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October 30, 2025 • 96 mins
With only a few days remaining until the election, mayoral candidate Cory Bowman give Willie and update on his campaign. Also Captain Russ Neville comes on to discuss the battle between the city administration and his sister police chief Teresa Theetge. Finally Marc Moreno explains the new direction of energy policy across the globe.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bill cunning in the Great America. Welcome this Thursday afternoon.
In the tri State. There's raining Thursday Afternion should stop
raining at about three four five o'clock according to Jennifer
ketch Mark. And then Tomorrow is gonna be fine, Halloween's
gonna be great, and Saturday looks gonna be chilly but sunny.
But until then we have big doings in River City.
Next Tuesday's an opportunity for the citizens of the City

(00:28):
of Cincinnati to say, we can't take it anymore, we
have to do better, we don't have to live like this.
And the man who's gonna lead that banner will be
Corey Bowman, the man who would be mayor of the
City of Cincinnati later on. We have entrees out to
a to have pureval and the discussions are being held
at the highest level, headquartered by Tony Bender and others.

(00:50):
Will try to get him on the radio, but not
or to give an interview, but nonetheless, Corey Bowman, welcome
again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all,
do you since the last few days something has metastasized
and the heart and soul of Cincinnatians that we can't
take it anymore. We have to try something different. Was
yesterday's session with the Family of Fiji. Part of that.

(01:12):
Give me a full report on you since and the
battles of Cincinnati like a Pryce sal chili in Avondale
in Hyde Park is something different.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Yeah, I believe that that's what's happening. Is that ultimately,
first and foremost, thank you so much for having me on, Bill,
But you know what's happened in our city over the
last four years. Really everything has culminated to now you're
getting it sent from people from both sides of the
aisle that they're fed up of what's going on, and
we have to see change in leadership. And this isn't
about a one party rule after November fourth. This is

(01:44):
about differences of opinion, differences of qualifications to come together
a city hall and work for the betterment of the city,
not for the betterment of their own political aspirations or
for using Cincinnati as a stepping stool to get to higher.

Speaker 1 (01:59):
Off As far as Chief of Police Teresa Thiegi later on,
we've scheduled today Captain Russ Neville to come on, but
talk about his sister. The Noville families held the office
in the police department for some seven or eighty years.
She began at the bottom of the list, she became
as a lowly patrolman. Over thirty six years, she's worked
away to the top, and then she had the Flora

(02:21):
taken away from her. As she was leaving town to
go to a Chief of Police conference in Denver. Things
metastasized here, what would you have done differently than the
mayor when it comes to Chief of Police Terry Thiji?

Speaker 2 (02:35):
Well, I think you have to look at what's been
done over the last four years. You know, whenever Chief
Fiji's in office, and whenever she's in the position that
she's in, with her experience and her qualifications, you think
that she has the knowledge to know how to fight
crime in our city, to be able to manage the
police department. For what we felt from all this time
is that this is trickled down in competence from city Hall,

(02:57):
from the mayor's office, in the city manager's office, and
how she was treated in the course of all of
this just shows that this is nothing more than a
political stunt. Because we're seeing now the documents of the
city manager's emails or texts being sent to the police chief.
That's not how you treat the chief of police when
it comes to the Cincinnati Police Department. If you allow

(03:17):
these officers to do their job, they have the experience,
they have the knowledge, and they have the passion to
be able to keep our streets safe. And those hands
have been tied from the Mayor's office and from the
city manager's office over the course this whole time. Everybody
wants us to call for the resignation of certain individuals.
I tell people, the only person I'm calling to be

(03:37):
fired is aft that have purvol on November fourth?

Speaker 1 (03:41):
Do you believe that the mayor is manipulating as the
great puppeteer the behavior of his city manager share Along
or is share Along doing this without the Mayor's involvement.
I cannot believe that it's possible that the two officers
there in City Hall are next to each other, that
somehow we have tab pirival. Has no idea what Sharyl

(04:03):
Long is doing. It's a personnel matter. I didn't do it.
It was her decision sharel Long and not mine. Do
you buy that? No? I don't.

Speaker 2 (04:11):
I believe that both offices know exactly what they're doing.
I believe the mayor's office knows exactly what the city
manager's office is doing, and vice versa. I believe that
this is a coordinate effort. We've even seen it from
the mayor's TikTok and the mayor's social media accounts that
you know, he's the front man and then she's the
band director, and they all work together. And so this

(04:32):
is what happens in our city, is that if you
have these people working together not for the best interests
of the city, but for the interests of their own
personal agendas, you're going to see a city suffer. And
that's why it needs to change. On November fourth, you.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Know, I hear the sirens in the background this Thursday afternoon.
You had said, about a week or two ago, shots
were fired that hits your coffee shop or hits your church.
It's a regular event to hear sirens. There's thousands of
shots fired every day, and the in the East and
the West End and the city of Cincinnati. It's terrible. Well,
what was the result of the shots the bullet's hitting

(05:06):
your hitting your church.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
Well it was reported as property damage, you know, But
for us, this is like what you said, this is
a regular thing over the last three over the last summer,
we've had three instances of shooting past our building. And
so this is being done really from just a culmination
of departments not working together. And it's all, like I said,
trickle down incompetence from the Mayor's office down that they're

(05:32):
just falling directives from the visionary of Cincinnati right now,
and that needs to change. And it's not just in
where I'm in in the West End. It's not just
in certain areas where you would expect crime. This is
all throughout the city. We're getting reports in Hyde Park
of cars getting broken into, a robberies happening where you
wouldn't expect it. Even right now hearing the sirens going past,

(05:55):
you know, buddh and know right here in the in
Pryce Hill, Chili. This is something that's a regular occurrence
here in our city and we've got to change it
from the top down.

Speaker 1 (06:04):
You know, Corey Bowman, you quickly said something property damage.
I'm told by many in the police that when shots
are fired and hitting buildings, hitting plate glass windows, hitting cars,
it is as marked up, not as attempt at flowing,
as assault or attempt at murder. It's marked up by
the police department as property damage as a minor misdemeanor.

(06:26):
Isn't that ridiculous, because that's why the crime stats are
so different. The police are told directly and indirectly not
to mark up vicious attempts to kill someone as anything
other than property damage.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
You know what I'm saying, Well, you got to see
it as well that the officers are trying to do
the best they can, you know, because they get into
the job because they want to protect and serve. They
want to be able to do their jobs properly. And
what's happening right now is a culmination of bad leadership
from the top when it comes to city Hall. But
also we're seeing major societal ships. You know, we're seeing

(07:00):
I'm on the rise in a lot of these areas,
and we've got to have proper de estalation tactics, and
we've got to bridge the gap between the officers and
the communities they serve. You know, I grew up with
you know, movies to where after a high school football game,
everybody would meet in a diner after the game, and
you'd see the share local share for the officers, all

(07:20):
in the involved in the community. And we need to
bring that back. We need to bring back the their
programs and other areas of the police department to show
that these officers want to protect and serve their communities.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
You know, Corey Bowman I said something that is happening.
Either the polling indicates have to have pure of all
and many Democrats are going to lose, or so do
you have any pulling? Is your campaign doing pulling in
the field or is to have peeravoll to your knowledge,
doing pulling that indicates he's in trouble.

Speaker 2 (07:50):
Well, I think based on a lot of the responses
you're seeing that we're making an impact. We're making event
in this. You know, for a campaign that started out
in February that everybody said that there's no shot, they're
reacting in a way to where it doesn't seem like
there's no shot of us winning, and so that's encouraging.
We've looked at the early voting. You know, unfortunately with
the smaller campaign like this excuse with a smaller race

(08:14):
like this, a lot of times polls aren't going to
be paid for. But what you can look at as
the early voting and the early voting results are all
trending upwards. For us and trending down for the other side,
and so I think people are starting to sense that.
I will say this that we have to see everybody
show up on November fourth, that camp. We have to
get people out to vote. And this is including where

(08:36):
I'm at right now on the west side. The west
side has to show up, the east side has to
show up, Hyde Park, Oakley, every area has to show
up to be able to say, hey, enough is enough,
We're ready for different leadership in our city.

Speaker 1 (08:48):
You know, Corey Bowman, my producer Tony Pender tells me
that people are going to vote necessarily for you, They're
going to vote against AF to have Pura ball. Can
you understand that.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
I can, because you're seeing that. You know, for me,
I know that a lot of people are saying, hey,
he doesn't have a track record because he's not in politics.
But one thing we do have is a track record
of who's currently in office, and who's currently in office
right now. Over the last four years, we've seen our
city rise in crime, we've seen decayed in this infrastructure,
and we've seen the budget being funneled into the friends

(09:23):
and partners of after that pur bal and that needs
to stop. And so what I'm telling people is that, yeah,
in a lot of ways, your vote is taking a
chance on me. But we've had a front row seat
to these policies. We're surrounded by the right people, the
right knowledge, and we're going to know how to be
able to take this city back when it comes to crime,
when it comes to infrastructure, and when it comes to

(09:45):
the budget being spent properly.

Speaker 1 (09:46):
You know, I had a recent conversation with the Governor,
Mike DeWine about a collateral matter, but I also pointed out,
how's that collaborative agreement working between the State of Ohio
and the City of Cincinnati. And I can't paraphrase or
disclose exactly what he said, but he said, I'm looking
forward to a little more cooperation. And I read that
to mean not much is going on, but the governor

(10:09):
is looking forward to more cooperation. He's a politician in Columbus.
Is there a union between the State of Ohio with
liquor control and also the highway patrol and also the
eyes in the sky, etc. Is there a lot of
coordination between the State of Ohio and the City of
Cincinnati as we speak, or as the governor said, I'm

(10:30):
looking forward to more cooperation. Which is it.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Well, I'll tell you this. We've spoken with people in
the Governor's office when it comes to public safety and
the director of the Public Safety in the Governor's office,
because we're saying, hey, what's really going on? Because he's
excepting two days a month in November, there's only four
days scheduled to coordinate with osp And this is what
we get told is that when they go into cities
like Cleveland or Columbus or Akron and they're able to

(10:57):
have let's say, even one night very successful results of
seventeen to eighteen, sometimes even thirty arrests and they're getting
criminals off the streets. This is what they say, is
that when they come to Cincinnati, they've got to jump
through so many hoops. Yes, a lot of times the
officers don't feel like they can do their job. And
then finally they say that they only have like maybe

(11:19):
two or three arrests because of the coordination, you know,
and that needs to stop right now. Whenever we're accepting
help from the Governor's office, people shouldn't have to go
through hoops to be able to make sure. I mean,
there's accreditation and excellence levels at the Ohio state level
that all osp is there. That includes the transparency and
the accountability that a lot of times is involved in

(11:41):
the collaborative agreement. So we need to accept the help
and not make everybody that comes in jump through hoops
to be able to work with Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
If you win the Mayor's office next Tuesday, will you
keep Teresa Thiji as the chief of Police?

