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May 28, 2025 • 69 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
The number one tuck 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.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Now, Well, good morning, good morning, it's already Wednesday. I
love a week like this. It's seven oh six. Thank
you for tuning in the bloom Daddy Experience. Sam and Otis,
News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. We're already halfway through the week.
I mean, come on, Otis, can't ask for anything better

(00:42):
than that. Your enthusiasm is overwhelming. Sometimes we got our
buddy here, Pong goes hanging out again.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Yeah, Pong goes here.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
He's like our new mascot Ninda.

Speaker 3 (00:58):
Well, I try to give the other Dolka couple break.

Speaker 2 (01:00):
Give him a break. We need to get a T
shirt made or something. Pongo the studio mascot.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
He was being very loud a minute ago because he
was chewing on that bone.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
Yeah yeah, keeping him occupied. But anyways, I wanted to
start off this morning with a bit of a laugh,
So a little behind the scenes for you. We have
different services and different connections. However you want to say, yeah,
prep work. That sends us like some of the little

(01:32):
funny stories that we get research all of that kind
of stuff. Not that I'm sure everybody thought that we
just had it right at our fingertips we were that
good at this. No, no, no, no, there's services out
there that we get all this stuff from. So one
of the services that we have for otis and I
we don't It doesn't come out until about eight forty five,

(01:54):
nine am, sometimes nine point fifteen, so and it is
information for it.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
But get it in here, yeah, mail, Yeah, we don't.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
Get in until right so it's usually for stuff for
the day of So by the point by the time
we get that, our show is pretty much done. Right,
so yesterday, but I tend to hold on to him
sometimes there's some funny stuff in it. So yesterday I
received this after the show and we talked about this.

(02:24):
We talked about the Spelling Bee, right. We mentioned the
young man from Bridgeport, oh I can't think of his
name off the top of my head. I'm so sorry,
but he's representing Bridgeport, Ohio at the National Spelling Bee.
So this was prep work, and I was talking about
the National Spelling Bee. Now it has a headline, we
believe good prep is definitely necessary. And I'm looking at

(02:46):
this and I'm like, that doesn't look right, doesn't look
right well, because it's not. The headline has two misspelled
words in it. So the headline for a National Spelling
b story has two misspelled words in the headline, and

(03:08):
it's not we and it's not good. So they misspelled
believe and they misspelled definitely. And as I'm looking at this,
I'm just I'm just laughing, because again, how many people
say and sing in their heads I before E except

(03:30):
after C. That's what they got wrong in the word
believe B E l E I ve e and then
definitely is d E F I n A t l Y.
And I'm pretty sure all of the young men and
women at the Spelling b would very quickly point that out.

Speaker 4 (03:53):
I just.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
You think they could have, just to see if anybody
he was paying attention.

Speaker 2 (04:02):
Oh I didn't think about it that now I was
paying attention, so I don't know, made me laugh. Made
me laugh. I thought, really, how in the world, how
in the world do you misspell two words in the
headline about a Spelling Bee's story?

Speaker 3 (04:19):
They must work at the news Register.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
He said that, not me, Not me, He said that.

Speaker 4 (04:28):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (04:28):
One thing to want to highlight though, for today Today
is National Hamburger Day. So for lunch, have yourself a
burger in celebration, and Wendy's is jumping on board. They're
offering a junior bacon cheeseburger for just one cent from

(04:51):
May twenty eighth, today National Hamburger Day through June first.
To get the deal, you must make a through the
app or the website. Yep, that's where they get you.
So you're not gonna go through the drive through and
get a cheeseburger for a for a penny. You have

(05:12):
to do it through your app, through the Wendy's app.
So it is national National Cheeseburger Day. Sounds like a
decent lunch. Don't you think I'd be all for it?

Speaker 3 (05:26):
It's actually National Hamburger Day, not Cheeseburger Day.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
Well, cheeseburger is a hamburger, just it is a hamburger
with a slice of cheese.

Speaker 3 (05:35):
I get it. But I mean, if you're going to
be official, it's Hamburger.

Speaker 2 (05:39):
Day, Okay, be more precise.

Speaker 3 (05:43):
Yeah, Well, because some people don't eat cheese, on their burgers.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
No, you have to No, Now, you have to have
the good melty cheese.

Speaker 3 (05:53):
I had a couple burgers yesterday with no cheese on them.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
No.

Speaker 3 (05:57):
No, those steak sauce. That's all.

Speaker 2 (06:02):
I'm a traditionalist. I like just simple, simple things.

Speaker 3 (06:06):
You know what I don't like?

Speaker 4 (06:08):
No?

Speaker 2 (06:09):
Well, yeah, I'm very particular.

Speaker 3 (06:11):
But somebody who's never eaten cereal doesn't need shrimp? What
else didn't you eat like nine of the foods out
there you don't need?

Speaker 2 (06:19):
I know again, I have the palette of a five
year old. I have admitted this multiple times. I'm not
embarrassed to say it. Trust me, people who I go
to dinner with or lunch with multiple times, they can
actually order for me, depending on the restaurant we're at,
because they know I am not adventurous when it comes

(06:41):
to eating. But I will say this, what do you think,
since we're talking about hamburger slash cheeseburgers, what do you
think makes the burger.

Speaker 5 (06:54):
Is?

Speaker 2 (06:55):
What is the thing that sets it beyond and makes
it like a to operate burger?

Speaker 3 (07:02):
Probably the seasoning. Seasoning you're gonna throw a little garlic
in their little onion pepper.

Speaker 2 (07:10):
Yeah, so I said, I just do salt and pepper
the bun.

Speaker 3 (07:15):
I stopped eating buns. Oh, I just I just had
to hamburger with the steak sauce on it.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
M No, no, no, I think you have to have
a good bun to make a good burger. It's just
it's the it's the ribbon on top of the sandwich.
And the best bun is if you take it and
you put a little bit of butter and then you
do a quick grill of the bun and get that

(07:46):
little buttery crunch, and then that's that's the topper for
the burger. I think that just sets it above and
beyond for the best burger. I don't know, that's just me.
That's just me. I think. I think a couple of
local things real quick to let you know about. Starting tomorrow,

(08:08):
it kicks off the weekend of events celebrating Wheeling Park.
Wheeling Park is turning one hundred years old, so beginning
tomorrow there will be a grand picnic in the park
from six to nine. There will be family style dining,
live music from No Bad Juju. I like that name,
No Bad Juju, never heard of them, but live music

(08:30):
from them, No Bad Juju Drinks in More and then
Friday will be fun Fest that's presented by our friends
at Belmont Savings Bank. There will again be live performances
by MSM and Eli and the Mojo Kings Concessions, Family
Fun Zone and Artists Market inside the White Palace. And

(08:51):
then Saturday and Sunday there are additional events. So Wheeling
Park celebrating one hundred years the kickoff this weekend. Think
about it. We are very lucky. I've mentioned this before.
We're very lucky here in the High Valley for the
outdoor complexes we have or natural parks that we have.
We have Wheeling Park, Ogibee Park, we have Grandview Park.

