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October 31, 2025 • 70 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
D 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.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
WWVA starts now.

Speaker 3 (00:20):
The Bloomdaddy Experience. It's seven oh six on news radio
eleven seventy. By all accounts, the US economy growing big time,
driven by almost unthinkable levels of spending to build artificial
intelligence dominance.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
The problem is for a lot of people don't bother
looking for a job.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
Some of our largest, most important employers say they don't
need the hire to keep growing. AI's taking the place
of a lot of these workers, driving more productivity out
of others. So everybody out there is fearing a white
collar bloodbath. Amazon this week cutting up to thirty thousand jobs,
Target Paramounts, Guide Dance, cutting thousands of corporate positions.

Speaker 4 (00:58):
You take a look worldwide. One study McKinsey study.

Speaker 3 (01:02):
It says thirty percent of the world's workforce going to
lose their job to AI within seven years and expected
four hundred to eight hundred million people going to lose
their jobs due to artificial intelligence by twenty thirty. Jeff
Hunter is a Savage marketer leading voice in AI marketing.
He created the world's first AI certified consultant program runs

(01:23):
the largest AI community with three point six million plus members.
Entrepreneur magazine ran a story about how he made seventy
grand in a weekend using one hundred percent AI, and
Jeff has trained thousands on how to make money using AI.

Speaker 4 (01:38):
Jeff, thanks for coming back on the show.

Speaker 3 (01:39):
You just heard the numbers and expected four hundred to
eight hundred million people will lose their job according to
this survey due to artificial intelligence by twenty thirty. That's
going to terrify a lot of people out there listening
right now.

Speaker 5 (01:53):
Yeah, the numbers are just getting worse and worse as
AI is getting better. You know, when this first happened,
I think you and I spoke last year and we
were talking about how maybe it would impact fourteen percent.
Now the number is up to about forty percent of
jobs that will be impacted and about twenty percent of
careers that will just completely be replaced. So it's just

(02:15):
getting there.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
Do recent college grads have any hope of landing a
job in this kind of environment?

Speaker 5 (02:20):
Jeff well, it depends on the degree.

Speaker 6 (02:24):
Yeah, I will tell you I'm not.

Speaker 5 (02:27):
You know, like I've proudly convinced two people to drop
out of college and come work for me, and they're
doing very well. You know, I have a thirteen year
old that, you know, genuinely, I don't know. I don't
know if I wanted to go to college because they're
not going to be able to teach him the skills
he needs to learn how to do AI.

Speaker 6 (02:44):
Today.

Speaker 5 (02:45):
You know, it's they're barely teaching how to do social
media marketing in colleges.

Speaker 4 (02:49):
Come on, Jeff.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Some predicted AI will automate a large portion of jobs,
particularly in low skilled sectors, leading to massive unemployment. Now,
proponents of AI point to history. They say, you know,
look at other technological revolutions, they created new jobs to
replace those lost.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
Will AI do the same.

Speaker 5 (03:15):
We're looking at massive job displacement from AI. This isn't
just low skilled jobs, by the way, that's not the
scary part. As a matter of fact, I would say
the low skilled jobs are probably the safest ones because
the robotics is still expensive, right, So you're not going
to be replacing your house cleaner soon. You're not going
to be replacing, you know, like your plumbers and stuff

(03:36):
like that. Like we're going after accountants. You know, AI
can already do all your taxes and accounting right now, lawyers, radiologists,
customer service, data entry, even middle management.

Speaker 6 (03:48):
You know.

Speaker 5 (03:48):
The only difference right now is that the Industrial Revolution
it took decades to happen and this is happening in years.
And I think that's the biggest problem. So anyone telling
you that AI will just create new jobs is selling
you something. Yeah, new jobs will be created, but not
fast enough for people losing theirs.

Speaker 3 (04:05):
Right now, I'm talking to Jeff Hunter right now, leading
voice in AI marketing. So, Jeff, this brings us to
the discussion of UBI universal basic income. And you've got
a lot of people out there, specifically Conservatives Republicans, who
do not want to go down this road. But if
millions of people are going to lose their jobs and

(04:26):
there aren't new frontiers opening up, as far as what
they can segue into is the government gonna have to
start paying people.

Speaker 4 (04:35):
Just to live.

Speaker 5 (04:38):
Everyone's talking about UBI right now. Do I believe that
universal basic income is a solution We're giving basically the
government giving free income free money to replace lost wages.
You know, someone like me, I'm not exactly a conservative
or Republican. I would consider myself more of an individualist,
maybe voter line libertarian. I just believe in individual rights

(05:00):
and personal responsibility. So my gut reaction tell no. You know,
government handouts to trade dependency and they destroy work ethic,
they give politicians more power over our lives. Look what's
happening right now. We have a government shut down and
what's it over money? And how many times have people
talked about food stamps and of people not getting you know,
it's like you know, in Brazil right now, like forty

(05:22):
percent of their population is on some sort of government assistance.
So they're basically being bought because you know, why would
they vote for someone who's going to cut their paycheck.
So but at the same time, I'll say, I do
believe that we have to come up with a radical solution.
I don't know if it's a retraining program. Maybe we
have to have a temporary government assistance. But you know,

(05:42):
we definitely have an unprecedented situation right now that might
require some unprecedented solutions.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Well, Jeff t o to your point, we could take
a look, as an example, federal stimulus check set during
the COVID nineteen pandemic. That was a form of temporary
targeted basic income. And look what it's led to, I
mean is COVID people will tell you that we can't
find people to work, nobody wants to do anything.

Speaker 4 (06:05):
A lot of that money misused.

Speaker 3 (06:07):
So to your point, universal basic income with that comes
a lot of problems.

Speaker 5 (06:14):
Yeah, well UBI doesn't solve the real problem. Right. People
don't just need money, they need purpose. They need to
feel useful. You know, give a man a fish, you
seed him for a day, give him a monthly check,
you trap him into the tendency forever.

Speaker 4 (06:29):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (06:29):
So we're not just facing an economic crisis, we're facing
a meaning crisis. So what happens to society when millions
of people have nothing to do, when their skills are worthless,
when they're just paid to exist but not contribute. That's
not freedom. That's a prison with a monthly allowance.

Speaker 3 (06:47):
So what's the answer to that, Jeff, you're you're the
smart guy, You're the AI guy.

Speaker 5 (06:52):
Well, I think the answer obviously isn't giving people fish.
It's teaching them to fish in new waters. You know,
we need a radical retraining and offer innership program where
we teach people how to work with AI, not compete
against it, how to build businesses and not just fill jobs.
How to create value that can be automated. See there's
the key right there. Can you create value in this

(07:13):
world that cannot be automated? But that takes effort, that
takes discipline, It takes people willing to completely reinvent themselves.
And I hate to say it, most people won't do it.
They'll take the easy path of a government check. And
that's exactly what the government wants, a dependent population that
needs them to survive. Once you're dependent, you're controlled.

Speaker 3 (07:33):
No, it's a very very good point, Jeff. Where can
people find out more about you? More about Savage Marketer,
more about your AI community.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
I have a newsletter that teaches people how to make
money with AI. It's called the Tip dot Ai. And
by the way, these are my opinions, not of my team.
I'm a little crazy, but I also think that we
live in a crazy time right now. You know, people
think that twenty thirty is far away. That's five years,
five years until autonomous vehicles eliminate trucking jobs. Five years

(08:05):
until AI customer service replaces call center, five years until
AI lawyers draft better contracts than humans. This is coming,
whether you want it or not.

Speaker 4 (08:14):
All right, Jeff, appreciate you jumping on here today. Thank you,
Thank you. All right, buddy.

Speaker 3 (08:19):
That's Jeff Hunter Savage, marketer, leading voice in AI marketing.
He of course created the world's first AI certified Consultant program,
runs the largest AI community with three point six plus
million members, And as he just pointed out, it's here
and a lot of people are gonna be wondering, what
the hell am I.

Speaker 4 (08:39):
Going to do?

Speaker 2 (08:43):
What's up? Boats on your Friday? And it's it's pretty
It's Halloween.

Speaker 7 (08:52):
Shoutout something where you need Vincent Price?

