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February 19, 2025 • 70 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Indeed number one Tuch show in the Ohio Alley. This
is the bloom Daddy Experience. Your host, bloom Daddy. His
goal inform, entertain and tick people off. The bloom Daddy
Experience on news Radio eleven seventy WWVA starts now the

(00:20):
bloom Daddy Experience.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
It's seven oh six on news Radio eleven seventy. Good
Tuesday morning to you, and welcome to the Blue Daddy Experience.
She better bundle up. I just took a look. I
think the next four days we're going to be in
this polar vortex, so I don't think the temperatures are
going to go above thirty degrees.

Speaker 3 (00:36):
So if you.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Don't have to go outside, don't. If you do, make
sure you bundle up. Obviously, animals got to come in.
Just make sure you watch because I know at night,
I think the lows in the evenings are going to
be in the teens. But as I mentioned, the next
four days, it's going to be very very cold. Now,
through the years doing this morning show and other things,

(00:58):
you've got to know a lot of things about about me.
I just want to let you know that last Thursday,
that was my dad who got killed in a mining
accident in Harrison County. Our relationship over the years somewhat strained,
and you know what, I'm not going to go into
it any further.

Speaker 3 (01:13):
Through this radio show.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
I've shared a lot of things personally, but there's some
things that I think got to remain to me, if
you will. But I do appreciate people reaching out. My
condolence is certainly going to people who worked with him,
who knew him, because obviously that is a big time
loss and a traumatic event to have to deal with.

(01:36):
So just once again, do appreciate anybody out there who
has reached out, or anybody out here there who wondered
if Ed Bloomquist was related to me. Again, yes, that
was my father. I'm not going to go into the
circumstances of what happened. Everything is under investigation as of
right now. But you know, once again, really to the

(01:58):
people who were his friends and people who work with him,
I feel for you. I'm just gonna I'm just gonna
kind of leave it at that. You know, I opened
this segment talking about the weather, and I want to
go back to that for a second, because that horrific
flooding that I'm sure you've been following in Kentucky. I
literally drove through that or close to that this past weekend,

(02:23):
right before it got severe because Wright State University was
supposed to play at Longwood University in Virginia, but it
got moved because of the rain. Longwood had an all
that natural surface they wanted to play on a turf
to be able to play through some of the rain drops.
So we got moved to Wise, Virginia, And in order

(02:44):
to go to Wyse, Virginia, I drove into Charleston and
then of course you keep on going down through Mingo County,
Logan County, Hatfield and McCoy Trail and into Pikeville, Kentucky,
and then you get to Wise, Virginviginia. On the way
out Saturday, we were down here to watch Braylen play.

(03:07):
On the way out, we left early because we thought,
you know what, they're never going to get these games in,
and they didn't. But as we were leaving in the morning,
right around eleven to thirty, we were just amazed at
the amount of water, me and his mother pouring off
the hillsides Because I mean, when you're down around Wise, Virginia, Pikeville, Kentucky,
Mingo County.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
I mean, you're going through mountains, and the.

Speaker 2 (03:30):
Water that was pouring off these mountains was unbelievable. And
there were a number of spots, because you're in Hollers
down there, there were a number of spots where the
roads were already one lane of the road was totally underwater.
And that was like at eleven thirty eleven forty five am.
And I can remember, you know, the two of us

(03:51):
talking on our way out of there, saying, man, we
are getting out of here, just in time. And then
all of a sudden, you see the news the next
day about the flooding in Kentucky and people losing their lives.
And it had to be very very close because I
mean some of the stuff we went through. And fortunately
Wright State University they left on their bus later that
evening and they got out of there too, but they

(04:11):
couldn't play Saturday because a couple of the roads going
in from the hotels were washed out and the one
team couldn't get to the field.

Speaker 3 (04:19):
So just crazy stuff.

Speaker 2 (04:21):
I mean, you feel blessed whenever you see severe weather.

Speaker 3 (04:26):
And you know you just missed it, you just ducked it.
And that was us.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
I mean, otis saying, I don't know if you guys
recently have been in any type of severe weather that
you basically, you know, just kind of skimmed through it
or you didn't bear the brunt of it.

Speaker 3 (04:43):
But when you.

Speaker 2 (04:44):
See mother Nature unleash, it's a scary, scary thing.

Speaker 4 (04:49):
Mother Nature is beautiful, amazing, and scary, relentless, all at
the same time, all at the same time. I yes, absolutely,
I was just recently this fall, unfortunately, when Hurricane Helene
went through the eastern part of the United States. Of course,

(05:11):
North Carolina is one of the biggest that's talked about.
I was driving to Virginia and on our way there
for the weekend, we noticed that this one particular I
wouldn't even say it was a river, a creek maybe,
was over its its borders. There was the one section

(05:32):
that we saw there was a campground, our v park,
and we noticed that people were rushing there. There are
v's out as fast as they could. And I hate
to admit this, but we the people that I was
traveling with, we were completely oblivious to what was going
on because we checked the weather of course as to

(05:55):
where we are traveling too, but we didn't pay into
anything that we were we were traveling through, and then
we had a long weekend and on our way back
then we saw the devastation of all of the water
that just came down so quickly in this particular area.

(06:17):
And honestly, off the top of my head, I couldnt
tell you exactly where we were in our travel that,
but I still remember just those visuals of this this creek,
small river, and and there was an RV stuck in
the middle, the trees, the cars, the devastation, and yeah,

(06:37):
we drove right through it. And this was in this
not to diminish diminish what those people went through in
this particular area, but it is small potatoes compared to
what those in North Carolina dealt with. So yeah, I
have recently seen the power of what the weather can do.
Otis have you seen anything?

Speaker 5 (06:57):
Not so much recently?

Speaker 6 (06:59):
I mean, I mean the one image it always will
stand out in my mind is two thousand and four
when the hurricane. You know, we get the nine inches
of rain and a short amount of time, and when
I had my business, there was a little run. I mean,
you'd be lucky if it was an inch deep in spots,
and when you looked out the window and you could
see it coming to the top of the basically ready

(07:22):
to overflow the banks. And I mean it had to
come up. I mean it went from like a one
inch little stream to a four foot raging rapid and
you know, I just that's one of my And then
at the end of the road it was flooding and
everything else. That was the intersection of National Road in
Parkview Lane, and I just you know, I mean, I

(07:43):
just remember having having to drive and you know, get
around to get out so well.

Speaker 4 (07:49):
And there, of course are those who not to sound
lighthearted about this, but there are the is that it
is second nature to them to deal with flooding. I mean,
think about the people that live on Wheeling Island, who
live at you know, the small river. We are River Valley,

(08:11):
So when we have intense rain and a short amount
of time, it's amazing to see how how much power
is behind that water. I remember when I was in
junior high my grandmother lived in Nadina and my grandmother
was maybe at best on a good day, five foot one,

(08:33):
five foot two, tiny little thing, and there was a
major flood and I couldn't tell you the year ninety four,
maybe ninety three, and I.

