Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:12):
That's still a speeding bullet, more powerful, letta lookomotive, able
to believe tall buildings at a single down on the sky.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
It's a bird to Lincoln.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Lincoln, Lincoln for bingus Bonana Bana, for being gun by
man gun Lincoln.
Speaker 4 (00:34):
They say this cat Lincoln is a bad mother. We're
just talking about Lincoln.
Speaker 5 (00:41):
Good morning, Cincinnati, Welcome to twelve thirty w dB Z.
We are the buzz of Cincinnati, your talk station, the
Lincoln where shell till one o'clock this afternoon. It's Thursday,
(01:04):
Yes it is. And there's a lot going on around
the Trice date, the nation and.
Speaker 4 (01:13):
The world. Where do we start?
Speaker 5 (01:16):
Black leaders organize a rally to counter Republican message on
Cincinnati crime.
Speaker 4 (01:22):
That's what how they inquire headlines it.
Speaker 5 (01:26):
But anyway, there's a big rally today Fountain Square at
twelve noon. Damon Lynch the third and a host of
other Black leaders will be at Fountain Square today.
Speaker 4 (01:45):
At twelve noon.
Speaker 5 (01:47):
So get over there and show your support, show your support.
And of course you know by now misdemeanor charges against
the white Russian. Yes, and I don't know the solicitors
(02:08):
are now. I heard the FOP president say that they
asked the chief to foul the charges and she wouldn't
and one of her I guess assistant chiefs did it.
Speaker 4 (02:27):
She said she wasn't going to do it. That's what
I heard. So I don't know. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (02:38):
Yeah, this guy had prior arrest for punching a cab driver,
so you know he likes violence.
Speaker 4 (02:51):
I don't know. We'll see, we will see.
Speaker 5 (02:55):
He goes he's to appear in court on Tuesday. Go
down there that day. I might pop in Tuesday. I
guess it's at nine o'clock. I would imagine in the courtroom. Ay,
I would say court room.
Speaker 6 (03:11):
Ay.
Speaker 5 (03:12):
If I'm wrong, somebody tell me. But I think he'll
be in court room. May I think I'll go down there.
I can get inside there, inside the glass, and we'll
see what happens, see what he has to say, see
what his attorney has to say.
Speaker 4 (03:30):
Yes, we'll see.
Speaker 5 (03:34):
Oh, the two parents invited, and remember the North College Hill.
I had the superintendent on from North College Hill, Eugene Blaylock,
and he talked about the fight he saw and the
parents encouraging the kids to fight. Well, the two parents
have been charged in then, and the two students who
(03:54):
were fighting. Yeah, so there you go. They were charge,
who do you think is who is the worst fop?
Is it King Kober or is it Dan Hills. I
(04:16):
didn't think anybody could get any worse than Dan Hills,
but King Kober might be uh moved Dan Hills out.
Everybody thought the fang Man was bad. Fang Man was
actually a pretty decent guy. The fang Man.
Speaker 4 (04:30):
Yeah, he was actually a pretty decent guy, Keith Fangman.
I mean he had his ups and downs.
Speaker 5 (04:40):
Good points and bad points, but overall the fang Man
was a decent dude. And he came back after he
retired and stuff. He came back into the studio with me.
He was in here, and I wonder what he would
say about all this man he's out on some boat.
(05:04):
He rents charter boats out on the ocean somewhere. I
don't know what he's done, but he's down in Florida,
I do believe. Shabazulu asked what changes will the March
on the Square bring. It's not a march on the Square,
it's a rally and they're just going to be there
(05:25):
to hear what's going on and next steps.
Speaker 4 (05:29):
I guess yeah, so there you have it. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (05:39):
Dan Hills was more of the Eddie Haskell type guy.
I nicknamed him Eddie Haskell.
Speaker 7 (05:46):
You know.
Speaker 5 (05:47):
He was all the nice guy in front of Missus Cleaver,
but as soon as Missus Cleaver walked out of the room,
he would rough up a little beaver. Yeah, leave it
to beaver, say all kind of stuff. Let's see what
else is happening. Hey boy, what I was This judge
(06:12):
had gotten the verdict from the jury, and the verdict
said not guilty. But the judge, I don't know what
he was thinking. He said guilty of all charges and
what And then I guess, you know you the guy
stand up there, You're like, oh god, I'm going to jail.
(06:34):
And then one of the Jewis said, wait, what you
know said something that he looked.
Speaker 4 (06:38):
He said, didn't I say not guilty?
Speaker 5 (06:41):
And they said, no, you said guilty, and he changed
it and the guy was found not guilty. But the
judge delivered the wrong verdict. This guy killed a police
officer too, and he was found not guilty because against
the police officer had been trying to pick him up
(07:02):
to have sex with him in the car. And yeah,
he said it was self defense, and they proved it
was self defense some kind of way.
Speaker 3 (07:11):
Wait wait wait wait yeah, wait mister way, I'm sorry
to interrupt your monologue. No problem, Okay. So the guy
who was in court for killing a police officer, yes,
was declared not guilty ycause it was self defense.
Speaker 6 (07:27):
Right.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
This particular police officer was trying to sexually.
Speaker 4 (07:31):
Harassed the guy. Yes, yes? Was that a male police officer?
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (07:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (07:38):
The Oliver's attorney claimed self defense throughout the trial, as
prosecutors argued his account of the events was inconsistent, noting
he did not mention any sexual advances when first questioned.
The jury found Oliver not guilty and initially announced the
guilty verdict on all six counts. Shortly after the at
(08:00):
least two members of the jury were heard saying from
the jury box, wait what. The judge paused and h
and he looked at the footage from the trial and
it showed that he and then he reread the verdict.
Before realizing his mistake, he responded, didn't I say not?
Speaker 4 (08:19):
Then he reread the correct statement. The jury found him
not guilty on all counts. Yes, and yeah.
Speaker 5 (08:29):
This guy it was three am and he was walking
down the street and the cop was trying to get
him in the car for sex.
Speaker 4 (08:37):
This is what the guy said.
Speaker 5 (08:39):
And when he wouldn't do it, the guy was gonna
come out and put him in the car, and he
shot him self defense.
Speaker 4 (08:47):
And uh, there you go, man.
Speaker 3 (08:51):
Yeah, the lawyer for that, god needs a bonus because
that would be very hard to.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Prove, right, I know.
Speaker 5 (08:57):
I don't know whether they had body cam or what,
but something proved this guy's innocence and the jury found
him not guilty of shooting a police officer self defense. Unbelievable, unbelievable.
This happened in Georgia, of all places. Oh yeah, Fulton County.
(09:21):
H oh yeah, so that was a big deal. Have
you ever heard of a dating term called shreking?
Speaker 4 (09:33):
You know, remember the guy Shrek, yeah, the movie.
Speaker 5 (09:36):
Yeah, Well that's it's a term they use for this
dating now. And what it is is a lot of
these women they'll get a guy that's not very attractive
in hopes that he'll treat them a lot better than
a guy that's you know, equal to them and looks
(09:59):
like you know what I mean. Yeah, And so that's
called shreky. Oh boy, No one of them having bad luck. Dady,
I figured it out.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
I'm supposed to be treating those women with respect, and
that's the reason why they chose me.
Speaker 5 (10:15):
Because right you're not attracted, and you'll treat them so
good because you're so glad to get.
Speaker 3 (10:21):
Them, so you do everything they want. You know, you're
out there, beacon call man, I'm changing my phone number.
Speaker 4 (10:30):
And sometimes it doesn't work out that way.
Speaker 5 (10:33):
Sometimes a god treat them bad because you know, you
can't judge how somebody's gonna treat you a by how
they look, and so a lot of.
Speaker 4 (10:42):
Times they make mistakes when it comes to shreking.
Speaker 5 (10:45):
Yes, oh hell man, oh boy. Folks, you gotta pay
attention to what your kids are doing. Kentucky middle school
students made rape threats in a ditty party group chat.
(11:07):
They had a party group called Diddy. It was a
chat called the Diddy Chat, and they would threaten these
girls with rape and all kind of stuff. These are
middle school students and now the parents assuing. And the
group chat where middle schoolers talked about raping their peers
(11:28):
was called Diddy Party, and it's also where one student
allegedly confessed to sexually harassing and threatening to rape a
ten year old classmate. The incident happened in a gym
in Carroll County, Kentucky Middle school were roughly five hundred
and fifty students attend fifth grade through eighth grade. That's
(11:51):
about sixty miles southwest of here in Cincinnati. And now
the Carroll County Board of Education and several employees are
facing scrutiny for how they had the alleged threats.
Speaker 4 (12:01):
The lawsuit accuses the school officials.
Speaker 5 (12:04):
Of false string a culture where did he type conduct
was permitted to take hold.
Speaker 4 (12:13):
And be believable.
Speaker 5 (12:16):
That's why folks, y'all got to pay attention to what
these kids are doing.
Speaker 4 (12:20):
They going crazy.
Speaker 3 (12:21):
And you know, I hate to interrupt your monologue again,
mister where, but I'm wondering about the race of these children.
Speaker 5 (12:27):
See Carroll County. I'm almost tempted to say that they're
white students. I don't know what the racial makeup of
Carroll County is. Maybe some Kentuckians out there can tell me,
but Carroll County Middle School, I would almost say that
(12:48):
it probably maybe ten percent black. I'm guessing I don't know.
If anybody knows who, they can, feel free to call me.
At five, one, three, seven, four, nine, twelve thirty. But
I think it's these little kids think the hip you know, Diddy,
you know, like rap music and stuff, white kids. That's
what I'm thinking. That's what I'm thinking, But I can't
(13:11):
be sure. All right, let's see what else we have here. Somebody,
some rich person donated a million dollars for the over
the Rhine project. They're building a recreation center and over
the Rhine it's gonna be sixty thousand square feet and
(13:34):
it's gonna be north of Liberty. How about that? North
of Liberty. It's gonna have a playground, a gym, a pool,
childcare services and three c DC broke round on the
project on May seventh.
Speaker 4 (13:50):
And the center who also houses a.
Speaker 5 (13:53):
Roller rink, weight room, track, exercise classes, spaces for you, programming,
and all kinds of stuff. Yeah, classroom, spaces, Pharaoh and
they either gonna have childcare for I guess six weeks
(14:19):
through pre K childcare services. So construction is expected to
last eighteen months. So a new recreation center going up
north of Liberty Street, which is I think a good deal.
Go ahead, three c DC, see three c DC. These
(14:41):
guys they're doing a lot. I know people hate them,
people think that the big bad wolf, but they do
some stuff.
Speaker 4 (14:52):
Now, okay, most.
Speaker 5 (14:54):
Of the people live north of Liberty Street. I would
say a black vogue. The recreation center is going up
north of Liberty Street. They got a roller rink, all
kinds of stuff, not an ice skating rink, a roller rink.
You know who loves the roller skate black folks. So
(15:15):
they got all kind of stuff going up there for you.
