Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And why they were climbing trees and they were sabotagee
loggate equipment in the woods.
Speaker 2 (00:06):
He received death threats before the bombing. You received more
thrusts after the bombing.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
I did this acounts to sabotage our movement.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Mom, open your free iHeartRadio app, search rip Current and
start listening.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Now, Honey, money, money is making money a good thing.
You better believe it.
Speaker 4 (00:26):
This is the Bloomberg Money Minutes on seven hundred wlw.
Speaker 5 (00:30):
AL we say good morning once more? Did Gina serve
Vetti from the Bloomberg newsroom in New York City. Major
movies cost a lot to make, Gina, And Now Disney
is saying that some of its new films are weighing
heavily on its earnings.
Speaker 3 (00:45):
Yeah, we heard from Disney this morning. Tom. The company
reported sales that fell short of Wall Street estimates and
said that a slate of big budget films, including a
new Avatar picture, will weigh on results for this current quarter,
which is the company's fiscal FIR first quarter. Disney's entertainment
division is facing challenges early in its new fiscal year
on a few fronts films but also streaming and television,
(01:09):
but a bright spot. Earnings at Disney's parks and cruises
grew thirteen percent in the latest quarter. That was led
by strong performance at Disneyland, Paris and licensing revenue from
consumer products. Disney did beat estimates overall when it comes
to earnings, but we are seeing those shares moving lower
ahead of the opening bell.
Speaker 5 (01:28):
Tom Now I have been in a driverless vehicle. I
did so out in Arizona about this time last year.
Now we don't have them in Cincinnati, but one of
the major robotaxi companies launching self driving cars that ride
on highways.
Speaker 2 (01:45):
Yes, this is Waimo.
Speaker 3 (01:48):
It is now the nation's first robotaxi provider to offer
driverless rides on freeways. The Alphabet owned company is offering
these trips that include highways in Phoenix, San Francisco, and
Los Angeles, and Weimo said it will gradually roll this
out to more users over time. It did not share
(02:08):
a timeline for expanding highway rides to other markets where
it operates. Currently, it also has these rides available at
least it runs robotaxis, not on the freeways yet, but
it does have robotaxis also in Austin and Atlanta. But Tom,
the launch of the freeway services here really has the
potential to make weaimo more competitive with ride share and
(02:29):
traditional taxis down the road.
Speaker 5 (02:31):
Yeah, I thought it was really cool. I felt safe
and I enjoyed it.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Okay. Meanwhile, the futures this morning, Gina, Well, they are.
Speaker 3 (02:39):
Slipping a bit here despite the end of the government shutdown.
The Dow futures are down seventy s and P futures
are down thirteen. Nasdaq futures are down forty seven from Bloomberg.
Genas Cervetti on News Radio seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 5 (02:54):
Hight A twelve on the Morning Show seven hundred WLW,
And we do.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
It every single Thursday.
Speaker 5 (03:01):
We get together with the man heard on almost three
hundred stations syndicated across the United States of America. Of course,
we're lucky to have him right here on our sister
station wk RC on Saturdays and Sundays, and we're talking
about our buddy Gary Sullivan.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
Good morning, Gary, How are you.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
Good morning time? How are you.
Speaker 2 (03:20):
I'm doing great. I'm doing great.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Was by the way, you know, a beautiful tribute to
your daughter. Been there and I know, Zach, what you're gonna.
Speaker 5 (03:29):
Get And you know, I say all the time, you
can love your sons with all your heart and soul,
but there is nothing like a dad's love for their
little girl.
Speaker 1 (03:38):
I agree. Yes, very well done.
Speaker 2 (03:41):
Yeah, thank you, thank you, thank you.
Speaker 5 (03:43):
Okay, look, I'm really excited about the idea of eating
during the holidays, man, I get fired up. There might
be some people out there, you know, maybe they don't
like turkey or stuff and whatever.
Speaker 2 (03:53):
Bring it all on. Okay.