(09:16):
Think about that, all within how many miles of one another.
We have so many great outdoor opportunities through those three parks.
But congratulations to Wheeling Parks celebrating one hundred years. One
hundred years. It is seven fifteen on this Wednesday. Just
a reminder, we're gonna be doing our free lunch with

(09:38):
River City, so get in your entries. Sam at iHeartMedia
dot com. Just email me Sam at iHeartMedia dot com.
Just need your name, phone number and in place of employment.
That's all We need, and then we will get you
lunch from our friends at River City. That's it. Get
in your entries by the end of the show. You
have about an hour and a half roughly, we'll say,

(10:02):
so we'll be well looking for those that's coming up.
At the end of the show. It's seven sixteen. You're
listening to the Bloomdaddy Experience Sam and Otis News Radio
eleven seventy WWVA. Welcome back. It is seven twenty one
on this Wednesday morning, the bloom Daddy Experience Otis and
Sam News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. We didn't get to

(10:26):
this yesterday Otis unfortunately, but you have the results. And
because we've been talking about the transgender high school athlete, Yes,
track and field, the state championship was this weekend, correct, Yeah.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
West Virginia State track championship was this weekend, and we
want to wish to congratulations to all the winners out there.
But we were talking about the transgender mail for Bridgeport
High School by the name the names out there, so
I mean we're not you know, it's it's in the
news articles, it's in the TV you know, if you

(11:03):
look at w DTV. Out of Clarksburg. That's the TV
station down there. W TRF has carried it as well.
The athlete's name is Becky Pepper Johnson.

Speaker 2 (11:14):
You just have to be careful with young you know, exactly, Yeah,
but I mean so, But we were trying to be
We were throwing our support behind a local athlete here
by the name of Paisley Babachek, who unfortunately get lumped
into a story about the transgender athlete by Channel seven
for no.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Reason at all other than one sentence and so and
then there was some online backlash identifying Paisley from john
from the local athlete as as the six foot boy.
And that's one hundred percent untrue because I've known Paisley
since she was probably three months old. I've seen her

(11:55):
in diapers, i spent an entire day with her when
we played five baseball games in one day, and so yes,
you know, I know the family and everything that she is.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
So basically a picture was misidentified.

Speaker 3 (12:10):
Yeah, well yeah, absolutely, so, just to let everybody know
that Paisley got I want to do this second place
in the discus, and the boy from Bridgeport placed third.
So a girl from Nitro by the name of Carson
Jones finished fourth, and if all goes as Governor Morrisey

(12:33):
plans that she will be awarded the bronze medal eventually.
So if if that's still out there. And then in
the shotput, I've got to change pages here, so sorry,
bear with me.

Speaker 4 (12:45):
For one.

Speaker 3 (12:47):
For the shot put, Paisley Babycheck is the gold medal winner,
and the boy that is attempting to be a girl
finished eighth in the shot put. So Paisley at first
a girl from spring Mills it was the silver medal,
and a girl from Bridgeport was also the bronze medalist.

Speaker 2 (13:11):
How many does it say happen? That's in how many
perk category?

Speaker 5 (13:15):
Does it?

Speaker 4 (13:15):
Well?

Speaker 2 (13:16):
It does?

Speaker 3 (13:16):
It gives you the top fifteen.

Speaker 2 (13:18):
Okay, so it's a large amount of competitors perk category.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
Yeah, and I'm looking here and it's and Paisley's a
freshman and there are a lot of underclassmen. Let's see one, two,
only three seniors in the top fifteen. So it should
be it should be a good couple of years for
the for the Triple A State girls shotput because a
lot of underclassmen.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
Well, and listen, this this topic is everywhere. Everybody's talking
about it at this point. The one thing that has
happened recently. I brought this up last week is there
are now very well known male sports figures that are
beginning to weigh in on this topic. Aaron Rodgers most.

Speaker 3 (14:06):
Recently, Well, how about Kaitlyn Jenner. Kaitlyn Jenner says men
do not belong in the sports. And there's a there's
a transgender.

Speaker 2 (14:16):
Individual, right who at the pinnacle of his career, correct,
because at that point in time he was a ze
He wasn't.

Speaker 3 (14:25):
He was a decathlon champion in the seventy.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
Six, which is considered like you're supposed to be.

Speaker 3 (14:30):
It's supposed to make you the world's greatest athlete, right, yeah,
because you win in ten different events.

Speaker 4 (14:37):
Right?

Speaker 2 (14:38):
But with with with names like Aaron Rodgers speaking out,
Kitlyn Jenner formerly Bruce Jenner, who else a Brian Urlacker
from the Chicago Bears spoke out? Uh, there was another
one I can't even here. But my point to this
is it's amazing that these men are getting more coverage

(15:04):
when speaking about this issue than the females who have
been speaking about this issue from the beginning. Now. Riley
Gaines is sort of an exception. To that because she
has become the voice of the character the face, right,
because she was one of the first very much highly
impacted by it. But I think it's a sad statement

(15:27):
that the rest of the country is finally starting to
pay attention more because men are now speaking out about it,
and it shows the fact that it took a while
for men to finally do it.

Speaker 3 (15:42):
Well, I'm looking at some of the comments that have
come through Facebook and some people here that are local,
and I'm going to admit that these are some people
that I went to school with or that I've had
dealings with through my jobs whatever. They and a lot
of these are women and they're sticking up for the
boy because they don't get it. First off, these are like,

(16:06):
these are people that are more into the arts and
entertainment as opposed to athletics. So they don't they don't,
they don't see it. It's it's not it's not a
male dressing up as a woman in a play. That's
a totally different thing.

Speaker 2 (16:22):
It's not a world they're a part of when it
comes to athletics, right.

Speaker 3 (16:25):
And I just think that they don't get it. And
it just said, like the one person posted, oh, we
just need to be better human beings. Well, that's fine.
This kid can do whatever he wants. If he wants
to dress up and call himself a girl, that's fine,
but he doesn't need to be competing in sports against women.

Speaker 2 (16:39):
Well, and my argument to people like that is, why
are you willing to defend somebody who wants to get
ahead stepping on other folks, but you won't defend the.

Speaker 3 (16:51):
Women who have And then and then they quote Ruth
Bader Ginsburg about you know, all the all the women's
rights and everything, and it's just it's just funny.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
No, when it comes when it comes down to those
hippie dippy people, what it's about is making them fear
feel more morally superior and cultural and that yes, it's
seven twenty eight, we're smarter than them. The bloom Daddy
Experience Sam and Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. Welcome

(17:22):
back to seven thirty six The bloom Daddy Experience Otis
and Sam News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. I wanted to
go back real quick to the conversation about the trans
athlete in the Track and Field States for West Virginia.
You know, there was a post on w TRF. Then
there was tons of comments. There is one comment that

(17:43):
I will agree with a little bit that says, you know,
this is a ninth grade young individual, and you know
a lot of adults have a lot of beliefs on this.
We do need to keep in mind these are student athlete,
these are young people. If you think back to when

(18:04):
you were that age, life is not supposed to be complicated.
Life is not supposed to be political, and at that age,
you are not supposed to be faced with or asked
to deal with such topics as this. Let alone make

(18:33):
very life altering is too extreme of a statement. But
being asked to make decisions that are culturally significant.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
That may.