Speaker 5 (08:44):
Still remember the same one, you know, in September, probably.

Speaker 4 (08:47):
Probably, but I can still remember her telling me and
her tiny little build. She was at the house by herself,
and her telling me, you've never heard a noise, and
like she heard that evening when that water came rushing
down Church Street. She said, it sounded like a monster,

(09:11):
an absolute monster, as if it was its own entity,
its own creature. That's the that's the power and strength
of mother Nature. But if you're just waking up, just
like bloom Daddy said, bundle up. It was six degrees
when I got in my car, roughly, yeah, six degrees,
So put on a couple layers this morning. It is

(09:35):
seven point fifteen on your Tuesday morning. I said Monday
earlier before we got on here, Otis corrected me. We
have plenty coming up and including the Doze Tracker. Gonna
give you an update on that and then also an
update on the Buckeye Local School District teacher story that

(09:55):
we brought you last week. You are listening to the
bloom Daddy Experience News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. We are
back seven twenty one on your Tuesday morning. The bloom

(10:16):
Daddy experience, Salmon, Otis. We were off yesterday. I don't
know if you missed us or not, but we're back.
We are back. One of the things listen, I am,
I haven't showed this to you yet, Otis. I'll show
it to you during the break. This is so entertaining. Listen.
All you have to go to is doge dash tracker

(10:37):
dot com. There is officially a tracker website set up
by doge to keep basically a tracker of what they're
finding and what they're saving for us. As of this morning,
fifty five billion dollars of taxpayers money is being saved.

(10:59):
That is three hundred and sixty six dollars and sixty
seven cents per taxpayer. I can think of a few
things I could do with that three hundred and sixty
six dollars of my money. Now, keep in mind, this
is just since January twentieth, so twenty eight days roughly.

(11:22):
Let's see me in twenty five thirty days. Think about that.
Think of what has been found and the money that
has been saved in this short amount of time. Take
out the absolutely ridiculous reactions that the Democrats are having.

(11:43):
Not going to get into all that because we've talked
about that. But I just want to highlight the numbers.
Fifty five billion dollars and they have just scratched the
surface of what waste is going on in our federal government.

(12:05):
One thing. President Trump has directed the Treasury Department to
stop minting pennies due to their high cost in limited utility.
A penny currently costing almost four cents to make. But
it's worth but it's worth one cent. One penny despite
the support from the penny in charity drives. The surprise

(12:29):
order comes after decades of unsuccessful efforts to ditch the
one cent coin. But President Trump he has demanded that
the US Treasury stop minting the penny. Does this mean
the penny is officially dead? If so, give the one
cent a proper farewell with his heart felt eulogy.

Speaker 7 (12:49):
Friends, we gather today to say a final farewell to
the penny.

Speaker 8 (12:56):
Even though your.

Speaker 7 (12:58):
Value to society had become worthless. You spent your long
life buying candy and people's thoughts being saved and earned
at the same time, and in for a pound as
well as for yourself. And while we'll miss your usefulness

(13:18):
as a makeshift screwdriver and to check the tread on
our car's tires.

Speaker 8 (13:24):
Your days of being spent are spent. You came from
heaven and now you shall return. Sometimes the world just
doesn't make sense.

Speaker 3 (13:39):
Literally see what I did there.

Speaker 8 (13:41):
And now please turn to page one for our recessional hymn.

Speaker 9 (13:49):
Survive, Lovely, Lovely.

Speaker 4 (14:00):
I think the last time I used a penny was
when I scratched a lottery ticket. I think that's the
last time I've used a penny. They're more of a
pain than anything. They end up just sitting in that
one section of your car, your your change drawer or
middle console, and they.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
Just you get a hundred of them, you get a dollar.

Speaker 4 (14:20):
Well yeah, but then you have to go somewhere to
a coin collect the coin machine and the whole.

Speaker 5 (14:24):
Yeah, it happens.

Speaker 10 (14:29):
Well, it be a big loss if they started, probably not,
I mean everything, probably because the nickel will probably will
be next, So everything's going to be rounded to a dime,
because the dime is the one that's the only one
that's worth printing, i mean minting anymore.

Speaker 5 (14:45):
Well, the quarter, well, I'm just saying out of the
three the small ones.

Speaker 4 (14:48):
Yeah, well, and don't you think it has a lot
to do with perception of pricing. Everything is ninety nine
cents or fifty cents.

Speaker 5 (14:58):
Yeah, because they it's it's again, it's all perceptions.

Speaker 4 (15:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
So if you if I see something that's fifteen ninety
nine or sixteen dollars, I'm going to go buy the
one that's fifteen ninety.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
Nine, right, But when you add tax to it, it pretty
much comes out to be exactly yeah.

Speaker 6 (15:13):
So and you know what's going to happen there. You know,
are you going to round up tax now or are
you gonna round everything? I mean, you see, it can
create a lot of issues unless you're going to go
to like an all credit debit system, which people won't
want to do that because people don't want their money
tracked and people don't want you know, a lot of

(15:34):
different things when it comes to that.

Speaker 5 (15:36):
You know, cash is ging there is.

Speaker 4 (15:38):
You know, I know people that never carry cash, they
never have cash on them. I will say this, I
always try to have at least ten dollars on me
for just not even I guess it makes me feel
more more secure in case something would happen I need
a gas, say they don't take debit cards whatever. I
just always like to have something in my pocket for

(16:01):
any particular reason. This past weekend was busy. I don't
know about you, Otis. I know you were busy, but
I went to tough Man Friday night, and once again,
tough Man doesn't let you down. Here's something to keep
in mind if you are a tough Man fan and
a boxing fan in general. Former Major League Baseball stars

(16:25):
Patrick Mahomes Senior and John Rocker will face off in
the boxing ring. Barstool Sports founder Dave Portnoy announced last
week the two have signed contracts to headline the upcoming
Rough and Rowty event. Here's where it ties in. It's
happening April eighteenth, here in Wheeling.

Speaker 6 (16:46):
I guess those two got into it at the super Bowl,
or not at the super Bowl, but in New Orleans,
Oh okay, on Bourbon Street.

Speaker 4 (16:53):
So they're going to.

Speaker 6 (16:54):
So somebody probably you know, they videotaped it and said, hey,
why don't we do this.

Speaker 5 (16:59):
Let's make money in Wheeling, West Virginia. Because neither one
of them are relevant anymore.

Speaker 4 (17:04):
So they're coming. They're coming here seven twenty eight. The
bloom Daddy Experience Sam and Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 3 (17:18):
Welcome back to the show on your Tuesday morning.

Speaker 2 (17:20):
You know, if you're a Browns fan, I don't know
if you've been watching what's been transpiring in Baltimore with
the greatest kicker in NFL history, Justin Tucker. You want
to talk about a duplicate of the Deshaun Watson saga
involving massage therapists. Seven more women have accused Ravens kicker
Justin Tucker of engaging in sexually inappropriate misconduct in Baltimore

(17:44):
area spas. So if you're keeping track at home, that's
now sixteen therapists from eight different spas that have made
allegations of inappropriate behavior by Tucker. And this is between
twenty twelve and twenty sixteen.