So there you go. We'll see what happens with that.
But the hat's off three c DC. Then they got
a million dollar boost from a somebody who wants to
remain anonymous philanthropists. And there you go. All right, let's
(15:41):
take a break and then we'll come back. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,
twelve thirty Lincoln were twelve thirty the buzz Hey, And
we've got tickets to give away to Tide Trippett. Is
that it trippet Okay on November sixth at Bowguards Plus
we've got tickets to give away to War and Treat
And Terrence Howard, you.
Speaker 4 (16:02):
Finally saw them on TV? You finally saw.
Speaker 3 (16:05):
I did They're on the one of those weight loss commercials? Yes, Yes,
it's a black couple. Yeah, you know they're both overweight. Yeah,
but you know, it was my first time seeing them.
And I've been seeing this commercial for.
Speaker 4 (16:17):
The law and I didn't know who the hell they were.
I'm like, who is what are they talking?
Speaker 3 (16:22):
And then I finally read the names on the commercial
and they said War War. I was like, oh, okay.
Speaker 5 (16:28):
Yeah, all right, I might have to check them out
on September sixth at music Hall. We got to focus
with music Hall coming in today, so they'll tell us
more about it. All right, let's go downtown to the
Crime Stopper headquarters and check in with my good friend,
Detective Tiffany Green.
Speaker 4 (16:46):
How you doing.
Speaker 8 (16:47):
I'm good.
Speaker 9 (16:48):
How are you this morning?
Speaker 5 (16:49):
I'm hanging in there, hanging in there. Do you have
your weekend plans set up yet?
Speaker 4 (16:54):
You're still working on them?
Speaker 10 (16:57):
I don't have any weekend plans.
Speaker 4 (16:58):
What? No, you mean you're not going out? You don't
have a date or what? What's going on?
Speaker 6 (17:06):
No?
Speaker 9 (17:06):
You're not all right?
Speaker 4 (17:08):
Just checkie.
Speaker 5 (17:09):
I was just looking at my schedule. I got the
Veterans Appreciation Day that's coming up Saturday down at Sawyer Point.
Had over two thousand veterans down there and their families.
They got entertainment, they're gonna have all kinds of stuff,
resources for veterans, jobs for veterans, all kinds of things
going on.
Speaker 4 (17:29):
I'll be at that.
Speaker 5 (17:30):
Then I was supposed to go to the Bengals game,
but I had to just cross that off my list.
Speaker 4 (17:35):
I couldn't make that.
Speaker 5 (17:36):
I've got the West End dance at the Union Terminal Saturday.
And then a former co worker of mine is having
a birthday party, Miss Ava works over at the Board
of Elections. Got to go to her party, so I
had to cut something out, and it was the Bengals
because they're not gonna play the starters. It's just you know,
why am I going down there?
Speaker 9 (17:56):
Okay, that's a lot, so.
Speaker 4 (17:58):
Yes, yes, yes, yes, that's just one. That's just Saturday.
There's more. Now, who are we looking for today?
Speaker 10 (18:07):
Anthony Tremble is wanted by the Ohio Adult Paro Authority
for a felony parole violation. Mister Trimple was originally charged
with involuntary manslaughter, aggravated robbery, and felonious assault. Anthony Trumple
is a mel Black. He's thirty five years old. He's
five nine and two hundred and sixty pounds. Anthony Trmple
has a history of murder and assault and was last
(18:29):
known to live on Spring Grove Avenue in Camp Washington.
William Dufferin is wanted by the Ohio Adult William Dufferin
is wanted by the Ohio Adult Paroa Authority for a
felony parole violation. Mister Dufferin was originally charged with drug trafficking,
escape and failure to register. William Dufferin is a mele White.
(18:51):
He's forty years old. He's sixty two and two hundred
and twenty five pounds. William Dufferin has a history of
assault and was fast.
Speaker 4 (19:01):
Tell them to be quiet when you're on the air.
Speaker 10 (19:04):
That was last no to live in New Richmond, Ohio. Listeners,
If anyone has information on where police can find Anthony
Tremble or William Duffern, please call crime Stoppers at five
one three three five two thirty forty or submit a
tip online at crimejask stoppers dot us.
Speaker 5 (19:25):
All right, now, are any tips coming in on the
guy that shot the young lady down on Liberty Street?
Speaker 4 (19:31):
Shot her in the back? You get any tips on
that one?
Speaker 10 (19:35):
It's very sad.
Speaker 9 (19:37):
Lincoln.
Speaker 10 (19:37):
But unfortunately I am not receiving any tips.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
That's crazy, that's crazy.
Speaker 10 (19:42):
But yes, if it's in regards to the Cincinnati brawl,
I'm getting flooded.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
See that's that just makes no sense at all. That
is just crazy. That's Cincinnati for you, I tell you.
And who is that in the background interrupting you back there?
Speaker 10 (19:57):
So actually that that's an error on my part because
I always has your show up and listening, and then
once we actually go live together, I'll mute it. And
I kept hitting the button back.
Speaker 5 (20:07):
Oh okay, okay, that was me interrupting you. Okay, all right,
all right, Oh I forgot I left something out for Saturday.
I've got the Lincoln Wear Walking Club Saturday morning too.
So that just adds another thing to my day on Saturday.
Speaker 11 (20:21):
I don't know how you're going to fit everything in.
Speaker 5 (20:23):
I will do it. I will do it. They don't
call me the man of power for nothing.
Speaker 4 (20:27):
Okay, all right, we'll talk.
Speaker 5 (20:29):
We'll talk to you tomorrow. All right, there we go,
Detective Green. That was me interrupting her in the background.
I was like, why don't they shut up? She's talking
and it was me, Okay, let's take a break, We'll
come back twelve thirty the buzz where if you don't
get twelve o'clock Fountain Square, join Reverend Damon Lynch Kzy
(20:53):
Smith and a host of other folks down there show support.
Sure you're this pleasure on the charges for the white
Russian fourth degree misdemeanor. And I want to see the entire.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
Video that they have.
Speaker 5 (21:18):
And I'm thinking, I'm hearing that video was turned over
from three CDC from inside the bar. Have we seen that? No,
we need to see more video. We need to see
more video. Witnesses are saying that the Russian was throwing
(21:39):
around the N word inside the bar, kicked somebody's car
and all this stuff.
Speaker 4 (21:49):
So I don't know.
Speaker 5 (21:54):
Let's go to the phones. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,
twelve thirty. Miss Jay, how are you?
Speaker 9 (22:00):
Oh my lord? I'm okay, my time.
Speaker 4 (22:04):
I got to show to do Miss Jay. Got to
do stuff.
Speaker 9 (22:09):
Okay before I forget a mouse, forgot what I want
to say? Okay, because I call hold an early in divinsark,
got my come in, yes, yes, okay. The first thing
I want to say is the guy that was on
yesterday was talking about people's being democrats and the being white,
how they're supposed to do this, supposed to do that,
(22:29):
but black. Well, let me let me let me say
one thing, Just because a person is a Democrat, I
don't mean that they're for the black race because they're
still white. They still are white like the and all
of them, most are going to be the same. Just
because their Democrats don't mean make understand up for black peoples.
(22:50):
I couldn't understand why he couldn't understand that, yes, okay.
And another thing, okay, that that mayor of Cincinnaties whatever
and the police chief, that lady to do anything to nobody,
(23:11):
to the white guy. Okay. I get nobody talking about
saying this, but I think the chief is racist and the.
Speaker 5 (23:23):
Marriage, Oh boy boy, why do you say that? Why
do you say that?
Speaker 9 (23:28):
Because how they're reacting behind this situation about the the
fight downtown and other things through the years, you understand, Okay.
I can just see people and feel how they talk,
some of the things they say what they are, yes,
and I feel that she she is.
Speaker 4 (23:49):
And it is oh boy, those statements.
Speaker 5 (23:53):
You call it the chief of rasis and the mayor
of races.
Speaker 9 (23:58):
I sure am you know, because can't you see it
for yourself. Okay.
Speaker 5 (24:03):
Another thing, I'm looking, but I can't see that I'm looking, Okay.
Speaker 9 (24:08):
I mean, you can tell by how a person talks,
what they do about certain situations in the city and
whatever that's been going on.
Speaker 4 (24:16):
Now's either white folks.
Speaker 5 (24:18):
The white police officers accuse the chief of hiring, you know,
moving blacks and females up in front of them. So
how can the chief win when she gets accused by
the white police officers that she's favoring blacks and women.
Speaker 9 (24:34):
Well, well, I haven't heard about that. I'm just saying
what I see in the police chief in the mirror, okay.
And they're not going to do anything to that dude. Okay.
It was on the news. It was on the news.
I watched TV all the time. It was on the
news that they charged him with a misdemeanor.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
Yes, which means that somebody proctor.
Speaker 5 (24:55):
Why don't the prosecutor do well, Okay, if they charge
you with a misdemeanor, that never gets to the prosecutor.
The prosecutor does not handle mister meanings. Only the city
celection saying.
Speaker 9 (25:05):
And I'm sorry because you know, I just want to
get out before I get my time and get you know.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
Yeah, because I'll hang up you know that.
Speaker 12 (25:12):
Okay.
Speaker 9 (25:14):
Another thing that that Worthy guy, he it was on
I see him on a video where he slapped us
supposed to be uh kind of retarded black guy that
everybody know.
Speaker 4 (25:27):
What are you about? Retarding?
Speaker 6 (25:29):
What what are you talking about?
Speaker 9 (25:31):
I'm just saying they saying he had a minimal problem.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
Well, I don't know.
Speaker 9 (25:34):
I don't mean no harm because I'm helping enough for
the guys that he was all known to be like minimal. Okay,
I mean I said the wrong word retarded.
Speaker 4 (25:46):
Okay, yes you did.
Speaker 9 (25:48):
I'm right because I'm fall I mean mental.
Speaker 4 (25:52):
Issues and yeah, I hear what you're saying.
Speaker 9 (25:55):
But saying they said he struck the boy.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
Yes, we all saw the video.
Speaker 9 (26:00):
All saw he backed and some white lady jumped in it.
They have to Russian and that's when he got knocked out. Now,
I'm not going for violing people, bocking out people and
stuff and people and whatever, but he should be charged
like anybody else because if he would have slept somebody
to haul off and slept them and call them an
(26:21):
inn were Okay, some peoples that were down there, that
was right there and then the woman was taking the
uh on their phones, was taking the video of what
first happened outside, and they seem then get barred with peoples.
Speaker 5 (26:35):
They came up and I'm getting I'm about ready to
hang up on you now you.
Speaker 9 (26:40):
I want to say, I want to I want to
know why the police officer, black police officers become police
because they can't A black police officer cannot go in
a white neighborhood, in your hill or whatever, and and
and jump on white of the boys just like a yes,
they call the kid.
Speaker 4 (27:02):
Do you get where you're getting this? Liffe?
Speaker 7 (27:04):
This is looking.
