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July 17, 2025 • 96 mins
Willie talks with former Congressman Brad Wenstrup on the origins of Covid. Also Nick Bryant tells us why the Epstein files aren't going away. Finally FOP President Ken Kober explains why we continue to see youth violence in Cincinnati.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:06):
All right, Billy Cunningham, the Great America. Welcome to Thursday
afternoon in the triesday Reds Baseball until Tomorrow and Friday,
Saturday and Sunday and the home of the Metropolitans, then
to Washington, then back home for an extended ten game
homestand so the next six days, of course, they win
four lose four. Where things look dire about a week
or two ago when the Reds are losing games to
the Colorado Rockies, for God's sakes, and the Miami and

(00:30):
the Miami Fish. But nonetheless they recovered any circumstance. We'll
see what happens going forward. And later on Jason Williams
is talking about trading Hunter Green, who, by the way,
is hurt. Like Caitlin Clark. They have growing problems. But
nonetheless joining you and I now as a doctor congressman
of the past, brad Winstrip and bread Winstrip, welcome again

(00:50):
to the Bill Cunningham Show. First of all, Brad, how
has retirement found you? The last four or five months
you were in the big house drinking the wine. Now
you're in the vineyard making the grapes. So how's retirement
been for brad Winstrom?

Speaker 2 (01:04):
You know, it's been good.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
I have no regrets in my twelve years in Congress
or my twenty five years in the military. I really
would say that they were all great experiences, and I'm
glad to have done them.

Speaker 2 (01:16):
No regrets, but I am glad to be home.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
My kids are younger, and I was missing a lot
of things. And I got to coach fifth grade basketball
this past year and I'll do it again this year,
and enjoying that. But at the same time, I've been
keeping busy. A couple of months after retirement, the President
appointed me to the President's Intelligence Advisory Board, and so
I'm in DC for a few days a month working

(01:42):
with the board, and it's kept me engaged with a
lot of things in d C that I was excited
to be working on while I was there, such as
making sure that our intelligence community is functioning properly, intelligent appropriately, Yeah,
there's things like that, And also work with the new
people in charge of pandemic preparedness and bio threats, and

(02:05):
these are some of the things I was working on before,
and these are things that I'm still individually working on.
It helps that I have a clearness of what we
do at the board. We don't really discuss. There'll be
things announced from time to time. And I didn't even
know about this board. Really is is something that was
started under Eisenhower and every president has had it. So
I'm and it's nice I get back. I'm staying up

(02:28):
with what's going on in Congress, and I've started an
LLC and it's Ubiquitous Strategies Alliance, and I'm doing consulting
and a lot of this work has come to me
and I'm able to engage in bioscience, biotech, a lot
of it for.

Speaker 2 (02:45):
Department of Defense. I'm engaged in health.

Speaker 3 (02:47):
And then the things that I was working on with
ways and means such as you know, tax and trade
and things like that. So it's it's been good and
it's been giving me a chance to still feel like
I'm staying involved but be able to be home spend
more time with the good people of Cincinnati area and

(03:08):
my family.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
Well, you were picked by the Congress that had a
sub committee on the Origins and Response to the so
called pandemic in which there wasn't one healthy child under
the age of I don't know if it's five or
ten years old who died from it. It was pictured
as the bubonic plague, the Black Death, which gave the
government great power over the activities of all of us.

(03:32):
I have a little card. I still retained that I'm
an indispensable American that has to report to the pod
underneath our tower and Mason and I'd be there underground
giving messages in a pneumatic tube delivered to me to
the populace about where to report to get water or MREs.
And I'm thinking, you got to be kidding me. This

(03:52):
thing was ginned up to be the Buvoni plague on steroids.
But one thing we spoke about was doctor Anthony Fauci,
who's now got to know the criminal referral definitively. Here
we are beginning. I guess March of twenty twenty is
when things metastasize, So it's been more than five years.
I think after five years we should know whether the
origins of COVID nineteen was in a bat cave somewhere

(04:16):
south of Wuhan or whether it came out of Wuhan itself.
And based on our previous conversations, looking to my right
YouTube videos, it appears that the American taxpayer, in other words,
you and I actually paid to create COVID nineteen, which
is so just give us a paragrapher two five years
your chair of the sub committee, what did fault you know?

(04:38):
When did he know it? And secondly, did we pay
for the creation of COVID.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Nineteen, Well, we definitely were paying for the type of
research that can create COVID nineteen in a lab, There's
no doubt about that. And it was through Eco Health
Alliance and it was being done in Wuhan, China, where
by the way, there's not only a Wuhan Institute of BRA,
but there's also there bio weapons program and many other things.

(05:06):
I will tell you that the investigation is not finished.
I mean, I think we've made pretty good conclusions as
best we can without any cooperation from the Chinese, that
this came from the lab.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
And you saw that the CIA, even before.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
The director left and John Ratcliffe took over, he came
out and said, we're changing our conclusion and we think
it came from the lab. Well, I believe they had
pretty good information at CIA that would lead them in
that direction. The FBI felt that it came from the Lab,
and it was other agencies that went with Nature and

(05:43):
we're looking into.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
Why they went with nature, and there'll be more.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
On that coming, I can promise you that. But now
we're looking at the origins of the cover ups. And
at least I think the government is now that there
is a new sheriff in town, if you will. And
so I've been engaged with some conversations and I'm glad
I had the opportunity. And i will tell you that
the people talking to me were told for several years

(06:09):
to not talk to me or they wouldn't be allowed
to talk to the federal official.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Let me get this straight. Federal officials were told by
the Biden administration do not talk to the chair of
the committee in the House looking into the origins of
COVID nineteen and our response and the government officials were told,
do not speak to Brad Winstrom.

Speaker 3 (06:30):
That apparently is correct, and so things are changing and
we're headed in the right direction.

Speaker 2 (06:38):
To get to the facts, okay, just to.

Speaker 3 (06:40):
Get to the very facts of what took place, Who
did what, who said what, and why did they do it?

Speaker 2 (06:47):
And what were the motives? And we're reaching conclusions on
the motives.

Speaker 3 (06:51):
I mean, if you look at China, you can understand
their motive of trying to cover up the origins of
COVID because it would be egg on their faith. Used
to say, it came out of their lab and their country, right, Yeah,
And who wants to say, hey, go to China, there's
a good chance you'll get a disease and die.

Speaker 2 (07:09):
They don't want that, so they're covering things up.

Speaker 3 (07:11):
They even sent me a letter when the committee began
saying they had great concerns about us even having this committee.
And they said it's already been settled by scientists. Well
it had not, actually, and I pointed that out to them,
and I said, we'll have scientists to talk to us.
As a matter of fact, we have seven physicians on
the committee from both sides of the aisle. I said,

(07:31):
but here's some of your scientists. I'd like to talk
to it. And even alluded to one said if he's
still alive. I didn't hear from them again after that.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Zero.

Speaker 3 (07:42):
So we're not going to get the live smoking gun
out of China.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
It's just not going to happen. But we got enough
forensics along the way, and.

Speaker 3 (07:50):
Then additionally international scientists that were doing gain and function
research and then rely on grants.

Speaker 2 (07:56):
I can see why they tend to want to say
this came from nature, but not all of them did.
But not all of them did.

Speaker 3 (08:04):
And the problem was no one listened to those that said,
here's how it could come from the lab, even doctor Fauci,
when I had him under a transcribed interview, I said,
you say now that you.

Speaker 2 (08:15):
Are open to their theory.

Speaker 3 (08:18):
I said, did you talk to any of the people
that wrote scientific papers about how it could be made
in the lab? The answer was now no. I encouraged
your listeners to go to our reports, five twenty page
report majority report on the coronavirus pandemic, and it's easy
to read. It's broken down by categories of interest, and

(08:39):
people can can absorb all this themselves.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
But you don't see mainstream being talking about it.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
I have not seen a negative word from ABC, NBC, CBS, NPR,
which is on life support at the present time because
of what happened last night in the Senate to indicate
the so called mainstream media treats this like a rabbit dog.
They don't want to get around, they don't want to
touch it. They propped them up for so long, and
the so called medical establishment for so long. They can't

(09:06):
go back and say, you know what, we were wrong.
And one thing that the worst thing at the human
level was the catastrophe it was for public education, in
which Catholic schools and private schools continued unobated with the
masking up and they went back to school. But the
NEA and the teachers' unions kept the public schools shut
down completely for months and years because it was free

(09:29):
time off for the teachers, and they weaponized the lies
of doctor Fauci to ruin public education. Is that too
strong of a statement.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Well, I will tell you that in the documents that
we found from the teachers' union, they weren't talking about
how it's important that we get the kids back in
school and that it's you know, we're going to have
to find ways to get caught up. The quote that
I can give you, or maybe I'm paraphrasing it, but
I know these words, it says we need a trigger

(09:58):
to close. They were seeking a trigger to close, and
the Biden administration had reached out to to the teachers'
union on what to do in the classroom even before
they were in office. They did that during the transition time.
But you know what I represented urban and rural and
our rural schools, public schools, they stayed open.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
You know it.

Speaker 3 (10:21):
It didn't happen everywhere, but it certainly happened in our cities.

Speaker 2 (10:25):
And and you saw the Catholic schools.

Speaker 3 (10:27):
My kids are in Saint Gertrude's and uh, you know,
the Catholic schools had a big rise in population of
students because a lot of parents were like, no, I
want my kids to go to school.

Speaker 4 (10:40):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (10:40):
You know, we could we could talk on all of
these things forever, but we're going to We're going to
continue to clear the air for the future. And we
have an administration right now it's willing to engage with
common sense and real science and be directed where all
point points are listened to and we can make sound decisions.
And I am glad to have this opportunity to have

(11:03):
outreach from those that are working on pandemic preparedness in
the future and engaging with me on this. And you know,
we also have had a National Security Commission on Emerging
Biotech and that's a House and Senate commission and that
there's some classified parts there and they've asked me to

(11:24):
come in and they gave me a brief on what
they found, and we're starting to build a better pass
forward for America to keep us safe.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
You know, you look in the last five years, last
five years, the biggest stories in America the last five
years was the cover up of COVID nineteen's origins and
most importantly our response to it. And the fact the
American taxpayer directly or indirectly paid for the creation of
COVID nineteen. And now the government and the teachers' unions
weaponized that trigger information to shut down public education. And secondly,

(11:55):
the big story missed what was the cognitive decline of
Joe Biden. We did not have a president for four years.
It was run by the progressives, the liberals, the Marxists
around Joe Biden. The auto pen was in full fury,
and the media ignored it. It was conspiracy theory. I
might recall in March or April of last year, about

(12:16):
six months before the election, that Joe Scarborough went live
and said, you know what, this is the most brilliant,
the most mentally supple, the most available, mentally president Joe
Biden we've ever had. That Joe Biden himself is the
best version of Joe Biden ever and the message was sent,
leave that issue alone, don't touch it. It delegitimatizes the

(12:38):
election of twenty twenty, which can happen. So those big
stories the media ignored. Now secondly, you're a father with
age appropriate children. You had told me a story about
Washington d C. Public schools, and this is relatable to
Xavier and the Georgetown and the Catholic University. Well, damn it.
There's institutions committed to family values and write to life

(12:59):
and conservative issues. And I would anticipate that Savior, Georgetown,
Catholic University, maybe Saint John's in New York City, would
represent the religion that they say they profess to believe in.
But in reality, we have public school children become marching
Marxists when they come out. It's about indoctrination, not about education.