Speaker 3 (17:58):
In the beginning, six.

Speaker 2 (17:59):
Women initially a qu Tucker of inappropriate behavior, with three
more therapists coming forward about a week to a week
and a half later, and all of them were saying
the same thing. And it's identical to Deshaun Watson that
Justin Tucker came in, he wanted a massage, he would
become e wrecked, he would touch them, he would guide
their hand, that he left a pool of certain something

(18:25):
on the bed sheets, I mean disgusting stuff. Now he's
categorically denying everything, just like Deshaun Watson did. But you know,
when you start talking about Harvey Weinstein or Michael Jackson
or Bill Cosby when you're rich and famous, this is
the way I look at it. This is how I
take I call it my scum meter, my scumbag meter.

(18:46):
When three or four women come out and accuse you
of something, you know, I sit there and I'm kind
of like, eh, because we've seen it before. Women make
it up stories against rich and famous men to try
to get money or famous.

Speaker 3 (19:00):
So three or four I'm like, eh, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (19:05):
Once it gets to six to eight, now the hole
where there's smoke, there's fire. Once you get to nine
and above, though, I'm all in, like you're guilty of something.
There is no doubt in my mind that you did
something you should not have done.

Speaker 3 (19:21):
And with Justin Tucker, I mean.

Speaker 2 (19:23):
You're talking sixteen massage therapists all basically saying the same thing,
these same stories. And these women, from what I understand,
did not know each other. It's not like they got
together and correlated. One woman said the reason she didn't
go forward with it before is because she was terrified.
She said, I'm just some girl and I'm going up

(19:44):
against the King of Baltimore. And that's exactly what a
lot of these massage therapists said with the Shawn Watson.
So the Justin Tucker thing is not going to go away.
I think you're going to see probably more harm than
anything coming his way as far as more women coming out.
And it just makes you sit there and wonder, why
do these guys do this. They're rich, they're famous, they

(20:06):
can have anybody they want. In justin Tucker's case, he's married.
Why the massage therapist? I mean, why not? I mean
I'm not trying to be stupid or disgusting or ignorant here,
but why not just go out and pay high price
prostitutes to have sex with you and go on your
way there.

Speaker 3 (20:25):
It's just a simple transaction. That's what they do for
a living.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
Like Charlie Sheen said, I'd never paid these women for sex.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
I paid them to go away after sex.

Speaker 2 (20:35):
And you know what, Charlie might be the smartest man
in the world if you think about what he just
said right there. But when you think about this, I
think it all comes down to power.

Speaker 3 (20:45):
That's what I think it is.

Speaker 2 (20:47):
I think it's all a power thing with these individuals,
and they just want to see how far they could
push somebody, how far they can manipulate somebody, how far
they can degrade somebody.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
It has to be it.

Speaker 2 (21:02):
I mean, Sam, I know you're not a clinical psychologist,
but I believe you did stay on the holiday in
Express last night.

Speaker 3 (21:07):
So I mean, what do you think.

Speaker 2 (21:08):
Why does the DeShawn Watson's of the world or the
Justin Tucker's of the world do what they do?

Speaker 5 (21:17):
Okay, I didn't realize you stated a holiday in Express
last night.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
I don't get that joke.

Speaker 5 (21:23):
That's a that's an old commercial. Oh okay, they used to,
they guy. They used to. What happened is that the guy.

Speaker 6 (21:29):
Would be like like they'd be flying an airplane and
the pilot would have a heart attack or something, and
the guy would say, oh, are you can anybody here
fly an airplane? And the guy says, well, I probably can,
And they say, oh, are you a pilot? He says no,
but I stayed at a holiday in Express last night.
So he becomes smarter and able to do everything.

Speaker 4 (21:47):
Okay, well, all right.

Speaker 5 (21:49):
It's not as funny when you have to explain.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
Yeah, I guess not. Sorry. So the amount of women
that are coming out a cue justin Tucker, there is
strengthen numbers, and I think that's what we're seeing here.
Same thing with Deshaun Watson. He was accused by over

(22:13):
two dozen women. Now this takes Tucker up to sixteen
total women with accusations. Why do they do this? I
don't think anybody will ever know why. I think personally,
I think it comes down to control and power and privacy.

(22:39):
And what I mean by that is they're in a
situation where it's awkward to begin with, Okay, So if
something physically happens to the man, there is always the

(23:00):
explanation of it was not intentional. So when it happens
the first time, the female massage therapists can overlook it
or understand it. When it happens the second time, possibly

(23:23):
the same thing. I think the circumstance that these supposed
or accused inappropriate reactions touching reactions by the men physically
when they happen in these types of situations, there is

(23:47):
a built in layer of protection because of the circumstance
that they are in. It is borderline clinical because when
you are having a massage, there is a natural trust
between the therapist and the person receiving the massage. So

(24:13):
the person receiving the massage is a bit vulnerable. So
does the person then who is accused of doing these things.
Are they taking back the control and the vulnerability by
doing these types of accused things. I don't know. I

(24:37):
think I think it is. It's a handful of different reasons.
I do, I really do. I think there is a
built in layer of protection because of the circumstance that
they're in.

Speaker 6 (24:51):
I think it's also I think it's also low self esteem,
like they just they don't they don't necessarily they're confident
in themselves on the football field, but maybe not in
real life, you think, Yeah.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
See, I think I I look at it more as
over self esteem where they're billy you know what that
could be and they can get but whatever they want.

Speaker 6 (25:19):
But I still think that they I still don't. They
may give you that persona it's fake, it's it's not real.

Speaker 4 (25:26):
So it's a cover for the inact.

Speaker 6 (25:29):
Yeah yeah, I mean it's just are they may not
be able to approach people the way they want to,
or maybe they're just I mean, maybe they're just a
sex addict, so you know, I mean that that could
come into play as well. They're I mean, they're without
really sitting down and talking to somebody, you're really not
gonna know what those answers are. I mean, you can

(25:53):
read the stories and you can do a lot of
different things, but you're just not gonna know. And obviously
we're not you know, we're not professionals when it comes
to stuff like that.

Speaker 5 (26:03):
But I mean.

Speaker 6 (26:06):
There are things that you can pick up on. You know,
you don't have to be a psychologist to know that.
You know, somebody has issues, so to speak. But it's
just you just may not be able to tell them
how to fix it, or you know what, we may
not be able to say, well, this is why you're
doing it right.

Speaker 4 (26:26):
Well, again, you know, there's a lot of trust between
the two individuals in that private room, and I think
those that are committing these types of assaults let's call
them what they are, use that as a protective layer
to get away with what they are doing. And I'm

(26:47):
sure we're not done seeing more names or more women
come out. It's odd, It's very very odd. Seven forty
five The bloom Diedy Experience, sam and Otis News Radio
eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 9 (27:11):
Seven fifty one on your Tuesday morning.

