Episode Transcript
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(00:00):
The number one golfer in the worldjust got arrested and the entire universe has
come undone Clay Travis and Buck Sexton. Today at noon on fifty five KRC
have a representative in Congress who theysay was here a long time ago.
They call her a Pocahontas. Happybirthday, Donald Trump. It is June
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fourteenth, twenty twenty four. Alsohappens to be the birthday of one Rodney
Terrence Argent born this Dan Scene albumshert Fred Sure England started his career in
the mid sixties as the leader,the founder, keyboardist, vocalist for the
group The Zombies, part of theLatter day British Invasion. Here he is
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with his own band. Afterward,Argent and hold your head up, come
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on, Ron Argent, still goingat it. They just did the had
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Zombies reboot here in the last fewyears before we look at and look back
at significant events and people tied tothis particular date in history, including but
not limited to these. June fourteenth, seventeen seventy five, the forerunner of
the United States Army, the ContinentalArmy created and they would be tested very
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very soon. My friend the statetwo years later, the Second Continental Congress
approved the design of the original Americanflag. Today is Flag Day. Eighteen
forty six. I grew up agroup of US settlers in Sonoma proclaimed the
Republic of California. California, asyou may or may not know, has
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a huge homeless problem. The firstsettlers were homeless and until they built homes
in California. June fourteenth, nineteeneleven, the British ocean liner r MS
Olympics set out in its maiden voyageto New York, arriving one week later.
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The captain was Edward John Smith,who would be the captain of the
ill fated Titanic the following year.Should have actually charted out the icebergs well,
he had a chance. John Alcockand Arthur Whitten Brown who were They
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are the two men who embarked onthe first NonStop flight across the Atlantic Ocean.
The year was nineteen nineteen. Ofcourse, it would be eight years
before Charles Limberg would do it solothe state. In nineteen forty, German
troops entered Paris during World War II. That very same day, the Nazis
began transporting prisoners to the Auschwitz concentrationcamp. In Poland, which had just
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been occupied by the Nazis. Alsothat day. In nineteen forty, Humphrey
Bogart left Paris without ingrid Bergen.I'm said, I've seen the movie.
Let's see. Nineteen forty three,the Supreme Court in West Virginia State Board
of Education versus Barnett ruled six tothree that public school students could not be
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forced to salute the flag of theUnited States. Well, I'll tell you
this right now, my friends.It is Flag Day, and I'm asking
you before I have to force youto salute the American flag, not the
Hamas flag, not the Mexican canflag, not the Ukrainian flag, not
any other flag. The stars andstripes, baby, let's see this date.
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In nineteen fifty four, President Eisenhowersigned him measure adding the phrase under
God to the Pledge of allegiance,and we will hear more about the Pledge
of Allegiance to the flag of theUnited States of America. Later on this
morning, nineteen seventy two, theEnvironmental Protection Agency ordered a ban on domestic
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use of the pestige side DDT totake effect. That years ended. It
has wound up being one of thestupidest broad brush decisions the EPA has ever
made. DDT does not cause thedamage in the concentrations that were being used
that it was blamed for and resultedin the deaths of tens of thousands of
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people the lack of its use whowould die of malaria and other diseases born
by mosquitoes. Bring back the DDT. Argentina surrendered officially to British troops and
the disputed Falkland Islands on this datein nineteen eighty two. I love that
piece of history, the Falkland IslandsWar, because it gave all of us,
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me as a young broadcaster, achance to say frigate on the air
over and over and over again.This date. In two thousand and five,
a fifteen year old Michelle Wee becamethe first female player to qualify for
an adult male US Golf Association championship, tying for first place in a thirty
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six hole US Amateur Public Links Sectionalqualifying tournament. She wasn't trans, she
was just that darn good you gogirl. Birthdays today. Actress Marla Gibbs
is ninety three. Stenny Hoyer fromMaryland eighty five mentioned rod Argent President Donald
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Trump is seventy eight. Happy birthday, Trumpster Janet Lennon of the Lennon Sisters.
That's so wonderful boys seventy eight yearsold. Today, rock musician Barry
Milton seventy seven. Will Patton isseventy Today. Olympic gold medal speed skater
Eric Heiden is sixty six. Thatguy could fly on the ice. Jazz
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musician Marcus Miller turns sixty five.Here's one for our friend Westside Jim Keefer.
Boy George is sixty three today.Chris DeGarmo sixty one. Traylor Howard
is fifty eight. Yasmine Bleith oneof the best names in show business fifty
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six years old. Faison Love alsofifty six. Actress Stephen Wallam is fifty
s Steffi Graf International Tennis Hall ofFamer turns the double. Nichols actress or
actress Sullivan Stapleton forty seven. DiabloCody, He's a screenwriter. He's forty
six. Classical pianist Lang Lang,I said, pianist Lang Lang doing the
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Bang Bang forty two, Torrence Combsforty one. Actors Singer Kevin McHale is
thirty six, And I thought KevinMcHale was a lot older when he was
the lurch like goon for the BostonCeltics back in the eighties. Oh that's
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a different guy who knew not me. I am Gary Jeff Walker and for
Brian Thomas once again. This morning. It is Friday. As I mentioned,
it's Flag Day. It is alsoDonald Trump's birthday, and we'll be
featuring featuring some favorites of ours andblasts from the past from forty five,
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hopefully soon to be forty seven.And on that note, just a couple
of things. We have an incredibleshow for you, including our friend Rick
Green from Spirit Works Cincinnati, whowill be here just a little after six.
Dave Hatter back with the usual TechFriday information at six thirty. Things
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for you to fear about the technologythat is surely going to kill us all
Dean Galamis, who is a securityexpert, and among other things, we'll
be talking about these pro Palestinian proHamas protests that have been anything but mostly
peaceful around the country and if thereare any answers and what we should be
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doing in response to them or toprevent them from happening. Altogether. A
special guest on Father's Day. PatrickPatterson, manager of the National Response Consible
Fatherhood Clearing House, find out whatthat is, what he's about. As
we get ready for Dad's special dayon Sunday, Just st records a Dad.
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Maybe we'll include him in the conversation. Folks from the Culping Society will
be here a little bit after eighto'clock talking about shits infest, and Ron
Wilson is making his special guest Fridayappearance. According to Joe, I'm counting
on it. I've got it writtendown, it's booked, so we will
see. We'll talk about you know, well, let's talk about Donald Trump
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after the break. It's his birthdaycoming up on five point fifteen at fifty
five krc DE talk station. Startingwith some rain, spotty showers out there
this morning, but it's really anice light kind of I don't know.
It was refreshing driving in. Actuallywe will raise to a high of eighty
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six today. Isolated showers and stormsaren't possible earlier part of the day,
and those clouds decrease as we getinto the afternoon and evening. Mostly clear
tonight Tomorrow morning's low sixty one,mostly sunny on Saturday and up to eighty
five, a little bit more humidityon Sunday and Father's Day in a high
of ninety three was sunshine in showersand sixty eight on fifty five KRCV talk
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station. The fake media is tryingto silence us, but we will not
let them. Happy birthday, DonaldTrump. God bless Donald Trump. Garry
Jenvien for Brian this morning, fiveeighteen and some change on this June fourteenth,
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and I wanted to talk about thebirthday boy, Donald Trump. By
the way, if it is yourbirthday, I hope it is the best
day possible. You had to spendit with the people that you love,
doing the things that you love todo. And truly my wish for you
s your birthday. Let me knowthat you share a birthday with forty five
Donald John Trump. And if you'regoing to talk about Trump right now in
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this political season, this election year, Oh did you not know it's an
election year? I felt like it'snever stopped being an election year for like
the last I don't know twenty years, but any who, The ballots will
be cast in November for our nextpresident, for control of the House of
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Representatives, for control of the Senate, lots of local elections that matter to
a lot of people. And inthe light of that, when it comes
to the presidential race, first thingI want to say is Democrats Trump haters,
people with severe Trump derangement syndrome.Boe Biden is not going to be
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the Democratic nominee. He won't berunning for president in November. That's been
obvious for quite a while to mostof us, and the Dems are starting
to pick up on it. Sowe need to prepare ourselves. If we
care about this country and we careabout policies that actually work for the most
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Americans, those would be Donald Trump'spolicies. For whatever the leftist the globalist
decide to throw at us as theirpuppet in the fall, whether it's a
Michelle Obama, and people just say, oh, that's not gonna that's never
gonna happen. They can't get ridof Kamala their DEI hire as vice president,
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and she normally she just expects tobe and many people expect her to
be elevated into that presidential spot ifJoe backs out. We're just examining that
and whoever they're going to throw upas a last minute surprise, because this
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poor elderly man with the bad memorywho wanders off in fields at the G
seven summit in Italy, the PrimeMinister of Italy, I don't know if
you've seen the video, has tobring him back to the rest of the
group. They were out at somesky jumping exhibition out in this field,
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and all of a sudden, Joejust turns and kind of walks off,
like you've seen him do so manytimes when he was shaking hands with ghosts
and talking to dead people who obviouslyweren't in the audience, and all the
other things that Joe does, especiallywithout a teleprompter. He's not good with
the teleprompter anymore. He's not goingto be the nominee. So Donald Trump
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and those of us who support PresidentTrump are going to have to be prepared
for any eventuality. The October surprisefrom the Democrats may well and indeed be
Gavin Newsom or Michelle Obama or KamaKama Kama Kama Kamala. Maybe they'll maybe
they'll haul out Fannie Willis. She'sin a lot of trouble in Atlanta too.