Speaker 2 (11:56):
Well, this is what I'm telling is that how Chief
CGI has been treated has been just incredibly incompetent from
the top down. This is a woman that has the experience,
and I don't believe that the results that we're seeing
on the street is a direct result of her experience
or her leadership. I believe that in the same way
that many of our officers hands are tied, I believe

(12:17):
that even the chief officer, the chief's hands were tied
in a lot of different areas. And so we haven't
even begun to see the fullness of her leadership capabilities.
And so when you see the signs to say I
stand with Chief Figi, that is I mean our campaign
in my mindset is I stand with Chief Fiji as well.
Because this is a battle from the top down. This

(12:39):
is what we're seeing from the mayor's office and the
city manager's office. That's where the change needs to happen.
And then from that point on we're going to be
able to make the proper decisions to make sure our
streets are clean and safe.

Speaker 1 (12:50):
Was that a yes or a no? On keeping Beiji?
Yes or a no?

Speaker 2 (12:56):
Like I said, whenever we get in, you're having the
litigation happening, and now you're having all these detailed I
stand with the Chief Fiji right now when it comes
to what's been going on right now with her litigation.
These are conversations we'd have to have when we get
an office to see what she would like to implement
on our city streets if she wants to come back,

(13:16):
and if that's the case, we'll address.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
It from there. What about share along the city manager?
Would you fire her?

Speaker 2 (13:23):
Well, here's the thing, it's not about just firing. You've
got to work with the city council. This isn't a dictatorship.
A lot of people are attending these no kings protests,
but when it comes to our city charter and when
it comes to our city government, you're not a dictator.
So whoever the new council is that comes in, We're
going to work together to make sure that we put
the right people in place for the city manager's office

(13:46):
and for all the other committees and all the other
boards that have to be appointed.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Do you support the collaborative.

Speaker 2 (13:55):
I support the transparency and the accountability of the collaborative agreement.
But I believe believe that when it comes to our
officers and huns from city Hall, the city Hall has
not allowed the officers to do their job.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
And the mayor says the same thing he said after Thiji,
I used the term fired. It's a slow roll of firing.
If she serves at the pleasure of the city manager,
she can be fired for a good reason, a bad reason,
or no reason according to the charter, and so she
doesn't have like a long term, guaranteed Bonus Leyton contract.
She serves as the pleasure of the city manager. But

(14:28):
to say okay, we're going in a different direction, We're
have to let you go. That's the nature of the business.
Like being the manager of the Reds, you got to go.
On the other hand, when he set up the system
of Frost Brown Todd that we're going to spend forty
or fifty thousand dollars to give me a reason why
I fired Fiji. That makes no sense. The city manager

(14:49):
has the power and instead of standing up and saying
I don't like the direction of the city, we have
to let you go, they want to smear Thiji with
this legal investigation to come up with information that the
the mayor says, we'll justify what I did. That's the
definition of a scapegoat. Well, once again, Corey Bowman, this
is maybe the last time we're together before the election.
Where will the victory party beat Tuesday night? Tony Bender

(15:11):
wants to know.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
We're finalized details right now, but I believe that we'll
be having at our church in the West det Well.

Speaker 1 (15:19):
Pray to God that the voters of Cincinnati know what's
going on. You don't have to live like this, and
the polling must indicate bad things for alf to have
peer Ofal and the other Democrats. One other disgusting thing
happened at the first meeting after Thiji was put on
quote administrative leave, Not one Democrat on city council voiced
any opposition to what the mayor and the city manager

(15:40):
has done. They sat there, blind, dumb, and befuddled fools,
without answering, Without you're taking the mayor to task whatsoever,
oldest city manager. No diversity of thought, no diversity of opinion,
and that's got to change. But Corey Bowman, good luck
to you. Upon your shoulders rest the hopes and dreams
of uns spoken millions of people that want to see

(16:02):
the city of Cincinnati take a new course. It's up
to you to bring this one home. Corey Bowman, thank
you very much.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
Bill, Thank you so much to you and your listeners
for having it. Everybody get out to vote November fourth.

Speaker 1 (16:13):
God bless America. Let's continue with more if the line
becomes available five one, three, seven, four nine, seven thousand.
My comments are next plus later on. We've scheduled the
brother of Teresa Teji to be here in person. Captain
Russ Neville will be here to talk about what happened
to city council yesterday when he took the mayor to
task and nothing happened. The mayor had a straight face,

(16:34):
he looked like a zombie and didn't respond at all.
We have a zombie mayor who's looking to escape. Go Thiji.
Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW at the music
Dave Keatson hit the music Big Things going on in
River City, fifty to fifty chants of Joe Flacco playing
on Sunday, which means he isn't, So it'll be up

(16:56):
to Jake to Snake Browning. Hopefully when I'm with you
on Monday, you and I again can celebrate an FC
victory over Columbus and of Bengals Bengals victory over the Bears,
and then the Bengals get a week off. We'll see
what happens down the road. Until then, the big news,
of course, is the election. I want to thank Corey
Bowman coming on I think probably for the last time
before the election. You know, we get the government we deserve,

(17:19):
and at times that concerns me greatly. When I listened
this morning to Sloaney and Sherry Poland at the Board
of Elections, it appears that all the issues that have
transpired the last several months have not moved yet. The
electorate in the City of Cincinnati to vote for change,
vote for an improvement, vote for something different, whether it's

(17:39):
the echo Chamber also known as City Council, or the
foolish efeckless mayor mayor. We have and have to have puival.
It's not a good situation with the laughing stock of
the nation, and we all hope for improvement. We want
things to be better. Of course, we don't want things
to be worse. But the history of human activity is

(18:00):
that we will suffer in silence until we reach a
breaking point. Then enough is enough. We must in a
sense rebel at the voting box. And if the early returns,
which are the absentee ballots in person and by mail,
are no different than twenty twenty one, we might be
in trouble. On the other hand, you have what five

(18:20):
days to change the outlook of the city and take
a new and different direction. After one o'clock today, we've
scheduled Captain Russ Neville to be here in the studio,
which is quite rare. In the studio talk about his sister,
his sister being Teresa Fiji, and what's happening with that situation.
And I'm sure he's going to vociferously defend his sister

(18:43):
as I would, but nonetheless I want to know the
facts of what things are like in the department five
years ago, ten years ago. And Captain and Neville has
been at it now for about I think thirty some
years himself. He's been retired for a bit, but he's
concerned about the direction of the city as hibited by
the police department, which used to be considered the best
urban police department in America. In fact, the chief of

(19:06):
police was on the cover of Life magazine. Believe it
or not. That guy's name is Stanley Schrotel. So we
had situations in the city that were completely under control.
But when the cancer of liberalism and progressivism of Marxism
has infected itself into the city, or racial politics mean
everything and confidence means nothing, we're in a difficult position.

(19:27):
I wouldn't note also that headline in the Washington Times
police slam democratically controlled cities for the billions spent on
illegal aliens as opposed to law enforcement. The National Police
Association is speaking out about the problem. Hundreds of billions

(19:49):
over the past five years have been spent in blue
cities shoveling money to illegal aliens. The National Police Association
says that every major city controlled by the Democratic Party
has fallen on tough times when it comes to paying
and incentivizing police because the money's gone. A police group
says that law enforcement and democratically run cities like Cincinnati

(20:10):
and states across the country are tired of seeing local
politicians have to have pure ofval supporting illegal immigrants rather
than attempting to address a key issue to dealing with,
such as understaffed and underfrond of police. These cities are
spending billions of dollars supporting aliens who shouldn't be here
in the first place, and it's costing the taxpayers in
these cities for no acceptable reason, a massive lawlessness that

(20:35):
here before had not existed. They should be repatriot and
sent back home. And this feeds into the SNAP debate.
Now I raised my hand in the back of the room.
I got a question I shared with you yesterday the
percentage of legal aliens receiving SNAP benefits supplemental nutritional assistance
programs loaded on their EBT cards. And it was done

(20:56):
because at the southern border, when you came here illegally,
ten to fifteen million illegal showed up. You were given
a menu of government benefits at your expense for them
to use them being illegal aliens, something the range of
fifty two cents of every dollar spent on food stamps
are given to the homes of individuals who should not

(21:17):
be here. They are illegal, or they're part of the
one million who have overstayed their visas continued to live
in this country illegally, or they claim special refugee status,
with the next hearing in their case to be the
year twenty thirty two, so as a consequence, they get
Section eight vouchers. Many apply and receive Social Security income disability.

(21:40):
Many also are getting food stamps. About half of those
on food stamps should not be on food stamps. They
are illegal. They should be gone, and that would cause
rench to come down. It would also mean less government,
less bureaucracy. The States administer the programs, but the FEDS
pay for it, and the cost is skyrocketed in the

(22:00):
past five years. The cost of food stamps in twenty
nineteen twenty twenty was fifty two billion dollars a year,
which seems like a lot. The cost today well north
of one hundred and ten billion. Do you think hunger
in America has gotten worse the past four or five years,
and doubly know what happened is that the menu of

(22:22):
government benefits went to those who are here illegally without
reference to citizenship, and they're handing out the money like
drunken sailors on shore leave, which isn't fair to the
drunken sailors. And some states are much more liberal when
it comes to this than others. And now the FEDS
want to crack down on illegal use of food stamps,
which are sold in the open market for fifty cents

(22:43):
on the dollar. Largest problem with those receiving food stamps
is obesity. It's not hunger because the government administers it.
When the government administers the program, the cost will skyrocket,
waste fraud in the abuse will proliferate, and those in
true need will get less. I want every American who

(23:05):
needs housing or who needs food stamps and need food
nutrition to get it. If you're disabled, if you're poor,
if you're elderly, if you're a kid, and you don't
know how the world works, you can't order yourself in
such a way as to pay your own bills. And
the cost is fifty billion dollars and a seven trillion
dollar budget. That's less than one percent, by the way,

(23:27):
for those who did not go to Deer Park High School.
So be it, but not at the expense of feeding
the world, which is exactly what we've been doing, and
the Trump administration needs some time to get out of
the system. Those who who are here, shall I say, illegally,
they need some help to get that done. So on

(23:48):
one hand, in the back of the room, I will say, look,
are you sure, are you positive that there's not a
lot of waste, fraud and abuse. The answer is no.
We're told ten to twenty percent is waste, fraud and abuse.
And I have the listing here percentage of US households
by ethnicity receiving SNAP benefits. Afghan is forty five percent,

(24:10):
Somali is forty two percent, Iraqi is thirty four percent,
Puerto Rican is thirty seven percent, Cuban is twenty seven percent,
Arab is twenty five percent, Cambodian is twenty four percent.
The list goes down fifteen or twenty more categories. The
great bulk are here illegally, and there's no reference.

Speaker 3 (24:29):
When you sign up for food stamps whether you're here
legally or illegally.