Speaker 4 (27:13):
The Glyndetti Experienced salmon Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA.
If you missed this story last week, we brought this
to you. According to multiple sources, a teacher at Bucket
Local High School who is a history teacher has been
suspended with pay pending an investigation into allegedly inappropriate behavior

(27:35):
with a student. We talked about this last week. This
teacher was the assistant cross country coach and was to
become the boys track coach. As I mentioned last week,
I had phone calls and messages into Superintendent Koy Sudbury
at Bucke Local School District, along with a message to

(27:55):
the investigation department at Jefferson County's Jefferson County Sheriff's Department.
I wanted to bring everybody up to up to date
where things were. I did have a conversation with the
Buckeye Local School superintendent. He did reach back out to
me and we had a wonderful conversation where he confirmed

(28:17):
that there is a teacher suspended with pay pending an investigation.
Did not use the name. Along with that the school
district is working jointly with the Jefferson County Sheriff's Department
during this investigation period. But one thing he wanted to
make abundantly clear that the safety and security of the

(28:40):
students at Bakaye Local is the top priority for everybody involved.
So listen, this is something that, as I said last week,
has been in the rumor meal unfortunately and cannot be
be hidden, and that the parents and everybody involved need

(29:04):
to know what's going on. And there you have it.
That is what is going on. That this is being
investigated by both entities. The teacher is suspended with pay
for these alleged during this alleged period where something supposedly
went on with inappropriate behavior with a student. But I

(29:26):
wanted to say that I did speak to the superintendent,
still waiting to hear back from Jefferson County Sheriff's Department.
But there is an update to that story. And again
Otis you and I talked about this last week. It
brings into focus what is going on. It seems as

(29:46):
if over the last let's say ten years roughly, there
has been an uptick in stories about things similar to this,
whether it's full sexual activity, if it is just inappropriate behavior,
you know, behavior. There seems to be an uptick in

(30:07):
these types of situations. And when you hear you initially
think male teacher, female student, there's also a female. Now
there's a large increase in female teacher male student. I mean,
just in Texas there was a Texas high school teacher

(30:28):
arrested for allegedly having sex with a male student. This
just happened four days ago. Why is this happening and
why have we become as a society numb to it.
It's not as it's not as shocking of a subject
matter as it used to be. Again, Mary Kayla Turno,

(30:52):
that's the name. Back in the nineties, she had children
with the teenage boy. They were married for years afterwards,
and there were those that try to paint it as
a love story. Yeah, yeah, Romeo and Juliet type of situation. No,

(31:14):
it's illegal, it's gross. Why is this happening more and more?
And why are we numb to it? It's this, it's
you know, it's the comparison is not on the same level,
but it's it's like it's kind of like school shootings. Unfortunately,

(31:35):
we have seen so much of it that it does
not affect us the way it used to.

Speaker 5 (31:43):
And now I think that's with anything, whether it's a
natural disaster.

Speaker 4 (31:46):
Whether it's yeah, yeah, you're back.

Speaker 6 (31:48):
I mean, if it's not something new, we aren't. You know,
our attention span as humans has become like seven to
ten seconds because we just that's what that's what you
can get in a sound bite, that's what you can
get in you know, a social media post, that's what
you can get in whatever. And our attention span has waned.

(32:13):
And when your attention span wanes, then the initial shock,
you know, when Columbine happened, everybody was like, oh my gosh.
Now it's like, oh there's another school shooting.

Speaker 5 (32:26):
You know, I mean, I hate you hate that you
see it that way, but unfortunate.

Speaker 4 (32:31):
Nobody trivialize it.

Speaker 6 (32:33):
No, absolutely not. But that's just how we as a
society have become numb to the situation.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
I was having lunch with some people last Thursday or Friday,
after we had had this this local story about this,
and of course just the conversation about young people, schools,
things like that, social media came up and one person said,
you know, you if you look at young people, females

(33:08):
in this day and age, they can be fifteen or
sixteen and they look twenty five. Now, I understand that
argument if you are just out in public, but when
you are an educator and this person is in your class,
then you know the rage. So there's no arguing. I

(33:31):
don't give much credence to that argument, but I do
understand that the young people are growing up faster in
this day and age. It seems as if whether it's
the social media aspect of things, whether it is the

(33:51):
cultural that they have too much access to a lot
of things at fourteen, fifteen, sixteen years old, they should
not have access too. I think there's a lot of
circumstances that get us to where we are with a
lot of these different subjects when it comes to the
younger generation. But as I said, I wanted to update

(34:12):
you on the story that we had last week, and
as this continues, of course we will bring you additional information.
But I will say to the Superintendent of Buckeye Lokal,
I appreciate you getting back to me and giving me
a comment seven point fifty eight on your Tuesday morning.
The bloom Daddy experience Otis and Sam. News Radio eleven
seventy WWVA.

Speaker 1 (34:39):
The number one talk show in the Ohio Valley. This
is the bloom Daddy Experience. Your host bloom Daddy. His
goal inform, entertain and tick people off. The bloom Daddy
Experience on news Radio eleven seventy. WWVA starts now.

Speaker 2 (34:58):
News Radio eleven seventy gives the bloom Daddy Experience.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
Hey, it's eight six. Let's get this hour rolling.

Speaker 2 (35:04):
Good Tuesday morning to you, and welcome to the bloom
Daddy Experience. You better bundle up. I just took a look.
I think the next four days we're going to be
in this polar of vortex. So I don't think the
temperatures are going to go above thirty degrees. So if
you don't have to go outside, don't. If you do,
make sure you bundle up. Obviously, animals got to come in.
Just make sure you watch because I know at night,

(35:25):
I think the lows in the evenings are going to
be in the teens. But as I mentioned, the next
four days, it's going to be very very cold. Now,
through the years doing this morning show and other things,
you've got to know a lot of things about me.
I just want to let you know that last Thursday,
that was my dad who got killed in a mining
accident in Harrison County. Our relationship over the years somewhat strained,

(35:50):
and you know what, I'm not going to go into
it any further through this radio show. I've shared a
lot of things personally, but there's some things that I
think got to remain to me, if you will. But
I do appreciate people reaching out. My condolence is certainly
going to people who worked with him, who knew him,
because obviously that is a big time loss and a

(36:13):
traumatic event to have to deal with. So uh, just
once again, do appreciate anybody out there who has reached out,
or anybody out here there who wondered if Ed Bloomquist
was related to me. Again, Yes, that was my father.
I'm not going to go under the circumstances of what happened.
Everything is under investigation as of right now. But you know,

(36:36):
once again, really to the people who were his friends
and the people who worked.

Speaker 3 (36:40):
With him, I feel for you. I'm just gonna I'm
just gonna kind of leave it at that.

Speaker 8 (36:47):
You know.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
I open this segment talking about the weather, and I
want to go back to that for a second, because
that horrific flooding that I'm sure you've been following in Kentucky.
I literally drove through that or close to that this
past weekend, right before it got severe because Wright State
University was supposed to play at Longwood University in Virginia,

(37:12):
but it got moved because of the rain. Longwood had
an all that natural surface they wanted to play on
a turf to be able to play through some of
the rain drops. So we got moved to Wyse, Virginia.
And in order to go to Wyse, Virginia, I drove
into Charleston, and then of course you keep on going
down through Mingo County, Logan County, Hatfield and McCoy Trail

(37:34):
and into Pikeville, Kentucky, and then you get.