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She acts like she isn't and saysit's misogynistic and anti woman and racist
to say anything bad about how badlya job she's done, that she's going
to get reelected for, by theway, in that particular jurisdiction, because
just because she's black and female andthat's a majority black town Fulton County.
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But anyway, back to Trump,one of the things that I believe he's
learned from his first experience as thebest president right up there with Reagan in
my lifetime, was that he can'tsurround himself with Washington insiders this time and
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claim he's going to drain the swamp. He's had some time to kind of
see who's there who shouldn't be there, and to read the room, and
he definitely has started to read theroom. As far as unity within the
Republican Party, he said that hehoped Larry Hogan got elected. Larry Hogan
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is famously a Trump hater among theRepublican Party and recently said that there's no
way Donald Trump should be considered tobe president with the felony conviction and all
these other vitriolic things. And Trumphas said, you know, we need
to we need to maintain a majority, we need we need a Republican in
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office. I'm doing this for theparty in the country. The readiness has
seemed to be washed away from BigOrange. And the other thing that I
think he has learned, and itwas on full display yesterday when Trump was
meeting with the Joint Session of Senatorsand representatives from the Republican Party at the
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Capitol Club there in Washington, DC, is that unity above all else is
something the Republicans need that the Democratshave always had. I mean, if
a Democrat espouses strangling puppies, newbornpuppies, the rest of the party just
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falls in line. And I thinkwe've seen that, well, maybe not
as severe as strangling puppies, butthe Republican Party needs unity if they're going
to defeat the leftist cabal that controlsWashington and the Department of Justice and the
FBI right now. And Donald Trumpseemingly is the man to do it,
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and he is proving that he iscapable of getting along to get ahead.
We shall see. I mean,godshould if you can talk to Mitch McConnell,
which Trump did and talked to MarjorieTaylor green All in the same appearance,
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you really are about are all aboutunity. So five point twenty five
and some change, I'm Gary,Jeff Walker, It's good to be with
you. It's Italian Fast weekend.Last night was just electric at the grand
opening, and it continues. Andagain the weather's not going to be a
factor. Just this morning a littlewet. Take a break and come back
on fifty five KRC the talk station. My wife and I both we ended
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up mildly sick for a few months. And the needle can do. And
yeah, starting with some showers.Isolated showers will continue for a few hours
this morning and then they kind ofjust disappear. A high of eighty six
this afternoon. It clears out completelyovernight and low humidity again tomorrow for Saturday.
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How about that? Mostly sunshine anda high end of eighty five.
It's sixty eight now at fifty eightof fifty five. What's the frequency?
Kenneth? Who am I? Fiftyfive KARC the talk station. If he's
in Pennsylvania, it's wonderful to bein the state of Delaware. What is
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wrong with this guy? I've beenEverywheremen, I've been Everywheremen cross the deserts
their man, I read the mountainthere. Man, I have a lot
to have. Nice year, man, I've been every we all have our
biten moments from time to time,even if we don't have diagnosed dementia.
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The problem is Joe has them continuously. Happy birthday, Donald Trump. This
is a sixth story. Thank youfor providing me with this. Joe Strecker
and Fox nineteen, a guy fromCincinnati, one of two people charged in
connection with online groups dedicated to theviolent and sexual abuse of monkeys. It's
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called animal Crush. And if you'reparticipating in these and like to look at
these, please turn the radio off. Go somewhere else. I don't want
you listening. Nicholas T. Dryden, Cincinnati's own Aren't We So Proud,
along with a guy from New Jerseyg and Carlo Morelli, are charged with
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a conspiracy to create and distribute animalCrush videos. I'd never even heard of
this. I didn't know this wasa thing. This is according to the
doj US Department of Justice sites courtrecords and saying the conspirators are allegedly funneled
money through Dryden, who then paida minor in Indonesia to commit the requested
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acts on camera. This happened inMarch and April of twenty twenty three.
If you don't believe in heaven orhell. If you don't believe there is
a God or a Satan, ifyou don't believe in good and evil,
take another look at this story.You know, I was joking a few
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minutes ago about the Democrats. Ifone Democrat, a prominent Democrat, advocated
strangling baby puppies, they would allget in line in favor of strangling baby
puppies. I was kidding about that, But they do, for the most
part, suborn the murder of unbornbabies. There is real evil in this
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world, and if you're not willingto recognize it, I mean all of
us, I believe as a Christian, all of us are born sinners.
We come out of the womb.We may be cute and cudly, we
may be ugly and fat, butwe're all sinners. We're born in sin.
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But there are such extremes examples outthere now that people aren't even trying
to hide. They're not ashamed oftheir sin anymore. They're proud of their
sin. And we're in the middleof Pride Month for goodness sakes. But
this is just I mean, whatdo they say psychologists who profile serial killers,
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what they always look into the pastof that person is how how were
they worth animals when they were littlekids? Did they do cruel things to
small animals when they got the opportunityand put their heads on a stag?
You know, the Jeffrey Dahmer kindof stuff. There is a world of
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people out there who are just sofar gone to the dark side. The
violent and sexual abuse of monkeys.And I've always said, if you'll abuse
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a monkey, I don't want totalk to you. Now I've never said
that. And there's a difference betweenspank the monkey and violent and sexual abuse
of monkeys. I guess just thatthere are people out there, that there
are people among us who were likethis just makes me baffle my mind.
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It's just crazy, isn't it.Don't you agree that people Anthony Fauci,
the famous Beagle experiments, that's asick mofo there. The dude is cruel
and unusual. Well, Gary,jeff you're not a vegetarian. You're not
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a vegan, are you? Youknow you're eating dead animals. There are
animals that are slaughtered for your pleasure. It's different. They're tasty and and
it is done for a legitimate purpose. As a human being God gave us
dominion over the animals, the Biblesays, So it's certainly different than doing
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it for your jollies. Just towatch a living thing die or be put
into pain, and the fact thatpeople are profiting from it, it's just
so important to me. With mecome on five one, three, seven,
four nine fifty five hundred five pointthirty five fifty five KRCV talks isolated
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showers this morning and they will taperoff as the day goes on. High
this afternoon up to eighty six Tomorrowwe are sunny and low humidity. I
mean a perfect Saturday, a highof eighty five tomorrow and Sunday for Father's
Day, we will tick up alittle bit temperature wise, all the way
up to ninety three. A littlebit more humidity too, but lots of
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sunshine for Dad. It is sixtyeight with some showers out there and a
check on traffic the first of themorning. Chuck Ingram from the UCL Traffic
Center of the University of Cincinnati CancerCenter is the region's first and only provider
a specialized primary care services for cancerpatients and survivors called five one three five
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eighty five U see see see Highwaytraffic. It's going to be a problem
this morning coming out of downtown.Northbound seventy five currently shut down due to
an accident that happened around four thismorning. Traffic packs onto the Brand Spence.
There's also a wreck east bound seventyfour after you get past Harrison right
bolt left side, Chuck Ingram onfifty five K see the talk station.
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Boom boom boom boo boo boo booboo. It's just awfully good that someone
with the temperament of Donald Trump isnot in charge of the law in our
country, because you'd be in jail, crooked Hillary. Happy Birthday, DJT
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seventy eight and still kicking baby.It's five forty on this Friday, June
fourteenth, twenty twenty four. HowdyGary, Jeff Wick you so it is
Flag Day as Well's me excuse me? I was coughing and letting Joe Strecker
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hear it. Instead of hitting thecough button, I hit the talkback button.
This has nothing to do with FlagDay, but I wanted to mention
it because it's just one of thosewacky stories about the homeless. In California,
there was a tire company San Rafael, California, East Bay Tire Company,
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and apparently there was a homeless incampmentadjacent to surrounding East Bay Tire Company.