Speaker 4 (27:05):
This is not nineteen forty five. This is not nineteen
forty five.
Speaker 5 (27:09):
And a black police officer can arrest a white person
and if they resist, they can.
Speaker 4 (27:14):
Beat it, beat their ass while they resisted. Where you
get that stuff? Yes, I've seen it.
Speaker 9 (27:20):
Oh you're never seen a white a black police was
beating down.
Speaker 5 (27:23):
Yeah, if he's resisting, Yes, why do you sing that
in life?
Speaker 4 (27:29):
Well, you haven't lived maybe.
Speaker 9 (27:32):
Right, because that's what I couldn't understand why they always
want to become so they're not equal to the West.
Speaker 6 (27:39):
They are, You're not.
Speaker 5 (27:40):
This is not nineteen forty five. This is twenty twenty five.
There are evil they can There was a time in
the Cincinnati Police Department where black police officers could not
arrest white people.
Speaker 4 (27:53):
Yes, there was a time.
Speaker 5 (27:55):
But that time IM gone, I'm talking about I gotta go, Jay,
You're wearing me out, Jay, I gotta go. I just
got to hang up on her.
Speaker 13 (28:06):
I just said something off, please boy, going on a.
Speaker 5 (28:10):
Wound head, unbelievable. And she said the black police officers
are not equal. They can't arrest the white folks. And
she said they can't go out to Indian Well, not
the Cincinnati police.
Speaker 4 (28:24):
No, they can't go out the Indian Hill and arrest
the white person.
Speaker 3 (28:28):
Uh, mister ware. When I was screening the calls and
I was asking her what she wanted to talk.
Speaker 4 (28:32):
About, she said downtown violence.
Speaker 3 (28:33):
She gave me the no. She that's all I could gather.
She gave me the hardest time. Why you asked me
this question? They never asked me this question. For why
I gotta tell you I'm supposed to tell Lincoln. Why
got the longest time? Mister ware? And I hope you
understand what I went through.
Speaker 5 (28:49):
I understand I went through the same thing. Just now, Oh, boy,
uh LG.
Speaker 4 (28:56):
How are you?
Speaker 6 (28:57):
I'm good, Lincoln. What's going on?
Speaker 4 (28:58):
I'm just hanging in there. What's on your mind?
Speaker 6 (29:01):
Keep hanging I wanted to ask you about this protest
and that you're telling people to go down there on protest. Right, Yes,
what are they protested?
Speaker 5 (29:10):
I'll let what they explain. They that they're not happy
with the charges on the white Russian, okay, and they're
not happy with, uh, the Republicans trying to come in
here and you play a power move by bringing uh
the state patrol in and they want to bring other
(29:30):
people in and everything like that.
Speaker 4 (29:32):
They're not happy with that.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
They're not happy with the Republicans turning this thing political.
There's a lot of things they're not happy about.
Speaker 6 (29:39):
Okay, we'll take those we'll take those things. So from
what I read, Number one, the disorder conduct citation that
the white guy got, I mean, everybody knew that was
all he was going to get. They want to protest that.
I mean, I'm not sure how they're gonna their protest
is going to lead to another charge, So that's wasted
(29:59):
in it. Number one. Number two, from what I read in.
Speaker 14 (30:02):
The inquiry, they also mentioned that.
Speaker 6 (30:04):
They wanted to counter the Republican narratives. Yeah, yeah, city
being safe. Did you see Fox nineteen? Did you see
Fox nineteen this morning?
Speaker 4 (30:13):
No? I didn't.
Speaker 6 (30:14):
All right, you should look. I'll send you the Lincoln.
But what was on in the video talking about crime
is up in the last twenty eight days, downtown OTR,
aggravated assaults, robberies, all that stuff is up forty fifty
sixty percent. So, like if they're one to talk about
the Republican narratives, this is a status that the Assistant
(30:35):
Police Department put out this morning about stuff being up
in the last twenty eight days. So it's more than
the narrative.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
I mean, you can't judge one month on a whole
You can't judge whether the whole city is safe.
Speaker 4 (30:50):
I don't think.
Speaker 5 (30:51):
I think the majority of white folks out there believe
the city of Cincinnati is safe for them. Well, they're
not going to go downtown to get jumped on by
a bunch of black folks if they're going down there
minding their own business doing whatever it is they're doing,
and minding their business and that's.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
What they're doing. Well, here's the statistics, though not just
the last month, but in the last several months. Again,
I'm gonna send you the link. You could look at
it for yourself. Don't take my word for it. They're
talking about the Mension and other folks and down the
time we're gonna protest the counter the Republican narratives. It's
not the Republican narrative. It is the city assist named
police Department narrative. And the numbers don't lie, men and
(31:28):
women do so. Again, I'm not going to be down
there for the fifty man march. I'm not going down there.
And folks my age and if you saw what they
did the city Hall, you've seen maybe five people I
even went down there. I ain't staying with them about
what to go. Look, man, all them dudes down there
your age, like maybe five ten people down there are
probably my contemporaries because my age group ain't listening to
(31:49):
that nonsense. Ain't going for it. This is all about
maintaining democratic control and just.
Speaker 4 (31:59):
I wouldn't go that.
Speaker 5 (32:00):
There's a lot of people out there that talks, talk
a lot of talk, and they're all, yeah, I'm all
for it, I'm for this, for that, but when it
comes time to show up, they don't show up.
Speaker 4 (32:10):
They're they're for what other people are showing up for.
Speaker 5 (32:13):
But they just don't you know, they don't have the
gall to get down there, and.
Speaker 6 (32:18):
And we don't know some time and we don't know.
Speaker 4 (32:20):
I do come. I don't only go a boy.
Speaker 6 (32:22):
Who shows up making We can only go about who
shows up. All the other folks who ain't showing up.
There's a reason they're not showing up. You want to.
Speaker 4 (32:29):
A lot of them work, a lot of them probably working.
A lot of people are working.
Speaker 6 (32:32):
Yeah, people are working. They walk us about their jobs
and what's going on down here. But they're also not
listening to the nonsense and the race baby that ching
kse he and all of them doing. I like both
of them, guys, But they're gas lighting us, like I said, and.
Speaker 12 (32:46):
You know that again.
Speaker 4 (32:47):
Gas lighting that words.
Speaker 6 (32:49):
They don't know what's going on, and they want to
feed into some black.
Speaker 4 (32:53):
That's the new Republican word.
Speaker 6 (32:55):
Gas Republican word, Yes it is.
Speaker 4 (32:58):
I only hear Republicans say it. I don't here republicans say.
Speaker 6 (33:01):
That, because only Democrats are doing.
Speaker 4 (33:02):
If I go to Fox News Network web page right.
Speaker 5 (33:05):
Now, I guarantee I'll see gas lighting somewhere in there
on the.
Speaker 6 (33:09):
Front because of Democrats, especially locally, are gas finding us
as Jan Scottie Chryl kares. If they're gas lighting black folks,
they already knew this white boy wasn't gonna get charged
with nothing more than a ticket, not to mention when
you went when they went to court, the county prosecutor
was saying, and what about.
Speaker 5 (33:30):
This guy's former charges. He's known for violence. He hit
hit the cab driver. Uh, you gotta got charged with that.
Speaker 4 (33:38):
That means this guy likes to start fights.
Speaker 6 (33:41):
It's not relevant.
Speaker 4 (33:42):
It is not relevant.
Speaker 6 (33:43):
Now you get that drivate when he takes this the trail.
They have a jerors. They're never even gonna hear about
what you're talking about.
Speaker 4 (33:50):
You don't know. They might be.
Speaker 6 (33:53):
The rules of advidence. He's not. That's not coming in acts,
ain't coming there, no jersey.
Speaker 5 (33:56):
Well, I'm gonna be down there on the twenty six
to hear what the hell he has to say.
Speaker 6 (34:02):
He ain't gonna say nothing. He gonna have a jury trial,
he's gonna get a not guilty, then he gonna suit
the city, and then you never know, you might have
Orlando come down here at Dylan from the Civil Rights
Division from the face come down here.
Speaker 5 (34:14):
Charges because charge Orlando's sons. That comes back to Cincinnati.
Uh from the Justice Department. Unbelievable. All right, LG, I
gotta go. Thanks for your call. Unbelievable. Let me gaslight
this commercial that is coming up.
Speaker 4 (34:31):
Gas light.
Speaker 5 (34:31):
That's all he can say. Gas lighting. That's a new
Republican word. The next Republican says that somebody should strike
a match when they say gaslights, strike a match, and
they'll stop saying it. Unbelievable. Let's take a break. Twelve thirty.
Speaker 4 (34:45):
The buzz.
Speaker 5 (34:48):
Do all that stuff they do, and nowadays roller skating
is so dangerous.
Speaker 4 (34:55):
These people out.
Speaker 5 (34:56):
There, they fly, they act like they have motors in
their skates.
Speaker 4 (35:01):
It's crazy. And they line dancing on skates.
Speaker 5 (35:06):
It's a whole new skating world from the days of
the Royal Skating Palace.
Speaker 4 (35:10):
Yeah. I've been skating for so long, I don't know.
Oh man, it's it is crazy.
Speaker 5 (35:17):
They have all the uniform they have the little outfits on,
just the like, and they clubs and they come skating.
It's a madhouse. I'm telling you. It is not a
pretty sight. All right, Let's go to Kathy, Kathy, how
are you?
Speaker 6 (35:33):
How you doing pretty good?
Speaker 4 (35:34):
What's up?
Speaker 15 (35:36):
I both have.
Speaker 14 (35:37):
I got a little rebuttal for LG. Because I cannot
believe that he is saying when you said that the
guy has a history of violence, that it does not matter, right, right?
Speaker 4 (35:51):
It does matter, Yes it does.
Speaker 15 (35:53):
If that's in his demeanor, it matters. And if that
had been LG's daddy, that he's last, he wouldn't be
talking about it don't matter.
Speaker 5 (36:03):
Oh yeah, he'd be round that ready. He want the
felony charges filed against him right now?
Speaker 15 (36:10):
Yes he would, or if it had been him, he
would have hit him back. And then if they press
charges against.
Speaker 14 (36:17):
Him and not the guy, then what it wouldn't matter.
Speaker 15 (36:22):
I just can't believe he calls in with that nonsense.
It's just nonsense to me. I just can't Sometimes I
have to sometime I have to turn it off.
Speaker 5 (36:32):
And I guarantee you after this upcoming election in November,
Council for the mayor and all that things are going
to die down so much. This is a Republican scheme, right,
and they want to keep all this commotion up of
how unsafe this administration is, how they how they can't
(36:53):
keep the streets of Cincinnati safe. And they're doing all
this talk because it's an upcoming election, right exactly, And
this is that's all this thing is about.
Speaker 4 (37:04):
That, that's the only thing this is about.
Speaker 16 (37:07):
Let me talk politic.
Speaker 5 (37:08):
Yeah, that's all all right, Kathy, thanks for your car.
