Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:12):
Saw a mind in my own business, like your mind
in your own business. Everybody's minding their own business, which
doesn't happen enough these days. And Ryan Hedrick is telling
a story from WIBC dot com. Actually I didn't see
it on WIBC dot com. He was telling a story
about some protest with what was it, Jewish Voice for Peace.
(00:37):
Just in case you ever come across this group, this
has nothing to do with being Jewish. There's no member
of Jewish Voice for Peace that has anything to do
with being Jewish at all. This is just another progressive
socialist communist front group that wants Israel destroyed and supports terrorists.
(00:59):
Said it meant it. This is my take on this
so called organization. Well, they're out there, they've got chapters,
and they're on college campuses and not good people. We
envision a world where all people from the US to
(01:20):
Palestine live in freedom, justice, equality and dignity. That is fantastic.
What do you do when some of those people murder
twelve hundred? What's your plan? Well, they never discussed this.
They discussed Well, the problem here is what Israel's doing.
I speak as clearly as I can. Tony Katz ninety
(01:42):
three WIBC, good morning. I forget sometimes if I say hello,
I'm kind of into the thing. The side that they
take is abhorrent. The side that they take is dangerous.
The side that they take will get them destroyed. There
(02:03):
is no part of them that resembles anything I grew
up with or was taught, certainly regarding Judaism. And more importantly,
there is nothing about them that says we want to
have a strong future. Every part of them says, man,
(02:23):
we can't wait to get annihilated next now, the old
note that they will discuss themselves as anti Zionist Zionism,
the idea that in Israeli homeland or Jewish homeland is
(02:44):
a thing that it matters. Okay, Just it would be
better if you just said it as you meant it.
Talk about anti Zionism from now into the cows come home,
just say what you mean, but you don't say what
you mean. Not a worthwhile organization. And if your kids
want to join, your kids are wrong and you should
tell them so. And any rabbi who isn't from the
(03:07):
Beama saying this is a bad organization, that's not a
rabbi worth being a part of because honesty is important.
This isn't a valuable organization. It's a dangerous group of
people in favor of supporting terrorists, and I believe I
can back that up, and not in favor of people
being able to live their lives. That's that's them, that's
(03:37):
who they are. Because if you say that Israel is
engaged in genocide, you've decided, Hey, we support the terrorists.
This all started on October seventh and would all end
with the return of the hostages. Let these so call
(03:58):
people for peace, call for their turn of hostages. Yeah,
you just keep on waiting. Oh, not how I wanted
to start the day, but had to make sure we
set the record straight. Oh and if JBP wants to
argue it time and place, Kitten, I am quite okay
(04:21):
with setting some Jews straight. Be a pleasure. Tony Katz
ninety three WIBC, Good morning. You are the worst human being.
It got out of control yesterday, guys. We started discussing
the fact that there's an event coming to town and
Kansas the band is coming and Jefferson Starship is coming,
(04:45):
and that led to We Built the City and my
discussion of that being the worst song ever made That
got other people discussing the worst songs ever made. That
led to a question on the social media is about
what the worst song ever made was? That led to
I haven't checked it. As of late, hundreds and hundreds
(05:09):
of responses about the worst song ever made on social emails,
Text everything, Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good morning, and
I said, well, we're gonna need a bracket. We need
Hammer Nigel to create a bracket for the worst song
ever made. I spoke with Hammer Nigel and they're like, oh,
we're in. So this is this is all going down.
(05:33):
Wait for it. We will determine You and I together,
we will determine the worst song ever made. You will
get your chance to participate and be a part of it.
Sponsorships now available. I've got a whole plan for this,
and I guarantee you a good time had by all.
(05:55):
Oh and as a follow up, the whole poker idea
not bad, not bad, not bad. We might make something
happen there too. Good things are afoot. Alena Habba, she
got tossed from her job as the interim ag in
(06:18):
New Jersey. Now she wanted the full gig. President Trump
appointed her to be the interim to fill in. She
was the president's lawyer during the nonsense trials that he
had to deal with. So she wants the job. She
(06:42):
wants to keep the job. There is a panel of
judges that could have allowed her to stay on the job,
but in New Jersey to since there was not Senate confirmation,
Trump was not going to pull her nomine. Seventeen federal
judges in New Jersey. By the way, New Jersey is
(07:03):
seventeen federal judges. That's what's necessary, many appointed by Obama
and Biden. They could have voted to extend your tenure,
but they said, nah, you're gone. It's cheap. In my view,
the question is not Trump. The question is is the
job getting done. That's the only question. That should be
(07:25):
the only question. But no, it goes political, as these
things do. And now you've got the Attorney General, Pam
Bondi saying whoa, whoa, whoa. Everybody slow down. I don't
know if you get to throw her out. So there's
going to be a fight over this. There shouldn't be
a fight over this. It just shouldn't be the idea
(07:50):
that the president of the United States is going to
choose people and nominate people. This is how it works.
And there's a whole argument made by the very very
odd people over at MSNBC that there's no one there
to stop President Trump. Why would they ever stop him
(08:11):
if there's a violation of the law. Discuss it otherwise,
what's your argument? You don't like the policies? Who cares?
And why shouldn't he be allowed to have the people
around him who are going to do the job that
he wants done? President? Why is the left always so
amazed that the guy who got elected is going to
(08:32):
do the job he was elected to do. It goes
back to that the left does not believe that the
president should be allowed to do the job he was
elected to do if they didn't do the electing. That's
the story. The president is only allowed to do the
(08:53):
job if they decide so, which is really as always
having nothing to do with Donald Trump and everything to
do with you. You shouldn't get what you want because
you didn't listen. If you had listened, if you had complied,
we'd have the first woman president. Wouldn't that have been better? Hmmm?
Speaker 2 (09:11):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
Well, now you don't get to get the president you want.