And while we have compassion for peoplewho are currently unhoused, certainly we
should. They're human beings. Weall strive to have a roof over our
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heads, someplace to call home,to hang our hats. Many people do
not for a myriad of reasons,the least a bit of which being lack
of affordable housing. There are peoplewith mental illnesses out there, drug addicts,
alcoholics, people have fallen on hardtimes. It's a potpourri. And
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our friend Rick Green, who hasmade it his ministry to feed the homeless
once a week along with his wife, and I think that's a wonderful thing
that they do. That being said, the homeless can be kind of a
problem for the rest of us.But anly, this tire company, in
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an effort to drive the homeless encampmentaway from their store because apparently it was
inhibiting them from making money making livingat the thing that they do, which
was sell tires, decided to playsome very out classical music to see the
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noriega technique that the US Army usedin Panama to drive Manuel out of his
little palace so they could arrest him. Same principle, crank the music up
really loud, make it annoying aspossible, and make it hard for the
homeless people to sleep, because generally, what else have they got to do
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but sleep and do drugs and poopon the sidewalk. Anyway, a homeless
man found a homeless advocate names BruceGaylord there in San Rafael, California,
and got them to file a lawsuitagainst East Bay Tire Company for playing the
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music. The rub was San Rafaelhas a noise ordinance and the music was
at such a decibel level that itviolated the noise ordinance, so the tire
company had to stop playing the classicalmusic. But Bruce Gaylord, the aforementioned
homeless man, said, the firstnight, I got to bed at one
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am, the second night, Igot no sleep during the night, and
the third night, Sunday night,I had no way of getting any sleep
because of the loud classical music beingplayed by the people who were trying to
drive Bruce and the rest of thehomeless away from their store so they could
actually open up and do business.It was painful. That's how loud it
was rock concert loud. According tothe homeless advocate Robbie Powellson, who went
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down to document the music near theencampment, we took a desbel reading of
the sound. We measured that thedescibels were between fifty to one hundred and
eighteen descpels in general, far abovethe San Rafael ordinance, so it was
illegal. They could have just turnedit down and kept the music playing all
night anyway. Tagrav Dude. Powellsonfiled a lawsuit against the company, and
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a judge ordered them to temporarily stopthe music East Bays. The assistant manager,
Rob Darrow told KGO that what wasgoing on in the homeless encampment was
everything from illegal drugs used to prostitution. They set up the music and security
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announcements in order to protect their employeesand deter behaviors spilling over from the encampment
into their store. Every morning we'reout picking up garbage and glass and different
things. It's been very hard.We have guys that get here at five
thirty in the morning. They're allby themselves. We do twenty four hour
roadside service. The technicians show upin the middle of the night, three
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in the morning, they're alone.There's danger. There is inherent danger when
you're dealing with people like Bruce Gaylord, the homeless man that I first mentioned.
He said, I'm just a personwho has Schitzo effective disorder and mental
illness. Do you want that aroundyour employees, or your customers or your
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business. No. I would thinkthat the beautiful thing about being homeless in
the first place was that you canmove anytime you want. Right if a
place isn't to your liking, wellgo somewhere else. There are plenty of
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homeless encampments in California. It's becominga state of homeless encampments because nobody can
afford the real estate, and everybodywho can is moving out. Soon the
whole state will be yours. You'llhave no commerce, no way to better
your life, no one there tohelp you better your life, and and
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piles of feces because you don't cleanup after yourselves. It's a great thing
about being homeless is anytime you wantto, you can pick up in stakes
and move because you don't have ahome. Jeez. I have compassion for
people, I really do, butthis is He also said the company was
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unable to produce police reports to supplytheir claim that the homeless people at the
encampment had been bad neighbors. Well, again, to be a neighbor,
you have to actually have a home. This society is just absolutely collapsing right
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before our very eyes, because numberone, there are places like California generally
as a state, that don't haveany answers and just encourage the behavior.
Two, there are no places forpeople who have serious and real mental illness
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to go. Got to figure itout. Coming up on five point forty
eight at fifty five KRC the talkstation, what happened, Dan. We
get some spinny showers this morning,and isolated storms are possible, especially early
part of the day. Then weclear out, clouds, decrease, a
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high in the middle eighties, andit looks like it's going to be just
a wonderful Father's Day weekend to havelots of sunshine, low humidity tomorrow,
a little bit more mugginess on Sundayaccording to Big Forecasts. It is sixty
eight now at fifty five KRC thetalk station. A check on the roads
(33:57):
from the UCL Traffic Center of theUniversities acin any Cancer Center is the region's
first and only provider of specialized primarycare services for cancer patients and survivors called
five one three, five eight fiveu SEC see North Bend seventy five is
closed. That's due to an accident. Just as you're coming out of downtown
above seventh Street, traffic is backingup across the Brand. Spence crews are
(34:19):
also working with a wreck on eastboundseventy four near Harrison right bolt. They're
on the left hand side. ChuckIngbramin fifty five K see the talk station
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Stars and Strives forever, but especiallyon flag Day. The great John Phillips,
Susan and then not so great Gary, Jeff Walker with you and for
Brian Thomas today five point fifty two. Just one more thing about about homeless.
Anytime you have and someone else doesn'thave, and it should really be
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up to you. It shouldn't beforced upon you. You should be willing
to We're all God's children, andI understand that they're before the but for
the grace of God go I.But these people, many of them,
have numerous opportunities and chances to bettertheir lives, and they just decide not
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to or find themselves incapable of it, and then then they're in this situation.
But you can't blame a business oran actual home owner for not wanting
to have a bullet hole in theside of your house or your business because
(35:55):
there was illegal activity going on inthe homeless encampment next door to you.
I would be playing some music too, And it's not like they were out
there with a bulldozer dismantling their tentsor whatever they had, their possessions that
they had on the street. Itwasn't like that all they were doing was
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playing music. Oh well, there'sbeen a stay out there, and we'll
see where it goes. But I'vealways thought that, you know, I
think the free thing, that thegreat thing about being free to be homeless,
is that you can pick up andgo anywhere at any time. This
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guy, I've found out later inthe story is apparently in a wheelchair,
So maybe though perhaps this is theonly handy capable accessible homeless encampment in San
Rafael. Perhaps all right, justto we have Rick Green, who I
(37:00):
said, does wonderful work God's workwith the homeless, that's what he was
called to do. Will be talkingto him about Father's Day, which of
course, is Sunday and about aspecial trip he's taking with his son,
and also the movie of his life, which is currently in process of being
(37:21):
made, which by the way,producer Joe Strecker is starring in, well,
not starring. He has his role, well a small, a bit
part. Yeah. Oh, he'sgot a line in the movie. He's
unpaid, more like an extra,but he's in the movie. I always
(37:49):
thought that my friend Joe had Hollywoodpotential superstar. I mean, in the
winter, just waiting in the wings. He's finally got his time on camera.
Watch out Tom Cruise. We'll askRick about that too when we continue.
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It's five point fifty five at fiftyfive KRC the talk station. I
don't care about anybody else. It'swhat motivates your vote there, and they're
trying to destroy or fifty five KRCthe talk station getting quality employees to film
news on the way to work andall day in fault checking throughout the day.
(38:36):
Fifty five KRC the talk station.It's six oh six on a sun
It feels like a Saturday morning becauseI'm usually talking to this guy on a
Saturday morning, but it's Friday morning, and Rick Green is here, a
lot of I'm going it Shine shit, a lot of I'm it sh miss
(39:05):
lot of mine, I'm it ShineIt Shine Shine, the Ukridge Boys,
and this little light of Mine.It's our theme song on Saturday mornings,
when brother Rick Green calls me fromSpearworks Cincinnati and gives us a Bible verse
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every Saturday, and has been doingso for quite a while now. I
first had a chance to meet RickGreen in the studio here at fifty five
KRC. I was filling in forBrian and Joe st Record said you want
this guy in the show. He'sgreat, He's got a fantastic story,
and he's just a really, reallygreat guy. And I said, yeah,
(39:50):
sure. And ever since Rick Greenand I have been friends, pals,
brothers, and it's great to havehim with us today on the verge
of Father's Day, and Rick hasa pretty special Father's Day weekend. We'll
talk about the Rick first, goodmorning, and thank you for all of
(40:10):
your prayers. Rick always starts ourexcerpts on Saturday telling me that he's been
praying for me and all of mylisteners, and I believe that he does
that, and I'm so thankful.So Rick, how are you. Hey,
good morning, Gary to now wokeup praying for you, your listeners,
Brian Thomas and his listeners, andthe world altogether. Gary. We
(40:34):
need to know God loves us rightwhere we are, So again, remind
people what you do with the homelesscommunity in Cincinnati and have been doing your
ministry. Yeah, by the graceof God is six years this month.
God told me to see the homeless. So I make thirty to sixty back
(40:54):
once. It is every Saturday,and I go on North Side and I
hand them out and I think Iget more out of it than the people
do. Yeah, really, Iwould. I would bet that's that's definitely
a blessing, knowing that you're sharingGod's love through food. Rick, Father's
(41:15):
Day, that song that we justkind of picked as a theme song you
said was your father's one of yourfather's favorite songs. Can you tell me
anything about that? Yeah, yougive me chills every time you play it.
I got chills right now because Imiss him. I love him.
(41:36):
After Jesus, My father was mybest friend, and that was his song,
and I had to make sure thatthey sung it live at his homegoing
because I know that he's not dead. He's just transend. I know he's
alive and well. You had someserious, serious things going on as you
(41:57):
were growing up, and you neverblame your parents or any situations for where
you wound up in life before Godpicked you up off that prison cell floor
and created a new creature that isRick Green we see today. But tell
me a little bit about your father. What do you remember about about your
(42:20):
earthly father? Rick the hardest workingman I ever met my life. With
eleven kids and me being the baby, you know, he was a real
man. She stayed at home.I mean, he took care of mom
and all the kids as best hecould. Garrett. We were poor.
(42:40):
I near the lot of Blogonney,a lot of white capitals. But now
looking back, I thank God forthat. He did the best he could
with what he had, you know. And of course the kids were stuck
at home with Mom, and thatwas a different story because she was just
a mean, better evil warning andI was just trying to survive. And
(43:00):
I couldn't wait for Daddy to gethome from work. It's not wait till
your father's your father gets home,it's I can't wait till my father gets
home. Right. A lot ofkids, right, about that, Gary,
a lot of kids. Then Isaw the jealousy in her eye,
Gary when I would run the daddyand I had to run to her all
(43:20):
day. It's hard to run tosomebody that belittle you and push you away
and dulls you all day. It'sjust hard to run them. Yeah,
no doubt. So your father wasa good influence in your life. There
were so many kids, as youknow, Rick, who do not have
a father figure in their household today, and that's a great problem in America.