Speaker 2 (18:52):
Make friends and family around you question you and also
determine your future. If you're a student athlete who, as
a female, is on the brink of qualifying or possibly
earning a scholarship for college, okay, and you're in a

(19:15):
state meet, whether it's swimming, whether it's track and field, whatever,
and you know the recruiter's going to be at this event,
but yet you know you have to go up against
a boy, a male, So do you participate because the

(19:37):
recruiters there and you want to impress or do you
take a stand because you believe that men should not
participate in female sports. Imagine being fifteen, sixteen, seventeen year old,
seventeen year old and in facing that type of question.

(20:02):
When I was that age and otis when you were
that age, do you remember ever having to consider or
think about such hot button topics that are adult topics
that have trickled into your realm.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
I'm gonna say no because the problem, the reason being,
you didn't have these things. You know, I you know
I don't. It's not that I hate to say it,
but it was a different time and anybody that Look,
I'll be honest with you. When I coached girls basketball,
I coached high school girls basketball for seven or eight

(20:41):
years something like that. I can't remember nine years. Maybe
I had a girl that played for me. I loved her.
I mean, she wasn't the best player on the team,
but she gave me one hundred percent all the time.
I have since found out that she has transitioned to
a male. She lives with a woman and they have

(21:04):
a kid. You know, that's that was it. Kind of
It didn't surprise me, but it did catch me a
little off guard. Now that's that you're talking the nineties now.
I mean, this girl had no in no inclination of
like transitioning. I mean, did I think that there was
a possibility that maybe she was gay? Yes, Okay, that

(21:29):
didn't bother me. I didn't bother me. I didn't look
at my girls that way when I coached them. Most
of them have gone on to you know, get married
and have kids and so on and so forth. The
with this, you know, and then you go back another
ten to fifteen years when I was playing. You know,
first off, you didn't have all the sports that you
do now, and you didn't you know if somebody was

(21:55):
you know, gay, or they they didn't talk about it
or you know, I mean I hate, I hate to
say this, but they either got harassed or you know, maybe.

Speaker 2 (22:08):
Bullied singled out.

Speaker 3 (22:10):
Yeah, and some people got bullied, you know, just you know,
you didn't think anything of it. You kind of just
as as a sixteen, seventeen, eighteen year old kid in
the eighties and early to mid eighties. That's what you did.
You used I mean, you called somebody a name and
it was you know, a derogatory name today, but you

(22:33):
didn't think about it. You know, you said it kind
of jokingly, and again, I mean for me, that's forty
plus years ago. You know, my fortieth reunion is coming up,
so I mean it's forty to forty one. Forty two
years ago. Junior high was even worse. Yeah, you know,
so you know, I mean the problem is that we've

(23:00):
become such a society and the education system has become
so liberal that you know, we we we find that
in some schools we're putting kiddy litter boxes in restrooms
for for kids to use. And when it's like, don't
cater to it, this is this is a mental issue.

(23:23):
Let's let's not cater to it. Let's try to correct
the problem. But instead we bow down and we cater
because we're afraid of a lawsuit.

Speaker 2 (23:31):
Well, and we've talked about how our young people are
over exposed to things through social media, through the Internet,
through video games, through things that we see on television.
Teenagers and younger are over exposed to adult content, and
it continues to increase year after year after year. Then

(23:56):
you take this particular topic, not only are they exposed
to it, there are young athletes that are being asked,
once again to make adult decisions that can not only
affect their future, but it affects how they are viewed
within their their atmosphere of social friends, their bubble, if

(24:22):
you will, of those that they have to interact with
every day. Because if an athlete says I'm going to
take a stand to defend women's sports and not participate
and wear a T shirt that says men do not
believe belong in women's sports, the next day at school,
that athlete could be harassed and called you know, they

(24:46):
could be called a bigot and all kinds of other
names because they decided to take a stand to defend themselves.

Speaker 3 (24:52):
There was a girl with the West Virginia state track
meet that was a gold medal winner, and I don't
don't I want to say what sport it was because
I don't think that that's fair and I don't want
to mention this girl's name. Okay, Okay, But she stood
on the podium and she has a T shirt on
that says men don't belong in women's sports.

Speaker 2 (25:14):
Okay, So yeah, exactly. So imagine if you're that young
girl and you go back to school the next day
and you're accused of of and you're labeled because you
decided to stand up for yourself and for other women
who are athletes. So we're asking these young people to

(25:35):
be put in a no win situation. And this goes
back to we wonder why teenagers and young adults are depressed.
We wonder why there's so much anger. This is this
is a prime example of that. We are asking them
to grow up too young, make too many adult decisions

(25:59):
too young, and they're over exposed to adult content that
they shouldn't have to see. We need to reflect as adults,
we need to reflect.

Speaker 3 (26:12):
Social media has given these these individuals the entitlement and
the maybe maybe the courage or they feel that they
have the right to do what they're doing and it's
for attention.

Speaker 2 (26:30):
And it goes back to what I said earlier. There's
this this elitism feeling that if I fight for what
they consider the underdog, then they're culturally superior because they're
fighting for the good guys. Since when are female athletes
the bad guys? That's my question, because they're the ones

(26:51):
being stepped all over. That's my question to you. But
keep in mind these and I go back to how
I originally started this. Keep it in mind, these are
young people. These are young people who are confused, so
don't go after them personally or attack them. It's the

(27:13):
entire situation that is wrong, and the adults have let
it get to this point. Seven forty six. You're listening
to the bloom Daddy Experience. Sam and Otis News Radio
eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
Welcome back to the Blue Daddy Experience seven fifty one.
On your Wednesday. Sam had to step out of the
studio for a second to take care of something. I
just wanted to let you know. I didn't know if
anybody heard this or not. Rick Darringer, a big hit
with rock and roll Houchiku, has passed away at the
age of seventy seven. Didn't realize this. He was born

(27:59):
in sal Ohio in nineteen forty seven. He was also
the lead singer for the McCoys and for all u
Ohio state fans, the McCoy's had to hang on Sloopy.
So I didn't realize Rick Deringer was the lead singer
for the McCoys with hang on Sloopy, and he did
that when he was eighteen years old. That was nineteen

(28:19):
sixty five seventeen eighteen, and it was like a teen
Idol band. He died Monday, though no cause of death
has been disclosed. Six decade career, he achieved success as
a guitarist, singer and producer. He worked with Steely, Dan
Todd Rundgren, Alice Cooper Kiss, Barbara streisand also played the

(28:39):
guitar in Edgar Winner Group's massive hit Frankenstein in seventy two,
which was a number one hit in May of seventy three.
Spanned from teen stardom in the sixties to collaborating with
artists like Cindy Lauper in the eighties, letting to producing
a series of wrestling theme songs, which includes the Hulk
Hogans iconic theme. Real American also played the guitar solos

(29:03):
on Bonnie Tyler's Total Eclipse of the Heart Air Supplies
Making Love out of Nothing at All, and in later
years he toured with Ringo Star his All Star band,
as well as Peter Frampton. I was just you, You
were just you were just in Seleno, Ohio, weren't you?

