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May 1, 2026 92 mins
Willie talks with political commentator Leland Vittert about the state of the Iran war. Also Rhyen Staley explains how socialism has infected our education system. Finally Willie remembers legendary reporter Liz Bonis.

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Speaker 1 (00:06):
My Billy cunning into Great America. Welcome is Friday afternon
into tri State. Someone left the refrigerator door open. Not
much golf weather happening here. Reds played the Pirates, who,
by the way, lately have stunk. They're like three and
seven the last ten games. And Paul Skeenes is not pitching,
so that's a positive. So let's keep the Reds rocking
and rolling with you to pulling so much more. But
until then, this is more or less the sixtieth day

(00:28):
mark a little past that of the war in Iran.
And of course, my friend and yours, Leland Vidder of
News Nation on every night, has a great column off
to the side which I read all the time, which
is Leland Viddart's War Notes, and he has such twenty
to thirty years experience covering issues in the Middle East,
and it's great stuff about where the war is headed, etc.

(00:49):
And Leland Viddert welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show.
And first of all, my producer Tony Bender drives one
of those gas guzzlers. I think it's like a ninety
seven Plymouth and to fill the damn thing up is
doubled in value. Unless he would work here. He would
not know the difference between Iran and a rock, and
most Americas, they might recall a country song by Alan

(01:10):
Jackson about the difference between Iran and a rock. And
the average American living in Moleen, Illinois, or in Devenport, Iowa,
has no idea Iran and the rock's on the map,
but they do know that their gasoline prices have doubled.
And you make reference to this, and many have said,
he'd better wrap this thing up quickly, and quickly does

(01:31):
not apply to the Middle East. So what do you
just say to some American living in Austin, Texas or
living in Devonport, Iowa, that he's got a sacrifice so
that the Iranian people can be free. Does that American citizen,
middle class guy get that.

Speaker 2 (01:47):
Well, if the President would spend time explaining it, rather
than waxing poetic about a ballroom or passport photos or
indicting James Comy, he might have a chance to make
that argument. And I think what we're seeing, and I
am perplexed by a president who won by having such

(02:08):
an innate understanding of where the American people were, that
he is now pivoted to talking about things and spending
time on things. The American people don't care about the
fact that less than a week ago there was a
credible and real assassination attempt on the president of the

(02:31):
United States and that person parroted the talking points of
mainstream democratic politicians and mainstream democratic media. And that's not
All We're talking about is political malpractice. And the reason
for that is not that the media is looking to
change the subject, is that the president changed the subject right.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
And every day at news conferences, almost every day, and
Ronald Reagan could make a point, and God bless him,
but Donald Trump does not have linguistic skills to envelop
his arms around those with whom he disagrees and bring
them into the tent. And the more this goes on
in you explain.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
That, well, the power of the presidency and now on
a Friday afternoon, I'm going to get really wonky. But
I'm a nerd, so that's fine. There was Richard Neustatt,
who was a great political scientist at Harvard University, and
he said the real power of the presidency is the
power of persuasion. And Donald Trump understands that better than anybody,

(03:35):
by far the best at managing the media of anybody.
But he is incapable of acknowledging things that are not good.
In acknowledging when the American people are hurting is somehow
he feels that he is going to get blamed for it,

(03:56):
and that's just not who he is. And what's again
perplexing to me is for a guy who got shot
at or was about to get shot at, and got
shot at and hitting Butler, the moment was totally lost
on him.

Speaker 3 (04:11):
That he could spend the next.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
Week complaining about everybody who had called him a Nazi
in an existential threat to democracy and just talk about that,
and they completely missed it. And I'm sorry. There's nobody
Tony included sitting around right now in Cincinnati thinking about
how they're going to pay for their kids to go
to summer camp, or whether they can take a week

(04:34):
long vacation up north and afford the gas prices and going,
you know, honey, it's all right that you know prices
are so high and we're going to have to stay
here this summer, and the kids are going to understand
because Trump's going to have his ballroom.

Speaker 1 (04:46):
Doesn't work that way. And the other issue is I
think he's right in the policy, and the Middle East
has been a cauldron for the last forty seven or
fifty years, and this may resolve that it may not
to allow crazy people with screwy ideas about suicide and
homicide in possession of a nuclear weapon is something that

(05:07):
the world would be better off without. But he doesn't
make the case. In fact, he's all over his shotgun
this thing, all over the place, talking about this, talking
about that. And I would note you have a great
column also up about CBS Chicago reports Chicago public schools
would take kids on a field trip to anti Trump rallies,
and so important things are happening in the country, and

(05:28):
I think that if this thing doesn't wrap up soon,
and the Iranians are playing chicken, and Iranians are not
used to losing negotiations, this thing may go into the summertime,
in which case you won't be able to find a
Republican with a search warrant come November the fifth. And
while this is going on, Chicago public schools take kids
on field trips to anti Trump rallies, and the kids

(05:50):
can't read. In fact, about eighty percent of the children
can't read, can't write in Chicago, which is typical urban schools.
And secondly, there's I think seventy four seventy five different
schools in Chicago in which no one can read and
ride at the grade level. Now that's important stuff, Leland Fitter,
And that's something the media does not focus on, do
they No.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
But again, when the President of the United States is
spending multiple press conferences waxing about his ballroom or indicting
James Comy on things that, whether are serious or not,
are not going to pass in any way before a jury,

(06:32):
that is what happens. And these are decisions the president
gets to make. And I don't think in this case
you can blame the media. The media was enveloped by
the assassination story. You had shut Todd, for God's sake
saying I'm not going to go to any more Trump

(06:53):
nut rallies because it's too dangerous to be around him.
Now it sounded like he was blaming Donald Trump for
people who want to assad being around them. But that's
a separate issue, chuck outle Be on the show tonight,
We're going to ask them about that. But nevertheless, the
media is nothing more than talking about themselves and how
in danger they were. We should have spent this entire
week talking about the rhetoric that inspired this killer yep.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
And the White House.

Speaker 2 (07:17):
Could have managed that and they and they could have
ended it with And by the way, the teachers' unions
are now creating more of these people by taking kids
to these rallies, you know, which.

Speaker 3 (07:27):
Is not difficult.

Speaker 1 (07:28):
No, can I raise my hand in the back of
the room with an objection, say teacher, I got an objection?
May I have an objection? Yeah? Please? Every time there's
an attempt on Trump's life, which is at least three,
maybe five, two of which should have been successful. And
the one and Correspondence Center was certainly dangerous. If there
was three Iranians with body bombs running in there, we

(07:50):
would have a different discussion. But how do you approve
if you're the Secret Service and one of your hosts
had this on the director and you agree to have
an event in which there was four to five hundred
restaurant employees coming in the back of the facility there
at the Hilton that are not properly screened at all.

(08:11):
You have thousands of people moving in, half of whom
When Trump out of office, you have a wide open
hallway in which some guy can run for fifty yards
with a shotgun through a magnetometer, and nine of the
ten cops there were looking at their phones, not paying attention.
This guy falls at the top of a landing he
was close to getting in, and the director of the

(08:32):
Secret Service says he wouldn't change anything at all. And
I look at Butler one hundred and fifty yards away
in the scope an easy shot. Trump turns his head
and he lives. I look at Ryan Ralph in the
full each at a golf tournament with Trump coming up
the fairway just as bright as can be, and he
had a scope on it, etc. And that was going
to be ugly. As my view, the Secret Service leadership

(08:54):
is not doing its job and putting him in circumstances
and can't tell him no. When he was asked yesterday
about wearing a bulletproof vest, he said, I don't need
to add twenty pounds, which was pretty good. But am
I right to say the Secret Service has failed institutionally,
not the brave men and women taking a bullet to
put him in circumstances in which he's likely to get shot.

(09:16):
I had on a couple White House officials a few
days ago who talked about and I said to them,
Trump's not going to survive. He's going to get shot.
It's amazing he's still alive. So do you blame a
little bit the institutional Secret Service? Overwhelmed, undermanned and they
can't protect the president.

Speaker 2 (09:35):
Well, I'll go one more, which is the fact that
the shooter, Alan Cole is still alive is a ethic
failure because the Secret Service are supposed to have the
highest marketman's qualifications of any American law enforcement agency because
they are by definition shooting into crowds and they discharged

(09:56):
their weapons at least six times and everybody missed. Okay,
So that's the real problem, and one has to think.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
About that number one.

Speaker 2 (10:04):
Number two, the Secret Service, I think has a job
in which we always say they have to be right
one hundred percent of the time.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
The bad guys only have to be right once.

Speaker 2 (10:16):
So to that extent, yeah, there have been real failures.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
I think.

Speaker 2 (10:20):
Also they have never dealt with a president who had
more threats against him, and that is because of the
rhetoric that is associated with Donald Trump, not from Donald Trump,
but about Donald Trump by the left, and they used
they did not have to deal with the level of

(10:41):
politically inspired, smart savvy people who want to kill him.
The correspondence here, I think you're right. I've been to
a number of them. The layer of security worked, and frankly,
if the checkpoints had been outside the hotel, there would
have been a bunch of people complaining that they couldn't

(11:03):
have gotten to the parties because they didn't have a
ticket to the dinner. So it just cuts a lot
of different ways. But it's clear that the Secret Service
has to change how they look at these kinds of
events in the level of threat to Trump's life, given
the rhetoric about him and the manifesto.

Speaker 1 (11:23):
But I hate to read any parts of manifesto of
Uh of of Cole and it's it's he ends up
with a PS and the PS of the attempt at
assassins manifesto says, oh, PS, okay, now all that sappy
stuff has done. What the hell is this Secret Service doing?

(11:43):
That's the attempt at assassin? Who is talking about the
Secret Service? Alan Cole and and uh and talking about
Cole Allan, what the hell happened to the Secret Service?
He goes on to say, no, damn security not in transport,
not in the hotel, not in the event I walk
in with multiple weapons, and not a single person there
considers the possibility I could be a threat. So it's

(12:05):
like Lee Harvey Oswald writing down, I can't believe I'm
able to get on the sixth floor of the Texas
Cobuk Depository in Scopak Kennedy's head and blow it apart
like a pumpkin. It's unbelievable. About the and the Secret Service,
what have they learned. I'm told by Congressman that you
show a little ticket, you walk right in. There was
no security at this event, and the director said yesterday

(12:26):
that he wouldn't changed anything. I'm going what what? I
hate to ye, I'd be shocked if Trump survives.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
Well, we can all hope that he does. But I
think you point out that the threat to this president
is different than one we have ever seen before.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
All right, another one of your war notes, and I
want to we got about two minutes remaining.