(43:45):
We have more and more single parenthomes where and it's usually a mom
who was trying to fill both rolesand take care of those things. And
they're a myriad of reasons why thishas happened in our society, but the
biggest one is is that in manycases, it became more profitable for the
(44:07):
father to be out of the houseand out of the picture. And it's
a sad thing about today's society.You grew up in a different home in
a different time, but you know, Rick, what I'm talking about.
In today's world in America, thereare a lot of kids who do not
have a father in the home,and it's not good for the family.
(44:30):
It's not good for the kids.It's not good for anybody. Don't you
agree. Oh yeah, it's sad, Gary, because I don't know what
it's like to grow up without afather. But Gary, it breaks my
heart because I have four older boysthat grew without a father because I told
I chose or I was an alcoholover them. And I was telling somebody
(44:52):
yesterday, I got three kids athome that's never been without me. I
got four kids that never knew me. And I'm ashamed to say that,
and I'll probably be ashamed until Idie. I just don't know how to
fix it. I pray for themseven days a week, and I believe
God came in anything. I don'tknow how to fix it myself because they're
(45:14):
grown man now, right exactly.So, Uh, you've got a big
trip coming up. And before wetalk about your big trip, and I
know you've got to work today,so I'm not going to keep you too
long. But before we talk aboutyour big trip, let's talk about Joe
Strucker for a minute. Who isUH is in your movie? I understand,
(45:39):
yes he is. I love thatguy. I love both of you
guys. We all three to click. The first time we met and Joe
does an awesome job as a lawyer. Wait team say him in the courtroom,
Gary, Oh he hit it good, he really did. He played
he plays your lawyer in the movie. Well, I don't know how Grid,
I don't know how good he did. I want to I was gonna
(46:00):
say the character he's playing wasn't necessarilya good lawyer since you did go to
prison. Oh my god, I'mnot gonna put that on Joe. He
did an excellent job. But healso made mentioned this morning, Rick that
he didn't get paid. I said, well, Joe, even a bad
(46:22):
lawyer gets paid. You know what, you're everybody on line nobody got paid.
I know, I know, AndI was. You offered a chance
for me to be in the movieas the judge that sends you to prison,
but I couldn't make the filming schedule. Yeah, we just couldn't line
(46:43):
it up. So, uh mycousin Billy, the military guy in the
family, the one that did thepodcast, he wound up being the judge.
All right. Fantastic fantastic And bythe way, you can also if
you if you go on the RickGreen channel on YouTube that's g R E
(47:04):
E N E Rick Green on YouTubelook for the butt God Podcast. They're
just audio podcast, but we've donea six or seven of them, and
I think they're really good. Theyare people's testimony of how they came to
know Jesus Christ and what God hasdone in their lives. And it's really
been edifying for me to be apart of it. And we'll do some
(47:27):
more after we get through this month. I hope and I pray, But
rick can you hang on for justa few more minutes or do you need
to go? If you need togo, It's fine, Oh no,
I'm good. I'm good. Ican hang on, all right, all
right, hang on through this segmentand we'll talk about your trip you're taking
on Father's Day with your son,Ricky. It's six fifteen at fifty five
(47:49):
KRC the talk station. Isolated showersas you're waking up and getting out this
morning, but those will eventually disappearas we get into the heart of the
day and some sunshine before we're doneon this Friday with a high around eighty
six. Tomorrow mostly sunny, lowhumidity, a high of eighty five wow,
and Father's Day Sunday mostly sunnay,rising humidity and the High approaching like
(48:14):
ninety three degrees, So enjoy thenext couple of days. It's going to
be really, really pleasant. Sixtyeight right now. And here's Chuck Ingram
with a check on the roads fromthe ucl Traffic Center. The University of
Cincinnati Cancer Center is the region's firstand only provider of specialized primary care services
for cancer patients and survivors. Callfive one three five eighty five. Uc
(48:37):
CEC Highway traffic is in pretty goodshape, with one exception that's northbound seventy
five shut down due to an accidentcoming out of downtown near Seventh Street.
That traffic now backing up into thecut in the hill for an extra twenty
minutes just to get into downtown andtake eastbound Fort Washington Way. Chuck Ingram
(48:57):
on fifty five KOC the talk station, and it's six nineteen, Good morning,
PGIF and all of that. GaryJeff with Rick Green from Spirit Work
Cincinnati, and we were talking aboutthe movie Rick, and you're doing some
things to work on that movie,and it takes you out of town to
(49:19):
the West coast. Tell me aboutyour trip that you're taking Sunday morning.
Yeah, my son Ricky will betwenty one on Monday, and he insisted
that he turned twenty one in Laand I try my best to make this
happened for him, and by thegrace, guy, he's going to get
his birthday wish. Well, Imean, are you going to be doing
(49:43):
some work on the movie out thereor not? Well? Yeah, actually
Covin Eddie has This, who wasthe drummer of Blessing Union Assault, will
be in his studio and I getto watch him work on some original scores
for the movie. If you knowEddie, he ups original music. Oh
that's great, that's fantastic. Soyou are doing some work on the on
(50:06):
the movie with the music in thisstudio out in La. Now, is
this Ricky, your son's first tripon a plane or first trip to LA
or what? Explain this is?This is pretty exciting. Yeah, it's
a first trip to LA and he'sthe one to go there his whole life.
And you know, like shif didn'tline up and this time it did.
(50:29):
And I said, man, I'mjust happy he missed nowing for like
a month. I just cannot waitfor Sunday. I mean, what a
what a great trip for Father's Dayand his birthday You've got to be just
smiling yourself from ear to ear overthis this opportunity. Rick. Oh yeah,
(50:50):
I'm praying God that we got threeor four family members out there.
And they're like, Rick, justtake a car, you could stay with
us. I mean it helps youhave family in the on your visiting.
Like, thank you Jesus. Theysaid, you so much money. Well,
yeah, I've kind of made apact with my wife, not because
I'm that cheap, but I justdon't have the cash either. Rick.
(51:14):
We've decided that whenever we go onvacation, we're going to go somewhere where
there's family and a free place tostay. It's yeah, yeah, I
mean it's shameful. I guess.I don't know. I feel kind of
kind of bad about it. Butwhen they offer, like last year on
Labor Day weekend, we got outof town and took our three day We
(51:36):
got a three and a half dayvacation all of last year, and we
got to go to a near WestPond, Florida, Jupiter, Florida and
stay with my brother and brother andhis wife. They have like a My
brother and his wife sold their houseand they've got a fifty three foot yacht
that they live on and we gotto stay on the boat. We got
(51:57):
to stay for free on the boatfor three days and it was great.
The year before that, we wentto Mount Pleasant, Iowa, where I
was born, and stayed with mycousin and his family for the time we
were there. So I'm trying toplan vacations the same way you're talking about
with people that you know are there. And they got a little help with
(52:17):
the with the room, if notthe board, you know what I mean.
Hey, don't so bad, girl. I'm praising God because I call
cousin Charles in La and after tall, me and Ricky be out there.
We're gonna rent a room from ninedays. She said, coug you can
come ire. You can't rent aroom, you stay here. Well,
thanks, cuz, Yeah, nodoubt. It's good to have family.
(52:39):
It's good to have family, andit's good to have God in your life.
Uh, this is not your firsttrip out to the West coast,
as you famously have told us before, you made a trip a mission of
mercy that God told you to maketo donate a kidney. Yeah, that
(52:59):
would they for twenty nine, twentyfourteen, and we land in lax and
Marvin Gay the Third. His wifeWendy was crying and I said, Wendy,
why are you crying? And shesaid, Rick there was seven people
before you to donate Marvin and Kidney, but nobody matched. I said,
(53:20):
Wendy, they couldn't. God toldme I was the match, and that's
how the whole thing started. Gary, it's all a good's story. What
was the last time you have youhad any communications with Marvin Gay the third?
Recently? Actually we text yesterday.All right, are you are now?
He is? He still living onthe West Coast. Yeah, he
(53:43):
don't stay too far from Eddie.One of them rich neighborhood think called Brentwood.
Well, how cool our neighborhood Icouldn't afford living. Oh yeah,
how cool would it? Are you? Have you have any plans to visit
him while you're out there? Actuallyhe's out of the concert todes A Lia
Okay, all right, he's onsome business trip to the lie. Well.
(54:07):
I pray that you have a safetrip with your son. On Father's
Day. Rick Green and Ricky Greenon the verge of his twenty first birthday
going to La together on a father'sson trip. I just think that's that's
marvelous. That is that is whatwhat we call God stuff. Rick.
Amen. Amen, Well listen,have a blessed day, and thank you
(54:29):
for a blessing us with some timethis morning. All right, Hey Gary,
can I leave you guys with this? I pray to God that we
could love God and love people andnot worry about the rest. That's my
prayer. Amen. Sure, sure, Gary, you guys have a blessed
day. Sure make it a lotsimpler. It's a six twenty five at
(54:51):
fifty five KRC, the talk station. Your morning espresso starts right here.
