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October 10, 2025 • 93 mins
Willie discusses the race for Cincinnati City Council with candidate Steve Goodin. Also Brett Samuels breaks down the Israel-Hamas peace deal and the government shutdown. Finally Austin Elmore checks in from Lambeau Field.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
Hi, Billy cunning in the Great America. Welcome this Friday
afternoon the Triestead. Of course, the big news is tonight
a lot of great high school football going on. And
then on Sunday at four twenty five that Bengalley's take
it off against the Packers. And of course we have
Flaco Wacko Flacco is in charge. We have just changed
Joe for another Joe, and we'll see what happens. Burrow
to Flacco and the game starts at four to twenty five.

(00:28):
All coverage starts here about nine oh five am in
the morning, and that gives Joe Waco Flacco an additional
three hours to know the playbook and made me understand
what's going on. And if he wins, if he could
beat the Packers twice over a four week period, he'd
be the first quarterback in an NFL history over a
four week period to beat the same team twice with

(00:50):
two different teams he's playing for, which is somewhat unusual
if you can follow my reasoning there. But the Bengals
do things quite unreasonable quite often. Why the Browns would
want to trade a functional quarterback to a division rival
they haven't beaten, They haven't beaten yet. Cleveland Cincinnati plays
in about six weeks. Is beyond me. But Cleveland Browns
often make decisions no one understands, but Joe of you

(01:11):
and I now is the great Steve Gooden. He's running
for city council. Unfortunately, he sees hope in the city.
And also he monitored the great debate last night. I
had on Corey Bowman a couple of days ago. I
have to have pure of all refuses to come on.
But nonetheless, Steve good and welcome again to the Bill Cunninghamshire.
First of all, I know you monitored the debate as

(01:32):
much as your good stomach. Give me your ideas of
what happened last night with a great debate for Mayor.

Speaker 2 (01:38):
Well, look, I think anybody that watched that debate that
didn't conclude that our mayor is a petty, didn't skinned
individual who has no business in an office like that,
They weren't seeing the same thing I saw. It's all attack,
it's all trying to paint everyone he disagrees with as

(01:58):
a maga fascion extremists. He has nothing he can say
about his record, nothing to say about the gun battle
on Walnut Street on Monday night at five o'clock in
the afternoon, when people were leaving their offices, where two
idiots got into a fight and started shooting and one
of them got shot in the hand.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
It was just he has nothing.

Speaker 2 (02:22):
To say about the new crime stats this week that
show property crimes up more than one hundred percent downtown,
that now shows that downtown is our most violent neighborhood
of all the neighborhoods, that outstrips the West End, Avondale,
other places where we seeing gun violence. Downtown is the worst.
He didn't talk about our restaurants being down twenty to
twenty five percent. He didn't talk about this River Roots

(02:44):
Festival having to cancel all their acts because of poor
ticket sales because people are afraid to come downtown. He
didn't talk about.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Any of that.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
He just tried to say that Corey Bowman was some
sort of an extremist or something, and you know, it
was just it was a disgrace.

Speaker 1 (03:00):
You know, a few months a few years ago, had
the Tall Stacks came here, it was well attended, people
going nuts. All the cruises were sold out, the dinner cruises, etc.
People downtown. It was all great stuff. It was good
now that we have river Roots is happening and no
one knows that. I was unaware until I saw Paula
and her toadies a couple of nights ago talking about

(03:20):
river Roots. I'm thinking, what is that? And so you're
telling me something I suspected. There's no buzz, there's no
feeling that those in Boone, Kenton, Campbell, those in Butler, Warren,
those in Columbus want to come to downtown Cincinnati, get
a hotel room, walk around Fountain Square, maybe with kevlar on,
go to the shores of the Ohigh, look at these

(03:42):
old river boats, get some rubber chicken, then go back
to the room if they're alive. And so that to
me is a clear indicator indicator about what's happening with
river Roots, which is a dud. And I would think
the mayor would say, you know what these are the
Paula this is the last four years on crime, support

(04:03):
the police, support the firefighters. We need affordable housing, We
need better healthcare clinics, we need better programs of one
type or another. None of that was. He can't defend
his record. So it's Tora Tora against Corey Bowman. So
let's talk about number one crime. You're downtown a lot.
You're a big time lawyer in addition to being unfortunately

(04:23):
running for city council. What have you discerned the last
two or three years the safety of downtown Cincinnati that
those around the region, no, I'm not going down there.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
Well, that's exactly what's happening. I mean, you see it.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
You know. Look, I have an office right up this street.

Speaker 2 (04:38):
I lived downtown for years, and I can tell you
it is less safe than it was four years ago.
They used COVID as an excuse to pull back on
some of the policing. We have a police staffing crisis,
which we've known for many years. There's not enough officers
to walk the beat, and a lot of the officers
are approaching retirement. Agent cannot be made under the contract

(04:58):
to work mandatory over time. It's a disaster. It's not safe.
People want to use our downtown. We have all these
beautiful new attractions, new buildings, new restaurants, but they're suffering.
And look, you know it's so bad now that the
Inquirer has a regular column every month that tells you
which restaurants closed because they've got there. Keith panned off

(05:19):
he's a great writer for them, actually does a column
on closures and openings. Okay, so, and there's always more
closures and openings, and most of them rure in that
downtown area.

Speaker 3 (05:27):
It's killing these small businesses.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
There are people who have put their entire lives, savings,
everything on the line to try to open small businesses
there because they were told, look, the city's investing it
over the rhine, investing in downtown.

Speaker 3 (05:40):
But if you don't invest in.

Speaker 2 (05:41):
Public safety, all the buildings, all the rehabs in the
world don't make sense.

Speaker 3 (05:45):
If people are.

Speaker 2 (05:46):
Afraid of getting shot, they're a free to getting shot.
And on this River Roots tall Stack thing, I mean,
you know, all the music acts, all the big music acts,
they had to cancel and pull away. I mean they
lost millions on this thing, I'm told. And because the
last time we had a music festival, the Cincinnati Music Festival,
the Old Jazz Fest, we made international news because of
the attack on this Holly and those people and the

(06:07):
Fourth Street beat down as they call it. So of
course the older people with people who have options and
want to choose word to spend the money, they're not
going to come down and take that risk. And we
also go I mean, my daughter runs a restaurant over
in Covington, that Covington and Bellevue were the ones that
are reaping the benefit. They have lines out the door
from people who don't want to come downtown because it's

(06:29):
safe because you can see police officers walking around Covington. Yes,
because Bellevue has lights and they haven't made so you know,
people are voting with their fief and it's to the
dutchment of everyone.

Speaker 3 (06:39):
And this is the council and active. They don't want
to talk about it.

Speaker 2 (06:43):
They have to go negative because they really have nothing
else to say.

Speaker 3 (06:46):
You know.

Speaker 1 (06:46):
Borough Love and Kevin had an headline the other day
about on the great debate is the National Guard needed
in Cincinnati? Instead of asking the question why is the
National Guard needed in Cincinnati? What are the policies of
the current administration that incentivize criminals and disincentivized police. One
of the great statements in Last Night is about all

(07:08):
the crime. We're enabling police to do their job, is
what f tab Pierraval says. We're enabling police to do
their job. No, they're not. There's millions of dollars being
spent on social welfare programs that could have hired an
additional two hundred police officers instead of hiring cops. They're
paying arm robbers one thousand dollars a month as part
of an ambassador program, not to commit any more arm robberies,

(07:32):
including travel vouchers to other American cities. Plus, I'm told
some of the council candidates have Iris Roley and others
that are being enabled to go after council candidates personally,
and of course Iris Roly can do that. She makes
one hundred and six or more thousand dollars a year
as an ambassador of type. She's the implementer of the

(07:52):
so called so called initiative to improve the relationship between
the city and the cops, and she's being paid to attack.
Can you explain, Have you been the subject of an
attack because the collaborative representative, not an employee of the city,
making more than cops and firefighters, is being incentivized under
the collaborative to attack council candidates that don't like Ted pureval.

(08:17):
Have you been subjected to that?

Speaker 2 (08:20):
I've been subjected to skathing, although I think in effective
attacks by mis roll lee, particularly online, and look, here's
the way it works. This is the new version of
patronage at city hall. You know, they do have civil
service protections for full time employees. They can't get involved
in politics. So what they do is they give these
big contracts to so called consultants or to nonprofits. A

(08:42):
lot of them are bogus, and that's how they defund
the police. They fund the money to these places. So Iris,
you know, used to be an activist outside a city
hall and some of the stuff she did was good,
some of it was bad, but she was on her
own time and she had a right to do it.
Now she has a paid city content and through a loophole,
is not subject to civil service protections and is clearly

(09:06):
being used to attack people like me that they see
as being you know, actually, I think the attacks are
good news for me because it means they must have
some polling that show people like me and Smitham and
others are in the hunt. But yes, they've come after me.
It's very clearly coordinated. She and Damon Lynch. You know,
hundreds of people from I guess from these church communities
that they associate with, are on Facebook and other places

(09:28):
attacking me. My favorite is a guy that keeps calling me, well,
it gives me a white piece of dog crap every
day I post something. He puts that on there actually
doesn't say crap, but I guess I can't say the
full thing here. And my other favorite is one that
keeps calling me, quote a mediocre douchebag, which which is
particularly offensive because I thought I was an extraordinary douchebag.

(09:49):
I really worked hard at it, so I was really
hurt by that. The mediocre part really hurts. But this
is the kind of stuff they do, and these are
tax dollars paying this woman who has no real metrics.
We can't tell what she does with her days. But
she's out there not promoting the mayor but attacking his critics. Well,

(10:09):
now that should bother anybody who from a taxpayer standpoint?

Speaker 1 (10:13):
Is she put in forty tough hours a week? Is
she up there eight o'clock on Monday morning she'll be
reporting to the collaborative. And then what happened a few
months ago is when she interfered with arrest and over
the rhine the police union Ken Kober wanted her arrested.
In fact that he told the cops the next time
she interferes with an arrest arrest her. And that's the
number one said. That's exactly what she wants. She wants

(10:36):
to be a victim. So how can anyone say, Irish
Rowllie is performing collaborative work when she has no work schedule,
she has no job. She collects serious money. I understand,
a three year contract worth four hundred and fifty thousand
dollars a year in order to collaborate with who about what?
And how can you be attacked when you're not in

(10:58):
office at all? And those in office not performing or
not attacked explain that one to me?

Speaker 2 (11:04):
Well, I can tell you, I mean, I mean, apparently
she's curious at me because I went on the VXU
radio program and had the temerity to criticize her arrangement.
And we've also called out the fact publicly that she's
got her son working for her company. So again, if
she were an actual civil servant, the nepotism rules would apply.