We send activist judges out there, and we won't even
confirm people or allow them to stay on the job
when clearly there's no problem. That's who they are. And
so this doesn't get better anytime soon. This this tip
for tach kind of stuff, and it just it just
(09:34):
doesn't General Motors Right did better than expected, but the
profit was down. The profit was down one point one
billion dollars. Why tariffs and the end result must come,
must come that eventually the tariff prices will be pushed
(09:57):
off to you, me and WI. President Trump is announcing
trade deals. You got the trade deal with the Philippines,
you got the trade deal with Japan, fifteen percent reciprocal
tariffs instead of the twenty five percent tariffs. And according
to President Trump, Japan is going to put five hundred
(10:19):
and fifty billion dollars into the US, and somehow the
US is going to receive ninety percent of the profits
from the investments. I don't I have no idea what
that means. And no, I'm not buying it. I'll wait
to see the details, Thank you very much. I'm not angry.
I'm happy to see a deal. Maybe it's set some
certainty in the market. That would be great. I mean,
(10:40):
the market's already doing gangbusters, but I'm talking about for
the rest of US. Okay, we know how we're going
to buy things. We know things were going to cost.
Now we can go about growing our businesses. I don't
know what it means that they're going to invest five
hundred and fifty billion dollars and only get a ten
percent return and the US is gonna get ninety percent.
I don't. I don't it's actually not even a ten
(11:02):
percent return. Whatever the return is, the US is getting
ninety percent. Not quite sure what that's all about. The Philippines.
They have created a trade deal where they're going to
open their market to the US and they've got no tariffs,
but goods coming from the Philippines will have a nineteen
percent tariff. The Philippines needs our markets. This is the
(11:26):
way it goes, right, hard edge negotiation. I don't mind.
Weird negotiation. I don't understand. And also, so we're clear
nice that the Philippines are going to open their markets.
I don't know what that means. Opening a market is inconsequential.
How much do they buy? What is the check that
(11:48):
they write? That's the question with the Japan deal, Japan's
going to open the trade including cars, trucks, and rice.
The rice is a big The rice is a big
deal to the extent that I know how much rice
we sell and where there's an opportunity there that I
don't But just the idea of it culturally, the idea
(12:09):
of it to their own markets. Yeah, that's pretty interesting.
Two more deals down, I said Japan, I said Vietnam,
I said South Korea, I said India. That's those four.
Now let's see where the pressure could be on China.
I believe we have two of those deals done. I
(12:31):
don't know what comes with China next. I don't know
where we are in the thing, and I don't know
how the market and the world sees these deals. But again,
opening up markets is just step one. The actual buying
is what matters, and that's what I'm gonna wait for.
I mean, great, hopefully this makes people feel good, and
hopefully it does get businesses feeling like they can grow
(12:53):
and build, they have certainty. I just want to see
what these deals do. It's more interest than anything else.
This just in eggs are good. Hold on, wait this
just in. You already knew that. Tony Katz ninety three WIBC,
(13:15):
Good morning, what is going on? Good to be with you.
Find everything over there at Tony Katz dot com. The
show sheet is up every single day talking to you
about what's going on with the show things were going
to be discussing. I mean, it's all right there for you. Also,
Representative Andrew Ireland schedule to be with us at eight
point fifteen. Should we be able to have more actions
(13:38):
against prosecutors? This is a Ryan Meher story. And oh
are there Ryan Meir stories out there? Where is it there?
It is Ryan Mears. He is, of course the Marion
County prosecutor. He is a Pino prosecutor in name only.
(13:58):
And the story is is that lawmakers should approach indie
leaders with ideas for collaboration rather than control. Why prosecutor mirrors?
Speaker 2 (14:09):
Why? Uh?
Speaker 1 (14:10):
Three one seven two nine ninety three ninety three, I've
got multiple phone lines, no waiting. Why Why should they
proceed uh with collaboration? What are they gonna get collaboration from? You?
Tell me how that works? Let me not pre judge it.
You've got Senator Michael Young, State senator says we should
(14:32):
carve out the Miles square and place it in control
of the state government of Indiana. We should just carve
that out and that way ensure the safety insecurity of downtown,
because Indianapolis isn't doing it well, Tony, we had WNBA
weekend and we had no juveniles who were breaking curfew. Well,
(14:57):
if that's the measure of success, an unbelievably high profile
event where the word went out, and that if you're
caught downtown, life's gonna get tough as opposed to the
everyday things. And of course the everyday business is not
being bothered, damaged, et cetera. You have a prosecutor who
has stated that not everything is worth prosecuting. You have
(15:20):
a mayor who is ideological and not focused on safety.
Mayor hog Seat, you're not focused on safety, and your
team knows this. You know who tells me you're not
focused on safety. The women who work in your office.
So don't try and sell that to us. It's embarrassing you,
(15:45):
Dan Parker, all the rev don't don't. Not impressed, not impressed,
not impressed with the tough guy routines, not impressed with
the vindictive routines. You're not doing good work and you're
not good stewards of the city and you're not a
good show, and you are not good ambassadors of what
Indianapolis can really be. But prosecutor mirrors. Why why is
(16:08):
it that you think that Indianapolis is fine as is?
And there isn't a reason to say we have to
do something about this. This is the capital of Indiana.
We need to have some focus, we need a better
job done. I mean, I've got five microphones. Go on
(16:28):
and please let us know we're listening. I'll have the
conversation with you happily three one seven, two, three nine
ninety three ninety three. And while you're dialing, Uh, let
me now explain to you that eggs are fine. Uh,
they don't hike bad cholesterol levels. The studies are out
(16:49):
University of South Australia. The idea that somehow the eggs
are increasing LDS is just not the case. People who
ate two eggs a day experience reductions the in the
LDL cholesterol levels as long as the rest of their
(17:11):
diet remain low and saturated fat. Okay, so omelets, omelets actually,
omelet sounds good. Omelet sounds very We should get an
omelet tony kats ninety three WIBC good morning, Fisher's making
the announcement. Huh okay, Tony Kats ninety three WIBC, good morning.
(17:39):
All right, follow me here. You have driven on sixty
nine and you've driven northeast and you have driven by
this house, this brick house, and it's got the windows
and the bottom windows are boarded up. It's the top windows,
and you're like, what is this thing? And why is
it just like hanging out there? Have you ever, Carl?
(18:01):
I don't know how much you get out of the house,
producer Carl, but you ever driven by this thing?
Speaker 2 (18:06):
What's the nearest cross street?
Speaker 1 (18:08):
The nearest cross street is You're on sixty nine and
you're heading nord of you turn right and you're like, hey,
look there's a house. Why is it there? That's the
nearest cross street. I believe the nearest cross street is Ikia.