Speaker 4 (37:14):
All right. Uh, let's go to Greg. Greg. How are you, hey?
How you doing pretty good? What's up?
Speaker 6 (37:22):
Hey?
Speaker 7 (37:22):
I want to ask the question a guy Georgie who got.
Speaker 12 (37:24):
Off for killing the police officer. Who was he black
or white?
Speaker 5 (37:28):
I think he was black. I think he was Let's see,
hold on, let me find let's see where is that.
Maybe I can tell by the guy's name. Let's see
where is this Alton Oliver? Alton Oliver. It sounds like
he might be a black guy.
Speaker 6 (37:47):
I thank you.
Speaker 12 (37:49):
I don't know about that.
Speaker 4 (37:52):
I have to check my people.
Speaker 7 (37:55):
That'd be good to know.
Speaker 12 (37:56):
There's a uh and then the uh. I gotta say,
beware of developers bearing gifts, amount of recreations, thinging over
the rune. When it's done, how many black folks still
will be in that area?
Speaker 4 (38:11):
Uh?
Speaker 5 (38:11):
Well, you think they well, you think they're gonna move
all the black folks out in eighteen it'll be done
in eighteen months.
Speaker 12 (38:18):
A lot I'm supposed to be put out now, so
and that's another question if they're still going to be
there and what they build it for.
Speaker 4 (38:25):
I don't think. I think it's gonna be.
Speaker 5 (38:28):
I do believe there'll be more black folks taking advantage
of this recreation center than white folks.
Speaker 4 (38:34):
With the stuff they've got there.
Speaker 5 (38:35):
They got daycare services for infants up until to pre
k or k kindergarten. They got a roller skating ring,
they got a track, well track, Yeah, I don't know,
he could go for either, but I don't know.
Speaker 6 (38:50):
I agree with you on that.
Speaker 12 (38:51):
But still, if any black folks take advantage of it,
you know, we always get stuff and then all of
a sudden, like a link, consider, I don't seem to
be black folks there there anymore.
Speaker 4 (39:00):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (39:01):
Yeah, I was down there for the backpack giveaway the day.
Speaker 4 (39:06):
It was hot as hell down there.
Speaker 5 (39:08):
The swimming pool was open, Nobody was in the damn pool.
Speaker 4 (39:11):
I'm like, what that hell?
Speaker 5 (39:14):
Nobody was in the pool and people sweating like crazy.
Speaker 12 (39:19):
And the YMCA they put down there used to be
Waterburn School, but they got the y m c A.
Speaker 17 (39:24):
They closed it because I used.
Speaker 12 (39:25):
To go there a lot.
Speaker 4 (39:26):
They closed that. I didn't know that.
Speaker 18 (39:28):
I didn't know that, but the school owns it.
Speaker 12 (39:30):
Now and they closed that. One and last thing is, uh,
I'm the guy who got shot. But when I told
you the last time, I didn't realize that was my
ex wife's niece who got shot down there over the rhne.
Speaker 4 (39:41):
In the back in the cross for really okay.
Speaker 12 (39:44):
Yeah, and so like when I was telling you, I
didn't realize that you might call me, uh later on
and day say yeah, that was your niece.
Speaker 4 (39:50):
So and so, yeah, the funeral was going on now.
As a matter of fact.
Speaker 8 (39:53):
It's today.
Speaker 7 (39:54):
It's today right now, it's going on now.
Speaker 12 (39:56):
It's going on today. So uh, that's all I want
to say. E. No, that guy's crazy to talk about it,
that the guy passed on matter because anytime a black
person go to court, they always tell he got well.
Speaker 5 (40:09):
They try to bring that up a lot of times
they can. The lawyer can have it kept out of court.
A lot of times they do that. They try to
bring it in there, but most of the time they
keep it out.
Speaker 4 (40:19):
I don't know. I've watched a lot of law and order, and.
Speaker 6 (40:24):
Yeah, all right, all right, thanks Lincoln.
Speaker 4 (40:27):
Hey, thanks for your car. Yeah. They they try to
keep that out of court. They're pasted. I did look
the guy up.
Speaker 5 (40:34):
He was black, I thought so, Yeah, Alton Oliver sounds
like a black guy to me. So he is black. Okay,
well I tell you he got out, he got off.
I'm sure the cops down there didn't like that. All right,
five one, three, seven, nine, twelve thirty Lincoln, wear with.
Speaker 4 (40:51):
You and let's see. Let's go to Brenda. Brenda. How
are you.
Speaker 19 (40:57):
Hello, Lincoln?
Speaker 4 (40:58):
How you doing.
Speaker 19 (41:00):
I'm hanging in there.
Speaker 5 (41:02):
Okay, Oh, this is Brenda from the Baseball from Great
American about your son.
Speaker 4 (41:08):
Okay, this is what I found out, Brenda.
Speaker 5 (41:11):
I found out they reached out to you and you
never did get back with it.
Speaker 19 (41:16):
No, they didn't know, they did not. I have all
kinds of information numbers to call that I reached out
to them and they haven't got back with me. All
I want to see is that video to see what
happened to my grandson.
Speaker 5 (41:29):
They say they reached out, They say they reached out
to you and you never.
Speaker 4 (41:34):
Got them back.
Speaker 19 (41:36):
No, no, it's not in my phone. I mean no,
they didn't.
Speaker 4 (41:41):
Yeah, well, uh, that's what they're telling me.
Speaker 5 (41:45):
They say the attorneys reached out to you and you
never got back. That's what they told me. Now, I
don't know what else I can do. I don't know
what it.
Speaker 19 (41:54):
Is letters that they denied Mike taking the case from lawyers,
I have two less Wait wait lawyers.
Speaker 4 (42:00):
Wait that those are the lawyers you tried to come.
Speaker 5 (42:03):
If they denied you wouldn't take the case, that was
the lawyers you contacted. These are lawyers from the Reds
who contacted you.
Speaker 6 (42:11):
They didn't.
Speaker 5 (42:12):
Okay, Well, look back at all, go back and listen
to your voicemails and your letter.
Speaker 4 (42:17):
Look at you know, I don't know whether they wrote
your letter. I don't know.
Speaker 5 (42:21):
I don't know how they reached out to you. But uh, uh,
why don't you call? I don't know.
Speaker 4 (42:26):
Well, maybe I'll give a number.
Speaker 19 (42:27):
I can call and see.
Speaker 5 (42:29):
Okay, I'll get a name for you the next time.
Speaker 4 (42:32):
Okay, I'll get a name for you. All right, Thanks
for your call.
Speaker 5 (42:36):
Okay, Oh man, I tell you.
Speaker 4 (42:43):
My work has never done unbelievable. Next I'll be trying
the case.
Speaker 3 (42:50):
For yeah, with all your law and order experience, you
want it to Yeah, mister, where I just I just
looked up the cop that was killed, and he looks
like he asking me in for sec favors.
Speaker 4 (43:02):
He's got that look.
Speaker 5 (43:03):
Well that's what the guy said he at three am
in the morning. Well three am is the morning. Why
did I say three am in the morning. Three am.
He's trying to get the guy to get in the
car with him, and I guess he was gonna force
him into the car. And the guy said, nah, baby nah.
All right, let's take a break. We've got news coming up.
(43:23):
The Lincoln Ware Show twelve thirty, the buzz Cober.
Speaker 4 (43:29):
FOP president.
Speaker 5 (43:32):
Said, Chief Fiji refused to sign the charges against the slapper,
so she didn't she wasn't gonna do it. So I
don't know. So we'll see what's gonna happen from there.
This is what the FOP is saying, Man, I tell
(43:55):
you don't get twelve o'clock. They'll be down on the
square at new.
Speaker 4 (44:01):
Show up and support, show up and support.
Speaker 5 (44:12):
All Right, we got Mississippi, James, Ozzie Suitcase, Charles and
j Let's go to J Jay.
Speaker 4 (44:19):
How are you?
Speaker 18 (44:20):
I'm good, Lincoln. You know, whenever you let them talent
Republicans call up like LG and all the mother bombs,
and I mean, how can they wake up every morning
thinking about what.
Speaker 4 (44:38):
I know?
Speaker 5 (44:38):
I know, they they're they're confused, They're they're confused, and
they just don't know right from wrong and they they're
on the wrong side on this one.
Speaker 4 (44:48):
And what can you say? What can you say? Jay?
Speaker 18 (44:52):
Since Trump started running in twenty sixteen, I've never seen
so many towers in my life. You think about from
the Gulf of Ohio. And what the Wine is doing
is sending the National Guard against his own American people.
How can he justify that?
Speaker 4 (45:09):
Yeah?
Speaker 5 (45:09):
Yeah, well you know this is what this is what
the Republican states are doing. They're bowing down the Donald
Trump and whatever he says. And when he says jump,
they say how high?
Speaker 4 (45:22):
And uh?
Speaker 5 (45:23):
And then the Wine blames it on the Secretary of Army. Well,
the Secretary of the Army called me, said he needed
my help. We know who called the Secretary of the
Army to call tell him to call the wine.
Speaker 4 (45:36):
We know how that works.
Speaker 18 (45:38):
Yeah, And it's just like, and why hasn't anybody how
come you haven't had Holly on your show so we
can ask such questions like why if you was breaking
up the fight.
Speaker 12 (45:51):
Why was you pushing the other guy in the red.
Speaker 18 (45:53):
Shirt and you didn't try to grab the white man
from fight or whatever. Yes, if you can reach out
to Holly here, she has enough gut to come on
your show. And you know Fox nineteen, they're really, uh,
they're really trying to show one side of what's going
on Christmas McKie and all them. Yeah, I mean that's sick.
Speaker 5 (46:15):
Well, the word is Tricia Mackie may be running for
uh for some office over in Kentucky, maybe for Congress.
Speaker 4 (46:24):
I don't know.
Speaker 5 (46:25):
We haven't heard anything else from her, but she may
be running for office, who knows.
Speaker 18 (46:30):
Yeah, she has still right in line with the rest
of the racists, you know whatever, running all right.
Speaker 4 (46:35):
All right, hey, thanks for your call. All right.
Speaker 5 (46:38):
Uh five one, three, seven, four, nine, twelve thirty Lincoln,
weare with you, and uh hey, we've been talking about
tickets to war and treaty. We've been giving them away
all week long, and we've got the folks right in
here in the studio.
Speaker 4 (46:53):
Uh Felicia Kenny, is that that you putounci living.
Speaker 20 (46:56):
It's Kenny, Yes, got its close.
Speaker 4 (46:58):
Okay, that's close, Felicia. Welcome to the show. How are you,
Felicia doing well?
Speaker 20 (47:03):
Thanks for having me.
Speaker 5 (47:04):
Good to have you moved that mic to the side there. Yeah,
that's that's fine right there. Yeah, there we go.
Speaker 12 (47:09):
Good.
Speaker 20 (47:10):
So we can still make eye contact.
Speaker 5 (47:11):
So they Yeah, we can make eye contact and they
can see you on Facebook live.