Speaker 2 (08:54):
Oh yeah, or.

Speaker 7 (08:57):
No, there's noe or it's just Vincent Price.

Speaker 4 (09:00):
All right.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
I was let's say, who played the original Dracula.

Speaker 7 (09:05):
Bela Legos, that's it sport board. Well, actually there was
probably another Dracula before Bella in the Silent movies.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
Oh yeah, all that wicked looking version. I think I've
seen what you're talking about. Yeah, happy Halloween folks.

Speaker 7 (09:22):
Great mask, by the way, Thank you, thank you. I
was sau you were taking selfies this morning. You look
like a dork.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
I was playing around with Snapchat. I don't I don't
usually use that thing very much, but I was looking
for something that said Happy Halloween on it.

Speaker 7 (09:41):
Remember how old you are? No, you're not a teenager.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
I'm not a teenager.

Speaker 7 (09:47):
You're sitting there going You're making these faces like and
I'm like, oh my god.

Speaker 2 (09:51):
Are you counting?

Speaker 7 (09:54):
I can't eat?

Speaker 2 (09:55):
How often do I do.

Speaker 7 (09:56):
That more than you should?

Speaker 5 (09:58):
No?

Speaker 2 (09:58):
I do not.

Speaker 7 (09:59):
Yes, maybe not here, but I see pictures of you.
You've had to have done it somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Listen, A girl can have work, can have fun. What's
your costume?

Speaker 7 (10:11):
My costumes?

Speaker 2 (10:12):
Old stick in the mud my costume.

Speaker 7 (10:14):
Yes, I'm probably not gonna have one this year. I
do have a couple of unused masks. But trigger treat
in my neighborhood starts at six thirty, And unfortunately, I'm
going to the funeral home beforehand.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
So, oh, your window is tight.

Speaker 7 (10:27):
My window is a little tight, so I'm not going
to be able to. Yeah, lost the lost a good
friend of cancer recently, so don't you know, and his
funeral services the funeral homes today, so and it's only
today from four to six, So yeah, so with work
and and trigger treat and everything else, and so I'm

(10:49):
going to try it because I got a feeling it's
going to be very packed.

Speaker 2 (10:51):
Do you have your candy for trigger treat?

Speaker 7 (10:53):
I bought it yesterday.

Speaker 2 (10:54):
And are you the are you going to be a
good house on the street or so?

Speaker 7 (10:59):
I bought small parties.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Okay, that's that's middle of the road.

Speaker 7 (11:02):
And I bought airheads. Okay, No, I didn't buy the
Normally I would go to Sam's and buy the big airheads.
These are the like the half sized airheads. But I
bought three bags of those, so there's there's almost a
hundred of them.

Speaker 2 (11:15):
Okay.

Speaker 7 (11:18):
So I will give the airheads out first and then
and I'll give two or three or four, I don't know,
it doesn't matter. And then I'll go to the Smarties
because I don't really want the airheads, so I'll get
rid of them. But if I have any leftovers, I'll
take the Smarties.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
You and I both did the same thing. Neither of
us went the chocolate route.

Speaker 7 (11:37):
I actually have a I have some of the miniature
rece cups, but I sure selling given them out. I've
already eaten half the bag.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
Well, I bought a bag that was half rece cups
half kit cats. The rece cups are gone, the Kitkats
remain the price of candy. It's ridiculous.

Speaker 7 (12:00):
Like, and I'm looking like I was, Should I say
where I was?

Speaker 8 (12:05):
No?

Speaker 7 (12:05):
Okay, So I was at a big box store there
you go. Okay, it's all over the place. I mean,
it's a name everybody.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
That is, right, and I avoid it like the plague.

Speaker 7 (12:17):
So I'm looking at like some of the candy that
was there, and then like the bag was thirty dollars
and it said like four hundred pieces and it's like
like sweet tarts and Smarties, and like I'm thinking, none
of this is worth anything.

Speaker 2 (12:32):
That's that's not the good.

Speaker 7 (12:33):
It's not even like and then there were dumb dumbs,
the lollipops, and I'm thinking to myself, God, i mean
because smarties aren't they can't they can't. Oh they are
is just sugar in a little wafer, you know, right?

Speaker 2 (12:47):
Yeah it's not it's not. It's not a full sized snicker.

Speaker 6 (12:51):
No.

Speaker 7 (12:51):
And when I give them out, I'll just I'll throw
four or five in.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
I I do a handful. Yeah, I didn't go chocolate
this route. Either I went fun Dep. I w the
fun I want the fund dep route. The parents are
gonna love me because that's that's just straight sugar buzz
right there, followed by and this is my favorite part.

(13:18):
Kids are gonna love me full size packages of bubble tape.
Remember bubble tape, the big old roll of bubble gum. Yeah.
I used to give options when the street this year,
I'm gonna be the cool house.

Speaker 7 (13:32):
I used to give options. So I used to have
like candy, and then I would have like fruit snacks
for like super young kids, like if they were like
still but walking, and then I had if they didn't
want candy or fruit, I had I had the crackers,
you know, like the Lance crackers or whatever they are,

(13:52):
nipchi whatever, I don't know what the brand names.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
Are what you're talking about, or like the wafers.

Speaker 7 (13:59):
Necho wafers or something, you know. But I would do
the peanut butter and cheese crackers, and then I will
always say, hey, they're peanut butter. Is that okay? Oh yeah,
you know because then you but I would always do
like the big airheads and then I would do either
fruits the fruit snacks because you know not everybody wants
their kids to have candy, and those fruit snacks are pretty.

(14:21):
But I didn't make it to Sam's this year, so
that's why they didn't get fruit snacks.

Speaker 2 (14:24):
I didn't even check the weather for tonight.

Speaker 7 (14:26):
What is going to be chili, windy chili?

Speaker 2 (14:28):
Okay, but no rain.

Speaker 7 (14:29):
So that's maybe chance of rain, but it shouldn't. That
might be earlier today, not like yesterday.

Speaker 6 (14:34):
Right.

Speaker 7 (14:34):
Didn't you listen to sexy xys forecast?

Speaker 2 (14:36):
I did not. I'm sorry.

Speaker 7 (14:38):
Would you like me to play it for you now?

Speaker 2 (14:40):
I'm good? Thank you, thank you. You just told me
what I need to do.

Speaker 7 (14:42):
But thank you sexy Xy for the forecast every day.
I used to have him alive on the other station.

Speaker 2 (14:50):
We couldn't do it without you.

Speaker 7 (14:51):
We just brutalized him at times. He was a good sport.
He took it well. He's a good dude.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
Yeah yeah, yeah. Well. And keeping on theme for today,
our question of the day is what is your favorite
horror movie? And could you survive the villain? So, if
like you were up against Jason, could you make it out?
Are you going to be one of the first ones
that he takes down? So what's your favorite horror movie

(15:22):
and could you survive the villain? I have a couple
jotted down that we'll get into. But of course you
can call us one eight hundred and six two four
eleven seventy can text us seven zero four seven zero.
Start the message off with bloom Daddy or also who's
got the better candy choices tonight for trick or treat
me with the fun dips and the bubble tape. I'm

(15:45):
gonna go you or Otis with the Smarties.

Speaker 7 (15:47):
I'm going to you.

Speaker 2 (15:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (15:49):
Yeah, although I hope, I hope I don't have a
lot of kids and I can have some Smarties leftover.
I'd like I go to the bank and they have
Smarties there, and I always take two or three rolls
through them pocket.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
There's something about as smarty. Again, it's straight sugar, pure sugar.

Speaker 7 (16:04):
Yeah, it's a precursor to diabetes.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
Yeah. Oh, we've also got some treats for you.

Speaker 7 (16:09):
We do, we do.

Speaker 2 (16:11):
We've got two family four packs for Saturday tomorrow, opening
night of the Nailer, the.

Speaker 7 (16:17):
Home opener, home opener.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
Yeah, okay, two family four packs. Here's the thing though, listen,
because it is the home opener. There it's Carnival Night.
It's it's uh, I'm sorry, Circus Night featuring Grace Good
who was on America's Got Talent. So there's gonna be
her show during intermission. There's gonna be free balloon animals,
face painting in carnival games throughout the concourse of the arena,

(16:42):
so it's gonna be an all around and of course
there's gonna be a hockey game.