(11:26):
So she's funneling money to her son as a full
time or a part time employee making forty five hundred
bucks a month. And again there's no metrics, there's no
time sheets. From what we can tell, I mean, we
don't know what they're doing or not doing. But I
can also tell you this when I talked to King
Kober and I talked to my friends at the FOP,
who I am proud endorsed our candidacy. Her actions are

(11:49):
one of the number one probably the number two issue
with morale. Number one is staffing by far, but number
two it's having people like Iris reporting to the mayor
and the city manager who are openly critical of police,
not just individual officers but out there interfering with the rests,
but just critical of police in general, and calling to

(12:10):
defund the police by steering money toward her program. This
awful community responders thing they have. They've got a couple
millions stuck into that where they send social workers out
to crime scenes to do god knows what. Eventually when
I'm gonna get shot. And I always say, if you
want to see how they're really defunding the police, drive
over some of these speed humps that they spent tens
of millions of dollars on. They're using those as an

(12:31):
excuse not to bring officers into patrol. The speed humps
are a form of defunding the police. It's tens of
millions of dollars. There's a whole recruit class plus in
those speed humps, and they just don't want the officers
out there doing traffic in addiction anymore and writing tickets
to one of the reasons we have so many guns,
frankly because a lot, as you know from practicing criminal law,

(12:52):
a lot of guns are recovered at traffic stops. That's
just part of how it happens. So we don't really
meaningfully do traffic in the city anymore on the speed hups.
And and that's a form of defunding the police. That's
the kind of thing that she's Those are the initiatives
she and people like that have been pushing.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
That can't be true. Crazy, None of this is true
because the mayor said he enables police to do their job,
you know that. And the other thing he said is
affordable housing. I like to know, and Kevin Aldridge push
pushed back on this. What is affordable housing the people's judge,
and I, you know, want to downsize a little bit.
Every now and then I look at Oakley or Hyde Park.

(13:28):
God knows, I never lived downtown or OTR, but we
wouldn't mind living in Oakley or maybe Hyde Park and
say we looked at these new housing being constructed on
at Oakley, it's going to be home. Rama. Do you
know what it costs at the minimum price to go
to Oakley?

Speaker 2 (13:44):
I can only guess you're in the four to five
grand a month in some of those for apartments from
what I understand.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Well, if you want to buy one, it's one point
three to one point six million, I say one point
three to one point six million in Oakley. And if
you want to have a rental, if you want to
run a place in and around hyde Park Square, it's
forty five hundred dollars a month. And so I would
ask the average American is one point three million? Is

(14:10):
that affordable? Secondly, is forty five hundred dollars a month
for an apartment? Is that affordable? So instead of talking about,
well the last four years, give me some results on
affordable housing or development like the Hyde Park debacle. Instead
of doing that, he talks about our plan provides more
affordable housing. What the hell does that mean? It's untethered

(14:33):
the reality.

Speaker 2 (14:33):
Yeah, well, nobody knows what affordable housing means when they
talk about it. I mean, if you're getting really technical,
and I do a lot of work in this world
with development. What he's really talking what I guess he's
trying to talk about, is this you know, income restricted
housing that the federal government pays for, you know, through
HUD dollars that they're trying to push. They're pushing it
on the same neighborhoods over and over, like the West

(14:56):
End and Bond Hill and Price Hill, and they don't
want anymore. They've at it with that kind of affordable housing.
But what they what they typically call with these developers
called naturally occurring affordable housing, which is you know, reasonable
rents because of good supply. We don't have that because
of the way our the city tax abatements have worked there,
incentivized to build these really high end units and get

(15:18):
really high rents and try to get really high stuff.
I mean, maybe iHeart will co sign with you on
a on a million dollar mortgage at the end, maybe
you could talk about that like some of your contracts.
But it is not affordable to the average person. This
Hyde Park development thing, the battle there. Those apartments were
going to go for forty five hundred a month. Yeah,
and they portrayed that as anyone who was against that,

(15:39):
They said, you're a nimby who's against affordable housing and
it's just nonsense. I mean, forty five hundred dollars a
month it did me to qualify for that is you know,
you wouldn't need an income well over two hundred ran.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Well six sixty thousand a year in rent. And so
if that's thirty percent of what you're making, you'd have
to make two hundred and twenty five thousand dollars to
maybe two fifty after paying taxes. And that it doubt
and af Tab Pierreval says that's affordable to buy something
in Oakley one point three million, or to get an
apartment in Hyde Park is forty five hundred dollars. That's affordable.

(16:11):
And he stands up there and I'm one last issue.
I'm told we are awaystation to the glories of the
administration of af Tab Pureval, either in Columbus or Washington, DC,
whether it's the clerk's office, running for the Congress. He
didn't want to become the mayor. It happened because of
would happened to PG Sittingville. That's the only reason. So
he's on his way to glory. And now he's going

(16:33):
to use all of his success in Cincinnati to launch
a nationwide or statewide campaign for something af TAB for Ohio.
How would that fly in Steubenville?

Speaker 2 (16:45):
I think, you know, I'm told he already has all
those website domain names purchased. But I think there he
may as well just wait, he may as well just
retire those black because you know, my understanding is black. Look,
you know, I've talked from our friends, and well I
think he's well, first they're going to sue him. I

(17:05):
think that's some like intellectual property copyright infringement that'll catch
up with him. But this poor guy is going to
have a hard time if you ever run statewide. I mean,
this guy has been not just not endorsed by the
police union, but the FOP. They voted no confidence in
it in his performance, and that will haunt him throughout
the rest of his political career, if indeed he has one.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
But Clark courts have some way stations.

Speaker 2 (17:34):
Yeah, well, he did a number on the courthouse too.
A lot of these judges that he handpicked and selected
and encouraged to run are the ones that are letting
these people out on low bond. So he has been
a very consequential figure in town, both in the courthouse
and at City Hall and in a very bad way.
So he's got a record that will haunt him everywhere.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
Save good and keep being a douchebag.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
It comes naturally to me. Thank you very much for
your time.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
Now you're a lawyer, so that it fits Steve good
and thank you very much. We get the government we deserve.
Let's continue with more Steve. Thank you News Next, that's
your home of non douchebags. News Radio seven hundreds WLW
with the music Dave Katon. Here we go Friday afternoon.
Big things happening, tother and fro Just heart from Steve Gooden.

(18:19):
On Monday or Tuesday of next week. I want to
get on Linda Matthews, the Avondale Community Council and Chris Smitherman,
if at all possible, I know he's busy and more
to see if I can help as a positive change
agent for the city of Cincinnati. I always like to
think I have hope, no matter how dark it is.
I continue to believe optimism will reign supreme in the

(18:40):
long run, and that Cincinnati, Hamilton County, the tri State
in the long run will be better because there are
so many good people with good intentions, democratic and Republicans
that may look at things different politically, but we all
want the same goal. We all want the same end.
So when Steve Gooden points out what's happening in our city,
and instead of the mayor and city council members trying

(19:00):
to defend its record, which they can't defend, they go
on attack, tora tora, tora against those who would dare
oppose them. And this is a difficult environment for an
independent end or for a Republican. Even though I'm proud
to have the vice president living in Hyde Park, jd. Vance,
we haven't had too many presidential vice presidential individuals living

(19:23):
in Cincinnati for a very long time. I do know
that in the last election, as Kevin Aldridge pointed out
last night at the inquir the moderator on the debate,
and by the way, I think Aldredge did a pretty
good job. That's seventy seven percent of Cincinnati voters voted
for Kamala Harris and they voted against Donald Trump. And
whether you like it or not, Corey Bowman is associated

(19:45):
with JD. Vance, who is his half brother. Now they
have severe policy differences, but that's okay. One thing Corey
Bowman is going to do is never speak ill about JD.
Vance's half brother, and so I get that completely, and
so ultimately is going to be up to you living
in the city of Cincinnati, to make change. I'm told

(20:05):
by the experts here that about twelve percent of my
audiences in the city of Cincinnati, about thirty five percent
is in Hamilton County, about thirty percent or so is
in northern Kentucky, and about twenty five to thirty percent
is in the rest of Ohio, Indiana and the world.
I get that. But nonetheless, even though we disproportionately cover

(20:27):
the events in the city of Cincinnati, it is the
heart that beats the tri state. Without a functional heart,
a body's not going to work real well, and right
now the heart is not working. Democrats have told me
that after Peerival fell into this thing because the PG
Sitting felt being indicted, and as I've said many times
in many places, PG Sitting felt, in my view, should

(20:50):
not have been indicted. And I guess he was pardon
and I think his case is still pending before the
US Supreme Court, but I'm not sure they criminalized politics
go after people like pg Sittinfeld and Matt Borges, the
former chair of the Republican Party who just got out
of jail. Those individuals do not belong in jail. If
they did something terribly wrong, I would say community service,

(21:13):
pay a fine. But to waste forty thousand dollars a
year on individuals like pg Sittingfeld in prison or Matt
Borges is a complete waste of time and money. But nonetheless,
I regress. There are a few examples of a far
left wing democratic, liberal progressive, some say Marxist government losing

(21:35):
grip of its power in a blue city. In fact,
I'm not sure there is an example other than possibly
the city of Dallas, where the Democratic mayor African American
announced two years ago he can't take it anymore. He
left the Democratic Party because its policies left him, and
the mayor of Dallas, Texas became a Republican. Believe it

(21:56):
or not, So it does happen. Do I think have
to have peer ofval or lemon Kearney or Scottie Johnson's
going to become a Democrat anytime, it's going to become
a Republican. I don't think so, But nonetheless I always
have hope. So if two or three members of council
could be kicked off who are not performing and have

(22:18):
normal people put on, like Liz Keating or Chris Smitherman
or Lynda Matthews or Steve Gooden. That would be one
small step in the right direction. Now will the city
voter take that step? I'm told they will. That individuals,
the white Liberals who live in Hyde Park and Oakley
are uniting with other community councils, some forty nine or

(22:38):
fifty strong, to say we can't live like this. How
can you have a mayor talk about affordable housing when
new housing in the city costs one point three million
dollars when rents are four to five thousand dollars a month.
And last night f Ted Pirival talked completely about well
we work toward affordable housing. Well one with a workbeat completed,

(23:00):
it will not be completed. Their policies calls rents to rise,
the air policies cause construction costs to increase in New
York City. When Ma'm Donnie the Kami once rent freezes,
that means that those who build apartment buildings aren't going
to build any more apartment buildings. They can't afford to
build them. That means there's a limited supply of housing,

(23:20):
and whether there's a limited supply an unlimited demand, guess what,
the price goes up, and when you have rent freezes,
the price really goes up. In other areas, one or
two may benefit, like Mamdannie himself living in a rent
subsidized apartment, But there's no indication in the cities of
New York or in Cincinnati that anyone's putting up a

(23:41):
whole bunch of brand new affordable apartment buildings. I see
construction if you check the price on that, and it
begins with a fifteen year tax abatement. So that means
the developers, the owners put up a slop up apartment buildings,
charge three to five thousand dollars a month in rent,
they get the tax abatements, and about five or six

(24:01):
years down the road, they sell out to nationwide interests,
cash in a big paycheck, and then the city's left
holding the bag after fifteen years with grossly increasing the
rents because property taxes skyrocket, which means though seeking to
rent after fifteen years going to have to pay four
to five thousand dollars a month. That is not affordable housing,

(24:24):
just the opposite. And the number one job of government
is of course public safety. The mayor talks about incentivizing
and enabling police to do their job. What hell does
that mean? Talk to cops, talk to law enforcement, talk
to deputy sheriffs, talk to the FBI, talk to the
US Martiall Service. Whether the City of Cincinnati leadership incentivizes

(24:44):
have to do their job, absolutely not. They disincentivize that
they don't want them in. I had on Chermaine mcguffrey,
the sheriff, about a month or so ago. She pointed
out that in a little bit of time they did
patrol parts of downtown Cincinnati. They they offered more than
they had, more than three hundred citations being issued. They