Speaker 1 (24:32):
You simply say I have a need. Under Joe Biden,
let everybody in the program. And once you start a
government program at someone else's expense, it is damn near
impossible to pick that plan up by the roots to
dislatch it from the soil. It is damn near impossible
to give government benefits and then a year or two
later stop them goes. There's a constituency build up around

(24:55):
those benefits that will fight like warrior poets to keep it.
Do I want hungary America is to be fed? Absolutely?
Do I want hungry Somali's out of the country. Absolutely,
So thank god we have a president that is doing both.
And I'm told by a certain US Senator that there's
a big pow wows and dinner tonight, which is Thursday

(25:20):
night and Friday before November, the one which, by the way, Saturday,
just trike a deal on at least the food stamps
at a minimum. Because there's a concern exhibited by the
Columbus Dispatch headline, downtown Dollar General store boards up citing
looting fears if it's not benefits end. And I've seen

(25:42):
online thousands of those getting snapped benefits say they're going
to loot grocery stores. How about this one? The Dollar
General store in downtown Columbus has boarded up its windows.
It says, says up yesterday, as the store manager says,
corporate parent has told Dollar General stores in America to
prepare for looting. It it's not benefits seized due to

(26:03):
the government shutdown. Benefits are scheduled to end November first
for roughly one hundred and eighty thousand Franklin County residents,
including I think in Hamley County. I think I saw
Denise Tree.

Speaker 3 (26:15):
I'll say there's about one hundred thousand Hamley County residents
getting food stamps.

Speaker 1 (26:20):
So they're going to riot. According to this news story,
The store is located at one sixty sixth South High Street,
remains open despite the plywood boards covering its windows. I'm
looking at the picture. The boards went up over the weekend.
The store manager, his name is Bear Foltz, said he
and his employees received notice from Dollar General over the
weekend that the company would be sent to the store

(26:43):
boards to cover up the entryways, and he has to
sign on the boards to say we're still open. We're
putting the boards up to discourage looting. Starting on Saturday.
What on October seventh, No other storefronts in the Columbus
area appear to be boarded up. Dispatch could not locate
any safety alert for downtown businesses, et cetera. But when

(27:06):
the stop benefits end, that's when the looting begins. So
that's a sign of the times right there. About half
of those getting food stamps are not eligible to receive them,
but they get them nonetheless, unbelievable. So let's continue. And

(27:28):
I also would note that the President's made great success
the last few days in South Korea, meeting with Jieshaoping,
the Chinese leader and others through curtail illegal drugs finded
by the Chinese communists coming into the country, and to
buy billions of tons of soybeans so the farmers can
have a better lifespan. So we'll see what happens at

(27:51):
the end of the day. When it comes to Tuesday,
I would hope more than thirteen percent of registered vote
will pick the next mayor. Let me explain. According to
Sherry Polley at the Board of Elections, it appears the
turnout is going to be about twenty five percent of
those who actually turn out to vote. As high as

(28:11):
twenty five percent might be less. And about half of
adults living in Cincinnati aren't registered to vote anyway. So
if half are not registered and half are, that means
the twenty five thousand means that thirteen thousand voters in
a city of three hundred thousand, which is what about
four percent, will determine who the mayor is and whose

(28:34):
city council is. So your vote is disproportionately counted. So
few people vote. So if everything that's occurred the past
several months, not picking up the snow, the snow powing
was terrible, all the potholes you talk, all the criminal activity,
the incompetence of the mayor and city council being an

(28:54):
echo chamber, not questioning the mayor of the city manager
at all, If all of that's not calls you enough
motivation to go out and do something to try to
change your community, maybe you get the government you deserve.
And right now I don't know what the polling is.
I asked Corey Bowman, what is the polling, and they
it's a rather shall we say, a small budget campaign.

(29:16):
They're not doing polling, but the fact the mayor's office
is reaching out to me to come on, which I've
said absolutely, arrange the time or set it up. I want,
I want the mayor on. I've invited lemon Kearney on.
She won't come. Scottie Johnson won't come. Then they won't come.
And I believe what Charlie Kirk said, when the talking stops,

(29:39):
that's when violence begins. I want communication with those I
disagree with, so well see what occurs. But if things
maintain the status quo, we're in trouble. And and the
lynchpin of this is not even necessarily the police. It
is the judges who make the final decision whether a
person is locked up an ankle monitor, et cetera. How

(30:02):
many times have you heard Jack Crumley and Brian Combs
and Matt Rees say, well, so and so has committed
another offense he had an ankle monitor on where he
was given no bond and got out. How many times
has that happened? Very very often. So pay attention to
who you're voting for for judge. And it isn't political.

(30:22):
There's some Democratic judges in Hamley County in the past
that have been more harsh on criminals than Republican judges.
It's the nature of the beast. We can't have judges
they have an agenda on the bench that talk about
restorative justice or reparations deal with a person based upon
what they do, not the color of their skin. What

(30:42):
a novel suggestion let's continue with more. And I'm told
by a certain US Senator that a deal should be
struck today or tomorrow to provide SNAP benefits that should
waylay the concerns and fears of dollar General that's boarding
up fearing looting starting on Saturday, of those who get
snap benefits and they're going to steal what the government

(31:05):
will often give them. And that's pretty sad too, isn't it.
I think it's awfully sad. So coming up after one o'clock,
we've scheduled in the studio Captain Russ Neville, who's the
brother of Teresa Thiji. I use the term fired. She's
on the administrative leave, which means she's going to get fired.
And the mayor wanted this big time great law firm,

(31:26):
Frost Brown Todd to do the investigation that he should
have done in the first place. And they have to
find something on Thiji to justify the mayor's firing of
her several days ago. So he wants this law firm
to collect forty thousand dollars. And don't get me wrong,
I'd love it when lawyers make money. That's a good thing.
But he wants the law firm to provide the justification

(31:48):
for what he's already done. The odds at Fiji coming back,
I think are basically non existent. So let's continue with more.
And after two o'clock today we have the Bill Gates
statements of Microsoft who claim there is no climate crisis anymore.
It's not a climate apocalypse going to take place. No,
we need to have cheap energy. And I'm thinking, where
have you been the past thirty years making billions of

(32:10):
dollars off the climate scare which is a hoax? And
the liberal groups have been funded by government activities in
this area with professorships in college and university, grants, etc.
And they kept all their liberal pals employed chasing the
climate change monster. And now they're giving up twelve fifty

(32:31):
five Home of Your Bengals, News Radio seven hundred WW
find Billy cunning in the Great American. Of course, the
issue of the firing Charlie Say administrative discharge in a
sense of chief of police stigy is on the front

(32:52):
burner and it's one of the big election issues coming
up on Tuesday in the studio with me now as
Captain russ Neville retired, is that correct? How many years
you's been thirty four thirty four years. Did you enjoy it?
I did. I enjoyed it, respect it, appreciate it. But
more importantly, you're the brother. Let's get it out there
of Terry Thiji. She is your sister, correct, Yes, sir.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
A little bit of the history of Chief Thiji A
mother of four, is that correct?

Speaker 1 (33:17):
Yes, sir. She went through the whole police department from
bottom to top with four kids, and I guess there
are adults by this point. And then how many grandchildren
does she have? She has nine grandchildren. So the city
manager and Mary wants to fire a mother and a grandmother. Correct, yes,
Tell me about Tell me about your feelings about what
happened to Chief Thigi and why it was so unfair.

Speaker 4 (33:37):
Well, I think there's a combination of reasons, but the
way it came about is ridiculously unfair, bordering on inhumane.
There were opportunities for communication that could have ended in
a different fashion. Basically, what they did is they forced
her to fight, and we're not going to walk away
from a fight. She dedicated thirty five years to the city.

(33:59):
She was a good player, a leader. She is not
and I emphasized not a DEI higher She earned everything
she got through her thirty five years. She was mentored
by some of the best and brightest minds of this
organization over the last thirty five years. Tom Striker, Jim Whalen,
Vince Demassi. Not bad, not bad at that. So if

(34:19):
anybody wants to throw DEI out related to Terry, they
are way off base.

Speaker 1 (34:24):
She earned it, earned it the hard way, the hard way,
being a mother and a grandmother while being in a
cop You mentioned this the other day. Not easy. It's
hard for a man, a father, much less a mother
and a grandmother been put in sixty seventy hours a
week on behalf of the people of Cincinnati. And she
did it without a without reservation, without anger, without frustration.

(34:44):
She did her job. She did it with pride and
commitment and dedication and care. I couldn't begin to tell
the amount Terry cares regarding.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
The communities, and I mean all fifty two, not one
or two like the mayor, All fifty two communities, all demograts, ethics.
It doesn't matter to Terry what's right is right, and
what service needs to be provided shall be provided.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
Why was she? I'll use the term fired because that's
where it's coming. I can't imagine after this review, bought
and paid for by the mayor, the law firm that
he hired, is going to come back and say, oh,
you know, Mayor, you're wrong. You know what's going to
come in a couple of months is smearing of thief
chief Thiji. Well, why do you think it happened.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
I think it happened because she had a desire to
provide services to the community that would reduce diminish impact
violent crime. And I think she had thoughts, plans, and
ideas on that. And I will leave it at that
for now until things work themselves out going forward. And
I believe the mayor had a different opinion.

Speaker 1 (35:47):
As far as the administrative put on the administrative leave
with pay of your sister. The mayor said it there
or two after this happened, we're going to start enforcing
the law. We're going to have misdemeanors being enforced. We know,
as a cop, you come from a family of cops
going back about one hundred years that when you enforce
the broken window theory of law enforcement, when someone is

(36:07):
taking drugs in public, when someone is sleeping on a
public sidewalk, when someone is shooting through a window and
he's classified as property damage, you know something's wrong. Do
you think the mayor got the message that somehow you
cops are going to have to start enforcing the law
because it hasn't happened so far.

Speaker 4 (36:24):
I couldn't begin to tell you what message the mayor got,
but I will offer to you those services are provided.
Lesser crimes are focused on and were focused on under Terry.
But the reality of it is, Bill, if there's a
revolving door at the justice center, or if there's early
release for no justified reason, placing people back into the

(36:45):
communities where they just victimized people without accountability one through
fifteen times, it's irrelevant. There needs to be something done
to control the early release and the offenders being played
back out into the streets without any accountability. That's not
on the coppers, it's not on the cops. It's on

(37:06):
the judges exactly. And I am here to say the
cops work hard. I'm not criticizing for one second the
officers of Cincinnati or any agency in Amilcanny and beyond.
I'm here to tell you that the administrative suspension of
Terry was in human, unjust, and let's think about the
fact that it's asked backwards. You place your own administrative suspension,

(37:29):
then you decide you're going to hire a law firm,
and your conducting investigation determined why you placed your own
administrative suspension. I'll leave the rest of that to her lawyer,
mister m and Terry. But everybody with a lick of
sense understands what this is about, what's driving it, who's
driving it, And that's where I think the conversation needs
to go as we go forward.

Speaker 1 (37:49):
Today. I think Channel twelve had this report about the emails,
the text messages back and forth. A precipitating factor, according
to scherl Long, was that your sis, Chief Thiji joined
the Hamlety County Police Chiefs Group without the permission of
the city manager or the mayor. Is that was that

(38:10):
a made up Was that precipitating? It wasn't unusual for
the chief of police of Cincinnati, which is about what
about forty percent of the county to join a group
of other police chiefs. Is that a bad act? Was
that wrong for Thigi to do?

Speaker 4 (38:25):
I don't see why it was wrong or how it
could be wrong. I mean, it's part of your responsibilities
as the head of an organization is to communicate with
heads of other organizations and put together strategies and plans.
I just have to leave it at that until anything
goes forward involving the case that may be pending.

Speaker 1 (38:42):
Well, what is does Chief Thiji want her job back? Yes?
I can't speak for her Bill either. I talked to
her every day. You must talk to her every day.
Talk to her. Does she want her job back?