Speaker 2 (12:53):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (12:54):
The Iranian new leader, I guess he's deformed a to
face in some way, is talking like the old leaders.
And the only way this is going to change if
something happens internally, because the leadership of Iran is suicidal,
homicidal and genocidal. Those are some bad titles right there.
And from your perspective, having great experience in the Middle East,
can you hazard a guess over the next one to

(13:16):
two months, what's going to happen between Iran, Iraq and Syria,
between Gaza and Lebanon, between Hamas and Hesbla, and the
two d's and the hoodies. What the hell can you
predict what's going to happen?

Speaker 2 (13:30):
No, if you want to be proven a fool, predict
the future in the Middle East.

Speaker 1 (13:34):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (13:34):
So, the one thing I will say, we are in
a better place than we were sixty days ago. Iran
weakened significantly, and America in a position of strength. The
United Arab Emirates leaving Opak, in forming security alliances with
the United States and Israel shows the power of a

(13:55):
president finally doing what every president for forty seven years
has said that they would, which.

Speaker 1 (14:00):
Is stand up to Iran.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
Has the policy been perfect? I don't think so, but
I don't get to make that decision. I think that
what they are doing right now is having a serious
deleitarious effect on the U, on on Iran and Iran's
ability to project power and formant terror around the world,

(14:23):
and in by definition, that makes the world a better place.
Of course, you could read the New York Times, as
we pointed out in War Notes, who needs Tehran Teresa
when you've got the New York Times editorial board just
lambasting the US military and forgetting that the reason the
US military was hollowed out over the past five years

(14:44):
was because of Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Yeah, you make that point when they Monday New York
Times says, well, the US military, it's an inside knowledge
that they're not very good. Tell that to Maduro and
tell that to uh what's happening now in Iran? And
it's amazing that most of the liberalism in America roots
against our success and in fact they want failure. And

(15:06):
it's one of the damnedest things I've seen that they
want the US military to fail. And some of the
hearings of Pete Hegseth the last couple of days have
been illustrative of the difficulty, and that is that there's
a large chunk of America that demeans the military, wants
it to lose. They keep looking for seditious behavior, They
encourage generals. I watched this one general commandant quizzed about

(15:28):
disobeying illegal orders and he didn't know how to answer
the questions like that. And it's just that we're rooting
for failure because it helps Democrats politically. Well, Leland, we
gotta go, we got to run, and it's sad where
we are and I don't know how we get out
of it. But the average American couldn't care less about Iran.
They care about their own lives, and they care about
the cost. And that three point five percent number in

(15:50):
March was kind of a bad one, and that inflation
is going one way, which is up, and summer is coming.
If this thing isn't concluded, I think by Memorial Day,
which I think is unlikely, there's going to be hell
to pay at the ballot box. But uh, Leland ventered.
I'll watch you every night, News Nation. Thanks for coming
on the Bill Cunningham Show, and good luck to you,
and good luck to all the folks there. Thank you, Leland,

(16:11):
Thanks Bill, God bless you. Let's continue with more headline
New York Times, US Military hollowed out, thinking, well, if
that's hollowing out, I don't want to see when they're
when they're successful, and it's just you're rooting against uh.
You're rooting against success in the Iran when everyone knows
on the inside it's positive.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
UH.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
To make sure that the fanatical Muslims that can trolly
run don't have a nuclear weapon that they would clearly
use against it, you know, debt to America and they
want to kill us, and they're telling us and they
want to use nuclear bombs to do it. Let's continue
with more. Bill Cunningham, the Great American A News Radio
seven hundred WLW. Sorry, Billy Cunningham, the Great American Reds

(16:49):
Baseball kicks off tonight five forty five in Pittsburgh without
Paul Skanks, who lost again yesterday to the Saint Louis Cardinals.
So the Reds are in Pittsburgh for three, then Chicago
go for four. We'll see what happens with that. It
was sad news reporting last night that Liz Bonus, the
medical reporter for Sinclair Broadcast Group Local twelve, unexpectedly died suddenly.

(17:13):
She's been on with me many times. I noticed that
Channel twelve ran some of her pieces last night and
today to celebrate the life and times of List Bonus.
Those of us in this business had no knowledge that
she was suffering greatly. During the last three or four years.
She was involved in many oncology trials, experimental drugs for
her colon cancer that I knew nothing about. In fact,

(17:35):
I talked to my friends at Channel twelve. They'll tell
you the same thing. One or two people knew there,
and that was it. That's the way she wanted to
do it. She wanted not to be pitied. She didn't
want to have that the focus of her reporting as
a medical correspondent. So she lived her life to the fullest.
He ran through the finish line. And it was shocking
when I got a text from Tony Bender, program director

(17:58):
here that Liz Bonus schedule to come on next week,
of course would not make it, and I it just
tears your heart out to think of that woman fighting
so bravely against colon cancer. And then there's so many
have in the past. They didn't make it, but she
elected not to make it public so she would not

(18:20):
be subjected to lots of interviews. She wanted to work
and do her job. Got in the every day about
eight o'clock in the morning and worked all day. She
was a fine woman. So I thought one of the
best ways we can pay tribute to Liz Bonus and
the contributions she made to all of us is to
play one of my recent interviews with her. And this
is me and Liz Bonus a few months ago, and

(18:41):
it shows you her vitality and her strength and her courage.
And Dave Keaton hit it the other night. I'm watching you.
Of course I watch you as much as I can.
And you're doing this topic very close to Tony Bender's prostate,
and that is that there's something going on in prostate
health with AI. And this is for men, not women.
Women who identify as men, I guess they have prostates

(19:02):
and as a consequence that the treatment for prostate enlargement
and prostate cancer is changing fundamentally. Explain that to the
American people. Everyone that's got a prostate, you better listen.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
You know, there is some thought that fifty percent of
us have prostates we should be talking more about them.
But you guys are really shy about talking about this
stuff that impacts everything from sexual function to a whole
lot more. So we're not going to be shy. We're
going to talk to you a little bit about what's
going on. Two different things you mentioned there. One is
benign prostate hyperplasia, which is it gets too big and

(19:39):
it makes you peel all night. The other is prostate cancer.
And the biggest breakthrough that we've seen is that artificial
intelligence now can customize your care, especially with pretty much
many types of imaging, but in prostate cancer. It's now
being used. In the Tristate. Our friends at the Urology
Group some of the first in the region to take

(19:59):
a cat skin and that you do before you have
a treatment plan in radiation, and normally what happens is
that that takes a couple of weeks and then your
body will sort of come in and it'll adjust, meaning
you know, your bladder's a little full or your bowels
a little full, and that can start off some of
those results like you're getting zapped and they want to
zap you precisely well. Now with AI, what they'll do

(20:22):
is to have you lay down on the radiation machine
and the imaging itself. AI will adapt essentially your cat
scan to what your bladder and bowel looks like that day,
which means when they zap you, they're getting the stuff
you need them to get and not the outside stuff
around it. Because if you talk to guys, they are
terrified not of getting you know, their PSA and the

(20:46):
process cancer. They're terrified that, like we're going to lose
sexual function, we're gonna have be ping on ourselves, which
is a legitimate concern. You're much more worried about the
side effects. Well, now AI in medicine is helping to
take care of that because when you precisely only hit
the target, you leave those other organs alone. What do
you think of that?

Speaker 1 (21:05):
I love it because I go to neurology group, beginning
with doctor Allen Cordell. Now I'm with Patrick Hertz, and
as a consequence, he has me on flow max. I
think Tony's on flow max because as men get older,
and thank god, whether it's your dead, your grandfather, you
want men to get older. And as you get older,
the prosta is like a tree. It keeps getting more
rings around it with pressures, you know, the flow of

(21:27):
urine getting up two or three times a night's no good.
And so but the fear men have a fear of
having things stuck in them. I don't care if it's
urology or if it's the bow you know, having a colonoscopy.
Those things men don't want to do that. I don't
think women want to do it either, but men really
don't want to do it. And so I can't tell
how many. A couple friends of mine have bowel cancer,

(21:50):
which is terrible. A few of the friends of mine
have had prostay cancer, which is more treatable. But men
don't want to go to the doctor for these purposes.
As a woman type person, can you tell me why?

Speaker 3 (22:01):
You know, I think some of it is the invincible thing,
don't you. I mean, I just think it makes us vulnerable.
And guys, we were just raised. The guy is not
vulnerable when we talk about this stuff all the time.
So you know, we'll kind of an advantage. We'll learn
about the new treatments and whatnot. But you should know

(22:22):
that even if it's not prostate cancer, there's a second
thing the neurologies group is doing on the I have
to get up and pee all night and it's called
prostate artery embolization. And I got to watch It's really cool.
I got to watch them like inject these beads. I
know you said you don't like stuff stuck in you,
but this is actually this is actually a liquid full
of teeny whiny beads, and if they can find the

(22:43):
right blood vessels that go around the prostate area, the
inject these little beads into them and they essentially eventually
cut off the blood supply which is feeding the prostate
getting bigger and bigger and bigger, and pretty soon it
just shrivels up. I know that doesn't sound right, but
you do want it to shrivel. And it shrivels up
enough that you will stop having that kind of pressure

(23:04):
the enlarged prostates, it shrinks and you stop peeing all night.
How's that?

Speaker 1 (23:09):
Well, I'll tell you what. One of our advertisers, I
should not mention his name, so I will not without
his permission, had that exactly done about six months ago,
and he said it changed his life for the better.
He was getting up four or five six times a night,
couldn't sleep. All of a sudden, he had that exact
procedure done Eurology Group, and guess what, he's now afraid
he can sleep all night, which is important.

Speaker 4 (23:29):
Now.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
Secondly, let's talk about ozempic. So many men and women
are on these exotic drugs ozempic to lose weight. It
was perceived to be a drug for some other purpose,
just like viagra was perceived for some other purpose. All
of a sudden, it helps certain other areas of life
to stand up tall and proud, and so with flomax
that helped me a lot. But now we're going to

(23:50):
talk about ozempik. Explain in general, ozempik off someone's overweight,
what happens. Then ozempik for sex, which is Tony Bender's interest.
Explain this to me.