(25:05):
seized numerous guns, executed warrants on many individuals who had
warrants out for their arrest, when the city police are
not incentivized to do any of that. And they had
the Punch and Judy show about six weeks ago in
which the governor came in. I think Mike DeWine was
used and abused by f to have pureval to act
as if the authorities are coming into the City of Cincinnati,

(25:27):
and they were not coming in. It was two days
a month, two shifts a month, and that didn't happen either.
It's all a facade to get us past the November
fourth election, that's all it is. And those who claim
to care deeply about the city of Cincinnati show to
enact policies that reflect that caring. To have a functional community,

(25:49):
to have lower price housing, to have safe streets, that's
what's required. And the policies of this administration provide just
the opposite. And secondly, on the kind of unrelated issue,
I'm watching an interview with the governor of Oklahoma Governors
did on one of the channels might have been on
YouTube in the last day or two. He brought up

(26:10):
a rather important point which I've hooked onto. You know,
God helps those who help themselves, and if the citizens
of the city of Cincinnati do not want to help themselves,
why should state government or the FEDS come in to
bail them out. When the inquir had a big headline
about should the National Guard come to Cincinnati, underlying the

(26:34):
question is the fact that it's arguable whether the National
Guard should be here because too much crime is in
the city of Cincinnati. The number one area of our city,
herting is the Central Business District. I'm told by the
powers that be, the CBC and others, that tremendous pressure
is being put on the mayor and the chief of

(26:54):
Police to do their damn job in the Central Business District.
Have you noticed that Proctor and Gamble, also known as
Proctor and God, is enlarging their facilities in Mason, Ohio?
Have you seen that? I went out to see my
good friend doctor Tara Harden the dentistry to the stars.
She's the best there is that dental work is Tara

(27:15):
Harden in Mason. I drove by and on the right
I saw the huge Proctor and God facility being grossly
expanded in Mason to take jobs from Cincinnati into Mason.
Have you seen that now? Why do you think that's happening.
It's because the managers, the employees, those in charge of

(27:36):
the Dolly Parton towers in downtown Cincinnati do not want
their employees to be unsafe. They're moving out of the
city of Cincinnati more and more. I talked to the
restaurant tours in downtown. Business is down twenty to thirty percent.
I look at the so called river Day's Tall Stacks
event happening on the river. Guess what, It's empty? Citizens

(28:00):
are not going there. The bands have been canceled, tours
have been canceled. People are voting with their feet by
saying it is unsafe in the city of Cincinnati. We
don't want to go there now. That is a major
major problem. It will take And by the way, Procter
and Gamble is not anytime soon going to vacate their

(28:20):
twin towers in downtown Cincinnati, but slowly incrementally, whether it's
Kroger or whether it's a Fifth Third Bank, or whether
it's Procter and Gamble other large employers, they are leaving
the city of Cincinnati, and there goes to tax base.
We're going to look like downtown Detroit or downtown Toledo.
That's a big issue. Now, to get back to one

(28:43):
of my original points. If a city is not willing
to help itself, if the voters of Chicago, Portland, d
c Atlanta, Memphis, Cincinnati do not want to vote for
change and reformation, why should the rest of us come
and help them? That Donald, by the way, the Nobel

(29:05):
Peace Prize should be known as the Donald Trump Peace Prize.
Don't give him the award, name the damn Prize after him.
That's a different issue. But if the citizens of Chicago
keep voting for individuals like Lori Lightfoot and Brandon Johnson,
and if we keep voting for people like have to
have Pirival, if we keep saying that's what we want

(29:26):
in the city of Cincinnati, why should the rest of
the state, the region of the nation come to your defense.
Live with it. Don't put the men and women of
the National Guard at risk going from Texas to Chicago.
Hate to say this, but I agree with Pritzer in
this one limited area the Governor of Illinois that the
National Guard from Texas should not be in the city

(29:47):
of Chicago because they don't know where the streets are,
don't know the personalities involved, don't know where they're going.
And the other thing is Chicago has got to help itself.
And so the argument here in Cincinnati, by the inquiry
is should the National Guard come to Cincinnati? Underlying that
is the fact that it's arguable whether it's needed here.

(30:08):
If that's the case, why want the citizens of Cincinnati
change their elected leadership whose policies caused these conditions. Does
this make sense to you? I can't imagine. I live
in Sycamore Township with Tom Weiedman at all, and if
somehow Tom Weiedman and the leadership of Sycamore Township did

(30:31):
not want law enforcement the National Guard to come to
Sycamore Township because it was perceived that Sycamore Township had
a terrible crime problem, a murder problem, shots fired, drug use,
massive lawlessness. It's up to Wei and Sycamore Township to say,
you know what, we got to get rid of the tracys.
We got to get rid of Tom Weiedman. That's what

(30:53):
we would do. I'm not going to vote that way
in Sycamore Township because things are pretty damn good. We
have law enforcement. We have a contract with the Sheriff's Department.
They do a great job. Likewise, in the City of Cincinnati,
if you're not willing to help yourself, why should some
other city, state, or region come to your aid and
defense when number one, your political leadership say don't do it,

(31:14):
and number two you vote for those leaders. The city
of Chicago voted for Brandon Johnson or Lori Lighthead. They
get for years, they've kept fools New York, the Blasio,
New York Adams. I guess mom, Donnie is next. So
why should Ohio National Guard go to New York City
when New York City is not willing to help itself.

(31:36):
So I think this is the election where you living
in the city, the twelve percent or so of my
listeners living in the city. If you're not willing to
change and go a different direction, why should the rest
of us save your ass? Why? I don't know. So
when Governors stood of Oklahoma gave that interview a couple

(31:56):
of days ago on YouTube, he would resist sending Oklahoma
National Guard to Portland, Oregon. He said, these are okies,
these are my men and my women. I don't want
them going on thousand miles away because the citizens in
those cities and states do not help themselves. And I
would say to my friends in the city of Cincinnati,

(32:17):
you don't have to live like this. There's a better way.
You can't have better schools, you can't have safer streets,
you can't have more functioning economic activity. And may God
help us if Fifth Third Bank or Procter and Gamble
or Kroger says, you know what, it is dangerous for
our employees to be here. Shots fired on Fountain Square.

(32:38):
A shootout on Fountain Square a couple of days ago,
as our employees were leaving work and we can't take
this anymore. It's too expensive. So chill on that one
for a while. Let's continue. After one o'clock today will
be a report from the nation's capital from the Hill
dot Com. Then after two o'clock today, I'm going to

(32:58):
try to put a call into to Austin Elmo. Austin Elmo,
who's walking the sacred grounds of lambeau Field to see
how things being prepared in Green Bay for the arrival
of the Bengals and Joe Flacco and things of that character.
Let's continue. But God helps those who help themselves. The

(33:21):
citizens of Cincinnati need to help themselves. And if you
don't see the problems, if you want to maintain the
status quo of high crime, terrible schools, depocherous misbehavior, failing businesses,
that's on you. We're not going to save you. Bill Cunningham,
News Radio seven hundred WW Bill Cunningham, The Great America.

(33:49):
Many doings now in Washington, d C. In addition to
the Phase one of the peace deal with Gaza slash
Israel appears to be in effect, we also have the shutdown.
It's getting the day ten that is not even in
session until Tuesday next week, and all the politicking is
going on. What is happening in Washington? Joining you and
I now is Brett Samuels, who's the White House correspondent

(34:09):
for The Hill, also does work with News Nation, And
Brett Samuels, Welcome to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first
of all, let's deal with the Israel situation. Phase one
appears to be operational the cabinet. Bob's Cabinet has approved
forty eight hours begin sometime on Monday. Allegedly the hostages
are going to be released. And I watch all the

(34:30):
coverage left and right, back and forth on this deal,
and how much credit I watch MSNBC many times so
other Americans don't have to, and they're not giving a
lot of credit to Donald Trump. They're saying, essentially that
Donald Trump is continuing the policies of Joe Biden, and
Joe Biden's policies resulted in this. Can you talk from

(34:50):
the Hill perspective in Washington? How does this play out
politically in Washington, DC?

Speaker 3 (34:57):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (34:57):
I think here in Washington, Uh, you know, President Trump
is actually getting a fair amount of credit for laying
the foundation for this, for his role in this uh
and especially for his team's role in these talks. Obviously
Steve Whitcoff and Garret Kushner, who is not you know,
serving in a formal government role but served in the
first term, and it's the president's son in law. You know,

(35:20):
they were over in the Middle East, in Egypt and
in Israel trying to kind of get this deal across
the finish line. Mark or Rubio has been very involved
in a lot of this, and so Republicans especially are
really giving the Trump administration a lot of credit. And
I think we're seeing Democrats, you know, begrudgingly perhaps giving
some credit to the administration here. You know, we're seeing them,

(35:40):
you know, certainly praise the deal, praise the prospect of
peace in the Middle East and a pause to the
fighting in Gaza, even if some of them aren't naming
President Trump in their statements. That's sort of, uh, you know,
it's pretty clear kind of what hell what the implication is.
So you know, I think, you know, even Trump's critics
maybe are are kind of optimistic. I think it's fair

(36:01):
to say that maybe this deal will hold you.

Speaker 1 (36:04):
Know, one aspect to this deal you you're reporting on
is that it wasn't well publicized that two hundred American
soldiers are going to be part of the so called
peacekeeping force. And one thing, I know all of us
feel like, why put American soldiers, men and women at
risk in the Middle East? I think that pulling on
that was eighty ninety percent. Don't do it? So do
we know yet where they're coming from?

Speaker 3 (36:25):
Are they?

Speaker 1 (36:26):
Are they the main force? What is the main when
Phase two is implemented sometime I guess after Monday or Tuesday,
when all the hostages are out and the body bags
have been delivered to Israel, what is the main reason
two hundred American soldiers will be somewhere in Gazo or Israel?
What is that? How is that going to happen? And

(36:47):
why is that not well reported?

Speaker 4 (36:51):
Yeah, so the White House is I think, you know,
one of the reasons that there's still some questions about
it is because the White House is said that some
of this is still being sort of sorted out and
finalized here. But you know, the White House is stressed
that that these U. S forces aren't going to be
in Gaza, that they will likely be in Israel and
sort of near the Gaza border. You know, they've also

(37:12):
kind of uh tried to clarify essentially that these are
our US troops who are already stationed in the region
and they're being kind of repositioned, that these aren't necessarily
uh you know, troops being deployed from the US sent
over to the Middle East. But essentially their role here
is that in the immediate aftermath of this this agreement, uh,

(37:33):
there's there's this peacekeeping force essentially, this uh this force
uh of that will be made up of the US
of Egyptian forces, Katari forces, and some others uh, and
their role is to essentially make sure that this peace deal,
the initial phase is implemented. You know, they're sort of
uh ensuring that there's no ongoing skirmishes or fighting happening

(37:55):
as Israel's withdrawing its forces from PARTUSA, as these hostages
are being returned. Long term, I think there are still
some questions about kind of what this peace keeping force
looks like, whether the US is involved with that on
the ground, but these two hundred troops seem to be
sort of in the interim essentially just overseeing to make
sure that this PCAL actually goes through.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
Assuming we would talk Monday afternoon or Tuesday or Wednesday,
assuming phase one is completed. Phase one is a ceasefire,
IDF pullback Hamas, releases all living and dead hostages. That
there's something in the order of two thousand Palestinian, many
of whom are terrorists, are going to be released sometime Monday, Tuesday,

(38:37):
or Wednesday, including several who have killed. I saw one
report out of Israel that one of the hot one
of these so called Palestinians being released is someone who
murdered thirteen israelis that guy's going to be released too,
So assuming that happens, assuming Monday or Tuesday, phase one
is completed, Phase two involves rebuilding Gaza, disarming Hamas, and

(39:01):
a permanent cease fire. That'd be great, That'd be wonderful.
Rebuilding Gos it could be a five to ten year process.
Disarming Hamas is the one that stands out to me.
Hamas's charter calls for the death the killing of every
Jew and Westerner. Disarming Hamas is that realistic?