It's the Sean Hannity Morning. Ijust watched this president, and all I
feel is a sense of embarrassment forthe country. It's really sad and really
unnecessary. Photo shows Joe Biden sniffingthe hair of Italy's prime minister. You
(55:15):
know this, This has gotten precipitously, dramatically and obviously worse. He's in
a perpetual state of confusion. Thatwas on pull display on this G seven
trip. He displayed it also inNormandy when he was in France and Washington.
Insiders reporting that the president is reallyperforming poorly in meetings and this cognitive
(55:36):
impairment is getting worse and worse andworse. And what are the Democrats going
to do? They just had apull come out that shows that Kamala harris
Are approval rating is lower than JoeBiden's. The Sean Hannity Show from Coast
to Coast later today, more inflationand recession. Did you know that experts
(55:58):
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it today. You can't wait later. Decreasing clouds as we move on through
the day, and sunshine even bylate this afternoon and evening. I have
eighty six reversed that it's sixty eightright now at fifty five KRC, the
(57:07):
talk station from the UCL Traffic Center. The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center is
the region's first and only provider ofspecialized primary care services for cancer patients and
survivors. Called five one three fiveeighty five u c CC. A little
bit of good news. Northbound seventyfive. The lanes coming out of northern
Kentucky and across the bridge are nowopen. Left hand side of the highway.
(57:30):
The ramp from eastbound Fort Washington Wayand Sixth Street, those are still
blocked off because of the earlier accident. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC,
the talk station saluting Old Glory onFlag Day twenty twenty four. This was
(58:20):
a day in seventeen seventy seven thatthe Continental Congress authorized the original version of
the American flag, and we celebratethe Stars and stripes today for that reason.
It's six point thirty Gary, JeffWalker. This is a patriotic guy
I know, and he's not necessarilyallowed to be patriotic all the time on
(58:42):
the radio, but he's a patrioticguy. I know this for a fact.
And he's also our tech expert,our guru. I call him the
mad Hatter, which I think otherpeople have now stolen from me as a
moniker for him, but that's allright. He is as ever ever man
on TV and on radio, andhe's here with us for a Tech Friday.
(59:04):
Dave Hatter, Good morning, GoodGary Jeff. How are you today?
You know what I'm kicking. It'sbeen a busy week though. Italian
Fest started last night, so Iwas up on stage and doing the MC
stuff that they've allowed me to dosince twenty ten, and then had to
immediately cram some sausage down my throat, go to sleep and get up at
(59:24):
three point thirty. And today I'mworking the bar after this and more Italian
Fest tonight. So it's a busyweek, but it's a good one.
How are you? Yeah? Prettygood? That sounds fun? Yeah,
weus who doesn't like Italian food.You know what I mean, The stuff's
just good. Yes, when it'sgood, it's very good. You're right.
Anyway, let's get to the subjectat hand, David. First off,
(59:49):
cyber attacks, as we know,and as you point out on a
routine basis, are increasing and surging. Ransomware attacks surging. They didn't tent
twenty three. In the healthcare industry, attacks nearly doubled from twenty twenty two.
There are actually some teams from Cincinnatiwho might be part of the solution
in solving people's issues with cyber attacks. Please explain this if you would.
(01:00:15):
Yeah, you know, Gary,jeffis as we've discussed so many times,
and you touched on here briefly withsome of the stats leaning into this.
Ransomware attacks in particular can be totallydevastating. There have been several hospital chains
that have been attacked recently. Infact, you know there's a big chain
in England that was down for severaldays. And that's one of the things
(01:00:37):
I think people often overlook if theydon't follow this closely or don't work in
the business. Is sadly because theentire world is now digital, or at
least you know, our economy isall digital if you can launch some sort
of ransomware attack. In particular,just a reminder for folks, ransomware is
nothing more than software that gets droppedinto your environment. It kind of surreptitiously
(01:00:59):
runs in the background encrypting your data. And you know, as that data
gets encrypted, then the systems don't. They either don't operate correctly, or
it won't operate at all because thedata can't be read. It can be
really devastating. You know, there'sno guarantee even if you pay the ransom
that you're going to be able todecrypt your data. And when you start
to shut down real critical, realworld infrastructure like a hospital, you know,
(01:01:24):
this goes beyond okay, well,this business lost money. This this
business paid to ransom It has realworld impacts on the rest of us.
And that's why this stuff is increasinglyimportant. So for a long time,
if you worked in the business,you've heard about the skills gap, especially
in cybersecurity, where there just aren'tenough people with the right skills to do
(01:01:44):
these jobs. And it's good tosee that now. Rather than just wait
for students to graduate from high schooland then go off to college and potentially
take the courses they would need todo this. There's a lot of options
out there, and several high schoolsnow in this particular story, they're talking
about a new program that's going tostart out at Seven Hills School. Yes,
(01:02:06):
but I know, I know Lakotahas had a program and other different
programs. Lakota has had a programfor some time. I know Mason City
schools are starting a program like thisbecause we've had some minor involvement in just
talking about what it would look like. You know, all the local community
colleges around here have offerings like this. But it's good to see even at
(01:02:28):
the high school level because you know, one of the one of the one
of the problems with the current educationaltrack is, you know, if you
don't start learning about this stuff inhigh school and see it as a viable
career option, I think a lotof people get bad advice. They think
you have to get a four yeardegree in computer science or something to do
this, and you really don't anddo these programs again, like Lakota or
(01:02:50):
Seven Hills or Mason, and Ithink there are some other high schools looking
to start up these types of programs. You know, you can get a
little bit of a taste of well, what does this mean, what would
it look like to work in thefeel what kind of opportunities are there,
and more importantly, learn some handson skills and some of these some of
these programs. Again, I'm themost familiar with what they're doing the Lakota
because I've experienced some of their studentsout and about. Some of them have
(01:03:13):
showed up at some of the local, you know it, professional type organizations
like SINPA or ISSC or that kindof thing conferences. It's pretty impressive what
they're learning, what they're capable ofdoing. So, you know, I
would encourage you know, anyone thathas kids or grandkids out there and they
might be interested in what could bea very you know, fast paced,
(01:03:37):
growing and lucrative career. This isyou know, something worth looking into.
And we need more of these peoplebecause, you know, the society increasingly
depends on technology and we need peoplethat know how to protect it, not
only from foreign adversaries, but youknow, insider threats are just people making
mistakes. It's amazing to me thatthere aren't more people doing this right now.
(01:04:01):
The way the technology has moved.David and You're right. Are there
are kids that are like eleven ortwelve that are more hip to the technology
than I am, So you're rightabout that. I think part of the
problem is trying to even find thepeople who can do to education, because
I think there's a big disconnect.If you have the capability and the knowledge
(01:04:24):
to teach this stuff, you couldpotentially make a lot more money in the
private sector than you could, youknow, working at a high school.
And I think that's part of theissue, is trying to figure out how
to get the people who have theknowledge and the capabilities to teach it to
go teach it at this level.But it's I'm glad to see it.
I think it's important. We needmore of it out there, and I
mean, it's an amazing opportunity forthe kids. Well, I mean,
(01:04:46):
I know all u IT nerds,professional nerds and stuff are very compassionate and
altruistic, and you'll just volunteer yourtime to go teach. You're going to
teach Dave, Well, you know, Gary, Jeff I actually have been
a lot long term instructor at CincinnatiState. I don't do it for free,
and you know, it's it's agood opportunity though. I'm glad to
(01:05:09):
see this, and we need moreof this kind of thing. We need
to get back to more of atrade school apprenticeship type program, yeah,
where people can get these or otherskills and get into the workforce rather than
spend an enormous amount of time andmoney earning a four year degree. It's
probably not all that useful anyway.Yeah, really, it's a good,
good step in right direction. Andyou know, and that way we won't
(01:05:30):
be responsible for your college loan thatyou can't pay. Yeah, there you
go, Soda. Kudos to SevenHills, Mason Lakota, and anyone else
out there that's pursuing this path.I think it's definitely a great way to
get kids engaged in this and getthem on the path to what could be
a great and frankly a necessary andimportant career. Dave Hatter and a Tech
(01:05:50):
Friday will take a break and comeback six thirty seven at fifty five KRCV
talk station. I mean, itwill chancefer some spotty isolated showers between now
and say noon early afternoon, thenwe clear out a high of eighty six
this afternoon, completely clear overnight tonight. Tomorrow Morning's low sixty one for Saturday,
(01:06:15):
low humidity, mostly sunny skies andeighty five and Sunday for Father's Day,
mostly sunny, rising humidity in ahigh round ninety three. It's sixty
eight. Now it's fifty five KRCDtalk station. Here's Chuck Ingram from the
UCL Traffic Center. The University isSincienti Cancer Center is the region's first and
only provider of specialized primary care servicesfor cancer patients and survivors, called five
(01:06:39):
one three, five eighty five use CZ. A little bit of good
news. Northbound seventy five. Thelanes coming out of Northern Kentucky and across
the bridge are now open left handside of the highway. The ramp from
eastbound Fort Washington Way and sixth Street, those are still blocked off because of
the earlier accident. Chuck Ingram onfifty five KR see the talk station.