Speaker 5 (03:55):
We know there's gonna be a lot of cooking going on,
and you want to talk about things today to not
put down and take down or break your disposal.
Speaker 1 (04:06):
Right exactly, because over the next you know, forty days,
there will be a tremendous amount of cooking in many
of our homes. And you know that little disposal in
the kitchen sings kind of for you know, table scraps.
But this time of year, plumbers get very very busy
because we get very very enthusiastic about putting everything down
(04:29):
the disposal and you really gotta be careful. I try
to avoid fibrous foods, so that would be like celery, yep,
even corn husk, onion skins, anything like that, because it
can get tangled up in the blades, and then maybe
your disposal shuts down. Also, you know, there's a lot
(04:49):
of oils in grease, and a lot of people just
like they look around the room. Nobody's watching.
Speaker 2 (04:56):
That's me.
Speaker 1 (04:57):
But I know, I know, I know, down the disposal
it goes and that solidifies, and that can cause clogs.
And then the worst I think is starchy foods. In fact,
every now and then I'll go through this tangent on
my show and people are like, well, why do I
even have a disposal? It sounds like you can't put
anything down it. Well, it's just in the quantities. So
(05:20):
if you're peeling potatoes, all the potato skins do not
go down the disposal. Pasta, rice, all that stuff just
comes up the works. And of course I think most
of us know we don't want to put any you know,
decent sized bones down or you know, seeds from fruit,
you know where you have the stone. I mean, we
(05:42):
don't do that, but just be careful of the amounts
and the type of foods. So no fibrous foods or
minimal fibrous foods, no grease and oil, no pastas and
rice and potatoes, and you leave it at Dad, and
you're probably being pretty good.
Speaker 5 (05:58):
Shaking all right, But what about maintenance. That seems to
be at the end of the day you've forgotten more
about it, more than I'll ever know. But if you
take care of something, it will more than likely continue
to work better.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
Well, that's true. And since it's a motor, if you
turn on your disposal and use it every day or
every three days, even if you're not using, just turn
it on and grind up a little food and that's fine.
It just prevents corrosion and rust. And always use cold
water when you're using the disposal because if you use
(06:32):
hot water, that kind of liquefies any type of grease
that's in there, and it can rehearden further down the
plumbing system, so we don't want to do that. And
then just take a handful of ice cubes and grind
them up occasionally. That'll help, you know, sharpen the blades.
If you got odors, you can just cut up some
(06:54):
oranges lemons, grind up a couple of those.
Speaker 5 (06:57):
That else, I wait a minute, wait a minute, wait
a minute. Oranges and lemons, now you're obviously not talking
about the peels.
Speaker 1 (07:04):
You can put the peels down. Absolutely wow.
Speaker 5 (07:07):
So times after what you just said about some of
the other things, Well.
Speaker 2 (07:11):
I wouldn't.
Speaker 1 (07:12):
I wouldn't put the whole big lemon down. But I
mean if you have a wedge of lemon or something,
you can put that in there, and that's citric acid
to really clean off oils and greases off the blades,
and so yeah, I would definitely. In fact, I do
it probably four or five times a year. Okay, in fact,
I even use probably a whole half a lemon.
Speaker 2 (07:32):
And one other thing.
Speaker 1 (07:34):
There's a little and you may know this right right
where you push the food down into the disposal, that
there's that little rubber guard. Pull that out, and on
the back side of that where food would splash up
against it, there could be some residue of food there
and kind of gets a little bacteria on there and
(07:54):
start smelling it. And so pull that out. Every now
and then a little dwn liquid soap, uh, you know,
a tower, washrag, wipe that thing down and tom. After
we just give these tips, what do you do if
the disposal just jams? Okay, because like I said, plumbers
are going to be really busy. But there's a little
(08:16):
safety button underneath the cabinet on the bottom of the disposal,
it's a little red button, a little circuit breaker. So
if it jams, that button pops all out and stops
the disposal. So you can reset that and if it
doesn't reset, in other words, you just press it in.