Speaker 4 (47:14):
Yes, yes, all right.
Speaker 5 (47:16):
War When you called me the other day talking about
War and Treaty, I'm like, what you know? And I
was in the car and I could I said, the
Warren Treaty, the Warren Treaty what. I'm like, what the
And then finally you said, it's a group and they're
real popular now and then I saw them on TV.
Speaker 20 (47:35):
Oh good, meant yes, and you got to go.
Speaker 5 (47:39):
And then everybody on the Facebook chat they know who
they are, but I didn't know who they are. I
hear they're real popular. They're coming to Cincinnati. How did
you get War and Treaty to come to town?
Speaker 21 (47:50):
Hey, we have a very talented team, very talented artistic
team bringing all the best acts of Cincinnati. Yes, and
the Warren Treaty there. I'd consider them the hottest acting
now Ashville right now. They have been nominated twice for
Grammy Awards, including Best New Artists. They're the first black
duo nominated for the CMA Awards, Academy and Country Music Awards.
(48:12):
And Tanya Trotter, who makes up one half of the duo,
she was actually in Sister Act too.
Speaker 4 (48:19):
Yeah, that's what I heard.
Speaker 6 (48:20):
See that.
Speaker 4 (48:21):
Yeah, I heard she was in there.
Speaker 5 (48:22):
I can't I saw it, but I can't remember which
one she was. But I'm gonna have to go back
and watch that again.
Speaker 21 (48:28):
Oh, we'll send it to you one. She was actually
the one who sang the duet with Lauren Hill. So
there's like that iconic scene that I have to check
that out now.
Speaker 4 (48:38):
So they're going to team up with the Symphony Orchestra.
Speaker 21 (48:40):
Yes, that's right boy, Okay, Cincinnati Pops. They'll be here
September sixth, seven thirty pm at Music Hall, and the
program's going to be really fun.
Speaker 20 (48:51):
It's going to really start off with a lot of soul. Yeah,
it's going to be very intimate.
Speaker 21 (48:55):
We want you to bring the one you want to
get close to Music Hall and then we're going to
dim the lights and after some of that music. At
the very beginning of it, we're going to have some
country in the middle to kind of cool things off
and at the very end some bluegrass and can I
get an amen from the group and the orchestra?
Speaker 4 (49:12):
Okay, man, I tell you so.
Speaker 5 (49:14):
They cover it all, every art, by country, everything, all
the fields.
Speaker 4 (49:18):
Man, okay.
Speaker 5 (49:19):
And I guess war he was doing a commercial for
this weight loss drug.
Speaker 20 (49:25):
Yeah, you found that too.
Speaker 5 (49:28):
And he says I lost some weight. I'm like, how
much did he wait before he lost weight? Because he's
a big guy.
Speaker 20 (49:33):
Oh you know, but a big guy with a big
bear hug.
Speaker 22 (49:36):
I'm sure.
Speaker 4 (49:36):
Yeah, unbelievable. But people, how can people get tickets?
Speaker 21 (49:41):
Well, you know, we actually have another offer for listeners
if they're ready for its Okay, we want to offer
two free tickets to the first ten people who call
our box office today, Oh, August twenty first, from ten
am to five pm.
Speaker 4 (49:55):
Well, that's going on now, it is.
Speaker 20 (49:57):
That's why I better share. The phone number.
Speaker 21 (50:00):
Have to do is call five one three three eight
one thirty three hundred and say you heard us on
lincoln Ware.
Speaker 4 (50:07):
Oh okay, well they better do that now. Give that
number again.
Speaker 21 (50:10):
Yeah, five one three three eight one thirty three hundred
and say lincoln Ware. The War entreaty and you get
two free tickets to the concert.
Speaker 5 (50:18):
Man, that's just that's easy. That's easier than calling up
winning them.
Speaker 20 (50:22):
I know you can call into Lincoln you should. They
would love that.
Speaker 4 (50:27):
All right, give that number one more time.
Speaker 20 (50:29):
Okay.
Speaker 21 (50:29):
It is five to one, three three eight, one thirty
three hundred. Uh, and we'll close the contest at at
five pm.
Speaker 5 (50:36):
Just say, Lincoln Ware, Well you'll get your you'll get
your ten people.
Speaker 4 (50:40):
Wait before five pm. I guarantee you, Hey.
Speaker 20 (50:42):
Matter, we're gonna we're gonna time that free.
Speaker 4 (50:44):
You have that in the next five minutes, trust me,
trust me. Good. All right, there you go. But uh yeah,
a War and Entreaty A new group. I gotta listen.
I haven't listened to their music. I have to check
it out.
Speaker 21 (50:57):
You'll get your juices fun and if you love the
soul of Donald Lawrence, you're gonna love this group.
Speaker 5 (51:02):
Really Now they were you said they were nominated for
some Country music award.
Speaker 21 (51:07):
Oh yeah, the first black duo nominated for the c
m A Awards, two time Grammy Award winners.
Speaker 6 (51:13):
Uh.
Speaker 20 (51:13):
They're just the group to watch.
Speaker 5 (51:15):
Yeah yeah, okay, and uh they're coming to Music Hall
where the acoustics are always great at music Hall.
Speaker 4 (51:22):
Yes, yes, yes, and uh boy, that's great.
Speaker 5 (51:24):
And you've got some other acts coming in too later
on in the year, share those with us.
Speaker 4 (51:28):
So you want to hold on, hold on.
Speaker 21 (51:30):
The come back and talk more about Whitney and Nas,
okay about them then.
Speaker 5 (51:35):
Okay, you're gonna do the Whitney thing, just like you
did the Uh who was it before? I'm trying to think.
Speaker 20 (51:42):
Oh, when Harold was here on the show Brown.
Speaker 5 (51:44):
Yes, who was it? It was an artist you brought in. Oh, Beyonce?
Speaker 21 (51:49):
Oh yeah, we did the Beyonce yeahsh up, yes, yeah,
that was pretty good too.
Speaker 4 (51:53):
I went to see that. And so you're gonna do
the same thing with Whitney.
Speaker 21 (51:57):
I'm gonna I'm gonna hold onto all those details until later.
It's one of a kind.
Speaker 23 (52:01):
Lincoln, all right, a lot of things going on down
at the Music Hall, War and Treaty September sixth, So
and give that number once again for those tickets today.
Speaker 21 (52:11):
Oh yeah, two free tickets if you say Lincoln, where
by Colin five one, three, three, eight, one thirty three hundred?
Speaker 5 (52:19):
Now where can they if they don't get in on
this deal? If they need to buy tickets. How can
they buy ticket?
Speaker 20 (52:24):
Oh, it will be easy.
Speaker 21 (52:25):
Ticket prices start at fifteen dollars to eighty nine and
you just go to Cincinnati pops dot org.
Speaker 5 (52:31):
Cincinnati pops dot org, get your tickets. And uh, I
tell you the seating is great at music Hall. You're
never there's no bad seats in there. And it sounds
like it's going to be a great event. Yes, all right,
we're gonna take a break and then we'll come back
and we'll go to the phones. Thank you for joining me,
Thank you so much. All right, let's take a break.
Twelve thirty the buzz for talk station. It's Lincoln where
(52:55):
it's Thursday, and let's see Mississippi, James, Ozzie Suitcase, Richard
heading you guys, hold on, we'll be back to you.
We've got guests in the studio, not other than doctor
Whitney Gaskins.
Speaker 4 (53:07):
How you doing that?
Speaker 5 (53:08):
I'm good, And of course my man Delano is here
also the lawyer with yes.
Speaker 4 (53:14):
Yes.
Speaker 5 (53:14):
Now today we're talking about AI. Yeah, today's a AI
convers Oh boy, I tell you, everywhere you look there's
something about AI, and it's a lot of good things
happening in AI.
Speaker 4 (53:26):
And a lot of bad things happening with AI.
Speaker 5 (53:28):
So I mean they say, if you want to get
ahead in the future, you gotta know AI.
Speaker 13 (53:34):
Yes, I agree with that.
Speaker 24 (53:35):
Just like when calculators first hit the scene, or personal
laptops like PCs hit the scene, everyone has a lot
of fear about what this means, what this could be.
AI is no different from any of those technological advances.
I think the biggest difference now is how available it
is and how fast it became available. If you are
not using it, you probably are not being the most efficient.
(54:01):
That doesn't necessarily mean that's a bad thing. But don't
be surprised if other people can outwork what you're doing,
because there are tools that can help support support a
lot of workfloads.
Speaker 5 (54:12):
And a lot of people are well, AI may take
my job if you don't know AI.
Speaker 4 (54:16):
If you do know AI, you can keep your job.
Speaker 24 (54:19):
There it is that is the key. So AI is
great until it isn't. So I can give lots of examples.
I think we were talking about this the other day,
but self driving cars, that's a form of artificial intelligence.
Speaker 13 (54:31):
It's still not human, right.
Speaker 24 (54:33):
It doesn't know that that person who's jaywalking across the street. Oh,
I probably should stop for that person. We still need
those human touches. Like you've seen the news articles about
how people have been hit or objects have been hit.
It's because you can't take people out of it, but
you need to know how it works so you can
still be a part of the relevancy on the scene.
Speaker 5 (54:55):
Yes, and so how did this? I mean it seemed
like it They were talking about it one day and
the next.
Speaker 4 (55:02):
Day it was here. What pushed the rapid growth?
Speaker 13 (55:06):
I have to be honest, It's been around for a while.
I just don't think.
Speaker 24 (55:09):
People realized how available, like how artificial intelligence in data
mining and machine learning, it has been here for a
very long time. One of my colleagues at the University
of Cincinnati I work with on a lot of different projects,
has been doing this for twenty plus years. It's not
actually new, like this is his field doing this for
(55:29):
twenty years.
Speaker 13 (55:30):
It's just it's avail. It's on our fingertips now.
Speaker 24 (55:32):
That's what's making it all the buzz and then generative AI, chat,
GPT and all of these things have made it a
really accessible tool. So people love talking about it.
Speaker 5 (55:43):
How is it reshaping education now? Because now you go
to colleges. Now they're saying you need to take some
AI courses.
Speaker 4 (55:51):
Now.
Speaker 24 (55:51):
Yes, So there's a couple of things to this. AI
is beautiful and that it helps with efficiency bad because
people are losing their critical thinking skills. So when your
professor used to ask you to write an essay, they
weren't asking you to write an essay just to make
you write. It was to understand your thought process. What
did you learn? Now people are just spinning it out
of a computer. So we're losing a little bit of
(56:12):
our critical thinking skills in that regard. But we're seeing
job creation and development as well, and so people are
learning about technology in a different way. And so you
can specialize in this field of artificial intelligence and really
help build technology that can help people.
Speaker 13 (56:30):
Some of the things that.
Speaker 24 (56:31):
We develop are really assistive to help those who have
different varying abilities. So if I am hard of hearing
or seeing, artificial intelligence helps people, and you can be
a part of the field that really can help people.