Speaker 3 (24:00):
Well, I won't say that we are using ozembic for sex.
I will tell you that there are side effects. Now
we call ozembic penis and ozembic batona that might influence sex.
So let's start with what ozempic or wagov or zep
bound semaglutide is what they're called by generics. These are
drugs that you inject into the abdomen, and they're working
on a pill. By the way, it's going to be
available very soon if it isn't already. Where it delays

(24:24):
the gastric emptying, So you eat your lunch and rather
than it's just kind of going through you and digesting
at a normal pace, it sits in the lower end
testine for a while, and because of that, you feel
less hungry and you eat less and lose weight. And
that's a different concept than the pill helps me lose weight.
You lose weight because you eat less, and you eat

(24:45):
less because you're not hungry, so you can eat around
these things. Trust me, not everybody loses weight.

Speaker 2 (24:50):
But you're right.

Speaker 3 (24:50):
They were developed originally to bring your blood sugars down.
We've now found they help bring weight down, help bring
blood pressure down, might help your kidneys, might reduce risk
for certain cancers. There's all kinds of things. But keep
in mind that when stuff is sitting in the gut,
there's these little bacteria that we have. We call them
the gut microbiomes and whatnot. And there's, yeah, there's some

(25:15):
thought that when you mess with those, you mess with
a lot of stuff, like everything from brain signaling to
your ability and desire to even have sex. How do
you like that.

Speaker 1 (25:27):
Belly keep you from wanting to enjoy sech? I think
a little worms a little bit.

Speaker 3 (25:31):
You know.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
That's not a pleasant look.

Speaker 3 (25:34):
I know, I know, And that's sort of what they are.
There's a very we're you know, we're fearfully and wonderfully made.
There's a delicate balance in our gut, and when you
mess with the balance, there's some thought that you mess
with the bacteria in your body. And for women it's
a real thing. They call it o odempic vagina and

(25:56):
it will actually mess with the bacteria percent gives you
like yeast infections and all the kind of things that
don't really lend to intimacy. Right, So it's a thing
and they say, if you are on this, you should
tell your doctor if you're noticing things like more yeast infections.
But also you can address some of that. Now, there's

(26:18):
a couple of different kinds of over the counter supplements,
like they call them pro anthosyanins, which are like they
promote there's stuff that's read in cherries and it's like
a good bacteria that can help you know, sort of
the bowel remove some of that stuff. Okay, yes, that
you don't want.

Speaker 1 (26:35):
So women might have a choice of losing weight or
having sex. I think most women would say I'd rather
lose weight than have sex. Am I right or wrong
about that?

Speaker 2 (26:43):
You know?

Speaker 3 (26:44):
One of my girlfriends said, when you lose weight, you
have more sex. So I'm not sure.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Well, let's talk about let's talk let's talk about ozepy
long term. Some have said to me, look at fenn Fenn,
which is supposedly was gonna be a great thing. Then
about ten years later we found out that it astroid
hart valves or there was medical How do we know
ozempic or these other exotic drugs are not having an
effect we won't know about for ten years.

Speaker 3 (27:10):
Well, they've actually been in development for that long, believe
it or not. I've been watching this research for a
long time. So for more than a decade we have
watched that. But I think we are seeing some side
effects we've never seen before. The ozempic vagina and ozempic
penis is a whole new set of a whole new
level of things we never talked about. But if you

(27:30):
think about it, just delaying gas orcs emptying isn't going
to have the same effect as like a fence fen
that shut down your lung. Now we don't know for
sure what happens when you do leave stuff in the gut,
like could we later see higher risks of other things? Yeah,
that you know? We I mean, and there's everything is
benefit versus risk. But if you talk to a lot

(27:51):
of people who are taking it. If you're you know,
nearing three hundred pounds and your doctor says, your heart's
not going to carry this for much longer. Losing the
weight gives you a benefit that maybe at the time
greater than the risk. Always got a weigh that. But
by the way, ozentpic penis is not a real thing
to see, you.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Know, explain that to Tony Bender. Explain that. Please.

Speaker 3 (28:13):
They started calling it that because these guys would lose
the belly, the penis looked larger, okay, and so they
were like, I'm not penis, Like, no.

Speaker 1 (28:22):
That's a good not a good thing. Not a good thing.
You lose your belly, pleasure get uncle Charlie gets a
little more, a little more protrusion, shall we say. So
it's a double whammia in a good way. You lose
your belly and your thing gets a little bit bigger.

Speaker 3 (28:35):
It appears that way. It's not necessarily true. I mean,
you lose your belly, a lot of things get easier,
like you can see your feet, you know. But what
you know, it's really interesting what you just call it,
mister Charlie or something. I was working on a story
when the eed drugs first came out in the newsroom
and I was trying to, you know, figure out how
to make it appropriate for the family audience at four
or five pm, and I'm like, hey, does anyone have

(28:57):
another word for penis? And let me tell you something.
I have, Like sixteen people pop up, mister Weekley, you
know whatever. There's all kinds of fish, Charlie. What is
the names? Yeah, what's up with the names of you
guys with all that stuff? You know, like, you know,
girls don't name their naty part for some reason. You
guys all have a name.

Speaker 1 (29:15):
You may call it mss kitty, but I call it
mister Charlie. So, so getting back to getting getting back
to zepic right now. You have to inject it, correct,
You have to inject it. Yeah. I'm watching the CEO
of Lily the other day on CNBC. He talks about
a pill form which many people would find more acceptable.
Was that coming down the road?

Speaker 3 (29:35):
It really is. And actually what's really interesting is some
of the research to do that was done here in
the Tri State. There's a couple of different uh as.
You know, we have some rather large research organizations here
that do great work, and some of those have been
testing the semaglu type pill, and it's supposed to work
in the same way. You have to like obviously adjust

(29:56):
dosing because the reason you inject is so that it
goes right into the area that you want to. You
are just dosing. But the pill is showing positive results.
And the number one thing that keeps people from selecting
the injection are going on it is they don't like shots.
So I have a feeling. I mean, right now about
twelve percent of people are on, so one in eight
they think is on the ozembic injectable. So think about

(30:20):
the number of people that are going to go on
the pill when you can actually pop that. There's some
people saying they're selling it now. It's rolling out in
limited doses, but probably by the end of twenty six
we're going to see it on a more regular thing,
and I think it'll regularly be prescribed. I'm like you, though, man,
I think you out of a million people on it
before you see what's going on. So I would still

(30:41):
approach with caution, and I would still tell you lose
weight because you eat less. It's not like a magic
fat burning pill. You got stuff sitting in the gut
delays that so you don't feel as hungry. And that's
great if it helps you eat less. But you know
what all these people are doing now is they're taking
the drugs because they Charlie to look better and they

(31:03):
don't exercise, don't change their diet. Well, what happens then
when you go off that? I see statistic.

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Yeah, I talk about that, Liz, when you go off
and I've seen statistics that it has negative consequences for
someone's muscular structure, et cetera. So at some point you
go off of it, then what happens.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
It may be as high as ninety five percent of
the people regain the weight plus ten percent they like that. Yeah,
And part of that is people that exercise may have
as much as double the success rate keeping weight off
compared to people that don't. And it's not because like
you really burn so much, so many more calories exercising.

(31:45):
If you think about what exercise does, it builds muscle,
and when a muscle is fit, it uses up more
energy throughout the day. So when you're sitting around doing nothing,
you're still burning more calories. Okay, but also you know,
I don't know about you, but I drag my butt
up and get on the elliptical or get on the
treadmill at four in the morning every day because it
helps my mental health. I mean, like I want to

(32:06):
hurt people coming in if I don't do that, And
I think there is a therapy to that. That is
the cheapest therapy you will ever find.

Speaker 2 (32:15):
And in the.

Speaker 3 (32:15):
Meantime, then your body's getting a benefit. Well why do
you overeat? You overeat generally because you're like pissed off
or stressed out or frustrated, or it tastes good. And
if you don't have another coping mechanism, which is what
exercise can help you with, you don't ever really have
a way to sort of work against that. So you
stop taking the drug, you feel hungry again, and you
start picking out. So there's one hundred reasons to incorporate,

(32:37):
you know, regular exercise and some diet changes amount.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
And I'm told these drugs are extremely expensive, but they're
coming down if it goes to a pill form. Wouldn't
that I can see five or ten years all of
us on these things. I can see all of us
on one pill with all of these things in it,
right within five or ten years.

Speaker 3 (32:56):
Well, so they thought that about like statins, like maybe
we should put them in the water for your heart,
you know, But there will always be people that will
have side effects, so who knows. But one thing I
do think is that, you know we talked about the AI,
the DNA testing is going to start when you're like
an infant now, or maybe when you get to be
an adult, and they'll be able to tell you, well,
you're predisposed for obesity or you're predisposed for heart disease,

(33:19):
and they probably will start putting us on some of
these preventatives, you know, for preventive purposes, and I think
you're going to see a prescription used for a whole
different purpose. But yeah, if you're looking at like medical
stocks for investment, these would be good ones.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
Probably absolutely. If twelve percent of I'm not on it yet,
you're skinny and good shape, don't have to be on it.
I can see at some point someone's saying, I could
lose thirty forty fifty pounds with little or no side effects.
I'll take Ozembic has this side effect of helping this
kitty and also Charlie, and it's a consequence everybody's happy.
And I can see in one pill having everything in

(33:54):
one pill. Low cholesterol, maybe high blood pressure. It might
be for weight purposes, it might be for liver, fatty life,
whatever it is, it'll be within five or ten years
of one pill for everything. Is that where we're headed?
M Maybe not.

Speaker 3 (34:09):
I think there'll be one pill for weight loss. Now
this is specific purposes. But you know what's really interesting
about this is I've read some really interesting research that
when you take away hunger, you lose your zest for
certain things, like you mention, like the sexual intimacy. There's
some people who say, like, I just kind of didn't
really want to do anything if I didn't want to eat,

(34:30):
you forget how much like hunger plays a role in
going to dinner and being excited about seeing someone. And
I wonder, yeah, drink drink and wine, which leads to
more intimacy. Yeah, there's some thought that this is going
to influence or this can influence your life in ways
that you never really thought about. And if your if

(34:50):
food has been like your passion and now it's not,
you're going to notice things like that. And I'm not
saying that's all bad, but it's fascinating to watch all
the things that happen when you start altering the guts
like you talk about Charlie. But the gun alters the brain,
and the brain is a powerful organ, let me tell you.
And when you start messing with that and you lose
your passion for food and life and dust and wanting

(35:12):
to do stuff, I don't know if we're all going
to want to be on that or not be like, yeah,
you know, it's where like people who said they tried marijuana,
it just made them not want to do anything right.