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Okay, yeah, I don't know. I'm not remembering this house
you're talking about.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
Well, according to the people at current Incarmel or yourecurrent
dot com, this is known as the Kincaid House, the
Historic Kincaid House. I did not know there was such
a thing as the Historic Kincaid House, the Flannagan Kincaid House.
Built in eighteen sixty one was this house yet somehow
(18:45):
it was just stuck there. Everything's developing around it, and
nothing happened. In twenty fourteen, there was a plan to
relocate it, to kind of find another spot for it.
Hamilton County Tourism took a role in doing this, but
(19:06):
I guess, I guess it couldn't be. You have some
groups that developed that donated twenty thousand dollars to the
relocation of the Hamilton County Tourism Board. They offered matching
donations up to forty five thousand. But now it's just
sitting there, and now we are hearing that it will
(19:31):
be deconstructed. Deconstructed is what we're hearing. I'm assuming that
means destroyed is deconstructed sounds like deconstructed should be destroyed.
We're at a point where there is such an advanced
level of deterioration that rehabilitating the structure would be a
(19:54):
significantly financial logistical undertaking and the house likely would survive
another move that. According to Mayor Fadness, they're gonna preserve
what they can celebrate the legacy of the Kincaid House
at a location that better fits the historical significance of
the structure. I'm not quite sure how they're gonna do that.
(20:15):
It is not the end of the world when things
like this have to go. I am not saying that
we should look to tear down history, but not everything
is going to survive the changes. It's all right, somewhere
(20:39):
someone is upset with fishures. This shouldn't be. The world
has moved forward, moved on, and this house is sitting there.
Do I think that everything requires a restoration?
Speaker 3 (20:57):
No.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
I will tell you that if you take a look
at I'll talk about north side places for a moment,
just with a little I have a little bit more familiarity.
This is uh. Clearly we can we can point the
places uh to the west, to the south, to the east.
Of course, the downtown of Zionsville is fantastic. The downtown
(21:22):
of Noblesville, that's square. I love. Danville has a great square.
The downtown of Carmel is way too homogenized for my taste.
We there was an elimination of character in way too
(21:42):
many spots. My biggest fear I have not talked to
Mayor Finkolm about this or anybody else. If you're in
the Carmel area. There's a road called Range Line, and
where Raine Line meets Main Street right the north of
Main Street. South of Main Street, there's already been south
some construction that's taking place. If you go north, it's
(22:04):
all little houses and there's a bunch of them that
are are zone commercial and lately bunch for sale. My
fear is that all of that is going to get
somehow redeveloped into some mixed use nonsense, and the street
of character is just gonna get pushed aside. I get
(22:30):
there comes a moment where maybe the density is too dense,
Maybe that isn't the total winner. A little kitch goes
a long way. Now, maybe there's already a plan in
place and I don't know about it. Says no, no, no,
we're not doing that's Range time. We're doing this, doing that, dude,
the other thing. And this could be true where you
are as well. A little kitch goes a long way.
Not everything needs to be the same pale brown or
(22:52):
pale plumb color. Give it a little life, give it
a little Yes, the building's coming down there, the Kincaid House.
It's okay. So what you're telling me is that Republicans
(23:18):
can't figure out how to be okay with the release
of some information regarding Jeffrey Epstein. So they decided to
go home. I don't know if this is just about Republicans.
This seems to be more about ridiculousness. Tony Katz, ninety
(23:39):
three WIBC, Good morning, what's going on. Good to be
with you. So the issue is is that there's legislation
that people want to bring about releasing information. The Republicans
are saying Trump has already said to the Attorney General
PAMBONDI released what you can that's court approved. So the
(24:02):
Republicans are saying, we got to wait for that process
to play out and then things will get released. We
can't be engaging legislation if this is the route that
they're going. But if Democrats bring to the floor, hey,
here's legislation to release the files, and the Republicans are like, well,
(24:23):
we're not going to vote for that because they're working
on this thing over here. Now, it's like, oh, Republicans
don't want to release the files. I hate everyone. At
that moment, I believe I was channeling you. I believe
you were speaking through me, and therefore that's what Oh gosh,
(24:46):
we're only talking about finding out who was sexually abusing children.
But sure, let's make a political game out of it.
How does Congress not have a lower approval rating? The
approval rating seven percent? This is my point. Who are
the seven percent who think this is all okay? Gross gross,
(25:10):
gross stuff? But not everything is lost? Lobster Palooza? Matt Barrett,
Matt Bear. Do you like the lobster Yeah?
Speaker 2 (25:21):
Man, definitely.
Speaker 1 (25:22):
Yeah. Do you find yourself just sitting down with your
rabbi and just cracking open some good shellfish?
Speaker 2 (25:27):
I don't have a rabbi yet, Tony.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
I know a guy. We can get you one. It
is this Saturday? Is it, by the way, is it
Basil Opera Center or Basile Opera Center?
Speaker 2 (25:40):
I like Basile, That's what I'm gonna call it.
Speaker 1 (25:42):
Yeah, but we should find out, shouldn't we?
Speaker 2 (25:44):
Yeah? Probably?
Speaker 1 (25:46):
So this is taking place. It's their fifteenth Lobster Palooza.
It is a fundraiser at the permanent home of the
Indianapolis Opera, which is super groovy, super super groovy and
not enough love. Like we talked about this symphony which
I do adore, and simply on the prairie and all that.
Do you remember Matt. When we used to do Symphony
on the patio.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Yeah, I do. That was on the canal walk.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
It was it was not yeah, it was it was No.
Speaker 2 (26:11):
They had a symphony on the prairie.
Speaker 1 (26:14):
That's that's different. When COVID hit and you couldn't go
to Sympony on the Prairie, we were like, we'll do it,
and we used to do these these shows on weekends
called Sympony on the Patio. So because you couldn't go
out to Connor Prairie, you could listen at home. I
did not know this symphony. I didn't know that.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
I didn't know where you're doing. Cool.
Speaker 1 (26:31):
One of the coolest things I ever got to do.
I don't know why we stn't. We still don't do
it Indianapolis Symphony. I mean we should, and we should
do it with the Opera as well.