(08:38):
If it doesn't reset, it means it's jammed. And in
the bottom of the disposal there's a little opening that
an Allen wrench fits in, and you can manually turn
those blades in those grinding plates, loosen it up, press
the red button back in, and there's a real good
chance you will have unjammed. It might save yourself a
(08:59):
call to the plumb run the day after Thanksgiving.
Speaker 5 (09:02):
Yeah, I mean, good luck getting somebody to come out,
because day after Thanksgiving a lot of people or you know,
take that Friday off and or they're just backed up.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
It's the busiest plumbing day of the year. You're kidding,
Day after Thanksgiving? Absolutely?
Speaker 5 (09:16):
Do you think most of it is because of what
we're talking about this morning.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
I think that's a good part of it. Even as
crazy as a sound toilets and ame all of a sudden,
there's twenty five people at your house and if there's
two people in the house, it's like overload on everything.
Speaker 5 (09:30):
All right, Well, then let me jump in there on that.
This is going off topic a little bit, but let
me ask you about that. If you're having a large
group of people come over to your house, I mean,
you're not going to tell them don't go to the bathroom.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
I just tell the guys go out back.
Speaker 5 (09:45):
But you know, having said that, in all seriousness, is
there anything you can do to prepare for that sort
of lack of a better word, onslaught of humanity?
Speaker 2 (09:56):
Now using your toilets.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
Well, you know, usually the biggest, most embarssed same thing,
quite honestly, is going the toilet won't flush toilet, And
usually what that is caused by is the water that's
in the closet isn't allowed to rush down into the bowl.
And I can't say I've really ever done this maintenance,
but a good point by you. Underneath the rim of
(10:18):
the toilet before guests get there, quite honestly, there'll be
all these holes and that's what transfers the water from
the closet into the bowl, which gives you the powerful flush.
If it's not a powerful flush, it's usually because those
holes have a little hard water deposits in it. So
you could take a little compact mirror and maybe a
(10:38):
little twist drill bit in between your thumb and forefinger
and clean out those holes.
Speaker 2 (10:43):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (10:43):
Because if it's all about the amount of water and
the power of the frush, so but it is in
all honesty that that day after Thanksgiving it's toilets and disposals.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
That is amazing. You learned something with Gary Sullivan every
single time he's here, and we thank you for that.
Speaker 5 (11:01):
Well, thank you, all right, my friend, I hope you
have a great rest of your weekend. People can listen
to you on Saturday and Sunday over on fifty five KRC.
So make it a great weekend, my friend, good.
Speaker 2 (11:12):
Lord Willing, I'll be there by. May care to that?
Amen to that? All right?
Speaker 5 (11:17):
Let's check the roadway. See what's happening out there at
Ain't twenty. It was busy early, Chuck. How we coming along.
Speaker 2 (11:22):
Now, sir?
Speaker 6 (11:23):
Settling down a little bit. This from the UC Health
Traffic Center. You'll find more options and clinical trialsfer pancratic
cancer care at the UCE Cancer Center. Get a second
opinion Fast call five one three five eight five U
see see see South Bend seventy five slows just a
bit above two seventy five. Then you'll need an extra
ten in and out of Ackland north bound seventy five
(11:45):
heavy out of Arrow Winger into downtown. That's now under
a ten minute delay. Northbound four seventy one. You're off
and on the breaks from Grand and in Bend seventy four.
Break lights continue from above Montana South Bend seventy one
that slow go through Blue Ash. Then you got a
little bit of a break until you try to come
out of Kenwood and slow down to Red Bank. Chuck
Ingram News Radio seven hundred WLW, and again for those
(12:08):
of you, we'll get to the weather here in a second.