Speaker 3 (13:23):
Please explain, well, I share this story that my son
was in kindergarten and d C, which was going to
be the only year, but we we made sure it
was the only year. When during COVID we realized they
wanted to teach them about the different types of families
there are. You know, this is our decision. Teach them,
teach them how to read, teach them, Please teach them

(13:46):
do these things. You know, we don't, we don't need
this type of indoctrination. We'll raise our kids, you know,
our way. But you know, I have seen other situations too,
as you know. Now my kids are in Catholic school
in Cincinnati and we're fine.

Speaker 2 (14:00):
We're fine.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
You talk about these colleges, you know, I was surprised
one time when I was in Congress when I got
to go to Georgetown and be on this pro life panel,
because Georgetown is flooded with liberal ideas. But at Xavier
University with the current president, I was pleased to hear
what she said to me at one time. She said,

(14:23):
and of course I'm speaking as a Catholic, so you
know there is that presidence, but it's a Catholic university,
and we chose to go to Catholic schools. But she said,
you know, to the people that are pro choice or this,
I just understand. We'll let you have your opinion, but
you don't get to harass other people over it. You
can have your opinion, but you have to understand that

(14:44):
this is a Catholic school and that is what we
are for. We are pro life, and you chose to
come here, and I give her a lot of credit
for that at Xavier. And it doesn't mean she's taking
away free speech.

Speaker 2 (14:59):
She's not.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
But she's just telling that this is this is this
is a private school, and this is where we are.
Georgetown could be the same way, but I don't know that.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
No.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
I have a guess coming up either today or mar
to talk about what's happening at Georgetown. And it's unbelievable
because you can't be a conservative, pro life Christian on
many college campuses. Your life is too difficult and your
political and or your religious beliefs are held against you
when it comes to getting a grade. Xavier is a
perfect example of previous previous administrations. I had an abortion

(15:32):
viewpoint when it came to girls on campus or young women,
and that's not the way it ought to be. God
knows that the mainstream media pumps the idea into the
minds of young girls and women. By the way, females
have babies, men do not have babies. I don't know
if that's shocking or not, but it's pumping the idea
that abortion is something as a birth control choice, and

(15:55):
that is not the case. You're killing the unborn from
the moment of conception through natural your filling the unborn,
and some has got to stand up for that viewpoint.
And Colleen Hansick, the president of Xavier, has turned around
the university to represent shall we say, traditional conservative values
that are sorely needed. And if you want to believe
in those things, go to UC. I can recall it

(16:16):
Xavier that there were signs up on campus about abortion
being a right, that kind of stuff on a Catholic university.
And you've got to be kidding me. Well, we got
to run. Brad Winstrip, thanks for coming on. Look forward
to having you on now and then and talk about
you have great access because of your appointment to the
Sport on Intelligence and they have someone intelligent on the
Intelligence Committee, which is pretty good. So we'll see what

(16:39):
happens down the road. But brad Winsterp, you're a great American,
and thank you very much for coming on the Bill
Cunningham Show. We'll do it again.

Speaker 2 (16:45):
Thank you, Brad anytime.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Bill, Thank you, God bless America. Let's continue with more
and there you have it. And this is a constant fight,
and just on the issue of education. According to Gallup,
sixty two percent of Americans are just satisfied with our
public schools. And that includes in that number the if
you want to say, thirty eight percent or so are satisfied,

(17:07):
and includes in that number the parents at schools such
as Deer Park, Sycamore, such as the Lakota schools such
as Beechwood, such as Simon Kenton. So in that number
is a large number that that should be satisfied with
their public schools. But otherwise the Department of Education needs
to be dismantled and the money sent to the states.

(17:29):
Let's continue with more. Bill Cunningham, the Great American, with
you every day. You're home with the reds. Off today again,
but back out of tomorrow A news radio seven hundred do.
Let's continue now with broadcast supervity as time allows. I'm
given so few minutes how to pack as much as
I can. It's like ten pounds of corn and a
five pound bag. I do my best under difficult circumstances.

(17:53):
And later on, of course, we're going to have an
expert at Jeffrey Epstein, which is a weapon of mass
distraction used by the me and some will intended conservatives
to shed light upon someone who is irrelevant to my life.
Don't care much about it. It's a summer scandal, which
isn't one. There's a few hairline fractures in the conservative
mega movement, nothing like the collapse happening in the Democratic Party.

(18:16):
So Democrats who've had the opportunity for years to fully
investigate release anything they want to release about Jeffrey Epstein
failed to do so. But now because of Pam Bondi
statement in February, in March that the files are on
her desk ready for review and to be released. Promises
made and promises not kept. A little bit of a problem,

(18:37):
but it's not a big deal. The numbers this morning
on retail sales went up again. Last month they were
down a little bits, signalingly maybe a recession. Now they're up.
In fact, every objective indicator of the economy is in
a good of shape has it been in the last
five years. Number one, unemployment rates down to four percent,
which is and that four percent wouldn't work if you

(18:57):
put a gun to their head. And then also the
stock market is at all time highs. Sixty one percent
of us are invested in the stock market doing pretty well.
Total jobs available is about right now. There's seven or
eight million jobs that can't be filled. So if you
want to work, you can work. We have the deficit.
I saw this number of investors Business Daily. I couldn't

(19:19):
believe it that in the month of June there was
a twenty seven billion dollar surplus in the US treasury
and June of last year there was a three hundred
and ten billion dollar deficit. Now try to explain that.
I watched the commentary and there's not good answers as
to why comparing apples to apples June to June this

(19:41):
year last year, instead of having a huge deficit, we
have a modest surplus. It could be the tariffs, It
could be the cutback in the federal workforce. It could
be that more Americans are taking risks and the effects
of the big beautiful bill have not happened yet. So
I every time there's good news, it's a quick lit
snippet in the mainstream media about retail sales, employment, et cetera,

(20:06):
going up, inflation, tamed stock market high, plenty of available jobs,
gasoline at all time lows. Everything that should be up
is up, everything that should be down is down. But
of course Trump gets no credit for it. Whatsoever has
only been there. What six months, so we'll see what
happens down the road. Won't know better than about a year,
but by that point I'm predicting good things lie ahead.

(20:29):
So you can't if you're in the media and you're
a committed leftist an apologist for progressive causes, which is
the mainstream media, you can't cover good news. You got
to look for something bad because the Republicans in the
White House, not just a Republican, but a Republican that
is loathed by the mainstream You hate it by PBS,
by VXU, by GUC, by NPR that loathe hate it completely,

(20:56):
and so you got to cover the news in a
way that in the case there's a scandal with Jeffrey Epstein,
Jeffrey Epstein, I have a guest coming up after one
o'clock that wrote the book on Jeffrey Epstein, and he's
going to lay it out as much as he can.
Of course, I read his book. I read some of
his writings. Jeffrey Epstein began this activity for some twenty
five or thirty years ago. Where he got his money,

(21:18):
he's kind of a mystery. The author tells us where
he got the money. He discusses whether there's videotapes of
the rich and famous having sex with teenage girls, and
whether or not Trump was involved or not, and everyone
could know he's not involved because the Democratic Party would
have released the information completely. And even morning Joe Joe
Scarborough committed an active journalism this morning head on a

(21:41):
left wing radical congressman rant and raven about Jeffrey Epstein. Jeffrey,
don't talk about the employment numbers, don't talk about tamed inflation.
Don't talk about the price of eggs that going down
fifty percent. Don't talk about a shutdown southern border for
God's sakes. Don't talk about military successes overseas or that
Trump is a peacemaker with nations coming to him to

(22:01):
solve problems. Don't talk about that. Talk about Jeffrey Epstein.
And he was asked the question this morning, Well, in
the years that Obama was in the White House and
then Joe Biden completely controlled by the Democratic Party, why
didn't you release the so called list or the tapes

(22:21):
or the dossier or the report, why didn't you release it?
And for a moment the congressman was stunned to be
asked that question on MSNBC, And then he said, well,
right now, we're not in power right now, Donald Trump was.
He completely avoided the question, provided no answer because there
are no answers other than well, either the materials cannot

(22:46):
be redacted because there's a federal court order not to
make public large parts of this report. Or secondly, there's
no there there because if there had been something against
the Republicans and or Donald Trump files, they would have
been released with glee or leaked with glee by Comy

(23:06):
or by others involved in the CIA, the FBI, Brendan Coe,
et cetera. They all would have released them, and they
didn't release them, and there's no good answer. They're trying
to shift the blame away from all the successes of
Donald Trump toets your eyes off the prize. And there's
some Republicans and mega members that are well intended who
are covering this story in such a ways to indicate

(23:27):
there might be a scandal. Well, you know my view
about pedophilism, it's, you know, you should be under the jail,
not in it. So we'll see what happens after one o'clock.
Listen up to see what you think. Secondly, last night
or saw I say this morning about two o'clock in
the morning, I was up watching it. Of course, the
Senate voted fifty one to forty eight to not spend

(23:48):
about nine billion dollars on USAID, which is foreign foreign
moneys and also PBS ETCTERA, and they kind of cut
out about nine point one billion dollars. It was a
so called recision package that dealt with the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting and also foreign aid, which is not a

(24:10):
very popular item with the American people at all. And
you know my view about government funded radio. Aren't we
in the public and aren't we radio? We are public radio,
and we survive and flourish because of the listeners and
the advertisers and the callers people involved with us. And
if you don't want to listen to Me or Sloany,

(24:33):
don't want to listen to the Rock and Eddy or
Lance or Tom, don't do it. It is absurd. Beyond
the definition of absurd is to think about this idea
that the government is going to fund information directly to
give to you. Now one can argue about PBS or
NPR dealing with documentaries about FDR or another beg's concert

(24:58):
to raise money. I want to give money, Please do.
I mean, it's a free country more or less, please
give money. But the idea that the government will sponsor,
in other words, the government coercively will go into your
pocketbook and your checking account demand that you pay for
radio out of your own pocket that you disagree with,

(25:18):
to me is pretty despicable. That's not the way things
ought to be. In fact, it is wrong. It's damnable,
and it's really wrong to do that kind of stuff.
So I'm glad finally it appears I think the hell
is freezing over that there are those individuals who might say,
you know what, we have plenty of choices in radio.

(25:39):
And if the Democrats truly believe that rural voters who
live in Brown County or in Auglais County are living
in caves incapable of understanding how to operate a radio
to listen to us, or go on the Internet and
see whatever you want to see, that's part of the
reason that the country voters reject Democrats so completely. You

(26:00):
can go to a fishing village in Alaska or some
dirt farm in Mississippi, and you have access to the
internet one way or another, and you can you still
find people that live in Adams County. Believe it or not.
They have phones and internet connections, they have photocopiers. It's unbelievable.
And why do the Democrats fight so hard to keep NPR.
Why because it represents their viewpoint and you're paying for it.