Speaker 3 (37:37):
To Wise, Virginia.

Speaker 2 (37:40):
On the way out Saturday, we were down here to
watch Brayln play. On the way out, we left early
because we thought, you know what, they're never going to
get these games in, and they didn't. But as we
were leaving in the morning, right around eleven to thirty,
we were just amazed at the amount of water me
and his mother pouring off the hillsides Because I mean,

(38:02):
when you're down around Wise, Virginia, Pikeville, Kentucky, Mingo County.

Speaker 3 (38:07):
I mean, you're going through mountains, and.

Speaker 2 (38:10):
The water that was pouring off these mountains was unbelievable.
And there were a number of spots, because you're in
Hollers down there, there were a number of spots where
the roads were already one lane of the road was
totally underwater. And that was like at eleven thirty eleven
forty five am. And I can remember, you know, the
two of us talking on our way out of there, saying, man,

(38:32):
we are getting out of here, just in time. And
then all of a sudden, you see the news the
next day about the flooding in Kentucky and people losing
their lives. And it had to be very very close
because I mean some of the stuff we went through.
And fortunately Wright State University they left on their bus
later that evening and they got out of there too,
but they couldn't play Saturday because a couple of the

(38:53):
roads going in from the hotels were washed out and
the one team couldn't get to the field.

Speaker 3 (38:59):
So just crazy.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
I mean, you feel blessed whenever you see severe weather,
and you know, you just missed it.

Speaker 3 (39:08):
You just ducked it, and that was us. I mean,
otis saying.

Speaker 2 (39:13):
I don't know if you guys recently have been in
any type of severe weather that you basically, you know,
just kind of skimmed through it or you didn't bear
the brunt of it. But when you see mother Nature unleash,
it's it's a scary, scary thing.

Speaker 4 (39:28):
It absolutely is. She has got strength, she has got beauty,
she's got destruction. That's one thing that you know, a
lot of times people say, why do you live in
this area? Why do you this? Why do you that
I love the weather that we have here the fo
I do. I love the four seasons, I truly truly do.

(39:51):
But the hills in the mountains also keep us protected
from a lot of weather can because weather catastrophes that
other parts of the country have to deal with. And
I think that makes it one of the one of
the good reasons for saying here.

Speaker 6 (40:11):
You know, it's you know, I was, I was away
for the weekend, and where I was was relatively flat.
The little town we went to yesterday, it says I
climbed Mount Dora in elevation one hundred and sixty eight
feet or something like that, because that's above sea level.
That's all it is. So it's just like, oh it
is is a hill, and you know, you know it

(40:33):
was there are things that this valley has that you
don't really like you you don't miss until you're gone.

Speaker 5 (40:43):
And and and the hills.

Speaker 6 (40:44):
You know, one of the people that I was with
over the weekend was they called them mountains, and I'm.

Speaker 5 (40:50):
Like, they're they're hills.

Speaker 6 (40:53):
You know, you gotta go down state a little farther
to get to the mountains, you know, but you know,
to us, their hills and I can see, you know,
I mean people somebody from Indiana or Illinois they think
that there are mountains.

Speaker 5 (41:06):
I mean, it's it's.

Speaker 6 (41:09):
You know, when it comes to Mother Nature and and
all her I mean, for everything she does that's beautiful,
there's there's mass destruction as well. And you know there's
there's some sort of a healthy balance because when you
have a flood a lot of times, you know something,
especially back in the day, you know, it would flood

(41:30):
your crops and then all that all that silt and
everything would be and so it would replenish the soil.
I mean, there are there are benefits to some of
the natural disasters. Obviously, people losing homes and and you know,
livelihoods and everything else. You know, lives you don't. That's
the that's the downfall of it. But when like just

(41:54):
like if there's a forest fire, that that's just a
new beginning because now the the ash has gone into
the soil, and now it's replenished, and the next thing
you know, it comes back bigger and better.

Speaker 4 (42:06):
It makes you wonder, not to get too deep this
early in the morning, but it makes you wonder what
is controlling things, or what is out there or what
is it with mother nature that says we need to
what's the word I'm looking for. We need to regenerate,

(42:30):
or we need to control all delete.

Speaker 5 (42:32):
We need to flip the swear reset.

Speaker 4 (42:35):
Reset, that's the word. You know what happens that makes
something like that happened. But you were talking about the mountains.
It reminded me of the first time I went to
meet my in laws. They live outside of Cleveland. Cleveland
is flat called Flatlanders, and I remember driving to their
house and there was this sign. It was an arrow.

(42:58):
It was probably the size of a sprinter van, okay,
flashing lights on it you know you. I thought, oh
my gosh, there is a turn coming up that I'm
gonna have to hold onto everything. So we're driving, and
we're driving, and we're driving. Finally I said to my husband,
I said, where's where's the turn that that big arrow

(43:20):
was the big warning. And he goes, oh, we went
past it like a mile back. And I went, we
went around a turn. He goes to us, that's a
big turn. And then I was like, yeah, these people
have no idea. They have no idea.

Speaker 5 (43:36):
What roads are Send them to West Liberty roads.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
Are really like, Oh, they drive off the side of
the hill. They drive off the side of the hill.

Speaker 3 (43:45):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (43:45):
Yeah, it is eight fifteen.

Speaker 5 (43:47):
We've got your chance to win.

Speaker 4 (43:49):
That's what I was just going to Sometimes.

Speaker 3 (43:51):
You forget, I do.

Speaker 5 (43:52):
I do.

Speaker 4 (43:53):
I tend to forget. But later on in the show,
we're gonna have your chance to win a pair of
tickets to see country superstar Aaron lewis here at the
Capitol Theater. So you don't want to miss that. That
is coming up here a little bit later in the show.
I was looking for the date. It's March eighth, Saturday,
March eighth, So sick stick with us for those it
is eight fifteen on your Tuesday morning bloom Daddy Experience.

(44:14):
Sam and Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA, it is

(44:35):
eighty twenty. I'm Sam, He's Otis. You're listening to the
bloom Daddy Experience. So maybe you missed it. This weekend,
SNL hosted its fiftieth anniversary special. Now I will say this,
I have not had a chance to watch it completely.
I've watched clips here and there, but it did achieve

(44:56):
an oppressive fourteen point eight million view viewers across both
NBC broadcast and their streaming platform at Peacock. It marked
a substantial increase of two hundred and two percent from
the regular season average of four point nine viewers. Well,
of course, it was a star studded event. There were

(45:19):
past SNL alum that were there, there were current there
were revised skits that we haven't seen in twenty thirty years.
Adam Sandler did a tribute when he mentioned Chris Farley
here he teared up. You know, there was there was
many things that came out of this that from what

(45:39):
I've like, I said, I've not seen watch the entire thing,
but there were some great points there was an absolute, absolute, horrifying,
appalling skit by Tom Hanks. Here's the funny thing. I
saw the complete eat skit yesterday. I went back this

(46:04):
morning trying to watch the complete skit, and everywhere I
have looked, it's just snippets. It's not the entire the
entire skit so far. So basically what he is doing.
He is on an episode of Black Jeopardy, they call
it right, and he is dressed as a Trump supporter.