Speaker 2 (26:41):
I should absolutely, Yeah, excited about that. I think it'd
be great.
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Ten billion percent. So uh. They are going to be
featuring live singing. They've got open bars. You don't have
to drink, and that's the key. They have caricatures, which Matt,
we want to see of you desperately, sure, because you
know you're gonna take your shirt off a cigar bar.
Are are good friends at blend bars. Cigar are going
to be there, popcorn saltwater taffy, which is the perfect
(27:08):
greatest thing. Opera is with a mouthful of saltwater taffy.
That's science. And then a lobster, beef tenderloin or surf
and turf dinner. This is going on. Uh, And you
can still get tickets. You go to Indieopera dot org.
Indieopera dot org. I wasn't. I wasn't planning on it,
(27:28):
and I'm like, yeah, I should I should go. I
should go. All right, Look, I'm not a big lobster guy,
but I could do the rest. I can do them. Yeah,
I just might buy the ticket anyway.
Speaker 2 (27:42):
You don't have to eat the lobster, you know.
Speaker 1 (27:44):
Right right. I could just save it in my pocket,
give it to you on Monday.
Speaker 2 (27:47):
Give it to somebody. You know here, eat my lobster.
Speaker 1 (27:51):
You know the way you say it sounds weird here,
take it right, Yeah, that is weird. But this is
very cool. And they do this. I don't know if
the money is for the opera or the money is
for it's for music education in the city.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
Oh, I'm off for that.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
Yeah, I'm down.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
I think that's great.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
I am down. And anything that involves Angela Brown, I'm
I'm I'm ten thousand percent in favor of Do you
know Angela Brown?
Speaker 2 (28:20):
I do not know.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
Angela Brown is spectacor Angela Brown should be the ambassador
for Indianapolis. She's spectacular. Oh oh, I don't even know.
I don't even know if we agree politically, don't care.
She's terrific.
Speaker 2 (28:32):
She's a soprano.
Speaker 1 (28:34):
Well, I don't want to label her.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
I'm sorry, my bad. Go, I'm sorry what I just said?
My bad? Yeah, clearly.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
Lobster Palooza July twenty sixth. Is it a basil basil
basil basil basile like fred Gila? How do I pronounce
this properly? Let me get it right. It's at the
Opera Center, and yeah, this should, this should happen. I'm
gonna go. I'm gonna buy tickets. I do that. I'm
gonna try and buy tickets right now, they're not sold out.
(29:08):
I'm gonna try and buy tickets. That's what's gonna happen.
So get there. Maybe I'll see you there, and yes, yes,
if you come to me, first, I will totally give
you my lobster. I'm that kind of guy. Tony Katz
ninety three WIBC. Good morning, gearing up for the popcorn moment.
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(29:30):
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The popcord moment, Let's go, Let's go, Let's go, Let's go.
Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good Morning on the popcord moment.
It is the story you need to hear to believe.
Then grab your popcorn because there is more. We shared
(31:36):
this release of information that came from the Director of
National Intelligence that shows that the Biden I'm sorry, the
Obama administration, like there's a difference, saw that there was
no interference from the Russians regarding the twenty sixteen election.
Although I will argue that the Russians are always trying
(31:58):
to meddle in elections and this is not anything new,
but that there was no overt, undetectable cyber attack or
anything else regarding the twenty sixteen election. It's actually rather specific,
and this was the thought process of multiple intelligence agencies,
multiple members part of the intelligence community, and that this
(32:24):
was spiked by James Komy, then Director of the FBI.
Then the presidential Daily Brief was scrapped and they had
a meeting the next day with Komy, with John Brennan,
the head of the CIA, with James Clapper, director of
National Intelligence, with Loretta Lynch, the Attorney General. I believe
Joe Biden was there in others. And then a month
later a new brief that said, oh, the Russians interfered
(32:45):
with the election. And this was the predicate for Russia. Russia, Russia.
This is who they are, this is what they did.
And President Trump has been talking about this now. At
one moment in the White House yesterday in the Oval Office,
he was there sitting with the leader of the Philippines.
(33:06):
He was cursing. So I didn't double check this one
producer carls a finger on the dumb button just in
case this was President Trump. No, Barack Hussein Obama is
the ring leader. Hillary Clinton was.
Speaker 4 (33:23):
Right there with him, and so was Sleepy Joe Buden
and so with the rest of them, call me Clapper,
the whole group.
Speaker 2 (33:29):
And they tried to rig an election, and they got caught.
Speaker 1 (33:33):
And then they did rig the election in twenty twenty.
And then because I knew I won that election by
a lot, I did it a third time and I
won in a landslide.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
Every swing state won.
Speaker 1 (33:42):
The popular vote. But I won that all the same
way in twenty twenty. And look at the damage that
was caused. Now, he could say what he wants about
twenty twenty, but the calling out of Barack Obama is
good and important. He is not above it. All the
(34:02):
idea that his administration was scandal free is of course nonsense.
What was done here was obscene. What it is that
progressives do when they have power is obscene, and yet
progressives find this to be beyond the pale. How dare
you say this of the the former president? And on
(34:26):
CNN they went crazy relate the votes, right, They didn't
even influence votes, They've had intentions. Why are we talking
about this?
Speaker 2 (34:37):
This is not the issue.
Speaker 1 (34:38):
The president, President Obama said that Russia did not manipulate votes.
We should note this because every liberal in America.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
Said that was the king possible.
Speaker 5 (34:49):
Not to talk about the fact that the president of
the United States, the current president of the United States,
just accused a former president of treason and suggested a
prosecution of that former president.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
There is no evidence. That is the problem. You can
call it. I'm not gonna call him then.
Speaker 5 (35:05):
I don't think why you talk about that instead of
talking about Obama?
Speaker 1 (35:09):
Because Obama just of Democrat mythology.
Speaker 6 (35:12):
What please, let's.
Speaker 5 (35:13):
Not talk about this. I don't want to talk about
your disturrections. The problem is, this is what Trump does.
He distracts everybody. He's talking about President Obama because he
doesn't want to talk about Epstein.