Sometimes though we abuse these things and it goes down
a negative turn.
Speaker 5 (56:49):
Do you think artificial intelligence will one day be able
to cure cancer? Can they come up with the answer.
Speaker 4 (56:54):
I think it can.
Speaker 24 (56:55):
Improve healthcare and diagnosis outcomes, absolutely, But I don't think
that there's going to be a space where we can
absolutely remove humans from the process. I don't think that
world exists. I hope that world doesn't exist. That seems
a little scary for me, not from like a job
security place, but I just don't think artificial intelligence has
emotions and feelings as much as we try to train
(57:17):
it to. So I do think diagnoses can improve. For example,
there are tests right now, and I'm going to speak
as a black woman that we know black women are
at the top of the list of heart disease and
heart failure. But if I go in for an annual mammogram,
there's not a scan for my heart, but your heart
automatically gets scanned in this test. Artificial intelligence can read
(57:41):
that scan and let me know if I'm at risk
for heart disease or heart failure. They can't do that
without it. That's a beautiful outcome that could save my life.
Those types of things are important.
Speaker 4 (57:54):
Well. People are afraid that, you know.
Speaker 5 (57:56):
Just like if you go into a McDonald's they have
the little kiosk screen.
Speaker 4 (58:00):
Yeah, put in there what you want.
Speaker 5 (58:01):
Then there's gonna be robots to make already there. So
you can go into a McDonald's, it won't be any
humans in there.
Speaker 24 (58:11):
Okay, I'm not gonna lie to people. That is already happening.
It already exists, and it's a real fear. And that's
why we need to also talk about ethics when we
talk about technology. There's an ethical side of all the
things that we build and do and produce. And I
don't know if we spend enough time talking about those
ethical implications, because I'm talking about there are job creation things,
(58:33):
but they're also job loss things like the McDonald Like
you literally can go I think it was a Panera
we went to. You could go in and put in
your order. There's only one person back there and they
just made it. You pay at the machine, you order
at the machine, and literally the only reason why there's
a person is to make it. And I worked in
manufacturing for a while. They have robots that can make it.
Speaker 4 (58:53):
Do that stuff.
Speaker 5 (58:54):
Yeah, I saw they had some. They had a track
set up and they were trying to teach the robots
how to run track, but they were falling down. Yes,
they couldn't do it, but yet right, right, they got
to take it back to the drawing board, but they
were in a race and they were falling down.
Speaker 4 (59:11):
But yeah, I mean.
Speaker 24 (59:12):
Humanoids are a robot that basically mimics a human body.
Those are in development and doing actually wonderful things, like
there are jobs that are really hard on the human body,
and so there again are good uses for this. So
if you've worked in manufacturing and you know about ergonomics
and you're not supposed to sit a certain way or
(59:33):
twist your body a certain way, if you have a
robot that does it, then we we minimize those types
of injuries to the body. But it also is a job, yes,
but maybe the job isn't doing that work, but it's
tending to the robot.
Speaker 4 (59:45):
I don't know.
Speaker 13 (59:45):
We just need to rethink how we integrate things into
say whether it.
Speaker 4 (59:48):
Was an AI radio station.
Speaker 5 (59:49):
I haven't checked on how it's doing, but they supposedly
had an aid.
Speaker 13 (59:54):
About the radio station.
Speaker 5 (59:55):
They had a radio station, and I don't know how
it turned out. When I have to look it up
to see what happened. They was going to the DJ
was AI and everything. Really, you know these commercials you see, yes,
where they use a person's voice yes, and it looks
like the person is saying this stuff.
Speaker 4 (01:00:11):
Now that's the dangerous part of it.
Speaker 24 (01:00:13):
It is replacing a lot of things that can replace
a lot of things.
Speaker 13 (01:00:17):
I never heard about the radio station.
Speaker 24 (01:00:19):
I just yes, I'm intrigued because it probably collects a
lot of data and knows when it has peak listeners,
knows when people are engaging more, and so then it's
going to play more of that type of music.
Speaker 4 (01:00:31):
That's interesting. It's they they've got it. You check that out.
Speaker 5 (01:00:35):
But yeah, it's I mean a lot of the They
did one for Oprah and she didn't endorse this product
at all, but it was her voice, see, and she
was talking it was some type of I guess a
male enhancement type product, and she was talking about how
good Steadman was after he used it and all kinds
of so you know, that wasn't.
Speaker 4 (01:00:55):
Oprah saying this stuff, but they, I know, they were making.
Speaker 13 (01:00:58):
It sound official intelligence.
Speaker 24 (01:01:00):
It is very dangerous because now we used to say,
well if you know, if I see it, I believe it.
Type of a culture that is not real anymore. People
make photos, videos with artificial tell and it gets better
and better.
Speaker 4 (01:01:15):
Because that's where it started.
Speaker 13 (01:01:17):
It is where it started.
Speaker 25 (01:01:18):
She talked about her colleague when he does his workshop
with us. He talked, it really started back when they
had a deep fake with George Bush. Yes, yeah, right,
you know at the time you could see, you could
tell it was fake, but.
Speaker 4 (01:01:29):
It's nowadays you cannot.
Speaker 25 (01:01:31):
I mean they say, okay, look because sometimes your video
will have someone will have six fingers because AI is
making those mistakes.
Speaker 13 (01:01:38):
But it gets refined.
Speaker 4 (01:01:40):
Yeah, better.
Speaker 13 (01:01:42):
It is scary.
Speaker 4 (01:01:42):
I don't know what.
Speaker 24 (01:01:43):
Are again ethical implications. What we're going to have to
change laws, We're gonna have to change regulations because the
it's not going anywhere. So I think that some people like, oh,
we'll get rid of it.
Speaker 4 (01:01:54):
You're not.
Speaker 24 (01:01:55):
We're not going to get rid of it. And so
now we have to figure out as a culture, how are.
Speaker 5 (01:01:59):
We going to live with, how you can navigate, how
to navigate and control it right?
Speaker 4 (01:02:03):
And then you know, there's got to be some laws
set up.
Speaker 13 (01:02:07):
And there aren't any.
Speaker 24 (01:02:08):
No, that is a highly unregulated field in the United States.
Now in other countries they do have regulations on artificial
intelligence and usage.
Speaker 13 (01:02:16):
We don't here.
Speaker 25 (01:02:18):
But not to get political, but you're looking at okay,
if the US is going to make laws. What are
all those laws going to look like when you have
the AI people given billions of dollars? Like, are we
going to have laws that are truly people focused when
it's the people that's given donations and get to sit
in a room and lobby and say, I think this
law should look like that.
Speaker 24 (01:02:38):
Yeah, well, it's interesting that you think laws in general
are people focused.
Speaker 4 (01:02:43):
Okay, what do you think?
Speaker 5 (01:02:45):
How do you think we're going to look twenty years
from now, twenty years down the road, where will we
be with when it comes to AI.
Speaker 24 (01:02:53):
I think we're going to have a very different culture
from entertainment in what we like to watch and see,
from what we like to read. I think that people
are If you are not skilled in tech, this is
my call to you to upskill as soon as you
possibly can, because in the name of efficiency and cost,
(01:03:14):
we are going to see replacements.
Speaker 13 (01:03:17):
And that's not abnormal.
Speaker 24 (01:03:18):
We did that with the Internet, We did that with
all every time we've built tech and yeah, self checkout.
Speaker 13 (01:03:25):
Yeah, I mean we've always done this.
Speaker 24 (01:03:27):
But I think it's a call for people to change
how they navigate because our world would be very different.
I mean, we already have stores that you don't even
have to bring your money in anymore. You can just
go shop and walk out, and it knows who you are,
what you bought, and it charges you. It's going to
be a very different world.
Speaker 4 (01:03:42):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (01:03:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:03:43):
And even in the military that's going to be different too.
I don't think the day of boots on the ground.
Speaker 4 (01:03:49):
I think those days are coming to an end pretty
pretty soon. Yes.
Speaker 24 (01:03:53):
I even think about delivery systems and people using drone
technology to deliver, like, a lot of it's gonna look different.
I always think like, is it gonna be like the Jetsons.
I don't think it'll be there in twenty years, but
we're getting close to that kind.
Speaker 13 (01:04:06):
Of a society.
Speaker 4 (01:04:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 5 (01:04:07):
Unbelievable. Unbelievable And uh, I just don't know. So where
are you with this AI?
Speaker 24 (01:04:15):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (01:04:15):
What are you doing?
Speaker 24 (01:04:16):
I'm on the education side of artificial intelligence. I'm trying
to make sure that the public understands how to use it.
And to that end, we just received a grant to
help do an ethical AI camp for high school students.
We are trying to make sure that they understand how
to do AI, how to use AI, how to build it.
So to be on the tech side, but then also
building in social consciousness and ethics into this space. And
(01:04:39):
so this grant is with the Ethics Center at the
University of Cincinnati and the Gaskins Foundation really working together
to help educate the population that is literally where we are.
And we do workshops for parents because when you are
you're helping your kid with their homework and they are
using AI to do their assignment. ANTI you doing that,
(01:05:01):
but the child still has to know how to actually
like they really do still need to learn it. And
so how do we help you navigate that space?
Speaker 4 (01:05:08):
Not let AI do it for you, but let them
help you.
Speaker 13 (01:05:12):
How does it help you?
Speaker 4 (01:05:13):
Yes, it's unbelievable.
Speaker 25 (01:05:15):
And the reality is the students that you see now,
they don't think it's anything wrong with it. They don't
think there's anything wrong with Okay, I give you assignment,
writ it through page paper and they'll put it in
to AI. And where we had to research and we
had right now, they just put it in AI and
it spits out everything they do.
Speaker 24 (01:05:36):
Tell me, Like my students this summer were like, oh,
this is how I do it. I put it in AI,
then I put it in a human there's an app
that human humanifies is I think the app name to
make it more human, and then they put it through
an AI detector to make sure that you can't detect
that it was made by AI, and then they turn
it in.
Speaker 13 (01:05:54):
They never wrote a word.
Speaker 4 (01:05:55):
Oh my god. The problem is again they don't think
there's anything wrong with it.
Speaker 25 (01:06:00):
They don't say, oh, I'm cheating or I'm gaming the system,
and they're saying this is the way we've been taught
to operate.
Speaker 5 (01:06:06):
Now, yes, unbelievable, Yes, unbelievable. Well, I tell you we've
learned a lot today. Yes, and uh, we'll hear more
about this AI.
Speaker 24 (01:06:14):
I'm sure we're going to bring a few people with
us to talk to you.
Speaker 4 (01:06:18):
People.
Speaker 24 (01:06:19):
Please, if you have questions, reach out because I have
experts that I work with in artificial intelligence who want
to help people understand what it actually And I mean.
Speaker 5 (01:06:28):
There's plenty of job opportunities AI with this too. It
needs to be discussed also.
Speaker 24 (01:06:34):
Yes, there are job opportunities, and it doesn't mean that
you have to be on the the only on.