(46:31):
He's got on the maga hat, he's got on the
the jeans tuxedo, if you will, and then has a
white T shirt underneath with the with the American flag
and the eagle and the whole thing, and it is
so disgusting and so stereotyping to that he plays off.

(46:58):
First of all, he says some thing in regards to
if more people went to church, we wouldn't be in
this mess. And then the host says something. And when
Hanks says about the church comment that, the host says,

(47:21):
you know what, I gotta agree with you got agree
with you walks over to him and he goes to
shake his hand, and Hanks jumps back as if if
he's going to touch this black man's hand, He's going
to melt, catch on fire, catch whatever.

Speaker 9 (47:33):
It is so.

Speaker 4 (47:34):
Racist against the host, the character that Hank's is playing,
and so is such an elitist characterization or stereotype of
a Trump supporter. It's uncomfortable to watch. And if you
really pay attention to the quote unquote laughs in the

(47:56):
background when this happens, they're forced. They sound forced. And
this is just an honest to god, this is just
another example of the arrogant left elitists that have used
this way of describing or portraying a Trump supporter for

(48:20):
years now. It's falling on deaf ears. We don't care anymore.
Call us. You know, you can keep doing this, but
it's not working. What this does is actually a reflection
of how people like Tom Hanks and the Hollywood elites,
the left elites, really think about the American people. Because

(48:44):
if you go back to November, you were completely outnumbered.
He won the popular vote. You can call people garbage,
you can basically paint them as racists, uneducated. It is
falling on deaf ears. And what this is telling us
is you hate us, You actually hate the American people.

(49:08):
You refuse to look in the mirror and acknowledge that
the American people are no longer bowing down to the
message or the forced way that you think we should think.
We don't care anymore. And Tom Hanks is an amazing actor.

(49:32):
Think of the roles that he's played. Think of the
roles that he has played. He played Forrest Gump, a
Southern character, and he did this character with a Southern accent. Listen,
you can take a joke, Don't get me wrong, We

(49:53):
can take a joke, but this isn't funny. It just
isn't funny. Lumping a group of people together in criticizing
them and judging them is prejudice and it goes in
every direction. It doesn't just go one direction. So to

(50:17):
the arrogant left elitists, come up with something new, and
last time I checked. If say, for example, you decided
for Halloween, let's say you decided to dress up as

(50:39):
as an Indian, Well, haven't we been told for the
past four or five years.

Speaker 5 (50:46):
That that's wrong Native American?

Speaker 4 (50:49):
Exactly? Isn't that wrong to use to use a class
as as a character to stereotype That's exactly what you
put on national television Saturday night, all in celebration of
fifty years of comedy. It was not funny. It was

(51:14):
not funny. And here's the one thing that people are missing,
the fact that Tom Hanks mentions going to church. And
the joke not only is that Trump supporters are racist,
but the other joke is that Trump supporters are racist
church goers. I can't help but disagree, because I think

(51:43):
one thing that is incredibly missing in the American culture
is some sort of belief, some sort of strength behind
who we are as a person, as people. S and
l You're not funny, You are not funny. Eight twenty

(52:05):
eight The bloom Daddy Experience, just reminding you get your
chance to win, to win.

Speaker 5 (52:12):
Aaron Lewis not Aaron Rodgers. Aaron Lewis.

Speaker 4 (52:15):
Did I say Aaron Rodgers last time?

Speaker 11 (52:17):
Oh?

Speaker 6 (52:17):
Okay, it ran through my mind and I almost said it.

Speaker 4 (52:24):
Aaron Lewis. He's coming here to the Capitol Theater on
March eighth, So we're gonna have your pair of tickets
for that here a little bit later before we wrap
things up. Also tomorrow, it's already here tomorrow free lunch pick.
So don't forget Samoniheartmedia dot com phone number name in
business eight, twenty eight, The bloom Daddy Experience. Sam and

(52:44):
Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 2 (52:54):
Welcome back to the show on your Tuesday morning. You know,
if you're a Browns fan, I don't know if you've
been watching what's been transpiring in Baltimore with the greatest
kicker in NFL history, Justin Tucker. You want to talk
about a duplicate of the Deshaun Watson saga involving massage therapists.
Seven more women have accused Ravens kicker Justin Tucker of

(53:16):
engaging in sexually inappropriate misconduct in Baltimore area spas. So
if you're keeping track at home, that's now sixteen therapists
from eight different spas that have made allegations of inappropriate
behavior by Tucker. And this is between twenty twelve and
twenty sixteen.

Speaker 3 (53:33):
In the beginning, six.

Speaker 2 (53:34):
Women initially accused Tucker of inappropriate behavior, with three more
therapists coming forward about a week to a week and
a half later, and all of them were saying the
same thing. And it's identical to Deshaun Watson that Justin
Tucker came in, he wanted a massage, he would become
a wrecked He would touch them, he would guide their hand.

Speaker 3 (53:55):
Then he left a pool of.

Speaker 2 (53:59):
Certain something on the bed sheets, I mean disgusting stuff.
Now he's categorically denying everything, just like Deshaun Watson did.
But you know, when you start talking about Harvey Weinstein
or Michael Jackson or Bill Cosby, when you're rich and famous,
this is the way I look at it. This is
how I take I call it my scum meter, my

(54:20):
scumbag meter. When three or four women come out and
accuse you of something, you know, I sit there and
I'm kind of like, eh, because we've seen it before.
Women make it up stories against rich and famous men
to try to get money or famous.

Speaker 3 (54:36):
So three or four I'm like, eh, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (54:40):
Once it gets to six to eight, now the hole
where there's smoke, there's fire. Once you get to nine
and above, though, I'm all in, like you're guilty of something.
There is no doubt in my mind that you did
something you should not have done it with Justin Tucker,
I mean, you're talking sixteen massage therapists all basically saying

(55:04):
the same thing, these same stories, and these women, from
what I understand, did not know each other. It's not
like they got together and correlated. One woman said the
reason she didn't go forward with it before is because
she was terrified. She said, I'm just some girl and
I'm going up against the king of Baltimore. And that's
exactly what a lot of these massage therapists said.

Speaker 3 (55:24):
With the Shawn Watson. So the Justin Tucker thing is
not going to go away.

Speaker 2 (55:28):
I think you're gonna see probably more harm than anything
coming his way as far as more women coming out.
And it just makes you sit there and wonder, why
do these guys do this. They're rich, they're famous, they
can have anybody they want. In Justin Tucker's case, he's married.
Why the massage therapist? I mean, why not? I mean

(55:49):
I'm not trying to be stupid or disgusting or ignorant here,
but why not just go out and pay high price
prostitutes to have sex with you and go on your
way there.