Speaker 4 (39:21):
I think that's definitely, you know, the big question as
we look forward here, and you know, I think some
Trump administration officials have acknowledged that there's there are some
ways that this agreement could go wrong, and that that's
why they're really trying to keep the pressure on all
parties make sure everyone's following through on their commitments. I
think folks are kind of clear out here that there

(39:42):
are some potential.

Speaker 3 (39:44):
Pitfalls, potential risks.

Speaker 4 (39:46):
But I think that's also a sign of this deal
that was negotiated, and maybe you know, points to how
the Trump administration was able to get Israel to agree
to this despite some of those concerns, the fact that
you know, this isn't a deal that necessarily is perfect
for Israel, certainly given some of what they're being asked

(40:07):
to do as far as with drawing troops, trusting Hamas
to file through on their end, et cetera. So I
think right now folks are kind of hoping that they
can get through phase one, that they can get the
hostage really especially, and then they'll kind of tackle Phase
two from there and hope that they can kind of
keep the keep the momentum going.

Speaker 1 (40:26):
It'd be interesting if Hamas would change his charter and
say we want to live in peace with Israel. That
would be interesting, and without the barrel of the quite
the accomplishment if that happens, Nobel peace price. Hell, they
should call it a Donald Trump peace price. If he
can get Hamasta his arm and rebuild Gaza and have
the ceasefire and Palestinian statehood and the International peacekeeping Force

(40:50):
and Palestinian bureaucrats running Gaza. If that happens, let's call
it the Donald Trump Peace Prize. Forget about giving it
to them. Name it after them.

Speaker 4 (40:59):
Would you agree, Yeah, you know, it's I'm sure we'd
see plenty of Republicans and calling PA just that.

Speaker 1 (41:07):
Let's move on to issue too, which is a shutdown
that affects Americans directly, and a little bit of history.
In January, February and March of twenty twenty one, as
part of the so called COVID relief packages, the government
stepped up and is paying a chunk of the monthly
premiums of something to the range of twenty five million
Americans so they can go on to the so called

(41:29):
Bama Obama exchanges to get health insurance for themselves and
for their family. And it grew from two to three
million and twenty eleven, twenty twelve to twenty five million today.
And these so called subsidies are government benefits involve individuals
making as much as five hundred thousand dollars a year.
Now we're talking about some serious money. And Marjorie Taylor Green,

(41:51):
who's that firebrand from the right, is angry that she
may not get about fifteen hundred dollars a month subsidy
when she makes about three hundred thousand dollars a year. So,
if you're a working stuff somewhere somewhere in Iowa or
Minnesota or Ohio, and you find out that the government is
subsidizing the health insurance premium of those making three hundred

(42:13):
thousand dollars a year, I think most Americans would say,
let's discontinue that subsidy. I think they would say that.
And the cost of this over about a ten year period,
it is in the range of four hundred billion dollars.
Now we're talking about some serious money. So and the
tenth day that Democrats are voting now to keep government
shut down and the Republicans are voting to open government up. However,

(42:38):
the Republicans floated this trial balloon this morning. I read
that they want to limit the subsidies, the Republicans say,
to two hundred thousand dollars a year of government help
instead of five hundred thousand, and Democrats don't want that one.
So can you tell the American people in a capsule
what is this shutdown about?

Speaker 4 (43:00):
Well, it's obviously the shutdown is essentially a messaging war
here where Democrats are arguing that these subsidies need to
be extended. I think you know, as you and I
both know, when you give a government service like this
and people start to use it, and you point it
out that millions of people are using the subsidy, taking
advantage of it, it's hard to take it away. And

(43:21):
you know, democrats argument is that if you take the
subsidy away, you got it expire. Healthcare premiums are going
to spike, people are going to pay more, and so
their argument is that they will only vote to fund
the government if these subsidies are extended. Now, Republicans seemed
to have the upper hand initially, I think when they
essentially were able to say, you know, Democrats have voted

(43:43):
for a bill to fund the government many times before,
they should do it again and then will negotiate extending
these healthcare subsidies. I think you know, a problem has
sort of emerged for Republicans in recent days where you
have people like Marjorie Taylor Green, who obviously has a
huge platform, who is basically accusing her own party of
not doing enough to address rising healthcare costs, you know,

(44:06):
saying that there's a real issue that affects her family,
affects her constituents. And you know, you see in the
shock of all shocks, Democrats, you know, essentially embracing Marjorie
Taylor Green fighting her comments in their own arguments.

Speaker 3 (44:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (44:20):
So it's yeah, it's become sort of this this drawn
out messaging war where initially the Republicans thought Democrats would
fold rather quickly. Now Democrats feel kind of, you know, galvanized,
and feel like maybe momentum is on their side a
bit in sort of the political struggle over this shutdown.

Speaker 1 (44:37):
But Bright Samuels, let me give you a quote from
the great Milton Friedman. He's on the mount Rushmore Conservatism
in my book, Milton Friedman said about thirty five years
ago the following, Once you habituate Americans to some generous
government handout, they grow dependent on it, and it becomes
politically perilous, if not impossible, to fully claw it back.

(44:59):
So if I would say to American my producer Tony Bender,
do you think government should subsidize the healthcare premium cost
of a person making three hundred thousand dollars a year?
He would probably say he wouldn't say no, he'd say
hell no, let her pay her own premiums. But on
the other hand, as Milton Freeman said, once you habituate

(45:21):
to Americans a generous government handout, it's stamd near impossible
to claw it back. And that's where we are today.
And I would add this. The Washington Post, not exactly,
a right wing publication, issued an editorial eleven days ago
in which has said, quote Obamacare was never actually affordable unquote.
So going back to twenty ten, you might remember, if

(45:42):
you like your plan, you can keep your plan. If
you like your doctor, you can keep your doctor. And
health care costs are going down. The only went down
because government subsidies were so generous that they organized about
twenty five million Americans to get a government benefit. And
God help you if you think some person making three
hundred k a year should not get a government benefit.

(46:03):
Marjorie Taylor Green is now rubbing her hands saying, oh no,
we have to keep the subsidy for me, and that's
kind of sad. Now, lastly, get out your crystal ball.
Brett Samuels of The Hill, White House Correspondent, How does
this end in a week or two or does it
go on ad infinitum? And will there be massive government
cuts the Democratic programs? According to Donald Trump? Get out

(46:24):
your crystal ball.

Speaker 4 (46:27):
Yeah, you know, it's hard hard to predict anything in
Donald Trump's Washington, I think, but you know, I think,
you know, there doesn't really seem to be a clear
off ramp here. It's not really clear kind of what
the compromise would be in the short term. So it
does seem this is going to go on at least
through next week. You know, Hakim Jeffries, the Democratic leader

(46:50):
in the House, you know, he previously suggested that this
wouldn't wouldn't the government wouldn't still be shut down by
November first, So maybe by the end of the month
we'll have a resolution. But you know, it's hard to
say with much confidence of what happened before that. So yeah,
you know, it certainly seems like folks should kind of
buckle up and sort of strap in for at least

(47:11):
another week of this, if not a little bit more.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
It's interesting how politics is played. And at this point,
the polling indicates the average voter blames the Republicans more
than Democrats, you know, garbage in, garbage out. So when
the media and the mainstream media only reports the fallacies
of the Republican argument, leave the Democratic argument alone, likely
garbage in, garbage out. The American people will regurgitate what

(47:34):
they're being told and what they're seeing and what they're hearing.
But Brett Samuel's White House correspondent, thanks for coming on
the Bill Cunningham Show. We'll see what happens. It's going
to be interesting. But the Nobel Peace Prize should be
the Nobel Donald Trump Prize. And if that happens, and
then that'll be the headline. Have you seen the headline
the Babylon b that Hitler saves Israel? Not a bad headline.

Speaker 3 (47:59):
We'll see.

Speaker 4 (48:00):
We'll see what they come up with next.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
I thank you, Brett Samuels, thank you very much. Let's continue.
One other headline I would put in that Trump can
negotiate with Hamas, he just can't negotiate with the Democrats.
That wasn't the headline, but it ought to be. All
let's continue with more. But it's interesting that if the
American people are told that you're going to get a
government subsidy based upon your income that goes up to

(48:24):
really five hundred thousand dollars a year, You're going to
get a subsidy out of the taxpayer, most Americans would say, no,
keep it lower than that. So the balloon was floated. Well,
let's make it two hundred thousand dollars and see if
that can fly. And the Democrats say absolutely not because
they want to keep the government shut down for reasons unclear.
Republicans claim it's because of the primary challenge of AOC

(48:48):
against Chuck Schumer. We'll see what happens down the road.
Let's continue with more. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred
WW it is a showtime.

Speaker 5 (49:03):
Hello Biett, I'm Scots, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (49:10):
I know Secon. A lot of information goes about the
boys football program as deer parks dominating every school except Madeira,
and I would say this, how the hell with that?
I know now we have we have golf royalty right
here in the studio. Now Madera High School Amazons who
finished second because the match was rained out. They would
have finished first in the state title. They marched for

(49:31):
glory and for some of the judgment sea to God,
and we give Fenwick credit. They finished and don't forget
Roger Bacon who refuses to play Madeerra by the way,
but with us today is the head golf coach, Katie Kaufman,
and I'm going to talk to Frank Zi Bell Frank
zy Bell about possibly having them sponsor golf balls next
year for Maderia High School girls team coach. First of all,

(49:53):
congratulations if any second, but you would have been first,
but it got rained out. Explain how that happened.

Speaker 6 (49:59):
Yeah, we definite would been first. It hasn't rained before
and it hasn't rained since. But it rained on that
day and they kept delaying us, and they were afraid.

Speaker 1 (50:08):
They were a fright.

Speaker 7 (50:08):
They were afraid of us. They really were.

Speaker 1 (50:10):
They were shaking, shaking in their boots, wet wet glosses.
They move it to the next next day.

Speaker 6 (50:16):
It's hard to do that because they would have had
to miss another day of school.

Speaker 1 (50:18):
That's okay, this is more important in school, and this
is more important. Huh.

Speaker 8 (50:24):
The team agrees they would be okay to miss another
day of school.

Speaker 1 (50:27):
Oh, yeah, yeah, no vote. It's rained once in the
past forty five days, not gonna but the one day
that madeir was undefeated the entire year. Even tried to
play deer Park, but deer Park wouldn't play you correct.

Speaker 6 (50:41):
No, no, they won't feel the team because they're so
scared of.

Speaker 1 (50:44):
They're so frightened as they don't even want to play.
How'd you do against Indian Hill this year?