Speaker 4 (38:54):
I'm going to refrain from answering that question based on
mister M's recommendations.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
Let me say this. I would say no, because how
do you work in that environment when you can't implement
the policies and procedures you want to implement? Because the
city manager and the mayor, and I guess Counsel Scottie
Johnson others are saying, don't do that. In other words,
put in speed bumps, don't pull people over for traffic offenses.
I had on the corner about a month ago, and
she was going to a big event, I think Fiddler

(39:19):
on the Roof at the Music Hall, and she and
a retired federal judge felt threatened walking across Washington Park
when they had left the play early because they knew
they had to get back to the car before dark.
Those are the things that I think that the police
should administer and take care of. That the police directly
or indirectly receive orders or indications from the city manager

(39:41):
or the mayor not to enforce certain statutes. I think
that was the case. That's why the mayor said we're
going to start enforcing the criminal law. Was there a
sense under your sister's leadership that she was told directly
or indirectly by expression or implication not to enforce certain
criminal statutes?

Speaker 4 (39:56):
Not that I'm aware of, And I talked to her
every day, and I think it is something that needs
to be kept between her and her attorney and for
any future purposes. So I really do refrain from discussing it, Bill,
because it is right for her going forward with any
potential when w was she speak when her attorneys when
the case is settled potentially.

Speaker 1 (40:17):
So going back to my point, does she want her
job back? You can't say yes to that.

Speaker 4 (40:22):
I'm not going to answer that. I will tell you this,
you wouldn't want it. I wouldn't want it. My brother Mike,
who's in the studio with us, wouldn't want it. But
I'm not going to speak for Terry.

Speaker 1 (40:31):
Why wouldn't you and your brother, Mike went Why wouldn't
someone who's come up through the ranks from the bottom
of the top not want the job today?

Speaker 4 (40:40):
Well today, meaning only under these circumstances. Wanting the job
prior to this happening to her, I would have even
wanted it at that point.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
But under these.

Speaker 4 (40:50):
Circumstances, why would anybody want to go back and work
and report to two individuals that have treated them so inhumanely.
One reason somebody may want to do it because they
care about the community, and they care about the members
of the organization, and they appreciate the support they're getting
from each of those. So you have to balance those
elements and reporting to two people who retreated so inhumanely,

(41:13):
who clearly don't want you there. And let's emphasize it
is two people, Bill, it's not one. What was it
in humane about her discharge? It was done in a
shockingly surprising way. She didn't see it coming, didn't see
it coming. It was done after a text notification to

(41:34):
come back from a police conference where she was there
to represent the city of Cincinnati and the police department
in an honorable a leadership fashion, and it was done
with a minimal to no communication.

Speaker 1 (41:49):
And I'll leave it at that. From sheer Long's perspective,
why do it? Then it's like embarrassing. According to media accounts,
someone was listening to me at one seventeen PM. Somebody
told me her days were the single digits. Yeah, I
heard you. And she goes to I was told that.
So she goes to Denver for this national deal and
I'm thinking this isn't good. But somebody approved her trip

(42:10):
to Denver. She didn't do this. Did city manager approve
her trip to Denver?

Speaker 4 (42:14):
I couldn't tell you the process on who approved it.
Bill she had authorization to go to Denver and represent
the city of Cincinnati, the police department, in the constituents
of Cincinnati, and represent them in high fashion, in high order, honorably,
and she was summoned back shock.

Speaker 1 (42:31):
Would you say she was shocked at that maneuver by
Cheryl Long. I would say she was caught off guard
that she needed to come back so quickly, because right now,
as I understand it, she's an I WILL employee. That
means she can be fired for a good reason, a
bad reason, or no reason. It can't be an illegal reason.
But if the city manager would say to uh, Teresa

(42:52):
thechi you know things aren't going very well, I have
to let you go. Let's talk about how we do this.
That's different than what happened. Correct, That is definitely different
than what happened. So she gave an interview somewhere that
she said she sent a text or something Cheryl Long
that said, I got thirty five years in October twentieth
as my anniversary. I'm not going to be here forever.
I want to have some indication as to the future.

(43:14):
Do you recall seeing that text. I'm aware that text
is out there. And as far as her being out there,
was she planning to retire anyway? Because when you say,
you know, you've been at a job for a long
time and somebody you get an indication things are going
the wrong direction. When she said I know I'm not
going to be there forever, was that an indication from
her that she knew something was coming.

Speaker 4 (43:36):
I honestly cannot answer that. I don't know what her
thought was when she sent that. I haven't discussed that
text with her. Do you know how she was fired
put on administrative leave?

Speaker 1 (43:45):
You know how, I truly don't.

Speaker 4 (43:47):
I don't recall if it's something she was told or
if it was something that was notified by her attorney.

Speaker 1 (43:51):
I truly don't recall how it came to her. Was
she shocked about that? She was caught off guard, off
guard and it just came out of the blue. Yes,
how is she doing today this afternoon? Is she actually
it's interesting you ask. Over a thousand people have asked
me that question in the last two weeks. She's doing
well as well as can be. She's spending she's doing

(44:13):
as well as can be. She's terry, she's a leader,
she's confident, she's independent, She's capable to overcome anything.

Speaker 4 (44:21):
But with that said, it's a kick to the gut.
It's internally straining. Her feelings are hurt. Her reputation has
been tarnished. But with that said, Bill, she I gid
you not. She is approached everywhere we go, or she

(44:43):
goes in one hundred and fifty mile radius of Cincinnati,
with people saying they support her, they believe in or
they know what's really going on. They know it's politics.
She was at the Bengals game the other day and
there were people yelling from two stamps, two levels up
down to her saying we support you leaving you keep
fighting the fight. But with that said, that's all great, right,

(45:03):
that's all awesome for her to hear. But at the
same time, there's the internal hit that comes with that
of what she's going through that would even cause people
to need to yell that out to her and show
that support to her. But she's doing as well as
anybody could do under this situation.

Speaker 1 (45:19):
She's going sixty seventy miles an hour. All of a
sudden there's a crash and at this point she I
guess four kids, how many grandkids? Nine? Nine, maybe some
on the way. She's a mother and a grandmother and
now she's going to care for her family, and she's
always cared for her family.

Speaker 3 (45:37):
She's always card physically present, and she wasn't physically present
I would think for a long part of her life
because she was a cop. And going forward, who knows
what's going to happen. I think the important takeaway is
number One, she was shocked about what happened. Number Two,
your indications are she won't take the job back as
it's presently constituted.

Speaker 4 (45:57):
Because I'm not don't mix it up on indicating one
or the other. I'm telling you, I don't know what
Terry's answer that definitively is or would be. And even
if I did, and I wouldn't share it, I would
let her do it and her attorney do it at
due time. What I'm telling you is you wouldn't take
it back. I wouldn't take it back, and Mike wouldn't
take it back. But Terry's independent, Terry's confident, and that's

(46:17):
for Terry to decide if that ever comes to fruition.

Speaker 1 (46:20):
Is there some information she has about the mayor or
the city manager that would require her to sign an
NDA in order to get the settlement?

Speaker 4 (46:29):
To my knowledge, none of those discussions have taken place,
and if they've had, Terry's kept them between herself and
her attorney.

Speaker 1 (46:35):
So there may be something that you can make public
to embarrass the city behavior. No, I'm just responding to
the NDA.

Speaker 4 (46:41):
I don't know the embarrassment side of it, Bill, I
can't answer it. I think there are things that took
place in her in her career during her administration that
would benefit her through litigation, but I don't know what
those are at this time. And we'll just have to
leave it that way until mister m decides what to
do with what information he compiles, or what he chooses

(47:02):
to do going forward.

Speaker 1 (47:03):
Davis with Chris Finny Law Firm. A week before all
these events transpired, she was, in your view, respected by
Cheryl long respected. I can recall we had numerous news
conferences on the air. It was af Tab, it was
Cheryl and and it was Long and also Thiji. The

(47:23):
three of them stood up there. Questions were asked of
the mayor, for example, are you satisfied with the chief
of police? Every time it was yes, yes. Her evaluations
were exceptional or above exceptional, whatever the heck that is.
And this was up to the moment she was put
on administrative leave. Was there a triggering event that went
from exceptional to your gone? Because normally, in normal life,

(47:47):
if you have a bad employee, you give them bad reviews.
You know, you got to improve this, got to do that.
I've seen the reviews. They're off the charts. Theresa Thiji
was at the top. All of a sudden, she's gone.

Speaker 3 (47:58):
What happened in those two or three days that calls
that to transpire When the mayor says she's better in
sliced bread.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
Now she's going to be sliced. What happened?

Speaker 4 (48:07):
It's the question for the mayor to answer. It's a
questions tell you. He's a question for the married answer.
It's a question for the manager.

Speaker 1 (48:14):
She's not talking. You're correct, and we don't know what
it is that caused this to happen. Bill, yesterday, you're
looking at the mayor. You were sitting at that table.
You've been in public service in Cincinnati for more than
thirty years, a captain well known, the family and Neville
family is well known. You look at the mayor and

(48:34):
you said, we need a strong leader or a Week leader?
What did you say to the mayor? And he did
not respond? To man the man eyeball to eyeball, what
did you say to f tab Basically?

Speaker 4 (48:44):
I basically shared that the city is under week leadership,
whether it be him or the manager. I said that
I think people who are going out to vote need
to make a decision on what's most important to them.
Is it going forward, is it improvement or is it
maintaining a loyalty or commitment to whatever thought process you
have that have placed him in there.

Speaker 1 (49:03):
And I offered to people not to vote for the coward.
So you're calling after a pure of all, a coward.
I called him a coward. What about Cheryl Long.

Speaker 4 (49:13):
Cheryl Long wasn't there. She's out there, she skipped, she
wasn't there.

Speaker 1 (49:19):
She did arrive.

Speaker 4 (49:20):
I think as we were leaving chambers, I did not
see her go in. I was told she came in
after we had left Chambers. So that's where we are.

Speaker 1 (49:29):
She did a great job in North College Hill. Now
she's doing it for the people of Cincinnati.

Speaker 4 (49:33):
Yeah, it's the decision making of those that are in
charge now, Bill that has us where we are. That
mayor has no he generates no benefit to the city
of Cincinnati. He does not, truly, truly, in his gut,
in his heart, care about the people of Cincinnati, the constituents.

(49:55):
He's wasting money, he's wasting resources. He treated a thirty
five year veteran of this department like the trash to
be thrown out.

Speaker 1 (50:04):
And I think the.

Speaker 4 (50:06):
Voters please please understand that, literally, if things hadn't happened
in the downtown business district, I don't know that this happens.
The American answer to that litigation may answer that I
don't know, but I will offer you have crime plateaus,
you have an EBB and flow of crime throughout the
other fifty one neighborhoods. Mayor's never shown this type of

(50:27):
response and benefit or support of those neighborhoods. And I
think I think it's I'm not think. I'm certain this
is a political decision. It's a scapegoat situation. I think
he's weak. I think he's a coward, and I think
he's bad for this city. And I wish people would
come out, get out of their comfort zone, vote for

(50:51):
new leadership. And I really believe this. If you want
to go down to council and vote for four or
five of the current council members, do it.