Speaker 3 (56:00):
It's just a simple transaction. That's what they do for
a living.

Speaker 2 (56:04):
Like Charlie Sheen said, I'd never paid these women for sex.

Speaker 3 (56:08):
I'd paid them to go away after sex.

Speaker 2 (56:10):
And you know what, Charlie might be the smartest man
in the world if you think about what he just
said right there. But when you think about this, I
think it all comes down to power.

Speaker 3 (56:21):
That's what I think it is.

Speaker 2 (56:22):
I think it's all a power thing with these individuals,
and they just want to see how far they could
push somebody, how far they can manipulate somebody, how far
they can degrade somebody.

Speaker 3 (56:35):
It has to be it. I mean, Sam, I.

Speaker 2 (56:38):
Know you're not a clinical psychologist, but I believe you
did stay on the holiday and express last night.

Speaker 3 (56:42):
So I mean, what do you think.

Speaker 2 (56:43):
Why does the DeShawn Watson's of the world or the
Justin Tuckers of the world do what they do?

Speaker 10 (56:51):
Well?

Speaker 4 (56:51):
First of all, that's my part time gig clinical psychologist
working with you folks. And you folks, I mean you
Otis and bliem Daddy, not everybody else out there. No, listen.
I think I think it comes down to control. But
I also think it comes down to vulnerability in that

(57:15):
particular circumstance, because it's built in that if the therapist
makes charges or accusations or takes it to the cops,
it's immediately he said. She said, which anybody who watches
any type of crime, crime dramas or documentaries knows that

(57:39):
a he said, she said circumstantial case is one of
the hardest to prove. So I think walking into that
circumstance is vulnerable for the therapist, that if something like
that happens, it makes it hard for them. As the

(58:03):
girl from Baltimore said, you know, he's the King of Baltimore.
Who's gonna believe little old me? Basically that that block
is already there for the person doing the crime, that
they already have built in a pretty safe scenario to

(58:27):
do things. That's I mean, that's how I look at it.
And and it comes down to power and control. There
are some people that that that's their thing, that is
what gets their jollys. For lack of a better terminology

(58:52):
for it, it's just I don't know, I don't know.
Maybe I'll talk, maybe I'll reach out to a massage therapist,
if they would maybe talk about what their education is,
because when you when you put your when you're in
that type of circumstance, how are they educated to handle

(59:17):
things like that? There's got to be some sort of
of procedure or.

Speaker 6 (59:24):
I know, sometimes they'll tell you right up front. They'll say, look,
if you step outside the bounds or the boundaries that
you will be asked to leave. So that right off
the bat tells you that if you cross that line,
you're done and you're not coming back.

Speaker 4 (59:48):
I don't know, there's there's there's something to it. I
don't get it. I mean, at this point in time,
you know, Deshaun Watson has over two dozen women that
have accused him. Now this takes Justin Tucker up to sixteen.
And I think when you see like you see things
like this, it's it's strengthened numbers. It's strengthen numbers.

Speaker 6 (01:00:08):
Well, the other thing is, so let's say a massage
therapist makes one hundred dollars per massage. No, some of
that if they have their own studio or whatever. You know,
they're paying rent, they have the investment in the table,
the oils, whatever they're using. Okay, so they have some expense,
so that's not you know, they're paying sales tax on

(01:00:30):
it everything else. So there's there are other expenses, insurance,
whatever that comes under that hundred. Out of that hundred dollars,
you get a Deshaun Watson or Justin Tucker and they're
paying you five hundred dollars for that one hundred dollars massage.
That's you know, and then they probably don't come right

(01:00:53):
out and say it.

Speaker 5 (01:00:54):
In the very first massage.

Speaker 4 (01:00:55):
Oh no, of.

Speaker 5 (01:00:56):
Course, they build the rapport.

Speaker 4 (01:01:00):
There's a grooming period absolutely, yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:01:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (01:01:02):
And then and then they crossed the line because they
get they get the person or the massage therapist to
the comfort level, let their guard down, and then they
and then they attack, so to speak.

Speaker 4 (01:01:16):
So mhm, it's unfortunate. It's unfortunate. Staying along the lines
of a football football talk, but a different side of
football talk. We talked about this last week real quick
about Trevor Lawrence. There were rumors going around that the
Steelers wanted to look at him. Well, now there's now
someone is lying about Trevor Lawrence. Pro Football Talk reported

(01:01:39):
yesterday that the Steelers never called the Jaguars about the
availability of the former number one overall pick. The Big
Ten Network reported last week that the Steelers inquired about
a trade, but Lawrence told up in Adams yesterday that
he's not going to Pittsburgh.

Speaker 5 (01:02:00):
So there you have it.

Speaker 4 (01:02:01):
Yeah, there you have it. There's a little back and
forth there, but according to people, the call never happened.

Speaker 5 (01:02:11):
Trevor Lawns the Dealer next year.

Speaker 4 (01:02:14):
Yeah, watch that happen. Oh, don't forget. Coming up, we've
got your chance to win a pair of tickets to
see Aaron Lewis not Aaron Rodgers March eighth here at
the Capitol Theater. So stay tuned for that that is
coming up. It is eight forty five. You're listening to

(01:02:35):
the bloom Daddy Experience. Samon Otis News Radio eleven seventy
WWVA eight fifty. Welcome back the bloom Daddy Experience. Guess

(01:02:55):
what's coming out? Different restaurants are coming out with their
Spring menu, and I saw over the weekend there is
tons of Easter stuff out there.

Speaker 5 (01:03:04):
So the peach imagine that the peeps.

Speaker 4 (01:03:06):
Are out, so that means spring is coming. Despite the
single digits this morning, Dunkin Donuts has released their Spring
menu which is coming here soon to locations nationwide starting
March fifth. So tons of new stuff like snacking bacon
that sounds just interesting, blueberry munchkins, cotton candy filled donuts,

(01:03:30):
and spring munchkins buckets.

Speaker 3 (01:03:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (01:03:34):
Well, speaking of peeps, we got our favorite peep on
the line.

Speaker 4 (01:03:37):
Wow, he said it not me.

Speaker 8 (01:03:41):
That was not me.

Speaker 5 (01:03:43):
He's like the pink bunny that looks like Ralfie.

Speaker 11 (01:03:45):
Oh you're just sating here, you know, teas and four
otis with all this food, knowing he's on the program.

Speaker 4 (01:03:53):
Oh that's right.

Speaker 11 (01:03:54):
It's losing hard, working out, Yeah, getting it done.

Speaker 5 (01:03:58):
I wouldn't go that far, but you're you're getting there.

Speaker 11 (01:04:01):
Yeah, you did that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
Man.