Speaker 7 (50:48):
We best at them.

Speaker 1 (50:50):
How about Wyoming, the home of the cow Cow Girls.

Speaker 7 (50:52):
I guess yes, we went over them as well.

Speaker 1 (50:54):
Introduce your great players here. Soon we'll be on the
LPGA tour. Coach Kaufman. Who do you have here?

Speaker 6 (51:00):
Two seniors Anaka Rone and Grace Kellett.

Speaker 1 (51:03):
Raise your hand. Yes, I'm the patch Gentilly's granddaughter, right.
He's a great American. Live next door to me at
seventy two forty three Camrgo Woods Drive. My phone number
is five one three two seven one five seven nine five.
Please continue.

Speaker 6 (51:17):
I have one junior, Maggie Meyer. Maggie Meyer, and I
have three sophomores. I have Brinkley Graves or two sophomore
sorry bro three sorry Brinkley Graves, Emma Combs and Ellie
Hart time.

Speaker 1 (51:30):
Now you have one player that shot thirty seven on
average on nine holes of golf. Is that correct? And
you played Augusta National. You played also Beth Page Black,
she played there and her average score is.

Speaker 7 (51:42):
What thirty five?

Speaker 1 (51:44):
Thirty five? Have you thought about the LPGA Tour? Yes,
really go to the US Ryder Cup. You would have
beat Europe with this grow. We need Kenny Cok, we
need her in charge of the men's team, right, would
you take the job as men's Ryder Cup captain if
you have? It only pays two point six million dollars.

Speaker 7 (52:04):
I mean I'd ask for more.

Speaker 1 (52:05):
But you're taking a pay cut. So it was a
highlight of the year for these girls. I mean, well,
the matches and everything. Explain well, explain how great this is. Undefeated, untied,
unscored on didn't lose a ball all year?

Speaker 7 (52:16):
Yeah, exactly. We lost no balls.

Speaker 6 (52:18):
We didn't lose a match in regular season. We were
first at sectionals for the first time in school history.
We were second or first at Dick Strict Districts for
the first time in school history, and then runner up
at state second year in row.

Speaker 1 (52:31):
We are you gonna ask Kenji for a raise? A
Board of Education needs to give you more money. Is
that correct?

Speaker 7 (52:37):
That's a good idea.

Speaker 1 (52:38):
How about nil money? Got some of that coming? I
don't know, segment, Get me into the student's report.

Speaker 9 (52:42):
Please will leave the studire borders of proud service of
your local Temestar Heating and air Conditioning dealers, Tamestar.

Speaker 1 (52:49):
Quality you can feel in beautiful Northern Kentucky.

Speaker 8 (52:51):
Called Johnson Heating and Coolie at eight five nine, four
seven to two sixty fifty one.

Speaker 1 (52:57):
Talk to me about the Bengals segment. Talk to me
about the Bengal and.

Speaker 9 (53:00):
We also want to thank Lears Prime Market for our
lunch today. Willie located in beautiful downtown Milford, Learsprime dot com.

Speaker 1 (53:06):
Lears Prime always a cut above.

Speaker 8 (53:10):
Bengals update brought to you by Good Spirits and Party
Town with thirteen locations in Northern Kentucky. Time to party
Bengals and Packers Sunday in Green Bay, Best Bengals coverage
at noon with the Rnel Carriers, pregame sports Talk and
then presented by the Cincinnati, Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers and
then kickoff will be four twenty five and then Tri
State Chevy Dealers postgame show on a commercial presented by

(53:32):
RNL Carriers Live from Buffalo, Wings and Rings and Fairfield.
Now this morning. This morning, Jamar Chase went out to practice.
What went through the long training matter fell and he
left with an illness.

Speaker 1 (53:50):
Probably looked at Joe Flacco said he had no chance.
He's going to get sick.

Speaker 8 (53:53):
High school football Tonight action all across a tri state.

Speaker 1 (53:56):
Wait a minute, you say Jamar Chase may not play, well,
he's probably, I don't know, he's got an illness. Postle dead,
get him something.

Speaker 8 (54:04):
High School Football Tonight show at sixty ESPN fifteen thirty,
Fox Sports thirteen sixty.

Speaker 1 (54:09):
That leads into Saint X and Lasal, Highland's and Elder Joymon,
hold on, Katie, who do you like? Give her the scores?
Let the coach tell you who's gonna win. Highland's and Elder.
Who do you like their elder? Please continue? Cleveland, Saint
Eyes and Molar Molar. I'm taking Cleveland, Saint Eyes, Cole
Rain and Lakota East. Don't take East. That's it right there,

(54:31):
Don't take Cole Rain. The last time you're here, ladies,
Middletown and Mason. I like the comments, that's where the
transmitter is. I'm gonna go with Middletown. Very good. That's
a good answer. Good answer. Let's see deer Park and Taylor. Now,
wait a minute, we got the yellow Jackson's against the Cats.
Why are they playing the game segment? I think it's
at Taylor. I'm not going there's too far away.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
I know.

Speaker 1 (54:50):
Who are you liking that matchup?

Speaker 3 (54:51):
Katie?

Speaker 7 (54:52):
I'm gonna go with deer Park.

Speaker 1 (54:53):
Very good, very good, very smarter. A lot of these
kids applied to go to deer Park. They didn't get
the admission requirements for the educational achievement. Is that correct?
There's that l sat to get into deer Park?

Speaker 10 (55:03):
Right?

Speaker 1 (55:03):
Girls?

Speaker 8 (55:08):
College football tomorrow, Willie u cef the Golden Knights in
town to take on our beloved Bearcats at eleven am.
I like to Miami and Akron, Ohio State at Illinois,
Indiana at Oregon.

Speaker 1 (55:20):
What do you like in that matchup?

Speaker 8 (55:21):
The Ducks for the Hoosiers going with Indiana, Baby quack quack.
The Dodgers beat the Phillies last night in Laron innings
two to one. Terrible Reliever or Orion kirk Ring Terrible
was on the mound, a bat ball right back to him,
two outs, bases loaded, throws, one wild at the plate, terrible,
and the Dodgers win it terrible.

Speaker 2 (55:43):
Uh So.

Speaker 8 (55:45):
Former UC standout Ean Half a three run homer early.
The Cubs beat the Brewers. So Game five tomorrow night
in Milwaukee. Game five of the America League Division Series tonight,
Seattle host Detroit.

Speaker 10 (55:58):
And you like it?

Speaker 1 (55:59):
You like the big dump.

Speaker 8 (56:01):
Inuenio Swarz and Ken Griffy Junior. Sure, what about the dumper?
One hundred and sixty nine days until opening day? Willie
in twenty four days until the official start of college basketball?

Speaker 1 (56:12):
You know segment. Kenji Messuda believes that Madeira has a
great educational that their kids are smart. So, with your permission,
I'll ask you girls a few questions. Academically, Are you prepared?

Speaker 5 (56:23):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (56:24):
Who is the governor of the state of Ohio? All right,
one of the Five Great Lakes? Write him down? What
are they? Ontario? That's it right there? Who's the Vice
President of the United States of America from Cincinnati? The VP?

(56:46):
Very good? Right there? Who's the principal of Madeira High School?
Very good? It is very good. Can't she's shaken? His
said the wrong direction of horizontally, not very She said
he was a principal. He thinks he is. It's an al,
not an Ellie at the ence. So I don't know.
I'll segue. I'm going to have on a little bit
of live report from lambeau Field. What do the Bengals

(57:08):
have to do? A fourteen and a half point dog
to kick the crap out of the Packers named after
a meat facility beginning in the nineteen twenties, the Packers?

Speaker 9 (57:16):
What do they have to do? Just play their game?
Will he have behind Joe Flacco? That's all they got
to do. Don't worry, he's already played. He's already beaten
the Packers once when at thirteen to ten or something.

Speaker 1 (57:25):
Well, so what one of them? So you have hope? Yes, Katie,
do you have hope? Because we've got two joes a quarterback.
One can't walk because of a broken toe. The other
one's released by the Cleveland Browns because he stinks. Now
which one you want to be playing quarterback in Green Bay?

Speaker 7 (57:40):
I don't know, but I have hope for whoever?

Speaker 1 (57:42):
Does I have hope to? That's all I have is hope.
That's all I have one more question, girls, ready for
another question? What are the states that border the state
of Ohio? No one give anything? Think of Ohio geographically?
What are the states? Give me one correct? Give me
another one? Correct another one? No, he's Illinois. Hi, her up? Illinois?

Speaker 2 (58:05):
Know?

Speaker 1 (58:06):
So we got we have Kentucky and Indiana, Michigan and
one more. That's it right there, Pennsylvania. Kenji, you should
be proud, Willie. I couldn't be more proud of these girls.
I've watched them grow up. They're not only great golfers,
but they're great human beings. I'd rather be a great
human being than a great golfer. And ten years from both,

(58:28):
ten years from now, you won't be playing basketball or soccer.
You'll still be playing golf. Is that correct? They'll be
making millions of pros pros especially the thirty five party
is unbelievable. There's your new partner for Saturday morning. I
might need it tomorrow morning at nine forty five against
the great Bartosik and thewine Tunis I need some help
at ken with no question? Well, girls, congratulations, you've succeeded

(58:51):
in golf. Now succeed in life. Play the game of
life as well, as you play the game of golf.
You know what I'm saying, segment get me out of
the Students report, please WILLI and Armer. In honor of
the Division two golf, we'll say Champions Amazon All Hail
the champion.

Speaker 8 (59:07):
Madera Amazon's we leave you with the immortal words of
the Stood Report.

Speaker 5 (59:16):
Bill Cunningham is a Reds fan and he is about
as political an animal as there is on earth, even
though he doesn't hold a.

Speaker 1 (59:22):
Public office, no doubt, thank you.

Speaker 5 (59:25):
He also is well, when you when you got a
guy four down with four holes to go, and let
him come back and beat you in match play at
the Kenwood Club Championship, is that what happened? Yeah, Chris
Sabo four down with four to go, Sable beat him
on the twentieth hole.

Speaker 1 (59:42):
C H O k E. That's built chokes all day.
That's hard to do.

Speaker 5 (59:49):
Now, all you've got to do is have one hole
and you got the match one.

Speaker 1 (59:53):
You're talking about a big league player now at s oh,
no question.

Speaker 5 (59:56):
I mean when they do his handicap, it's not minus something,
it's plus sup.

Speaker 1 (01:00:01):
That's fine.

Speaker 5 (01:00:02):
But Bill Cunningham would tell you that his game is
second only to the passing of Ben Hogan.

Speaker 1 (01:00:09):
Second one, that's all false, It's untrue. Yeah, it's all Ai. Girls,
congratulations and in life, don't be a clown? Do you agree?
All right, let's continue with more after two o'clock is
a live report from lambeau Field on news radio seven
hundred WLW, breaking news out of lambeau Field. In fact,

(01:00:30):
walking in and around lambeau Field is Austin Elmore, representing
all that is right about sports broadcasting. Austin, Welcome again
to the Bill Cunningham Show. First of all, Austin, where
does life find you?

Speaker 10 (01:00:41):
As I speak, I am just outside of lambeau Field.
I'm looking at the giant scoreboard that says lambeau Field,
the beautiful American flags that fly high Packers fans everywhere.
It is a beautiful day. Willie in Green Bay, Wisconsin.

Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
What about your Chase? What can you tell me about him?
We got a bad report about an hour ago.

Speaker 10 (01:01:05):
Yeah, come to find out, Jamar Chase came down with
an illness. He showed up to work today, went through walkthroughs.
Zach Taylor said, why don't you go home? Why don't
you get some rest? Rest up? See if we'll get
you back here tomorrow. Obviously a weird week because the
Bengals play on a Sunday and then right back again
on a Thursday. Jamar got an off day earlier this
week as well. But there was another Bengal, Shaka Hayward,

(01:01:27):
a backup linebacker, who earlier this week missed the day
of practice due to an illness, and he was back
the next day. So hopefully just a one day thing.

Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
For Jamar Chase.

Speaker 1 (01:01:37):
So it's like a cold to flu, something like that
gill old Tama flu. Take some fluids, go home, relax
a little bit, watch some baseball playoffs, and away you go.
So you're telling me Jamar Chase, we'll play on Sunday.

Speaker 10 (01:01:49):
The word they said is hopeful. They are hopeful that
he plays on Sunday. I guess nothing is guaranteed, but yeah,
I mean, I'm sure they have plenty of stuff to
fulcome full of vitamin C, gets some sleep and hopefully
he can sleep it off.

Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
Why wasn't on your bucket list to attend the Bengals
game at lambeau Field.

Speaker 10 (01:02:09):
It was on my bucket list to attend any game
at lambeau Field. I mean, I love football more than
just about anything on planet Earth. And for the last
couple of years, you know, I've known that the Bengals
are going to be coming to lambeau So I started
saving up and I said, no matter what, I'm going
to come to Green Bay, I'm going to go to
lambeau Field. I'm going to see a game. So here
I am, and so far it's been awesome that people

(01:02:31):
are so nice beautiful here and it's literally just a
small town with a massive NFL franchise right in the
middle of it.

Speaker 3 (01:02:38):
It's cool.

Speaker 1 (01:02:39):
It kind of begins with the Indian Packing Company. The
Indian Packing Company convince a person to notate donate money
for the uniforms. In the process lent the name Packers
of the team. And that's how it started more than
one hundred years ago with Curly Lambo because of the
Indian Packing Company, and it's been at his present location
since the late nineteen fifties. Every game's been sold out

(01:03:01):
since nineteen sixties. So what's that sixty five years of
consecutive sellouts about six hundred games. No time soon is
not going to end. How much hope do you have?
Because I monitor everything simultaneously and the line continues to
be about fourteen and a half points, which is not good.
But what does the addition of Joe Flacco due to

(01:03:25):
the mentality, the psycha, the psychic of the Bengals do
the Bengal players now believe they have a chance.

Speaker 10 (01:03:32):
I would think they do. And the main reason for
that is because Jake Browning was so unbelievably bad Willie
that they had to do something like That's how bad
it was those three games, and especially that first half
against Detroit. We're talking Achille Smith levels of bad quarterback
play for the Bengals, and he was not being able
to do the easy stuff. He didn't know what to

(01:03:55):
do with the ball on an RPO, he didn't know
he couldn't get to the ball to Jamar Chase one
on one. It simple reads. He wasn't getting the ball
out of his hand and two of the place that
was supposed to go. And so the Bengals are like,
all right, we've got to do something here. They look
around the league and they decide, okay, well, Joe Flacco
can at least read a defense. He can pick up

(01:04:15):
the offense quickly, and he knows throw the ball to
Jamar Chase. Throw the ball to t Higgins. Now, the
issue is he's forty years old and he can't move
and the offensive line is terrible, which is part of
the reason why he's not in Cleveland anymore. It wasn't
starting in Cleveland anymore. So I think the basics of
the game plans for the Bengals will be, let's not
make Joe Flacco a sitting duck. Let's try to do

(01:04:36):
a similar game plan to Jake Browning and hope that
Flacco can just at least know where to go with
the football and when he does throw it, it'll be accurate.
Unlike Jake Browning.

Speaker 1 (01:04:44):
What does it do for the offensive line? Because the
problem has been the lack of a running attack and
a bad parse offensive line. Nothing about Flacco takes the
place of that. And secondly, a couple of years ago,
Jake the Snake Browning was so good he was the
offensive player of the Week once or twice. So two
years later he should be two years better. He got
two years worse. What happened to him?

Speaker 10 (01:05:06):
Yeah, it's inexplicable, Like I have no way to explain it.
It doesn't make sense. It's why the Bengals were so
comfortable with riding with Jake. Even after that first you know,
rough start, they're like, okay, we know he's got it
in them, and that just never came out. And it
looked like there was a mental block for Jake. I mean,
you could see the way he came off the sidelines.
He was bashing his heads into his helmet, he was

(01:05:27):
grabbing onto his face mask, he was screaming like there
was clearly a mental block for Jake Browning. And so
you need to go to a season betteran in Joe Flacco.
And as far as the offensive line's concerned, I don't know.
I really don't like. They're soft, they're slow, they play
with a high pad level. They're just not a good group.
They're old and you know now they're a little bit

(01:05:49):
beat up. Don't know if Dylan Fairchild, the rookie who's
been okay, is going to be able to go. And
it looks like Lucas Patrick, one of their offense their
free agent signings in the offseason, not quite going to
be ready to go. So it's probably gonna be Dalton Reisner,
who they signed right before the start of the season
at left guard in a rookie Jalen Rivers at right
guard and Ted Carrisson the center, Orlando Brown Junior at

(01:06:12):
left tackle. Those two have been really bad. So I
don't know that the quarterback change changes that much for
the offensive line.

Speaker 1 (01:06:18):
Unfortunately, one aspect to this game, the Bengals have a
much better procedure. I'm a much better a pair on
paper to have a little bit of a positive outlook.
As the special teams, for some reason, the Packers kicker
I think has been hurt. They have lousy special teams.
If it comes down to special teams, the Bengals are
in good shape.

Speaker 10 (01:06:38):
Correct Well, I would hope so. But the Bengals gave
up a bunch of kick return yards last week that
wasn't good. They had a penalty on their safety punt
that's not very good. They weren't able to recover a
perfect on side kick from Evan McPherson and Ryan Rico
kept punting the ball into the end zone. A bunch
of touchbacks that wasn't very good. Now you're right, Brandon mcmanhon,

(01:07:00):
the Packer kicker, cropped up with a quad injury. I've
been trying to peek through the gates here to see
if I can see if he's kicking or not, but
I can't tell either way. He might not be able
to go, and if so, they might have to bring
somebody in last second. But overall, you would feel like, Okay,
the Bengals might have a slight advantage there, but that
group's been consistent too.

Speaker 1 (01:07:20):
Now I look at this situation, there's no part that's
working like it's going to be a super Bowl. The
Bengals began this season as the fifth or sixth favorite
to win the Super Bowl. We're talking one of the
top five or six teams in football. Now they're at
the bottom five or six with little or no chance.
And I'm told that Joe Burrow may come back and
thanksgiving her a week or two thereafter, he's going to

(01:07:41):
be available the last five or six games of the season.
If that's the case, they're two and three. Let's assume
they lose to the Packers, make it two and four.
Let's assume they beat Pittsburgh and then Tennessee. At that point,
believe or not, there'll be four and four getting ready
for a break. Is there hope if those if that
scenario happens, yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:08:00):
I mean there's hope, absolutely, especially if you're able to
beat the Pittsburgh Steelers at home on a Thursday night,
which you should do. And we saw last night the way.
You know, the Giants, who many expected to be a
pushover team not any good this year, they rolled over
the Philadelphia Eagles at home. It's difficult to go on
the road in division short week, and that's what Pittsburgh's

(01:08:22):
gonna have to do coming to Cincinnati. So you know,
nobody expected really the Bengals to win this game against
the Packers from the beginning. So whether or not that matters,
I don't know. But if you can still take care
of the division games ahead of you, which almost all
of them are for the Bengals, two against Baltimore, two
against Pittsburgh, one more against Cleveland, they're very much in
this thing. Because although Pittsburgh has a good record, they

(01:08:45):
have a negative point differential. It's not like they're dominating teams.
They're really not all that great offensively. Rogers hasn't been
that good. So it's still all right there for the
taking in front of the Bengals. You just got to
get some sort of momentum going, and I think that's
what they're hoping. Flaco is going to bring a spark.

Speaker 1 (01:09:01):
Well, you're experts at ESPN. I'm talking about Marcus Spears
and Dan and Lofsky is talking about why acquire Flaco.
One of them said, quote, I don't know what this
move is all about. This is desperation. First thing I
thought about. Okay, let's bring in a living statue to
staying behind that lousy offensive line that get quarterback hits
and then get better. That sounds rather stupid to me.

(01:09:24):
Another expert said, well, maybe they brought him in just
to in order to sell tickets. Maybe they had some
calls for a younger player that maybe a little bit
too much. They traded a bag of footballs and they
got Joe Flacco. Why don't you tell Joe Flacco what
the experts are saying.

Speaker 10 (01:09:39):
Well, I'm sure he's well aware of what the experts
are saying. But he's also a little too busy trying
to learn an offense in seventy two hours because he's
going to start on Sunday. So you know, let's not
be let's not you know, dance around it here. It
is a desperate move, That's exactly what it is. Jake
Browning was that bad that they had to go get
a forty one year old statue. That's what happened. Like,
that's a fact. And so you know, desperate times call

(01:10:02):
for desperate measures, will you, And that's what happens when
you dip into the nursing home to find your next quarterback.

Speaker 1 (01:10:07):
I live in desperate times, Elmo. I live desperately. And
I would note that on Thanksgiving Day night you had
that circled on your schedule. It was Thanksgiving Day game
in which Joe Flacco is now going to go against
the Baltimore Ravens for a team for which he won
a Super Bowl MVP. So assuming that's the case on
Thanksgiving Day night and Baltimore appears to be maybe in

(01:10:30):
worse shape than the Bengals, that which is incredible to say,
but hopefully Thanksgiving Day night it'll be relevant, it will
be important. Well, which team I don't think it's the
Bengals that the most disappointing NFL team this year is.

Speaker 10 (01:10:46):
Yeah, I mean it's hard not to say Baltimore. I
mean that's another team that they had higher Super Bowl
odds than the Bengals did. And now Lamar Jackson's staring
down the barrel of missing another game. They invested a
ton both money and draft picks into their defense, and
these can't stop an Nosebley. That's why, you know, when
it comes to the Bengals Ravens matchups, like, if you
still have the offense, if you still have the receivers, like,

(01:11:08):
you can score some points on Baltimore. And we saw
that last year when the Bengals and Ravens played in
both those games. So I don't I don't think those
games are just automatic losses, even when you are going
there on Thanksgiving. But it's hard not to say. Baltimore,
I mean, and John Harball, I think is really starting
to feel the heat because it's been a long time
since they won with Joe Flacco fifteen years ago. So

(01:11:30):
they're gonna have to, you know, get a couple of
monkeys off their back and win in the playoffs and
go for a run if this season is to be salvaged.
And I think they'll be changes in Baltimore if it doesn't.
I mean, hell, they've already started trading guys. They traded
a pass rusher earlier this week, so it might just
be fire sale mode in Baltimore.