Speaker 13 (01:06:39):
The tech side of it.
Speaker 24 (01:06:39):
I think some people think they're going to be at
a desk encoding a computer there are other elements to
this too that you can work in this field.
Speaker 4 (01:06:46):
And uh what about tutoring?
Speaker 24 (01:06:48):
Uh?
Speaker 4 (01:06:49):
Well, AI play a part in tutoring kids.
Speaker 24 (01:06:51):
You know, it does personalization, it does help with tutoring,
and so AI can be a useful tool like most things,
and we just want people to know how to use
it appropriately and ethically.
Speaker 5 (01:07:03):
All right, Delano, thank you, doctor Gaskins day, Thank you.
Appreciate you coming man. I tell you I got a
lot to think about. Let's take a break.
Speaker 4 (01:07:12):
We'll come back.
Speaker 5 (01:07:12):
Twelve thirty The Buzz twelve thirty WDBZ, The Buzz of Cincinnati.
You're at talk station. It is Thursday. That means that
it's free side Thursday. What kind of side you got
up there?
Speaker 4 (01:07:28):
Dukes there?
Speaker 16 (01:07:29):
Well, Lincoln, the basis loaded is two outs and I'm
at bet what you think I'm gonna do? Get on
in to you, Lincoln and happy free side Thursday, Buzz listeners.
It is Thursday, August is twenty first. The weather's getting
better every day. That's why you need to come on
by the Dukes and grab yourself a couple of tickets
for the Lincoln Court Law on West End Reunion this Saturday,
(01:07:50):
evening from six thirty till twelve am at the Union Terminal.
Speaker 17 (01:07:54):
There's going to be a super party with DJ Baby
Room on the whizzle of Twizzles, and you can come
on out meet some old friends or make some new ones.
Tickets are going fast, so come on out, folks, come
on out to the Dukes and get your tickets today now, Lincoln.
On the Dukester's menu is our big smothered port chop
with candied dams, collar greens and corn breads. Or stopped
(01:08:15):
by for our golden sounding croquettes with macaroni and cheese
and smothered cabbage. We're also featuring our chilas very steak
meal with gravy, rice and fried corn. If I pick
for today, Lincoln is our tender grill turkey ris with corn,
red dressling and gravy and coleslaw. I have a blessed Hey, everybody,
we'll talk catch you later.
Speaker 7 (01:08:35):
Lincoln.
Speaker 5 (01:08:35):
All right, that's the Dukester right there in the Summit
Plaza on Reading Road. All right, five one, three, twelve thirty. Uh, Mississippi, James,
how you doing?
Speaker 6 (01:08:47):
Hello?
Speaker 7 (01:08:47):
My north Mississippi Sam?
Speaker 4 (01:08:50):
What's going on?
Speaker 7 (01:08:51):
All right? Lincoln? Did you ever get in touch with
the guy from the Hirst Center with freyro Uh.
Speaker 4 (01:08:58):
Yes, I did.
Speaker 5 (01:08:59):
And I don't know if he got in touch with
Pharaoh yet or not, but I'll check, I'll check, Okay.
Speaker 7 (01:09:04):
I would love to see his class get going.
Speaker 5 (01:09:07):
Yes, I think we're too late for this semester, and
he's not gonna start it at any old time. He's
got to be right at the beginning of the semester
according to Pharaoh.
Speaker 4 (01:09:17):
But we'll see.
Speaker 7 (01:09:19):
And you know, with him doing research in ancient Africa,
not more than Africa, ancient Africa that predated Christianity, and
I would love for some more researchers come out and
either you know, debunk him or agree with him. But
I'm quite sure that some more researchers out there and
(01:09:41):
ancient you know, Africa that we could look at and
you know, just see what we got going on.
Speaker 4 (01:09:47):
Yes, yes, all right.
Speaker 7 (01:09:50):
But hopefully mister phar get his class.
Speaker 4 (01:09:52):
That's so, let's hope.
Speaker 7 (01:09:53):
So all right, see you guys Saturday, all right, I'll.
Speaker 5 (01:09:57):
Be there Saturday, all right, Mississippi James, Yeah, that's right.
I added the walking club of course, that's always on
the list of things to do on Saturday. For the
entire summer. The Lincoln wear Walking Club wenting Woods eight thirty.
You better be there, Yes, all right, let me hear
the barge rhythm of the night, because I tell you
(01:10:17):
it sounded just like that song if you find it. Okay,
it's in there. Let me hear just the beginning of
that song because okay, maybe not okay, maybe not that
(01:10:37):
little part right in there? Okay, all right?
Speaker 3 (01:10:42):
Twelve thirty w dB Z the buzz of cent your
radio card, mister ware.
Speaker 4 (01:10:49):
I just, for some reason, that song sounds like that song.
Got of that.
Speaker 3 (01:10:53):
You know the reason I played that point of such
a song because you you had a guest on talking
about AI. Yes, it's called automatic automatic about you know,
yeah stuff or whatever. Anyway, I thought it would be appropriate.
But since you didn't know what the song was, I
feel like a failure.
Speaker 5 (01:11:07):
I mean that that was a good song. I played
that song when it was new. It was like late seventies,
early eighties. I think, yeah, uh, suitcase, suitcase, How you
doing suitcase?
Speaker 4 (01:11:23):
Once? Suitcase twice? Let's go to Charles, Charles, how you doing?
Speaker 7 (01:11:28):
Hey? How you doing it?
Speaker 26 (01:11:29):
And I normally wouldn't call in while I'm working but
lt got me kind of riled up. So I want
to put a message out bequ I sure, wow listen.
I mean, I don't want to say Bill Cunningham listened
to you to see what you know? Black community talking
about him and the Republicans were steaming about how we
downtown is so unstained that all part of the Republican
(01:11:53):
it's all hundred thousand white people come downtown.
Speaker 7 (01:11:55):
They ain't gonna cancel that money.
Speaker 26 (01:11:57):
And they ain't gonna cancel next month October bet one
hundred and twenty five thousand white people.
Speaker 8 (01:12:02):
Come down there.
Speaker 7 (01:12:02):
There's too much money.
Speaker 4 (01:12:03):
It's gonna be SAE come down for that day, don't.
Speaker 26 (01:12:05):
Cast so Downtown's DEPTHY ain't unsafe to kill that. There's
just all the political stunts to try to make our
mayor look bad. And this guy who we never heard
of new Good as a mayor. Yes, that's all that's about.
That's all I had to say, lincol because he kind
of got under my Sunday.
Speaker 7 (01:12:20):
Was with that one.
Speaker 5 (01:12:20):
Boy, Okay, got under your what I'm talking all right, y'all,
thanks for your call. Did these days the guy got
under his nuts on that. Jeez, man, boy, he really
rowed you up, didn't he unbelievable?
Speaker 4 (01:12:34):
Unbelievable.
Speaker 5 (01:12:36):
All right, yeah, Cincinnati will be safe during the October Fest. Oh,
it'll be the safest place in the world. Let me
tell you, Richard Heading, how you doing.
Speaker 27 (01:12:46):
The morning's lincoding?
Speaker 7 (01:12:47):
Lincoln? Where how you doing that? Over bit?
Speaker 5 (01:12:50):
I'm hanging in there, looking forward to seeing you on
Saturday down at saw Your Point.
Speaker 27 (01:12:55):
Yes, I want to get these vestings out. You know,
we got a special group coming in mopping Point Marines back.
Speaker 6 (01:13:01):
In War two year.
Speaker 27 (01:13:03):
Yes, they're gonna give a gold a Congress Gold medal
to John Marsh's family. He was missing in action for
fifty five years. Lincoln, Yes, okay, yeah, that's great.
Speaker 4 (01:13:14):
You know when Mumford Mumford Point Marines.
Speaker 27 (01:13:17):
Yeah, you know a lot of people don't know about
Moffatt Point.
Speaker 5 (01:13:21):
Yeah, but uh uh. He said they're coming in this weekend.
Speaker 27 (01:13:26):
Yeah, they're coming in this weekend to give a medal. Actually,
John Mars Smith is my brother, my two brother, older
brother's father. Okay, all right, my family be getting that.
Nothing I like to give talk about Lesha. You know
a lot of bests don't know what she's doing for us,
And I just want to take my hat out and
thank her on the radio. Yes, yes, when we did
(01:13:47):
that zoom, I didn't realize how much she did out
front to start, you.
Speaker 7 (01:13:52):
Know, just last year.
Speaker 5 (01:13:53):
Yeah, and she uncovered the fact that there's the Bengals
and the Red Stadium they had to give so many
any community days where they had to let the community
have the stadium to do events.
Speaker 6 (01:14:05):
Uh and.
Speaker 5 (01:14:08):
Yeah, that was in the contract and she found it.
Speaker 4 (01:14:11):
Yeah, we didn't even know that they had to give
up a couple of days to the community to do events.
Speaker 27 (01:14:17):
So there you go, and all of them, you know, thanks,
thank the commissioners, you know, Lisa Reeds doing this and
Treehouses because they do a lot for veterans behind the scenes. Yes,
you know we out in front, but they behind the scenes,
you know, and they do a lot.
Speaker 7 (01:14:31):
And I just want to thank.
Speaker 27 (01:14:32):
All three of them. Mill but Lisa's you know, out
in front, you know, she was her and Orlando, you
know them two, you know for the first one. Yeah,
they did a lot of work on that Invader.
Speaker 4 (01:14:44):
It was great. But this week, this week could be great.
Speaker 5 (01:14:47):
Down at Sawyer Point, the food trucks and veterans can
get free food veterans can find out about jobs, all
the resources uh uh, disability uh, you know, military disability
and stuff like that, and the hospitals all kind of
all kinds of information the veteran needs.
Speaker 4 (01:15:03):
They'll find it there this Saturday, starting at two o'clock.
Speaker 27 (01:15:07):
And it's a lot of things vets don't know. You know,
they didn't you know because since I've been at the
b A Hospital doing coffee and you talk to the veterans,
they didn't know too much about the Hamilton County Service Commission,
you know, and they did they had a negative yes,
yes uh thing behind it.
Speaker 4 (01:15:23):
You know, we have turned out, we have turned it
around the board.
Speaker 27 (01:15:26):
You know, you got Lee Washington, you got Steve, you
got Glenn running the show. We really have turned the
corner Lincoln, Yes, yes, all.
Speaker 5 (01:15:36):
Right, and if they need if you need it, and
more information on what's gonna take place Saturday, veterans called
five one, three, nine, four, six thirty three hundred, and
they'll give you more information and tell you how you
can register.
Speaker 27 (01:15:49):
Another thing, Lincoln, Are you gonna walk? Are your club
walking in the Lincoln Heights Day Parade Saturday to thirty thirty?
Speaker 4 (01:15:56):
And now we got another event to do on that day.