Speaker 11 (01:04:02):
I'm kind of watching you on the on Facebook there
when you say a few things. Good for you mans.
That'hing wrong with getting healthier. Nothing wrong with getting healthier.
But Pink's huh, Ralphie pink All right, money dig bunny.
Well let's ill. Let's talk about let's talk about Nissan.
We'll talk about Nissons in a while. The all new
twenty twenty five Nissan Lana is out. Okay, you can

(01:04:23):
check it out right here. We've got a couple of
them that just came in, totally redesigned, totally restyled, probably
one of the most comfortable vehicles that you're ever gonna
set in. But something else that Nisson is coming out. Man,
they're coming out swinging this.

Speaker 3 (01:04:37):
Year, all right.

Speaker 11 (01:04:38):
They have a revamp, they're just about their entire product line,
and they have also come with some of the best
incentives I have seen from Nisson in probably fifteen years. Okay,
I mean listen to this, all right, the all new
twenty twenty five all wheel drive Nissan Kicks. How about
a payment of one hundred and sixty nine dollars a month.

Speaker 5 (01:04:59):
That's insane.

Speaker 11 (01:05:01):
Look, I mean it is, and it is an absolutely
gorgeous vehicle. You can get behind the wheel of a
brand new Rogue all wheel drive for two thirty nine
a Nissan Frontier Pro four X fully loaded three ninety
nine ten thousand dollars worth of savings on the Nissan Pathfinder.
All right, I mean, these are some great looking vehicles

(01:05:21):
and the best way to start your shopping process when
it's was it seven degrees out there this morning? Just
log on to straw Nissan dot com. Right, every unit
in stock is clearly sell priced. If you need more informations,
a couple of ways you can do it. You can
reach out to us through chat, you can reach out
to us through email, or you can use the Express
store and literally build your own deals. You can look

(01:05:44):
at leasing by yourself. You can look at what payments
would be, what your bottom line would be if you're
paying cash. If you need to get your trade to praise,
you can send us some information. We can get you
an online quote for your trade. It's the easiest buying
experience that you're ever one a half, and each and
every one of them is backed with wat otis.

Speaker 10 (01:06:03):
What is it?

Speaker 11 (01:06:04):
Backed with ever Drive ever Drive Lifetime power Trains protection.
So it's all good.

Speaker 6 (01:06:10):
I'm glad I knew the answer because I stopped paying
attention for a second. B I had somebody asked me
about tickets.

Speaker 5 (01:06:19):
I'm just getting I was multitasking.

Speaker 11 (01:06:20):
Well, yeah, today, i'mbout to stretch before I picked up
the phone. On Thursday, I'm going to get ready for
my phone.

Speaker 5 (01:06:26):
I was multit.

Speaker 11 (01:06:29):
A little more banter man.

Speaker 6 (01:06:32):
Sorry, he's just like, I mean, hey, this this job
sometimes requires several other things going on at the same time.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Yeah.

Speaker 11 (01:06:39):
Plus you seem to be in a mood.

Speaker 6 (01:06:41):
Well, that's because I'm working on like one hour sleep. Okay,
I got home last night at two thirty in the morning.

Speaker 5 (01:06:48):
He's he's a little tard.

Speaker 4 (01:06:50):
He's hit that wall.

Speaker 5 (01:06:51):
Catin, I've hit the wall.

Speaker 11 (01:06:53):
I get it, I get it. Get you some resks
have some fun.

Speaker 5 (01:06:56):
Yeah, yeah, I talked to you Thursday.

Speaker 6 (01:07:00):
Wow, I'm just having some fun, I know, I know.

Speaker 4 (01:07:07):
Okay, here this will perk you up. You're my music man,
all right. And there's a study that says listening to
music can can't it really help with work? This study
is from Georgetown and Stanford Universities where they tested four
different types of sounds workflow music, deep focus music, pop hits,

(01:07:31):
in office noise. Seventy six percent of participants who listen
to workflow music started to work faster, but they also
did a more accurate job. Pop music, on the other hand,
did not seem to boost mood or productivity. So is

(01:07:51):
there any type of music that.

Speaker 6 (01:07:52):
Like, Well, they're saying workflow music is a tempo around
one hundred and nineteen beats per minuted, strong steady rhythm,
simple melodies, no lyrics, balanced energy level.

Speaker 4 (01:08:05):
So you're not your attention isn't being drawn towards words, right.

Speaker 6 (01:08:09):
So you're not You're not You're not being drawn to
the top four. I mean, I I've worked in a
lot of places that have music in the background.

Speaker 4 (01:08:17):
I can't do it.

Speaker 6 (01:08:19):
When when when you're bartending, that's kind of like oh well, yeah,
you know, I mean, that's that's almost you have to
have music in the background. Most of the other jobs
that I've worked, we've always we always had a radio,
we always had music playing. I I honestly think it
makes the day go faster.

Speaker 4 (01:08:39):
Yeah, I'm sure it does. I just can't. I can't
concentrate because if it's a song, I know the words too.

Speaker 7 (01:08:45):
M h.

Speaker 4 (01:08:46):
Then that I'm completely distracted.

Speaker 5 (01:08:48):
You can't multitask.

Speaker 4 (01:08:50):
I can, but not. I don't know. But here's the
weird thing. I can sit and work on my computer
and get tons of stuff done with a TV on
m M.

Speaker 11 (01:09:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (01:09:00):
So I don't understand why.

Speaker 5 (01:09:01):
Sometimes it's just background noise.

Speaker 4 (01:09:03):
Yeah, but for some reason music can't be background noise
for me. I don't know.

Speaker 5 (01:09:09):
It's very strange interesting.

Speaker 6 (01:09:10):
Yeah, No, I mean, I just I mean, but I'm
a music guy, so like almost everything I do has
music involved. I mean this, I mean even the bumper
music here, some of the like some of these little
bumps that we have that aren't quote unquote songs, some
of them I could see where you could play that
at work and and and become a little more efficient

(01:09:31):
and you can keep you going. And it's not something
you that you necessarily have to pay attention to. But
it's got that beat where you can kind of like
it gives you that driving force.

Speaker 4 (01:09:43):
Yeah, now I can't for some reason. It just absolutely
distracts me. Distracts me. Think it's talking about music. I
want to do it. Chance to win sure, all right,
we've got pair tickets to see Aaron Lewis coming here
Mar eighth, which is a Saturday, going to be here
at the Capitol Theater. We've got a pair of tickets

(01:10:05):
for you. Your chance to win one eight hundred sixty
four eleven seventy s do caller number eleven. Since we
are eleven seventy.

Speaker 5 (01:10:17):
I was gonna go higher. Oh that's okay, Yeah, you're good.

Speaker 4 (01:10:21):
It's trying to be clever.

Speaker 5 (01:10:23):
That's that's your that's the first that's the first downfall.

Speaker 4 (01:10:28):
Yeah, caller number eleven. One eight hundred six two four
eleven seventy to see Aaron Lewis here at the Capitol
March eighth. Well, everybody, we are done. Your day is
just getting started. Have a good one.

Speaker 5 (01:10:45):
Politics unleashed tomorrow.

Speaker 4 (01:10:46):
Politics unleashed tomorrow. We will talk to you then
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