Speaker 7 (16:45):
Yeah, that's thrown.

Speaker 4 (16:46):
In there too.

Speaker 7 (16:47):
Let's not forget that's the reason you're going.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
Yeah, so we've guys.

Speaker 7 (16:50):
I wonder if it's a Frosty Friday too.

Speaker 2 (16:53):
I'm looking at the page. It doesn't say on the
notes that I have that side of it.

Speaker 7 (16:57):
It could potentially no, because tomorrow Saturday, dummy, I call
it myself.

Speaker 2 (17:04):
That doesn't go along with Frosty Friday.

Speaker 7 (17:06):
Yeah, Saturday. It's not Frosty Saturday.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Yes, So we've got that and we're gonna uh those
will be coming up here a little bit later in
the show. It's seven twenty eight. You're listening to the
bloom Daddy Experience Otis and Sam here on news radio
on Halloween. We'll be back this time of year, of course,
with it being October, a big focus is breast cancer

(17:32):
awareness because it is officially Breast Cancer Awareness Month. We
are very lucky here in the Ohio Valley to have
the Tony Tara Manna Cancer Center part of Trinity Health
System and joining us. Now we have doctor Trombetta, the
medical director of the Tony Taramanna Cancer Center. Good morning, doctor,
how are you.

Speaker 9 (17:52):
Good morning? Doing well?

Speaker 2 (17:53):
How are you good? Good?

Speaker 8 (17:55):
Now?

Speaker 2 (17:55):
As I, as I said, you know, October highlights focuses
upon awareness for breast cancer. So I wanted to bring
you on to talk a little bit, not only about
breast cancer, but of course everything that the Tair Manna
Cancer Center offers for patients here in the Ohio Valley.
So thank you so much for your.

Speaker 9 (18:14):
Time, thank you for asking.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
So first off, when we're talking, you know, of course
October we're talking breast cancer Awareness month. Of course, early
detection is the mantra that we hear. What are some
of the symptoms when we're talking early detection that ladies
and of course gentlemen should be looking for.

Speaker 9 (18:38):
Well, first of all, we'd like to find patients as
early on because the cancers are earlier. So the first
would be to have no symptoms. But for women, particularly
those women who are at risk, and that would be
any woman over the age of forty, to have their
annual screening mammogram, that's the one best safest thing that

(19:01):
can be done.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
Yes, absolutely, And of course I am mine is on
the schedule, so that is coming up here shortly for myself.
And you know, it's one of those things where a
lot of women they're not comfortable with it, but five minutes,
ten minutes of being a bit uncomfortable is worth early detection.

Speaker 9 (19:23):
Correct, Oh, yes, I mean, and you know, ladies, there
was kind of always a prohibition to cancer and now
we're seeing less and less, so that was more awareness, more,
for instance, opportunities like you're giving today to educate people

(19:43):
so that you're seeing more women having mammograms and more
women having them at younger ages and before there's anything
that might be identified clinically or physically on an exam.
So it's this educational thing the awareness that's really helping
to improve. How comes because breast cancer death rates, that's

(20:06):
what we always worry about that they're dropping.

Speaker 2 (20:09):
That's what I was going to ask you, is the
current survival rate. It seems as if we have a
better survival rate here in the most recent years than
what we've had in the past. We've seen a lot
of change in the correct.

Speaker 9 (20:24):
That's correct, and the ammograms are not always the most
comfortable test that they're not terrible, and sometimes that's the
worry that ladies have, and it is also worried that
we're going to find something, and so sometimes that puts
people off. But early detection is the whole key. Find
it early, that's the best chance for cure and it

(20:47):
really has made a difference in overall cure rates well.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
And when it comes to the Tea Amnic Cancer Center,
of course, one of the biggest ones is the breast
cancer treatments that you do up there. There's a lot
more that goes on within those doors.

Speaker 9 (21:02):
Correct, right, I mean the CHAIRMANA Cancer Center came into
existence right at the merger of if people remember back
twenty years the merger of the two hospitals, and it's
been I think the most successful part of Trinity's merger
by far, but also has brought world class care into

(21:25):
our community. Between the two entities of UPMC and Allegheny
Health Network who combine medical one radiation, oncology, services respectively,
with the same level of care that you can get
at any better cancer center in the country.

Speaker 2 (21:41):
Well, and with you again, we're talking to doctor Trombetta
of the Tairmana Cancer Center medical director. With the years
that you have spent in oncology, what are the biggest
changes that you have experienced in this particular you know,
specific treatments and the growth in cancer treatments. What have

(22:02):
you experienced.

Speaker 9 (22:05):
Well, I'll tell you if we speak just about for
us cancer. When I first started my career in I
won't tell you what.

Speaker 6 (22:13):
Years that was.

Speaker 9 (22:14):
There's been a few and so we it would be
frequent that patients would have to go through surgery, sometimes chemo,
but also seven weeks of radiation up to thirty five treatments.
Now in the fact I saw a lady earlier today
that we're treating in five treatments of radiation, very few
side effects. It's very easy for people to go through it.

(22:36):
So it's a huge difference in what we call morbidity,
which means the side effects that people get. And of
course we talked about already the improvement and it in curates,
so it's a huge difference, a huge improvement and dramatically
better for the patients.

Speaker 2 (22:53):
What made you decide to get into this specialty? If
I can go a little personal with you, you know,
what made you say I want to you know, I
want to practice medicine. I want to treat cancer. It's
something specific in your life that made you go this direction.

Speaker 9 (23:11):
Well, it's it was kind of an unusual pathway. But
just to say that when I found this specialty, I
like the technical aspects of the physics and the surgical
basis that we do surgeries for prostate cancer and really
any cancer the body related to radiation and the.

Speaker 6 (23:32):
Need.

Speaker 9 (23:33):
It's sometimes a tough specialty, but it's also something so
necessary for people.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
And you know, you always hear people, almost in a
way flippantly say you know, a cure for cancer. It's
almost to the point where it's an off the cuff remark.
But do you think we will ever see a cure
for cancer? I mean, I know that's a huge, heavy questionquestion,
but you know, will we ever get to that point

(24:03):
in our lifetime?

Speaker 6 (24:05):
Well?

Speaker 9 (24:06):
I don't know about in our lifetime, but I do
think first of all, tremendous advances have been made and
we're you know, it's not long ago that say, twenty
years ago, we'd see on the evening news this breakthrough,
this wonderful cure for cancer, and then they never panned out.
But we're really in a remarkable age now where antibody

(24:29):
therapies and targeted therapies and focused radiation makes treatments so
much better, so much easier, and people are living longer
with less side effects, and cancer is becoming more manageable.
Not quite like a blood pressure where you can take
a pill and keep things in check, but I think
we're getting to a point like that, And of course

(24:51):
the best thing would be if we could prevent it
from ever occurring.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
Sure, Sure, And I had a dear friend of mine
three years ago, a breast cancer survivor. One of the
things that she swears by not only was the treatment
that she actually received at your facility, but also she
was very, very diligent in the mental side of the treatment,

(25:16):
keeping a positive attitude, holistic treatments. In a way, it
was almost like a balanced care. Is that something at
the center that that you guys focus upon also not
just the physical but the mental care for the patients.

Speaker 9 (25:34):
I think yes, the answer is yes, And I think
that that's that's critical. I can tell you that people
who have positive attitudes have better outcomes. I don't know
why that occurs. I think people of faith have better outcomes.
I think people have who approach this positively do and
that's something that's been noted for a long time. So

(25:56):
we do have them. This isn't the hum and gloom place.
If you come in here, it's going to be a
very positive experience to the extent possible, and that the
people are going to push you to do your best
and to approach things to become help me. So I
agree with your premise.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
Yeah, a too pronged approach, if you will. So in
the long run, the point we want everybody to take
from this conversation is early detection. Don't be embarrassed. Have
the conversation with your doctor because right now we're talking,
of course, breast cancer awareness because it is October, but

(26:40):
we have coming down the line plenty of things to
pay attention to, but just cancer in general. It's all
about paying attention to your body and being tested properly.