Speaker 1 (35:20):
You know, you want to eat a bunch of pizza
and eat popcorn, And I don't know what that els going.
And we don't know that the long term effects of
marijuana for teenagers. We have no idea in thirty years
what we're going to deal with. But list bonus, we
got to run. You're the best at what you do,
and you're a wonderful guest. More importantly, you're like a
encyclopedia of health. And I think Channel twelve should double
your salary and cut your hours in half. Do you agree?

Speaker 3 (35:42):
Oh my goodness, I'm going to play this little snippet
from my boss.

Speaker 1 (35:45):
You tell them right now, tell them to give me
a call. I'll set him straight. God bless you. Thanks,
Let's go tell you with more, Let's continue, you know,
with all due respect. That's one of my last interviews
with Liz Bonus, who passed away last night of colon cancer,
and that interview caught her humor, herd, a good cheer,
and the respects she had for the art in which
she was involved. She was a great medical reporter, a

(36:06):
great medical correspondent, and many of us still can't believe
that she's dead. Liz Bonus, rest in peace. Bill Cunningham,
the great American, with you every day. You're home of
the Reds playing today in Pittsburgh. And by the way,
after one o'clock we're going to have on a guest,
Ryan Staley. You may know there's three thousand protests under
way all over the country in order to bring about
more socialism and communism, and the school children are being

(36:29):
recruited against their permission as props and a political charade
by the Democrat Party liberal Democrats all over the major
cities and some right here in Cincinnati. And then later
on a course, we have Reds baseball starting about five
point forty five Reds in Pittsburgh, first time in Ret's history.
By April thirtieth. They won twenty games, which is pretty good.

(36:51):
But Liz Bonus, we miss you and may your family
find peace. Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven hundred WLW want
to be Billy cunning in the Great America. Of course,
made as being kicked off. The month of May is
when schools normally conclude their activities, and May first, as

(37:14):
I proceeded, to be Communism Day. It began about forty
or fifty years ago in the Old Soviet Union to
celebrate the rights of the working man and women, mainly
the men and the old uss Are and now it's
been metastasized in the Western world as a day to
celebrate socialism communism, which is rampant. If somebody had told
me many many years ago that the mayor of New

(37:35):
York City would be an avowed Muslim who supports some oss,
I would not have believed New York City could have
done that. But now I guess we're going to have
a US Center candidate from the state of Maine feeling
the same way. And that's the marching Marxist that come
out of our schools that begin as early as a
preschool in Chicago. You have to choose your gender when

(37:56):
you're five years old, and then also choose your pro
nouns to begin the indoctrination. Of course, Defending Education is
an institution in which they chronicle the failures of public education.
And there's a great column up by Ryan Staley, whose
director of research at Defending Education dot org. Bombshell report

(38:19):
over one billion dollars and for those mathematically challenged, that's
one thousand million dollars and members dues going to political
spending by teachers' unions at the national and state local
level since twenty fifteen. And some of the spending here
six hundred and sixty nine million dollars at the federal
level throughing thirty six million of the state level. And

(38:40):
they're spending the money on socialism, communism, Marxism to indoctrinate
children instead of public education. Joining us now is that
same Ryan Staley of Defending Education dot org And Ryan,
welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. So tell the
American people what this study has shown. Yeah, Happy Friday, Bill.

Speaker 2 (38:59):
You know what we what we investigated was just simply
using publicly available documents, you know, campaign finance documents, et cetera,
to look at how the unions, both federal and then
state and local were spending their dollars. And just to
be clear, some of it is member dues, some of
it is you know, political contributions by the individual teachers themselves,

(39:24):
and so when people read that, but here's the problem
with all that bill is that the unions will mix
these dollars anyway. They'll take union dues and they'll move
them over into their political action campaigns, or they'll move
them in some cases the member dues into other nonprofits
like your Sunflow you know, the formerly Arabella Advisors was.

Speaker 1 (39:48):
The Sunflower Group now, you know, and.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
They funnel this money into other proxies to advance their
far left political agenda. And you know, one of those
groups received one point seven million dollars, and that that
specific group, Midwest Academy, has been helping to organize and train,

(40:13):
you know, people across the country for today's May Day
rallies like we're seeing in Chicago. And so this is
a real problem in terms of you know, in some
cases taxpayer dollars going indirectly into these groups who are

(40:33):
then on our streets marching for quite literally socialist policies,
and even with very far left radical groups like Party
for Socialism with Liberation.

Speaker 1 (40:43):
May I add, the causes are not shall we say
moderate or conservative. The causes are the transgender rights, anti
law enforcement uh waiving, the hammer and the sickle, and
for children identifying as trans genre at a very early age.
And this is in a climate where I looked at

(41:04):
Brandon Johnson, the mayor, who was a teacher in the CFT,
the Chicago Federation and teachers, eighty percent of the children
do not read at the appropriate level. Ninety percent overall
do not compute mathematically. You kind of learn to read
and then you read to learn. Well. Eighty percent of
the children in Chicago public schools, by the way, at

(41:24):
a cost of thirty five thousand dollars each cannot read
at the appropriate level. And there's something in the range
of forty schools public schools in which no student rises
up to the level of competency in reading. And those
are the children, those impressionable minds that the most left
wing causes are indoctrinating with this socialistic idea. And they

(41:47):
do not talk about American individualism, American entrepreneurism. They don't
talk about the right to life, they don't talk about
the conservative issues of any type. It's always the left
wing causes, and I know your list. Of course, we
broadcast into Kentucky. In Kentucky, for example, there was something
in the range of six point seven million dollars in

(42:09):
Kentucky given from teachers union's dues in order to promote
something called the organization advocates against school choice and bouch
your legislation and so to try to get your kid
out of failing public schools. Many Kentucky just has a
new law. Ohio and in Nana has it already. You
can exact your kid out of a failing public school
and having to go to a private school. But the teachers' unions,

(42:31):
like in Illinois, you have no right to do that.
You're locked into the public school system. And so this
is just Illinois. I'm talking about Kentucky, correct.

Speaker 2 (42:40):
And that was one of the themes that I took
away from the full report that I think is really
important for people to understand. We can debate all day
long about these big nonprofits and how much money they're
getting and the work that they're doing at the federal level,
but really the power comes with what you just outlined
with the group in Kentucky, some small nonprofit that received

(43:03):
seven million dollars from the unions in one calendar year
to push back on school choice measures. And that was Maine,
by the way, that was Nebraska. We saw that in Arizona.

Speaker 1 (43:17):
The same thing.

Speaker 2 (43:18):
Very powerful when these unions funnel in a couple million
dollars into state entities that are state level proxies that
push back against these these politics. And people don't know.
They think that these local nonprofits are just good actors.
But Bill, it's even more than that. Like if you
go to Chicago, let's go back to Chicago for just

(43:38):
a minute, because this is really important with today's today's events.
The Chicago Teachers' Union has a model curriculum for Black
Lives Matter, for Black lives, you know, Black Black History Month,
that focuses on teaching preschoolers the ten point political program
for the Black panther. So where is this going? Where

(44:03):
they are training our children to be far left radical
street radicals. And this is in curriculums, this is in
social emotional learning programs. They have captured the entire industry.
Now it may not be your local school here I'm
talking to your audience, right, but you better be investigating

(44:24):
because these people have been quietly putting their fingers into
everything that's.

Speaker 1 (44:29):
School and it's all about left doing political causes. Then
when Brandon Johnson takes over the government in Chicago, he
make sure the teachers receive huge salary increases, many of
which deserve them, and also time off. One of the
most radical elements of American politics, the Mom Donnie element,
is represented in the New York public school system. The

(44:51):
Sinni Federation to teachers, very left doing, very radical. They
would never consider teaching children about independent thought. It's the
indoctrination and not education. So I watched this morning one
of the shows I watch MS now so you don't
have to, and Ryan Staley of Defending Education Dot Org.
One of the it was either I think it was Joe,

(45:11):
might have been Zeka Bolinski, but nonetheless one of them said, well,
what do the parents say about this? Because if I
have a kid in a large urban school district like Cincinnati,
which has terrible academic results, and Cincinnati we have, the
numbers are unbelievable. Forty seven percent of the student bodies
chronically absent. Break it down by race and gender, Seventy

(45:32):
one percent of black boys are chronically absent from school.
So you would think the parents would raise their hand
and say, now, wait a minute, how come my kid
can't read? You can have to learn to read. Then
you read to learn and you can't read. The results
are like F and D minus. It's terrible. And the
answer was, well, the parents don't seem to care, or

(45:52):
that they care more about homeless encampments in the parking
lot of public schools. What is the sense of the customers?
The cush are the students. The customers are mom and dad?
Where are they in the process? Now, you got me
all fired up? This system right?

Speaker 2 (46:08):
And so when their child comes home and says, hey, Mom,
there's or dad, there's a field trip. In Chicago's case,
they're claiming that the kids have permission to be on
these Is it going to these protests.

Speaker 1 (46:17):
Led boycott of ice. They wanted to protest ICE. So
the students were asked, and by peer pressure, practically all
the high school left and marched around the track for
a while and came back. There were two or three
parents and said, now wait a minute, you did what
today at noon? You left school on a sunny day
in the middle of April and you marched around the
foot Cincinnati or Comington Independent Schools or Chicago. When they

(46:41):
get to be seventeen, eighteen years old, they've been chronically absent.
They have no computing or mathematical skills, their linguistic skills
are greatly limited, have a difficulty reading. They're eighteen years
old and they get their high school diploma. Now, what
thing different to keep it? Keep the game going, which
is why these midterm elections ought to be so important,

(47:02):
but they're not. And Ryan Staley, can you give me
any hope? Here it is Friday afternoon, may can you
give me any hope.