(01:07:09):
Rushing back into the conversation with DaveHaddard on a Friday morning tech talk on
fifty five KRS. It's six fortyone Gary, Jeff and for Brian and
Dave up next. I have heardfor years that once it's out there,
once it's in the digital space,it's there forever, but that's not necessarily
(01:07:32):
true. Something called link rot anddigital decay. On government news other web
pages, thirty eight percent of webpages from twenty thirteen, eleven years ago
are no longer accessible. So whatabout that thing we were all as told,
once it's out there, it's alwaysout there. Well, I thought
(01:07:53):
this was an interesting bit of researchfrom Pew, and I think you have
to look at it from two differentperspectives. Once it's out there, it
certainly has the potential to last foreverbecause storage is so cheap, and when
they use terms like link rot anddigital decay, my take on that is
(01:08:14):
we're talking about things just breaking throughentropy. Companies going out of business.
You know, one company gets soldto another and they decide to discontinue some
operation or something, so they shutthings down. Now, that doesn't mean
your data is not still there somewhere. It could be in the dark web,
could be just on a hard disksomewhere. One of the most interesting
things that I think people who don'twork in the business may not be aware
(01:08:39):
of is anytime you hear in thisI'm kind of I'll come back to this
topic, but anytime you hear abusiness say, oh, well, we've
anonymized your data, and you know, you can't really tell who the original
creators of that data were. Ijust call bs on that. There's numerous
studies out there, including one fromMIT, where they've gone out and done
(01:09:00):
things like dumpster dive and bought harddisks from used computer stores or off eBay
and been able to prove that withas little as three or four pieces of
information, they can de anonymize thatdata and figure out, you know,
who it actually is referring to.So when you hear it's out there forever,
to some extent, that's true,or at least it could be,
because storage space is so cheap,and it's so easy to get incredible amounts
(01:09:25):
of storage for little amounts of money, and companies are often incentivized to store
as much data as possible. NotThe good news on that front, Gary
Jeff is we're now up to eighteenstates that have passed some sort of consumer
data privacy law, including Kentucky inthis last session, which is which is
good news. We should talk aboutthat sometime. It's not perfect, but
it's a huge step in the rightdirection. But what this is referring to
(01:09:46):
is, again you know, somecompany as a website, they get sold,
they go out to business, whatever, and things just sort of die
through entropy. It's not really likean worlwell memory whole thing where it's being
destroyed on purpose. But it pointsout an interesting problem with as our society
becomes more digital, like we discussedin the last segment, you know,
(01:10:08):
and you don't have paper records likeyou used to, it is entirely possible
for you know, content to justget lost because again, company goes out
of business and whatever they had ontheir blog, their website, whatever,
it just eventually goes away. Nowthere is an interesting website out there,
and it can often be a greatresource if you do have like a digital
(01:10:29):
decay situation where a company is goneand they had content that was interesting to
you and you can't find anymore.The Internet archive a lot of times you
can find things there because it's justkind of crawling the Internet and capturing data.
You can often like find the previousstate of a website from ten years
ago or something. But it doespoint out an interesting problem that over time,
(01:10:50):
you know, stuff does get lost, and unlike in the old world
of paper, something that used tobe there might be gone at some future
points, simply because whoever was fundingit, for whatever reason, decides not
to fund it anymore. No see, I thought when I set the fire
to destroy my permanent record, itwas gone, And now you're telling me
(01:11:12):
that it still. It may existsomewhere in the dark web, or maybe
maybe if I'm lucky, it willalso disappear from digital could be. I
mean, I actually ran into thisyesterday where someone sent a link to a
news story about about Saudi Arabia gettingout of the petro dollar situation, which
I don't know why that's not gettingthe coverage it deserves. To me,
(01:11:33):
that's Oh, it's a huge,major, major potential issue. You want
to talk about the US economy takinga swan dive. It's not good for
sure. But interestingly enough, someoneposted it on LinkedIn. I read the
article, I wanted to share itwith someone. I went back to the
person that posted it on LinkedIn,clicked the link, and it no longer
(01:11:56):
worked. So, I mean,that's a perfect example of what this Pew
research is referring to. You know, for whatever reason, and this wasn't
the link itself, the person posted, you know, the website that it
pointed to for whatever reason, removedthat content or or change something so that
the link no longer work. AndI mean, I'm sure you and every
one of the listeners out there hasbeen in the situation where you try to
(01:12:18):
find something or someone emailed you somethingand you go back to it. Yeah,
the link no longer works. I'vehad that happen numerous times. Dave
Hatter, Let's take a quick breakand come back with one more segment.
We're talking about devices you wear thatare connected to the Internet and how your
(01:12:40):
brain waves are being captured. Perhapssix forty seven at fifty five KOC the
talk station artradio problem. All right, brain now, not rain later,
in fact, even some sunshine bythe time we get into later this afternoon,
early this evening, eighty six fora high temp. It's sixty eight
(01:13:01):
now, and let's check traffic fromthe UCL Traffic Center. The University of
Cincinnati Cancer Center is the region's firstand only provider of specialized primary care services
for cancer patients and survivors. Calledfive one three, five eight five UCECCE
northbound seventy five better through the cutin the hill, but slows out of
downtown to the accident above the seventhStreet ramp that has only the lept two
(01:13:27):
lanes open and the ramp from sixthStreet to northbound seventy five remains blocked.
Chuck Ingram on fifty five K seethe talk station Dave the Mad Hatter.
Friday Tech talk continues on the MorningShow and Dave, this story is out
of Australia, but it's applicable foranybody who has got a fit bit or
(01:13:50):
a smart watch, or maybe asthey continue to develop the technology, the
neuro technology. Oh that's already outthere too as a small extent with like
headbands and whatever that measure your brainwaves. And the headline of the story
is wearable vices can now harvest ourbrain data. And this is again something
(01:14:14):
that I am just simply not goingto do. If I don't need a
fit bit. If I'm out andI decide to run, I can take
my forefinger and my middle finger ontomy wrist and I can get my pulse.
You know, my wife has ablood pressure cuff at home if I
need to measure my blood pressure,and I just I don't need it,
(01:14:35):
and I don't need anything on mybody attached to any internet anywhere. Well,
Gary, Jeff I'm sure it's notgoing to shock you when I say,
yeah, there's not a chance.No, it doesn't shock me at
all. But I also got togive the hat tip to Joe. How
about that rock? Well, somebody'salways watching me home there, I mean,
(01:14:58):
perfect, perfect seguent. That's whyit was the best. But you
know, you and I have discussed, and Brian and I have discussed for
some time all these so called smartdevices. They're just basically a privacy and
security dumpster fire. And when youthink about the business model that drives these
things, and in many cases youget the device for free or at some
(01:15:19):
nominal cost, way less than itwould normally cost, because your data is
what drives their business model. Right, And I'll tell you I used to
have a fitbit, and once theywere bought by Google. Since I'm not
a fan of Google and their surveillancecapital as a business model, I stop
using the fitbit. You know,it's fun, it's funny. Hold on
just for a second, because youtalked about not being a fan of Google.
(01:15:44):
On my phone, on my iPhone, I'll hit Safari because I'm searching
for something and the Google thing automaticallypops up. Stay signed in with Google.