Speaker 7 (26:50):
Correct.

Speaker 9 (26:51):
Yeah, simple test for breast cancer is mammogram, and don't
fear it. It's easy, quick to do. Sometimes a little uncomfortable,
but not bad and for prostate cancer. Put the plug
in for the PSA, the one single easiest test. The
blood test can find it tremendously early and highly curable.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Wonderful well, Doctor Trembetta, thank you so much for your
time this morning.

Speaker 9 (27:17):
Oh thank you, Thank you forving.

Speaker 2 (27:18):
Absolutely and keep up the good work. We all appreciate it.
You're listening to the bloom Daddy Experience here on news
Radio eleven seventy WWVA seven fifty one Friday Halloween? Halloween
is that scary?

Speaker 8 (27:39):
Halloween?

Speaker 2 (27:41):
Is but a boch?

Speaker 9 (27:45):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (27:45):
Anyways, thank you for starting your morning off with us.
Of course, it's the bloom Daddy Experience. I'm Sam, He's
Otis and you've tuned into news Radio eleven seventy WWV.

Speaker 7 (27:55):
Don't forget that. You We've got your chance to win.
We've got two family four packs to tomorrow's opening night
for the Wheeling Nailors. You can only win those.

Speaker 2 (28:04):
Right here, it's Circus Night, Circus Night, Circus.

Speaker 7 (28:07):
Opening opening day.

Speaker 2 (28:09):
Oh my, what in the world.

Speaker 7 (28:11):
My iPad's going crazy blowing up in there. It's all
the inspections that I did, so that's I'm being emailed,
Oh oh, okay, hold on, let me do.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
This rapid fire going on in there. Should just throw
it out the door pretty much.

Speaker 7 (28:24):
Okay, hold on, I got through the.

Speaker 2 (28:27):
Okay, that works.

Speaker 7 (28:28):
There you go.

Speaker 2 (28:29):
All right, Okay, their state issue, there you go.

Speaker 7 (28:33):
But we get those chances to win. And just to
remind you that if you are looking for something to
do this weekend, the Wheeling Nailers making their home debut
tomorrow night. It's seven ten, and they're back at it
on Sunday afternoon as well at four ten, all both
games at West Banco Arena, of course, taking on the
Norfolk Admirals in both games. And if you can't make
it to the.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
Game, hey, I know where you can listen.

Speaker 7 (28:55):
Check out all the hard hitting action on our sister station.
Mixed ninety seven to three. And just to kind of
keep it in a hockey mode, the Penguins crushed the
Wild last night four to one. Anthony Mantan netted his
six goal of the year, Ryan Shay, Bryan Rust and
Ben Kinda also scored as Pittsburgh has won two of three.
And we'll visit the Winnipeg Jets tomorrow afternoon. Catch it

(29:17):
the Jets game tomorrow and all the Penguins games on
our sister station, Eagle one, O seven five. I know
it's going crazy because there's like thirty of them going.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
It's like you have your own personal background music in there,
like you're you're, you're on the soundtrack.

Speaker 7 (29:34):
Rush out the door and I'll do this one and
then you can go into the NFL.

Speaker 2 (29:39):
Oh okay if you want. Sure.

Speaker 7 (29:40):
But Game six of the World Series tonight, the Blue
Jays are going for their first World Series victory and
over three decades. Kevin Gussman takes the mound against Yoshinobo Yamamato.
That's why I took that and the Dodgers in Game
six from Toronto tonight, the Jays bounced back from a
two to one deficit in the Best seven series and
plan to have star slugger George Springer back in the

(30:03):
lineup tonight. That's big LA can force a decisive Game
seven with a win and keep their championship repeat hopes alive.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
So so you think they'll keep hopes alive or nailing
the coffin.

Speaker 7 (30:18):
I like Yamamoto over Gousman, but in I think right
now the Blue Jays are hitting the ball better than
the Dodgers are. The Dodgers are having it. They have
a their center field er, I can't think of his
first name. I think it's Anthony Anthony Pegas paid peg
Pagas whatever p A G E s is. I don't

(30:40):
know how you say it, but it comes off pages
but that's not how you say it. Isn't hitting at all,
Like I mean, he's like over October.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
Inteh, yeah, slump.

Speaker 7 (30:53):
We call it a slump. But yeah, they just need
to find somebody that can hit and the bullpen needs
to really kick in. So it'll be interesting to see
what happens. I mean, if Toronto wins, I'm not going
to be like super disappointed because they've got some great
guys on that team. Vlad Guerrero Junior. I mean, they've

(31:16):
got three baseball legend sons. They've got La Guerrero Junior.
His dad's a Hall of Famer. They've got Bobaschett, his
dad's Dante Bichett played for the Colorado Rockies. And then
they've got Dalton Varshow, who's dad. Gary Varshow spend some
time with the Pirates.

Speaker 2 (31:32):
So you say Bobachette, I say Boba Fette. I went
straight to Star Wars. I'm like, wait, what I missed
that new new Star Wars.

Speaker 7 (31:42):
It was s time they had another They had another
major leaguer son on their team too, but I can't
think of who it was he got traded away. Trying
to think who it was?

Speaker 2 (31:51):
You think on that, I'm gonna go to.

Speaker 7 (31:52):
Football, Okay, you go to the football. Okay.

Speaker 2 (31:55):
So the Steelers, oh, they face a pretty uh tall
mountain this weekend. A tough task is they want to
bounce back. This Sunday, the team squares off against the
AFC leading Colts from Pittsburgh. The steel Curtain got shredded
by the Packers on Sunday Night Football this past weekend,
but remains first in the North despite dropping back to

(32:17):
back games. Well, if you know anything about the AFC
North currently, that's really not a big statement to say
that you're number one in that division. Were one India's
on India's course on a four win, four game winning
streak after blasting the Titans last weekend and then staying
in the ifs Okay.

Speaker 7 (32:37):
Don't forget. Also, if you can't catch the Steelers game
on TV, it is on our sister station Eagle one
oh seven five.

Speaker 2 (32:44):
Yes, I have a really hard time calling eagle our
sister station. Eagle to me is like a guy station,
our big brother station or brother's dad. Anyways, call it
whatever you okay. And then also again staying in the
AFC North, the Bengals and the Bears will face off
on Sunday in Cincinnati. Chicago has won the last three
meetings between the clubs. Joe Flacco has thrown for seven

(33:05):
hundred and eighty four yards with seven touchdowns and no
turnovers in three games since he was acquired from the Browns,
but coach Zach Taylor said this week and it is
fifty to fifty whether he will play. The Bengals have
lost five of their last six games and are three
and five on the year. That's what I mean when

(33:27):
I said earlier it's not a big accomplishment to say
you're number one in the AFC North.

Speaker 7 (33:32):
And just to kind of keep the sports theme going,
since we're about a minute or so with down the
break rabbit Hole Loyola University. Remember earlier this month we
told you that sister sister Jean Delora Schmidt passed away
at a one hundred and six. She was the face
of the Ramblers basketball program during their twenty eighteen NCAA
Final four run. Loyola the men's basketball team is going

(33:57):
to wear a uniform patch honoring her. So that's pretty cool.
So they opened their season on Monday against Cleveland State
at Gentile.

Speaker 2 (34:05):
Arenos one hundred and six years old, one.

Speaker 7 (34:07):
Hundred and six years old. But that's cool that they're
going to honor her. I mean with a patch. Normally
that's reserved for like your Hall of Fame players that
you know played for you, or you know somebody that
was very impactful to your program. I mean, the Mountaineers
were forty four last year with Jerry West. Sure, the
Dodgers are wearing Fernando Valenzuela's thirty four this year. So
I mean, people that were big in your organization or

(34:29):
your team are the ones that normally get honored with that.
So she was huge.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
She was impactful, just in a different way, maybe not
on the court, but by the sideline fan favorite YEP
seven fifty eight. You're listening to the bloo Daddy Experience
here on news radio eleven seventy wwva.

Speaker 1 (34:50):
Z number one talk 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.