Speaker 2 (29:18):
Is that where he was from?

Speaker 3 (29:19):
He was was born in Selena, Ohio back in nineteen
forty seven. Yeah, and then right before you came in,
he was the lead singer for the McCoy's, which is
the basically the highest state unofficial theme song, hang on Slooping.
Oh yeah, so he's the lead singer on that. I
didn't realize that. And you know, for being somebody that
knows a lot about, you.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
Know, music, he has quite an eclectic Yeah.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
I mean well, I mean working. I mean, you work
with Kiss and Barbara Streiser. I mean like, could you
go from one other of the spectrum to the other
in Hulk Hogan. Yeah, you know, writes the theme song
for Hulk Hogan and you know got in with Cindy
Lauper and during that time when she got involved in
the w at the time the ww F which is
now the WWE.

Speaker 2 (30:03):
Could you imagine dinner with Hulk Hogan and Barber Strays
and Sydney. No, that's quite a h is he in
the rock and roll hollify?

Speaker 4 (30:12):
He is not.

Speaker 3 (30:13):
I mean, and you look at somebody like that probably
probably probably doesn't deserve to be in as necessarily a musician,
but maybe a contributor. Where he he was, you were
a little bit of everything, musician, composer, uh, you know,
I mean just to be on some of those songs
that he was on I mean to play lead guitar

(30:35):
on Frankenstein by Edgar Winner, kind of.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Like behind the scenes person.

Speaker 3 (30:39):
Yeah, doesn't get the acclaim that And I can't remember.
I think I think it's called Hired Guns. It's a
movie and it's it's out there on probably streaming somewhere.
I've seen it on different streaming platforms. At one point
in time, it was on Netflix, but I think it's
either on Amazon Prime or you can probably pull it
up on to me if you ever get the chance
to see Hired Guns. Hired it's about studio musicians or

(31:05):
people that have been had had maybe had been in
a band, uh when they were touring because they needed
somebody to go on tour with them. Like there was
a guy that played I can't remember if it was
drums or guitar. He toured with Guns and Roses. And
then when the tour ended, he was out of a
he was out of a job, and then he got
he was he was painting houses and one of the

(31:27):
members of Guns n' Roses hired this company to paint
their house. And he he goes, man, you look familiar,
how do I know you? And he goes, well, I
played with you for oh my whole you know, a
year and a half. Hease, oh man, hey, how you
doing this? That and the other? But in uh like
Kenny Aronoff who was a drummer who drummed for John
Mellencamp for years and then went out on his own.

(31:47):
Uh great, it's a great but but you know, Rick
Derringer could probably fall into that category of of of
the hired gun Is that?

Speaker 4 (31:56):
Like?

Speaker 2 (31:56):
Okay, I watched the show Nashville right back in the day. Okay,
it was about behind the scenes music in Nashville. It
was a drama and everything. But is that what ado
studio musician is? Where somebody comes in and they're not
necessarily a part of a band.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
But yeah, I mean you'll have studio musicians to play
on albums and recordings that aren't necessarily a member of
the band, but they'll get credit on the album. Okay, okay,
But what was the other There was another one out
there about basically the studio musicians from California, California that
behind the scenes and how great they were and just

(32:37):
like some some studio musicians. They like the song Brandy,
You're a Fine Girl. That was studio musicians that got
together and formed a band and ended up with a
number one hit or you know, a big hit, right
and then just disappeared.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
That's definitely a one hit wonder.

Speaker 3 (32:54):
Yeah, oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:56):
What popped out to me? And this is totally Clips
of the Heart. That is one of my all time
favorite songs. I know every word to it. I don't know,
I don't know why, but it is just one of
those songs that, like I said, I know every.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
I'm just trying to think like air supply. I don't
remember like any like real guitar solos. I mean, there
probably is, but you know, I mean as a kid
growing up in the eighties, you know, you grew up
with their supply. And I think I saw him at
the time Wheeling Civic Center now West Banco Arena. I

(33:33):
remember one with my mom and dad, you know, as
a kid, and it's just like now you look back
and you're going, good, God, did that music suck? I mean,
you hate to say it, but yeah, I mean, but
it's a it's a generational thing.

Speaker 6 (33:48):
Oh wow, I know.

Speaker 2 (33:49):
Yeah, I mean I grew up part of the eighties
and into the early nineties, and you look back at
some of the music from the eighties.

Speaker 3 (33:56):
Huh the nineties, I think are wor oh no, oh.

Speaker 2 (34:02):
Yeah, no, Nirvana, Pearl Jam.

Speaker 3 (34:04):
Oh you you have your good stuff. I mean you
just you have your good stuff from the eighties too.

Speaker 2 (34:08):
I mean, well, yeah, you're right.

Speaker 3 (34:10):
I mean you're gonna tell me that like Prince in
the mid eighties wasn't like top and everything.

Speaker 2 (34:14):
Yeah, okay, all right, you win on that one. I'll
give you that one. But man, there is some stuff
from the eighties.

Speaker 6 (34:20):
Oh.

Speaker 3 (34:20):
Absolutely, there's terrible stuff from every generation.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
There are some pictures, hairstyles, outfits. Yikes, yikes. It's seven
fifty eight. Just a quick reminder, Sam at iHeartMedia dot
Com name phone number company for your chance to win
free lunch by River City. Seven fifty eight. You're listening
to the bloom Daddy Experience here on news radio eleven
seventy WWVA.

Speaker 1 (34:43):
Z number one tuck 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 you WUVA starts.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
Now eight o six. Welcome back to the Blue Daddy
experience samon Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA. It's Wednesday,
it's eight o'clock hours, so it is time for Politics
Unleashed with Elgin Maccardo. Good morning, Elgin, Good morning.

Speaker 3 (35:23):
How are you.

Speaker 2 (35:24):
I'm good? How are you?

Speaker 4 (35:26):
Oh? Good?

Speaker 6 (35:27):
Good? Good good.