But for those of you that want to chuck check
check out Chuck in Action. I'll be back before the
midnight is the show Marymont Players. That's right there off
for Route fifty. You go past Marymont if you're coming
from say downtown, if you're coming from out east on fifty,
(12:29):
you would get there right on Walton Creek Road shows
tonight at seven thirty, Tomorrow night seven thirty two, shows
on Saturday at two o'clock and seven thirty, and then
Sunday there's a show at two o'clock, and Chuck, we
are rooting for you.
Speaker 5 (12:48):
We know you'll do great. Go break a leg. I'll
be back before midnight. Tickets are available. Beautiful morning out
there right now, it's going to be an even more
beautiful day. Up to fifty seven degree under sunny skies.
We're drive tonight down to thirty seven partly cloudy. Tomorrow
very small, very very small chance of a pop up shower,
(13:10):
high a fifty four clear Tomorrow night high school football
in and around the Tri State kickoff time at seven
o'clock should be around fifty five degrees. And then on
Saturday it's going to be cloudy, a little bit of sunshine,
but we're up close to seven eight degrees. All right,
I invite you to call here in about five minutes
(13:30):
at five one three seven four nine seven thousand five
one three seven four nine seven thousand if you were
directly affected, not politically, Okay. We're not getting into a
big political debate here on who is right who was wrong?
Speaker 2 (13:47):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (13:48):
This is more along the lines of how were you
real life stuff affected by the government shutdown. Maybe it's
your snap benefits, maybe mill terry benefits. Maybe you weren't
getting paid as a government employee. I would love to
hear from you and how you made it through, what
(14:10):
it was like, real life stuff. That's coming up at
eight thirty eight seven dred WLW after.
Speaker 2 (14:18):
One hundred WLW.
Speaker 3 (14:20):
The breakup of Delta Airlines and Aero Mexico is on
hold for now. A US appeals court in Atlanta put
a temporary pause on a Trump administration order directing Delta
and the Mexican Airline to dissolve their joint venture by
January first. The pauses in place while a review of
the order is pending. Fan Duel is launching its own
prediction market product called FanDuel Predicts with a new app
(14:43):
next month. But with both FanDuel and draftking zine prediction markets,
Nevada's gambling Board says they're not welcome. The board says
FanDuel's parent has surrendered its license to operate in the state,
and DraftKings has agreed to withdraw all pending applications for
sports wagering in Nevada. It's one of five stays that
have told gambling operators they're in danger of losing their
licenses if they take prediction market bets. That's because such
(15:07):
markets are not regulated and taxed by the states like
other forms of gambling. And the down starts out at
a record high this morning after a mostly higher close
for stocks yesterday. From Bloomberg Genus Cervetti on news radio
seven hundred WLW, all right.
Speaker 5 (15:22):
Phone lines are open between about the next ten twelve minutes,
and I would love to hear from you.
Speaker 2 (15:27):
We don't have a lot of time most.
Speaker 5 (15:29):
Of the time on the morning show to take a
lot of calls, but I would love to hear from
you at five one three seven four nine seven thousand,
five one three seven four nine seven thousand. If you
were someone who is directly affected by the government shut down,
maybe you're in a military family. And again five one
(15:49):
three seven four nine seven thousand. I'm a little lary
about how many calls we're going to get, only because
we never do it. So if you don't do it
very much, then you know, uh, we'll see how it goes.
Speaker 2 (16:00):
Anyway.
Speaker 5 (16:01):
Maybe you get snap benefits. Maybe you're a government employee
who had a job you're getting paid and now all
of a sudden bang. I told a story about going
to the airport where I go every Friday if I'm
not driving to my football game on the CW and
(16:21):
just thanking those TSA workers who were there. Maybe you're
one of them where you were going into work and
you knew that you weren't getting paid. So if ive
one three seven four nine seven thousand five one three
seven four nine seven thousand, I would love to hear
from you. And again, let's try and stay away from
(16:43):
the politics of all this. Okay. You know, you might
be a Democrat and you want to scream at Republicans.