Speaker 2 (47:11):
Absolutely, they've been at this for a long They've been
at this for a long time, Bill, and they don't
have absolute control. And that's because the American people are
good people, and eventually we don't want to deal with
this anymore, will stand up to it. And we're starting
to see that, right, We're starting to see independent journalists
expose a lot of the fraud. We're starting to see

(47:31):
some stuff. We just need to keep putting pressure on
our politicians in DC and in the state level. But
I know for fact a lot of the kids are
not down with this stuff. And so you know, we
just need to take care of our families, start local
and work from there.

Speaker 1 (47:50):
Running for the school board, stand up and meetings, saying
the essential purpose of public schools is to prepare the
next generation of Americans to sit at the table of
economic opportunity, to be informed, to be an independent person,
and not to be in marching Marxists with the little
red book marching around that used to be called peking
and instead there ought to be independent thought. But in

(48:11):
these large cities, because it is so well funded by
either the federal government to state government, I can't imagine
the state government in Illinois cracking down on the money's
given to the Chicago public schools. That'll never happen. These
are communists and socialists that must be curtailed. I'm glad
you gave me some hope because I sit here for
many years listening to this. I know what's happening, powerless

(48:32):
to stop it. And what I try to do is
give some information independent voters to make informed decisions. And
that's our goal. Ryan Staley, once again, what is your website?

Speaker 5 (48:43):
It's defending ed dot org. Defending ed dot org. Thank
bhil education dot org. Let's continue keep hope alive because
all I have is hope. Bill Cunningham News Radio seven
hundred WLW.

Speaker 1 (49:03):
Hello, quiet, and I'm Skulls. I'm broadcasting, first of all, said,
who's on the clock, Well, Willie. It looks like the
Sports Business Journal is reporting that numerous sources familiar with
the National Football League thinking they're considering Minneapolis Saint Paul

(49:23):
a clear favorite to win the hosting rights to the
twenty twenty eight National Football League Draft. But now sources
also tell the sport SPJ that Cincinnati, Ohio has the
inside track for twenty twenty nine. Where would it be

(49:44):
at the Banks area? Where would it be? You got? Well,
why not Union terminal? The whole of justice? Lot of
room there. Speaking of justice, got another tip that Dieters
is down. Joe Dieter's down to the last three to
become the Attorney general, really the United States down in
the last three. They're asking Dave Keaton, my producer, for

(50:06):
more audio tape of Joe Eaters to see if he
has said something that the left could use against him
and his confirmation here. That's That's what I'm talking about
right there. I mean, is there something he has said
that's going to hurt him politically in Washington. Never are
you kidding?

Speaker 4 (50:23):
For instance, had she been in the bathroom smoking crack
and let her kids run around the zoo, that'd be
a different story.

Speaker 1 (50:29):
But that's not what was happening here.

Speaker 4 (50:31):
She was being attended to her children by all witness accounts,
and the three year old just scampered off.

Speaker 1 (50:39):
Why did you order the code read on Harambe? I'm
told that maybe Peta is going to oppose Joe Dieters's
nomination to become the AG because of Harambe. Peta is
after Joe Eaters. Think about that one? Are thets for Marsha?
He's got the hots that what was that? Joe? Somebody?

(51:01):
That's all we need? Is that's all we need. Rombey
bring down Joe like Joe brought down with dumb people. Well,
you don't know, got a point there. Pete is angry
at Joe Dieters. They're going to call it a code
red on his nomination. I think I think Donald Trump
would care about he had read. Do you think he
wants to become the Attorney General the United States? But

(51:22):
he's got a good deal in Columbus?

Speaker 3 (51:24):
Yes, huh, you know you're a Jackass.

Speaker 1 (51:26):
You know he's got Berlin Shiverdecker and Scotty Crosswell is
going to be his top two assistant. The magic Man, Yeah,
the magic They're going to Washington. His slide of hand
is unbelievable. On a bus, yes, the Crosswell, yes, Crosswell bus.
Can you see him sitting in the hot seat with
some of the Democrats going after Joe Justice Joe. We
would get, we get, we would get cuts galore. Just

(51:51):
imagine that Rombay and Peta is going to be the impediment.
Well do you think that's going to be brought up?

Speaker 4 (51:58):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (51:58):
The Senate here? Did you down? Harambe? Why you're gonna
roll in like a life size statue of the eight
Rabbe put his arms up like this and the kid
in his arms. If they would have stuffed that thing
and put him out in front, oh, it would have
been bigger than Fiona. Well, well, I tell you one thing.
Fionda is pretty big bingo right now, but not back

(52:20):
then seven pounds. Oh, you don't want to get Tucker
and uh Tucker and Waby? What about Fritz? What about Bebe? Fritz?

Speaker 5 (52:29):
Fritz?

Speaker 1 (52:29):
How about how big is Fritz? Right now? This is
this building looks like you here he is, so will he?
The Stuge report on this Friday is a pearl service.
Every local Thamestar heating and air conditioning dealers Thamestar quality
you could feel in southeastern Indiana called Joe Eckstein at
Eckstein Heating and COOLi get eight, one, two, nine, three

(52:50):
to two, twenty twenty six spots. Will he have the
Reds taking two or three of that series over the
Rocks much needed. Now they're often at seven game All
Central Division road trip crucial first of three tonight in
the Steel City against the Pirates. Five forty five Sports
Talk rnel carriers inside pitch, but then Kelsey Chevrolet Extra

(53:13):
Ding show after the game. Now, no Paul Skeens, he
pitched yesterday and lost. Brady Singer goes for the Reds tonight.
Pittsburgh reeling a bit. They were just swept in a
four game series at home by the Cardinals. Skeens lost yesterday.
Olivia Dunn is maybe quitting the date. No more dating
of Paul Skeenes thill he wins the game could be

(53:34):
a crisis. So overall they've lost five in a row.
Pittsburgh sixteen and sixteen. They're reeling. Our red legs are
twenty and twenty and twenty and eleven, I mean one
game over the Cubs, two over the Cardinalies. They entered
the month of May a top the division for the
first time since two thousand and six. Well, they've won

(53:54):
five consecutive series for the first time since June of
twenty twenty three. Are they just They're twelve and zero
in games decided by two runs or less? Are they
this good right now? Yes? What about? What about Nick
Mildodo goes tomorrow at for Triple A Louisville and another
rehab might be a little cold and it's going to
be in the derby. What about they need somebody Monday?

(54:18):
They need a starting pitcher Monday in Shytown. Correct, what's
the temperature is going to be a little cold, isn't
it in Chicago? I don't know. Check it out, you
got it? I got the phone, got the hot phone.
There the hot ten day forecast Chicago, Illinois. I'll be
gonna snow Monday is forty eight low seventy two is

(54:40):
a high. Well, that's not bad for bad, Yeah, that's
not bad because they're playing at night. Except for next
Thursday when we have the inside pitch starting at one
twenty something like that, Correct, Willie, we say congratulations La
Coda East with a no with another no hitter this week.
I think it's two the the Coda East Beach Sycamore

(55:02):
ten nothing combined no hitter by mister Maddox Roth and
Joshua Moore. What about that? Gratulations Soccer FC Cincinnati on
the road tomorrow night against the Chicago Faya and actually
at eight on ESPN fifteen thirty. And Xavier has one
of the best recruiting groups coming in in the country.

(55:22):
How about that? Correct? Speaking of Xavier, the Big East champion,
Xavier women's tennis team's going to take on number fourteen
Vanderbilt today starting at five o'clock Cincinnata time in the
NCAA Tournament first round in Music City, USA. That'll be good.
And by the way, sixteen million dollars is what Xavier
is spending sixteen mili your comments you better get a

(55:44):
team for that. How much is ucpaying them? I think
about the same of them, dude, I don't know. Good
luck to everyone into twenty eighth Flying Pig Marathon Sunday.
Are you running this year, No. Six thirty am start
best to luck to all the runners and walk in
the full marathon at half twenty six point two miles.

(56:04):
Are going to start at Freedom Way and finish the
long Marring Way. John Barrett's gonna run in that this year.
What about Biller? What about John? What about Mike Barrett?
I think John will on him. But he did the bike,
did the bike fifty mile, so he needs you know,
Let's see the Kentucky Oaks for the Phillies tonight at
Churchill Downs eight forty pm for the that race. They

(56:29):
used to do that in the middle of the afternoon. Yeah,
you know, one of my good friends, Kenny Smith, headquartered
in Louisville, is picking an upset in the derby itself. Well,
the Derby is tomorrow, Willie. As you know right before
seven Renegade out of the number one post is the
favorite full effort. The Jeff Ruby Stakes winners got scratched, scratched,

(56:52):
they're out. So I think it's a twenty or twenty
one horse field and I don't I don't think anybody
and nobody. I don't think anybody's run runs. I think
it's supposed to be like F H. Hit your phone.
I guess. Ten day forecast Louisville, Kentucky Saturday says, going
to high of fifty seven a low of forty. Oh

(57:16):
it's not good, is it? Maybe? I don't know. It's
good for running marathons. Yeah, but I don't know if
that's good or not. Fifty seven degrees, that's if it's sunny.
Seven pm Louisville is there? They are on Central time
or Eastern time, Eastern Eastern time. Yeah, all right, so
about six fifty they get correct, six fifty seven. Do
you have any hope for the Red segment? Yes, because

(57:37):
this is the greatest start maybe in baseball history for
the Reds and everybody. Everybody thought they were gonna stak terrible, right,
didn't start that way. You might remember they lost on
Reds opening Day to the Red Sox and Red Sox stink.
And look what happened, and look what has happened to
the Red Sox. Everybody's fired a clean house, Alex, everybody,
all the coaches called Tracy, Jim, Tracy Sons taking over

(58:00):
in Boston. He can't do worse. I think against Baltimore
that night they want and one like seven is seventeen
to one, seventeen to one. He gets back to Cora,
gets back to the hotel and come over and talk
to us here. Yes, you're out.