Speaker 2 (35:13):
Welcome back a six on this Halloween Friday, The bloom
Daddy Experience Sam and otis News Radio eleven seventy WWVA.
Hopefully you get lots of treats today, not tricks. Uh,
we have some treats for you. We're gonna have your
first chance to win coming up here very very shortly.
We've got a family four pack to Opening Night, which

(35:34):
is tomorrow night for the Wheeling Nailers, and it's Circus
Night home opener.

Speaker 7 (35:38):
Hop Yeah, they've been playing on the road for a
couple of weeks now, I said opening night, well, opening
night would be the first game, but home opener.

Speaker 2 (35:46):
Oh okay, okay, I mean if you're gonna if you're
gonna be nitpicky.

Speaker 7 (35:51):
Well in a little bit, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:53):
So but we have your chance to win those so
stay tuned. That's coming up here very shortly, very shortly.
So alright, I want to I want to touch on
something here real quick. So no it's not but I
guess it's a figure of speech. So if you follow
the show, then you follow things that are going on

(36:13):
across the Ahigh Valley. There has been this situation brewing
in Belmont County, specifically in Richland Township. Now, yesterday we
had Rick Ferrell, one of the incumbent candidates for Richland

(36:35):
Township Trustee, on the show. Last week we had the
other incumbent, Jim Denoble, on the show, speaking about the job,
why they do the job, why they want to continue
to do the job. And we have invited via the show,
as we you know, the other candidate, his name is

(36:57):
Jane J. Stevens, more than welcome to come on the show.
Just reach out. You have to do is email me
sam Atiheartmedia dot com. It's pretty simple. But this has
turned into for some reason, this ridiculous over the top story.
So yesterday, i am driving through Saint Clairsville and I'm

(37:17):
driving on Route forty and i am coming from downtown
Saint Clairsville heading towards the High Valley Mall or Kirk's
ice Cream, whichever you want to use as your pin perch.
Lit'll drop in there for you. Anyways, as I'm driving through,
there one thing I have always noticed about that route

(37:39):
is when you're heading that direction east right, that's east. Yes, Yes,
the left hand side of the road is one of
the most beautiful stretches of road in Belmont County. The
homes are gorgeous. They're beautiful homes. They're well taken care of,
they're decorated all the time. For the differ holiday beautiful.

Speaker 7 (38:01):
Structure road kind of history to the historic house exactly.

Speaker 2 (38:05):
The other side of that road is a mud hole.
I don't know what better way to describe it. It's undeveloped,
but it's also ripped apart lake. Yeah, it looks terrible,
looks terrible. Well, I noticed yesterday, besides the fact that

(38:26):
it has turned into a giant, a bigger mudhole thanks
to the rain yesterday, there was a particular billboard sitting
on that particular piece of property on like on a trailer.
So it's not your traditional billboard that is that is
there all the time. It is sitting on a trailer. Now,

(38:47):
this is my opinion, but I'm asking you to connect
the dots, if you will. That particular piece of property
is owned by a particular person who owns a particular
set of radio stations. Who has turned this topic of
the trustee race from a little molehill into this mountainous

(39:12):
million dollar building topic.

Speaker 7 (39:15):
Well, I don't think. I think you're you're on track.
But it was a it was a non topic, and
they're they're attempting to make it right topic.

Speaker 2 (39:25):
That's what I mean, this little hill into this mountain.

Speaker 7 (39:28):
Yeah, but it's I mean, it turned to ninety nine
percent of the people.

Speaker 2 (39:31):
It's not No, it's not right right. I find it
very convenient that the one candidate has an ad not
only on the radio stations who brought up this particular topic,
also has this billboard sitting on this property. Again, I'm

(39:52):
just asking you connect the dots. Where was all this
concern three years ago when the building was voted upon
and then henceforth built. Where was all of the conversation
that why is it just now coming up? And why
are so many people wanting to get involved to build this,

(40:13):
As otis said, non story into a story. Listen, folks,
this is trustee for Richland Township in Belmont County. This
isn't even the entire county. This is just the township,
a small township of the county. I am not negating
the position that these gentlemen want to want your vote for.

(40:35):
It's it's you know, it takes their time, their energy.
They want to do it. They want to hold that office.

Speaker 7 (40:42):
I thankless position.

Speaker 2 (40:43):
Yeah, but they're not running for governor, folks. No, that's
not what this is. This isn't like the next hanging Chad.
This is it Nixon versus JFKs.

Speaker 7 (40:52):
It's a it's basically similar to a city council seat,
or a township council or something of that nature. I mean,
it's it's in that same line. I mean, let's let's
it's a it's a low level community office, we'll call it. Yeah,
I mean, and that doesn't mean that it's not that
they're not worthy of doing the job compared to your
other positions that are elected. This is this is pretty

(41:16):
bottom rope.

Speaker 2 (41:17):
We're talking dog catchers sort of.

Speaker 7 (41:19):
Yeah, again above that.

Speaker 2 (41:21):
But not trying to be insulting, No, no, not at
all to any of them. But it has just gotten
so blown out of proportion. Here's the thing I want
to ask you, though, for those that have turned this
into this ridiculous talking point at this point, they want
to ruffle feathers and create content and for their show
and all this drama, right, what have you done for

(41:43):
the community? Let me ask you that, are you part
of something like rotary? Do you do you volunteer your
time at the food pantry in Saint Clairsville, in Belmont County,
in Richland Township? What do you do for the township
in the county? Me that you want all this drama
for that doesn't benefit you, that doesn't benefit you?

Speaker 7 (42:08):
Are we a mouthpiece for somebody else as well?

Speaker 2 (42:10):
There you go, there you go, And.

Speaker 7 (42:13):
You know, you know, obviously the the we'll call it,
we'll say personality that is promoting this is he also
a mouthpiece for somebody bigger and better. But let's let's
be honest. The personality that is bringing this up always
tends to take the small things that really don't match.

(42:34):
Oh my gosh, they're doing this culvert that we're going
to talk about it, and I mean this personality, I mean,
just be honest. At one point in time, post COVID
came after myself and bloom Daddy.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
And recently came after you and.

Speaker 7 (42:49):
I and you know it doesn't bother me, but I
was doing my other job and there were rules in
place after COVID. I didn't necessarily agree with them, but
it was my job to enforce them. And so you know,
and and he sent a fourier request to my office
and got my copies of my reports. And I think
I changed a word from tip to complaint because on

(43:13):
my time sheet there's a thing for complaints. It's not
as there's not a thing for tips. And then that
I changed my whole story, which it really wasn't, you know.
I mean, I had some guys, some people tell me, Hey,
this is going on at this location. This is going on.
So I went up and investigated. None of this stuff
that people complained on came to fruition, so they were
all unfounded complaints. But there was As I was there,

(43:35):
I found out that, you know, you weren't allowed to
have indoor dining at the time, and they were dining indoors.
And so I went through the process, called my supervisor.
My supervisor said, call the health department. The health department
said call yours. You know. They so there was a
channel that went through before a citation was issued, and
there was no witch hunt, right, you know, it was

(43:56):
just it was me doing my job, and I didn't
necessarily agree with it, but I had to do my job.

Speaker 2 (44:03):
Well, that's like yesterday after we did the interview and
I thought, Okay, unless mister Stevens wants to come on
the show, we're done with this topic. Yeah, that's that's
what I thought until I had that drive yesterday and
I'm like, wait a second here, what's really going on.
That's when the questions.

Speaker 7 (44:22):
Started, and I know we're going to a break. But
it's amazing that when we have guests in like to
mister Denoble and mister Farrell that we had this week,
We've had Belmont County Sheriff's deputies, had other people that
have been on both shows.

Speaker 2 (44:36):
Mister McGruder yesterday, and.

Speaker 7 (44:38):
They just they compliment how much more professional we are
at it than and pleasant and pleasant? Yeah. Yeah, So
we're not going to keep you for an hour to
talk about a two minute topic.

Speaker 8 (44:48):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (44:49):
And here's the thing. We don't get mad and our
voices don't go up five or six of octaves when
we find out people do interviews on other people's shows.

Speaker 7 (44:58):
And we've donated our members only jacket to charity thirty
years ago. Did I just say you did?