Speaker 1 (35:22):
No, no, no, maybe he doesn't want to talk about Epstein,
but we should be talking about President Obama. This is
the difference. This is the difference, guys, between us and
everybody else. We can do two things at once, since
clearly a whole bunch of people, can't you think it's
now wrong? Uh? CNN, Keith Poinkin, you think it's wrong
(35:44):
to accuse a former president of impropriety. Funny, I don't
remember you speaking out during the four years that former
President Trump at the time was attacked every day by
CNN and MSNBC and the Democratic Party and lied about
on every subject everyone. You weren't there, You weren't talking
(36:07):
about it. You didn't care, You thought it was fine.
Now that it's Obama, it's a problem. It's not a problem.
Barack Obama is not special, as I recall it. No
one is above the law, and neither is Barack Obama.
Let's find out what he knew and what he didn't know,
what he did and what he didn't do. Absolutely, there
should be a full on investigation here. It shouldn't even
be a debate. This investigation should have started on January
(36:29):
twenty First, I don't know what took Donald Trump so long.
They manipulated data. That's what they did, and you better
believe we're going to discuss it. You can scream Epstein
from now until the end of time. I'm a guy
who wants the Epstein files released. I believe you can
do more than one thing at a time. But you
(36:51):
want to use it as excuse. It won't fly, it
doesn't work, it doesn't stick. Don't you get that. We
get that this Progressive Party, he is a bad group
of people. This is the group of people that kept
screaming that Trump was a threat to democracy enough times
that they got a lone wolf to try and kill him.
(37:11):
We understand what it is you do, and the answer
is we're not interested. We'd rather fight. That's what we
voted for. And Obama and Clapper and Brennan and Comy
and Andrew McCabe. Already, we've always known these people were low.
Now we know more of what they did. And if
(37:33):
trying to subvert the duly elected president of the United States,
trying to derail his entire presidency through lies and deceit
and manipulation, if that isn't worthy in your mind, progressive
left of an investigation, then holy hell, what is actually
worthy in your mind? No, wait, don't tell me. I
(37:55):
don't want to know anything that dark Today on the
marketplace for those of you who like to eat your
your hot dogs super fancy like Tony Katz. That's me
ninety three WIBC. Good morning, Good to be with you.
The marketplace brought to you by Indiana Unclaimed dot gov.
It is your cash. Go get it. It's just sitting
(38:16):
there waiting for you. No, really, it's your money. It's
not free money, it's yours. You earn this, it's yours.
Go to Indiana Unclaimed dot gov. Or text my name Tony.
That's me, Tony Katz. How you doing? Text my name
to four six two two zero and you can get
your cash fast, easy, free to do. During downtime, I'm
(38:37):
trying to clear my head, get ready for what's next
on the show. I find myself on Facebook marketplace. Cool stuff,
odd stuff, weird stuff, strange stuff, all sorts of stuff
on the marketplace I bought. I'm sold, I have done
it all. I had things from the marketplace hanging in
the studio right now. Uh, but this this is for you.
Fancy hot dog eaters right there, Matt Bear, Matt Beer.
(38:58):
Do you like a fancy dog?
Speaker 2 (39:00):
Yeah? I like a big hot dog, man, right.
Speaker 4 (39:03):
But so not fancy, just big, yeah, big fancy with
the coney and and all this stuff.
Speaker 2 (39:09):
Yeah, let's let's do it.
Speaker 1 (39:10):
What what is your preferred methodology?
Speaker 2 (39:14):
Just cony, Just a chili, that's all, just a chili.
Speaker 1 (39:16):
You want chili?
Speaker 4 (39:17):
On I just want chili. I don't want anything else.
I definitely don't want onions, but I do want the chili,
and I want a hot dog to be big and succulent.
Speaker 1 (39:24):
So growing up, it was certainly mustard right because it
was a it was a New York thing, for sure.
I have never been opposed to ketch up on a
hot dog. I don't understand the people posed to ketch
up on a hot dog. I think that they're all
just play acting and have never once confronted their own demons.
Speaker 4 (39:42):
I think that ketch up on a hot dog it's
kind of like ketchup on a steak. You kind of
have grown a some age, you know, well, your taste
me sure, possibly, But I'm not here to tell people
how to do these things.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
There are people out there who still get well done steaks.
I don't understand them. I don't. I don't get how
that that's possible. How that's good? By the way, your
strip medium rare? You rehbbi medium. Why you want the
fat to render a little bit more? Just trust me
and do what I tell you. The fat's the flavor.
Oh have we met nothing but flavor?
Speaker 2 (40:16):
Boo boo boom.
Speaker 1 (40:17):
That's what That's what I am right there. This is
a hot dog tray map bear.
Speaker 2 (40:21):
Yeah, I can see that.
Speaker 1 (40:22):
It's cool and you would think that you mean, like, oh,
it's a way to serve hot dogs. No, this is
the kind of thing where it looks like a hot dog.
It's like a ceramic hot dog. You take the bun
off on top of which actually looks like actually I
think it's like the hot dog. It's not even a bun.
It looks like the hot dog. You take that off,
and then it's got three little compartments and three spoons.
You can put your relish in there, and yes, your
(40:43):
onion's in there or something else in there, so you
can use that as a way of fancying up your wiener,
And that's what you do.
Speaker 4 (40:53):
This is a good party favor here. It's a party
tray where you can kind of make your own hot dog.
You put the buns on one tray, a hot dog
on another end. Then you can come over here and
get your real issue everything else with these cool plastic spoons.
Speaker 1 (41:03):
Well, I don't know if those are. That might be
just cheap plastic. I think that might be melomine. I
don't know the moral of the story is. Is this
trying too hard?
Speaker 2 (41:13):
Yeah?
Speaker 4 (41:14):
I think so, I really do, because when you have
hot doogs, you just want the hot dog. I don't
want to have to think about what condiments I put
on it and actually have my condiments to be segregated.
Speaker 2 (41:23):
I want my.
Speaker 4 (41:24):
Hot dog to be full and just just decorated lovely
with the This just in.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Matt Bair does not believe in segregation.
Speaker 2 (41:31):
This is true. This is true.
Speaker 1 (41:33):
I just I just think that, like like, some things
don't have to be so fancy. Mustard used to be
a laborious exercise. You'd have to unscrew the lid, you'd
have to get a spoon or knife, you have to
stick it in there, and then you have to put
it on whatever it is you're putting on. These days,
you just pop it open and squirt it right out.