(26:24):
Do you want to pay for that? If you want
to pay for it, damn please do have ad it
build big buildings everywhere all over Go ahead, pay you
salaries to the management staff have added. But the Big
Bird is so rich he doesn't need taxpayer money. In fact, Investors,
Business Daily, Investors dot Com, and I want to credit

(26:45):
Denny from Dayton for sending me the story about the
funding of Big Bird. Last year, Sesame Workshop brought in
one hundred and twenty two million dollars in revenues. Fifty
million came and distribution fees and royalties, thirty seven million
came in licensing of toys, games and clothing, food and such.
About four percent of its revenue came from the government. However,

(27:06):
according to RS findings, the CEO, Melvin Ming, was paid
himself more than a six hundred thousand dollars regular salaries
of Sesame Street personnel and PBS, or north of a
million dollars, including Katherine Maherr, the CEO, makes over a
million dollars a year. In twenty fifteen, PBS signed a

(27:26):
five year deal with HBO, and they're making a boatload
of money. So why do they need our support? What's
the reason? Only about fifteen percent of PBS's budget comes
from you, the taxpayer. Well, as if it's no big deal,
why fifteen percent? How would you like it if the
government paid fifteen percent of my salary as a liberal Democrat?

(27:49):
Would you say that's a good idea. I want to
pay Bill cunningham salary with my tax dollars, and if
I don't pay taxes to pay his salary, I'll go
to prison. Hey, that's a good idea. Would you say
that's let's do it pay Cunningham. No, we have the
choice of hundreds of television channels. We have the choice
literally with this phone on my left, to hundreds or

(28:12):
thousands of radio stations all over the country, all over
the world. And so do we have to send coercively
tax dollars to Washington to fund left wing democratic propaganda
on PBS and NPR. I don't think so. A lot
of what they do is non political yes, we'll watch it,

(28:32):
but for me pay for them to compete with talk radio.
It's kind of ridiculous. This started late in the late
nineteen sixties, early nineteen seventies, half a century ago, when
FM didn't even exist. There were three national TV channels.
Those are not the circumstances today. And so you know

(28:52):
I'm right those Democrats are screaming, shouting and hollering about
getting rid of NPR, which is a media outlet for
their viewpoint that you pay for. We got MSNBC if
you want to listen to that crap. We've got CNN,
We've got the mainstream media. It's all the same. Got
the New York Times, Washington Post, your void point, Your

(29:13):
viewpoint will be heard. And so treating rural voters like
low rent morons who can't get to don't understand radio
and TV is kind of ridiculous. And that's the argument
of the radical left. And you know how important it
is to them, because they're screaming like stuck pigs that
their outlets won't be funded by the taxpayer. Would you

(29:35):
want to fund my salary with your tax dollars? Answer
that question, raise your hand. Let me see a bunch
of hands one up. I appreciate that. Then why should
you courcively pay tax dollars to support VXU and PBS
and other public so called television or radio when most
of the time I disagree with the viewpoints expressed, even

(29:58):
if they were conservative. As a principaled American, I would
say exactly the same thing. It's your choice. See choice
matters when it comes to killing babies, but it doesn't
matter when it comes to listening to radio. Let's continue
with more and if a line becomes available five one, three, seven,
four nine, seven thousand plus later on about one thirty five,

(30:19):
I'm going to welcome in the trustees of Sycamore Township
big party this weekend. Everyone's invited to attend, assuming you
can behave yourself and so much more. But it kind
of drives me nuts when the argument by the Democrats
in Washington is rural voters are stupid. They can't figure
out how to get the radio, and without NPR, they
wouldn't have any way of knowing what an emergency is.

(30:40):
What This station just by itself covers eight states during
the day and thirty eight states at night, and we're
one of about forty fifty thousand WHA clear channels. We
can broadcast all over the world very easily and the
information you need should there be emergency required, We're to

(31:00):
do it. In fact, I'll be transported to a pod
area as south of our transmitter, about ten feet underground,
to give you information if we have a real catastrophe,
I'll be there. And NPR is funded by the taxpayer
to promote propaganda instead of information, and that's got to stop.
I didn't think it would happen. It has to be
a vote tomorrow by the House. And if that does happen,

(31:23):
and then a small funding of NPR and PBS will
be stopped. And believe me, they'll be here anyway. They
can go through more BEG concerts, maybe do documentaries on
Harry Truman, whatever it is. And if people generally older
white females want to listen or watch that crap, have
at it, but don't make me pay for it. Let's continue,

(31:45):
mark my words. A year from today, all these PBS stations,
NPR will still be there, still doing what they're doing,
and more people will support it because that's what they do.
Let's continue. Twelve to fifty five Home of Year reds
News Radio seven hundred wus by Billy Cunningham, the Great American.

(32:09):
Of course, that Jeffrey Epstein matter continues unobated. I tweeted
on this about a week ago in which I did
not believe what Pam Bondy was saying. I do not
believe Nick Petell what the head of the FBI was saying.
I do not believe. I hate to say this, Dan Bongino,
I think he's wonderful. I don't necessarily believe what he's saying.

(32:30):
I don't disbelieve, so I wanted to dive deeper into
this whether cash Ptel knows more than he's saying. And
of course the one man that knows everything is Nick Bryant.
He's a veteran investigative journalist, widely regarded, holding a PhD.
In all things Epstein. Going back to about twenty oh five,
when these matters began, you might recall US Attorney Alex

(32:50):
Acosta kind of want easy on Epstein. In twenty eight
part of the Bush administration, he said that Acostas said
that there was someone up higher in the food Shane
ordering him to back off. The only two possibilities for
Bush forty three or the or Gonzales, the Attorney General,
Alberto himself. That began in twenty oh eight. This's been

(33:11):
going off nearly twenty years. And first of all, Nick Brian, welcome,
I think for the first time to the Bill Cunningham show.
Let's go to number one, which what led you to
investigate Jeffrey Epstein when so few others around the world
were paying any attention going back almost twenty years.

Speaker 5 (33:29):
I started investigating Jeffrey Epstein in twenty twelve. And the
reason I did that is I published a book in
twenty oh nine twenty ten about a nationwide pedophile network
that was covered up by federal authorities. And what we
see with Epstein, it's kind of a carbon copy in

(33:49):
many ways of.

Speaker 6 (33:50):
The network that I reported on.

Speaker 5 (33:52):
And it's the same as far as children being flown
around the country and pandrid very powerful individuals, and also
an intelligence connection and blackmail.

Speaker 1 (34:06):
Wow, well I could ask you, as there's still ongoing.
I pray to god it isn't. But Jeffrey Epstein received
a sweetheart deal, like in twenty oh eight for serious
misbehavior talk about p ditty situations. It was awful. And
why did Jeffrey Epstein in twenty o eight get a
sweetheart deal when it came to trafficking children for sex.

(34:28):
Why was the deal so easy on Jeffrey Epstein in
twenty eight the.

Speaker 5 (34:34):
Department of Justice knew about had a list of thirty
four Jeffrey Epstein victims.

Speaker 6 (34:40):
I've got that list, but they.

Speaker 5 (34:42):
Were aware of forty underage Jeffrey Epstein victims and Alexander Acosta,
and he alluded to this, was told that he had
to stand down from prosecuting Jeffrey Epstein because Jeffrey Epstein
was intelligence. And as you also said, there's only two
people in the and that was in two of seven.

(35:02):
There's only two people in the country that can tell
a US attorney to stand down. One is the Attorney
General and one is the president. And there's no way
the Attorney general is going to cover up a nationwide
pedophile network without his boss saying cover it up. So
that's when the cover up with Jeffrey Epstein started.

Speaker 6 (35:21):
That we can definitively prove, you know, I.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
Do not think currently there's much thought about George Bush
forty three is covering up a nationwide pedophile network involving
one Jeffrey Epstein to me. That's somewhat we're talking about
Bush and Cheney. Why in the hill would Bush slash
Cheney cover up the crimes of Jeffrey Epstein. What's the motivation?

Speaker 5 (35:47):
I believe that they were protecting They were protecting very
powerful people.

Speaker 6 (35:52):
But I believe that.

Speaker 5 (35:53):
They were protecting a political system that's ripe with blackmail,
and Americans are very naive about that. And actually there
was a there's a city and US congressman from Tennessee.

Speaker 6 (36:06):
His name is Tim Burchett, and he.

Speaker 5 (36:08):
Came out about a year and a half ago and
he said, my colleagues are being compromised in honey traps,
and that has been the case.

Speaker 6 (36:17):
Political blackmail is as old as our republic itself.

Speaker 5 (36:20):
So they're protecting a system of blackmail, which I think
is even more important than protecting the number of these
very powerful purpose.

Speaker 1 (36:32):
Hasn't Bush forty three gotten away? Shall we say? Without
remarks or criticisms about this, I would say, if somebody
would ask him, he doesn't give interviews anymore, he would
say out on anything about that, he would simply ignore it.
Is there any objective evidence, like emails about these orders
given to a Costa, the age to stand down is
simply a word of mouth that somehow somebody in the

(36:54):
White House made a telephone call in twenty oh eight
to Acosta in Miami to stand down. Is there any
hard evidence there was any connection between Bush forty three
and Jeffrey Epstein any connection.

Speaker 6 (37:08):
There isn't a direct connection.

Speaker 5 (37:12):
But Bush's father was actually his administration covered up the
Franklin network, and his attorney general was William Barr, And
William Barr was Trump's first attorney general, and he covered
up the Ebstein networks.

Speaker 6 (37:30):
And there isn't a definitive voicemail. There isn't a definitive email.

Speaker 5 (37:37):
But as I said, and I've talked to legal scholars
about this, because I really wanted to be right, the
only people, the only two people that can tell a
US attorney to stand down is the Attorney general and
the president.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
And it happened. What sentence did Jeffrey Epstein receive and
twenty eight that was far different than other pedophile sexual
traffickers have children received? What kind of sentence that Epstein
received in twenty oh eight.

Speaker 5 (38:07):
He was sentenced to eighteen months in the county jail.
He served thirteen months, and he was actually able to
go out during the day and molest underage girls.

Speaker 6 (38:19):
Well, he was ostensibly incarcerated.

Speaker 5 (38:21):
And then he had his little wing of the jail
fixed up like the taj Mahon.

Speaker 1 (38:29):
So you're saying wild in the county jail, he's given
like work release to go out and molest children.

Speaker 6 (38:37):
Yes, yes, absolutely, How's that possible?

Speaker 1 (38:41):
I mean I've heard how's it possible that that could
happen in Miami? I guess this would be like twenty
nine to twenty ten. How is it possible he could
do that?

Speaker 5 (38:53):
Well, how is it possible that the federal government could
have a list of thirty four victims that he molested dead?
Their Anderdon got molested, didn't only do eighteen months in
a county jail?

Speaker 6 (39:05):
I mean, how is that? And the Feds knew at
forty victims?

Speaker 5 (39:08):
So how is that possible that he the most prolific
child molester. I believe that's ever been acknowledged by federal
law enforcement.

Speaker 6 (39:18):
How is that possible?

Speaker 5 (39:20):
It's because the strings were pulled at the apex of
power to allow him to walk essentially unmolesting all those
unraged girls.

Speaker 1 (39:32):
Uh, Nick Bryant, I would assume by twenty ten, Jeffrey
Astein was done with his sentence or so. He then
spent the next many many years flying around the world
Lolita Island. This is a convicted pedophile. You would think
he would be like radioactive, nobody would want to be
with him at all. But during this time frame from
twenty ten to twenty nineteen when he killed himself, is

(39:54):
it true he was out doing exactly the stuff he
was doing before, but on steroids.

Speaker 5 (40:01):
Yeah, it wasn't even a speed bump for him, and
the upper echelon still community. The former CI director William
Burns actually visited him a couple of times at his house,
and we know about Bill Gates and Sergey Brand, a
founder of Google. Yeah, it wasn't even a speed bump.

(40:21):
But the government is saying now is that Jeffrey Epstein
didn't pander a single child. And that's really really egregious
with that memo that came out last week that nobody
would sign. I mean, no one in the Trump administration
was going to take a fall for that memo. But
that memo said that Jeffrey Epstein molested over a thousand

(40:45):
underage girls by himself. Now, I do agree with the
memo that that part anyway, that he did molest over
a thousand underage girls by himself, but the memo also
said that he didn't pander the girls and blackmail wasn't involved.
So what was Jeffrey Epstein doing on his island? Was

(41:05):
he just going to his island and drinking martinis and
then flying back.

Speaker 6 (41:10):
The whole thing is observed. And then with Dwayne Maxwell,
so they're.

Speaker 5 (41:15):
Saying Epstein acted alone, But then Dlainne Maxwell is in
prison and Dlayne Maxwell was indicted on two conspiracies.

Speaker 6 (41:23):
No one else was indicted.

Speaker 5 (41:24):
The same thing is happening with Diddy right now because
there were multiple people involved with Diddy's criminal enterprise.

Speaker 6 (41:33):
So the elite have a very different judicial system than.

Speaker 1 (41:41):
You or me, Nick Briant. How did Jeffrey Epstein get
all of his money? One estimate was a half a
billion dollars, He did not have a college education, and
that he lived the lifestyles of the rich and famous.
Where did Jeffrey Epstein get hundreds of millions of dollars from?
Where the money come from?

Speaker 5 (42:01):
Well, less Wechner gave him power of attorney over his empire,
and less Wexner was the CEO of l Brands, which
owned Victoria's Secret and Tommy Hilpinger. He's a billionaire and
Epstein could do anything he wanted.

Speaker 6 (42:17):
With that money.

Speaker 5 (42:18):
And this is how the mainstream media has been so disingenuous.
Bennity Fair actually had an article that addressed this, and
they said that Les Wexner gave Jeffrey Epstein power of
attorney over his billions was because he was lonely.

Speaker 6 (42:35):
And then and this is another this is another good one.

Speaker 5 (42:38):
Leon Black, who was the head of Apollo Management, another billionaire,
and another individual that was Jeffrey Epstein was pandering underage
girls too. He gave Jeffrey Epstein one hundred and sixty
million dollars. And there were multiple media outlets that reported
that the reason why Leon Black, a billionaire, gave Jeffrey.

Speaker 6 (43:01):
Epsteen one hundred and sixty million dollars was because Jeffrey
Epstein was helping him with his taxes.

Speaker 1 (43:07):
Great guy, one, I don't believe any of that. I
don't believe I'd be your friend for one hundred and
sixty one million dollars. He's got to provide some services
of some type commensurate with the value given. This guy
lived the lifestyles of the rich and famous. Well, why
didn't Maxwell, She explained, Maxwell, the top deputy of Jeffrey Epstein,

(43:28):
is serving like twenty years in federal prison in the
state of Florida. If she knew incriminating information against anyone
of the rich and fame is not named, why wouldn't
she disgorge that information to save her own hide?

Speaker 5 (43:43):
For the same reason that Jeffrey Epstein is dead. It's
because she knows that entire network. And I believe that
she was told either you can talk, and well, if
you talk, you're going to end up like Jeffrey Epstein,
if you were going to push you in prison for
a while while, and.

Speaker 6 (44:01):
You're going to have to adjust to that.

Speaker 5 (44:03):
But she was put in a very cush prison, and
then she was cycled into dormitory living, which is very
rare for relatively new inmates to live in dormitory living
because it's usually inmates that have been exemplary and are
fairly close to getting discharged from the prison. So she's

(44:24):
got to cush life and prison, and she's going to
get all that money when she gets out.

Speaker 6 (44:29):
So and the same thing happened in the Franklins gown.

Speaker 5 (44:32):
I wrote that book about the interstate child trafficking, and
there were two primary pedophilic pimps. One kept his maull
shut and did about ten years for financial crimes, and
then he had a no show job waiting for him
at a BM BMW dealership in Alexandria, Virginia, so he
was taking care of her.

Speaker 6 (44:52):
And the other one was much like Epstein.

Speaker 5 (44:56):
He had a big ego and I think it would
have been hard for him to deal with prison, and
he committed suicide. So I think that I think that
Dwayne Maxwell was given door one in Door two, Door one.
She keeps them all shed and does some time door too.
She ends up like Jeffrey Ebstein.

Speaker 1 (45:16):
Well, I'll tell you what. This is used by the
media now to drive a wedge between Mega supporters and
President Trump himself. Can you predict in the next few
weeks or months, what's going to come out of this
thing or is it simply going to die on the vine.

Speaker 5 (45:32):
I don't see this dying on the vine. I mean
what the Trump administration is doing. It's covering up a
for thousands of girls that were molested, well over a
thousand girls that were molested and it's lyne. It's it's
saying that Jeffrey Epstein didn't pander any of these girls,
that that there was no blackmail involved. I mean, no

(45:56):
one believes that. I mean there are some hardcore mega
people that are living an extreme denial, but no one
else believes that.

Speaker 6 (46:04):
So this is something.

Speaker 5 (46:06):
When the Trump administration said that they were going to
release the Epstein files, they put a white elephant in
the living room, right, and they thought that they could
kill the white elephant with the memo that was released
last week saying that Jeffrey Epstein acted alone.

Speaker 6 (46:23):
But that killed the elephant.

Speaker 5 (46:25):
But now the elephant is still in the living room,
and now it's really starting to stink.

Speaker 1 (46:31):
Well, let's see what happens. It's a fascinating tale. And
this makes p did he look like he committed misdemeanors
compared to what Jeffrey Epstein did for what from at
least twenty oh six, probably been well before that to
twenty nineteen.

Speaker 6 (46:45):
Jeffrey Epstein.

Speaker 5 (46:47):
Jeffrey Epstein traffic miners for twenty five years. And I've
started an nonprofit organization called the Epstein Justice and your
listeners can go to Epstein Justice Dot com. And if
they want to be part of the solution, if they
really want to get justice for all these victims and
want the government to come.

Speaker 6 (47:07):
Clean, that's what we're about.

Speaker 5 (47:10):
And so I would suggest that you and your listeners
go to Epstein Justice dot com.

Speaker 1 (47:15):
All right, Nick Brian, investigative Journalists, thanks for coming on
the Bill Cunningham Show. The truth will set us all free.
The truth will set us free. And Nick Brian, thanks
for coming on the show. And may God bless you
and God bless America. Nick, thank you very much.

Speaker 6 (47:29):
Thank you.

Speaker 5 (47:29):
Bill.

Speaker 1 (47:30):
All right, let's continue with more. There you have it.
I don't know what to say, Dwight General. I would
trust Cash Betel and Dan Bongino, and I would trust Bambondi.
But this thing has me in turmoil because I don't
know who to believe. I don't know who to trust.
I know a bunch of girls were victimized, and maybe
as many known thirty four to forty, but the reporting
is close to one thousand over twenty five years. And

(47:54):
while in jail, he was released on work release to
go have sex with girls. Unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (48:00):
No.

Speaker 1 (48:01):
Cunningham News Radio seven hundred WW.

Speaker 7 (48:03):
And I may have to force something. Somebody said, who's
the genius that thought of that? I said, it's me.
Unlike Biden. I stay awake at night thinking about how
to save our country. He was much better at sleeping
than me. Could sleep in the beach. He could sleep
in a beach with cameras rolling.

Speaker 1 (48:21):
I can't do that.

Speaker 3 (48:23):
Oh hello, quiet, and I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
Nine segment. We have Sycamore Township Royalties here. They got papers.
Well you about it, says eviction on fiction? What what
have we been have we've been paying? Go fund me?
Hurry up. We're gonna work out of the Cunningham Garage.
We're gonna the Queen of Hearts game. We're gonna do
the Queen of Hearts dam. That's what we're gonna do,
the Clean of Hearts. But Mike mcewn is here, Greg

(48:55):
Bickford is here, Tom Weedman is here, Tracy Tracy is here,
Schwegmann and callums. Everyone's your first of all, My talk
about Tomorrow Night, Friday and Saturday is gonna be wild.
What's gonna happen.

Speaker 8 (49:05):
Thirtieth Annual Festival in Sycamore Tomorrow night, the eighteenth, eighteenth.
We've got Naomi Carmen, the Almond Butter Band, attribute to
the Almond Butter the brothers.

Speaker 1 (49:21):
But who was that first group of Naomi Carmen? Seg
Who is Naomi Carmen named a car after the singer? Singer?
Is he a singer? He's a singer. Maybe she's trained.
You don't know what she is Sorrow Night. I don't
know she is. And then we're finishing up Tomorrow Night

(49:41):
with Hell's Bells segment. Ac DC is going to be
that is right down your ally excellent will he will
be in the front row with his shirt off. I
don't want that, believe going nuts? So where is the event?

(50:02):
People wanted Greg vikfer Once to know where to.

Speaker 8 (50:04):
Go bet Toll Park, forty three twelve Sycamore Road. You
can't in Sycamore Town, Sycamore. What's it called festival in Sycamore?

Speaker 3 (50:11):
Is there a.

Speaker 1 (50:12):
Website the Tired discount Ors Festival? And yes, it's the
Tire Good Point Tired discount O, your sponsor. I'm glad
Greg Bigford is here because sek we have Ron's roost
and first of all, do the plug. Then I want
Greg and Tom and Tracy to talk about a relocation
of Ron's Roost we go again, will he the stooge
reporters of Proud Service ever your local temp Star Heating

(50:33):
and air conditioning dealers Temepstar quality you can feel in
beautiful Western Hills called Derby Heating and Cooling at five
one three, five nine eighty four forty nine or go
to Derby Heating and Cooling dot com spots. Thank you, Roxy.
We also want to thank Ron's Roost. It's clucking good
at thirty eight fifty three Race Road at five seven

(50:56):
four two two two for our lunch today. The Queen herself, uh,
Pam or no Donna bought it in Now, Tom Weedman,
what about this negotiations about Ron truth shutting down in
uh on the Race Road and coming to Kenwood to
upgrade the fair. So we're gonna have shrimp flombay in Lobster,
Newburgh made by Olga. Yeah, well you disclose the part.

Speaker 9 (51:20):
I thought the Purple Pool was moving in. Have you
heard about the Purple I guarantee you he's on the
electric trick. I can't eat all the food that's very
good the Purple Pool. But nonetheless, let's.

Speaker 10 (51:33):
Not get on ro words deep negotiations with Ron Larkin
and uh we we we may be moving the.

Speaker 1 (51:42):
Next thirty days. AGAs waited on it. She likes the idea.
We're gonna moved, like segment right there down. Olga likes
the idea in the Chicken from the west Side to Kenwood.
Get that big rooster over here. Can you see him
going up and down Montgomery Road. There's no way on
earth that place is gonna look look lose the west Side.
I'm just saying it's possible. Everything's possible, anything dominating. What

(52:07):
do you think. I don't think they're gonna leave. I
don't think they're gonna leave the west side. Will I
think you'll have a revolt. No income tax, you have
low property taxes. Made him a nice deal, and it's
more upscale. It's a little upscale, you know, a little
bit down. Where would it be located if they move?
I can't say top secret, can't say Kenwood townsend right

(52:28):
next to your house, right, it'll be close. Yeah, I'll
be looking like you in about two years. Yeah, okay. Now,
as far as you have to upgrade the offerings, is
that correct? You can't? You gonna have maybe some purple chicken. No,
don't give up we don't have a Kentucky closed right.
I can't see the clothes over there, so we could
use a wrong That's one of the reasons why he's

(52:49):
moving here. He likes it. Olga Augusts tired of working there,
which it's only been there sixty four years, kind of
tired of the story she has working at Walt's hitching Post.
She's a server and she's serving you know, Walt sitsy.
So this guy kept coming in and trying to she
he said she. He said she uh looked attractive and

(53:11):
he said I like to I like to meet you.
He said, I don't want to meet you. Kept serving
him chicken chicken. After about four months, guy's name is
Ron and said please go out with me, and she
finally said yes. And now sixty some years later they
found the restaurant and they've in nineteen sixties correct, and
now they've sold more chicken the Kentucky Fried Chicken all
the locations come by. That's unbelievable. Unbelieve Andy Mack and

(53:35):
Andy Mack I got to get him in fora Matt
coming in. Well, that'll be here before you know it.
And Tracy Schwegman talk to me we've had you on before.
I hate to bring this up. How are the banks doing?
I mean, I said, okay, it's okay. You know we're
at the All Star break. Reds are Reds are going
to be coming back here res come back t well.

Speaker 6 (53:54):
So you know this is the perfect weekend since the
Reds are out.

Speaker 1 (53:56):
Of to come on down to the bank. You come
to Sycamore towns me tomorrow night. Everybody. They didn't want
to compete. That's right, that the Reds All Star Game
didn't want to compete. That's correct. Tracy Calvin Callam's house,
Dylan Vale, Dylanville's wonderful, Willy, as you know, it's always
wonderful if there's more in Sycamore and just a middle

(54:18):
class guy from Deer Park, Willie. I know the feeling.
And you're gonna name Wicklow Avenue after me, I'm told,
and so I very much have an honor eighty four
to seventy nine Wicklow. But uh, what else? What is
it named after? You? Got the Great American Park? What
is it named after you? I about the bridge, A
new bridge, the Great American Bridge. Yeah, I heard that's
that's true. Ron's Roos will be sold in like a

(54:39):
drive through window. Just come right through whole booth. Chicken Chicken,
chicken chicken. Get a bucket to go, bucket to go
on the way to on the way to Florida. Got
more crafty assess pool segment. Give me some sports and
make it fast.

Speaker 6 (54:51):
Will you?

Speaker 1 (54:52):
MLS soccer of course, last night Evander's scoring two goals
in Roman Celtano with his seventh clean sheet of the season.
FC Cincinnati downs Messi and enter Miami three nils. How
come Messi left early? Wouldn't shake hands. He was a
kind of a clown. I saw a picture of him.
He was mad, he was He was on a golf

(55:12):
cart eating cold pizza after the game. Should have gone Ron,
trust I guess he should have maybe pink, maybe pink.
That's The Open Championship is underway with Ted McKay. Jakob
Olison of Denmark is at four under along with Matt
Fitzpatrick and Lucas Glover was like a tennis player Scotty
Scheffer at three under at sixty six. There he is?

(55:34):
What about? What about? Mac Roroy is at three under
at the turn bet uh Xander Shaffley is even through
at seventy one how about Jason Kocrack out of Xavier
and heard in for a while. He's on Live Golf.
He's part of Live Golf. I didn't know that he's
one over at through seven. He won't make the cut.
He's been where's he been live Golf? He disappears of course.

(55:57):
Bengals update. Bengals opened a training camp in six days.
They got about three days to sign Shimer Stewart or
what happens then? Well, then I guess he goes back
to school and gets reach. He gets back in the
draft next year. Put him in the dunk booth. The
other guy other the other linebacker hasn't signed either night

(56:20):
the sun No, he's kept his mouth shut. I think
there's a lot of second rounders. What about that segment?
Why many signed? What about Trey Henderson? Nothing, tomm You
were there for the big Trey Henderson's speech at Montgomery
in he raised a lot of money for Since then,
right downhill, lads are off today again? Will I missed that?

(56:43):
I was in Florida studying the Sunshine. You were directing
the attacks on Iran? That's correct, I was doing the
bunker Buster. Yeah, that is me. Reds are off again. Today, Willy.
They'll resumed the season tomorrow night with the first of
three against Pee Alonso and the Polar Bear and the
Mets in New York's pitching tomorrow night. It'll be uh Nicolodolo.

(57:05):
N He's pretty good. Interesting comments from Middletown zone. Kyle
Schwarber might be coming the All Star MVP tells the
Philadelphia inchoir coming back that he would like to play
for the Reds one day. And what do you know,
he's a free agent next season. Nice? Really nice. He
would have five hundred home runs a season here. Save

(57:25):
the money from Candelaria, save the money from Martinez. Those
two were what forty five and twenty sixty five million
to sign him immediately? And Hunter Green? Is he on
the trading block? He's still in Arizona. How's his groin?
Well now it's his back, his back, Yeah, he's twenty
five years old, for God's sakes. Oh yes, HAITLN Clark's
got a back and a groan. I don't think women

(57:47):
had groins? Did you know this? Did women have groins?
You learn something new every day on this show, as
we know. That's fine, Tracy, do women have groins? I
heard what the hell her right and the left when
both hurt is a bad right grind and a bad
left ground. We got two grons. I mean, she's one
of those transsexual dealers. I'm not sure what's going on.

(58:09):
What the hell's happening here? I don't don't ask me.
I don't know. So Hunter Green's got a groin. Well
now it's in his back. He goes from his pains
in his back, back and forth. The pain, the pain
is what you know, By the way, do men have
serving I don't know they have groins, but women have
groins to men asking me for you think doctor kram

(58:29):
Check or something.

Speaker 6 (58:30):
I don't.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
I don't know. I think we get a doctor call
in where's cram Check when you need we got a call.
I don't think he works in that part of the
body well, because we know he does not. I don't know.
What do I know? Mike, Mike McEwan once again, Tomorrow Night.

Speaker 8 (58:44):
We got to Tomorrow Night and then on Saturday nights,
the big big night with Kevin Fox.

Speaker 1 (58:48):
You're saying ac DC is going to be there, They're
going to be there Friday. It's a band. It's not
the band itself. No, no, Okay.

Speaker 8 (58:56):
Then Saturday, we've got Kevin Fox a shooting Star.

Speaker 1 (59:00):
Shooting Star, that's a ride at the Coney Allen Shooting
Star is going to be spent many days on that.
I bet you didn't in the Lost River. I know
you were in there a couple. I try to get
a penny on the Lost River. She wouldn't get in
the boat with me. She told you to get lost
in the river. The boat beg of him for the night.
Is Mark Farner's American band. Of course.

Speaker 8 (59:19):
Mark Farner, the creator and leader and singer and guitar
player for Grand Funk Rail.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
Graham Funk Railroad, is going to be there in ac DC, Mark.
That's going to be a crowd. Hopefully the same security
at the White Blue Ash, Red White and Blue Ash
Bash will not arrive, but we'll see. That's up to
Tracy Kellums to handle that if necessary. Would you kick
ass like mister ass? Oh? Absolutely for it ready? I
bet Tracy, good luck to you. You're a rose among

(59:48):
a bunch of foreigns. I don't know why you do it,
But Tom, when can we look forward to an announcement
about Ron's Rush Reels coming soon, Coming soon, Sega's coming soon. Okay,
shut down that facility and move the would will be
there every day, every day day. About the renaming wicklow
three votes, I don't know. We got three votes. Put
a little rememb we got one vote or two? I

(01:00:09):
don't know. You only need to only need to. What
about Esther Marie? Oh yeah, I used to date a
woman named ester Marie. It's right there. And jud yeah
eighty five fifty eight tuddlest I don't know somewhere. It's
great to have you here, but good luck. There's more
in Sycamore. Correct, Amen, that get me out of the
Student's Report. We have the power brokers a Sycamore Township.

(01:00:30):
R here Willie and honor of Sycamore Township our home.
We leave you with the immortal words of the Stooge Report.

Speaker 11 (01:00:38):
Yeah, I'll tell you what would you do me a favorite?
Would you say hi to my favorite radio personality segment Dennison?
Because that guy, without a doubt, has got some class.
That guy is the guy that makes this show segment
Tom my favorite personality. I said, hello, see.

Speaker 1 (01:00:53):
If you're breaking up again, but I'll be in touch.

Speaker 7 (01:00:55):
Man.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
Thank you. That's Tom Strike, remember him? Amen? Tom Strike?
Like that? Thanksgiving day story. The family got into a fight,
so just leave it alone. Trying to tell you off
the air. They're trying to say who gets the breast?
And so these two brothers are fighting over a breast,
which happens quite often really, So one of them took
the turkey fork and deposited into the chest of his

(01:01:19):
brother during the Thanksgiving Day dinner and then all you
know what, the family each other on top of the
turkey and the mass potato. They called nine to one
one and then the hell of a time getting the
his chest. They were fighting over the breast. They got it.
They got it. Tom once again, good to have you here,

(01:01:41):
and Mike and I share the life and times of
Gordon Veterino and we want to say hi to him.
What a great guy and was ninety years old. He
coached Burnette Pontiac used to be right here, yep. And
also aver University came later. And now he's having some
health difficulties. But there are many young boys that are
now a little bit older than look back fondly upon
our times with him. So we wish doing better into

(01:02:04):
nothing but the best. Greg. Good luck with your negotiations
with Olga. I know she's on speed dial with you. Tom,
I don't know how you do this. Yeah, you don't
know either. Why is Kenwick Town Center work when all
the other malls don't like segment? Whatever is Florence Mall?
None of them?

Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
More?

Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
Is we actually? We actually? You mean you're talking about
traffic or traffic and business? It's the best mall.

Speaker 10 (01:02:28):
Actually, can we control the traffic signals? We from Black
Friday to the first week in NTL there we have
we know we have we have somebody at a at
a computer at an engineering firm controlling it. What that's why,
That's why we moved. That's why we want the traffic
what nobody else does that? Brother, We don't have a
lot of time right here, the three of them. We've

(01:02:52):
had great leaders in the past too.

Speaker 1 (01:02:55):
But nonetheless, so you're saying that there's somebody in real time,
in real time, real time. Did you hear that? Yeah?
Why don't Why don't others do this? Because too expensive?
Too expensive?

Speaker 10 (01:03:08):
And so you move the people, you know, when they
used to back up on that on the exit exit
ramp from seventy one to get off. I don't see
that anymore because we move the traffic because we have
a guy sitting there at the computer changing changing the signal.

Speaker 1 (01:03:21):
Segment your reaction. That doesn't happen in Middletown. I guarantee, no,
why not? Why don't you give some leadership? He knows what,
he knows what. I'm showing up at four o'clock in
the morning because had light right there at seventy one
on Montgomery Road is green like money y right through it.
I thank you from Tony Roellow. Oh boy, fight us on.

Speaker 6 (01:03:46):
Now here we.

Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Go, le little sign not happening fellas. So now Rod's
rose is in great shape. You're gonna have two entities
competing to keep that take no competition that. Well, look
at those faces Tony Rosiello, Buddy L. Rosa, and Olga.

(01:04:09):
And I said that. I said to Olga, what why
do you date Buddy L. Rosa? And uh, she said
he wanted to date me, but I didn't find him attractive. Segment.
Let's continue. You got me out of the Foos report
Friday and Saturday, Sycamore Township. Look it up, and away
we go with a C d C in their prime

(01:04:31):
a news radio seven hundred w LD Bill Cunningham, the
Great America, of course, have a list of social welfare
spending by the City of Cincinnati that includes a hip
hop dancing and basketball games and additional swim pool activities

(01:04:54):
and also face painting, also monitors at government square, et cetera.
When the teenager the symbol, and of course that's terribly
important to learn how to hip hop dance. It might
be better to heart two hundred and fifty more cops to
resolve the problem. And to point this out in the
city of Cincinnati. I'm looking at a posting by Ken Kober,
who walks in the shoes of alber Dunaway as the

(01:05:15):
leader of Quin City Lodge sixty nine to quote. Juvenile defendant,
after being adjudicated delinquent which means guilty for aggravated robbery
and weapons under disability which means he had previous record
with guns, was released by Judge Carrie Bloom of Juvenile
Court to roam the streets and continue his life of crime. Monday,

(01:05:37):
officers observe the defendant operating a stolen vehicle and possessing
not one, but two guns. Due to circumstances beyond their control,
the defendant was able to avoid apprehension. In other words,
he took off like a jack rabbit. Then on Tuesday,
officers once again observed the defendant another stolen car, not one,
but two guns, and led the officers on a high

(01:05:57):
speed pursuit, crashing a car. Time. The defendant was taken
into custody, charged with ten felonies relating to auto theft
and gun charges. This defendant needs to remain locked up,
Judge Kerry Bloom. This defendant is a menace to Cincinnati,
will be the next homicide victim or suspect if he's
released because of your soft on crime policies. You're going

(01:06:18):
to regret regret this one. I would add the word
also in addition to all the others being released. Ken Kober,
the president of the FOP, what happened after Tuesday? Do
we know yet if Judge carry Bloom has released another
armed juvenile, Derek Havoc in the black community? Well ironic
in this case that you just referenced.

Speaker 12 (01:06:37):
Thanks to the Parole department, there was a parole holder,
so they were unable to be released. But I suspect
without that parle holder, they would have been released.

Speaker 1 (01:06:47):
Well how bad is this? Because you would think in
the good old days, if you're a person and you're
committing numerous robberies, stealing cars. I think there's going to
be more than two thousand cars stolen this year in
the city since along with maybe as many as ten
thousand car breakings. Can you go back about ten to
fifteen years But by the way, the Democrats were completely

(01:07:09):
in charge ten or fifteen years ago. The last time
a Republican was in charge was nineteen seventy one with
Willis Gratison. So this isn't necessarily against Democrats, it's against liberals.
Is this the way things were ten or fifteen years ago?
Not even close.

Speaker 12 (01:07:25):
You didn't have fifteen years ago the amount of kids
carrying guns.

Speaker 1 (01:07:29):
I mean, you might have one every once in a while,
but you.

Speaker 12 (01:07:33):
Certainly didn't have kids shooting at each other. You didn't
have these You know, this rash of juveniles that are
that are being homicide suspects or homicide victims.

Speaker 1 (01:07:41):
And like I said, the.

Speaker 12 (01:07:42):
Case I just referenced, he's out running around, he's been
shot at several times. We know that this juvenile has
been involved in other shootings, just a matter of investigating
it further. But you know and then that this juvenile
will be a suspect or a victim of a homicide
if they're let.

Speaker 1 (01:07:59):
Out a Ryan Hinton style. I'm also looking before we
talk generically about a posting. This is one of Judge
Melbourne Marsh's cases. Defendants shot a twelve year old victim
in the back of the head. Fortunately that juvenile survived
and this defendant is now charged with attempted murder felonious

(01:08:19):
assault times two. He gets a relatively low bond. He's
out roaming the streets of Cincinnati. The defendant's name, this
is public record, is Brisha Stroud. This is an African
American who's out having shot somebody in the back of
the head. What's the latest with him? Oh it's a
female female. I'm sorry.

Speaker 12 (01:08:41):
However, that got posted, and I know within twenty four
hours the bond was revoked, the person was arrested, and
that wasn't Judge Marsh was not the one that issued
that bond.

Speaker 1 (01:08:52):
I think that's important to know.

Speaker 12 (01:08:53):
It was actually Magistrate Anita Burning that issued that bond.

Speaker 1 (01:08:57):
And this only highlights this isn't just juvenile. You know
you got you got.

Speaker 12 (01:09:01):
Municipal court judges that are these soft on crime. We're
going to issue these castless bails. But then you've got
ju or adult common police magistrates that are doing the
same thing.

Speaker 1 (01:09:12):
It's all the court system.

Speaker 12 (01:09:13):
They're all doing the same thing, and it's endangering Hamilton County.

Speaker 1 (01:09:16):
Uh magistrate and need a Birding set the bond. Then
when you highlighted this Judge Melvine Marsh, I think Judge
Melbourne Marsh is one of the better judges in Hamilton County.
I was with her about two or three months ago.
I made a state visit to her courtroom, which, by
the way, was hilarious her and her mother a dailier
part of Martha was unbelievable. And so when Melbourne Marsh
found out that this low bond was set off, we

(01:09:38):
go and you talk about a generic problem. It's not
one magistrate like Aneda Birding or one judge like Harry Bloom.
Are you saying it's endemic to the system.

Speaker 13 (01:09:50):
Absolutely, it's it's being affected by.

Speaker 1 (01:09:52):
Adults, juveniles.

Speaker 12 (01:09:54):
You know, you have a certain amount of judges that actually,
you know, look at the safety of the commun Judge
Burkwitz is a perfect example. Who issues a three million
dollar bond for a thirty one year old that shot
and killed a twelve year old. That's the bonds that
Hamilton County residents should expect from the most violent offenders
in this county. Unfortunately, it's just not happening all the time.

(01:10:17):
You thank god Judge Burkwitz was in room May this week.
Hamilton County will be safer because he's here.

Speaker 1 (01:10:23):
Well, describe this a little bit, because I heard the
defense counsel, and god knows, I've been one. You have
to be somewhat gymnastic in your arguments to try to
get your client out on bond. And the public defender,
the female public defender, said, well, this thirty one year
old was a victim of a crime, and this got
a lot of note because of the age of the
twelve year old who's been identified because he is deceased.

(01:10:46):
But kind of describe the facts of that case, which
are very interesting.

Speaker 12 (01:10:52):
Well, this thirty one year old, who's also a convicted
fallon that had no business carrying a fire and to
begin with you that decides he sees his stonlee car
and he shoots at it. I think he's probably going
to get a lot of sympathy in the community because
the community's tired of being victimized. And while I appreciate that.
That still doesn't give you a reason to pick up
a gun and shoot at your car. I don't care

(01:11:13):
if they're twelve or they're twenty two. It is still
just a stolen car. Like I said, I understand why
the community's likely going to sympathize, but we can't have
people just shooting at a stolen car because their car
was stolen. But it just shows the bigger symptom. People
are tired of it. They're tired of crime.

Speaker 1 (01:11:29):
Well, Brian Henderson had a report on this guy, a
thirty one year old that has forty four zero previous
contacts with law enforcement from the age of eighteen to
thirty one, thirteen years forty contacts, numerous felony convictions. One
might ask fop had ken Kober, why is he not
already locked up? If he was locked up, the twelve

(01:11:50):
year old will be. His family said he hitched a
ride with somebody, and I'm willing to accept that at
face value. I guess he wasn't part of the group
that was stealing car o. His family said he was
simply getting a ride. So he's dead. It is what
it is. But should he have been shall we say
free after committing numerous felonies his entire adult life. Well,

(01:12:14):
I mean, you look at some of the felonies that
he's convicted.

Speaker 12 (01:12:16):
Robbery, I know, there was a drug trafficking, things like that.
You know, this is just a bigger symptom of the problem.
Forty So he's been arrested forty times in twelve thirteen years.
So the police are doing their job. The police are
enforcing the laws. We just have judges that aren't sentencing
them and sending these people to prison.

Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
Well, it's really unbelievable to think about this that somehow
in our system, which was Hamilton County, which was so
conservative and so well run with low crime, all hell's
breaking loose. Did you see the news conference a few
days ago when the mayor and the chief of police
sprained their shoulders patting themselves on the back about how
much crime is down? Is that true? I would argue that.

Speaker 12 (01:12:54):
The first week of July was not exactly a downward
event for crime, especially when I had police officers being
shot at, if juvenile's being murdered, I don't care what
the numbers say. When you have things like that going on,
how could you stand up there and say that crime
is going down.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
Well, it's nonsense. That's rather gymnastic in this verbal presentation.
Do you think social Irish Rowley, who's now with security
guards living in OTR for like two weeks? I saw her.
I think it was Channel of nine or five walking
around talking to people, another social welfare worker wanting to say,

(01:13:33):
how do you feel? What can we do for you?
House did to live here and she gets all this
negative information. I go to it to OTR. I was
there Saturday night, got an ice cream, a greators who
walked around Washington Park a little bit, and I saw
open air smoking in marijuana. There were three or four
individuals on motorcycles doing wheelies up and down Vine Street.

(01:13:53):
It was light. I wouldn't go there after dark. It'd
be dangerous. By the way, would you take your family
to OTR after dark? Not a chance? Say that again,
not a chance. And you know how many years you've
been a cop, just over twenty three years, and you
would not. An armed cop would not go to OTR

(01:14:17):
after dark, maybe before dark.

Speaker 12 (01:14:20):
I'm not taking my family there. No, I'm not taking
my family. They're absolutely not all right now.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
Lastly, of course, Clyde Bennett is a shirt tell friends
of my friend of mine. I like what he does.
As far as criminal defense attorney, he's representing the person
who murdered Larry Henderson, the fallen Deputy Sheriff of Hamley County,
and so far over one hundred thousand dollars has been

(01:14:45):
raised for his assistance, help and defense. There's been lawsuits filed.
We'll see what happens down the road. The identity of
those individuals who give money to this kind of a
person hinting is really unbelievable. If somebody reaching their pocket
and pay for this. As an on duty police officer,
how do you respond to large members of the community

(01:15:07):
funding Hinton in his defense for killing in cold blood
officer Larry Henderson.

Speaker 12 (01:15:16):
Well, you know, I'm conflicted because as a police officer,
as an FOP leader, I'm absolutely disgusted that people in
the community would want to do something like this. But
the other side of me is an American in a
free country. It's there right if they want to do it,
have at it. You know, the people spend money on
all kinds of silly things all the time. Is he
entitled to the defense, He is, absolutely so. It's certainly

(01:15:40):
a moral confliction that I have because I do enjoy
being in a free country where some of these things
can be done. But, like I said, the professional side
of me, I just shake.

Speaker 1 (01:15:50):
My head and go, oh whatever.

Speaker 13 (01:15:52):
If that's what you want to spend your money on,
go have at it.

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
I shake my head a little bit, because law enforcement works.
You're about two hundred and fifty cops short. You need
a lot more cops instead of hip hop dance lessons.
Can you tell the American people why certain laws are
not enforced in the City of Cincinnati, such as open
air smoking marijuana such as one wheelies up and down

(01:16:16):
Vine Street, or the curfew requirements are not enforced. Why
are those things by police not enforced. Well, we'll start
with marijuana.

Speaker 12 (01:16:26):
The city administration has made it clear that there is
no expectation for us to enforce this law.

Speaker 1 (01:16:31):
I don't care.

Speaker 13 (01:16:32):
That's a city administration telling us that.

Speaker 12 (01:16:34):
So if they're saying there's no expectation, why would any
officer go out and enforce that and then find themselves
in a predicament, you know, and potentially get themselves you know,
whether it's discipline suspended.

Speaker 1 (01:16:49):
Whatever else. Why would they do that?

Speaker 13 (01:16:50):
If the city administration says, ah, there's no expectation for you.

Speaker 1 (01:16:53):
To do this. Stay right there, Ken, because what if
they say to you, there's some state laws we want
you to arrest people for others eight laws. Don't arrest.
You're violating your oath in a sense. They're violating their
oath in a sense by saying don't enforce criminal statutes.
What if they would say, you know what, domestic violence
is not that big of a deal. Like in New
York City with Mom Donnie, he says cops should not

(01:17:15):
show up at the sites of domestic violence. The next
mayor of New York says, send social workers. What if
they say, you know what, DUIs not that big of
a deal, don't pull people over. Would you follow those dictates?
I wouldn't.

Speaker 12 (01:17:29):
But this is politics over policing and it's destroying the
very fabric of our safety in Hamilton County.

Speaker 3 (01:17:36):
Right.

Speaker 1 (01:17:36):
What about the truancy and or truancy is a different matter.
What about the idea that you have to be certain ages,
You got to be off the streets of Cincinnati. There's
a curfew. Why not enforce those laws? Law in the.

Speaker 12 (01:17:49):
Books twenty twenty, you arrest these juveniles twenty twenty refuses
to take them. The Juvenile Justice Center refuses to take
these kids. I've talked to council members, I've talked to
city leaders. Twenty years go, we would have curfew sweeps summertime,
we'd open up a rec center.

Speaker 1 (01:18:05):
We'd have officers that all process these kids.

Speaker 12 (01:18:07):
Right, we go round them up, the ones that are
violin curfew, round them up, take them to a rec center.
Those officers there that would process them would call their
parents and require them to come get them. So that
freed the officers in the streets to go back on
the streets, and then you had a small contingent of
people that they had the babysit these kids until the
parents would get there. The problem is now we don't

(01:18:28):
have that. So now we've got an officer that stops
the juvenile. Kid won't tell him where he lives, kid
won't tell him whose parents are, what phone over they're
supposed to call. You can't take them to twenty twenty.
So now you're stuck with this kid, and what are
you supposed to do with them in.

Speaker 1 (01:18:41):
The back city of your cars is drive around with them.
Can't do that, That's just it.

Speaker 12 (01:18:46):
So the answer is, well, if we don't have a
mechanism to deal with this kid, they just don't stop them,
and that's what ends up happening.

Speaker 1 (01:18:55):
Can you address yourself to the murder of Patrick Harroling Gerr.
I listen to the nine call last night from Sarah.
His wife is complete terror. Why was Mordecai Black running
around the streets of Cincinnati.

Speaker 13 (01:19:09):
That's a million dollar question. Why was he running around?

Speaker 12 (01:19:13):
You know, we know that he served his complete sentence.
He was a targeted violent offender who had cut off
his bracelet. You know, there was certainly a breakdown in
communication with different agencies in law enforcement. Then that's why
you have representatives like Cyndy Abrams that is working on
fitsing these gaps in communication. It's something that has to
be done that way. Agencies know, Okay, this person who's

(01:19:35):
a targeted violent offender, you know, has violated these terms
and they're wonted and it's just it's something that just
didn't happen in this case, and unfortunately, out of tragedy,
something that has to happen. And if it's legislation that
is going to require agencies to communicate better.

Speaker 1 (01:19:51):
Than I'm all for it. Lastly, is there a movement
underway as we speak this Thursday afternoon to hire two
hundred and fifty more cops? Is that ongoing or he's
not just smoking mirrors.

Speaker 12 (01:20:03):
I'm guessing that it's probably not going to be that many.
I know, we do have a recruit class that starts
on Monday, July twenty first. I think it's set for
fifty nine officers. The problem is we're gonna lose probably
fifty nine before the end of the year. So this
lateral class is certainly gonna help, which we can get
that that's started, I'm hearing maybe the first of January,

(01:20:23):
so that will certainly be something the beneficial. But we're
not going to see this, you know, for six eight months.
We're we're kind of just going to be treading water,
hoping that officers don't leave. Even I could tell you
when they retire, they come down here to the FOP Hall.
You have to sign up for their retiree benefits, do
things like that. In this place is a revolving door.
We got people almost daily coming in here to sign
up for their retired benefits.

Speaker 1 (01:20:44):
They can't take it anymore. Yeah, a lot of them.

Speaker 13 (01:20:47):
I got a classmate of mine that just left.

Speaker 1 (01:20:51):
He said, I'm done.

Speaker 12 (01:20:51):
He's not staying for a deferred retirement option program drop program.

Speaker 1 (01:20:56):
He's like, I'm out.

Speaker 13 (01:20:57):
He left, unfortunately, but that's that's becoming the norm.

Speaker 1 (01:21:01):
FOP chair Ken Kober, the president of Queen City Lodge
sixty nine. Go online check out the number of people
being released by magistrate and need a birding and others.
She's the tip of the iceberg. The real problem are
the judges who instruct the magistrates, and the judges themselves
who said little or no bonds. And the murderers, the shooters,
the rapists, the gang bangers are set free on the

(01:21:23):
streets of Cincinnati, resulting in more death in mayhem. I
guess it could be up to actually the voters. What
a novel concept, the voters to change the direction of
city hall. Ken Cober, once again, thanks for coming on
the Bill Cunningham Show. And you're a great American. Thank
you for your service. Ken, Sure, thanks for having Bill.
God bless you. Let's continue with more. How about that?

(01:21:44):
You just heard it. That's what's happening. Will there be correction?
I sincerely doubt it. Bill Cunningham News coming up at
your home of the Reds News Radio seven hundred WLW.
These people are perverts. Hello, quiet skulls. I'm broadcasting in

(01:22:06):
the Rock in the last time, Sorry the Rock is
not here segment. In the last hour we had the
ac DC front men were here along with the others
at the Sycamore Festival happening tomorrow night and Saturday. Plus
we have the Stormtroopers available in cap some of the
kids act up. The Red Wright and Blue Bash will
not happen at Sycamore would you agree? I hope not.

(01:22:26):
Will you be there? Segment? They have some funnel cake.
I love funnel cake. Maybe floating questions will you be there?
Can't say, I can't say. I mean it depends, depends,
but I know Greg Euster will be there because it's
a Sycamore Days at Sycamore Park. Go'll be bigger than Montana.
You sure that's not Bill Cunningham party named it that,
but I said no, it's aka Bill cunning That's right,

(01:22:51):
that's right. But segment these are important times? Would you agree?
I would say?

Speaker 10 (01:22:54):
So?

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Is the president going to be okay? He's got this
venus problem? What the hell have you looked it up?
Chronic veg veins in his legs are closing or something.
I looked it up and they have trump in bad shape.
He's got swollen ankles and he doesn't look good, shall
we say? And I looked it up and it's it's
called chronic venus insufficiency. And you write that down. It's

(01:23:17):
called c v.

Speaker 8 (01:23:20):
PI.

Speaker 1 (01:23:20):
Do you take medication for that? How to reverse venus insufficiency?
Ten actionable tips. One is a ten Deer Park High
School and drink the water. Number two basketball. You have
poor legs circulation. You have swollen ankles and legs, sock lines,
varicos veins and aching legs and more. The president has

(01:23:41):
that second man, he's got it something else? What does
he got I don't know. It requires a medical diagnosis.
Pain in the legs, et cetera, discoloration of the skin,
thick skin on the legs, swollen blood, vessels in the skin,
varicos veins and more like matt Reece, chronic venus insufficiency

(01:24:02):
as caused by bad circulation. What is the best treatment
for it? How about this get rid of democrat? Oh,
I'm sorry, don't say that. Of course, lifestyle changes, impression
therapy potentially minimal invasive procedures or surgery segment of your reaction.
I hope the President's going to be okay, Willy you

(01:24:23):
think the Democrats wish for that? No, will he the
st reporters of proud service, every local Temestar heating and
air conditioning dealers tamestar quality you can feel in Cincinnati
Koch Schmid Heating and Cooling five one three five three
one sixty nine hundred. What about moving to Kenwood and

(01:24:44):
are giving up their green tosup? Lokewe they or not?
Tony Rosiello will not let that happen. What about just
to drive through in Deer Park area by dipsy doodle? Now,
wouldn't that be something you could drive through and pick
up some ron's roost? At the Open Championship, there's a
like a si x way tie for the lead with
Matt Fitzpatrick, Lucas Glover and Company, Scottie Scheffler just one

(01:25:07):
shot back. Let's see this looks difficult, would you agree?

Speaker 11 (01:25:11):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (01:25:12):
Yeah, Well, the wind is like blowing one way and
blowing the other and then the rain's coming in and
it's a mess. It's a crisis. That's the way it is.
That's what we like in those segment We love crises
Evander two goals last night Willie and Roman Celatano recording
his seventh clean sheet of the season. FC Cincinnati down's
messy and those inner Miami Miami Boys a three to

(01:25:34):
nil about five out of six now for Pat Noonan's club,
and they are at Real Salt Lake on Saturday night.
What about Hell is Reel? What happened in that game? Well,
they rebound out that loss, they found out that hell
is Real. Well, they sure did, winning two zip to
lose four two, but then messy, but then they came
up big last night. What about Ronaldo coming into town?

(01:25:55):
Christiano Ronaldo, I don't know, would not be something? Oh
are you going to say? You look like him? A
lot of people of Chris Euster, a nice woman at
Deer Park Community School, says I look like Rinaldo. Do
you think she needs some help visually? What do you think?
I want to go down to check it out? Wing

(01:26:15):
eye Care, go check it out. Bengals Up. They brought
to you by Good Spirits and Party Town thirty locations
in northern Kentucky. Time to party, Rookie What Bengals rookies
reports Saturday. What o'clock is ticking? Shamar Stewart is not signed.
I have a text here for my friend at Social
Security is an expert and all the things relative to
the Bengals are enough to do it on social Security already.

(01:26:39):
Yes he is, he's only like twenty four. He's going
to collect early. He says there are two unsigned second
round picks. I believe the reason is because there are
two second round picks, we're given fully guaranteed contracts, which
is not normal. So Stuart's the only first rounder that's
left unsigned. Well, you have garantaranteed money? You kidding? You

(01:27:04):
had a sense I do? Let's see will he have
Reds update? Reds are off again. They will resume the
second half of the season tomorrow night against those Metropolitans
in New York with the action here on seven hundred WLW.
Some we got some injury updates? Oh no, who's an
hour ago from Mark Sheldon? What about a Hunter Green?

(01:27:25):
Hunter Green is still a goodyear Arizona rehab with that
groin strain and he's on a throwing program. What about
Caitlin Clark? What about her groin? Both of hers are
hurting and she's out of the All Star Games. And
now that's a crisis right there the Indianapolis. Yeah, and
she's out of the All Star Game, Bengo, And I'm

(01:27:45):
sure the TV boys are going what she says, she's
not even none. None of the festivities are growing. How
do you hurt your groin? Both of them? Do women
have groins? Yeah? Rhet louder on the il since the
Star to the season, here we go.

Speaker 11 (01:28:02):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:28:02):
Then with a left oblique injury obleak. He's in Arizona
now and he's no timetable for his return. He's gone.
He's out for another rehab. Ian Jibo, the reliever, about
out since June thirtieth. He's a guy with long hair. No,
I don't think so. He blew the open right right

(01:28:23):
shoulder impingement. He's got no timetable for his return. That's
not good. When they say no timetable for your return,
that means there's no timetable. What about Hunter Green is
coming back? I don't know. We'll wait and see it.
Hopefully is growing, it's a happy growing In the next
couple of weeks.

Speaker 11 (01:28:40):
Jack McKeon said, this year we got more Mr hy.

Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
Than You're not kidding. Yeah, a loose groin is a
happy growing Oh, it's better get real happy because they
need number twenty one in the lineup. How are your groins,
by the way, they're fine. You got to check him
later on. Interesting comments from Middletown native and All Star
MVP Kyle swarbur this is big segment. Told the Philadelphia
in Choir during the break that he would love to

(01:29:04):
play for the Reds one day. Oh, he's a free
agent after this season, really after this year. The Reds
could sign him in three months. But he said he
likes playing with the Phillies. But because of the money
that dow the Ray and the me right, I would
say the Reds get a nice infusion of cash. Maybe
uh get rid of candelaria. That was forty five mil

(01:29:26):
forrtenis is making twenty between those two. That's sixty five
million dollars. Kyle Schwarber, I was still say would hit
five hundred home runs a year here at my ballpark
and drive in about three thousand runs. Dropping the ball
in the licking river. Youre talking about going on on?
What do you say to dear park? Folded, tied and
night In twenty seventeen, because of demanding mcclintyre. Deer Parker

(01:29:48):
was undefeated, untied, unscored on the reds of twenty twenty six,
twenty seven, and twenty eight would go one hundred and
sixty two and oh each year, which just happened to
have Demanty MacIntyre with us and Greg Euster Demani, you
recall was in twenty seventeen and twenty eighteen, twenty eighteen,
twenty eighteen, dear recall deer park being twenty nine to zero, undefeated, untied,

(01:30:12):
unscored on. Yes, sir, I remember now what was the
key element? I gave you boys a speech, as you
might recall, but the greatness, the opportunities all of us thought.
He was in the locker room yelling like give me
the ball. He did say at times, give me the ball. Yeah,
well that's what you used to say, Jamal, Jamal, just
give me the ball. He did say that a few

(01:30:33):
times in the locker room. The Nubians were kicking the
crap out of the park. Backs are against the wall
right to Moni always you were losing by nine points
at the arena in Ohio State. Maler was playing the
game after and Maler would not play deer park during
the regular season is I don't want to see this.
They didn't want to see us, and so he stood
up and said, Jamal, Jamal, just give me the ball.

(01:30:55):
Give me the ball, among other things. Among other things,
the head coach, you're a good friend, and Steve Gentry said, guys,
give him the ball. It took possession for five straight times,
hit two threes, four point plays, a five point play,
then I overhead hot tomahawk dunk. The Nubians were in trouble,
and deer Parker rose for glory and for some the

(01:31:16):
judgment seat of God. De MONDI do you recall that?

Speaker 4 (01:31:19):
Yes, one of the best days, the best years of
my life that year for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:31:22):
Segment the post game celebration was big. Tell him what happened.
I had my dear park jersey on running around Ohio
State Arena, tahs. Those two TV guys had to be
from Columbus to Cleveland. They had no idea who you
were what they said you had that you had your
jersey on from what was it, nineteen sixeteen six, the
last great class barely fIF were you in nineteen sixty six?

Speaker 10 (01:31:45):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:31:45):
The thought us your father wasn't born yet. Segment, please continue.
And you were up there, you were you were up
there on the ladder, and they just kept they didn't
know what to do. They kept showing you on TV
and they had no idea who you were. They who said,
guy up there must be an older, older player and
alumni or something. And I said, you guys are stupid.

(01:32:06):
Sixty years ago. It's a great American up there. That's good.
And since then you've become a Rhodes scholar, played some
professional basketball. Now you want to move back to Deer Park.
You got good sense, don't you? Skyline chilly love it,
love it segment? You're maybe he could. Maybe those guys
will be a shooting this weekend at the Sycamore Township Festival.

(01:32:27):
Do they have basketball shooting up there? Will maybe Papa shots. Yeah,
I'm the nineteen Williamani. You're a smart man over there.
Smart man. These many many have taken the challenge, talked
to Byron Larkin, have felt the pain, felt the pain.
Now I'm talking about Papa shoots. You're with the free throws.

(01:32:49):
Free throws another issue. When you went to Moler Undefeated
on Titan, Bobby Brannon and Byron in a good Time
Bill Unningham free throws. You know how to you know
how to google stuff. I'll definitely look it out as
soon as we lived here. Cunning And they took him.
And who was fit fielding my balls? Nothing but sweating,
nothing but string? Who was fielding my balls? I think

(01:33:12):
it was Tricia McKie. Was it was you underneath the net?

Speaker 3 (01:33:16):
So that.

Speaker 1 (01:33:19):
He never want to state championship?

Speaker 14 (01:33:21):
When Bill was there leading the league and scoring, whose
matto was, I've never seen a shot I didn't like it.

Speaker 1 (01:33:29):
He led the scoring city and scoring one year.

Speaker 14 (01:33:31):
I guarantee you he did an average point five assists
for the entire season because once she gave it.

Speaker 1 (01:33:37):
To him, you never got it back.

Speaker 15 (01:33:42):
Here's a call strike again on a low velocity pitch
for Makeda. I'm not gonna pile on there because I've
learned my lesson Marty one two pitch swinging a miss,
and Irvin just flared at it again. Makita took a
bunch off and fooled Irvin badly for out number one.

(01:34:03):
Bill Cunningham has an open mic three hours a day.

Speaker 14 (01:34:08):
He would not retaliate because he knows what I said
is the truth, and everybody everybody knows that he never
gave the ball up. If you gave it to him,
don't expect to get it back because the next thing
you know, the ball is going to be in the
air toward the best.

Speaker 15 (01:34:21):
We're talking about the uncommon voice of the common man.

Speaker 1 (01:34:26):
That's correct. Well you can tell the jealousy in his voice,
can't you. Yes.

Speaker 14 (01:34:33):
And that's the same high school that Bill Cunningham went to,
Deer Park. They never want to stay championship. When Bill
was there, leading the league and scoring. Whose matto was,
I've never seen a shot I didn't like.

Speaker 1 (01:34:45):
They called me Bill Crowe. Seg your reactions. He's absolutely right,
all right, seg what else going on in sports? Anything?
What about Caitlin Clark's is growing? Can we get he's
not playing this weekend All Star game? Heat treatment? Called
for your groin? I guess I don't know. Can you
demand you ever have a hurt groin? Actually I have? Well,

(01:35:08):
how do you? How do you fix it?

Speaker 4 (01:35:09):
A lot of rest, a lot of sleep, some massage
might help. Massage, and a lot of video games as well.
Video games gets it done. Sego, there you go, all right, said,
get me out of the Stoog's report, will you in
honor of the Deer Park Wildcats in the championship undefeated, untied,
unscored on twenty nine to zero, and a rainy day
here in the tri State may leave you with the

(01:35:30):
immortal words of the stooge report.

Speaker 14 (01:35:33):
Well, he was beating you down today on the radio.
I was not comfortable with it at all. He can
do whatever he wants to do. I was not the
one that spit the bit against Chris Sabot. He can
say anything he wants to spit the bit. Having trouble
swinging a golf club with your right hand around your throat.

Speaker 1 (01:35:50):
All of that applies to Billy c.

Speaker 14 (01:35:54):
So he can say whatever he wants to say over
your And if he wants to play us, you bring
Jimmy Oppenheim and I'll bring Brett Wederick and then we'll
see how it plays out. Hey, you know, if we
can settle for the PGA guy, that's great. I'll just
take Jimmy p I'll take Steve Kirby, so will I?

Speaker 1 (01:36:12):
Yep? Yeah, cunning am running off of the mouth like
he does.

Speaker 14 (01:36:16):
Geez, I'll take your guy, though, here's my guy.

Speaker 1 (01:36:19):
Sounds like I'm his guy. Doesn't he the money? He
sounds like my Can you feel the love? I can
feel the love. I can feel the love. Love in
the air. Greg, thanks for coming in. Greg Euster, athletic director.
He's the John Cunningham of Deer Park High School segment
Get Me Out of the Students Report I just did
on seven hundred WLW
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