No, I opt out every singletime. But anyway, please continue,
And that's what you should do,because that cuts off the flow of
data to them. But you know, when you look at these so called
smart devices, the Internet of thingsand the fact that they're capturing enormous amounts
(01:16:10):
of often very sensitive data, youknow, in and of itself, they're
risky for a variety of reasons thatagain I've talked about ad nauseum, but
now we're going to take medical devices. And I would point out to people
Mozilla, the people that make theFirefox browser, have a great website called
Privacy Not Included, where they ratethis sort of stuff and through the lens
of you know, privacy and it'sso it's a great website. I highly
(01:16:33):
recommend it. I tell people togo there all the time and check it
out. You know, I postthis stuff on Twitter and LinkedIn all the
time. And when you look atthe kind of information that's already been released
about things like period tracking apps forwomen, they've been you know, all
kinds of data and security problems withthese things. The idea that you're going
(01:16:53):
to strap something on your head,and Apple recently had a patent for ear
pods that I could reach your brainwaves. That's in theory. It hasn't
been released. There's a patent forit out there, you can go see
it. You know. I'm notgoing to use any device that is not,
you know, run by medical professionals, controlled in a setting where that
(01:17:15):
trusted medical professionals. It's why don'tuse things like twenty three and meters or
colow Guard or any of that sortof stuff. Yep, you know,
can you trust the company to dothe right thing with your data? You
know, in some instances you needmedical treatment, you go to the local
hospitality you trust. That's one thing. But I'm not going to give a
private, for profit company who isusing a surveillance capitalism model to strap some
(01:17:38):
kind of thing on my head thatcan read my brainways and send them that
data. It's just completely insane,and I honestly it's almost unfathomable to me
that anyone would think that that isa good idea. Yeah, some people
making it or the people using it. Well, the last time that I
had an actual EEG done at thehospital, they found out that I actually
(01:17:58):
didn't have any brain activity at all. So I'm not as concerned about that
I might have the same problem.There's other things that may be involved in
and just this internal snooping man,and it's just can't we just have some
autonomy. Can't we just have somesome things that are private and less and
(01:18:18):
less seems to be the answer ornot. Not really, there's no privacy
anymore. We are at a placefor your privacy is definitely decreasing. Although
I will say I think more andmore people are waking up to this stuff,
and I mean it's credit to organizationslike the Plum Foundation here in Cincinnati,
(01:18:39):
whose whole purpose is to try toraise awareness about privacy and why it's
important, on what you can doto try to reclaim it, and organizations
like EPIC and EFF and others outthere who are trying to help raise awareness
about this and why it's important.And the again, I think the message
is getting out. I think peopleare coming around. You're seeing dates past
(01:19:00):
these privacy laws. So we hada long way to go, for sure,
and these sorts of devices are certainlyheaded in the wrong direction. But
you know, I appreciate the opportuneto try to help people realize, yes,
you should be entitled to privacy andall of these IoT devices, especially
anything medical is headed in the wrongdirection. Dave head asol was a pleasure,
(01:19:20):
my friend. Thank you so muchfor your time, my pleasure,
Gary Jeff, have a great day, all right, six fifty six at
fifty five krc the talk station.You're just minutes away from refreshing your news
feed at the top of the hour. I have never seen anything like this
exclusively fifty five krs the talk station. This your morning news, gets me
(01:19:44):
ready for the day and all dayinvolved and check in throughout the day fifty
five krs the talk station. Weare living through a calamitous and chaotic period
in America's story right now, andsecurity has never been more important. Personal
(01:20:04):
security, city security, campus security, subway security, and the police try
as the best they can to dothe job of keeping us safe from the
crazies and the leftist and the peoplewho want to destroy American society are overwhelmed
(01:20:30):
in many cases by the sheer numbersflash mob mentality that we have seen,
as particularly with the pro Hamas Islamicjie Hottist protests, which are not even
close to mostly peaceful protest or protectedFirst Amendment protests. They're anarchic and They're
(01:20:56):
meant basically to divide and conquer ourWestern society, and there are many people
behind it in many reasons why.And add that to the fact that we
have had unabated, unvetted illegal migrationinto this country with a nod and a
wink from the Joe Biden administration.That continues, and we have literally the
(01:21:23):
entire world coming here, and manyof them are people who want to tear
America down, commit terrorist acts,do any number of heinous things to the
average American you and I. Soare there any answers to this? Well,
we look to Dean Gallimis here.Began his career as a cop in
(01:21:46):
New York City Police Department, fiveyears on patrol and narcotics officer in the
Bronx, transferred to Rockland County SheriffNumber thirty nine's office Police Division, retired
from the Sheriff's Office Bureau of CriminalInvestigatation as a senior detective twenty years of
service, and then founded Global Securityand Investigative Services about fifteen sixteen years ago
(01:22:09):
in two thousand and eight, hasgrown that company into a multimillion dollar corporation
that operates in four states, andhe is our guest this morning, Dean
Glemas, Good morning, how areyou. I'm great, Thanks for having
me. Oh no, thanks formaking time with us early on a Friday
morning. So particularly the latest imagesthat we've seen, like, for example,
(01:22:31):
the subway takeover by the pro terroristprotesters, the pro Hamas saying all
Zionists get off the train, Wellyou've got a chance to get out or
else, and all the other nonsensethat in many cases it has been permitted
by pandering politicians to a very verysmall minority of their base who want to
(01:23:00):
see this and who are being fundedmostly I believe, by anti American globalists
like George Soros and the like.And the police just simply they're doing the
best job they can. But yousay, in New York City, in
the subway takeover, for example,they were just at a loss to compete
(01:23:23):
and combat this horde. So what'sthe answer, Well, I believe what's
going on is a perfect storm.Right. We have lowest police numbers in
New York in thirty years. Theyare horribly understaffed. We have handering politicians
(01:23:49):
like you said, who are whofor too long ignored all these protests and
poop pooed them and they've turned itto a real threat here. I mean,
imagine being a Jewish person and beingin that subway and the horror you
would feel being sur surrounded by peoplewho are calling for you to be killed
(01:24:10):
for threatening you. Yes, it'sit's in the United States in twenty twenty
four. We should all be ashamedof this. Well, I think we
all should be. But there aresome people who well, publicly they're they're
saying, oh, well, yes, we care about everyone, and anti
(01:24:31):
Semitism has no place, and YadA, YadA, YadA, But their actions
speak louder than their their words,don't they. Yeah, it's unfortunately,
it's been just lip service, youknow. It's these kinds of protests and
actions are like a cancer. Right, if you find out you have cancer,
you go get it removed, right, You're eradicated as soon as possible.
(01:24:54):
You don't let it fester. Andthese and these protests have been allowed
to fester by politicians and by youknow, university administrators and there. What
has happened? Right, what dowe have? We have the lowest police
numbers in thirty years, and basicallyevery police department across the United States,
(01:25:15):
we have these protests going on wehave unfettered immigration into our country. All
of this is driving these protests tobecome more and more violent. Every week
we can see these these protests becomingmore absurd and more chaotic. And I
think the politicians were hoping that thesewould die down with the closings of universities
(01:25:40):
for the summer, and in factthey've only gotten worse and more egregious.
The NYPD is the finest organization,the law enforcementization in the country. I
mean, they are incredible, abunch of men and women. They know
what to do, they know howto handle this and and the NYPD has
a model that they can they canaddress any manpower. They don't. The
(01:26:04):
NYPD does not get easily overwhelmed.Uh. It's it's a city that was
built compact and dense, and there'sa lot of cops in a very small
area and they can call and mobileeye very rapidly to address any of these
protests quickly. The politicians have togive them take there, take the leash
(01:26:25):
off of them. Yeah, whenthey're when they're allowed to do it.
When they're when they're allowed to doit. A dina, I will tell
you one of I sat in frontof my television cheering the night that the
NYPD and that special unit went insidethat building at Columbia to get the idiots
out of there. That the waythey the swiftness and the efficiency that they
(01:26:50):
did that with it could have beenhandled about one hundred other ways that would
have went totally wrong. But pullingthem out and put them on But is
like in fifteen minutes, if they'reallowed, like you said, if the
handcuffs are taken off the police,if they're allowed to do their job.
It's kind of the same thing atthe at the southern border. If the
(01:27:12):
border agents are allowed to actually dotheir job and enforce the immigration laws that
are on the books, we gotwe got no illegal immigration problem. But
again, it's a politician's and somesome you know, local district attorneys who
want to encourage more chaos and arevolving door in the criminal justice system,
(01:27:35):
and you get what you're seeing inNew York. I think it's particularly poignant
Dean to point out that this isonly happening in America right now, primarily
in democratically in democrat controlled cities,not democratically, but democrat controlled cities and
blue cities and leftist cities that areagain dominated by Democrat politicians and policies New
(01:28:02):
York City. I mean Eric Adams, a former New York City cop right,
and he's a guy who knows betterand he has you know, in
most cases after it got bad,let you know, was ready in New
York situation with the Prohomas protesters deemmost of this was attributed I believe,
(01:28:26):
at least initially to these university administratorsand college presidents who just allowed it to
go on and you know, thinkingthat you know, we get to the
end of the school year, thiswill be this nonsense will be over and
they'll be on to the next thingby the time we reconvene. They were
wrong, as you mentioned, andlike a cancer, as you made that
(01:28:46):
analogy. This is now metastasized toall over New York City. But it's
going on in New York City,in Washington, d C. In Chicago,
in Los Angeles, all of theusual suspects. It does have a
political component to it, does itnot? Right? These protests are organized
(01:29:12):
by professional agitators, often in NewYork. I know in many instances,
people have been arrested in the morningat a protest and that evening at the
protest the Revolving Door in New Yorkdue to all these outlandish Bale reform acts.
You get arrested. It more,it's not even a slap on the
(01:29:33):
rest. So these people pose verylittle risk. Also, Letsia James in
her infinite wisdom joining the ACLU,and they really changed how the NYPD can
respond to these protests. It usedto be that you cannot be masked at
a protest. You know, thenthey try to overturn it under the guise
(01:29:54):
of COVID. Well, COVID,we will don't want to interfere with their
right free speech during times of anepidemic. But what are these guys doing.
They're using the COVID idea but towhere those kifahs, those Muslim jobs,
(01:30:15):
and they're doing it. You know, they're white kids, the're American
kids. They're using it simply toconceal their identity so they can say horrible,
outlandish things. You know. Theywent to the October seventh Memorial and
unfurled a long live October seventh Iknow Banner that that's the equivalent, just
in case people aren't paying attention ofunfolding a long lived September eleventh terrorist attack
(01:30:43):
at the nine to eleven Memorial.You know, it's just absolutely absurd that
more people are not just standing upand saying enough and we've got to do
something about this. And again there'sthere's there's never been a big, bigger
need for private security. And that'swhy we're my company comes in is you
know, these events need private securitybecause the police are just right now just
(01:31:05):
overwhelmed with these protests. What canif you're allowed to do it, and
you're hired to do it, whatcan Global Security and Investigation Services do to
assist. Well, we can definitelykeep we can definitely keep through crowd control,
we can, we can protect privateproperty. We can you know,
(01:31:25):
make make safe passage and egress areasfor for for attendees of events so they
don't have to be attacked and slappedand with bottles made to feel afraid.