Speaker 2 (41:53):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 1 (41:54):
Right, that's America. That is called progress, ladies and gentlemen. Progress.
Speaker 4 (41:59):
But if you're talking to eating mustard out of a jar,
I mean you're talking about great poop pond it.
Speaker 2 (42:02):
That's the fancy stuff. You're just getting yellow mustard. You
can squirt that out of a bottle. What's easy to do.
Speaker 1 (42:07):
Yes, But I'm me growing up being a Golden's guy.
Not everybody grew up with Golden's. I don't know what
the Midwest mustard? What was the Midwest mustard soda problem?
Speaker 2 (42:18):
I don't know. Yeah, Midwest mustard would have been.
Speaker 1 (42:20):
Uh.
Speaker 2 (42:21):
Hell, I could see it and I could taste it.
Speaker 4 (42:22):
I can taste a mustard on my tongue, but I
can't remember the name, the.
Speaker 2 (42:26):
One with a W yellow wellow.
Speaker 1 (42:29):
No, it wasn't. No, God, you're just sometimes you're just terrible.
Speaker 2 (42:33):
Well o, my wellow mustard is No, it's hold.
Speaker 1 (42:36):
On, I can figure this out. I know what this is.
Oh come on, dang, Nope, nope, but close all right.
Wolbers Wawr of course's.
Speaker 2 (42:47):
Never heard of it.
Speaker 3 (42:48):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (42:49):
Uh so the point is is are you getting this
hot dog tray, This little condoment tray for twenty five dollars.
Speaker 4 (42:56):
This is just one more thing for me to throw
in the trash in my move. So, no, I don't
want this, But do you eat a hot dog? It
should be a simple experience. You don't need to fancy.
You don't need anything. I mean, you can get a
brought worse if you want to be fancy with your
hot dog.
Speaker 1 (43:09):
Right, it's like Mitch Hedberg talking about do I need
a receipt for my donut? No, we don't need to
bring paper and ink into this exactly. Oh gone too soon.
It don't get me wrong. If you like the kitsch,
it's twenty five dollars. It's cool enough. It's in Warsaw, Indiana.
Take a little drive. Take a drive. Matt Barrel, give
you directions.
Speaker 2 (43:29):
Let's see Osco County.
Speaker 1 (43:30):
Right, he knows things. Yeah, he knows.
Speaker 3 (43:34):
It is there.
Speaker 1 (43:35):
Find everything at the marketplace at WIBC dot com. We've
got everything listed. Tony Katz ninety three, WIBC, Good morning,
A couple of things to get to Tony Katz ninety three, WIBC,
Good morning. Good to be with you in the world
of Well, of course, this is what happens news CNN tried,
(44:04):
and I think that that that's more the story here
than the response. They did an interview with Mahmud Khalil.
Speaker 2 (44:15):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (44:15):
This was the guy on the Columbia campus going after
Jewish students, Uh, being supportive of of terrorists. Uh and Uh.
There was going to be a deportation and then was
it a judge that that that forced his release? And
now he's going to sue the Trump administration. He is
(44:35):
not a citizen. He's a I was a lawful temporary resident.
There's a specific term, not a citizen. And this led
to a lot of questions of well, what are rights
and and and and how do rights get decided upon?
Just because you're in the United States? Do you have
(44:56):
all the rights of the Constitution? Doesn't being a citizen
mean something in that regard? So a lot of people
are focusing on this conversation with Wolf Blitzer. Pamela Brown
is asking the questions and this guy mach mc Khalil
about HAMAS.
Speaker 4 (45:20):
Just to be clear here, though, do you specifically condemn
hamas a designated terrorist organization in the United States?
Speaker 1 (45:27):
Not just for their actions on October seventh.
Speaker 3 (45:32):
I condemned the killing of old civilians full stop. And
but what I I don't want to get into is
is no, I I am very clear with with condemning
old civilians. I'm very I'm very straight in my position
and that and that.
Speaker 1 (45:51):
Part.
Speaker 3 (45:51):
But it's it's this ingenuous to ask about condemning hamas while.
Speaker 1 (46:14):
Be careful out there. This weather is the kind of
stuff that hurts people. Check on your neighbor, keep an
eye on your pets. It's gonna be hot, it's gonna
be humid, it's gonna be it's gonna it's just gonna
stink to high heaven. Tony Katz, ninety three WIBC, Good morning,
(46:36):
Good to be with you. Existing home sales seeing the
biggest jump this year. Closed existing home sales, as reported
by the ib J is up nine point six percent
year over year, so over three thousand homes in June. Now,
(46:59):
the of a house is also up. The median sales
price three hundred and twenty five thousand. We're talking about
a seventeen county area here, so prices are going up
(47:22):
and sales are up. Huh. But yet we have a
housing issue and a housing shortage across the country. Now
the things here that is not necessarily indicative of happening
everything happening across the country. I'm not sure how all
of this jives. I'm not sure how all of this
comes together. Pending sales are up sixteen point eight percent
(47:46):
in May campaign compared with the same month a year ago.
New listings are up. Do I take from that? First
of all, tis the season, right people engage the moving,
the selling a house, is buying a house before the
school year starts and get their kids into school. And
that whole thing that's number one. Number two is the
(48:09):
idea of some people waited long enough, they can't wait anymore.
They got to get something done. They got to get
into a new place. That could also be a part
of it. It's an interesting bit of data and certainly
worthy of discussion. I've got a lot to get to
my God, Tony Kats today is gonna be full. But
(48:31):
right here in Indianapolis, we need to be asking ourselves
what is the plan for the safety and security of
the city, because the city doesn't so much seem to
be interested in it. Representative Andrew Ireland has an idea
which involves prosecuting the prosecutors is this a good idea,
The representative joins us. Next, keep it here. Tony Katz
(48:53):
ninety three WIBC. Good morning, So how does one respond
when the prosecutor won't prosecute? What if you see police
doing the work protecting a city and yet those of
a political bent decides that work is meaningless. Should there
(49:15):
be a remedy for the state when the city or
the county fails? Or is that stepping over a line?