Speaker 1 (50:59):
Do it it.

Speaker 4 (51:00):
Get some new council representative in their Smitherman, Keating, Kerney,
I think still Scottie Johnson actually on there now, some mixture,
some new and some old blood, and let's see what
can be done. But regarding the mayor, do not do
not hask to vote for the marriage just because you're

(51:21):
down there voting for the council representatives. Vote for new leadership.
People know what that means. Vote for new leadership in
that mayor seat. If you want to see economic improvement,
if you want to see first responder management improvement, if
you want to see humane treatment. I highly recommend people
come out and those that haven't voted in ten years

(51:42):
or so, Billy, check the website, see if their registration
is still valid.

Speaker 1 (51:47):
Come out, Come out.

Speaker 4 (51:48):
We're still sitting at twenty five twenty eight percent right now.
If we get that to say thirty five forty forty
five fifty, specifically on the west side, Hyde Park, Mount Loot,
Mount Washington, we can have new leadership.

Speaker 1 (52:02):
Yeah, people have to vote off, vote off your duff
and go do something. If you care, I mean if
you don't care. If you don't care, don't vote, don't care.
If you like the status quo, want to continue with this,
you know what to do. Don't vote or vote for AFTAB.
You call him the coward of Cincinnati. You have to
have puivault.

Speaker 5 (52:18):
Well.

Speaker 4 (52:18):
I think he's a bad manager. I think he's disloyal,
I think he lies. I think he's a coward the
way he's handled this. And you know what, a week
and a half prior to this, he says to my
brother that there's no light between he and the chief.
While all this is brewing apparently. I mean yesterday my
brother Mike is approached by Iris Rowley at council chambers.

(52:39):
Just show support for Terry and how much she believes
she's being mistreated and this is being let me finish
this being mistreated, and how much she treats, appreciates and
respects her and wishes things work out well. Whether Iris
believes that or not, I don't know. But people who
say those things, if you truly believe them, get out

(52:59):
from behind and closed doors and share it. It's not
about Terry. It's about future seats for this chief position,
the fire chief position. It's about the future of the city.

Speaker 5 (53:09):
Right.

Speaker 3 (53:09):
If we want to use Terry as a process of
explaining it and having the opportunity to share it, okay,
we'll do that.

Speaker 1 (53:15):
She shouldn't be going through it.

Speaker 3 (53:17):
But with that said, there's council members reach out and
they say, how hey, we don't like the way this
is being done. They sit there and they toe the line,
as you say, they tow the line Bill, and that's
is that leadership?

Speaker 1 (53:30):
Is that character cowardly? It's neither we got to run.
Captain russ Neville, good luck, get out and vote. We
get the government we deserve, and at times that concerns me.
Thank you, sure, captain, Thank you very much. Thank you.
Bill Cunningham News Radio seven hundred ww what do you
think we can't wait? I have hopes too. I have
hopes I can dunk a basketball at some point, but
but you can't jump. But I can't jump?

Speaker 6 (53:51):
Right? Hello? Quiet?

Speaker 1 (54:04):
That was me and Chief Black will remember him? When't
he fired for something? I don't know. I don't have
no idea. I have no idea either. What about the interview?
What do you think?

Speaker 3 (54:13):
Seg unbelievable? Andy Mack thinking of Andy Mack is coming
in tomorrow? Is that tomorrow? Thirty tomorrow?

Speaker 1 (54:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (54:20):
The breakdown Xavier basketball and an all three hundred and
sixty five teams.

Speaker 1 (54:24):
He's going to go a to z. Well, how about
UC Bearcat football? He's gonna talk about football at all
Saturday night late? I well, maybe I don't know here.
You'll have to ask him. I will, don't worry. I'm
going to ask him. What about russ Neville, your comments,
if any? Whatever? He called? He said, the mayor is
a coward, a yellow belly coward who slithers on his

(54:45):
belly in the council every day, licking the boots of
liberal Democrats with it or something. He's the mayor, you fool, No,
I mean Russ Neville. Oh he's a cop thirty five
years captain. I don't know. He retired recently. Now, everybody
in this town. What don't you care about this? Yeah?

Speaker 3 (55:00):
Yeah, you know what I say? What all you got
to do is three three names?

Speaker 1 (55:07):
What's that?

Speaker 3 (55:08):
Or three words to solve the problem downtown? What Richard K. Jones?

Speaker 1 (55:13):
I had him on last week. You know what he's saying.
Take him ninety days to get this town in order,
taking ninety minutes? He would he'd kick ass like miss
he would Richard K. Jones for Chief of Police? Wouldn't
that be something him?

Speaker 3 (55:26):
And be supreme Allied commander of Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (55:30):
Well, let's take over the mayor.

Speaker 3 (55:32):
He could be the mayor, city manager, Council and prosecutor,
Bengo Sheriff, coroner, County Commissioner, Marshall Law, declare Marshall Law.
Will he the stute reporters apro service every local Thamestar
heating in air conditioning dealers, tamestar quality you could feel
in Cincinnati. Col Sheldon Braun at broad Heating at five one, three,

(55:54):
three eight, five seventy seven sixty five.

Speaker 1 (55:58):
That's a great golf for a clovernook. Thank you, Roxy.

Speaker 3 (56:01):
We also want to thank Ron's Roost Restaurant and Bar
the world's greatest fried chicken.

Speaker 1 (56:06):
It's clucking good Tony Benner Sharon just started eating right
out of the ladles.

Speaker 3 (56:10):
Thirty eight to fifty three Race Road at five seventy
four two two two Pam bringing down our food today.

Speaker 1 (56:18):
Thank you, mister president. That's Obama. Of course, we have
a coward in the mayor seat, a coward, a yellow
belly coward. Well yeah, let's see Bengals up.

Speaker 3 (56:27):
They brought to you by Good Spirits and Party Town
with thirteen locations in northern Kentucky. Joe Flacco's still out
with that ace sprained ac joining.

Speaker 1 (56:37):
Yes or no, I need to know it's unknown.

Speaker 3 (56:38):
No, no yet, No, I don't think he will No,
because you take he gets healed up this week.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
You got the bye week he's and he got him
for the rest of it. If you lose another game,
you can kiss the baby goodbye. Oh Jake, the snake's
got to stand up. If they lose this three and six.
That's not good.

Speaker 3 (56:55):
Bengals and Bear Sunday preview the Action on the Cincinnati
tax resolution powered by Toe Roundtable show presented by Postman
Law Live from Long Necks, not a Lawyers and hebron
at six oh five. Here on seven hundred, w all
that lawyers are hungry for action. We need we need
t shirts that say that we get those SENSI shirts.

Speaker 1 (57:17):
By the way, is another plug, got me a text
here and Dollar General took the boards down after pressure
from the City of Columbus. I have the story segment
Dollar General stores in downtown Columbus have been boarded up
in anticipating of looting and rioting. So the city manager
Columbus must have another winner, get a hold of Dollar

(57:37):
General and say take the boards down. It's looking bad.
So if on November first, if the snap recipients riot
and looted the departments, that's right, that's right, that's right.
Coming up, they're going to be looting happening at Kroger.
WHOA what do we do? Then?

Speaker 3 (57:51):
Thursday Night Football Baltimore and Miami seven thirty, Fox Sports
thirteen sixty. There are reports former Penn State head coach
James Franklin is going to become the new head coach
at Virginia Tech, a five year, sixty million dollar deal.
What Tommy Brenneman's and on his way to Virginia Tech

(58:13):
right now?

Speaker 1 (58:13):
Let's find out from today what's going on? Got the
Hokies and the Cardinals of Louisville Tomorrow in beautiful Blacksburg.
Is the Virginia Tech coach fired? Yet? Well, he didn't
know that. He didn't know it. He didn't know it.
But here comes Franklin.

Speaker 3 (58:30):
Let's see Toronto knocks off the Dodgers last night six
to one, to go up to three to two. Game
five tomorrow night north of the Border. Let me write
this down when we sit here on Monday. Here are
the choices. Okay, sit here Monday at one thirty three
games Bengals Bears. I'm gonna write this down segment Bengals Bears,
who win?

Speaker 1 (58:50):
Bengals? You see in the shoots. The Mormons come on.
You see's down a ten point dollars. We don't take
any points. We take flat out. Who do you like?
I got it? I'm go in with the bear Cats.
I'll take the utes in the Mormons and the last
one is Dodgers v. Birds tomorrow Jays. All right, please continue.

Speaker 3 (59:12):
Let's see the bear Cats open their season Monday against
Western Carolina. Preview the game in the season Tonight the
West Miller Show live from the original Montgomery In at
eight oh five. I may be there right here on
seven hundred WLW, I said, may.

Speaker 1 (59:29):
That's that's the key word in that sentence. If you
want to break it down.

Speaker 3 (59:33):
Hockey tonight, e Cohl Action, the Indy Fuel in town
to battle our beloved Cyclones, unbelievable Highlands, gonna play for
the state championship in Kentucky. And soccer Bluebirds on Saturday
seven o'clock against Sacred Heart.

Speaker 1 (59:46):
Get them in.

Speaker 3 (59:47):
Let's see Notre Dame is headed to the state tournament
in Kentucky.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
Volleyball not Mount Notre Dame, but Notre Dame Academy.

Speaker 3 (59:55):
Mount Notre Dame meets Thomas Worthington tonight at seven, and
the girls State field hockey semi finals.

Speaker 1 (01:00:04):
Segment with Fiji except two million dollars to sign an
NDA not to tell what the mayor has done and
the city manager in exchange for her silence, would you
give it up for two million dollars? Seg would you
had to report on you, Tony Bender? What would you
report in? Stephan had to report on Rhino? Having any
report on Joe Frederick? Would you take the money?

Speaker 6 (01:00:23):
It?

Speaker 1 (01:00:23):
Would you sing like a canary? What would you do?
Take the money? So I figured, let's see Brendan Soresby.
He's gonna coach.

Speaker 3 (01:00:31):
He's gonna play the Cats quarterback and the quarterback for
named the Davy O'Brien Quarterback Class of twenty twenty five
really today, So good luck to him.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Well, I mean, can he play for the Bengals on Sunday?
They get back in time? I don't know. Plane might
be delayed or something. Clifford the Big Red Dog could
be the next Tom Brady. You know that's a good show.
I like watching that every day. Please continue. No, you
watch Clifford the Big Red Dog. You got to do
something around here. There's something better than watching cliff For

(01:01:01):
the Big Red Dog. You learn things from people. I
bet like that. Yeah, I bet you learn to be nice,
You learn to be thank nice and everything else. What
are your comments about Captain Neville calling the mayor a coward,
the coward of the county and he lives in the city,
the hope play.

Speaker 3 (01:01:16):
This whole town's all of a sudden going to a
total mess.

Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Would you take the money and run segment? And would
you sing like a canary the truth? I probably take
the dough. I take the dough, the ray and the
me I take it all the hell? The truth is
that what they're offering. Well, at some point it's going
to come down to one thing. Money, the green lettuce
of salvation bags of cash. To quote Gary, don't make
me holler, don't make me shall turn those pockets from

(01:01:40):
the city inside out.