Speaker 2 (35:29):
Okay, So we're gonna we're gonna start off this morning
with a listener email with a question for you. Okay, okay,
all right, here we go. This is from Randy. It
says the FBI lied about Hunter's laptop, helping to predict uh,
helping to protect Joe from investigations about what he and
his family has been up to. They created leverage over

(35:50):
Biden for people at the FBI. They weren't the only
people with that leverage over Biden. That is clear and undeniable.
Is it too much to ask? Who had our president compromised?
And what goals they accomplished by doing it? It seems
to be an obvious angle. Can we the people demand

(36:10):
an investigation into this? That's a lot there, that's a
lot to unpack.

Speaker 4 (36:17):
Yeah, So I guess the answer is, first, yes, we
absolutely can demand an investigation. And that's my understanding that
Congress I'm sure.

Speaker 6 (36:30):
That they are.

Speaker 4 (36:31):
The House will be investigating, you know who, who had
so many things, who had the control and quite frankly,
at this point, I don't know that Biden even knew
that he was in the state that he was in.
I just think that he who is out of it
the FBI, Jim Comey obviously is a big, big individual

(36:56):
that needs to be looked into, especially in light of
his cute little sea shell posts last week. Yes, I
think we can demand. I think the biggest thing is
who was in charge of the autopad, who made the
decision to I guess prop him up as the face

(37:17):
of the decisions, and quite frankly, whether his family was involved,
was China involved, was you know so many things? I mean,
the Biden family profited enormously during his tenure as president,
and his name was clearly used as a vehicle to

(37:39):
do that. My bet is on Jill and Hunter. Jill
just was too, I don't know, front and center in
so many things. I've seen posts and pictures of her.

Speaker 6 (37:57):
During cabinet meetings.

Speaker 4 (38:00):
She came out right after the debate and talked to
her husband as though he was a child. Such a
good job, Joe you answered all the questions. I mean,
really right, I mean it was disgusting, It really was disgusting.
But to Randy, yes, I think we can demand it.
There's so many things to be looked at, executive orders,

(38:24):
auto pen contrast and contrast to Donald Trump who signs
in front of the camera each executive order and explains
what the executive order is, contrary to the big pile
that was on Biden's desk. Here are the executive orders
that I signed today.

Speaker 6 (38:44):
Sure you didn't.

Speaker 4 (38:45):
You don't even know what they are or what was signed.
So yes, we can demand all that.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
Well, and that's just the executive orders. I mean then,
of course we talked about this last week, the pardons
that were given away, like you know, tic tax Yeah,
at the end of his his reign or not rain
it's not a dictator, that's not the right terminology during
his presidency, yeah, administration. So I mean there's that side

(39:09):
of it too. But I think right now, and we're
going to get into this, the media currently is taking
their lumps when it comes to the cover up. Let's
just call it what it is. That's what it was.
There's no speculations and a more behind that. This was
a cover up. The media right now is the focus
in participating in this cover up. But the bigger question is,

(39:32):
and you brought this up a little bit, how deep
does this run?

Speaker 4 (39:37):
Oh, it's deep state. You know, it's the it's the
term that has been used by right the right conservatives,
right wing conservatives and Republicans. But there's always been a
deep state, and I know there's been a deep state
back to JFK. The question is just how corrupt it

(39:59):
is in the transparency that needs to be had in government. Now,
certainly there are terms, there are certain issues that have
got to be kept quiet based upon national security, right,
But you know, I think you've seen in the Trump
administration when transparency is there, it's criticized. You know, it's

(40:25):
criticized as him being a dictator. So it's so much
of it I think circles back to the Trump derangement
syndrome and the reasons for doing this. I don't know
exactly how PDS got to be so prominent. Was it

(40:47):
simply the brainwashing? Was it the propaganda? Was it the media?
So many things were involved in just creating that mantra
that unfortunately people who just listen to one particular news
station or ideology just becomes so embedded in their thought

(41:14):
process that it becomes.

Speaker 6 (41:17):
Ridiculous.

Speaker 4 (41:18):
Now, I guess the good news is the mandate that
was issued by the country in voting the way they
did clearly says that the republic is intact, that the
majority of the citizenry are not into the woke ideals,

(41:38):
are very suspicious of the deep state, and hopefully it
can be turned around. But I guess that remains to
be seen well.

Speaker 2 (41:46):
And Okay, so the term deep state, if you said
that four or five years ago, you're considered a crazy
conspiracy theorist and looked at by outsiders as kind of
a nutjall, I mean, right, for lack of a better term,
that you're like, Okay, yeah, there's something wrong with this person. Now,

(42:07):
I look at folks who has a lot of this
been able to happen because of Americans? They're complacent. Have
we as a society become so comfortable and so entitled
entitled as Americans that as long as something doesn't directly

(42:28):
affect us and we're comfortable in our own little bubble,
whatever happens outside of that bubble, we're okay with because
it's not directly happening to us.

Speaker 4 (42:40):
Oh I, there are so many people they just say
live in their own little world. If it doesn't affect me,
it's not relevant. Well, the problem is it doesn't affect you.
You know, you don't know it, but it does. You know,
Let's just go to inflation in the grocery store and

(43:03):
how that all of a sudden was affecting the price
of eggs. How how much was the price.

Speaker 6 (43:08):
Of eggs in the in the media for how long?

Speaker 4 (43:12):
Right? Just you know, it does affect you.

Speaker 6 (43:15):
The administration, the.

Speaker 4 (43:18):
Biden Biden administration versus the Trump administration, and you have it.
The Biden administration is sandwich between two Trump administrations. You
can clearly.

Speaker 6 (43:27):
Seemparison in your life, your own little bubble, and how
things were in gas prices and grocery prices in your
four to one case, all.

Speaker 4 (43:37):
Of those things in Trump's lacks administration despite him being
fought by the deep state all the way around. You know,
if you if Trump sneeze is wrong, then it's.

Speaker 6 (43:51):
It's a big to do. But if Biden falls on
a stage or has his bubbles right, it's not a
big deal.

Speaker 4 (44:00):
Yeah, you know, it's so clear and so evident that
I think the general constituency said, oh no, oh no, no, no, no,
Ye's not happening again. And you know, you know, Cabala
certainly was not the answer. I mean, there's so much
hypocrisy and the deep state and the Democrats and they're

(44:22):
waffling around with no message and trying to figure out
what to do. And now you have media, you have
you know, politicians all of a sudden thinking oh oh
we better switch, yeah, better switch. Well, don't switch, or
else we're going to lose.

Speaker 2 (44:39):
Okay, don't switch off on us. Stick with us. We're
going to jump to a quick break. Elgin, you stay
on the line and then we'll be back with that X.
We're going to continue that and we're going to get
into the media a little bit more. It is eight sixteen.
You're listening to the bloom Daddy Experience with Sam Otis
and Elgin for Politics Unleashed here on news radio eleven
seventy w WVa. Welcome back eight twenty one on your Wednesday,

(45:14):
The Blue Daddy Experience Sam and Otis, News Radio eleven
seventy WWVA. Of course we are not alone. We've got
the one and only Miss Elgia mccardal on the phone
for Politics Unleashed.