And it's up to the voter well to make better choices.
Tony Katz, Good to be with you. Representative Andrew Ireland
joins me right now. You can find his work. Ireland
(49:38):
for Indiana dot Com is where you find him. This
conversation where you are discussing the General Assembly having power
to impeach prosecutors and judges who failed to enforce state law.
Let's start where we start, sir, what brought you to
this place?
Speaker 6 (49:58):
Good morning, Tony, Well, I'll tell you. I mean it
is a real frustration of mine. And when I go
talk to people on the South side of India where
you know happy to represent is that people are frustrated.
You know, Ryan Meers doesn't just get to ignore state
law because he disagrees with it. He's not the legislature,
he's not above the law. But unfortunately, right now there's
no real check in the systems Ryan Mehers wants to
(50:20):
ignore the law. There's not much anybody can do about it.
Speaker 1 (50:24):
And I'd like to change that. So when we discuss
the idea of somebody not doing their job, isn't that
exactly what the voter is supposed to do, Say hey,
the work isn't being done here and let's bring in
somebody new.
Speaker 6 (50:39):
Well, I think that's part of it, right. We want
people to make better choices and take a prosecutor that's
going to do the job. But at the end of
the day, you cannot elect lawlessness. Particularly you know, we
have a model of separation of powers, and if the
General Assembly passed the law and then on the other
end you've got a prosecutor that ignores that. That is
not a sustainable system. You should not have a prosecutor
playing super legist play. Sure, So I think it's time
(51:01):
that we really have a serious conversation about putting a
check on that and raiding those individuals.
Speaker 1 (51:06):
In talking to Representative Andrew Ireland of House District ninety
in the Indiana General Assembly. I believe people can vote
for anything they want, and they sometimes vote for people
I don't like, for sure, but I'm not here to
tell them how to vote. You're making what seems to
be a different argument that there needs to be a
(51:26):
mechanism for what happens when if in office, the person
isn't doing their job. You bring up Ryan Mears, the Democrat,
the Marion County prosecutor. What is it that has you saying,
very very clearly he's not doing his job.
Speaker 6 (51:42):
Well, that's right, This is not a partisan issue. I
don't care that Ryan Meuhers is a Democrat. In fact,
his predecessor, Terry Curry, was a Democrat, and I'm one
record of saying he did a good job.
Speaker 2 (51:51):
He held the.
Speaker 6 (51:52):
Violent criminals accountable, he put them behind bars where they belong. Unfortunately,
that is no longer the case and the current guy.
We have a lot of repeat violent offenders that are
being let back out on the streets. And it shouldn't
you surprise anybody that these same individuals who are already
repeat violent offenders, Guess what, they repeat those violent offenses
again and again, and often those crimes get worse over time.
(52:14):
If you're not holding these individuals accountable, then our city
is getting worse. And so again to me, you know,
I could care less if it was a Republican and
dependent a Democrat. I just want somebody who will holds
the violent offenders accountable, and if Ryan Meres is an
up to that task, then we have to have tools
to replace them.
Speaker 1 (52:30):
When we talk about violent offenders, are there any specific
cases that you could point to where you believe that
the Marion County Prosecutor Ryan Meres should have engaged the
prosecution and didn't. Oh, we lost the good representative. Oh
(52:54):
that's a shame.
Speaker 2 (52:56):
That is a shame.
Speaker 1 (52:57):
Try and get them back. I mean, that's all you
can do is try and get him back the best
severe ability. It is the question though, what specifically. I'm
not here to defend Ryan Mears. I'm not here to
defend how he has act, acted and how he has
(53:17):
presented himself and the arguments that he has made seeming
quite clear about whether or not he will do the job.
Not here to make that argument at all in the slightest,
not here to protect him. I have said, if he's
got an issue with this kind of conversation, he should
come on the show, explain it. I've got five microphones
(53:40):
and no waiting. Five microphones and no waiting. Come on
the show and explain yourself. I'd love to hear it
directly from him. But if we're going to make the
argument that we should be able to remove these people
from office, I just want to know what specifically we
(54:01):
think has been done. But maybe a greater point is
whether or not these kinds of things should exist, And
I don't have an answer for that. We take a
look at what happened with Holcombe and the idea of
emergency after emergency after emergency regarding COVID, and the answer
(54:26):
there is shouldn't the General Assembly have a place where
they could say to the governor, no more extending out
these emergencies. We're done with that. And I answer yes,
absolutely positively, without question. The General Assembly should have had
that power. Ten thousand percent should have had that power,
(54:52):
and the idea that they didn't was anathematomy just absolutely
awful and horrible. So this is that question. Were we
not able to get the representative back there? Producer Carl
ah As we have seen technology has not been on
(55:13):
our side today. We will get the representative back we
won't end the conversation there, but one should ask where
the power should be centered. Should you be elected and
then therefore the election is the protection. No, the election
is so you can do the job. But there's nothing
(55:34):
wrong with the people having the ability to say you're
not doing the job. The only thing I would argue
is that it can't be something that's easy. If we're
going to engage conversations of recalls, impeachments, et cetera. There
(55:55):
has to be a threshold because if you allow this
to be something easy, then it's utilized as political retribution,
and that's the issue that is a new problem, and
we can't have that. We need to be able to
have a system that allows for the people being able
(56:20):
to engage a mistake, an issue that is egregious. All
of it. I agree with that we need it. We
just need to make sure it's it is as abuse
proof as possible. It's the only thing I want. I
(56:41):
don't want it to be something that's utilized like the
Left is utilized impeachment every step of the way.
Speaker 2 (56:49):
It's the last thing in the world that.
Speaker 1 (56:52):
We should want. Time to fill up on the news.
Tony Katz ninety three WIBC, Good morning. What is going down?
Speaker 7 (57:00):
Own?
Speaker 1 (57:00):
Everybody? Dow futures up two thirty seven NAS, that future's
up sixteen fifty. That's because there's a trade deal with Japan,
which involves Japan investing five hundred and fifty billion dollars
in the United States and somehow the US is gonna
end up with ninety percent of the profit. I don't
know how that works. I don't, but we'll find out
(57:24):
no way. I don't know if we ever will. Actually,
it's just a weird statement that got made. But I'm
happy there's a trade deal. There's reciprocal tariffs going down
to fifteen percent. That's extremely important. That's more important than
the deal because with all these deals in the opening
up of markets, Japan's going to open up automobiles and
rice to the United States. Opening up of markets is
(57:48):
one thing. Things getting sold to something completely different. But
maybe I'm looking at it wrong. You gotta start somewhere.