Speaker 3 (01:01:41):
They're going to be out of a lot of people
have done that over the years and millions.

Speaker 1 (01:01:46):
Not to tell the truth about the mayor and the
city manager. After the election, then the money will flow
into her pocket or shall I say her purse. The
mayor fired a mother and a grandmother. Think about that segment,
Would you fire a mother and a grandmother? The mayor
did Fiji's a mother of four and a grandmother of nine.
She didn't do anything.

Speaker 3 (01:02:07):
Who are you talking about? The mayor and the share
of the chief didn't do anything. She's just doing her job.
Thank you give me out of the student's report, please, Willie,
we say happy birthday today to the one and only
Dean Gregory.

Speaker 1 (01:02:19):
What he's about? Happy birthday, She's seventy five, seventy Montgomery
in boathouse? How old is Dino? We leave you with
the immortal words of the Stooge Report.

Speaker 5 (01:02:29):
Hey, I've got some wise words for that, Cincinnati matre No,
your role is shut your mouth.

Speaker 1 (01:02:37):
Travis Kelcey, also known as mister stan On seven hundred
wo Bill Cunning in the Great American. Of course, when
I'm watching the climbing right now, it's cold, it's winning,

(01:02:58):
and it's west and to hurricanes. With Larsley's passed through PERMEAA,
things looking better there. But nonetheless, I hate to say this,
I think the views of average Americans about man made
climate change are dissipating. I have a sense we might
be winning. Many times as conservatives we beat against the
doors of change and they never opened. But I have

(01:03:20):
a sense something is happening when it comes to spending
trillions of dollars on man made climate change, which is
a hoax in my viewpoint. Yes, I want clean air,
I want clean water, of course we all do. But
to spend trillions of dollars in pursuit of something that's
not going to happen. And secondly, fund liberal causes is
the real problem. And I would note also that Bill Gates,

(01:03:41):
one of the apostles of man made climate change, the
billionaire for Microsoft is also shall I say, shall I
say softening his position? Joan you and I now is
Mark Marino. He's the founder of climatedepot dot com. And
first of all, Mark, welcome to the Bill Cunningham Show.
And Mark, the comments of Bill Gates few days have
been startling. Tell the American people what Bill Gates is saying,

(01:04:04):
one of the apostles of man made climate change, and
why he's lessening his position on the world's going to
end any anytime soon.

Speaker 6 (01:04:12):
Yeah, this is quite a remarkable development. Bill Gates the
architect of the modern climate scare. This is a man
who's worked closely with the World Health Organization, with the
United Nations. This is a man who has funded research
to block out the sun to try to stop for
the heating. This is a man who's the number one
farm land owner in the United States according to NBC News,

(01:04:36):
with the stated explicit purpose of moving cow emissions, cow agriculture,
animal agriculture into the laboratory he's investing in lab grown
meat made from stem cells printed on a three D printer.
Bill Gates. Bill Gates came out this week and basically
said that climate change is not going to lead to

(01:04:59):
our demid. He warns against a doomsday outlook, and according
to The York Times, he's appeared to have shifted his
views on climate change. He's now openly talking about no
climate catastrophe, how we should be worried about human prosperity
and worried about human I mean everything climate He's founded,
like Donald Trump overnight, this was a shocking development.

Speaker 1 (01:05:20):
Build well. He also cared about cow flatulence. He wanted
to block out the sun. He wanted to put some
sort of diaper system on a cow and do it
and capture the med thane coming out of a cow's butt.
Explain that one to me.

Speaker 6 (01:05:35):
Yes, this is this goes back decadka. When I was
working in the US Senate Environment of Public Works Committee,
I worked for the great Senator James Inhof and now
he and we were battling. Well, first, I hate to
have to say, is we were battling the Bush administration
and the Obama administration. In fact, it was the first
Bush hw Bush in nineteen ninety two. That got us

(01:05:56):
into this whole mess. But when when I was working there,
the UN came out with this big report two thousand
and seven that said cow emissions, in other words, flatulence
and burping and methane from a cow were more damaging
to the climate than trains, planes, and automobile automobiles combined.
So this led off this whole Remember al Gore's motto,

(01:06:18):
they can there's a lot of money to be made
off of this. There's a lot of entrepreneur this is
going to be business friendly. Oh, there was a lot
of money to be made. Bill Gates and al Gore
both knew how to make money. I love it with
RFK Junior who said about Bill Gates that he's a
filantro capitalist. And when you translate that and Bill Gates speak,
it means the more money he gives away, the wealthier

(01:06:39):
he becomes. I don't know how that works. Somehow, that's
that's the way charity's given. Now money's Bill in their class, it's.

Speaker 1 (01:06:45):
Still going to be king. You can't make this up.
I mean, this is the guy. Can you give us
an idea? But from nineteen ninety two, Democrats and Republicans
until the Trumpster about how much money has America spent
on this? And then the world. How much money we're
talking about.

Speaker 6 (01:07:02):
Here, I mean we were talking at this point globally
trillion to.

Speaker 1 (01:07:06):
Trillions of dollars. I mean easily.

Speaker 6 (01:07:09):
I don't have the number in front of it, but
probably like five trillion or more in the US probably
been there record levels of you could say thirty billion
was the last estimate, but that was before things like
the Inflation Reduction Act, which tried to top out it
over a billion. You go back to Obama stimulus. The money,

(01:07:31):
it's not just the money directly allocated, it's the impact
of banning energy that work. Remember this whole thing began.
You know, if you go back to look at Al
Gore's testimony in the nineties, it was all supposed to
just be an economic opportunity. Well, it quickly turned into
we're going to ban gas stoves, would inspire and pizza ovens.

(01:07:52):
We're gonna come after your meat. We're gonna can banish
the gas powered cars. We're gonna start going after carbon
footprints at homes, carbon print of travel. We're going to
start coming after every aspect of your life. And this
is how Bill Gates got involved. You mentioned the cow.
He started funding all the agriculture, started buying up farm land.
He's promoting this whole idea of labrow meeting, and just

(01:08:16):
give me the idea what lab grow meat is. It's
not the vegetable oil processed stuff. This is stem cells
from a cow, sheep, pig, mixed together in a petri
dish with fetal blood, then put into a steel that
allowed to fester for a few months, then processed, made
into a process that looks like the pink goo from
McDonald's sick and nuggets, and eventually printed on a three

(01:08:36):
D printer. This is a true frankin food that Bill
Gates is funding.

Speaker 1 (01:08:41):
It's called lab grown meat. And so give me a
double change burger of lab grown meat which begins as
a paink meat.

Speaker 6 (01:08:51):
It is meat because it's genetically dry, but think of
it as ultra processed, the exact opposite of anything. The
same with the vegetable oil process media that, by the way,
impossible burger now collapsing. It used to be a eight
hundred million dollar company and now it's eighty million in debt.
And this was a huge company that al Gore invested

(01:09:12):
in and going back to what you said at the
opening bill, you said, the people don't seem to care anymore.
The CNN polster this past summer, I think it was
in August, showed a poll that showed that there's been
no increase in concern by Americans about global warming. This
is the late nineteen eighties when Gallup Polling started asking
this question, are you worried about global warming? Trillions of dollars,

(01:09:35):
massive education, propaganda to our kids, Hollywood, academia, all these
international organizations, all the treaties, all the media reports, and
Americans still care about the same level they cared in
the nineteen eighties, which by the way, was only in
the it's the low thirties of actually had It's usually
just the hardcore Democrat base that really cares about climate change.

Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
Let's get creative it, I said Mark Marino of climatedepot
dot com. What it is as a money grab by
liberal causes to fund universities, colleges, lots of jobs for
family members, and all funded by the so called Department
of Energy. There is no impending climate change apocalypse, and

(01:10:15):
they had to use the language of the apocalypse to
motivate lawmakers who receive large amounts of campaign donations screened
through liberal causes and foundations in order to fund their campaigns.
It had nothing to do with climate change, had everything
to do with funding liberalism.

Speaker 6 (01:10:32):
Correct, absolutely, in fact, the biggest funders. I mean, here's
what I love about this whole thing. Remember they just
stop oil and the extinction rebellion. The people with the
think care that would go spray and deface the Constitution
in the US, or go into an art gallery or
interrupt a football game, these were looked at it all,

(01:10:53):
look at these these are grassroots activists. Turns out just
who they were funded by, the Getty Foundation, the Hollywood
producer who did the High Is Up the film, major
Hollywood producer. Hillary Clinton funded these people. So all these
protesters which try to look organic and grassroots, they're not
taking it to the man. They're funded and speaking for

(01:11:15):
the man. And the man is the billionaire class and
the global organizations like World Economic Forum, United Nations, And
that is what this whole thing is about. You couldn't
be a Democrat running for office back then, but with
shocking bill is January when Donald Trump was sworn in
two point zero he has decimated everything to the point
where this net zero banking alliance collapsing. I'm heading to

(01:11:39):
Brazil next week to this bleam cop thirty United Nations
Climate Summit, and over one hundred nations haven't even failed
to bother to submit their climate goals or meet the
climate goals for this UN summit. It's completely falling apart.
It's called the Trump effect. And that's what Bill Gates,
by the way, is reacting to when he came out
and basically walked away from three decks age of climate

(01:12:00):
sphear mongering.

Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
You know, I want to say something startling. In a sense,
I feel sorry for Greta Thunberg in a sense, she
was victimized by her education in Scandinavia. She believed the
crap taught to her, garbage in, garbage out, She acted
out in ways, and she had this odd facial expression
that captured the mainstream media. She was used and abused

(01:12:24):
by the climate alarmist for a particular goal, and now
that the whole thing is crashing, she'll be ignored. Do
you have some sympathy for the victimization of Greta Thunberg
at the hands of the climate alarmists. Do you feel
sorry for her?

Speaker 6 (01:12:39):
Yeah, I mean I do. This was a twelve year old.
I believe she started at he's twelve years old. She
had parents. Her mother was a climate activist, her dad
was the influential in the society, and they got her
to the point where she was literally thinking, what's the
point of going Her whole premise was, what's the point
of going to school if the earth is going to end?
And so that's why she started to skip school and

(01:13:01):
doing these protests. And of course she became the darling
of the United Nations the media. She was Time Magazine's
person the here but here's the interesting, here's the untold story.
And I witnessed this. I got to see her in
person and at the twenty nineteen Madrid UN Climate Summit.
She was absolutely a tool for the global elite establishment,
the billionaire class, and she was smart enough on her own.

(01:13:26):
At two thousand and two, I was at the UN
Climate Summit. I was in Scotland, and she announced that
she was basically disassociating herself from the UN climate scam.
She said it was full of greenwashing, and she called
it a scam, and she condemned the UN. The UN didn't.

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
Miss a beat.

Speaker 6 (01:13:42):
They forgot about Greta. They immediately for the next summit,
they hired a lady named Kananie A. I hate to
say this, but she was referred to as hot Greta.

Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
She was.

Speaker 6 (01:13:53):
She wore skimpy outfits and hung around with the UN
Secretary General, and she replaced Greta. Greta then went on,
of course, to go fight protest Israel and other things.
But what's interesting about it is she vowed never to
fly again, and she ended up on an airplane after
she got deported from Israel. So Israel the amazing that

(01:14:14):
Israel is able to get Greta to violate her no flyban.
But I feel bad for her, but she's basically, if
you look at Greta's timeline and tweet, she didn't even
talk climate anymore. She's walked away from that movement. She's
now fighting against Israel instead.