Speaker 3 (45:26):
The Queen, the Queenie.

Speaker 2 (45:28):
Hello, so continuing the conversation. So we you mentioned briefly
the medium. So it has blown up. Okay, I'm sure
you've been following it. Everybody's been following it. It's it
has blown up about the Biden cover up, and it
the most entertaining part to me is the fact of

(45:52):
watching these quote unquote journalists sidestepping doing the tango, the salsa,
this been whatever you want to call it, to say well,
we just didn't know, We just didn't know. Oh come on,
Even the White House Press Corps are speaking out and saying,

(46:14):
you know, yeah, we we were full, just like everybody.
Please please.

Speaker 4 (46:21):
Please, I mean, come on, you just need they didn't Well,
well that's the question. Did they not want to see
it because of their tds or were they instructed to
ignore it? And if they were instructed to ignore it,
who was doing instructing?

Speaker 3 (46:41):
Right, Well, let's let's go to Jake Tapper.

Speaker 2 (46:44):
Oh yeah, that's where I was going.

Speaker 3 (46:46):
And and you know, here's a guy that said, oh
I met with President Biden, and he's the sharpest that
he's ever been and blah blah blah blah blah. And
then they went out for the debate and he couldn't
put two words together. Oh yeah, you know, so you're
going to you're going to tell me that he was
the best at his the best that he's ever been
in the sharpest he's ever been.

Speaker 4 (47:06):
Come on and I agree, completely agree. And then you
know his argument with Laura Trump on his show saying that,
and then he then he comes out and says, oh, well,
she was right, and I'm going to apologize to her.

Speaker 5 (47:19):
Whatever.

Speaker 2 (47:21):
Well, the best this disgusting part about Jake Tapper is
he is now profiting off of it. He's profiting off
his failure as a journalist. That's repulsive. I'm sorry, that's repulsive.

Speaker 4 (47:36):
It is repulsive. I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (47:40):
What did it teach.

Speaker 4 (47:41):
Is there an ex course in journalist? Yes?

Speaker 3 (47:43):
There is, Yes, there is. I mean, but you know,
obviously nobody's adhering to it, because you know, here's the
other thing you had. You had all these people about
the Hunter Biden laptop, and people from the Washington Post
or the New York Times or whatever. Somebody wins a
Pulitzer prize eyes over their article because and it's a
it's one hundred percent a lie, right, you know, but

(48:05):
they don't they don't they don't recount, they don't recant
their story, or they don't say, oh, you know what,
we made a mistake, and they still keep the pultar right.

Speaker 4 (48:14):
Oh, I agree. So so they teach ethics in journalism school.
Is there a licensure? I don't know. Is there a
licensure per state on journalism? Is there any kind of
authority that monitors? So who cares? So why have the
rules if they're not going to be enforced or there's

(48:35):
no body that actually, you know, use it. Well, for example,
there's there's a code of ethics. Obviously Office of Professional
Responsibility in you know, doctors and lawyers, and each state
bar is responsible or state organization is responsible for monitoring
their own. So you're telling me there's nothing for journalism,

(48:57):
So who cares?

Speaker 2 (48:58):
I mean the closest otis maybe the closest would be
the FCC, but that's more about programming on media. I mean,
they can they not necessarily journalism.

Speaker 3 (49:10):
I mean, obviously the FCC enforces certain rules. You know,
if one of us would drop for a four letter
word on here and then the next thing, you know,
they issue a fine. But you know, there's there, there's
decency rules, there's there's all kinds of things that go
on and and there is supposedly some policing of that.
But you know, when when you go into the newsroom,

(49:33):
it's it's more of if if you're if you if
the people at the top don't have any ethics, how
do you expect the reporters and the broadcasters to have
any right?

Speaker 4 (49:43):
And I think you need to go back to the
days of Walter Cronkite, like the right, the twenty four
hour news cycle and the spin. There's not just reporting news.
Everything is spun. I don't care whether it is Fox, MSNB,
the CNN, it's all fun. What news organization. I would

(50:05):
like to just see the news two o'clock at night,
and it should be mainstream where they just present this
is what happened. For example, the latest thing that happened
on the news, the Krawn's wife all the face, Yeah, okay,
it happened.

Speaker 6 (50:23):
Well, you know it's up to you to decide what
was what went on?

Speaker 4 (50:26):
You know that kind of thing. It's just the spin,
the comments, the it's a wonder people don't go on
too good, people don't run for office because nobody wants
to live in a fishball.

Speaker 2 (50:38):
Well, and I have said this, the downfall of our
journalism ethics, as you put it, started with the twenty
four hour news cycle because once that started, they had
to fill time. So what do you do when you
feel time? You bring in commentators. You bring in, like
you said, people who spin stories, or they they dive
into it with speculat as opposed to as you said,

(51:03):
just reporting the news. You take the twenty four hour
news cycle. Then you slowly add in social media, where
you want to be the first one to break the
story and you tweet it out there before anybody.

Speaker 3 (51:15):
Else without confirmation.

Speaker 2 (51:17):
Exactly, you can't cross check and check and all of
your facts because you want to be there first, and
you can do it immediately with social media. So between
those two things, that is where we have gotten to
where we have gotten when it comes to journalism. But
I just wanted to point this out real quick, going
back to those that are spinning and dancing and doing

(51:38):
the whole thing. The White House Press Corps, Now, did
they not sit and listen to Peter Doocy from Fox News?
Did they miss his questions about Biden's mental acuity. I mean,
were they not there for that? So don't tell me
that they were not even remotely paying attention, because obviously

(51:59):
they weren't. Elgin. We got to jump to a quick break.
But when we get back, I want to talk about Sam,
not me, not me, not me. I'll explain when we
get back. It's eight twenty eight. You're listening to the
bloom Daddy Experience. Sam and Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA,

(52:28):
A thirty six Politics Unleashed. Elgie mccardal, this is News
Radio eleven seventy WWVA. I'm Sam, He's Otis. Thank you
for tuning in, Elgin. I wanted to go back, just
real quick. One final thought that I wanted to add.
With this whole media cover up, the whole Biden thing,
It's hard to see or hear when you're actually not

(52:54):
willing to listen or look. I think that's what it
comes down to when it comes to this, all these
people that are arguing they didn't see anything. You know,
what was your first thoughts or what was your first
inclination that there was something wrong? If you're not willing
to open your eyes and listen and open your ears,
and you're not going to see it. I think that's

(53:16):
what it comes down to.

Speaker 4 (53:18):
Well, I think that's that's what it comes down to
with PDS, and as Otis was saying earlier, you know,
if if your boss tells you ignore it, you're going
to ignore it. I mean, I think that's where the
ethics comes in. It's like payton my paycheck.

Speaker 6 (53:33):
Or hit the road.

Speaker 4 (53:35):
And I think you're right. It was a very good
point that when they were sitting in the White House
briefing room, do they ignore Peter DC. Do they think
he was crazy?