This is better than what we had before, and it
was Japan, South Korea, India, Japan, South Korea, India, Vietnam.
These are the places I was looking at for deals
(58:09):
to see how it would affect China's negotiations. Now you've
got some of these deals in place. You have a
deal with the Philippines in place. Now do we start
seeing China move a little bit more into making a
trade deal of their own. They have other markets. They
don't need the US as much as we believe, although
(58:30):
it's clear that they do need the US. We need
to work on moving more manufacturing out of China, which
is going to take a long time to do. It
doesn't happen overnight, not only moving to the US, but
creating the supply chains in other places, because you want
the supply chains and other places. And bestn't Trump. Anybody
would be wrong to say otherwise. I'd happily engage this
(58:54):
argument everywhere. You can't just have one place. If something
goes wrong in that place, now you don't have any
of the goods and bad idea, bad idea. West Texas
crud is down to sixty five dollars a barrel, Ren
crude at sixty eight dollars and twenty five cents a barrel,
the ten year treasury at four point three seven four.
(59:15):
It's been holding there and it's we see from just
Central Indiana people are still buying and the prices have
gone up and people are still buying, yet some stuff
is sticking around more. You hear that anecdotally about things
sticking on the market. Is this because the buyer has
gotten more persnickety? Is the seller just so exhausted that
(59:41):
things aren't maybe selling as fast as they'd like that
they they're walking away faster.
Speaker 2 (59:46):
We've heard this before too.
Speaker 1 (59:48):
A lot of data out there about the home sales,
and I'll try and break this down further on Tony
Kats today at noon. You know, we were off in
fans of saying the world is crazy, but we don't
have to be, and we bring you the TK Tony
Katz Thursday Music Moment. I know, I know it's Wednesday,
but Dear Lord, the death of Ozzy Osbourne at seventy six,
(01:00:14):
I mean, it's it's absolutely brutal because he transcended everything.
It was just a I mean, Ozzy Osbourne is iconography.
Never mind the music, never mind the music of Black Sabbath,
never mind the start of metal, never mind the influences everywhere,
(01:00:36):
never mind the cultural connection in every genre. I mean,
it's just it's unbelievable to be able to do that
and just a couple of weeks ago, and I didn't
know about this. If you caught eat rink smoke, I
didn't know this had happened. There was a concert and
he was the headliner, Black Sabbath and they raised like
two hundred million dollars for charity. That was July fifth,
(01:01:00):
passes away three weeks later. Yeah, Partinson's of course he
was ill and that was that was known, and so
are I could have picked any song. I'm pretty sure
carl I really let pick the song here, because sometimes
you gotta go with the with with the classic and
the most meaningful. But could have gone with mister Crowley,
(01:01:21):
could have gone with iron Man, could have done a
host of things. But a special music moment today, brought
to you by kill a Dent Removal, Kill a Dent
Removal dot Com. The dentless door repair, the hail damage
all fixed with Killadent Removal dot Com. Uh, just a
just a special because guys like that, they don't come
(01:01:44):
around too often. Turn up your speakers, yes, it might
be human, but roll down your windows, grab your drink.
As long as you're not driving, I'm not judging. Ozzy
Osbourne gone at the age of seventy six MoMA, I'm
coming home, Producer Carl for everyone Safe Home? Ou was
(01:02:07):
the Osbourne. It's time to play America's favorite game. What
the heck is that TV theme song? Here's how we
play our game. Producer Carl picks a television theme song
from yesteryear. I have to guess what that theme song is.
(01:02:32):
This is very, very very eighties. It's not a cartoon. Wait,
maybe it is a cartoon.
Speaker 2 (01:02:48):
Well, cartoon is a hint, but it's not a cartoon.
Speaker 6 (01:02:54):
Huh.
Speaker 1 (01:02:56):
Well, let's start where we start. I think at a
moment like this, I phone a friend, don't you? Yes?
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
Absolutely?
Speaker 1 (01:03:04):
Matt Bear in the WIBC traffic center, what is this
television theme song?
Speaker 2 (01:03:10):
This is what to the oldies toning, good work, good work,
good work?
Speaker 1 (01:03:16):
Actually close. This was actually the music that went along
with Suzanne Summers auditioning the thig Master. What is this song?
I'm I am at a loss. No, Molly in the
(01:03:37):
in the chat room, I do not believe this is
the theme to card Sharks. No, that's a great, great
game show, but not it. Some people in the chat
room did guess the Ghostbusters cartoon.
Speaker 7 (01:03:49):
No radio hint. Go ahead, produce your Carl, give us
a hint the Simpsons. This is the theme to the
Tracy Omens Show.
Speaker 1 (01:04:00):
Yep, my gosh, that's good. First of all, called it
about the eighties. Called it about the eighties right there. Secondly,
people forget that The Simpsons started as this weird, weird,
poorly drawn cartoon as breaks in the Tracy Almond Show.
(01:04:22):
They also forget that the Tracy Almond Show was sensational
and Tracy Ollmen was a remarkable talent. She I mean,
I don't know what she's doing. Now, there's another interview
I would love to do. Get me Tracy Almen. I'll wait, yeah,
(01:04:42):
I'll do it, and get me a bowl of soup.
I don't know if we're just asking for things. Oh on,
Tracy olemend and a bowl of soup. That's that's all.
Speaker 2 (01:04:52):
I'm looking for.
Speaker 1 (01:04:54):
And a slinky three things now I'm not the three thing.
Very good, very very well done. On Tony Katz. Today,
President Trump said nothing wrong about Barack Obama, and why
aren't we investigating what it is he and his team did.
We'll take a look at these trade deals and most
(01:05:15):
maybe also a little bit of look at we're getting
Epstein silly now, which is exactly where we knew it
would go. I will have it all for you on
Tony Katz today. At noon, i'll explain what the silliness is.
Tune in then