Speaker 1 (01:14:28):
Yeah, she loves Hamas and it's said at this point
she'll be used and abused by the climate alarmist and
once it becomes kind of a hackneyed approach, they simply
discard her and pick up someone else. Now. Lastly, Governor
Kathy Hogel of New York has shifted her stance on
climate change under electoral pressure because of electricity costs. The

(01:14:51):
New Jersey election on Tuesday is gonna maybe turn on
this issue. Explain how liberals are now loving oil. Explain
that one a natural gas.

Speaker 6 (01:15:00):
Okay, okay, Well, first of all, what Hochel said was
she cannot meet the state's climate goals through the horror
of the academia and all the activists. And her response
has been I have to have I want. I have
to worry about affordable rates and plentiful energy for New Yorkers. Bingo,
that's what we were saying for since the nineteen nineties, all

(01:15:23):
this nonsense about all these fake promises. So what's happening here?
And the reason Kathy Hockels saying that the reason the
polling is going nowhere with climate, the reason one hundred
nations plus don't care about it. The reason Mark Carney
the new Prime Minister of Canada, he was a world
economic form He was a banker, a Bank of England,
head of the Bank of Canada. As globalists and climate action,

(01:15:48):
as you can imagine, one of its first acts as
Prime Minister was to zero out the Canadian carbon tax.
This is shocking. It's the whole world. A couple of
things have come together. First, the Trump effect. When you
have a president who's willing to go to this General
to the General to the in New York City, the
headquarters of the UN, the General Assembly of the UN,

(01:16:09):
and tell them that they've been perpetrating a fraud and
a hoax for decades and that they are all wrong
about climate and et cetera. And then do you have
a president who's just wiped out their agenda in the
first nine months and there's been no pushback. That's what's shocking.
There's no no, none of the activists even seemed to care.
That's what's so shocking. They realize this is not their
moment and they're just sort of laying low. That's where

(01:16:31):
Bill Gates came out, and so that's what's happening. And then,
of course the final reason is that the decades of
lies about solar and wind and it's going to be
cheaper and it's plentible, it's taking over and all we
had to do blah blah blah blah, and you en Timement,
are you in Paris? Agreement has saved the planet.

Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Our dream, superable thing.

Speaker 6 (01:16:48):
Because guess what after they made all these announcements in
twenty fifteen, John Kerrey, President Obama, they literally the next
year said we had to save the planet all over again.
I remember being like, wait a minute, we saved it
last year. You said our grand children would be forever
and debt, and all of a sudden, we had to
do it again. There's no criteria by which they were
ever going to say we solved the climate crisis. There

(01:17:09):
was always more regulations, more bands, more restrictions in our life,
more power to them until we can solve the crisis.
But there was no way to solve it. So every
time they declared victory like you in Paris, it didn't
matter because the next year they were warning of tipping
points and we had to save it all over again.

Speaker 1 (01:17:29):
Well, Greteth Thunberg believed that our hair was going to
fall out, that's our teeth would decay, that you'd have
a gas mask walking around, the predictions of the nineteen nineties.
In two thousand and two thousand and one was that
by twenty twenty five, twenty five years later, the Florida
will be under eight feet of seawater. The world's going
to end. Many liberal females don't want to have babies

(01:17:50):
because they're going to live in a world and in
which methane is going to turn their lungs in the
Craven episodes, and I'm thinking, Okay, none of that stuff happened.
Now Bill Gates is talking about let's use energy to
improve the lives of the poor around the world. Wow,
always a hoax in the world.

Speaker 6 (01:18:09):
And that's exactly right, that's a good message. Now here's
the thing. Did Bill Gates really believe what he's saying?
Bill Gates is already mentioned the more he gives away,
the richer he becomes. So there's some kind of this
just connect there somewhere you.

Speaker 1 (01:18:24):
Usually give it all. Well, good luck to that next
week in Brazil. The agenda is not going to be filled,
and I would imagine the results of this will mean
that Americans and Europeans have to spend more in Africa
and Asia pursuing policies that won't work in America. Billions
of dollars have been saved to giveaways to George Soros
and other foundations to preach about the concerns of the climate,

(01:18:47):
which was a bunch of crap from the beginning. The
rich get rich or the poor get poor. Even Bill
Gates now says, let's use energy to uplift the lives
of mankind. Wow, full circle, bingo.

Speaker 6 (01:18:59):
It's incredible. But he's playing that's in the end. This
is all strategic. He's just going with what he's trying
to He's laying low right now. But what they ultimately
want to do is merge climate into a public health issue.
This is why you have carbon footprint of asthma, carbon
footprint of cancer medication. This is why you have dignes
patients with climate change, climate.

Speaker 1 (01:19:18):
Change, climate change. You couldn't make the trillions of dollar
spent on nothing to fund liberalism. Website climatedepot dot com.
The founder is Mark Marino. And Mark thanks again for
coming on the Bill Cunningham Show. And Mark, you're a
great American. Thank you, Thank you.

Speaker 6 (01:19:36):
Bill appreciate it.

Speaker 1 (01:19:37):
God bless you. I think Americans have figured it out.
I think maybe we have another win. Bill Cunningham News
Radio seven hundreds.

Speaker 5 (01:19:45):
Wow, I've got some wise words for that, Cincinnati mayor.

Speaker 1 (01:19:50):
No, your role is shut your mouth. You Hello, Bump Scows.
I'm broadcasting. The segment is appeared.

Speaker 3 (01:20:07):
There's this guy over here, just walk off the street back.
Too much tape and too many people are taping too much.

Speaker 1 (01:20:13):
Gone. Well, I'm glad to be here.

Speaker 3 (01:20:15):
When's your next Tuesday Night, Wednesday, Thursday night games and
back to back fash I'm.

Speaker 4 (01:20:20):
Sure I'll have some action next week, I believe, and
then the following week and then some games on Saturday.

Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
So let's go a big issue. You ready for the
big question? Fire away Flacco yay or nay? On Sunday
with the.

Speaker 3 (01:20:31):
Bad AC and AC joint. He's practicing today? What throwing passes?
What just saw it? Ben Baby took a picture and
video Flacco is throwing at practice for the big I
understand a se joints is it's it's more a matter
of pain than that's something you're gonna like pain the
big deteriorate more if you know that kind of thing.

(01:20:53):
But what about your guy Clifford from sand X taking
the place of Tom Brady, starter is hurt, signed one
hundred million dollar contract.

Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Brady comes in. What's your name again? Kid? Tom Brady
get in there, took him to the super Bowl, the title.
Then they had a quarterback controversy the next year. Could
Clifford arise from saying ax and dominate?

Speaker 3 (01:21:13):
Is he gonna play? Or is Browning gonna play? I
can't say a snake a snake. I hope Clifford gets
an opportunity. That'd be great.

Speaker 1 (01:21:20):
Now I will say this, I want Joe Flacco to play.

Speaker 4 (01:21:22):
But if he doesn't and Jake brown plays, I like
that guy and I feel like, you know, for whatever reason,
he got an opportunity and didn't work out for him.
It was in a contract year. But he's a genuinely
nice guy, a hard worker. I hope he goes out
there if he plays and has a great See his
girlfriend in the the white outfit last year? Yeah, more
curves than of the hill. I was forced to look

(01:21:44):
at that and research that in mershttle bit. That was
the research on going, not as in depth as you
would like. Now what about Yeah, I gave I heard
your interview with her brother. So so let me ask
you this, so and tell me if I'm right wrong
on the money, not of the money.

Speaker 3 (01:22:01):
So no one can really make an argument right now
that as the as the police chief, acting as the
current police chief, that she has been tough on crime.
You couldn't make that argument, right, No one's going to
confuse what she's done for Sy Lease or Richard Kate.

Speaker 1 (01:22:17):
No one's going to compare those three.

Speaker 4 (01:22:20):
Okay, But but she has a history of great police work, right,
maybe not so much in this role.

Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
Tell she became the chief under it. But then here's
my power of the county.

Speaker 3 (01:22:29):
Here's my question with her lawyers.

Speaker 1 (01:22:32):
Then make the case.

Speaker 3 (01:22:33):
Look, I am acting at the behest of the city
manager and the mayor. You find the email, find the
correspondence where they're telling me you.

Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
Got to be tougher on crime. I bet you'll find
the opposite.

Speaker 3 (01:22:46):
Right, So, because you can, her lawyers not make that
case she was a reflection of what they demand. See,
I'm only implementing the policies that the people above me
are telling me to implement.

Speaker 1 (01:22:57):
She's the instrument in the hands of Sheryl Long and
the cow of the set. That's what That's what her
lawyers should the puppet the case they should make.

Speaker 6 (01:23:03):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
Yes, she's going to get millions and millions of dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:23:07):
Because I mean she got great reviews. Right, Yes, So
you make the case is all one hundred thousand percent
purely political, purely political passification.

Speaker 1 (01:23:17):
Makes Captain Neville, what happened between the great reviews above exceptional?
Kind of like this segment above exceptional and suddenly she's fired.
What happened between above exceptional and fired? And the answer is,
it's got to come from the top. And if the
person at the top, the mayor, who is a he's
a beta male. Okay, let's call what it is a

(01:23:38):
beta mal. He's not a killer. He's not someone that's
going to cop down and do things that are hard
to do. He wants to play the part and a
play of a mayor, not actually do the role that
it is a sharp precincts given the men and women orders. No,
he's not walking there at you know, five am meeting. Listen,
damn it. Here's only got to do this.

Speaker 3 (01:23:59):
Yeah, he's not doing at all. So you know she
can only act the way you know.

Speaker 1 (01:24:06):
At his direction. Right, he's from show show me.

Speaker 3 (01:24:09):
The conversation of him saying, listen, Cheryl, I want more
people arrested, I want more cops on the streets. I
want drones, I want dogs, I want all this. Show
me that show me. If he can produce that, then okay,
then she can be fired. But if not, I imagine
it's gonna be the exact opposite. We start digging through
the records.

Speaker 4 (01:24:29):
That's what our lawyers need to take up front and
say it up here, it is, here, it is And
if that's the case, then she should get all the money.

Speaker 6 (01:24:36):
You know.

Speaker 1 (01:24:36):
I spoke to your friend Mike Dwaine last night about
unrelated matters. Then I said to him, how much cooperation
are you getting from the city And he said something
classic for a politician, We wish there was more. So
very carefully calculated, Well.

Speaker 3 (01:24:53):
Is there enough? He said, I wish there was more?
And so you have a crime crisis. I can't just
say it like it is. I can just say, look,
there's a bunch of bums.

Speaker 1 (01:25:02):
A bunch of bums and cowards, the cowards of Cincinnati,
he said, I wish they would do more.

Speaker 4 (01:25:09):
Well, now, there's a reason why people like Donald Trump
is because he just if you're not doing the.

Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
Job, he's gonna tell you. If you are, you're it's great.

Speaker 3 (01:25:16):
It's you know, booth, here's the Are you ready for
the other issue? You know where you stand? Yes, fireway, the.