That's fine, no problem. You might be a Republican and
blame the shutdown on Schumer and the Democrats. That's fine too,
But that's not what we're asking for here.
Speaker 2 (17:00):
Okay.
Speaker 5 (17:01):
I just want to know how were you affected by
the shutdown. Let's start with Bill in Erlanger. Bill, thanks
so much for taking the time to call.
Speaker 7 (17:10):
How are you, sir, Great Tom, How are you doing, sir?
Speaker 2 (17:14):
Doing all right? My man, doing all right?
Speaker 7 (17:16):
You know, honestly, right now, with shutdown and everything like that,
I've been thank God, I've been fortunate right now. I mean,
it really hasn't affected me that much, but I do
feel sorry for the ones you know that really went
through hardship through all this. But one thing I really
wanted to say, just to get off I mean, not
(17:37):
to get off the topic, but I just want to
say what a great job you are doing on the
morning show. And I want to say what a great
man your dad is. Can I meet him years ago
at the airport? And that's basically all I mean. You know,
you have a wonderful day.
Speaker 5 (18:04):
We're going to is it, Mason, or we're going or
the callers from Mason Danny forgive me?
Speaker 2 (18:09):
Yeah, yeah, that's okay, Mason. How are you?
Speaker 5 (18:11):
Thanks for calling the show? Forgive me Mason, I apologize.
Speaker 8 (18:15):
Oh all right, doing that job?
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Do it good man? Thanks for the call.
Speaker 8 (18:19):
Yeah, of course I'll make it. I'll make it easy
on you. You know personally that the government shutdown's not
really affected me too too terribly. But in terms of
my work, one thing that I have seen it affecting
that people probably don't think about too much is in
terms of insurance. If you need flood insurance or any
sort of subsidized government insurance, that stuff is not getting
(18:40):
processed right now. So I close a lot of homes
home insurances, and they are they're not going through. People
can't close on their newly purchased home because they can't
get the insurance that they need through specific programs that
found it through the government.
Speaker 5 (18:55):
So if I hear you're right, they're able to afford
to buy the home, but when it comes to in
the insurance on the home, they might need a little
bit of help from the government, and so that's preventing
them from moving in.
Speaker 2 (19:06):
Is that what I'm hearing you saying?
Speaker 8 (19:08):
Not quite not quite so far. Like flood insurance, for example,
I deal with a lot of blood insurance down in
Kentucky and Tennessee. Sure they it's through that, and I
are inn FIP, the National Flood Insurance Program, which is
funded through the government. A lot of these companies are
subsidized or sponsored or approved through government, and those are
(19:32):
not going through currently because of the shutdowns.
Speaker 5 (19:35):
Now, are you getting any indication with the shutdown over
that that's going to change or how soon it might change.
We had Genus or Veti on from Bloomberg News earlier,
and she made the comment about this very thing you're
talking about among a laundry list of things that they're
hoping to have up and running relatively soon. Anybody giving
you any information on any of that kind of thing.
Speaker 9 (19:57):
I'm in dark man.
Speaker 8 (19:58):
I don't talk. I don't talk to any one important
early about that type of stuff. But I just been
from what I have heard is as sin as the
government is back up and operational, then it should get
the ball rolling. It could take a little bit of
time because they have so many requests that they have
to process right after they are back in rolling. But yeah,
(20:20):
not really sure how long they'll take.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
Well, the bottom line is, Mason, it is directly affecting you.
I mean, you may not be reliant upon snap benefits,
military benefits, a shutdown from your salary, but when your
business is affected, and this is a great point that
a lot of people, including me, don't think about now
(20:43):
all of a sudden, your livelihood is very much affected.
Speaker 8 (20:48):
Correct.
Speaker 5 (20:49):
Well, we're rooting for you that they can get this
stuff up and running soon. Mason, thanks so much for
the call. Let's go to Rick.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
Rick.
