goodness, the kluphone is going off and my dad's
answering it. The kluephone is raking in my answered it,
same thing you think with your kids. You're like, oh,
my goodness, son, the klophone has been ringing for like
six months. It's founding on your door and it's going
(26:09):
to be painful if you'll pick it up. So again,
you want to model the same thing. It's okay to
say I'm not good at this. Guys, you know I'm
not good at this. You watch me every day. But
I want to at least be better at this. And
you'd be amazed at the forgiveness and grace people give
each other when they realize you're at least trying to
aim in the right direction.
Speaker 4 (26:28):
Great stuff is always.
Speaker 2 (26:29):
Pastor Chad Hoven can't thank you enough for your time
and hope you have a great rest of your week.
And uh and thanks as always, sir. Great talking to you.
Speaker 6 (26:38):
Sounds good.
Speaker 2 (26:38):
Talking Pastor Chad Hooven, always great talking with him, always
incredible wisdom.
Speaker 4 (26:43):
Every single week. We call it plain glass, stained glass.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
All right, the roadways, Chuck Ingram, have things gotten better
at all?
Speaker 7 (26:51):
Only in a couple of spots, and unfortunately in a
couple of other spots worse. This from the uc Health
Triumphy Center with a stroke, every second counts, and so
does your team. Home to rapid life saving treatment and
clinical trials. U sea Health is the clear choice for
stroke care. Learn more at ucahealth dot com. Northbound seventy
(27:13):
five is that spots low out of Florence into downtown where.
Speaker 4 (27:18):
There is an accident near Ezard Charles.
Speaker 7 (27:20):
The left three lanes are currently blocked off. Cruise are
also working with a wreck on westbound Fort Washington Ways
ramp to the sixth Street Viaduct. Further north on seventy five,
a wreck above Mitchell and at Town Street. One on
the left, one on the right, and he's bound two
seventy five, A record seventy five in Sharonville's backing traffic
(27:41):
past seven forty seven, Chuck Ingram. News Radio seven hundred WWLW.
Speaker 2 (27:45):
Alrighty our WCPO nine first warning forecast resented by Jennifer
ketch Mark. It's a whole lot of rain, up to
an inch total by the time we get through roughly
tomorrow night. Supposed to rain most of the day today,
most of the night, night, most of the day Tomorrow.
Our highs only at fifty one degrees, which is ten
degrees below our October average on a yearly basis. By
(28:09):
tomorrow night, we're getting down to thirty nine, but the
clouds will begin to break up, the rain will get
out of here. We're going to dry up by the
time we reach Halloween Day. And it looks like Halloween
night is going to be quite pleasant. And that means
high school football, playoff football, that kind of thing going on.
(28:29):
So should be in good shape by the time the
weekend rolls around. Before we say goodbye, we always ask
you to think about making a shelter pet part of
you and your family's lives. I promise you they need it,
You need it. This is seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati,