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September 19, 2025 • 88 mins
Willie talks with the Vice President of the University of Miami (OH) chapter of Turning Point USA Barrett LeMaster. Also Senator John Husted joins Willie to discuss the Charlie Kirk Assassination and the Schumer Shutdown. Finally Willie breaks down the crime in Cincinnati and how we can stop it.
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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:07):
Bill Cunningham, the great American. Of course, Reds Baseball starts
about six oh five tonight back maybe a little bit
earlier than that. In first pitch about six forty or so.
Nicklodola's on the mound. Hunter Green was unstoppable last night, incredible,
and we have the coverage. They have three more with
the Cubs through with the Pirates. We'll see what happens.
But of course, the big issue in the country is
the murder of Charlie Kirk and what's happening in Turning

(00:30):
Point USA. Erica Kirk. I've reached out. She's going to
schedule to come on with me in about a week
or ten days after the memorials concluded on Sunday. But
one of the local chapter vice presidents, Barrett Lamaster, he's
an accounting major at Mia University. I might end in
the Farmer School of Business, and my friend Scott Farmer
would be very happy to hear that that we have

(00:51):
young men like Barrett Lamaster, who is our running Turning
Point USA Chapter at Miami University, the home of the RedHawks,
and Barrett Lamaster, welcome the Bill Cunningham Show. And first
of all, Berret, can you speak to the issue of
the assassination of Charlie Kirk and what impact that had
on your life and also the impact of Miami students
in the Turning Point USA chapter. What impact did it have?

Speaker 2 (01:15):
Yees, sir, thank you once again, Bill for having me
on and to answer your question. When I first heard
what happened, I was very very upset.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
To see somebody lose their life for you know, expressing
their First Amendment right. To me, that was just very
very concerning. I was very very upset, you know, and
I would say the way it's impacting students here on campus.
You heard a lot of students, you know, mourning and
expressing their you know, displeasure with what had happened. And

(01:49):
obviously it's something like that to happen in front of
a group of thousands of students in public. You know,
you never know what kind of impact that's going to
have on somebody that's there or somebody that maybe looked
up to him on that aspect of things. But here
on campus, we've received so much interest that people wanting
to reach out and get involved and you know, really.

Speaker 2 (02:09):
Express their freedom of speech. So here on campus.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
There's been a lot of developing.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Interests and not only turning Point USA.

Speaker 3 (02:18):
But standing up for the values that Charlie stood for,
you know, whether it be your faith, expressing what you
believe in, and really just being courageous and telling your
own truth.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
What before, what was the motivation months and months ago
that caused you to get involved in the first place.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
So I actually got involved back in high school. That
would have been my sophomore year of high school. I
joined Attorney Point Chapter, and for me, it was just
really kind of I'm a very faith driven person, so
that was what caught my eye when I first first
saw Charlie was you know, how backed he was in
his faith, and that's what kind of got me into

(02:54):
the movement.

Speaker 2 (02:55):
But then I started.

Speaker 3 (02:56):
Listening to you know, his podcast and has proved me
wrong and seeing that, you know, he was really coming
from a point of telling his truth and that that's
kind of really what inspired me. But also, you know,
in these past you know, a few years months, really
just kind of understanding what he was preaching was somewhat
common sense, and I think as a country, common sense

(03:18):
has kind of been something we've lost.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
And so for me, it was more.

Speaker 3 (03:22):
About you know, finding something that I aligned with on
some aspects, but also just telling the truth and being
more you know, common sense wise with things.

Speaker 1 (03:32):
How much flak. I watched a news story last night
that there are places not like Miami of a completely
different character. I watched about fifteen or twenty students at
NYU in New York City, And when my TV show
was in New York, I went there and spoke at
a class, and I did certain things. And it's it's

(03:53):
in a pretty good section New York City, but it's
very urban. And these Turning Point USA students had a
table set up, had a sign up said prove me wrong,
had the American flag there, and within about fifteen minutes
they were shouted down, their sign was torn up, their
tables are overturned, and when the police arrived NYPD, nobody

(04:15):
was physically injured, so they just let it go. Do
you have similar problems at Miami?

Speaker 3 (04:22):
You know, we haven't personally encountered anything to that aspect.
We've done a few different tabling events, and at one
of our tabling events, this was a few weeks ago,
I'm a student did come up to us and say
some pretty hurtful things.

Speaker 2 (04:36):
But me and my brother, my brother is the president
of our chapter. That stuff doesn't affect us. If somebody
wants to.

Speaker 3 (04:42):
Come and, you know, use their words to try and
to mean us and what we stand for, we're really
just not going to let that affect us, you know,
because we know that the movement's bigger than ourselves and
what other people say, So, you know, words can sometimes
be hurtful, but I think in that aspect, you just
got to brush it off, which we we did pretty well,
i'd say, but other and there hasn't been anything anything

(05:03):
more than just I would say, use of words. There's
been nobody trying to disrupt what we're doing, or take
our stuff or destroy it or anything like that.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Last night I watched Jesse Waters on Fox News. They
had two students on from UCLA. Their lives have been threatened,
their docs repeatedly. There's individuals at UCLA that follow them
around campus and yelling obscenities, especially at the College co ed.
It's dangerous and they feel as if their life's at risk.

(05:32):
Charlie Kirk felt the same way. Do you feel as
if this mission of yours may result in something really
bad happening to you or one of your one of
your brothers.

Speaker 2 (05:44):
No, I personally don't.

Speaker 3 (05:46):
I've always felt really safe on Miami's campus, and I
think it's just a very safe environment we have here,
and I hope that wouldn't be the case, you know.
I dream for a country where we can all, you know,
coexist with different opinions. I want to be, you know,
in a place where, you know, like Charlie, a vision
where we could have these tough conversations come together and

(06:08):
you know, really discuss our differences, and it's good to
have differences, because differences build character and they build relationships.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
And for me, it's just so hurtful and demeaning.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
To see people, you know, threaten other people over common beliefs.
I mean, it's just it's honestly sickening to hear about
those stories like you're accounting. I mean, it just it
really breaks my heart that that's what has come to.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Are you aware of what's happening on college campuses? With
some twelve hundred chapters? Is unique. I'm old enough to
remember when I went to Xavier, there wasn't much It
was a Jesure religious school, but there wasn't much religious
ideations at all. I go back to Xavier I'll go
to a so called Catholic university. I'm often embarrassed by

(06:52):
what I see at Georgetown University, what I see, what
I see at Catholic campuses, Saint John's, for example, in
New York City. I'm embarrassed by what I see. There's
no sense of God, there's no sense of faith, no
sense of family. And I think, uh. And this gets
into one of the topics I often cover, which is
the uh the unattached white male, certainly the murderer, the

(07:15):
assassin whose names whose names never crossed my lips. Came
from a so called good family. Mom and dad, functional,
father involved in law enforcement, mother worked, and after a
year or two, after a high school, he went he
went to u UVU and then kind of dropped out engineering.
He was bright, he was intelligent. He got lost in

(07:36):
the dark web. He got lost in conspiracy theories. He
worked himself into believing that Samow Charlie Kirk represented evil
and that Samoa Charlie Kirk and those like you, Barrett
Leamaster are hate mongersaid. Somehow, he believed, from his disjointed
view of reality that he had to act. He seemingly

(07:56):
committed no other criminal offense in his life at the
age of twenty two, and then by listening to his
fellow travelers, he developed his attitude toward Turning Point Usa,
Charlie Kirk, toward God, family in America, which are the
three themes of Charlie Kirk's life that he acted. He
wanted to kill the Dreamer, hoping the dream would die.

(08:18):
Are you aware of the literature that indicates we live
in a disjointed society where you might get lost on
the internet, in porn or in gaming, and that you
live in some alternative universe. By swimming in a sewer,
you begin to feel as if you must act to
stop Hitler, or stop the Nazis, or stop fascism. Can
you do you understand and know that's happening in certain

(08:41):
corners of the world right now, the young, unattached white
male that lives in some fantasy land.

Speaker 3 (08:48):
I mean, you hear stories and you know, you see
things on the news and for example, this which has happened.
I mean I personally here on our campus haven't seen
anything like that, haven't heard anything like that.

Speaker 2 (09:00):
I believe it's going on.

Speaker 3 (09:01):
It may be going on, but for me, I think
speaking on everything that you kind of just referred to
we need to get back to the basics in America,
which is God first, family second, and politics third.

Speaker 2 (09:15):
People in this.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
Country are so indulved in hate. I just feel like
everybody has hatred in their heart. And like I said earlier,
I think we just need to be able to have
these conversations to coexist with other people. I think part
of what you're saying is, you know, people getting into,
you know, these deep holes where they feel.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
Like they can't get out of, and you know, these ideologies.

Speaker 3 (09:37):
I think it's from lack of you know, interaction with
human beings. I think, you know, whether they get themselves
on the dark Web and they start reading and then
they just have no interaction with people, and they start,
you know, getting on these chat websites and they can
talk with other people who think the same way they feel, and.

Speaker 2 (09:52):
It's it's it's fantasy land, really.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
I mean so, in my opinion, I think the best
way for me America, you know, prosper it's for people
to start finding God.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
And you know, like you were saying, like these.

Speaker 3 (10:06):
Universities, you go to a Catholic university or to a
Christian university, and you don't get any sense to that,
you know, I think it's kind of disappointing, very much much.
I'm very backed in my faith and I'm a very
strong advocate for my faith, and I think that we
could benefit from more people, you know, finding God and
you know, going to church.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
The second principle of Charlie's life was family. And by
that I mean in today's world, the average male is
married at the age of thirty one, the average female
is married at the age of twenty nine. By that
point you're well down the road. There's personal relationships happening,
a lot of sex without love, a lot of drugs

(10:49):
improperly used. And if we live in a society where
family does not matter much, at is personal gratification, it
is sexual pleasures, taking drugs to live in some alternative universe,
it's living this indirect life on the web. Then the
family structure will collapse and the large parts of our

(11:09):
society is completely collapsed. And I would like to thank
you and I Barrett LeMaster of Turning Point, USA, live
for a reason. If this is all there is, if
one my dead body simply is put in the ground
at Gaeta Heaven Cemetery and that's it. Then one should
perceive pleasure as the ultimate god. One should perceive personal

(11:34):
satisfaction as the automate goal. But if we live a
faith filled life, this is a way station, is something better,
And I hope, I hope that when the messenger was killed,
the message continues. Normally, when there's charismatic leaders of a
group that falls, the group falls. Also, why will that

(11:55):
not happen with turning point?

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Well, Bill, it's simply happen because we're all believers in
the mission that Charlie put forth, And honestly, at the
end of the day, that mission can be categorized into
finding your faith, believing in the nuclear family. And you know,
when it comes to politics, it's speaking your mind, it's
speaking your truth, it's having those hard conversations. And I
think a lot of the people who are involved, you know,

(12:20):
in you know, their first moment right and wanting.

Speaker 2 (12:22):
To speak out.

Speaker 3 (12:23):
I think they've seen this as an attack on them
as well, because if they were willing to do this
to somebody that believed the same things as you.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
What would they be willing to do to you?

Speaker 3 (12:33):
And I think it really touched people because not only
was it an attack on a political assassination, but.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
A lot of people have been saying it's a religious.

Speaker 3 (12:42):
Assassination because most of his not all, but most of
his political beliefs were backed in his faith and he
had openly expressed that.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
And I think that.

Speaker 3 (12:51):
A lot of people who are religious that maybe kind
of weren't, you know, speaking their mind, are kind of
coming out and saying, you know, if we can't preach
what we believe in, why are we you know, why
are we here just to be quiet and not say,
you know what we're thinking.

Speaker 2 (13:04):
So I think that's kind of.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
The mood I've got a sense from just on campus
and you know, through different from communications with others. And
I really don't think this movement will die. I think
Erica is a very very strong woman, and I think
she is going to do a wonderful job, you know,
heading Turning Point. And I think she she has the
fire in her heart to continue this mission for her husband,

(13:26):
and I think she's gonna do a great job. And
I think she's gonna have a lot of young Americans
behind her at Turning Point USA.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Barrett let master one or two quick things. How many
members were in the Turning Point USA Chapter A Miami,
say two weeks ago, and how much insurance is there today?
What changed? So two weeks ago, what was the status
of Turning Point USA at Miami, Say two weeks ago.

Speaker 3 (13:51):
We had about twenty five members, So twenty five members.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
Out of maybe how many students now it's about seven
or eight thousand at Miami No.

Speaker 3 (14:00):
I believe on campus it's around seventeen thousand, and then
with online and commuters it's about twenty one I believe.

Speaker 1 (14:06):
So you had like two dozen members two weeks ago. Yeah, yes, sir,
And what's the interest today?

Speaker 3 (14:14):
At our meeting this past Tuesday, we had about four
hundred people come to that meeting, and we have gotten
over two thousand followers on our Instagram.

Speaker 2 (14:25):
Tons of people have reached out.

Speaker 3 (14:26):
To us SEA direct messages saying they want to get involved.
We have tons of people, you know, from the community,
wanting to help us in any way they can on
our student like register for different organizations. There's a ton of.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
People requesting to join. And to see, you know, four.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
Hundred people show up to a meeting after just the
week before there was about two dozen. It speaks for
the magnitudes of I think what's going to start happening
in America, people coming forward and speaking their truth.

Speaker 1 (14:53):
And when's the next event? Is there another event coming
up where you might do prove me wrong event.

Speaker 3 (15:00):
We're definitely looking into that on some different aspects. Nothing
has been officially confirmed yet. More details will be out
on that. Just I encourage people to check up on
our social media when something is set in stone, it'll
all be released on there. And we're just so thankful
for the support from the community.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
You know, it's meant a lot to us.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
You know, this is important. You know, Barrett the Master,
we need ten thousand, we need a million. Charlie Kirks,
this is important. I thought the federal government was done.
I thought it's over. It was a good, great experiment
that failed. The cities are in complete collapse. Every American city.
The public school systems and most of the American cities

(15:44):
have collapsed. The southern border was wide open, and we
were borrowing two trillion dollars every year and unpaid debts.
Church attendance was down as far as it can be.
Catholic churches under siege in many corners. Then all of
a sudden, a few months ago, we made a slight
turn in the right direction. And now I think of

(16:06):
the comments of Yamamoto, who, as you may know, was
the planner of the Pearl Harbor attack on December seventh,
nineteen forty one, and he was in a room when
it came back that the Japanese forces were extremely successful
in taking out the American navy of Pearl Harbor. Everyone
was drinking sake and cheering up. And someone look at Yamamoto,

(16:28):
who planned the whole attack, and said, why aren't you
cheering with us, Admiral, And Yamamoto said, I fear that
we have awoken a sleeping giant and filled it with
a terrible resolve. And they looked at him and said, ah,
now now we got this. Don't worry. And I fear
that the forces of evil do not know what they've done.

(16:51):
And I hope that Barrett Leamaster, you at Miami will
light a flame of courage for god family in America
that will burn for generations to come. And do not
live a life is anything other than filled with value
and worth, and live the kind of life that Charlie
would have been proud about. You know what I'm.

Speaker 3 (17:11):
Saying, Yes, sir, I completely understand what you're saying, and
I do agree with you. I think this has ignited
a whole generation of Charlie Kirk's an attack on this,
and I think it's really opened people's eyes up.

Speaker 1 (17:26):
All right, Barrett LeMaster, head of the chapter of my university.
And if in the future you might need a little
publicity for something, you have my personal email. You get
in touch with me. I'll provide some air cover in
the Midwest. And let's let's get this thing moving big time.

Speaker 2 (17:44):
Thank you Bill so much for having me on. I
appreciate your time.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you, Barrett LeMaster,
I'll bless you.

Speaker 2 (17:51):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
Well, let's continue with more. That guy gives me hope
your comments. Next on news radio seven hundred WLW, I
hit the music, Dave Keaton, hit the music. When I
hear words from Barrett to Lamaster at Miami, I guess
he's eighteen or nineteen years old as a freshman at Miami.
I'm getting some background noise out of Miami that maybe

(18:14):
the president and others. President Gregory Crawford of Miami is
not offering shall we say, full support for turning Point USA.
And I'm going to tell the powers that be that
at this point hold things quietly because I anticipate that

(18:35):
after the murder of Charlie Kirk, maybe the universities and
colleges would not act like Yale or Harvard or UCLA
or NYU. And I would hope that the local college
campuses would want their students to be involved in an
organization that their focus is God, family, and America. That's

(18:57):
not bad godly in America and in the past. I
understand in Miami there was some reticence, some apprehension of
the powers that be at Miami not to give this
chapter what they deserve. That there was a permits and
requests for this and more. Documents had to get a

(19:18):
sponsor here and a sponsor there. But if you act illegally,
well that's fine. Simply organize a protest to boycott, just
march around. That's okay, you can do that. But if
you believe in God, and you believe in family, the
nuclear family, and you believe in America, maybe make these
kids go through too many hoops. So I'm gonna stay

(19:40):
in touch with the Turning Point USA chapter in Miami
and elsewhere locally. I do have some political friends and
I do have some political influence. And if my university
under President Gregory Crawford doesn't with open arms welcome turning
Point USA, then and he works for someone, he gets

(20:02):
his funding from somewhere, and I'm sure he has federal money,
and I'm sure he's got state money, and I'm sure
the boards of trustees of these colleges understand that there's
a new sheriff in town and they will be judged
differently than they would have been under Joe Biden and
Kamala Harris and Barack Hussein Obama, etc. They'll be treated differently.

(20:25):
So I anticipate soon to get a report from Barrett
and from others at Miami that the boy, the attitude
of Miami's changed toward us. We are college kids who
want to worship God, they want to talk about family,
they want to talk about the American flag, and if
that's not welcome on campus today, I'd like to know.

(20:47):
And I've given out to these individuals my personal cell
phone and my personal email, and my next few calls
will be to a certain vice president, a certain governor,
a couple of US senators, a local and they will
have hell to pay if they do not understand the
value of this turning point USA chapter. Secondly, I found

(21:09):
this in on YouTube and Charlie Kirk was doing a
podcast I think was Senator Mike Lee of Utah where
he was murdered, and Charlie Kirk said the following about
the dangers of the radical left. Dave Keaton hit.

Speaker 4 (21:27):
It my fear, Senator, and I hope I'm wrong, And
let's say stay in prayer that I'm wrong, that someone
is going to get shot the same way that Steve
Scalisee got shot and god forbid killed. The Left is
creating a pressure cooker with so many of their rank
and firal paramilitary troops that very well might result in
one of us getting shot or killed.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
God forbid that happens.

Speaker 4 (21:50):
We're getting death threats every single day here on the
Charlie Kirk Show.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
Well, he was a prophet in addition to being a martyr.
Charlie Kirk was a prophet. And when I see this story,
and I'm gonna mention this as Senator John Eustad in
about twenty minutes, the headline nearly one hundred House Democrats
refuse to support a resolution condemning political violence, and I
read that story, and I said, what, Well, I went

(22:19):
deeper into the story, and this is what it is.
That this morning, about ten thirty am, the House of
Representatives passed a resolution condemning political violence and honoring Charlie Kirk,
but nearly one hundred Democrats refused to support it. And
so I thought, Okay, well, maybe the Democrats support political violence,

(22:41):
or maybe it's about Charlie Kirk because he stood for
God family in America. Well maybe Democrats don't stand for
God family in America so they don't want to sign
up for that. Or maybe Charlie Kirk was too radioactive.
So I went back to the month of June. You
might recall in June there were Democrats killed in Minnesota.

(23:03):
House Democratic Leader Representative Melissa Hartman and her husband Mark
were killed by an assassin who dressed up like a cop,
who was a Democrat and an appointee of Tim Waltz.
He was angry about all kind of stuff, mainly he
was mentally ill, but he was a Democrat. So there
was a resolution offered in June by the same House

(23:28):
of Representative Leader Mike Johnson, and it's simply word for
word traced the same resolution for Charlie Kirk, and at
that point the vote was four hundred and fifteen to zero,
and the resolution dealt with objecting to political violence and
honoring the life of House Democrat Representative Melissa Hartman and

(23:51):
her husband Mark killed in their own home. Every Republican said,
you know what, we honor Melissa Hartman and our sacrifices,
and we also condemned political violence. So might Lee. So
I'm sorry. Mike Johnson, the House Speaker from Louisiana Ward
for Ward, had the same resolution for Charlie Kirk, except

(24:14):
substituting the name Charlie Kirk from Melissa Hartman. Guess what,
one hundred Democrats this morning were not supported. That kind
of tells you where we are. And this feeds in
nicely to what's going on with what Jimmy Kimball. Now.
The media and others would have you believe that Donald
Trump fired Jimmy Kimball, even CNN reported last night, which

(24:39):
is hard for them to do that before any action
by Brendan Carr, the head of the FCC, took no action,
by the way, He simply held a He had a
brief interview twelve hours after the event took place which
was yesterday, and he simply said, look, we'll take a
look at that in the future. But Jimmy Kimball had

(25:00):
terrible ratings. His ratings the last eleven years have collapsed.
There were numerous groups of TV station owners that were
contractually bound to ABC who for months and months and
months and months, said we're going to look at not
carrying Jimmy Kimmel. He's well behind the ratings of Stephen

(25:21):
Colbert and Jimmy Fallon, and those two guys have terrible
ratings anyway, And normally on most nights, Jimmy Kimble would
get one point one million total viewers in the whole
country and the target demo twenty five to fifty four,
he'd have eighty thousand. Hell, every day, I have over
one hundred thousand listeners myself, and I'm just a slept

(25:43):
talk show host in the Midwest. He was failing, He
wasn't succeeding. It was awful, mainly because he wasn't funny anymore.
The last several years. He became very political and a
captive of the left. So he was going to get
fired anyway next year or a cock not renewed be
goes number one. I don't know if you know this.
In this business, you have to have ratings and revenues,

(26:07):
and the ratings drive the revenues, and the revenues pay
the bills that keep us going. Numerous broadcast groups, including Nexttar,
repeatedly complained to ABC about doing something else. Late evening,
he goes, Jimmy Kimball's failing, not working. Just like Stephen Colbert,
Kimball was losing tens of millions of dollars a year,

(26:30):
despite the fact he and his wife executive producer of
the show's his wife were making about twenty million dollars
from the show total. They're multi multi zillionaires, and Jimmy
Kimball needed an exit strategy. He couldn't leave by saying,
you know what, my contract wasn't renewed because my ratings
are terrible and the station owners that owned the TV

(26:53):
stations are dumping out of the show. So a couple
of days ago, after his most recent rant in which
he directly lied to the American people about the murder
of Charlie Kirk, numerous stations, including Next Star stations and
other station owners said that's it, We're not carrying it.
ABC officials kind of went back to Charlie, went back

(27:14):
to Jimmy Kimball and said, hey, you know, can you apologize?
The next night it got worse. Tuesday night was worse.
By this point, Nexstar and others pulled the plug and said,
we're not carrying him anymore. No ratings, we can't sell it,
and our viewers don't want to see it. So Kimball,

(27:34):
seeing that distant thunder, said, you know what, I've got
to get an egitive strategy. So then he got worse,
and then he said, okay, now I'm a martyr. Well,
I tell you what a martyr is. A martyr is
Charlie Kirk. A martyr is not Jimmy Kimball. So what
Donald Trump would want to happen or the FCC would
want to happen, is irrelevant. He was going to be

(27:57):
released anyway because no ratings and no revenues. Now that's
a problem in the media, and so he needed a
good extras strategy. Other than that I failed. Now he's
become the darling of the left like Stephen Colbert did.
And although he's set to leave next May, I would
predict that CBS will get rid of him sooner. The
last man standing is Jimmy Fallon, who is not as

(28:18):
political as the other ones. You give me an idea.
Greg Gutfeld with Fox News on late night eleven o'clock
has about two point five million viewers. It's a cable
show two point five million. A broadcast over their network,
ABC with Jimmy Kimball has one point one million. So

(28:40):
Kimball has forty percent of the rating of Greg Gutfeld,
and Gutfeld is on cable. You got to pay to
get it on. Jimmy, Kimball and Colbert were terrible failures
of what happened. So the outrage over this suspension is
obvious hypocrisy, absolute hypocrisy, and he's gended up the radical

(29:04):
left to make CNN think somehow it's awful. It's terrible.
Donald Donald Trump does everything right. And lastly, I may
talk about this later on. I'm starting to give grace
and understand the abject failures of Cincinnati public schools, and
in fact, every public school in the urban areas are

(29:27):
failing the time the culture. When I see so called
black civil rights leaders, and I believe in civil rights,
and others on city council stand up and complain the
culture in every urban area that it's this functional schools
has failed, lack of marriage, lack of faith in God,
no belief in the country, the morals, the ethics, the

(29:48):
values conducted by large numbers of individuals under the auspices
of the rhyming. Reverence is in the toilet, but the
lack of marriage, lack of jobs, filth, degradation, spray painting.
It's a culture that has collapsed. And it's not the
problem necessarily of individuals, but collectively, it's a problem with

(30:10):
the culture. In addition to that, I spoke to someone
an educational know with the CPS. They have about five thousand.
There's about thirty five thousand students at CPS. Of that number,
there's about fourteen thousand that are chronically absent every day.
Fourteen thousand of thirty five thousand chronically absent in black

(30:32):
male category, seventy percent are chronically absent. There's about five
thousand homeless kids at CPS. You know what kind of
life it is for a nine year old girl to
be homeless and try to go to school. So fourteen
thousand chronically absent, five thousand homeless, there's about five thousand
or English is the second language, that have little or

(30:54):
no educational achievement, or all about five thousand or special needs,
and then the bussing system gets kids to school on
time and back about twenty percent of the time. Yet
up those numbers, it is a collapse. A homeless kid
graduating from high school and functioning lots of hurdles, someone

(31:16):
that doesn't speak of the English to function in our society,
lots of hurdles. Chronically absent kids, lots of hurdles, special
needs kids five thousand, lots of hurdles, don't even get
to school. Bussing problems, lots of hurdles. It's amazing CPS
as a two point five rating out of five when

(31:36):
the great majority of kids in the eighth grade can't
read and write. So it's not the system, it's not
white privilege. It's the collapse of a culture where marriage
does not take place, where drugs are rampant, gun play
is frequent, and the leaders seek to blame others for
the collapse of the culture that they think they're in
charge of. Well, let's continue. Coming up next to Senator

(31:58):
John Houston, Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW. Bill Cunningham,
the Great American of course, the s and the junior Senator.
I'm not sure. I think it's junior centator. Maybe the
senior State of Ohio is John Houston. John Houston, welcome

(32:19):
again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all,
Senator Houston, I want to get some reaction from you
on the murder of Charlie Kirk. Also, I just had
on about an hour ago a representative of Turning Point
USA Miami Chapter. I'm going to share some of those
comments with you. But first of all, from your level,
and I know he was a great assistant at JD Vance.

(32:40):
And how did the assassination of Charlie Kirk affect Senator
John Houston.

Speaker 5 (32:47):
It's heartbreaking. And when you see a young person, particularly
Charlie Kirk, who did so much between you know, at
the age of thirty one, to go into college campuses,
into the belly of the beast where they were trying
to do cancel culture, and hear Charlie say, hey, you know,
debate me, prove me wrong, Let's have a conversation about
these things, you know, trying to to give young people

(33:10):
a courage to speak up and and then the intellectual
tools and to make their voices heard in the platform,
to make their voices heard, and and then to have
someone call a guy like that a fascist and then
and then murder him. Uh, is is just despicable and

(33:30):
our hearts are broken. But I'll tell you know it.
Up here on Capitol Hill there are a lot of
young staff people right from all the offices, and you
could see, you know, Charlie Kirk was Charlie Kirk was
to them, you know what Rush Limbaugh was maybe to
a previous generation, or Bill Cunningham was to a previous

(33:51):
generation in Cincinnati, right. Uh, you know, it was the
person that sort of they brought, they were brought up on.
And to see him uh struck down like that was
just hard for a lot of a lot of the
young people appear to take and they're struggling with it.
And I've seen that with you know, so many cases.

(34:11):
It's just so sad.

Speaker 1 (34:12):
Senator I played about twenty minutes ago the words of
Charlie Kirk. He did a podcast for Senator Mike Lee
of Utah in which he talked about the violence on
the left. The what about is is one hell of
a failed argument. We all condemn all political violence, no
matter what. Even though House Democrats yesterday did not condemn

(34:34):
the political violence against Charlie Kirk, the same was not
true about the murder of State Representative Hortman in Minnesota.
That's a different story. But there appears to be a sewer,
and it's beneath the capital, it's beneath Cincinnati, It's beneath Chicago.
And what there's an alternative universe that exists that in
that universe, Charlie Kirk was a fascist. In that universe,

(34:59):
Donald Trump is Adolf Hitler. He's a Nazi in that universe,
as Senator John Eustad is someone who needs to be
taken out in one sense or another. And I don't
think the Democrats accept that whatsoever. There for white males,
especially who spend their time on the dark Web, on
the Internet, disconnected to other people, not dating girls, no

(35:23):
sense of God, no sense of family, no sense of patriotism,
and they're lost in the world of gaming and porn,
and they develop their own set of principles in which
the murderer, whose name has never left my lips, believes
he's doing some greater cause by killing Adolf Hitler. Can
anything be done from a legislative level that indicates that

(35:46):
that kind of hate speech on the left must be
stopped or curtailed. Something must occur. The firing of Jimmy
Kimmel was occasion mainly because he had bad ratings and
bad revenues. But legislatively, do you sense on the left
a bubbling sewer that every now and then the lid's
popa well.

Speaker 5 (36:06):
Bill. That's a lot to unpack right there.

Speaker 2 (36:08):
I don't.

Speaker 5 (36:09):
I don't know that there's a legislative solution to it.
It looked there has to be. There has to be
a you know, a cultural outrage at what they're doing
by saying that anyone is comparable to Hitler. Nobody's comparable
to Hitler. He murdered seventy five million people. You call
people fascists and things like that. That's language that Then

(36:32):
when when you know, like these radicalized left leftists, like
the guy who shot Charlie Kirk, when they hear those things,
they think, well, I've got to do something about it.
You know, I hear people, you know, talking about this
person like he's Hitler. He's not Hitler. For goodness sakes,

(36:52):
there's no comparison. And this is crazy talk to even
try to compare anything that's going on in America today
to what happened in Nazi Germany in the thirties and forties.

Speaker 6 (37:04):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (37:04):
And but it does radicalize people when you do this,
and then they try to take you know, they they
want to They see themselves as a hero in this story,
as somebody who's doing something bold and noble to save America.
That's the kind of environment those words are creating. And
then you see tragic events like Charlie Kirk happen, and

(37:25):
Charlie Kirk is not even you know, had his funeral yet,
and they are already shifting the conversation away from the
assassination of Charlie Kirk to their own victimhood again. And
it's and it's now it's troubling.

Speaker 1 (37:43):
You know what other figures have been assassinated. I look
at John Wilkes Booth, who murdered Abraham Lincoln. He thought
he would be hailed as a hero. He thought he
was going into the South, into Virginia, and he'd be welcome.
When Lee Harvey Oswald Mark murdered John F. Kennedy, he
thought he would be welcome in the in the Cuba

(38:04):
if he wasn't caught after he killed police officer Tibbets
in the movie theater with the movie Warris Hell was playing.
He thought he was a hero. When James ro Ray
murdered Martin Luther King Junior assassinated him, he thought, Okay,
I'm going to be welcomed by the white supremacist movement.
And in this case, the assassin, the murderer thought he

(38:24):
was doing the lord's work, that he'd make a he'd
have a getaway. He have a network of other left
wingers to support him. And and and I don't know
how you fall on that level of mental illness, but
individuals do, and what it happens. I agree with you.
Senator houstaid, I don't know what legislatively can be done
to cure the human heart, to make someone believe that

(38:47):
someone who believes so strongly in God family in America,
it doesn't have to.

Speaker 5 (38:53):
That's why we have to condemn anybody who will not
denounce this. I mean, you have to denounce political violence
or violence of any kind to set the standard for
the world, to set the community standard under which people.
You know, there used to be rules of of sort
of a code of morality and ethics which people would

(39:17):
operate in in the political sphere that we debated the
issues and we would disagree with someone's ideas, but we
didn't try to vilify the individual to the point that
we would stir people's emotions to the point that they
think that assassinating them is a good thing. And that's
that's now a standard in many cases that's being set

(39:40):
on the political left, and it's not tolerable. And look,
my language, I always try I always tried never to
name call I always try to characterize my disagreement with
the ideas that an individual has. I don't I don't
try to call someone a name. Uh, It's how I
do things. And that's what we need to do. Fight

(40:04):
about the issues. This is Look, this is what Charlie
Kirk was trying to do, right, trying to fight about
the ideas, fight about the issues. You knew where we
settle it. We settle it at the ballot box. And then,
like any good sportsman or a fan of democracy, you
recognize that elections have consequences. You bear those consequences for
two years until you get a chance to vote again.

(40:26):
But that's how it's supposed to work, not through violence.
To get our means, not through canceling people to get
our means.

Speaker 1 (40:32):
Senator you said, let me give you a headline out
of this morning about ten thirty am. You might have
been busy and missed it. Nearly one hundred House Democrats
refuse to support resolution condemning political violence. And I read
that headline about what the House of Representatives past the
resolution on Friday condemning political violence and honoring Charlie Kirk.

(40:54):
But nearly one hundred Democrats refuse is support it, and
the we're all numbers impossible to ignore. Close to one
hundred Democrats bulked at denouncing political violence. So I went
back in time to June of this year. There was
a House resolution to condemn political violence and in a sense,
to honor Representative Melissa Hortman. Back in June, the House

(41:18):
unanimously passed a resolution without one objection, honoring Minnesota House
Democrat Representative Melissa Hartman and her husband Mark after they
were tragedically killed. I might add by a fellow Democrat
who was an appointee of Governor Tim Waltz. He went nuts,
dressed up like a cop and killed Melissa Hortman. So
percent of the Republicans in the House a couple hours ago.

(41:41):
I'm sorry, in June said, okay, we condemned political violence,
and we honored the life of Melissa Hartman. You had
nearly one hundred Democrats eleven o'clock this morning refused to
support a resolution condemning political violence. Now you just said,
can we all agree you can't have political violence? Just
had one hundred Democrats say I'm not signing.

Speaker 7 (42:00):
Not for that.

Speaker 1 (42:00):
What does that say?

Speaker 2 (42:02):
Now?

Speaker 1 (42:02):
You got me all pissed off? Senator. I'm reading this
story and I'm thinking, what the hell's going on? And
I thought, Okay, they didn't want to honor Charlie kirk Hey,
well okay, But then I went back in time and
every Republican honored Melissa Hartman. Can you explain that to me?

Speaker 5 (42:17):
I can't explain it to you. I can't explain it
to you. I you know, I can just see you
the limited time.

Speaker 1 (42:24):
I've been here in Washington.

Speaker 5 (42:25):
You just I think people are just are just sometimes
just scared of their own shadows. Like somehow, you know, somehow,
somebody's going to say if you voted for this and
you were on the left, that that meant you supported
what Charlie Kirk stood for No, that's not what it means.
That's not what it means at all, And don't try
to and don't try to suggest that somehow it does.

(42:46):
This is this is a statement. These these these are
these kinds of votes are statements of principle. They're a
statement that you honor a person's life who was assassinated
and you condemn any violence, which is a statement, a
forward looking statement that this is not how we settle

(43:07):
our problems. And the fact that they can't even vote
for that and go out and look their constituents in
the eye and explain why they voted for it is
you know, Bill, I don't have words for I don't understand.
I don't understand how this happens. I mean, when when
the shooting occurred in Minnesota, you know, I was one

(43:29):
of the like, of course, like like, you condemn it
and you offer your you know, your heart, your heart
hurts for people, and you condemn it and you offer
your prayers because that's what a civil society does in
the case of tragedy and unspeakable actions by a deranged murderer, assassin.

(43:53):
And that's just what we do. And if you fail
to set that standard as a nation, as a as
a leader, then you are condoning that kind.

Speaker 1 (44:01):
Of behavior, Sountery Houstad. In about ten days, one of
these things is going to happen again, which is a
governmental shutdown. The House of Representatives past a CR continuing resolution.
Now it goes to the Senate. Chuck Schumer called the
Schumer shutdown yesterday said from the floor of your body
the Senate said a couple things. Number one, it must

(44:23):
be tied to an extension of Obamacare, and secondly, it
must be tied to an extension or payment to NPR,
the National Public Radio. I thought we won that battle already,
but Schumer and the Democrats will not vote in the
Senate to continue governmental funding, and he uses as an
excuse Medicare subst I'm sorry, Obama subsidies and also NPR.

(44:49):
So how does this thing end in about ten days.

Speaker 5 (44:52):
Well, the Schumer shutdown is up to Chuck Schumer. We
do not need to shut down the government. We have
the votes to keep it open if he'll just allow
a vote. But he doesn't. You know, he wants to
use his power to to really just say, hey, you
got to negotiate with me. He doesn't want he doesn't
even want to vote to come to the floor because
he knows that he will have Democrats that will vote

(45:14):
with us to keep the government open. Remember this is
the Chuck Schumer who literally said last year when Joe
Biden was president that we need a clean cr we
can't shut the government down. It's irresponsible. And then now
that Donald Trump's the president, he has Trump derangement, Sinzerman.
He has to be a post anything the government that
Donald Trump does. He wants to shut the government down

(45:35):
to try to make Donald Trump look bad because he's
more interested in defeating Trump than he is and helping Americans.
And you know, well, I'll be here. I'm going to
be ready to vote, ready to keep the government open.
I mean, it's it's it's incompetence to do what he's
trying to do. He'll play his games and in the
end we'll get this fixed. But he needs to play

(45:58):
his games first. He wants to he wants to make
it about him, and he wants to make it look
like he's tough, and he wants to make it look
like he's trying to fight for something, when in the end,
he's just playing games. At the expense of the American people.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
Well, if there's a shutdown, which at the Democrats goes
to the rules of the Senate, even though Senate's controlled
by the Republicans, it takes sixty votes to do anything
in the Senate. And if Schumer sticks to his guns,
and he's going to try to make it look as
if Senator John used it and Bernie Marino and jd
Vance and Donald Trump did it, and the media is
going to sing out of the same hymn book as

(46:34):
the Democrats going to be tough. But let's face it,
I think the American people figure it out. We have
to go a different route, play a different game. Senator
John used it. The odds of a shutdown for a
short period of time, you think are pretty good.

Speaker 5 (46:48):
I'm always going to be an optimist, but I look,
as I heard somebody say yesterday, never underestimate Chuck Schumer's
desire to play political games and a point and he look, Bill,
it's just frustrating to deal with this guy because it's

(47:09):
he's blocking a vote. That's really what he does. And
this this this process, if you had to vote, if
you just got rid of the sixty votes, because they
just vote, just vote to say, really, what it is is,
let's vote so that we can have a vote. Because
if it's about a clean cr that just keeps the
government open so we can continue to work through these details. Democrats,

(47:29):
many Democrats would vote for it too, and they just
he's just blocking it. It's all about him.

Speaker 1 (47:35):
Now, maybe Schumer's approaches quote a threat to democracy, which
Democrats love to employ that phrase. That's the threat to democracy.

Speaker 5 (47:44):
Threat to the democracy is a failure to do your
job as an elected official. And if he doesn't want
to do it, he should step aside and let somebody
else do it. But he's he's trying to block just
think one person trying to block the whole country from
having the services that people paid for. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (48:03):
Well that's a threat to democracy right there. Senator John Newstead,
you're a great American and thanks for coming on the
Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Senator.

Speaker 5 (48:11):
Great to be with you.

Speaker 1 (48:11):
Willie God bless America. Let's continue with more news coming
up your home of the reds one last night. Let's
see what happens tonight on news Radio seven hundred. All
right after Ingo, that's Wayley release Thres Bye, cooor. Please
see one down? Oh oh hello, hello, byet, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 5 (48:44):
God.

Speaker 1 (48:44):
Is that Sarah Elise releasing the Wieners? I don't know?
Sounded like her. Didn't it without her? I didn't hear
I didn't hear it. Hit it again, sheriff hit it
again because segment wants to hear. Oh, okay, Sarah Elise
and the Wieners all right after Ingo, that's wayley by
what wine down?

Speaker 6 (49:07):
You know they had a heck of a lot of
people down there today. Don't don't don't give kids go
to school? No, it's called truancy.

Speaker 1 (49:14):
Oh I think do you think cops where they got
murder and mayhem arrest kids for truancy or for no?
They don't give to each other? Now that's more important.
And how about the so called civil rights leaders not
caring about things that can effectuate, which is the culture,
the way kids are raised going to school? What are
my three rules of life? Graduate from high school, work,

(49:36):
don't commit crime? Can you do those three things? So far?
Have done it. There's a hell of a government program
right there right bang by the bang like Frank Ziebell
and Weatherington makes a twenty five foot downhill sidehill, putt
the banana ball the tea man. You know what I'm saying.
Senator George Way went down hard. I hear, I hear

(49:58):
he's going to go on tour. He's gonna think about
the Senior Tour. Twenty five foot down here, putt for
a birdie on eighteen of Weatherington. Senator George Lane collapsing
into the sandtrap. I gave him out the mouth and
they lost. They lost eighteen dollars. Oh wow, that was
guys playing for the big dough. Huh. Dave t Man

(50:18):
couldn't believe it.

Speaker 6 (50:20):
Will Will He the stood reporters of proud service of
your local Tamestar Heating and air Conditioning dealers.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
Tamestar Quality. You could feel it.

Speaker 6 (50:28):
Beautiful Milford, the home of one main gallery called Baker
Heating at five one three eight three one fifty one
twenty four talked about last night. We also want to
thank Lears Prime Market Willie for our lunch Deluxe Deli
located in beautiful downtown Milford. Lears Prime dot com Lears
Prime always.

Speaker 1 (50:47):
A cut Above.

Speaker 6 (50:49):
We go to the Bengals update, brought to you by
Party Town in Turfway in Florence the Ball Festival today
from four to seven. Carnival style games, tasting and unbeatables.

Speaker 1 (51:00):
Come on out to Party Town and party down. Let's party.

Speaker 6 (51:04):
Zach Taylor, Bengals said after practice today, Joe Burrow successfully
underwent his surgery for his turf toe and he's in recovery.
No timetable for number nine's returned as of yet.

Speaker 1 (51:17):
How bad can it tell? Hurt? Well, apparently that's get
I guess at grade three?

Speaker 6 (51:22):
I mean that's what's the scale?

Speaker 1 (51:25):
Is three bad or worse? Okay? Well then ouch?

Speaker 6 (51:31):
So the Bengals go at it on Sunday, Willie up
against the Minnesota Vikings and h Let's see best Bengals
coverage Sunday nine am with the RNL Carriers pregame sports
talk show presented by Cincinnata, Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers. Kick
Off is at one, then you go to the Tri
State Chevy Dealer's postgame show presented by RNL Carriers. That'll

(51:52):
be at Buffalo Wings and Rings and Beautiful Monroe, Red's Update,
Hunter Green Ultra Deal. Last night, Willie come first complete
career complete game, one hitter, nine strikeouts, walked one. He
was on. Now they do that tonight with Nick Lodolo,

(52:14):
Saturday night with whoever, and then Sunday, let's get it on.

Speaker 1 (52:19):
I said to Tito Francona, you tell Huntergreen for me,
don't puke on the mound.

Speaker 6 (52:26):
Well he didn't. Good he was. He was on it
last night, and Lodolo goes in Game two tonight. Got
to have that mentality of getting it gun, and their
offense has got to get a few more runs. Back
him up with some runs. Coverage five forty Sports Talk,
Carno Carriers, Inside Pitch, Kelsey Chevrolet Extra Inning Show after

(52:47):
the game. Now Diamondbacks and Reds are two back of
the Mets. Giants dropped three back. Nine to go segment.
Can they win seven of the next nine minimum of six?
Only their hairdresser knows for sure? WILLI in this rock
in his roller coaster season? Who knows what they're gonna do?

(53:08):
High school football action all across the Tri state Tonight.
High School Football Tonight Show at six, ESPN, fifteen thirty,
Fox Sports thirteen sixty.

Speaker 1 (53:16):
That'll lead into the GCL matchup. Sainte X v Moler.
I'm an offered a field pass, but I don't want
to go to West Claremont because of the forty five
minutes I'd be in the park and has sold out.
A lot of people are there too.

Speaker 6 (53:33):
Also tonight Wildcats. The Wildcats with Cepha Saki at quarterback.
What how you say his name?

Speaker 1 (53:43):
The Deer Park kid, Sefa Saki, He's not a he
plays defensive line. Well, he's six foot eight. We got
Lamar Jackson at quarterback.

Speaker 6 (53:51):
FC Cincinnati on the road tomorrow night, William against LA Galaxy,
ten PM coverage on ESPN fifteen thirty.

Speaker 1 (53:59):
I have a question, which is Paul skeins? Yeah? Is
he gonna pitch or not? Is he shut down or not?
I guess he had his last home start. I don't.
I mean, I gotta find out. Hopefully they get they
get things done before he comes. That's it. Three out
of four Cubs segment. Give me out the Stuard's report,
Will he and honor of those reds Legs. Red Legs

(54:21):
just keep a winning and winning and the Bengals three
and zero. We leave you with the immortal words of
the stew Triple.

Speaker 5 (54:28):
Thank you.

Speaker 1 (54:30):
On seven d.

Speaker 2 (54:32):
W l W.

Speaker 1 (54:42):
Time, Billy Cunningham, the great American Reds Baseball kicks off
tonight early and the Reds have on the Mount Nicolodolo,
and the last night Hunter Green looked impregnable. And we'll
see what happens the red they just score a few
runs and smart money says of the next nine games
you need to win about six or seven to have
a clear shot. We'll see what happens down the road.

(55:03):
We can't control that. I wouldn't note again that this morning,
or shall I say, last night, a fourteen year old
boy was arrested facing charges with a deadly shooting and
over the rhine. The shooting happened on June the twelfth,
what about three months ago, on Wall Street around twelve
thirty five am, which most boys that time are in bed.

(55:29):
According to the media accounts, there were about forty bullets
were fired and he killed one man. Forty one shots
were fired. The prosecutor said there was a crowd in
nearby church steps and a victim was shot there. It
happened to be killed, who wasn't the object of the
fourteen year old boy simply was spraying bullets all over Clifton.
Now this fits in nicely to what happened a couple

(55:50):
nights ago when another young teenage boy in possession of
a gun fired and killed. Another teenage boy shot another
one who remains in critical condition. And Brian Hamrick either
last night or the Thursday night or Wednesday, went up
to Vice Mayor Michelle lemon Kearney and said, doesn't this

(56:11):
indicate perhaps that the highway patrol or other's ATF should
come in alcohol, tobacco, firearms and maybe provide more boots
on the ground. And lemon Kearney said, no, this doesn't
mean that should happen at all. In fact, her approach
is to pay arm robbers about one thousand dollars a
month plus other benefits, on condition that the arm robbers

(56:34):
quit stealing from people with guns. You may know in
Ohio as an open carry state, but not if you're
under the age of twenty one years old or have
some legal disability. And I would assume all these individuals
are well below the age of twenty one, but they
had this sense they can carry guns. I have a
text here from an elected official which is very illustrative

(56:56):
of the problem, and she reports to me the Blouse
community it is somewhat common to have weapons of one
type or another and to use them She goes on
to say that it appears. Don't you think you should
do a segment Willie about all the violence around Grant Park,
which is up Fine Street on the right before we
go to Clifton. I see all the time underage kids

(57:20):
with guns that are roaming around there in broad daylight
with their guns in their hands. And the answer would
be yes, under the age of twenty one, the mere
possession of a gun, a weapon, open carry or not,
is illegal. It can occur, and this was part of
the gun violence that resulted ultimately in the killing of

(57:42):
that eighteen year old boy, Ryan Hinton, along with Jarel Austin,
Anthony Bullocks, and Sincere Grigsby who was stealing cars in
northern Kentucky, and then Ryan Hinton just to turn eighteen
years old in possession of a gun with an extended clip.
That's a machoel that was killed. And as a consequence

(58:03):
of the killing by that CPD officer Rodney Hinton, in
the next day or two took it upon himself to
murder Deputy shaf for Larry Henderson. And when that occurred
quickly quickly social media was erupting with the idea we
take one of they take one of ours, we take
one of theirs. The implication being that if police are

(58:25):
forced to kill someone who is carrying a gun, then
we have to identify a police officer to kill, and
we will kill. In this case Larry Henderson. And I'm
shaking my head that there's a cultural problem that often
the law cannot fix. And I had a guest on

(58:46):
many years ago, and I think this might have been
with doctor phil His name is Bob Woodson, and he
talked about the ongoing difficulties in the black community that
law does not fix. It has to be good mind
and good dads has to be community leaders. It can't
be individuals only exercising their so called First Amendment rights

(59:08):
when someone can make money or fame out of the
death of another. So when something bad occurs, you will
see Damon Lynch and others. The three or four council
members stand up and loud, proud and start shouting about
the deficiencies and certain elements of the Black community caused
by outside elements. But how many times does the black
community look at itself and say, the culture that we

(59:28):
have devised, developed and nurtured loath these many decades is
not working. For black kids not working at all. If
seventy percent of black boys are chronically absent from the
public school system, that's not white supremacy, that's not white
wait racism. That's a failure of the family. And there
is no black family functioning in large parts of urban

(59:49):
Black America. And by the way, I would add that
the great majority of black folks are in the middle class.
The face of crime and Cincinnati is a young black
male face. But the great majority, if young black males,
have nothing to do with crime. Here are the words
of one of my guests, Bob Woodson, about what could happen,
what should happen, but have not happened in the black community.

(01:00:10):
Dave Keaton hit it. This is really good.

Speaker 7 (01:00:16):
So this is a black activist, I would say, an
activist who happens to be black, by the name of
Bob Woodson on The Doctor Phil Show, talking about what
has happened in the black community and how it relates
to basically everything we're talking about here today.

Speaker 5 (01:00:30):
You say you.

Speaker 1 (01:00:31):
Don't support reparations.

Speaker 8 (01:00:33):
Why not not everybody suffered equally. I mean, when you
go into slavery, it's more, much more complex than all
white people were. The oppressors and black people were the victims.
If you dissect it, you will find there were about
three thousand, seven hundred free backs who owned twelve thousand slaves,

(01:00:54):
black slaves. The question is to the descendants of those
free blacks who owned black say, do they pay Blacks
really benefited more the first hundred years after slavery we
have in the last fifty years. I was born in
nineteen thirty seven. During the Depression, everyone in my small,
low income black community, ninety eight percent of the households

(01:01:18):
had a man and a woman raising children. Elderly people
could walk safely in that community without fear of being
assaulted by their grandchildren. Never heard of gunfire during that time,
never heard of a child being shot to death in
the cryp. But they're fifty children today who have been
shot and killed in our cities. You're talking about remedies.

(01:01:42):
We've got to look beyond saying that every solution has
to have a winner and a loser, that blacks can
only benefit if whites lose.

Speaker 2 (01:01:52):
We have to be.

Speaker 8 (01:01:53):
Defined more than just victims of oppression. When whites were
at their worse, blacks are at their best when we
were denied access to hotels.

Speaker 1 (01:02:04):
We built our own.

Speaker 8 (01:02:06):
We have to communicate to our people that the history
of how they achieved in the face of oppression. But
if we continue to sit back and say all of
the challenges that we face in out of wedlock versus
of violence, that somehow white of the control of that
is in the hands of white America, and therefore until

(01:02:28):
white people change, there's nothing that we can do. This
sets up a terrible situation for this nation. The big
crisis faced in America is not racial, It is a
moral and spiritual freefall that is consuming our children.

Speaker 3 (01:02:44):
The highest.

Speaker 8 (01:02:47):
Death rate among black families is homicide. Among Silicon Valley
the highest level of suicide six times the national average.
And Appalachia they're prescription drugs. And so if we are
to address this crisis that is causing our children to

(01:03:10):
lack a sense of personal responsibility or value for their
own life, they will take their own life or take
someone else's. So in order to address that, we must
come together and look beyond race and realize America is
drowning because it's in the moral and spiritual freefall. Not
of us should be defined by the worst of what

(01:03:31):
we were in the past, but we should be defined
by what we want to become in the future, and
that people are motivated to change when you give them
a vision of victories that are possible, not constantly reminding
them of injuries to be avoided.

Speaker 1 (01:03:46):
What makes more sense there? It is I would ask you,
as an American, would you look forward to a day
when fifteen to twenty black leaders would get together from
Irish roly to the members of city council, lemon Kearney
and Scottie Johnson, Victoria Parks and Mika Owens, along with
the mayor. This isn't a black issue, this is a

(01:04:07):
human issue. They say. The problems in our community are
not based upon white supremacy or white racism. Were not
being paid enough money, But the problem is internal. It
is a lack of spirituality, a lack of ethics, a
lack of morals. The free fall is happening during a
time when the availability of assistance and help and jobs

(01:04:29):
and educational opportunities are rampant. They're everywhere, As Bob Woodson
points out, in the nineteen thirties, forties and fifties, ninety
eight percent of fathers black fathers are in their homes
working with their black sons with their black wives and
black mothers to raise black kids during oppression, a modead
caused by the Democratic Party in the twenties, thirties, forties,

(01:04:50):
and fifties and sixties. So it is not endemic to
be black to commit crime, nothing to do with it.
The great majority of black boys and young men have
nothing to do with but in the urban landscapes of America.
If you would walk right now to the Hammond County
Justice Center and ask Sheriff Charmaine McGuffey, what's the race

(01:05:11):
of individuals inside the jail, I would say over ninety
percent or black. And it's not because black folks want
to commit crime. It's a lack of morals, ethics, values, spirituality.
The three rules that I have for any young American
is graduate from high school, number two, work, number three,

(01:05:31):
don't commit crime, and number four have children after you
get married. That's the formula, in fact, according to the US
Census Bureau eight years ago. I read it and I
discarded it that if you do, if you do those
four things, in other words, graduate from high school, number two,
work or slash go to higher education. In other words,

(01:05:53):
get up on Monday morning, you got work. In school
to do Number three, don't commit crime, and number four
don't have babies out of wed luck. The odds of
being in middle class are about ninety six percent. You
could find right now a job at Wendy's or Chick
fil A, my favorite fast food place. Go to Ron's Roosk,
go to gold Star Skyline, get to work ten minutes early,

(01:06:14):
stay ten minutes late. Do your damn job. Make ten
to eleven twelve bucks an hour, drive for Amazon and
do that. Meet a guy, meet a girl, get married,
have children, have a nuclear family. That's how you succeed
in America. And if the failures are cultural, If the
failures are acceptable for fathers not to become husbands and

(01:06:36):
for mothers not to become wives, and that the system
pays somebody on condition they act here responsibly, you get
the result we have today. The federal government or state
government or the free food bank is a terrible mother
and a father. When guns are ubiquitous and there's no education,
and you're being told by the civil rights crowd that

(01:06:59):
someone's hunting your dea because of the color of your skin.
Now you can't make it in America because you're a
black male. That is a lie, and the damnable lie
should be out to be called out by somebody. So
we have a terrible not just in Cincinnati, Dayton call
it Dayton, call every part. Every urban area has the
same difficulties. In the nineteen forties, fifties and sixties in Philadelphia,

(01:07:23):
Walter Williams, one of my friends passed away, would clearly
say the same things that Bob Woodson just said. My
father was in the home, my mom and dad were married,
We had three or four other brothers and sisters. We
were expected to be at school ready to go. And
if we got in trouble at school, we got in
trouble at home. My mom and dad knew exactly where
I was every time. How many functional families are there

(01:07:46):
right now in OTR, I bet there's less than ten
in which is a mother and a father who were
married on the day they had a child or children,
that they both live and over the rhine, that both
have an education at least high school, both work or
care for the children, and nobody commits crime. So where's

(01:08:06):
the crime coming from. It's not coming because a person
is black. History demonstrates that's not the case. In fact,
I've pointed out a few months ago, I look at
a documentary, a documentary from the nineteen thirties and early
nineteen forties as far as what's in American prison system.
They simply had cameras inside to depict who's in jail

(01:08:26):
in the thirties and forties, haven't committed crime? And the
great majority of people I saw were white men. They
were in jail. There was a few blacks, but not
many at all. So why is it flipped completely during
the era of the civil rights We have overcome is
not we shall overcome. We have overcome. So why is

(01:08:47):
that the case? Is it cultural? Is it acceptable not
to work? Is it acceptable not to go to school?
Is it acceptable not to go to church or to
synagogue or to a mosque? Is that acceptable? Is it
acceptable to have kids out of wedlock? Absolutely? And bat
a boon, bada bing bata bang, it's all acceptable. In

(01:09:10):
other communities it's not acceptable at all. So the kids
take on the attributes and the cues from the adults,
take on the adults and OTR and you have a
There are certain parts of Adam Brown's county, the failures
there have white skin have the same conditions, same thing
goes on, no marriage, no education, no work, crime takes place,

(01:09:36):
especially by boys. I look forward to the day which
may not happen in my lifetime. Or a mom and
a dad can have a kid and that goes to
ache and use or woodward, and that kid comes home
every day to a functional family, not chaos, not yelling
and screaming, not graffiti, not drug use, not waffling marijuana

(01:09:57):
through the skies in Cincinnati, and that kid wants to learn.
A thirty seven year veteran teacher told me that are
thirty seven years at CPS, she did not have one
student who had moms and dads who were married on
the day that student was born and stayed married for
the entire eighteen years from the age of six to eighteen.

(01:10:19):
When that kid was in elementary school and then high school,
it didn't have one student zero. So the problem is
not racial, it's behavioral. Behavior can change for the better.
That's the mession of the message with Charlie Kirk. Number
one is faith in God. You're not just an animal
with high intelligence. You have a soul and at some

(01:10:42):
point you're going to face your maker and account for
your life. Number one, believe in god Number two, work,
go to high school, get a diploma and number if
you number three or four when you desired to have
children and get married first, then have kids, so graduate

(01:11:04):
from high school? Did any of these kids the gang
bangers graduate from high school? Jarrell Austin, Anthony de Bullocks,
sincere Grigsby Rodney Hinton? Did any graduate from high school?
Number two? Did they any m work? Number three? All
of them committed crime. The problem is not racial, it

(01:11:24):
is behavioral. Change the behavior you get different results. Let's
continue much more to say on the topic later. I'll
be watching the Charlie Kirk memorial on Sunday, and I'll
be with you Sunday night to discuss it with a
couple of three of my guests and more. So, let's
continue and remember Charlie Kirk. Don't let his murder be

(01:11:48):
in vain. As I had on my guest in the
first half an hour this afternoon from my university, Barrett,
I thought, did a great job. There were twenty four
kids going to the Turning Point USA meetings. Twenty four
kids two weeks ago, and now he reported to me

(01:12:10):
there are now four hundred attending meetings. Let the four
hundred become four thousand, live a better and a more
productive life, and live out the hopes and the dreams
of Charlie Kirk and Barrett's la Master and others at
many local universes need to do that. Number one God
Jesus Christ. Number two work, graduate from high school, and

(01:12:36):
number three, don't commit crime and believe in this country,
believe in America. Two twenty six Homie Reds and Hews
Radio seven hundred WW.

Speaker 4 (01:12:45):
My fear Senator, and I hope I'm wrong, and let's
stay in prayer that I'm wrong, that someone is going
to get shot the same way that Steve Scalice got
shot and God forbid killed. The Left is creating a
pressure cooker with so many of their ranks can firal
paramilitary troops that very well might result in one of
us getting shot or killed.

Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
God forbid that happens.

Speaker 4 (01:13:08):
We're getting death threats every single day here on the
Charlie Kirk Show.

Speaker 1 (01:13:14):
Oh hello, quiet Scots, I'm broadcasting segment. Those are the
statements of Charlie Kirk about six months ago when he
interviewed Senator Mike Lee. The sewers in which the Left
now swim every now and then there's a lid that blows,
and one of them happened at Utah Valley State, and

(01:13:37):
it's happening more and more. I look at the kids
at NYU in New York City at about fourteen turning
point USA kids American flag, about twenty five or thirty
others came up, overturned the tables, torn up the stuff.
NYPD came in said anyone get hurt? Well no, but
look at our stuff. They said, well that's okay. Can

(01:13:59):
you amage if the shoe was on the other foe,
ugh saies would be burning.

Speaker 6 (01:14:04):
It would be impeachment twelve billion. Well, the one guy.

Speaker 1 (01:14:09):
The violence, there's always violence everywhere segment, how there's violence
in Boone County now when derelk tried to kill two
Boone County violence happens everywhere. It's the frequency and the
support for violence. When you had nearly one hundred Democratic
congressman this morning not vote to condemn violence. Nice because

(01:14:30):
of Charlie Kirk. We got a problem. Segment, Let's get
less serious. We need some frivolities. That's why I look
at you.

Speaker 6 (01:14:38):
Will heave the student borders of proud service of your
local Tamestar Heating and air Conditioning dealers Thamestar quality you
could feel in beautiful Western hills called Durbin Heating and
Cooling at five one, three, five nine, eight eighty four
forty nine or go to Durbin Heating and Cooling dot com.

Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
Fine you know segment Charlie Kirk was murdered. There were vigils,
there were prayer groups, there were candlelight vigils. There was
people marching around with the American flag. If the opposite
had taken place some other hero on the left, the
cities would be inflamed. The apple stores would be looted.
It'd be rape, murder and pillaging all over the country.

(01:15:18):
And the media won't call it that way. But I
just did. Bengals update.

Speaker 3 (01:15:21):
Well.

Speaker 6 (01:15:21):
He brought to you by Party Town on Turfway in Florence.
The Ball Festival runs today from four to seven. Carnival
style games, tasting and unbeatable prices are there. Come on
out the Party Town and party down Joe Burrow. According
to Zach Taylor, prior to practice, Joe Burrow successfully underwent
his surgery today for that turf Toe. He is in

(01:15:42):
recovery and no timetable for his return.

Speaker 1 (01:15:46):
I say it's three months. That's what Julie Usfording says.
I guess what mid December? Do you think a bad
big toe's a big problem.

Speaker 6 (01:15:55):
Yes, Bengals at the Viking Sunday and Best Bengals Coverage,
nine am Sunday, Arnel Carriers pregame sports talk show and
presented by the Cincinnati Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers kick off
at one here on seven hundred WLW. Then at the
Tri State Chevy Dealers postgame show presented by Arnel Carriers,
Buffalo Wings and Rings in Beautiful Monroe.

Speaker 1 (01:16:16):
What about Jake the Snake Browning he starts Sunday? Is
he related to Tom Browning?

Speaker 6 (01:16:21):
No, and he's And it's a battle of the backups
because JJ McCarthy, the current the starter for the Vikings,
is out with an ankle injury. So Carson Wentz will
go for the Vikes.

Speaker 1 (01:16:34):
He used to be pretty good. See what happens?

Speaker 6 (01:16:37):
Hunter Green tossing his first complete, first career complete game
last night, Willie a one hitter, and Will Benson drove
in the only run of that fourth inning double a
is the Reds beat the Cubs? One nil, and Nick
Lodolo goes tonight in game two has to have that
same mentality as young Hunter Green had last night. They
got Hunter Green's got to look into the Lododo's eyes

(01:16:59):
and say, this is it, big boy.

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
This is why you were plowing right. This is why
you were raised, this is why you work out, this
is why you ecorrectly, this is why you practice. This
is why you pitched Niclodolo. It is tonight, Live out
your destiny, Nick, Live it out.

Speaker 6 (01:17:18):
Five forty Sports Talk, Arnold Carriers, Inside Pitch, Kelsey, Chevrolet
Xpinning Show after the game. Now the wild Card chase
going into the night. I want to know Diamondbacks and
Reds two back of those Mets, and the Giants are
three back.

Speaker 1 (01:17:33):
Nine to go well, nine to go well.

Speaker 6 (01:17:39):
High school football action across a tri state tonight will
ye high school football Tonight show starts covering six o'clock,
ESPN fifteen thirty, Fox Sports thirteen sixty. That'll lead into
the GCL battle tonight. Sainte X Moler, who are you
liking that matchup? Bombers Crusaders doesn't get a better out
on a Friday night.

Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
I'm taking the crusade. I'll give you the.

Speaker 6 (01:18:01):
Bombers Skyline Chili Crosstown Showdown game tonight has Anderson up
against Kings. Also, Oak Hills tries to take whether they
take on Cole Rain, they'll try to score at least
a touchdown. Middletown and Sycamore, Fennytown and the Park Wildcats.

Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
The Wildcats along with Sepaea Cephasaki did a nice story
on him in the inquir very fair. There's been some
allegations which are scurreless, absolutely scurreless, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (01:18:35):
Also college football, tomorrow, the Miami RedHawks will play host
the UNLV, Purdue and Notre Dame, the Irish looking for
that first win. Not good Illinois and Indiana dating up
against Robert Morris. The Bearcats and Wildcats have the week off.

Speaker 1 (01:18:50):
Can I give you some facts? Go ahead? The Reds
own the tiebreaker edge over the Mets and the Diamondbacks,
but not the Giants. If there's a three way tie.
If there's a head to head tie, the Reds go,
except head to head against the Giants. If they tie,
you go to the fourth scenario that determine that the

(01:19:13):
Giants go and not the Reds. But if it's I
it's the Reds the Mets, or Reds and the d Backs.
Or if it's the Reds, the Mets and the d Backs,
the Reds go. But if it's the Reds and the Giants,
they don't go. But if it's the Reds and the
Giants and the Mets, then the Reds do go. If
the Reds, Giants and Diamondbacks tie, they do go. But

(01:19:37):
if it's the Reds and the Giants, they don't go.
But everything else they do go. You know what I'm saying,
You repeat that one more time. I don't know if
I can't.

Speaker 6 (01:19:45):
I lost you when the second scenario. But what that's
one nightmare scenario, tim nightmare. What happens if they win
and it comes down to the final three days in
Milwaukee and everybody's tied, they got to beat the Milwaukee
Brewers down Milwaukee. That scenario is nightmarish and cannot happen.

Speaker 1 (01:20:09):
And that one game the Reds are up eight to
one at home and lost to the Brewers. Right, well, No,
the Mets play three at home against the Nationals. I
write this down, you never know, write this down. They
play the Nationals beginning tonight three. How many games do
the Mets win at home against the Nationals? You mean,
I say two? Two out of three?

Speaker 2 (01:20:31):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:20:31):
Two? All right? Then they go at the Cubs for
three meds the Mets and Cubs. Yeah, write that down?
How many? All right? Three? All right? Then they go
to Miami to play the Marlins with three. Write that down?
How many? How many?

Speaker 5 (01:20:45):
Way?

Speaker 1 (01:20:45):
Three games by the Marlins are good?

Speaker 6 (01:20:47):
Right now? I know, but and the Mets are two good?
I think I think the Marlins play them tough.

Speaker 1 (01:20:52):
Right, So give me the total number of victories for
the Mets of the next nine, how many probably have
to win? About six or seven? I would think, Well,
I think the Mets are gonna win five. Let's say
they take the Nationals for two. What's San Francisco's deal? Oh?
Here it is. They have beginning tonight three at the Dodgers,
So that's today, Tomorrow, and Sunday. Then they're at home

(01:21:14):
against the Cardinals for three. Yeah. Then they're at Colorado
for three. But the Giants, I don't know if I
like that one. The Dodgers need to take care of business.

Speaker 6 (01:21:27):
T ball team could beat Colorado. They stink on the
Cardinals thing too. So if at home, if the Giants,
let's say in Los Angeles, think they're gonna have a
fan appreciation day at Colorado for the.

Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
Two fans that show up. Yeah, So let's say the Giants,
that's the one I worry about. Right at the Dodgers,
let's say they win one game, all right, all right,
then they got the car the Cardinals own for three.
Let's say they sweep them, that means they got four,
and then the Colorado at home for three.

Speaker 6 (01:21:56):
Well, you never know, Willie. Maybe some of these teams
are playing for pride. Say the Reds out to win
six or seven of the nine, right at least? I
would take six right now and settle the case, would you?
Six and six and nine? From this point? Which I'd
like to see him win a few and get about
a game or two leads.

Speaker 1 (01:22:15):
I don't want to go to Milwaukee win two out
of three.

Speaker 6 (01:22:17):
No, but that's the nightmare scenario and have projectile vomiting
and explosive diarrhea together.

Speaker 1 (01:22:24):
If that happened, so would I. I wouldn't know which
direction to go. The entire tri State would too, the
only team I worry about it.

Speaker 6 (01:22:30):
Then then it would come down to the Mets at Miami, Yes,
and the Giants at Colorado and the Reds in Milwaukee
that final weekend, you win the standings flip flop. It
couldn't come down to that last Sunday. Write this down

(01:22:52):
s all right, the Reds have four against the Cubs.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
They have won one. Let's say they win three against
the Cubs. Okay, two against the Pirates. That's and then
they have to win two and they'll walk. Is that possible?

Speaker 6 (01:23:08):
I don't know, Willie. They Milwaukee owns. Milwaukee owns them
like you know what. Hate the one at home and
they lost, They lost like eleven nine. The red just
got to keep winning, Willie. And they gotta worry about
as I know what. Don't worry about what you can't carry.
Francona to get him together about right now and say, look,
hey boys, let's just go out and play.

Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
Play this game.

Speaker 6 (01:23:31):
Play this game. Don't worry about anybody else. The Giant
on the board, Cardinals, don't worry. Let him go, let
him go win this game, right, and then you wake
up tomorrow, see what happens. Then you win again. They
just got to keep winning. That's it. Well, don't worry
about anything else. Just win, right, baby? And maybe I
think somebody say that one time, one time. I think

(01:23:52):
Al Davis too. Yeah, but you win.

Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
The Reds have had fifty games scoring two runs or less.
Is that a problem.

Speaker 6 (01:24:00):
Yeah, and I think they I don't think they're very
good in extra inning games this year.

Speaker 1 (01:24:04):
Nothing. What if it goes to extra innings on Sunday
and oh the Reds have got to win extra No,
I'll be I'll be in every every every every person
in this town will be an ic U somewhere. Oh
there Reds the top of the tenth.

Speaker 6 (01:24:22):
Then we start with the and then then the Bengals
play that Sunday in ball in Denver and they and
the Bengals roll to four and O. This town will
know what to do. What if the when you have
great coaches, then after you have great coaches, you get
great players, have a great organization, and you.

Speaker 2 (01:24:42):
Tell them one thing.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
Just wind and to col Davis is now dead. Do
you think he's in heaven segment? Yes? Okay, but probably
sitting next to Pete Roselle. I can see now extra
innings a week from Sunday and Milwaukee. Hey, Reds have
a phantom runner on second and if they win this game,

(01:25:05):
they have to go to uh Los Angeles to play
the Dodgers in three. But let's see if they can
make it in the playoffs. All right, it's to you,
Jeff Tommy, what do you say, Oh, I don't know,
that's the that's the I don't know.

Speaker 6 (01:25:21):
That would be Just go out and win tonight, play tomorrow,
play Sunday, Just take take one, you know, this, one
game at a time. Bit that's it. One inning, one
pitch right tonight, and that's it. Don't think about else.

Speaker 1 (01:25:34):
And Dela Cruz will actually play like an All Star
at some point in this series. At some point, O
can he not make an error? And he actually hit
a home run? H home run? In like two and
a half.

Speaker 6 (01:25:46):
Months, he has got as many home runs as I
had in the second half, which is zero.

Speaker 1 (01:25:51):
Right, fine segment, give me on the student's report. But
I do not want to go the week from Sunday
in Milwaukee, no extra innings to the termin if thereads
go to the playoffs and Milwaukee is already in. Right,
but you rather play a team not in the have
play hard or play a team that's already in Who
don't care which way? You want to play Milwaukee. They're

(01:26:13):
in Just do you want to play him?

Speaker 6 (01:26:16):
Under Green stepped up last night. Now it's Nick Lodolo's turn. Tomorrow,
it's Andrew Abbitt or whoever it is. No, it's who's
it singer? I think it's Lttel, isn't it? Oh? The
Zach Littel's got to step up tomorrow? And then who's
Sunday Abbott or is it singer one or the other?
One of the just got to step up and get

(01:26:37):
it done. That's it singer, that's it. And then he
maybe he goes to Pittsburgh. Now, let's see what happens.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
They're off on Monday, when they played Tuesday, Wednesday, business
special on Thursday, and then to Milwaukee. Meet me in
Milwaukee Friday, Saturday, and Sunday. I want to get to
the point where those games are meaningful. Would you agree? No,
you don't want to. No, they want to wrap it up.
Don't want to raf all that would be That would
be nice. That's six games at home. That'd be great.

(01:27:06):
Because people need a heart medicine. Cardinals have got to
do their duties. Somebody got to help them out. Giants.
Cardinals have got to help them, and the Cardinals help
the Reds.

Speaker 6 (01:27:17):
Well, I'll tell you what if you know it's no
picnic about the the Giants in l A. I mean,
the Giants could be three or four, maybe five or
six out by the weekend and then they're done one.

Speaker 1 (01:27:29):
If the comes and then and they Giants are swept
by the Dodgers, then the Reds are three games up
with Pittsburgh coming, Let's go. I like what you're thinking segment,
give me out of the Suits report. Please have a great
weekend on Octoberfest and go Deer Park undefeated, untied, unscored
on because.

Speaker 6 (01:27:47):
Willie and utter of everybody have a great weekend, Go
Reds Bengals FC Cincinnati and have a safe one.

Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
We leave you with the immortal words of the stood.

Speaker 9 (01:28:00):
Next week's case handled by the Highway Patrol is a
very exciting one. We hope you'll be with us until then.
Remember the careless driver isn't driving his car, He's aiming it.
This is Roderick Crawford saying see you next week.

Speaker 1 (01:28:12):
Segment. Thank you, yes sir, on seven hundred W out
of You
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