Speaker 5 (20:57):
Welcome to seven other WLW Thanks for calling Rick.
Speaker 10 (21:01):
Hey, good morning Tom.
Speaker 2 (21:02):
How are you Rick?
Speaker 10 (21:05):
I am in This call is to say thank you
for your show. I really love playing glass thing Glass
that you do on Wednesdays than you and uh, you
know earlier you were talking about the uh, the feelings
and the thoughts of a dad when uh, your your
daughter is is is growing up now moving out on
(21:25):
their own and uh uh the emotional you know journey
you go through watching your little girl, you know, turn
into a young woman and uh it's fruck on with
me and and uh I uh I I I waved
my wife and I said, listen to this, listen to this,
you know. So uh one wanted to thank you for
that sharing.
Speaker 2 (21:47):
So you've been there before already, Well.
Speaker 10 (21:50):
I I I have somewhat recently. Three weeks ago my
daughter was married to a wonderful guy and we love him,
and uh but the thoughts all during their engage, even
before was the adjustment you go through is the dad
seeing what's going on in your daughter's life and knowing
this is that little girl that you bought dollars for
and took the dance lessons and now she's a young
(22:12):
woman and then in my case, now a young bride.
Speaker 5 (22:15):
Well, Rick, congratulations on your daughter's wedding and her life ahead.
Our thoughts and prayers are certainly with her, and thank
you for calling in. Rick really appreciate it. Let's go
to John on a cell phone about to shut down. John,
Welcome to the Morning Show. How are you, Matt?
Speaker 3 (22:33):
All right?
Speaker 9 (22:33):
Tom, thanks for taking my call. Something that a lot
of people may not be aware of. I'm a recent
government retiring retired September thirtieth. I've been working for the
government for fifteen years, and because of the government shutdown
and people being furloughed, my paperwork for retirement has not
(22:58):
been processed through my governmental agency, and then it also
hasn't gone through the Office of Personnel Management, which is
the one that finalizes your return.
Speaker 2 (23:07):
Sure.
Speaker 9 (23:08):
So I've been sitting here essentially for two months without
a paycheck or pension, and I realize a lot of
people don't get pensions. I don't want to get into
that conversation because I'm quite honestly. I used to work
in the private sector for twenty five years. So but
the point is, I've been without an income for two
months and it has nothing to do with TSA and
(23:30):
any of that stuff. I just wanted to make other
people aware because the agency for which I used to work,
everybody was furload and nothing was moving as far as
PaperWorks concerned regarding retirement applications or anything like that. So
you know, the government is interweaved and basically a hell
of a lot of stuff are especially like the insurance
(23:53):
that the people aren't aware of.
Speaker 5 (23:56):
Well, John, I hope that thing gets processed. I mean,
this is lightning. Maybe to many of you, it's not.
You're going through the same thing John is, but it's
so enlightening. And he brings up an awesome point. John,
thank you for the call about how.
Speaker 2 (24:12):
You know.
Speaker 5 (24:12):
Look, I can sit here and I can rail about
government and there in effectiveness oftentimes, but but you know,
then you think about the tentacles that the government has
in virtually every single part or nearly every single part
(24:34):
of our lives in some form or fashion. Now, there's
a guy in John who worked for the government, said
he was in private business, in the private sector, works
the last fifteen years of his professional life working for
the government where they're very fortunate. He's right to have
a pension. A lot of people don't have that. But
once you retire to have to Now, okay, let's go
(24:56):
out to paperwork, get it in all right. Checks you're
going to start coming and then they don't because of
the shutdown, the paperwork never gets processed. So John just said,
he's gone two months. I don't know a lot of
people out there that can go two months, especially longer
than two months. Thank God it's over. And you'd like
(25:21):
to think that they're going to ask some folks to
really start putting in extra hours to take care of
you know, as Mason said about insurance claims for people
trying to move into somewhere, whether it's starting your pension,
whether it's just getting your paychecks back, if you're a
government employee, tsa military snap benefits, you'd like to think
(25:46):
that they're going to do all they can. You'd like
to think I'm skeptical. I'm cynical. I hate to admit it.