Speaker 5 (58:14):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (58:15):
And when the coaches were hauled away from their hotel
unceremoniously on the side of his neighbor, it wasn't a
cross Well bus, was it. There wasn't Scottie Crossan who
said need a coach. That was not a question mark
with the phone number. I'm thinking that's appropriate right there.
I need a coach. Yeah, they need a few coach.
So Carr is getting paid through next year. I was
going to say, he's making seven million dollars, so I

(58:37):
don't feel sorry for him to you. No, No, he'll
get a job someplace, believe me, if he wants to work. Well,
So rich Me got to let go. And then Rob
Thompson and Philadelphia's got ahead and go. Philadelphia started winning too, Donnie,
Baseball's taken over about in New York Mets. They really stink. Well,
I think that's just waiting to happen. So the next

(58:57):
ten days, three in Pittsburgh Fornce Caring, then three home
against Houston. Right then we're gonna have a pretty good set.
I want to go five and five. What I'm saying
five and five in those ten games, there'll still be
nine games over five hundred, and you do the math.
Listen to Lance McAllister last night who lost it. He
completely lost it. He did again. I can't say what
he said, but they only have what a hundred pacemaker

(59:20):
go off? It went off and it was buzzan one
hundred and thirty one games. They go sixty five and
sixty six, sixty five and sixty five, they're going to
be nine games over five hundred with like eighty five wins.
Then they're in the playoffs forever. And I think that'll
get you in because this division is I don't think
anybody's gonna run away with this division because they're all good.

(59:40):
Well what Brandon Woodworth last night walked off the mount
he's heard from Milwaukee, their main guy. The Cubs have
had injuries, Pittsburgh is Pittsburgh. The Reds of course that
had there was Saint Louis is young. But I mean,
you know, I don't know. I mean I think that,
you know, I think this division is going to stay ohing.

(01:00:02):
Anybody's gonna run away with it. How about no team
in baseball other than the Raves have won more than
twenty games. Raves are twenty two and ten. The Red
Legs are twenty and eleven. They had the second best
record in all of baseball after thirty one games. By
the way, that's almost twenty percent of the season. And
the reason why they're playing so well, Tito I say

(01:00:22):
they've gotten. They've gotten used to him, they got, they got.
They like a year to go through everything. Now they're
just right now, they're right under the tutelitch of mister Francona.
I was with your friend and mine, Paul O'Neil, yesterday
on the golf course. Why, by the way, I took
eight dollars from Paul O'Neill. I shouldn't say that publicly,
but Paul O'Neill paid me eight dollars. He said, the

(01:00:44):
key to this team. You know he does Yankees games right,
and yes, yeah, is Tito Francona correct. He said, that's
the important part of this team. So say, give me
out of the students report, will he get out of
those winning Red Legs go out of tonight in Pittsburgh.
Please we leave you with the immortal words of the
stooge report, who's got the chicken? Ron Truce has the chicken?

(01:01:08):
Mister president? Yeah, In fact Taren is walking around here
now none on the chicken leg and Ron Lark's right.
We want to say happy birthday to the man of
Chicken seventy seventy, Ron Larkin seventy seventy five, thirty nine
and holding he's getting old, he's getting burt. Happy birthday
to Ron Larkin. Thank you, Sheriff. Let's continue News Radio

(01:01:29):
seven hundred WLI you my Bully Cunningham, the Great American
and now it's free foreign just you and I batting
around the issues. I wouldn't note all the monitors around me.
I brought this up with the Ryans Daily. There was

(01:01:51):
a something called may Day that was begun about fifty
years ago by the Communist Party and uss R in
order to convince lards notmers, of Western democracies that communism
was the way to go. Was workers' rights, workers Unite.
And now it's metastasized into America. There's three thousand protests

(01:02:13):
happening as I speak, all over major cities and a
few here in Cincinnati. And it's been taken over by leftist,
far left organizations. Whose goals are anti American in every
way imaginable, open borders, attacking the Jews, attacking American soldiers,
attacking law enforcement. That's what's occurring. And the headquarters of

(01:02:36):
this largely is Chicago, with the Teachers Union that have
donated literally hundreds of millions of dollars the Teachers Union
out of the dues to far left wing organizations, some
of which have been funded by the federal government. When
Biden was in charge, along the Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer,
they funneled billions of dollars the teachers' unions to Plan Parenthood,

(01:03:01):
calling it something else than it was in COVID relief
funds to well fund these leftist organizations with their pre
printed signs and messages that deal with the far left
wing of American politics. The Democratic Party today, it's not
your mom and Dad's Democratic Party. What we have now
are candidates like Graham Plattner, who's a Democratic candidate to

(01:03:25):
become a US Senator from Maine, who embraces the idea
of defunding the police, eliminating ice and all border patrol.
He says, we're going to tear down the system, and
he talks about women being raped as something their behavior
has caused. He also has a Nazi symbol emblazon on

(01:03:47):
his chest, he said, made over. So the Democrats have
embraced a Nazi run against Susan Collins for the Senate
seat in Maine, which might be critical to the Republican
Party keeping control of the US Senate. It becomes more
difficult if other left wing socialists like Shared Brown is

(01:04:08):
resurrected and can beat John Houston. If those two seats
are gone, then the Senate's gone and all hell is
going to break loose in the country. He also, by
the way, Platner also wants at least a fifty percent
reduction in our military along with the course open borders,
expanded welfare benefits and food stamps, and more Somali lairing centers.

(01:04:30):
That's what the Democratic Party is today. The Democratic Party
of Charlie Luken and John Cranley does not exist. It's
gone and it's not coming back anytime soon. Because socialism
and communism is marching across America today in ways one
could never imagine, in places like Seattle, Washington, in Portland, Oregon,

(01:04:51):
and New York City, and it's almost unstoppable because of
the shall I say, the organizing of children beginning at
the age of five and six years old, to identify
what sex they want to be called. So you have
a five and six year old boy or girl that
is being taken the minds are being taken over by

(01:05:14):
the left wing, and that continues through the eight years
of grade school and four years of high school and
then on to college that they're indoctrinating them with left
is propaganda in the major cities, it gets pretty difficult
to succeed. And on top of that, the left is
raising serious money because of the US Supreme Court decision

(01:05:34):
that came out two or three days ago about race
based gerrymandering. It's not race based, and I'll dispel that
notion here in a moment. It's politically based. But the
Supreme Court simply ruled that it is illegal to use
race to form a political district under the fifteenth Amendment

(01:05:55):
and also Section two of the Voting Rights Act of
nineteen sixty five. You can't do that. The way in
race discrimination is to quit racially discriminating and to tell
people you have to compete in the in the arena
of ideas to get elected to a political position. It's
not based upon race. If it was, I'll give you
three good examples. Ken Blackwell, my friend in yours, was

(01:06:19):
the mayor of Cincinnati. He was a Charter right then
he became a Republican. And I can recall that Sean
Hanny and I and Handedy came in for a fundraiser
in Blue Ash. I think it was twenty oh six.
He was running against Ted Strickland as the Republican endorsed candidate.
So the Republican Party traditionally supports minorities such as John

(01:06:41):
Kennon Blackwell, such as eliminating the ku Klux Klan, which
the Democratic Party was and is the ku Klux Klan.
So it was thought that of Ken Blackwell, who's black,
who went to Xavier, played football there, got drafted by
the Dallas Cowboys, been a friend of mine since the
nineteen seventy, he'd be that selling candidate to be the
governor of Ohio twenty years ago. And Ken told me,

(01:07:05):
look that I should get thirty to forty percent of
the black vote, and if I get thirty percent of
the black vote, I can't lose the governorship to a
white guy named Ted Strickland. So he did all the
things he should have done being black to get the
black vote. He didn't get a sniff. He lost by
Ted Strickland by eighteen points because eighty five to ninety

(01:07:27):
percent of the black vote ignored his race and voted
for the Democrat. Likewise, Chris S. Mitherman, my good friend
and yours, head of the NAACP independent with conservative leanings.
He runs to get on city council, one of nine
against largely unknown, unnamed individuals who were endorsed by the

(01:07:50):
Democrat Party. Now, if race was a factor in electing
office holders, if black folks would say, well, Ken Blackwell
is black, He's well known to us, well supported by
many of the ministers in town, spent years in government,
and it was the mayor of Cincinnati for a term.

(01:08:12):
If he's running for governor, if you listen to the
Democrat Party, Black's vote for black's, white votes for whites,
et cetera, then Ken Blackwell would have easily won the
governorship of Ohio, not even close. It's not about race,
it's about political power. But the Democrat Party will use
race as a vehicle to get to the land of

(01:08:33):
political power. Another Chris Smitherman was obviously the most qualified
of the nine people that got elected to Cincinnati City Council.
By any fair measurement, Chris Smitherman should have got most
of the black vote because he represents the African American
community in all communities. Extremely competent, very bright, well educated.

(01:08:55):
He's a millionaire, bright guy, raise his kids well. His
father is a living legend in the medical community. When
my dear wife Penny was in Christ Hospital with a
broken pelvis at crack pelvis and I was of course,
I nursed her back to health. I went into a
quiet room that was dedicated to doctor Smitherman and I

(01:09:16):
called Chris from the room. So his roots in the
black community in Cincinnati are deep. But he didn't run
as a Democrat. He ran as an independent. And I
talked to Chris repeatedly. We talked almost two or three
times a week, and I said, why don't you get
the black vote. You're black. Democrats tell us that these

(01:09:39):
are race based districts, that you want to have black's
voting for blacks and whites voting for whites, which is
of course racism, again practiced by the Democrat Party. They
get away with it because the media allows them to,
and he said I should get the vote he got
didn't get a sniff. It was several thousand votes behind
the nine winner, and no one knows who that guy is.

(01:10:02):
So race was not a factor in Ken Blackwell's position,
and it wasn't a factor in Chris Smitherman's position a
few months back, because we're told that these gerrymandering based
upon race number one is unconstitutional and number two, number two,
it's wrong. So if it was based on race, which

(01:10:24):
the Democratic Party tells it is, when it isn't, then
Ken Blackwell would have served two terms as our governor,
and Chris Smitherman would have been elected to city Council
and could run from Aaron Wynn. But black folks understand,
you don't vote for a black person or a white person.
You vote for the Democrat. A black Republican is an

(01:10:45):
endangered species. Right. But we're told by the media that
the Supreme Court of the United States, who is following
the law under the fifteenth Amendment that says you can't
have legislative districts drawn because of race, that is illegal.
And now the Supreme Court is going to be expanded.
Supposedly the thirteen justices. If the Democrats take over, which

(01:11:09):
they can legally do. It's not about race at all.
It's about politics and holding power. There was a woman
named win some Seers, Haitian, the legal daughter of Haitian immigrants,
who was Lieutenant governor of Virginia under Youngkin for four years.
By every fair estimate, she did a great job. She'd

(01:11:29):
go into black churches regularly, and she ran against a
white female Liberal named Spanburger, and so she wanted the
black vote. And if win some Seers had gotten the
black vote, she easily would have won the governorship of Virginia.
But she didn't get the black vote because it was
about It wasn't about race, it was about political power.