Speaker 1 (01:11:47):
I don't know. Well after this, the next three games
or Pittsburgh at home, which you think the Bengals might
be a slide underdog, and then the Jets at home,
and then the Bears at home, and then the bye week,
and then it's at the Steelers. So after this they're
in the softer part of their schedule. It was perceived

(01:12:07):
the Steelers would be a little bit softer than they are.
I don't believe that good. They're that good, but the
Jets and the Chicago Bears. I'm trying to be hopeful.
I'm trying to do my best, Elmo, to be hopeful.
I'm trying to be helpful, you know what I'm saying.
I'm trying to look at the positive.

Speaker 10 (01:12:21):
There's one thing you got to understand is that positivity
and negativity neither one of them have bearing on the outcome.
They have no bearing on results. So it doesn't matter
if you're positive or negative. You just do your best
to find the truth, Willy, That's what matters.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
I seek the truth and everything I do. Yes, all right, Elmo,
what's on the schedule for tonight? What will you be
doing in Green Bay? Is there anything to do on
a Friday night in Green Bay?

Speaker 10 (01:12:48):
You know what's big around here Willy on Friday nights
are fish fries. Apparently they are all over the place
in Green Bay and in the surrounding area. So this
is something I learned about Green Bay. I didn't know.
But I'm gonna go searching for some cheese curves and
ash in a fish fry.

Speaker 1 (01:13:04):
What do you think? I love that. Are there any
buildings in green Bay, Wisconsin? Anything above? Is there any downtown?

Speaker 3 (01:13:11):
Yeah?

Speaker 10 (01:13:11):
There is. It's funny when I'm staying in Appleton and
so I'm driving up the Interstate coming into Green Bay
and by far the tallest structure for miles is lambeau Field,
And you see the lights on top of lambeau Field
and that giant g and the lights basically are you know,
to alert aircraft of the height of the building because
it's the only thing that tall. So it's kind of

(01:13:34):
breathtaking to be completely honest. But yeah, I'm gonna go
explore more of the downtown area of Lambeau when I
get off the phone, and I'll report back because there's
this thing called the Packers Heritage Trail, which kind of
takes you through all the historic landmarks in Green Bay
that relate to the Packers and we go check.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
It out, check it out, let me know what happens.
We'll be listening for twenty five pm Sunday afternoon. Flack
O's got three more hours to go. And once again,
al Mo, thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show.
And I'm a fan of Tony Pike. I like Tony Pike.
You love Tony Pike. Tony Pike will live forever.

Speaker 10 (01:14:11):
Yes, indeed he will. Thank you for saying that I
miss them already. And we're all wacko for Flaco.

Speaker 1 (01:14:15):
God bless America. Thank you very much. Let's continue with
more Austin el Moore live from Green Bay. Let's continue
with my comments and more on news radio seven hundred WLW.
A couple of fake things going on. Number one, I
want to congratulate again to Madeira girls team. Many asked,
why does the Great American put on high school girls
to talk about their successes? Is because that's the reason

(01:14:38):
so many times we hear about young Americans, especially teenagers,
not doing what's right, not doing what's proper. And I've
always tried, over the years and decades to highlight the
accomplishments of those in high school because it sets the
standard of what life can be for them later on.
If they're champions in golf or football, or volleyball, or basketball,
or football or baseball, why not be champions in life

(01:15:02):
and live your life in a way that makes yourself
and your family and your God proud. So I will
always put on high school boys and girls who do
well exceed greatly. Let that be a landerd in the
future for their later on success. Also would point out
that instead of cursing the darkness, there are many men
we need men in Greater Cincinnati doing what's right. There's

(01:15:22):
a Catholic men's Eucharistic procession in downtown Cincinnati on the
third Saturday in October each year. This is the eleventh year.
Starts at the procession starting at Saint Peter in Chains
at nine am, working the way through downtown, ending up
the Old Saint Mary's about eleven am. It's a two
mile walk. It's a great walk, but number one, it's
an example of how Catholic men say, it's okay to

(01:15:46):
be Catholic, and it's okay to walk, and it's all
okay to recognize Jesus Christ. So if you want to
be involved this year, contact the Archdiocese. I know Doug
Jaeger is one of the men involved. The route is
approximately two miles, about a thoul and men participate the
last few years. And there's flyers available at your local parish.
So once again it's a week from Saturday Saturday of

(01:16:08):
next week, the eleventh year the two mile walk from
Saint Peter in Chains the Saint Mary's put together by
Doug Jagger. Information available all over the place. Get involved,
don't complain about the way things are, work hard to
make things better and the Catholic Men's eucharistic procession will
certainly be a step in the right direction. And thank

(01:16:29):
you to Doug Jagger. Let's continue with more. Segment is
up next along with Rocky Boyman back from his ESPN work.
That's home of the Reds and Bengals marching for glory
and for some the judgment Seat of God on news
Radio seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati.

Speaker 11 (01:16:44):
You know, you have to be ready for anything. That's
kind of what it was. You know, definitely didn't have
this on my list of things that were going to happen.
So but hey, that's this league, and and and I'm
a player, uh, I think most players would say the

(01:17:04):
same thing. I mean, you know, I like to play football,
and if that's in Cincinnati right now, then you know
I'm all for it.

Speaker 10 (01:17:12):
Oh hello, by, I'm.

Speaker 1 (01:17:19):
Broadcasting or does he sound fired up? He's ready to play,
run through a brick wall, ready to go in Green Bay.
There rocket an offensive line.

Speaker 8 (01:17:32):
Wait a minute, Jamar Chase questionable did not practice today
with an illness.

Speaker 1 (01:17:38):
Give me a live update on that rock. I know
what that just came out about a year ago, an
hour ago. Tama flew. He's at home.

Speaker 9 (01:17:47):
He's got everything, getting vitamin C, vitamin T, all B
and C. Get them all, have a few ladies visiting.
Whatever it takes, whatever it takes, the results driven situation.

Speaker 1 (01:18:01):
Oh, it's good to see you guys on Friday. I'm
never hearing on Friday. Georgia Southern I lit a little
bit last night. Yeah, thirty five something like that, thirty
eight three point game.

Speaker 9 (01:18:12):
Yeah yeah, Southern Miss jumped out twenty eight to seven
first half, and Georgia Southern came crawling back with fun
going on their bellies. They're still the Golden Eagles. Yes,
And do you know who a coach for Southern Miss is?
Their special teams coach Joe Bolden, Yes nephew of Tom
really played at Cole Raine, played at Michigan.

Speaker 1 (01:18:33):
Who was a linebacker at Michigan.

Speaker 9 (01:18:35):
To come back to me was that he's been a
bunch of a few play he's been in Washington State.
He was at Tulsa for two years and then he
just got hired by Southern Miss. He does special teams
and coaches at nickelbacks.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
Hell of a guy. Talked to him before the game.

Speaker 9 (01:18:47):
He's doing great and he's one of Cincinnati's finals. I
gave him a shout out in the game last night.
Him becoming a head coach somewhere and gonna happen. Col
Rain needs help bad.

Speaker 1 (01:18:56):
I don't know if they're.

Speaker 9 (01:18:57):
Paying as well as a UH Division one football purpose.

Speaker 1 (01:19:01):
Just talk to Katie Kaufman, the girls coach at Maderra
girls golf team. You know she's looking to maybe headquarter
the Ryder Cup for the men next year in Ireland
about a women taking over the Ryder Cup.

Speaker 9 (01:19:13):
Now, tell us goofy thing where they didn't get to
play for the state titles. Made this makes sense to me.
Day two it got rained out. Well, he said, that's it.

Speaker 1 (01:19:22):
It can't play tomorrow. Imply what I said. They said,
they don't want to take another course. How about miss
school now.

Speaker 3 (01:19:28):
They.

Speaker 1 (01:19:29):
Didn't want him to miss another day of school, So
that's it. Well, we have a Texas hel passo from Kenji.
The superintendent was going to say, okay, miss school and
play for the state title. They wouldn't let them. This
is they the ohs a A the grand poobas in Columbus.

Speaker 9 (01:19:46):
They stink clowns wouldn't let him play.

Speaker 1 (01:19:49):
That's ridiculous.

Speaker 9 (01:19:50):
And they haven't lost a match and now they runner up.
And see take that from those girls that have worked
so hard.

Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
All year, all year and they got a sponsor now
with ACR guny pulls and spots. Frank's Bell is going
to give them golf balls next year. How about that
they didn't lose one. They didn't lose one all year long.
They can't afford to lose golf balls. I said, I
got you a golf ball sponsor. He said that we
didn't lose a ball because we're afraid deserves the ball,
because they're so good at golf. Again, I played with ball.

(01:20:19):
I often say on number one t this is the
third round with this ball. I don't know if you
guys deserve a brand new ball. I just keep playing
with the same ball. The balls looser. You know when
the ball gets loose, got more springall spring springy, springy. Yes,
instead of a hard ball. I like a loose ball,
not a hard ball. Give me a loose ball, not
a hardball. Spring it so. I hit the ball three

(01:20:40):
or four rounds.

Speaker 9 (01:20:41):
By the fifth or sixth round, that's a dirty ball softball.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
I like softballs rather than hardballs. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 9 (01:20:49):
Amen, sound like Chris mass Amen, say give me some
sports and make it fast. Will leave the stoot Reporters
of service of your local Tame Star Heating and air
Conditioning dealers, Tame Star quality.

Speaker 1 (01:20:59):
You could feel it.

Speaker 8 (01:21:00):
Beautiful Southeastern Indiana called Joe Eckstein at x Teinn Heating
and Cooling.

Speaker 1 (01:21:04):
An eight one, two nine, three to two.

Speaker 8 (01:21:06):
Twenty twenty six starts Bengals Update brought to you my
good Spirits and Party Town thirteen convenient locations in Northern Kentucky.
Bengals and the Packers lambeau Field on Sunday. Bengals are
two and three Green Bay two to one and one.
Stupid for a tie. I like Bengals Best Bengals coverage

(01:21:27):
at noon, RNL Carriers Inside and Arnold Carriers. Pregame sports
talk show presented by Cincinnati Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers came
off at four to twenty five. Get them All in
Tri State Chevy Dealers. Postgame show follows presented by RNL
Carriers Live from Buffalo, Wings and Rings and fair Field.

Speaker 1 (01:21:46):
Get them All in Sake. You ever play a lambeau Field?

Speaker 10 (01:21:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:21:51):
Is it different? Different than playing maybe a pay corps.

Speaker 9 (01:21:54):
It's cool, absolutely, because there's a lot of a lot
of history there.

Speaker 1 (01:21:58):
You know, I don't know what Green Bay's like now,
but and I played there.

Speaker 9 (01:22:01):
I remember driving We had to stay like an hour
away because it wasn't hotels or Hotel six is all
the drive through this town that was like trapped in
out nineteen eighty three, and then boom, there's a stadium
right there. You have no buildings in the center of
the entire neighborhood. Yeah, some place I'm saying, like, you
drive through like literally a subdivision.

Speaker 1 (01:22:18):
What the hell are we? And then there's a field.
It's like Wrigley Field. You go in the middle of
o or suddenly regular field right, ride the kids bikes
into the game. I didn't do trading came, we didn't
do that? No, please continue segment.