Speaker 1 (01:25:20):
City manager controls supposedly the chief of police. Yeah, or nate,
good reason, bad reason. You're not well employee. You can
be fired for a good reason, a bad reason, or
no reason. You serve at the pleasure of the city man.
So that's what they're going to stand on. And instead
of saying, you know what, Teresa Terry, you've been here
thirty six years. We love your service. You're a mother

(01:25:42):
of four and a grandmother of nine. She came up
from the bottom riding traffic tests all the way to
the top service and she spent all this time becoming
the best chief she could. Then she wanted to enforce
laws she didn't. I was told d indirectly, don't enforce
those laws because we don't want them. And so since
she serves as the pleasure of the city management, couldn't

(01:26:03):
she simply say, look, you've done nothing wrong, but we
want to go a different direction. We're gonna put you on.
We're gonna let you go as not how they know
they wanted to smear her on the way out. That's
what That's what has the Nevil Klan all pissed off.
So just tell us, okaysure give you a great you'd

(01:26:24):
be nice, but we need we need to move on.
But we're going to compliment you, et cetera. They didn't
do that. No, no, they.

Speaker 3 (01:26:30):
Embarrass her, embarrassing as you even another example of how
much of those folks are lowlife, low life.

Speaker 1 (01:26:37):
What anybody call the mayor back from Vancouver. Yes, the
mayors in Vancouver on vacation when July twenty sixth happened,
and he was aggrieved that he had to come back
from his vacation. We didn't come back that next day.
He waited a few days. But you know, the city
manager said, look, we love you, Terry, but we're gonna
go another direction. Done a great job. Here's the gold

(01:26:58):
Watch retirement party, and we like, we don't. We don't
need your services anymore. That's all. But they didn't do that.
They waited for her to go to a police chiefs convention.
That they do. These people know how to do anything right.

Speaker 3 (01:27:11):
They can't even fire someone right, They can't even move
on from someone, right.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
What would Donald Trump do? You're fire?

Speaker 3 (01:27:16):
You know what, It's just ain't working out. God bless you,
We love you.

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
But here's the other thing. Insult a little bit inside baseball,
insult injury. The law firm has got to spend forty
to fifty thousand dollars justifying what the mayor did after
he's done it by finding dirt on Teresa Thiji. They're
not going to come back and say, Frost Todd, you
know what, mayor, she did a great job. Yeah, I
don't think you should. They're gonna go back and say,
she didn't do this, she didn't do that, she didn't

(01:27:40):
do this to keep the glowing. That's what you got
to go back to. Well, how come in real time, law,
That's what I was come in real time. She's doing
a great job. All of a sudden goes to the
shooting on Fountain Square. Inside that that pizza parlor next
to Jeff Ruby's takehouse. That's when they said, okay, that's
when the city fathers got together and told the mayor,
we remember we Rubyon, etcetera. She came on and so

(01:28:03):
then they panicked and said, we got it, so we
need a scalp. And the scalp's not gonna be me,
it's gonna be you. We're gonna smear you and take
your job away. That's why the Nevils are pistol.

Speaker 4 (01:28:12):
There's not one documented piece of evidence of them telling
her you must be harder on crime.

Speaker 3 (01:28:19):
It does not exist. I would bet my life on it. Segment,
Give me some sports. We got more information on Jordan
Hudson coming up. Well, what the the stuot reporters of
proud service of her local Tamestar Heating and air conditioning
dealers Thamestar quality you can feel in Cincinnati called Stacy
Heating and Air Solutions five one, three three six seven

(01:28:40):
h E A T Spot Josh Berkowitz, Yeah, it just
came to me.

Speaker 1 (01:28:53):
Rona, Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (01:28:54):
It's nothing about the past, nothing about the futures.

Speaker 1 (01:28:57):
Right now we're praying for Cincinnati. Is it twenty million run?
You're a ESPN, You're the big man on campus when
it comes to college football. Twenty million dollar buyout for Belichick?
Yay or nay?

Speaker 4 (01:29:08):
Well, it's not as much as Brian Kelly's fifty four
million dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:29:12):
Is he welcome on college campus at Notre Dame the
all time winning is coach?

Speaker 1 (01:29:16):
Is he welcome at UC? Is he welcome in LSU?
My family? Why would somebody who's.

Speaker 3 (01:29:23):
I think there's a way you can be you can
be hard and you can be old school. Plenty coaches
do it.

Speaker 4 (01:29:28):
Nick Saban Kurt Signetti, you know Dan landing without burning bridges,
but notre is.

Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
What's a great way to get started? And I haven't
even won all my games yet, phony with a capitol
to be a tiger. I'm here with my family. Family,
You're so excited. I just didn't start off on the
right foot. Right right there was like and who's the

(01:29:57):
full who's got the fifty four great things? And it
ain't an incredible ride here?

Speaker 4 (01:30:07):
And uh listen well and er Meyer was saying that
I guess the the Louisiana governor was in on this.

Speaker 3 (01:30:14):
Land landry who's everything charges a whole new fifty four
million we're given him.

Speaker 1 (01:30:22):
He's not welcome anywhere he's been. Could you go back
to Sandex and be welcomed? Absolutely cold? You go back, absolutely,
no question, no quite yes.

Speaker 3 (01:30:30):
Could you go back to Cole Render m k U
and be wine dined and pocket lined?

Speaker 1 (01:30:34):
Yes? Yes? Could I go back to Deer Park? You
do often often could? But they've named everything up over there.
There's nothing, not a name for.

Speaker 4 (01:30:42):
Saying, there's not a park or even a spare blade
of grass that doesn't have his name on it.

Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
It's less than I deserve. But nonetheless, why can't you
go back to any place you've been If you've never
been back to any place you've been? Is that is
that bad? Who's going to hire him now? Penn State?

Speaker 4 (01:30:59):
Eh?

Speaker 3 (01:31:00):
Eh, just saying James Franklin as rumored to be host
of Virginia Tech.

Speaker 1 (01:31:04):
That's a tough job. Five years, sixty sixty million.

Speaker 4 (01:31:09):
From what I've read that, I guess they're somehow they're
making gonna make more investments in their football program, and
that means the dough of the ray and the me
for nil.

Speaker 3 (01:31:18):
I'm the where it's coming from. But that's been the
problem with that job for a week. You're ready for
the three options with Brian Kelly, Yes, A, B and C.
A is to take eight hundred and some thousand dollars
a month until twenty thirty one, not a bad gig.
Two is to have this set off apply, which means
if he gets another job whatever that dollar amount is,

(01:31:40):
subtract that from the fifty four mil.

Speaker 1 (01:31:44):
Or three. He has to have good faith attempts to
get another job. So down the road, if he didn't
get another job, LSU can sue him, alleging that Brian
Kelly has not made quote good faith attempts to get
another job, in which case they don't have to pay
him the fifty four mil. Could he go to the pros? Yes? Good,
any offset football job offset. I think he could.

Speaker 3 (01:32:05):
Maybe that's the best best spot for him. Take go
b an Oc somewhere. Take fifteen million dollars. The other
deal is, give me, let's work out a deal. Forget
about the good faith attempts. Forget about you inenter thousand
a month. I will take twenty million dollars and let
me go. I'll do what I want to do.

Speaker 4 (01:32:21):
Whatever I want to do, if I want to go fishing,
or if I want to coach whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:32:26):
But right now he's tied to LSU. I don't know what.

Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
I don't know if a TV network's going to have
him more though he's not very good, but he's gonna
want to go on TV to repair the image.

Speaker 1 (01:32:34):
Yes, and like Saban's done, we'll save and go back.
I don't know. He's old. He's like seventy three. When
you're that old, you should retire, is what I say. Right,
just stay on TV. Right, he's not bad. By the way,
Belichick was better on TV than coaching from a pr perspective.

Speaker 4 (01:32:52):
That's a bold stamer. He was pretty good on TV.
Nick Saban's fantastic. I think he's the single best thing
on our game.

Speaker 1 (01:32:59):
On TV and not.

Speaker 3 (01:33:00):
I don't know if he likes it though you got
it in your blood like segments. I like you guys,
but you're not serious people. You got to sit next
to Pat McAfee the whole time. He's really good on TV.
He teaches you football.

Speaker 1 (01:33:15):
That's what I want. Ali Chuck was better on TV
than he was doing news conference.

Speaker 4 (01:33:19):
He was great when he would go on. You know,
Peyton Manning's uh was good and manning Castle was good.

Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
He's ruined himself. Had is he ruined until he starts
a new family with Jordan Hudson. What daddy call me daddy?

Speaker 4 (01:33:31):
What if he got rid of her and said, look,
I'm making you know what, this whole thing is not
fitting more.

Speaker 3 (01:33:36):
That's gonna call it. That's palamoni. If she gets married
or she can't. What if she gets pregnant.

Speaker 4 (01:33:43):
He's saying she's gonna put a goalie on him and
DNA try to pull the goalie. Pull the goalie, DNA testing,
can you say pull the goalie?

Speaker 1 (01:33:54):
I don't know. You tell me. I think there's moments
of passion. Men have pulled the goalie, would you agree?
And women men usually don't pull it, you know, women
pull the goldie. You understanding segment and what we're talking about.
We got our issues. I think I do what a problem?
Four million dollars? What am I going to do except
twenty mil buyout? Should I take eight one thousand a
month the rest of my life? Or maybe I should,

(01:34:15):
you know, go back into coaching and have an offset
or be sued. He gonna go back to Central Michigan tomorrow.
That's the only is that the chip Awas Chip was
That's where he was at before he came to UC
Central Michigan. Grand Stay. Yeah, he coached there. It was
pretty good too, wasn't he?

Speaker 4 (01:34:33):
But fifteen for him? You got all the money, you
got all that. Maybe you just want to coach ball.

Speaker 1 (01:34:38):
Maybe get a coach. You don't get a twenty something,
go to Grand Valley State. You don't have to worry
about Nil and his crap. He just coach coach? Segment?
Is that in sports? Yeah? Give me out of the suits.
By the way, what's on the big show today? I
don't know. I have no idea segment Eddie's working on.
Had of the game. We have Scott Wortman talking about
the Fiji mess. It's a mess. It's a mess, and

(01:35:00):
who caused it? I should be your lawyer. You get
some money two million for defamation of character. All they
had to do is say, look at will we decide
to let you go. We're gonna honor you completely. We're
not going to find dirt on you which don't exist
in order to justify the decision I've already made. Yeah,
there's no dirt, honor dirt. Women don't have any dirt,
especially older women have no dirt segment. Give me out

(01:35:22):
of the student younger women have dirt segment. Give me
out of the Stoog's report.

Speaker 3 (01:35:25):
Willy, in honor of a rainy day here in the
tri State and the triumphant return to the Rock and
long lived Fiji, we leave you with the immortal words
of the Stooge Report.

Speaker 5 (01:35:37):
I've got some wise words, but that Cincinnati mayor, No,
your role is shut your mouth.

Speaker 1 (01:35:46):
With him. I agree with him. What about little Taylor Swift? Did?

Speaker 3 (01:35:51):
Did that sem cost us the super Bowl? That's phony
best conference? He had yes on seven hundred WLW
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