Speaker 2 (45:05):
You did? But we just pose the question to you.
You connect the dots. You asked the questions we ask them,
You ask them too. Okay, anyway, we're gonna be give
it away tickets. Yeah we are, that's right. One eight
hundred sixty two for eleven seventy Family four Pack Nailer's
home opener. Did I get it? I got it?

Speaker 7 (45:25):
Yep. Service Night home.

Speaker 2 (45:26):
Opener one eight hundred sixty two for eleven seventy caller
number fourteen, Caller number fourteen. We'll be back The bloom
Daddy Experience, Sam and Otis, News Radio eleven seventy WWVA
Welcome back, eight twenty one, Halloween Friday, The bloom Daddy Experience,

(45:51):
Sam and Otis, who was our first winter Otis? You
still have it in there? Tim from Dylan Vale, Tim,
congrats going to the home opener tomorrow. We got one
more set for you later on in the show, Family
four Pack. As I said to the home opener for
the Nailers, it's Circus nights, so it's gonna be a
really fun night for the entire family, and we've got
your four pack. So I'm having fun today. You having

(46:14):
fun today?

Speaker 6 (46:14):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (46:15):
Just peachy?

Speaker 2 (46:16):
Yeah, I know. I figured that would be your response.
I'm having fun, darn it. People want to know who
we were talking about.

Speaker 7 (46:23):
So do you believe in ghosts? Do you believe in ghosts?

Speaker 2 (46:26):
I do. I've encountered.

Speaker 7 (46:28):
I've encountered that supposedly here.

Speaker 2 (46:30):
I have seen her here, Yes I have.

Speaker 7 (46:35):
There's a new survey out there that suggests about one
third of all Americans believe in ghosts. The UGOV survey,
conducted earlier this month, pulled about eleven hundred US adults
and asked them about their belief in the supernatural. It
found that thirty eight percent believe in ghosts, while forty
three percent believed in demons.

Speaker 2 (46:56):
I've never distinguished between the two.

Speaker 7 (46:59):
I guess well, I mean like, I don't. I don't
think the ghost that's allegedly here is.

Speaker 2 (47:04):
No no, no, no demonic, no no.

Speaker 7 (47:06):
Only six percent professed a belief in were wolves and vampires.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
There are people that live like vampires. You know that, right? Yeah?

Speaker 7 (47:14):
Knock knock?

Speaker 2 (47:15):
Who's there?

Speaker 7 (47:16):
Ah?

Speaker 2 (47:17):
Ah? Who?

Speaker 7 (47:18):
Where?

Speaker 4 (47:19):
Where?

Speaker 7 (47:19):
Wolves in London? You you're supposed to go.

Speaker 2 (47:21):
Ah, who where?

Speaker 7 (47:25):
I sent that meme to a few people. They thought
that was funny. Anyway, This is funny. This is this
is what adds to this survey. I found that Republicans
were more likely to believe in the supernatural than Democrats
women and women more than men. A majority of the respondents,
roughly sixty percent, claimed to have had a parent normal experience.

(47:46):
So you're in that. So you're also in the women
more than men, the Republicans more than Democrats. So you're
like the poster child for somebody that believes in ghosts.

Speaker 2 (47:56):
Have you seen them?

Speaker 7 (47:58):
I have not seen, but I do believe that there's
something that there is, you know, I you know, as
as a young younger kid, probably in my teens or
maybe like twelve twelve is twelve eleven, twelve thirteen, somewhere
in there. Like I think I brought up yesterday that

(48:22):
my mom went to Shepherd in Shepherdstown and we would
go over to the Hagerstown area to visit her college
roommate who lived over there, and every once in a
while we would we would venture into Shepherd or Harper's
Ferry or something of that nature. And I think I
ended up getting a couple of books. They were little

(48:43):
paperback books and it's like the haunted houses of Harper's Ferry. Yeah,
and some of the but between you know, there's a
lot of that. You know, you're you're over there in
that area Antietam, and you know there's there's there's all
kinds of Civil War battlegrounds in that area, and you
know allegedly they're all haunted, you know.

Speaker 2 (49:04):
So oh yeah, if you ever go to Gettysburg.

Speaker 7 (49:07):
Or something, yeah, I I think, I mean, I've never
encountered no that I know of. I used to think
there was a ghost in my house because my the
first dog that I had, would get freaked out, like
like she would not eat her food in certain places
in that Like I had to move her dog food

(49:27):
bowl because she would get spooked if the dog food
was some like she just she would jump back, like
if she started to eat it, like something would scare her,
would spook her right there. It hasn't happened with the
two other dogs that I've noticed.

Speaker 2 (49:40):
Yeah. Oh, and here's the thing I think, and people
are gonna people are out there probably like, Okay, these
two are nuts.

Speaker 7 (49:47):
I think they say that every day.

Speaker 2 (49:50):
I know, but certain people are more open to having
the phenomenon it have the experience. I think it depends
on your personality. I think it depends on whether you
are open to having this happen here in here, in
this building, there is a ghost and it is I

(50:13):
have seen her downstairs in the offices. She likes to
hang out in the boss's office. Actually, well, i've seen her, well, yeah, currently,
but I've seen her sitting in the chair and it spins.
She'll spin his his chair. And then we my husband

(50:34):
and I we first got married, we lived in the
original farmhouse on my family farm in Belmont County, and
I was there one night. He was working midnight shift,
and there was this cool breeze and I'm telling you
that's part of it too, that's real. This cool breeze
blows through the living room and I look at the television,

(50:56):
which is off at the time, and there's this full
image of a woman in an old school dress, think
like little house on the prairie, the big full dress.
And I'm like, what is that? And the TV's off.
So I ended up talking to my grandparents and I said,
there's something in this house. And my grandfather said, well, yeah,

(51:18):
such and such died in that house back in such
and such. He's like, yeah, that's probably her, probably her.
Nice Yeah, yeah, I think it's real. Absolutely, I think
it's real. And then I've never I've never gotten one
hundred percent on a test like that before, and all
the categories you labeled, What do.

Speaker 7 (51:36):
You think the most hunted state is in the US?

Speaker 2 (51:39):
I would say Pennsylvania because of Gettysburg.

Speaker 7 (51:42):
Actually not even in the top five. Oh, California is
number one, has nearly four thousand reported ghost sightings. Rounding
out the top five Delaware, Texas, New York, and Nevada.

Speaker 2 (51:57):
Nevada sort of makes sense the Old West.

Speaker 7 (52:00):
Yeah, well, you know, the silver the silver minds.

Speaker 2 (52:03):
Maybe I'm thinking too hard about this.

Speaker 7 (52:05):
I don't know if you're thinking too hard, but I
mean I think that I don't think you're too far off.

Speaker 2 (52:09):
I'll tell you what, Go to Gettysburg if you want
to experience some stuff.

Speaker 7 (52:13):
Go tog. Yeah, well, they say, go to the penitentiary.

Speaker 2 (52:17):
I've spent the night at the penitentiary. Bloom bloomber Bloomgaddy
and I did that together, spend the night at the penitary.

Speaker 7 (52:26):
Does your husband know?

Speaker 2 (52:27):
Oh, yes he did. He sent me with a flashlight
that came out completely wrong. All right, we're gonna go
to a break. On that note, Dykes, it is eight
twenty eight. You're listening to Sam.

Speaker 6 (52:39):
Tree.

Speaker 2 (52:40):
Don't you even? Oh bloom Daddy Experienced, samon Otis News
Radio eleven seventy WWVA. Welcome back eight thirty six, The
bloom Daddy Experience, samon Otis News Radio ele w w VA.

(53:02):
Just got a message from Terry Anne. She heard us.
She heard me mention.

Speaker 7 (53:08):
It's carry Inn.

Speaker 2 (53:08):
Sorry, my apologies for that.

Speaker 7 (53:12):
Well, I can't get that high.

Speaker 2 (53:14):
Well it's probably good, yeah, but she she asked about
the interview we had with Mayor Magruder yesterday. She wants
to listen to it. She missed it yesterday. Thank you
for that first of all, Terry In. But that leads
me to tell everybody we have a podcast channel. So
what we do is every day after our show airs
later on at some point in time later in the day,

(53:37):
the episode is put up in our podcast channel. So
I'm going to share that link with Terry Ann. But
then I'll also share on our Facebook page. So if
you do miss something and you want to go back
and listen, like our interview yesterday with Mayor McGruder, that's
where you can find it. Because it really was it
was a really good conversation with.