Speaker 8 (01:22:29):
Let's see will thee high school football all across the
tri State Tonight? High School Football Tonight's show listen up
begins at six ESPN fifteen thirty, Fox Sports thirteen sixty.
That leads into the contest a GCL Action Bombers the Lancers.

Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
Battle of North Bend Road tonight.

Speaker 3 (01:22:47):
Baby.

Speaker 1 (01:22:48):
If Bombers lose that, when they're really done, d u
n n done. Sal's got a good team. It'll be
a hard battle. No fan of l I know you
got your purple underwear on over there working.

Speaker 8 (01:22:58):
Well Wait a minute, you picked Moler for to win
tonight against Cleveland Saint.

Speaker 1 (01:23:02):
I so how do you do both?

Speaker 9 (01:23:04):
I can't say Moller had Highlands. No, make that Old
Highlands as Elder. That's what Cleveland Saint is as Moeller.
I'll take Elder over Highlands. If you got the guts,
rock for a hot fut Sunday. Where do they play
the game. It's like, man, where's the game? I think
it's a tailor, it's Mueller. Wait a minute, you're talking
about Elder and oh, it's it's that elder. I'll take

(01:23:24):
to go again taking the pan should go. Yeah, you're
a big time there, go to go to the game.
I'm now Olga might be there now, one of the faithful.
I got Elder. I had the hundred anniversary. The sign
was up there, so we had to restart roku.

Speaker 1 (01:23:39):
The damn thing didn't work for three days and Jack
Crumley came in, took everything off the top of my TV,
replugged it, plugged it back in Roku. Now everything's working.
What happened to my Elder sign? It's on the floor
right there. I gotta get it up there. Gotta get
it up there.

Speaker 9 (01:23:53):
Where's my skepture of me and Bob Trumpy and Antony Munt's.

Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
I think Lamb took that home. Lance took it home.
He's going to sell it on the back college football
tomore you see for the bear Cats?

Speaker 10 (01:24:05):
Do you like that?

Speaker 1 (01:24:06):
I'm taking eleven am Cat only if Tony Pike does.
He is doing the game to Miami, Miami and Akron
I stand with Tony Pike? What about you? I do
please continue Ohio State the Illinois. But do you like that?
Like ill play they play the game. Man at Illinois.

(01:24:26):
Illinois might be good Indiana and Oregon. What about the
Ducks taking the Ducks? You like the Ducks, Yes, I'll
make you a bet. Then I'll take the Hoosiers and
I'll give you the ducks. Quack quack, straight up. I
ain't trying points. I need the points. No, you're not
getting any points. I don't need points.

Speaker 9 (01:24:43):
Go back baseball. The Dodgers got by the Phillies last night.
It was an error right though, reliever or Ryan kirker Ring.
We got that sheriff in there. It's it's both in
the or Drew. We got that in both English and Japanese.
Our listeners play Japanese.

Speaker 8 (01:25:01):
Obviously, two outs, bases loaded, one right back to the box,
bocks the guy looks he could have had the guy
out at first base by a mile, throws it to
home wildly.

Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
The Dodgers score walk by. It was a squeechy though.
It's one of those. But the Cubs remain alive. They're alive.
Game five, gotta find it.

Speaker 10 (01:25:25):
Oh my goodness, it throws it away.

Speaker 1 (01:25:28):
The Dodgers have won basis juice Dodgers one to one.
Dodgers I don't like the Dodgers, and I don't like
the Phillies.

Speaker 8 (01:25:37):
And this winner go home tonight in the American League
Division Series with Game five, Game five here Seattle host Detroit.
The winner there gets the Blue Jays. And David Bell,
And David.

Speaker 1 (01:25:49):
Bell is an executive with the team that Toronto putting together.
Why did you do it? Here?

Speaker 8 (01:25:54):
One might ask? One might ask the question, why to
one hundred and sixty nine days until opening day?

Speaker 1 (01:26:01):
You like the big Dumper?

Speaker 9 (01:26:02):
And see did you have any inclining that? Uh, the
Mariners have a catcher that hit sixty home runs this year?

Speaker 1 (01:26:08):
Cal Raw Yeah, I kind of knew about the Big Dumper.
That's his nickname. He's the dumping. That's amazing. What why
would that one under the radar until at the end
That's never happened before.

Speaker 9 (01:26:18):
No, the catcher is not easy to hit runs as
a catcher. Amen, we just set a record.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
Yeah, but what a Bench is all time was forty
four forty five home runs the most.

Speaker 9 (01:26:31):
You're saying he's better than Johnny Bench. That what you're
saying this year he was Will he be in the
Hall of Fame? Unanimously?

Speaker 1 (01:26:38):
Almost no. Another couple of seasons like this together? Will
we sixty home runs? Why can't he play for the Reds?
Take anything else? The green Salad of salvation, rock about.

Speaker 9 (01:26:49):
Swar he's crying, crying in the locker. He's crying. Goes
to how they lost facing free agent. A ground ball
to the picture here, say get.

Speaker 1 (01:26:59):
Him here, Okay, I'll call him ground ball to the pitcher.
He's looking bat knocked right back to five fifty feet.
He's got to throw two outs. You gotta throw the first.
We had aheaded guy by him on or and they
catch his point in the first. The easy ones to
throw first. This way he kind of gets stuff.

Speaker 8 (01:27:19):
You gotta score two runs up above and the and
the to the left of ru Multo goes to the backstop.

Speaker 1 (01:27:25):
They score. That's it. You got that season over, season
over for a rookie Dodgers would have scored two runs
on that play. The guy on second has already been
around third, and the balls against the back stop. How's
that possible? Unbelievable? M what's on the big show today?
You and Eddie been working on guests all day? I'm sure, yes,

(01:27:45):
I just kept back in town. But our normal excitay show.

Speaker 9 (01:27:49):
Uh, Richard Skinner right out of the gay at three,
we're gonna talk about Joe Flacco in your Cincinnati excited,
doesn't he if John Matteizie, he's just ready to just
come storming out of gate.

Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
You heard the press conference and what what uniform moment?
Who am I playing for? By the way, what was
the calls? This is going to give me? Give me
one offensive call. Let's say you're you're playing for the Bengals.
Spire to white banana, Spire, spiral, spider.

Speaker 9 (01:28:13):
To spider two, white banana segment, forty three, host juke,
forty three. You got basic plays, you got forty three
host juke.

Speaker 1 (01:28:21):
Let's go. When I was with Gordon Beverno, we had
twenty five crossbuck and forty six Crossbuck plus the naked
reverse Gordon Bettererino. How about those like those calls?

Speaker 3 (01:28:32):
I do?

Speaker 1 (01:28:33):
I knew, Yeah, I know those old old calls. Give
me another one, Give me another offensive call, Give me
a defensive.

Speaker 9 (01:28:38):
I can give you all kind of the defensive calls,
but I know, give me a defensive call.

Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
You're a linebacker, You're playing for the Colts, and all
of a sudden someone says to you, give me the
call rock.

Speaker 9 (01:28:47):
We played over Denver a lot, which was cover two
and the reason it was covered two at the time
Denver had won two Super Bowls. That signified cover two
over Denver over Denver? Did you ever go over Denver?

Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
No? Over Silver was cover three over over three? Yeah,
got that segment.

Speaker 9 (01:29:03):
Yeah about a four man front with a stunt, four
man front with a stunt?

Speaker 1 (01:29:08):
What about that break on three? Heike?

Speaker 10 (01:29:11):
Heike?

Speaker 1 (01:29:12):
What about Omaha to Omaha?

Speaker 9 (01:29:16):
I still remember the defensive call when I was at
another day and we had Michigan State beat at their place.
All you had to do is hold them okay, and
Bob David calls Obi week Mouse, which was a blitz
and they throw a steam route Tony Driver or safety
is right there, slips gone.

Speaker 1 (01:29:36):
So much for the blitz. We shouldn't have blitzed right there.
Shouldn't let them beat you. Don't beat yourself. Let them
beat you. You can't get beat, but don't beat yourself.
Would you agree? Tony Dungee's motto do the little things
also more important? No Belichick. The rumors out of Chapel
Hill and Marty Brenahan is that there's a divorce happening,

(01:29:57):
not between Judson Hut not between the Belichick. I'm still
going great. Assume they're planning family together. But between the
tar Heels and Belichick, there's a rumor they're talking about
a divorce.

Speaker 9 (01:30:10):
And I guess so they owe him twenty million, but
I guess if he pays a million, he can get
out of the contract. They want him to pay a million.
But he's got to find a soft landing. You gotta
find a gig the Bengals.

Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
What about zach Shula Belichick here, hasn't he really bring
them on? Is like an analyst or something?

Speaker 9 (01:30:29):
I mean, you would just fall over debt because you
get to talk about Jordan hut having the box next
to Jake Brownie's hot wife.

Speaker 1 (01:30:38):
But two in the box or three in the box?
Like three? I like three anyway? But with Belichick, is
he ruined the brand and the Belichick you can make
a case. I mean, people have short memories, right, And
you know you're the one that said, lots of people
know the Bowl games I might win, might have two wins,

(01:31:00):
four more, four more.

Speaker 9 (01:31:01):
There's four wins on that schedule, except there three losses
are by thirty four points, twenty five points and twenty
eight points.

Speaker 1 (01:31:08):
Oh, there's also a rumor.

Speaker 9 (01:31:09):
I guess you know, Drake May, who's now with the Patriots,
played at North Carolina. I guess North Carolina's putting out
all cons of like highlights celebrating him.

Speaker 1 (01:31:19):
Check the New England a defensive coordinator.

Speaker 8 (01:31:22):
Oh you can't you that he doesn't want anything to
do like so much, right.

Speaker 9 (01:31:26):
Yeah, he's so they're putting out and he's like, he's like,
you know, banned them from putting out pro UNC highlight
tweets and stuff because of the hell with the Patriots
because he plays for the Patriots.

Speaker 1 (01:31:38):
So there's a divorce between Bob Kraft the massuse.

Speaker 9 (01:31:42):
I just can I always think who's the president Cunningham
or the athletic directors.

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
His last name in at Cunningham. Yeah, and your cousin,
right's brother John.

Speaker 9 (01:31:49):
He said to imagine, like in like February of last year,
He's like, I did it.

Speaker 1 (01:31:54):
I did it.

Speaker 9 (01:31:55):
I just just orchestrated the total turnaround of UNC football
for bringing it in the greatest people recognize as the
greatest coach of all time.

Speaker 1 (01:32:04):
This guy does nothing but eat, sleephen breathe football for
fifty straight years. Defense he's doing an NFL system. This
is gonna be unbelievable. He could never could have guessed
that would have worked out like this, and it.

Speaker 9 (01:32:15):
Just shows the show. Nothing is a sure thing. Nothing nothing,
nothing rock. Thank you, going to have you back on
a Friday segment. Thanks for making a fool of yourself
again anytime. Please get me out of the stud's report.

Speaker 8 (01:32:25):
WILLI and honor of everyone have it a happy weekend,
Bring home a winner, Go Bengals, We and Bearcats. We
leave you with the immortal words of the stood report.

Speaker 3 (01:32:39):
See high. We patrol again next week. Until then, remember
it isn't what's your drive, but how you drive it counts.
This is Roderick Crawford saying, see you next week.

Speaker 1 (01:32:48):
And the Madeira girls drive very well in the golf team.
They should have won the state title, but the association
would not let them win. On news Radio seven hundreds
WU
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