(01:11:52):
And for reasons unclear to me, African Americans vote overwhelmingly
for Democratic candidates who destroyed their communities, have policies that
don't work and have failed miserably. I could not think
of a community the past fifty or sixty years who's
impandered to more and exploited more than the Black community
still in the Democratic Party. It's incredible, but that's the

(01:12:16):
way it is. Clarence Thomas, Justice Clarence Thomas been there
for about I don't know. Thirty five years on the
US Supreme Court ought to be the most popular black
person in America. If these positions are about race and
race alone, Clarence Thomas is a star. But guess what,
He's vilified and hated in large parts of the black

(01:12:38):
community because he's not a Democrat. I thought it was
about race. On it's about race. The Democrats say it's
about politics. One, it's about politics. The Democrats say it's
about race and use that club against Republicans, which is
a lie, and they know it's a lie, a snicker.
Black voters are used to keep a certain group of

(01:12:58):
small number of persons in power so they can have
their money and their power and their prestige and use
black votes when little gain has occurred in the black
community the past forty or fifty years. In fact, by
every objective measurement, there's been retrenchment. It's gone backwards by
fair standards. And of course media types always look for

(01:13:21):
the angle to crucify, to vilify Republicans. Whenever they touch
the third rail of American politics, which is race, they
get hurt by it. And I think more and more
Black Americans have figured out they're being used and abused
by the Democrat party who promises everything delivering nothing. Because

(01:13:42):
if race was a dominant factor in black votes, Blackwell
would have been the governor, Smitherman would have been the
mayor when some Seiers would have been the governor of Virginia,
and Clarence Thomas would be popular. None of that's the case.
None of that is the case. So we'll see see
what happens with these Supreme Court decisions. The Supreme Court

(01:14:03):
simply said we have to stop racial discrimination, and the
Democrats don't want that. They live and survive off race discrimination,
and they always have, from their days controlling the slave
trade to the ku Klux Klan. And now they're endorsing
a Nazi running for a Senate seat in Maine because

(01:14:23):
this white guy, Graham Platner, is a Democrat. If you're
a Democrat, you're golden. If you're a Republican, a black Republican,
dirty names, Uncle Tom et ceteras thrown around because you
don't play the game well. The game is ought to
be to have good public schools and good public safety,
and it does not happen that way. The city of

(01:14:45):
Cincinnati is a small microcosm of what's happening in Chicago,
New York. Just pick the American city controlled completely by
the Democrat Party, hurting those who live and vote and
maintain the same politicallyleadership. Can you say that the black
communities advanced itself in the past five or ten or
fifteen years in the city of Cincinnati? Are you safer

(01:15:08):
with more jobs or the schools better as law enforcement
encouraged and enforce the law. Do we have good judges
in this town that lock up those that are praying
upon the black community? They answer all those questions is no,
doesn't work that way because it's never about race. It's
about politics and buying off directly or indirectly the leadership

(01:15:29):
of the Democrat Party to convince a group of loyal
voters that we're here to help you when actually they
hurt you. And that's why I think I saw a
poll twenty percent of black men up from sixteen percent,
like what Donald Trump is doing in Washington. So maybe
possibly more and more folks are figuring out what the

(01:15:50):
Democratic Party has done in our major cities, many of
which are in complete collapse. In Cincinnati, we have a
thirty thirty million dollar deficit. We have this spirit at
law enforcement. We have a public school system that doesn't
produce graduates that can read. We have little job creation.
We have large companies moving out of Cincinnati because the
employees do not feel safe waiting for the next riot.

(01:16:14):
All that's bad And Cincinnati is a microcosm of every
major American city controlled by the Democrat Party. And is
it getting better? Is a different No. Do we fight
like warrior poets for something better? Absolutely, some large companies
in down like Western and Southern. John Barrett's going nowhere,
the advantages of pill Hill. Think of the structure around

(01:16:34):
the University of Cincinnati and all the hospital systems. Think
about that, it's wonderful. And Xavier University. And so we
fight against the control of government and money by a
far left wing Democratic party that hurts those who vote
for them, and we hope always for a better day.

(01:16:54):
Let's continue. Plus, I was if we want to go
to my podcast page three five. Today we played one
of my recent interviews with Liz Bonus of Local twelve.
She was nationally known medical correspondent. The best of what
she did and none of us. I asked Stephan Showhouse,
who's our new market manager. He worked at Channel twelve

(01:17:16):
for many years. Led that said, none of us had
an idea that she was suffering so greatly from colon cancer.
And Liz Bonus unexpectedly died yesterday afternoon with friends and
family around her. And I was scheduled to have her
on Monday, Tuesday. I spoke to her about ten days
ago and she said, let's do it. Let's do it
after May First, And I said okay. And one of

(01:17:37):
my frequent guests was Liz Bonus. And for her May
First did not come. And for those who left behind
and knew her well, may you be left with only
the good memories of a woman who lived her life well,
that did not want others to know about her circumstances.
In fact, she wanted to live her life through the tape.
Run through the tape, and not focus on her, but

(01:17:59):
focus on others. What's your sacrifice? And may her soul
rest in peace and may her family find peace. Let's
continue with more two twenty five Home of Your Reds
playing today. Starting about five forty five, the beat goes on,
Liz Bonus, We loved you, Bill Cunningham, News Radio seven
hundred WLW the whole Town's battie about Cincinnati. Wa a team?

Speaker 4 (01:18:22):
What a team?

Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
What a team?

Speaker 2 (01:18:27):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
Hello, yet I'm skulls. I'm broadcasting Rocky. Three months ago today,
eighty four year old Mother Today Coach co hosts Savannah
Guttriy and Nancy Guthrie kidnapped and likely killed. Three months later.
Everyone said at the beginning, this won't take long. We're

(01:18:48):
gonna have fiber, We're gonna have blood. The back door
was opened, blood drops in the front, elliptical blood drops
indicate that it was probably from the eye mucus, and
it was going out because of the drop and everyone
and so what you know, they got it three months later. Nothing.

Speaker 6 (01:19:04):
It's amazing considering how everything these days is on camera.
But there's a camera catching it. There's a something, there's
a cell phone ping something, there's fibers, all the technology.
I mean, this is like the most forgotten about thing
there is. And I thought, well, it'll be a week
or ten days. They had the backpacks that were found
hitting around on a road.

Speaker 1 (01:19:24):
What do you think happened? I think she was kidnapped,
likely for money. She's coming out, they get into a fight,
she's bleeding without her medication. She unexpectedly died in the
next four or five days, and the kidnapper said, what
do I do? Now? That's what I think.

Speaker 6 (01:19:40):
The kid nappers did not know the that she had
to have heart medication, and if she did in twenty
four hours, she'd be dead. I think they they found
that out the hard way, the wrong way.

Speaker 1 (01:19:52):
And it's very to get rid of a body. But
if you dig a nice big hole in the desert,
do it properly. It's sad. And if your mother did
that age kidnapped her heartbreak. It's all.

Speaker 6 (01:20:02):
Speaking of sad, I got to give a shout out
Harrison Community. Southwest Local was his morning a teacher, twenty
plus years of Southwest Local, coach baseball, basketball, top math.
His name was Steve Kaufman. He passed away yesterday. My
son did not have him. I but I know a
lot of people in the community were taught by him,

(01:20:24):
coached by him. It's a very sad deal. So we're
thinking about the family of Steve Coffin.

Speaker 1 (01:20:28):
Today, dropped dead in class with his boots, almost like
Liz Bonus had no hit her on frequently. I saw
that news last night. Eddie called me, calling cancer had
no idea. Talked to people at twelve, including stuff in
show House president he worked there for many years. Had
no idea. And I'm thinking she lived her life and
didn't want to be the subject of a medical She

(01:20:50):
wanted to report on the story, not be the story.
She was in Foss. God bless her in the family.
That's a bad one. N nice, nice, nice swimming, nice lady.
I played in my one of my last interviews with
her at twelve thirty five. It's on the podcast It's
but a vibrant personality fun. He says. Nobody knew that
she suffered in silence four to five years. Way, isn't

(01:21:11):
that there's some admirable about that though?

Speaker 6 (01:21:13):
Or just very spartan, like, you know what, I'm not
gonna I'm gonna live my life and I want everyone
you know, every day, how you doing?

Speaker 4 (01:21:19):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:21:20):
None of that. I'm just gonna live. That's it. Nobody
twenty five years at Local twal twenty five quarter percentury
second man, give me some sports and cheer up a
little bit, will he? The Stuode reporters of Proud Service
every local Tame Star heating and air conditioning dealers tamestar quality.
You could feel a beautiful Milford called Baker Heating. Right
down the street is one Main Gallery five one three eight, three,

(01:21:43):
one fifty one twenty four. And the guy that owns
that used to be Jeff Henderson right still is is he? Yeah?
I saw him a Jack Crumley's thing. Yeah, I said,
aren't you Jeff Henderson? Yeah? And he still is Hendy.
How's he doing? He's doing what? He looks old though,
he said, the hell, I'm seventy. He had gray hair
and everything. He looks old, right, Well, who do you

(01:22:07):
think you are? Something? Young young teenagent. Look at guy.
He's running this this art game right, living off the
fatted calf. Yet he's got Matisa's, he's got Timona's, He's
got everything there and goes there quite often, don't you?
Brady Singer will go for the Red Lakes tonight as
they opened up that big seven game Central Division road

(01:22:28):
trip of the first of three in the Steel City
against those Pittsburgh Pirates. How about Caitlin Clark went down
last night, got into a Frankas first home game more
she lived there, crumpled on the floor. I watched the game.
She shot a ball and she was pushed and shoved
by one of the other players, and she's limping off
the courts. It's the first preseason game.

Speaker 6 (01:22:49):
Leave her alone, bless herd. They they have the golden Goose.
He's right there, she's arrived.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
No, they can't do it. They want to cut her.
Golden got a better play, got him the airline, airline
trips instead of buses or whatever.

Speaker 6 (01:23:03):
At some point, she's gonna like either form her own
league or go overseas.

Speaker 1 (01:23:07):
And it doesn't is going to go back to being
just not dead as it always is. The extent of
the damage. You've never seen anything like that.