Speaker 6 (53:49):
You know, I don't.

Speaker 4 (53:50):
They probably thought, well, good for him, right, at least
he can in his job, he can actually say it.
So I think if it's a combination of a lot
of things, but it's unfortunate.

Speaker 2 (54:03):
Yeah, it really is. It really is. Let's turn a
little bit, so we are inching our way towards the
mid terms. They'll get here sooner than we want, but
we're moving towards that. The Democrats have basically been in
a tailspin since November and when they basically got served

(54:26):
up on a silver platter when it comes to the election.
But now they are looking towards Sam to solve their problems. So,
as I said, SAM is not me Sam, They're yeah,
they're looking to me. No, SAM is actually an acronym

(54:46):
for this speaking with American men. So the Democratic Party
is investing twenty million dollars on a study to examine
how American men speak because basically during the campaign they
lost six and ten white male voters went for Trump,

(55:10):
one third of black male voters went for Trump, and
fifty percent of Latino male voters went for Trump. So
they want to examine and learn why this happened, how
their message is not speaking to the male voter.

Speaker 4 (55:29):
Oh again, let's go back to common sense. Why is
their message not speaking to the male voter. Their message
is you can be You can as a man, you
can give birth to a child as a man. You
are you know, allowed to participate in women's sports as
a man. It's everything contrary to what a man, manly

(55:51):
man you know once or is a portrays you know,
I mean men, you're you're manly man, your cowboy, your
Yellowstone cowboys there you believe in none of that? You
know what you know what they need to do, They

(56:12):
just need to watch Yellowstone if they watch Yellowstone, they'll
figure out what a man man is?

Speaker 2 (56:16):
Well, wouldn't you say that masculinity has been often yes, well,
and it's been under attack.

Speaker 4 (56:28):
It has. I mean when when let's let's just go
back to the bud Light commercial, when when bud Light
used to be the Clydesdale horses and the you know,
it's just everything was switched when they used to transgender
guy male male pretending to be a female to advertise

(56:52):
the beer. I mean, that was just such. That was
the biggest backlash. That was the first hint. I mean,
there are two sexes, male and female. Period.

Speaker 2 (57:04):
Yeah, it's pretty simple. It's it's not hard, it's it's
a simple concept.

Speaker 4 (57:08):
Yes, it is a simple concept. But when you start
blurring the lines of what's what's what, what's male and
what's female and you try to change that by perception
or then it it completely eludes reality. Well, and it's

(57:29):
not difficult. I mean, this this same thing, what was
it millions or twenty million millions to figure out what
how to appeal to a man? Watch Yellowstone?

Speaker 2 (57:43):
You can you can buy the complete series for one
hundred and fifty dollars on Amazon. I don't know there
you go.

Speaker 4 (57:48):
Yeah, and and and watch that and you can figure
it out, or or just the old shows. I mean, Bamanza,
you know, I I you probably notice you Bonanza.

Speaker 3 (58:01):
No, I'm sure, I know, I know Bonanza, Bananza, the
Big Valley. I mean, I used to watch them all.

Speaker 2 (58:07):
Well, and I do, and I don't think it's all
that either. I also think that it's not necessarily the messenger.
It's the message that they're portraying, and they're trying to
get Middle America males to believe in. And that's exactly
what you're what you're saying, Elgin. But I also think
it comes to the the elite way of thinking, where

(58:29):
the the trade jobs, the blue collar worker, the average
the regular American citizen, male citizen has How do I
exactly want to say this? They're not on the same
level in the eyes of the Democratic Party as the
guy who wears a suit every day to the office.

(58:53):
Does that? Does that?

Speaker 6 (58:53):
Am? I?

Speaker 5 (58:54):
Am?

Speaker 2 (58:54):
I clear with what I'm trying to get across there.

Speaker 4 (58:58):
Oh yeah, yeah, you know what wearing suit? That not
necessarily I mean, it's just it's I mean, if you
want to talk manly man, look at the guy on
the sweatshirt.

Speaker 2 (59:11):
Yeah, you know, yeah, it's.

Speaker 4 (59:13):
It's just it's I don't know, it's not difficult. I
don't think you need twenty million dollars to figure it out.

Speaker 2 (59:21):
They could we could have split that between the two
of us, Elgin, and we could.

Speaker 3 (59:24):
Have well, whoa, whoa whoa, the three of us, the
three of us.

Speaker 2 (59:27):
I'm sorry, Sorr, I just I just tramped on the mail.

Speaker 4 (59:30):
In the room and we could have used your name, Sam.

Speaker 6 (59:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (59:35):
There. They didn't even have to come up with a fancy,
fancy acronym.

Speaker 3 (59:40):
I think it goes back to eliminated there.

Speaker 2 (59:43):
Sorry, I'm so sorry, and mean, I feel like I.

Speaker 3 (59:46):
Feel like a girl in women's sports.

Speaker 2 (59:51):
I'm so sorry that was rude, that would But I
think it goes back to when we Elgin we got
to go see VI vag Ramasamy speak up in Wintersville.
He said all jobs or professions, no more class divisions
of those professions, which was kind of what I was
trying to get across with my last thought. Right, Yeah, So,

(01:00:13):
I mean again, does it go back to the message
that they're delivering. It's not appealing to men.

Speaker 5 (01:00:22):
It's just it's not no you know, you know, they're in,
you know, for women to take offense to quote being
pigeonholed or or whatever the case may be.

Speaker 4 (01:00:36):
I mean, notice you'll you'll agree with me. Leave it
to Beaver, you know, June Cleaver, you know, the stay
at home mom who had dinner on the table and
just all of those old times. Why do we have
to take offense to that. So that's what she did that.
You can do that, and you can work, you can.
Everybody is entitled to do what they want to do

(01:00:59):
or feel as that is right for their life. But
we can't. I mean, you don't pigeonhole that individual by saying,
by you accepting that role, you are a disgrace to women.
I mean why right?

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
You know, And I think that goes to.

Speaker 4 (01:01:17):
Your comment about Zach. And you can wear suit, you
can wear an hard hat, you can go down in
the coal mines, you can work on the oil fields,
you can be an electrician, a plummer, all of those things,
and those are all men, and you can might wear suit.
He can be a man, you know. But the bottom

(01:01:39):
line is they're all men or they're all women. They
choose to do different professions. And just because they choose
to do different professions. Doesn't make them any less of
a man, or any more of a man, or any
less of a woman, or any more of a woman. Yes,
they all have value. And while they have this DEI diversity,
equity and inclusion, they want to exclude the white male.

(01:02:02):
They want to exclude to stay at home mom, They
want to exclude the you know what I mean. So
it's DEI in accordance to their definition as opposed to
everybody's under the tent. And so what they're missing is
the Republican Party under Trump has morphed into this huge
tent that includes everybody. Yeah, you know, it's the it's

(01:02:27):
the discriminatory, it's the reverse discrimination that is the problem.

Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
Well, you know what, we're not to discriminate, Elgin.

Speaker 3 (01:02:36):
We're gonna let you go.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
We're gonna let you go.

Speaker 3 (01:02:38):
So we're not going to discriminate at all.

Speaker 2 (01:02:40):
See ya, enjoy the rest of your week. Thanks once again,
of course.

Speaker 4 (01:02:47):
Okay, all right, we'll see you.

Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Next question, all right, talk to you soon. All right,
there she gets, Yes, she did. It's eight forty six.
Don't hang up on us. The bloom Daddy Experience, salmon
O chance to register, Yes, last chance to register lunch
River City. We'll deliver it on Friday. Email Sam at
iHeartMedia dot com, name phone number in business. That's all
you have to do. We'll be doing that here at

(01:03:08):
the end of the show. Stick with us. The bloom
Daddy Experienced salmon Otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA eight
fifty two. That was quick. That was a quick breaking
help Like now.

Speaker 3 (01:03:28):
I'm still five minutes.

Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
I don't know. It's seemed quicker than that bloom Daddy experience,
samon Otis News Radio, eleven seventy WWVA. All right, so
imagine this. You're sitting at home, you're relaxing, just had dinner,
curled up on the couch watching I don't know if
you're me the Real Housewives or below deck. Who knows

(01:03:56):
Otis is watching Cheers Bonanza.

Speaker 3 (01:04:00):
I don't watch Bonanza. I don't think it's that great
of your show.

Speaker 2 (01:04:02):
Okay, so I know Cheers.

Speaker 4 (01:04:05):
There we go.

Speaker 2 (01:04:05):
Okay, Mash mash, that's right. How can I forget Mash.
So you're sitting there, you're relaxing, you're doing that, having
your bowl of ice cream whatever. So family in Kentucky
they're doing this as they're relaxing after dinner, cleaning up,
doing the whole thing. A bear falls through their ceiling. Whoops,

(01:04:33):
Not a squirrel, not a raccoon, a bear.

Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
Let's that say about the construction of your house?

Speaker 2 (01:04:42):
What that says is get a different roofing company.

Speaker 3 (01:04:45):
Well, he got into the attic, Yes, so he's it
doesn't have anything.

Speaker 2 (01:04:49):
To do with the real Well, that's true. Yeah, yeah,
you're right, you're right. Yeah, he got into the attic.
He climbed up a ladder and got into an opening,
as you said, that goes into the home's attic, and
from there he crashed through the ceiling and landed on
the kitchen stove. Now, there were no injuries that were reported.
What do you do? Do you stop and go?

Speaker 3 (01:05:12):
I poop my pants? What I do? Because that's what's
gonna happen. I'm gonna go, holy blank, and I'm gonna
poop my.

Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
Pants because do you freeze?

Speaker 3 (01:05:27):
Do you?

Speaker 4 (01:05:27):
I mean?

Speaker 2 (01:05:28):
Hopefully the bear was a little kind of sunned, yeah,
startled or whatever?

Speaker 3 (01:05:34):
Confused?

Speaker 5 (01:05:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:05:35):
Holy yeah, Well you that's the last thing you want
is a bear that's confused. And then all of a
sudden he's now pod because he fell through the ceiling.

Speaker 2 (01:05:45):
Do you go look for some honey, like here, take
the honey.

Speaker 3 (01:05:48):
No, you're just telling him there's the fridge. Take what
you want the yikes, hope takes the expired stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:05:55):
Officers. Yeah, officers were called, and they were able to
get the bear out of the home by getting it
to run through an open door. So basically they like
shushed it, shoot it out out the front.

Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
They just went outside and opened the door to the
kitchen or something of that nature. Maybe oh man, man, yeah,
I would have had to change my shorts probably twice.

Speaker 4 (01:06:19):
What was it?

Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
Who was it? Yogi Bear? Boo, that's it. That's what
I was trying to think of. All you stole my line. Hey,
boo boo. There you'll be saying that the rest of
the day.

Speaker 3 (01:06:30):
Now, boo boo, that's a little before your time. I'm surprised.

Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
You know that Yogi Bear.

Speaker 3 (01:06:35):
Yeah, No, Yogi Bears from the sixties, like the Flintstones
and the Jetsons.

Speaker 2 (01:06:39):
Oh, they were all on when I was a kid.
Yogi Bear was handiedb Bear. It wasn't. Yeah, oh like
at the time, like I knew it was a rerun.

Speaker 4 (01:06:48):
No.

Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
I loved Yogi Bear. I thought it was fun. I
liked Yogi Bear.

Speaker 5 (01:06:52):
Oh.

Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Speaking of cartoons, this is disturbing for everybody out there.
I want you to know I am highly disturbed by this.
This is this is this, This should not happen. I completely,
one hundred percent disagree with it. What am I talking about?
Marvel in d C Comics are collaborating on a Batman

(01:07:16):
Deadpool crossover comics series set for release later this year.
The storyline involves Deadpool being hired in Gotham City, prompting
conflict with Batman. The two companies are also planning additional
character matchups. This marks the first ever DC Marvel crossover
in over twenty years.

Speaker 5 (01:07:40):
Mm hm hm hmm.

Speaker 2 (01:07:43):
Nope, this is wrong. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. You're not
gonna see Batman and iron Man having dinner together. You're
not gonna see Catwoman and wonder Woman.

Speaker 3 (01:07:57):
Well, Catwoman's a criminal.

Speaker 2 (01:07:59):
Well yeah, you're right, But I'm just saying, character wise,
I'm trying to think of a female character. You're not
going to see them having tea together. There are some
worlds that do not cross in DC and Marvel. I'm sorry,
do not cross. It's just it's nope, goes against goes
against the inner nerd in me.

Speaker 3 (01:08:22):
Keyword being nerd.

Speaker 5 (01:08:26):
It's just wrong.

Speaker 2 (01:08:27):
It's just wrong. It's just wrong, just wrong. You know
it's not wrong. We are going to have our winner.
You have your your, your doo, dad, your randomized already.
So of course this is our free lunch Fridays and
we will bring you lunch from our friends at River City.

(01:08:48):
And let me tell you, it's a good lunch. It's
a good lunch. Chicken wraps, pasta salad and warm chocolate
chip cookies. That sounds good right now, doesn't it?

Speaker 3 (01:08:57):
Show me the paper with the number of entries.

Speaker 2 (01:08:59):
Oh, sorry, fifteen, okay, to put in one through fifteen? Okay,
what's our number five? Number five? Okay, okay, we have Kihi.
I hope I said that right. Kilee is our winner.
So Keille, if you're listening, I will be giving you
a call here a little bit shortly after the show

(01:09:21):
and arrange how we do all of this on Friday.
So congrats, and hopefully you and your officemates are going
to enjoy the lunch that we will be bringing you
on Friday. If you didn't win today, you can still
register for next week. We are done Enjoy your Wednesday, everybody.
We'll be back tomorrow.
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