Speaker 7 (53:54):
May and sometimes don't forget that the guy that uploads
at Corey sometimes it's caught doing some other things that
right like his job. Yeah, he's multitasks, so it doesn't
always get put up right away. Most of the time
it's the next day, like probably by lunchtime is but
sometimes he gets behind and it's maybe a day late.

(54:14):
So don't don't panic. It will be up.

Speaker 2 (54:16):
Yeah, yep, we will get to it. Speaking of yesterday,
now we had three lucky winners. They've gone to go
see the Robert Plant Show last night. So if any
of those three are listening, I want you to call
one and sixty for eleven seventy. I want to hear
how the show was well.

Speaker 7 (54:34):
As we see people going in and out over here,
if you see justin flag him, flag him down? What
is that? It sounds like it's probably a.

Speaker 2 (54:46):
Water all they're working, okay.

Speaker 7 (54:49):
Or it could be the jackhammer.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
Yeah. So but even if you weren't one of our winners,
if you went to the Robert Plant Show last night,
would love to hear how it was.

Speaker 7 (54:59):
Just everything I've seen on Facebook. Our former co worker
here now currently working at one of our sister stations.
Wdvenel Chat was there and posted that it was an
incredible show. Oh really Okay, Justin who works here at
the Capital Theater, was like, it was a long day
but well worth it.

Speaker 2 (55:20):
Oh well, I told you this morning. You loved here
and went to do your real job, like you like
to call it, and this place it went from being quiet.
You know, I was like the only person in this
entire building and then all of a sudden it just
exploded with people busy doing this, doing that, running here,
running there. So yeah, if you were there, you want

(55:41):
to call us, tell us what the show was like.
Would love to hear from you, because.

Speaker 7 (55:44):
Kudos to Kelly and their staff at West Banco and
Capital Theater that made the show happen. They've been bringing
in some incredible talent and incredible shows to the Capital
Theater here and also the arena, so hats off to
them for and this this this was stop number one
on the Robert Plant tour, so this was the opening.

Speaker 2 (56:08):
Show, so we're kind of like the guinea pigs for
the stage.

Speaker 7 (56:12):
That's why they had all their crap out in the
alley for two days.

Speaker 2 (56:15):
That stupid security guard no offense.

Speaker 7 (56:17):
To anybody's not stupid.

Speaker 2 (56:19):
But no, scare the crap out of me. Every morning
I kept forgetting he was going to be sitting there.
There's not usually somebody sitting right there. Yeah, so if
you were there, we loved how love to hear how
the show was. You know, was really excited for it.
And as people, as I said, people started doing stuff
here around the building, I was like, Okay, you could
almost feel you could feel the excitement buildings as it

(56:42):
was going to happen. Because listen, seeing somebody like Robert Plant,
who is a rock legend here in Wheeling, West Virginia.
I mean, that's like a once in a lifetime chance
to see somebody right like that, right here in your
own backyard. I mean, honestly, it had to be great.
Who we got on the phone.

Speaker 7 (57:01):
Nope, buttons are hard. So we have a Dave from
Toronto that went to the show. So he was one
of our winners yesterday morning.

Speaker 4 (57:11):
Dave, good morning.

Speaker 7 (57:14):
Hey, why don't you let us know how the show was?

Speaker 10 (57:16):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (57:16):
How was it?

Speaker 5 (57:17):
Well?

Speaker 6 (57:17):
It was. It was incredible. It was an incredible show.
Robert Plant put his twist on a lot of the songs,
but they did some Zeppelin songs and Hangman for example,
Rambuan and some others. And then the musicians were superb.
I mean, probably some of the best musicians I ever
heard in my life. And I've been to a lot

(57:37):
of concerts, and it was a wonderful, wonderful concert well attended.
I mean, it was as busy as I've ever seen.

Speaker 7 (57:46):
It at Capitol and you got to see it for free.

Speaker 6 (57:50):
I did it, and I like it. I like it.
So I listen to you guys every morning and I'll
continue because it was. It was a fun time and
it's been a rough for me. And I'll tell you
what that was. That that concert was just a great
thing to happen.

Speaker 7 (58:04):
Oh good, good, Yeah, and it's it's it's nice that
you can actually hear us in Toronto.

Speaker 6 (58:10):
Absolutely, Oh yeah, you have fans here like that.

Speaker 7 (58:15):
Well, we got another we got another caller that was
at the show last night, Dave. So we're gonna let
you go appreciate it.

Speaker 6 (58:21):
Appreciate it.

Speaker 7 (58:22):
Hey, Mike, Good morning Mike from East Liverpool. He went
to the show last night, was our one of our
winners yesterday. So what's going on, Mike?

Speaker 10 (58:30):
Hey, It was like the last guy said there it
was a wonderful show, and uh, it just had a
good mixture a few of the old Zeppelins and and
newer things. And he just did really well. He was
he sounded great.

Speaker 7 (58:47):
Have you ever seen a show at the Capitol before?

Speaker 10 (58:50):
That is my first time? Beautiful, so beautiful place. You know,
every seat in the house is a good, great seat,
not a bad seat in there.

Speaker 2 (59:01):
No, no, how how did it feel, hun wheeling? Was
it just like like alive? Could you feel like a
buzz despite the.

Speaker 6 (59:10):
Rain and everything? Oh?

Speaker 10 (59:13):
Yeah, it was kind of dreary. But uh, you know,
I've never been to wheeling too much. I'm up in
Liverpool here, but I just wanted to thank you guys
for going the extra mile. Like Sam, you call back
and checked on me as so sweet.

Speaker 6 (59:29):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (59:29):
Oh you're welcome. You're you're so very welcome.

Speaker 7 (59:32):
Quit pumping her up. She'll she'll, she'll be riding that
for a week.

Speaker 10 (59:36):
People, you too, Otis, Some people do like.

Speaker 7 (59:41):
To be nice to me, you know, all right, make
thanks for the call.

Speaker 2 (59:45):
Glad you had fun.

Speaker 10 (59:46):
It shows over the radio that you're two very nice people.

Speaker 7 (59:51):
It's amazing. In real life. We don't even like each other.

Speaker 10 (59:55):
Oh you can't even tell all right, nice.

Speaker 7 (01:00:01):
Yeah, just kidding. Well anyway, yeah, so Robert Planting again,
kudos to Kelly Tucker and her crew at West Banco
and the Capitol Theater and Howard and everybody everybody that
probably leaving a few people out. But yeah, we're leaving
a lot of people out. So but yeah, those those
two in.

Speaker 2 (01:00:21):
Particular, just we don't know all the names.

Speaker 7 (01:00:24):
Let's put it that way. Yeah, you know, it's nice
when you're when you have that you can bring something in.
You know, it is Halloween, it is.

Speaker 2 (01:00:32):
We've kind of been bouncing around between.

Speaker 7 (01:00:34):
What like is this like a perfect Halloween story. There's
a Kentucky woman Okay, she got the she got the
shock of her life. She opened up a package.

Speaker 2 (01:00:46):
Like a delivery, like a FedEx or something.

Speaker 7 (01:00:49):
This happened Wednesday night. She thought that this package was
her medicine that was being chipped. Instead, the box was
full of human arms and fingers. Real yeah. Yeah. The
Christian County Corner's Office responded to the woman's home and
took the body. This happened in Kentucky and took the

(01:01:12):
body parts to the morgue. At this time, it is
believed that a shipment error is to blame for the
mix up, and that the body parts were intended for
transplant and research purposes. So shut you get your package
and you open it up. You think it's your medicine,
and then there's fingers and arms in there. Oh, my
happy Halloween. That's a little creepy story.

Speaker 2 (01:01:35):
Oh that would No, that is super creepy. I would
I would drop the box, and then my common sense
would kick in. I would do do my pants well,
But then I would stop and I would say, are
those like movie props or you know? And then I
probably poke it and then realize, no, these are ice

(01:01:55):
cold and frozen. These are real.