Speaker 5 (01:15:59):
We're not gonna make it, okay, yeah, okay, yes, but
I love to be out in Lincoln Heights. I love
Lincoln Heights. Some of my favorite people out there. I
used to I used to, you know, I used to
work in Lincoln Heights at the Peppermint Lounge. I used
to DJ there on Wednesday nights.
Speaker 27 (01:16:16):
I remember that.
Speaker 4 (01:16:21):
Yes, all right, Richard hadn't been talking to you? All right?
That's Richard Heading, the former mayor of Lincoln Heights.
Speaker 5 (01:16:29):
How about that. All right, let's take a break. We'll
come back, Perry Ward, Ozzie. I'll tell you what before
we go to break. And by the way, all those
tickets are gone down at Music Hall, all the free
tickets that call it number, they're gone.
Speaker 4 (01:16:43):
I told her.
Speaker 5 (01:16:44):
I'm like about five o'clock this afternoon. If ten people
call by five, they'll be gone in five minutes. When
you're talking about five o'clock five minutes. Anyway, I've got
a pair of tickets for you to see Ty Trippett
at on November six at Boguards. You want to go
see him, be calling number. Let's take calling number six.
(01:17:08):
Call he number six right now at five, one, three, seven,
four nine, twelve thirty. That's on November six. He'll be
at Bowguards Tied Tribute and you'll be good to go.
Calling number six at five one three, seven, four nine
one two three zero. We're taking caller number six. You
(01:17:34):
call it one. I'm looking for number six. Your caller two.
Speaker 4 (01:17:38):
I'm looking for number six. You calling number three. I'm
looking for calling number six. You call her number four.
I'm looking for number six. You call her five. You're
so close. I'm looking for six.
Speaker 5 (01:17:53):
Hey, guess what what you number six in the winner?
What's your name?
Speaker 8 (01:18:02):
Mary Flag?
Speaker 4 (01:18:04):
All right, Mary Flag?
Speaker 5 (01:18:05):
You just want yourself a pair of tickets to see
Ti Trippitt November sixth at Boguards.
Speaker 4 (01:18:10):
How about that?
Speaker 12 (01:18:12):
How about that?
Speaker 4 (01:18:13):
All right? Where you're calling from?
Speaker 12 (01:18:16):
Evanston?
Speaker 4 (01:18:17):
Evanston? Okay? Anybody ever tell you talk slow?
Speaker 9 (01:18:22):
But you know what they did eight?
Speaker 5 (01:18:24):
You know what they've always said that we talked southern.
Speaker 4 (01:18:28):
Okay? All right? Well what station just made you a winner?
Speaker 5 (01:18:33):
Twelve thirty the buzz All right, hold on twelve thirty
the buzz. I just want to reach down and pull
it out of it. She talks so slow. But let's
take a break, we'll come back twelve thirty. The buzz
your talk station is Lincoln where it's Thursday. And later
(01:18:53):
on I've got more tickets to give away to War
and Treaty coming to the Symphony, coming to Cincinna Music Hall.
They'll be performing with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra. How about
that at Music Hall September sixth. And we've got the
tickets coming up for you in just a few minutes,
So stick around, stick around, all right, Let's go to
(01:19:18):
Lincoln Heights. We just stopped to Richard. Heading from Lincoln Heights,
let's go to Miss Nattie, Miss Nannie, how you doing?
Speaker 11 (01:19:26):
Oh I'm doing fine. Greetings to you from beautiful Lincoln Heights,
and to the first lady sharing well walk and talk
and to you Lincoln, and to the real LaRence Howard,
thank you.
Speaker 7 (01:19:39):
Oh.
Speaker 11 (01:19:40):
And young men gets through the William young man they
kin to meet. They are fixing up ten twenty three shepherd.
Oh honey, we're gonna have it going on down here.
Speaker 5 (01:19:50):
Oh yeah, what's that ten twenty three shepherd? What's the
ten twenty three shepherd?
Speaker 11 (01:19:54):
It's a house. Oh and guess what their cousins? Well,
the campbe girl is a kid to me. Also, she's
a Williams vibird.
Speaker 7 (01:20:03):
Can you dig it?
Speaker 4 (01:20:05):
Is anybody not kin to you?
Speaker 8 (01:20:08):
Well?
Speaker 11 (01:20:09):
I don't know. And Alice, oh, she was the sweet
grandmother of that house. She was the sweet grandmother of
that house. I'm if she wanted something done, she would say,
miss Natty, I need you to do this. I need
you to do that. And you know who's willing to
do it?
Speaker 4 (01:20:27):
Oh boy, sort of like Frog?
Speaker 11 (01:20:29):
Well yeah, yeah, Frog, would you say something to Lincoln?
I got Lincoln on the phone.
Speaker 5 (01:20:36):
Frog says, Miss Naddy. I need you to do this,
Miss Nanny. I need you to do that.
Speaker 11 (01:20:40):
I've been helping him. I've been helping him.
Speaker 8 (01:20:42):
Hell, Lincoln, how are you?
Speaker 4 (01:20:44):
How you doing? Frog?
Speaker 8 (01:20:46):
I'm dropping around.
Speaker 4 (01:20:49):
I bet you are.
Speaker 11 (01:20:53):
You need to behave yourself, Lincoln, you know what, don't
make me call for a lady.
Speaker 28 (01:20:58):
I will do that.
Speaker 8 (01:21:00):
Boy all right, Miss Naddy, all right, thank you.
Speaker 5 (01:21:04):
We'll talk to you all right, as she jumps around. Frog, Yes,
all right, five, one, three, seven, four, nine, twelve thirty
Lincoln were with you and looks like Ozzy is up?
Speaker 4 (01:21:18):
Ozzi? How are you hey?
Speaker 7 (01:21:20):
I'm doing good?
Speaker 8 (01:21:21):
Link you and it's not as I hope you're doing
great today. Yep, everybody's doing all Yesterday, Greg Glanceman really
disappointed me with the comments that he made magic.
Speaker 29 (01:21:34):
It sound like he's got all kinds of proposals out there,
but nothing is getting done from this. And I want
to know this in Cincinnati and Hamilton County, who is
the highest rate ranking politician is a Marino.
Speaker 28 (01:21:53):
In Hamilton County of the state in Cincinnati.
Speaker 4 (01:21:57):
In Cincinnati, the county of the city.
Speaker 28 (01:22:01):
In this area who I'm not saying is there because
I'm now in medicine.
Speaker 4 (01:22:05):
Well, you gotta, you gotta.
Speaker 5 (01:22:07):
You gotta narrow it down for me, the county or
the city.
Speaker 8 (01:22:11):
So let me, does anybody higher ranking than Marino in
in this area.
Speaker 4 (01:22:15):
Well, Marino is a senator.
Speaker 8 (01:22:19):
He's a power than the mayor or than well, they.
Speaker 4 (01:22:25):
Have their boundaries. I mean he can you know, he
can do so much.
Speaker 5 (01:22:29):
But I mean in Cincinnati, I guess you would say
the mayor is pretty much the most powerful person.
Speaker 4 (01:22:35):
But he used to be where the city manager was
the most powerful. Well, I think the reason we got
a strong mayor.
Speaker 5 (01:22:44):
Now we got a strong mayor, but the the the
employees and everybody answers to the city manager.
Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
Okay, here's the reason I'm asking is because in this city,
we know that murder rate has gone down, major crimes
are going down, but other crimes are going up. And
I know that we have black politicians that's focused in
on the crimes that are happening in our city, but when.
Speaker 28 (01:23:11):
It comes to those who are not black, I'm not
seeing a lot come from them when it comes to
trying to protect black people. And I say that because
of Miss Win on.
Speaker 2 (01:23:23):
Her beihead and all the people that have dealt with
crime in this city, and not only them, but the
ones that are going.
Speaker 29 (01:23:30):
To be affected by crime.
Speaker 28 (01:23:33):
And it seemed to me that we got the white
people that's in the Democratic Party that stand up against
the things that are happening in our city the way
that white people in the Republican Party are defending the
crime that happens to white people, then maybe we could
get the crime to go down even more.
Speaker 8 (01:23:51):
In other words, where it is is good, but it's
not good enough. And we need the participants of our government,
white people to come into our city and help the
black people to overcome the problems. Because we know that
there's an area within Cincinnati that the crime is the worst,
(01:24:12):
and we need to put.
Speaker 5 (01:24:13):
A period on one of them at the end of
one of those words. So I could jump in here,
all right, jumping out now, I hear what you're saying.
You don't hear a lot about this power grab that's
going on from the white city council members. They've been
pretty much silent and a lot of this stuff, uh,
other than going after Victoria Parks when she h uh
(01:24:37):
said what she said. But yeah, I mean this power
grab that the Republicans are trying to do with the
with the city. I don't hear a lot of white
council members fighting up standing up against that. You hear
Jan Michelle and Scottie, but you don't hear anything else.
Speaker 8 (01:24:54):
At least the road, the road guard or the guard
rails would be where the white Democrats joined the black
tim and press and find against the crime and such
that the Republicans have nothing to argue about when it
comes to crime.
Speaker 5 (01:25:08):
Thank you, brother, all right, thanks for your call. But
you the white council members have pretty much.
Speaker 4 (01:25:16):
Been silent.
Speaker 5 (01:25:19):
Huh, pretty much silent as far as I can tell.
Maybe I'm wrong, You tell me all right, the Perry Ward.
How you doing, Perry Ward?
Speaker 7 (01:25:40):
Oh you're a Lincoln. How you doing.
Speaker 4 (01:25:42):
I'm doing, Okay, I'm doing okay.
Speaker 6 (01:25:45):
Hey, it was good to see you down at the wall.
Speaker 22 (01:25:48):
Oh yes, yes, when they had the first day of school.
Speaker 4 (01:25:51):
Yes, yes, I saw you there. I remember.
Speaker 22 (01:25:53):
Yes, yes, Well I will call her I neighbor to
talk about them, them ais and things like that. AI
that I well, yeah, yeah, they're gonna need somebody to
pick them when they break down.
Speaker 4 (01:26:07):
All right, Ferry Warren, Thanks, I appreciate it. Yeah, I
hear you. But it was good still.
Speaker 8 (01:26:14):
Not only that though, I'm just gonna say this too.
Speaker 7 (01:26:16):
It is good that they are letting people learn how
to do that.
Speaker 30 (01:26:20):
Learn that.
Speaker 7 (01:26:21):
Well, I'm working.
Speaker 30 (01:26:23):
But like I said earlier, they're gonna need somebody to
repair them. So if anybody want to be electricians or
you know, be an engineer, it would be a good
time and take their subject up. Because when that stuff
ain't working no more, we're gonna have to use the
computer on our neck that God gave us.
Speaker 27 (01:26:38):
Okay, all right, all right, then you have a good day.
Speaker 9 (01:26:41):
Erry.
Speaker 5 (01:26:41):
Thanks for your Kyle unbelievable. All right, we've got news
coming up, we'll come back on the other side. The
Lincoln Wear Show twelve thirty The Buzz