Speaker 6 (01:23:16):
That'd be like the NFL when John Elway was drafted, right,
being like, we want to we want to do whatever
we can to keep this guy down, break him, Peyton
Mann to get rid of him, and Tom Brady, Yeah,
let's let's let's just hate. Yeah, but that the Michael Jordan.
We can't really promote him. We don't want him to
be the centerpiece of the league. And after she left it,

(01:23:39):
they lost ninety five to eighty. You see, okay, Amri
today wister rifle. Hopefully not much damage. Labor says, forgive
them Lord, they know not.

Speaker 1 (01:23:52):
Yeah that's true. Uh airtime here tonight with the Reds
and Pirates five forty five Sports Talk, Arnell Carriers, Inside Pitch,
Kelsey Chevrolet Extrady Show. After the game, third quarter, she
gets hurt. She had scored twenty one points and had
four assists and no turnovers. Two rebounds gone great, and
all of a sudden they knock her out. Wait, we

(01:24:14):
can't hit n can't heavens nice? The crowd said, what?
Then they lost? Beaver lose Beaver got the fever alone?
How many people are gonna be at the next game?
Like Garry Jeff Garry Jeff's funny. Numerous sources familiar with
the National Football League thinking considering Minneapolis Saint Paul a

(01:24:37):
clear favorite to win the hosting rights to the twenty
twenty eight NFL Draft. This is for the sports business.
Beard Journal spots a sponsor Cincinnati has the inside track,
apparently to SBJ report the inside track for twenty twenty nine. Now,
where were they gonna put it? Where are gonna put it?

(01:24:57):
What about the Laring Center? We got at the Laring Center, Anneapolis,
get them to sponsor it? What Laring Center? The Laring
Center where's it going to be, seg we need to know,
I say, at the Hall of Justice, at human in terminal.
Is it big enough? Big enough? I don't know. I'm
you're Anthony, I'm I'm answering you, Dave Keats, you gonna

(01:25:18):
put it downtown. Washington wants more cuts of Joe Eaters
in the top three to be the attorney considering, yes,
that'd be fantastic, and that'd be great attorney general. But
then the harambe he does come out against Joe Eaters
because he put a customer or something? Is he if
he literally think if he leaves the Supreme Court of

(01:25:41):
Ohio and see right here, who takes over me? You
couldn't leave us, could you? Yeah? Yeah you could in
a minute. And the New York you said they don't
do anything, total crap. Don't do anything here that Joe
Deeters doesn't do anything either. I mean, Joe Dieters wants
to be the attorney.

Speaker 2 (01:25:58):
General's total crap.

Speaker 1 (01:26:00):
Do you want a Supreme Court? That'd be great to
do that. Yeah, like there space he's getting pretty old too.
I think he's like seventy years old. Now he's getting old.
I'm tired of hearing this. So there he is.

Speaker 3 (01:26:12):
There we go.

Speaker 1 (01:26:12):
We'll see what happened to well, we'll see what happens.
He'll be the first lady for her on. It might
have to be a lawyer, by the way, to be
on the Supreme Court of the US. I don't have
to be aboarded. See what happens. It's like you could
get on soccer. I don't look in the black robes.
Let's see soccer FC Cincinnati on the road tomorrow night

(01:26:32):
against Chicago. F's Chicago Faya eight o'clock ESPN, fifteen thirty.
Rocky ready for the Kentucky derby. Here I am just
before seven o'clock tomorrow night. Renegade. The number one post
is the favorite renegade. Let's be cold, Yeah, but the horses.

Speaker 6 (01:26:50):
John, we had John Engelhart on yesterday said the horses
like to around the cold.

Speaker 1 (01:26:53):
The jug out ten day forecast Louisville, Kentucky. We'd be
careful what you're doing there. I gotta be careful about
to get her off of there. Saturday is a low
of forty and a high of fifty Seven's that's not bad,
all right. I mean for the pig too. The pig's
going to be a little chili, but you know, flying
Pig Marathon. The runners will like it. These spectators not

(01:27:15):
much by what's on the big show today at three o'clock.
The way, Richard Skinner right out of Gay at three o'clock,
and the first question I'm going to ask him is Cincinnati,
you're gonna get the NFL draft in twenty twenty nine,
shocking and unbelievable.

Speaker 6 (01:27:25):
We're going to talk about the Reds. They're twenty and
eleven playing fantastic. We're gonna talking about Miles Murphy. The
Bengals denied. Why is that running up the option? Why
because it's fourteen and a half million bucks?

Speaker 1 (01:27:39):
Boom? What kind of years are you going to have?

Speaker 6 (01:27:41):
Oh, he had a better year. He had five and
a half sacks, forty one pressures. This last year easily
far and away his best year.

Speaker 1 (01:27:48):
So this isn't true. I heard your good friend Duke
Toban talk about we're at the top of the wage scale.
Are the Bengels like spending money? Yeah, they're at the top.

Speaker 6 (01:27:58):
Now, the last thing needs to happen is restructured Joe
Burrow's contract, which mean he's paying him more guaranteed money,
which they don't like to do, but it would free.

Speaker 1 (01:28:06):
Up some more money to do some more moves or
sign some people. It's some moves and next show the
CAP's going up. Anyway, I assume always does three hundred
million plus. Yeah, I forget what it was when I
played ten million, three and twenty. I mean Peyton made
a million dollars. That was a big deal right now.

Speaker 6 (01:28:24):
I tell people all the time, I remember where I
was because I played with the Titans at this point.
It was like my second year, and I remember coming
over the wire. I was in the training room or
we're all good and you ready to go out to practice.
Peyton Manning signs ten year, one hundred million dollar contract
and we go.

Speaker 2 (01:28:38):
You got.

Speaker 6 (01:28:38):
You can make one hundred million dollars over ten years.
Now Burrow makes two fifty and what six makes.

Speaker 1 (01:28:46):
About fifty million a year. That's like money even to you.
That's real money. That's real money. You can not screw
around money. But he needs to find a nice young
that's money, like you can make a few mistakes and
still have money. Money. Mountain not there name high school,
get a grad out about twenty five twenties, six years old.
Let joke. Set see in high school they got big thighs, right,
Saint Ursela, something like that. What's on Mountain Notre Dame.

Speaker 6 (01:29:07):
You don't know if I just think a cougar's we
want to much more west side west side values.

Speaker 1 (01:29:11):
When he's on the east side. He lives in Innerson Town.
Don't mean anything. He needs to find a woman and
settle down a little bit. Forget about the influencers and
the runway models and the harlots. You don't need them.
The harlots. There are harlots, and say, you know what
we can't have that? You need Joe to settle down
and start having babies. What else were we have?

Speaker 6 (01:29:30):
By John Matteis At three fifty, we have a guest
on gold the price of Gold.

Speaker 1 (01:29:35):
At four o'clock. What's going on now uptown? I haven't
seen it, let's check it out yet.

Speaker 6 (01:29:41):
Then we have doctor Bruce Herman, our plastic surgeon, guests
at five o'clock on a zembic face.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
You've seen Olivia Wilde. He was like a good looking
woman and now it's like this looks like a like
a train wreck. Do we know yet? After ten or
twenty years the effects of it just came out like
three years ago. We know what's going on now. I
don't think so. I don't know. But these women that
are like young and beautiful are taking this stuf. You
don't have to.

Speaker 6 (01:30:05):
I guess the pressures of Hollywood or everybody thinks you're
fat and all that stuff. But these young women are
getting all this work done and all this o zempic
and stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:30:14):
It's crazy. It's bad. It's bad. I need a thick
thighed woman.

Speaker 2 (01:30:19):
Is what I like?

Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
A thick thighed woman, junking, dunking?

Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
You like that?

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
Really?

Speaker 4 (01:30:23):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
You know what I'm saying, seg you and Sarah talking.
There's still rumors about you two. Yeah. I talked to
Rocky about this yesterday and Eddie on the air. But
you and Sarah Elise, Yeah, scandal after scandal after scandal.
I'm going to hire the magic Man to sue the
pants off of you. Magic man. Actually, it stands no
pants Day today, so make sure you're wearing your pants.
I got pants on. I'm just saying I don't want

(01:30:45):
to forget them. Did you have pants on? You have
pants on? With Sarah? I didn't. What was that you said?

Speaker 2 (01:30:51):
No?

Speaker 1 (01:30:53):
You said and I exchanged. That's a whole diver match
what Steve Hawkins said. So you wore that was awkward?
He didn't know, he didn't. You didn't wear your underpants
together on the inside or outside its traded pants. We check.
That's not a manly thing at all, is it? That
was awkward? Thank you? Think of Dave Good to get

(01:31:13):
him back. I'd say, get me out of the Stude's
report baked the stuff coming up And once again, Liz
Bonus rest in peace? Will he in honor of the
Reds go rids this weekend up against the Pirates and
the Cubs. Safe and race for everybody at the Kentucky
Derby tomorrow. And Ron Larkin Happy birthday number sixty three today.
He's getting old, isn't he? The King of Chicken? King

(01:31:36):
of Chicken? I love chicken and Olga about Olga ninety
eight eight, that's getting old. Ninety eight makes me seem
like a kid night. How much chicken does she put away?
All of it? There's none left?

Speaker 6 (01:31:51):
I go, I go, there you live in ninety eight
probably eating fried chicken a sticking amount of days a week,
and look at her.

Speaker 1 (01:31:57):
She didn't there you got Caynes, is there you got?
Are there any chickens left in Green Township? How many chickens?
All the chickens? See what happened, Tonie Rosie.

Speaker 6 (01:32:09):
I'm building a new turkey farm out in Harrison, Cops.
Turkey farm used to be kind of like chicken and
now it's like on the Indiana side, humongous facilities.

Speaker 1 (01:32:17):
You're great, say get me out of the Suge report.
Just did we leave you with the immortal words of
the Stooge Report. See the Highway patrol election again next week.
Until then, remember, leave your blood at the Red Cross, not.

Speaker 4 (01:32:32):
On the Highway.

Speaker 1 (01:32:33):
This is Rodrick Cruffe saying see you next week. I
don't make them like him anymore. I guarantee you our rock.
Let's continue is more. Can your kids read? By the way,
in the fourth and fifth is can they read the
local schools? You can read, you can recognize their colors? Well, okay, yes,
all right on seven hundred WLW

Bill Cunningham News

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