Speaker 7 (01:01:57):
And then you would put one of the fingers in
your mouth. No, I wouldn't, or you use it to
pick your nose, because I mean, that's one of your
bad habits that I see in here all you picking
your nose.

Speaker 2 (01:02:11):
All the time, all the time. I can't help myself.
I don't know what to do with that one.

Speaker 7 (01:02:19):
We've got your chance to win coming up here in
a little bit. Uh, we get a family four pack
of nailers to Opening Night. It's also Circus night. What's
the chicks name? That's going to be there from America's Good.

Speaker 2 (01:02:30):
Chick's name the performer's name is Grace Good.

Speaker 7 (01:02:35):
Okay, there you have it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
Yeah, sometimes I have to, you know, tone down the
masculinity chick.

Speaker 7 (01:02:43):
Listen, you talked about comparing.

Speaker 2 (01:02:47):
Oh I did sizes, yes, so just uh.

Speaker 7 (01:02:53):
I think chick is far more acceptable, just saying it's
the blue days. So samon notice she's laughing on news
radio eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 2 (01:03:14):
Eight fifty one. We are having way too much fun
this morning, way too much fun, the blue Dotty experience,
Samon Otis, news Radio eleven seventy WWVA.

Speaker 7 (01:03:23):
Let's see if we can have some really some real fun.
Oh no, okay, if Kevin from Strawb Automotive, yeah, and
you know, if he can you know, listen, we've been
going at this now for about a week.

Speaker 6 (01:03:40):
It seems like we've.

Speaker 8 (01:03:41):
Been going at it for a month.

Speaker 9 (01:03:43):
It's a long time.

Speaker 7 (01:03:44):
It's like marriage, you know, you multiply it by ten,
So if you've been married a year, it feels like ten.
Did I say that out loud? I'm sorry, I'm sorry anyway,
So you know, I'm just waiting for you to, you know,
come down a little bit and we'll go.

Speaker 8 (01:04:03):
You know, I'm just wait for you to come up
with it. I mean stopping you drove, you saw chucking
the guys over there, I did, right, all right. We
set it off to the side to hold it for you,
which we never do. No, Okay, okay, simply because there's
so many people in the market right now, especially for
wranglers and the deals that are out there. I actually

(01:04:25):
turned someone away yesterday because I told you you had
the first write a refusal.

Speaker 7 (01:04:31):
There's that, okay, all right, yeah, but you know, listen,
it's not like it's it's not like it's a fine woman.
I mean, it's you know, here's the thing. I like it.
There'll be other ones out there, you see what I'm saying. So, yeah,
it's it's a negotiating process, all right. You ever watch

(01:04:52):
American pickers. I mean, it's always about the.

Speaker 8 (01:04:54):
Deal, I know. But you're getting a deal, all right.

Speaker 7 (01:04:59):
You have your no, I have my number, okay. And
you know I have to have running boards.

Speaker 8 (01:05:08):
Yeah I don't get that on a jeep.

Speaker 7 (01:05:10):
But okay, so well, a big tall guy like you,
well I'll explain later. So if you do the running
boards and you meet me halfway. I'll do the deal.

Speaker 8 (01:05:24):
If it wasn't the last day of the month, there's
no way I would do this. But being as it is,
and I'm encouraging all of our rooftops put every deal
they can together, I have to take my own advice.
So all right, I'm in.

Speaker 7 (01:05:39):
All right, start the paperwork. All right, I just bought
a jeep live on the air.

Speaker 8 (01:05:48):
You witnesses here first, you can't back out either off
his wallet?

Speaker 7 (01:05:53):
Oh well, I'm gonna have to do a lot of dusting.

Speaker 8 (01:05:56):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (01:05:58):
So anyway, all right, we're doing what other deals you
got going on besides the one you just gave me.

Speaker 8 (01:06:03):
For everyone else out there, this is what's happening today
at all the rooftops. Okay, we're doing our best to
meet you in the middle. Put something together. Put more
money in trades, lower payments, better interest rates. I mean,
got today's the days last day of the month. You know,
we're trying to put them all together. I think we

(01:06:24):
even have a Halloween.

Speaker 6 (01:06:25):
Car for sale.

Speaker 7 (01:06:27):
Wow.

Speaker 8 (01:06:27):
Like it's a orange, No, it's a mallet food.

Speaker 2 (01:06:34):
Wow.

Speaker 7 (01:06:37):
Talk about a dad joke.

Speaker 8 (01:06:39):
And with that, I'm out of here.

Speaker 7 (01:06:42):
Hey, you do have a nice orange of black jeep
out there if anybody's interested.

Speaker 8 (01:06:46):
We have the orange Gladiator that I'm driving now's got
five thousand miles on it demo. We're putting it out.
I'm getting out of it today and it'll have a
huge discount on it. Mohobby, Orange, awesome vehicle. Love it,
but gotta get something else, So.

Speaker 7 (01:07:02):
Okay, check it out. Are you since it is Halloween,
are you in costume today?

Speaker 8 (01:07:08):
No? I'm not.

Speaker 7 (01:07:09):
Okay, you have anything orange or black and anything like that,
or I'm still wearing a uniform.

Speaker 8 (01:07:15):
I wear in a uniform.

Speaker 7 (01:07:16):
All right, all right, well you're no fun. All right, Well,
there you have it. We just did a deal on
the radio.

Speaker 2 (01:07:27):
Wow, okay, it's been.

Speaker 7 (01:07:30):
Going on for a while.

Speaker 2 (01:07:31):
It's I wasn't expecting.

Speaker 7 (01:07:34):
Like, and that dad joke was bad Mala, Yeah, that
was pretty bad, but it was actually kind of funny.

Speaker 2 (01:07:42):
It was but bad at the same time.

Speaker 4 (01:07:45):
Bad and funny.

Speaker 7 (01:07:47):
We might have another dad joke here in a little.

Speaker 2 (01:07:49):
Bit, another dad joke. Okay, Well, your friend's blown up,
and I.

Speaker 7 (01:07:52):
Know somebody's texting, probably Kevin, like I need your Social
Security number, the name of your firstborn and.

Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Oh, in your DNA and everything else. Oh so keeping
along the Halloween. Ah, I just lost my train of
thought topic. Yeah, so these are the bad guys that
I picked out, like some of the scariest villains in
history horror movies Penny Wise never saw it but okay,

(01:08:22):
Norman Bates okay, Hannibal Lecter or Buffalo Bill from Sidon,
Si Williams, and leather Face.

Speaker 7 (01:08:33):
I don't really, you're not.

Speaker 2 (01:08:34):
A horror movie guy.

Speaker 7 (01:08:36):
I'm not. I just like I mean, I've I've never
seen any of the Friday the thirteenths, never seen any
of the Freddy Krueger. Yeah, I've never seen those, never seen.

Speaker 2 (01:08:47):
Have you seen the Exorcists?

Speaker 7 (01:08:49):
Yes, I have seen that, but I don't consider that
a horror movie.

Speaker 2 (01:08:52):
No, I don't see There's there's.

Speaker 7 (01:08:54):
The never seen Texas Chainsawn mask Er, that's leather Face, okay,
and then if Friday the thirty oh Halloween never seen.

Speaker 2 (01:09:03):
There's the campy movies like the Mike Myers and all
of that, and then there's the paranormal stuff like Exorcist,
so well, we have.

Speaker 7 (01:09:12):
To get you. It just it's not my uh, not
my genre. I just I don't find them entertaining like
it just it's scary, can not scared. It's just like
I like, I like thrillers and suspect. Like I think
my favorite movie like that type of a movie is
was like Sinister with Ethan Hawke. Oh that's I mean,
I kind of like it where you have to think

(01:09:33):
of it.

Speaker 2 (01:09:33):
Yes, there takes some intelligence to get the scare. Yeah.
Well we have one more treat, no more tricks this morning,
eight fifty eight. Of course we're gonna wrap this up.
One hundred and six two four eleven seventy Family four
pack home opener tomorrow the Nailer's Circus themed You do
the number number twelve, number twelve, one hundred six two

(01:09:53):
four eleven seventy. Everybody have fun tonight on Halloween. Enjoy
trick or treating. We'll talk to your Monday
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