I'm doing my best not to be so much that way.
I just hope that they're on their game. I really do,
all right. Umm, fellas, Look, starting in our thirties, we
start losing two to three percent of our testosterone production
(26:10):
in our bodies medical fact, every single year. So what
does that mean If you get to be in your forties,
your fifties, even your sixties, maybe you just don't have
a lot of energy. Maybe you're not sleeping as well.
Maybe you feel kind of foggy and perhaps even your
sex drive is a little bit off and you just
(26:30):
chalk it up, I'm getting older. That's the way it goes.
So low testosterone might be the issue. And that's where
our friends at Tri Statemen's Health come into play and
can help you. Log onto tri statemenshealth dot com. Okay,
book an appointment. You'll be in and out of there
thirty to forty five minutes. You give them a little blood,
They run a testosterone test, they run a PSA test,
(26:54):
They come back with the results. You sit down with
a licensed medical provider to review those results, talk about options.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
What can I do here?
Speaker 5 (27:04):
The appointment is ninety nine dollars unless you sign up
for testosterone treatment the day of your appointment, then your
visit is free. Tri State Men's Health has six locations, Cincinnati, Dayton,
two and Columbus. He's in Hilliard and Westerville, Louisville and
Northern Kentucky. Most men, we wait to dagon long. I
know I did, wish I didn't. Don't be one of us?
(27:25):
Call today in one eight hundred, nine hundred and ninety
sixty five for or visit tri State Men's Health dot Com.
Let's get one more look at traffic, Chuck, how are
things out there.
Speaker 2 (27:33):
Trying to clear out?
Speaker 6 (27:34):
But there's some debris in the roadway on south Pound
seventy one near five for the left side. That's keeping
things slow. From above two seventy five. This from the
UC Health Traffic Center. You'll find more options and clinical
trials for pancratic cancer care at the UC Cancer Center.
Get a second opinion, fast call five one, three, five
eight five UCCCE southbound seventy five slows just a bit
(27:57):
promote Union Center than a bit more through Lachland and
seventy four. Starting to clear out now from above Montana
to the seventy five ramp, Chuck Ingram News Radio seven
hundred WALW It's.
Speaker 2 (28:08):
Gonna be a beautiful day today.
Speaker 5 (28:10):
Our WCPO nine first warning forecast sunny in fifty seven.
We won't have the winds that we had yesterday, so
it's gonna feel considerably warmer out there.
Speaker 2 (28:21):
Tonight. We're down to thirty seven and dry.
Speaker 5 (28:23):
Tomorrow we're gonna go from partly sunny, few clouds rolling
in the afternoon, but we're up to fifty four degrees
forty nine and clear tomorrow night. If you're going to
a high school football playoff game, tomorrow night, tickoff around
seven o'clock should be right at fifty five degrees. That
is football weather. And then over the weekend, a warm
wedge comes in. Might be cloudy on Saturday, but we
(28:45):
could reach seventy degrees before we get out of here,
as we always do. We encourage you to think about
getting to your local animal shelter and adopting a shelter
dog or cap. If you can't adopt one, try fostering one.
(29:05):
I promise you your house will be happier, healthier, and
have a lot more love. Eight fifty six seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 4 (29:16):
There will be claws and chaos when the Football bear
Cats wrestle with the Wildcats in a Pig twelve Conference clash.
Will you see annihilate Arizona or will the Cats from
the Canyons scratch out a win? Find out it's Saturday
at eleven am on seven hundred WLW or stream for
free on the new and improved iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 3 (29:40):
This report is sponsored by Miami Valley Gaming.
Speaker 6 (29:43):
Get to Miami Valley Gaming no.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
December twenty seven for a chance to win, afford him