You know, that's what this is. This is the campaign of intimidation.
Right, They're trying to silence,silence us. And you know there was
(01:31:46):
that old staying I'm going to probablystay it wrong at seven o'clock in the
morning. But you know all thatall that needs saffed and for evil to
triumph is for good men to standby and do nothing, and the lord
longer we stay silent because the vastmajority of people just think this is madness.
(01:32:08):
We can't be quiet anymore. Alot of time down in Florida.
Yeah, I'm sorry, No,eighty percent of Americans think this is nonsense
and wanted to stop. You spenda lot of time in Florida, you
said, I do, and thereare You're absolutely correct. Where this problem
is is democratically democrat controlled blue cities. But there are protests in Florida and
(01:32:30):
in Texas. Do you hear aboutthem anymore? No? You know why
because the police there handled it.They locked the people up, they stayed
in jail, and that's the endof it. That's all. We have
the model, we know what todo. We just have to have the
stomach to do it. Our politicianshave to not count cowtail. So these
fringe groups that are making us docrazy things and the police just let them
(01:32:54):
go do it. The NYPD willstop this protest within a week. If
people want to find out more aboutyour your company, Global Security and Investigation
Services, where would they go,Dean? They can go to our website
at www dot Global hyphen Security Servicesdot com all right, fantastic, thanks
(01:33:16):
for the insight and the experience.And I think just the casual observer.
Maybe I've never been in law enforcement, but to me, it's pretty obvious
what needs to be done. Itjust having the will to do it,
you know. And we talk aboutthe other problem in New York City.
I'm running late here, but theother problem with New York City is the
(01:33:39):
same mayor we were talking about.Eric Adams, you know, made such
a big show this pandering to welcomeall these illegals that have been let in
during the Biden administration into New YorkCity as a sanctuary city and then be
careful what you wish for. Nowhe's he Now he's complaining to the Biden
(01:34:00):
administration that they're not they're not enforcingor securing the border, even though he
was the one who was bringing outto welcome Matt. One quick last point.
The next three New York City PoliceAcademy classes have been canceled for budgetary
reasons because they had to reallocate thefunds to the homeless, the homeless migrant
(01:34:23):
situation. When you think about that, that's two thousand cops a police academy
class. I mean, people can'tget their hands. It's enough from New
York. How big the NYPD is. That's six thousand cops not on the
streets that they desperately need because ofthis migrant crisis in New York. Well,
thank god it's not Cincinnati, soI can tell you deed. Dean
(01:34:45):
Gilemmas, thank you so much foryour time this morning. I appreciate it.
Okay, thank you for having me. Great talking to you. You
bet seven one at fifty five KRC, the talk station our high Art.
This report is sponsored by Audible.Get immersed in you worlds and ideas with
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(01:35:06):
one easy app. There's more toimagine when you listen. Sign up for
a free trial at audible dot com. Oh, we've had some scattered showers
earlier this morning. Those are goingto be off and on isolated shower chances,
but as we get into late morningearly afternoon, they are gone gonzo
decreasing clouds. We went on throughthe day, some sunshine even by this
(01:35:30):
afternoon, to high of eighty sixsixty one tomorrow morning and eighty five and
beautiful on Saturday. It's sixty eight. Now it's fifty five KRCD talk station
near chuck Ingram from the UC HealthTramfic Center. The University of Cincinnati Cancer
Center is the region's first and onlyprovider as specialized primary care services for cancer
patients and survivors called five one threefive eighty five uce CEC crews continue to
(01:35:55):
work with the accident. Northbound seventyfive coming out of downtown. The left
to lane are open, right twolanes are blocked off thanks to the wreck
just above seventh Street. They're alsogoing to block off some of the ramps
to clear the semi that was involvedin that rent chuck Ingram about fifty five
KR see the talk station. It'sessential that Congress fund another ten thousand ICE
(01:36:16):
officers, and we're asking for thatso that we can eliminate MS thirteen and
root out the criminal cartels from ourcountry. Now we're getting them out anyway,
but would like to get them outa lot faster. And when you
see these towns and when you seethese thugs being thrown into the back of
a paddywagon, you just see himthrown in rough. I said, please
(01:36:38):
don't be too nice, like whenyou guys put somebody in the car and
you're protecting their head, you know, the way you put their hand or
like, don't hit their head andthey've just killed somebody. Don't hit their
head. I said, you cantake the hand away, Okay. God
bless Donald Trump. Happy birthday DonaldTrump. Today. Also on this June
(01:37:01):
fourteenth, seventeen seventy five, reallythe birth of the United States Army,
the Continental Army, forerunner of theUS Army created two years later, the
Second Continental Congress approved the design ofthe original American flag. Today, in
addition to being Donald J. Trump'sbirthday, is also Flag Day. And
(01:37:24):
we celebrate this great country of oursand let's do everything we can to preserve
it. And we kind of allknow what that means. It's not re
electing Democrats at seven twenty six theGreat Kate Smith America FLA and my lone
(01:38:02):
Sandy, and not the life ofthe line, from the ball, from
the mountains to the press, tothe oceans, white with warm gone less
(01:38:28):
form, maerical, my sweet,all from to the grasp to the old
white with farnless for mar Ah,sweet, my sweet. This is fifty
(01:39:36):
five KRC. Hello, I'm VictorGray and I'm Colin Hurst. We want
to invite you to listen to VictorGray Financial Services, Money and Retirement Show,
helping your forecast for today once again. After the showers this morning,
(01:39:56):
pretty nice weather ahead eighty six fora high temp and will even see some
sun before the day is over.Today clearing out completely over night. Sixty
one for the low. Tomorrow beautiful, low humidity, sunshine, a high
around eighty five on Saturday. ForFather's Day, We're looking a little bit
warmer, a little bit more humidity, but really not oppressive yet. A
(01:40:18):
high of ninety three for Father's Dayon Sunday. It is sixty eight now
at fifty five KRC the talk station. Here's trip from the UCL Traffic Center
of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Centeris the region's first and only provider specialized
primary care services for cancer patiency andsurvivors. Call five one three five eighty
(01:40:39):
five u SEC see northbound seventy fivecontinues slow out of downtown. What two
lines are open? Right? Twolines are blocked for an early morning accident.
They also had the ramp from sixthStreet to northbound seventy five blocked off
chuck Ingram on fifty five KRC thetalk station, Color Him Father, Color
(01:41:14):
Him Love, never man at myhouse. He's so big and strong.
He goes to work each day andhe stays all day long. He comes
home he's night, looking tired andbeat. He sits down at the dinner
table and has a bite to eat. Never crown, always smile when he
(01:41:36):
says to me, how my childall right? At seven point thirty one,
here on the verge of Father's Day, we're joined by Patrick Patterson,
manager of the National Responsible Fatherhood ClearingHouse, and we thought it was appropriate
to have Patrick here with Father's Dayon Sunday. Good morning, mister Patterson,
(01:41:57):
how are you, sir? Goodmorning, Good morning, Good morning,
How are you good? Do youremember that song? Color Him Father?
I had never heard them? Ohyou got My favorite song is Dance
with My Father. Oh that's that'sa good one too. That's a good
one too. When we get done, check color and Father, it's it's
pretty impressed. So it's a songabout a man who steps into this family
(01:42:23):
after the first father passes away.I guess it was out in the late
sixties. And this from the singer'sperspective, he's saying, this is a
man who provides, who provided everything. He may not have been my biological
dad, but he's a dad thatI've always known. And it's all because
of the love and the guidance thathe has shown and your your organization.
(01:42:47):
The NRFC is trying to provide oversightand guidance and trainings to help agencies to
better engage and work with fathers.And we see what happens when fathers are
not actively engaged in their children's lives. We see too many sad examples of
(01:43:09):
that in America today. Are youdo you feel like groups like the NRFC
are making inroads to help alleviate thatsituation? What are you doing to do
that? Absolutely, and thank youfor the song. I'm definitely gonna check
it out. I'd always start bysaying dad's matter. I'm a father of
two today with my twenty seventh weddinganniversary, and I know the importance of
(01:43:32):
thank you of locking my door atnight, and my daughter's still safe,
my wife is still safe. DataResearch for Life has taught us that kids
s fell love T I M E. And so what we're trying to do
is encourage dads to be active,whether they're in the home or out of
the home with their kids, spendingtime with them. Pretty memories. But
(01:43:53):
also we have a hashtag dedication beingdedicated to the art of being involved father.
What do you think being dedicated means. I mean, like you said,
they spell love time. Obviously takingthe time and making the time to
make that happen. But beyond that, I look back at the lessons that
(01:44:15):
I was taught by my dad,you know, the self reliance and the
importance of caring about other people,and so many things that I can point
to today that at the time Ididn't even think about it. I just
took it for granted that everybody hadthat in their lives, and sadly,
(01:44:39):
a lot of people do not.You know, the data bears out that
there are a number of fathers whoare actively involved. I mean, we
hear the worst end of the stick, but there are a lot of dads
who are doing it, doing itright, doing it daily, and doing
their very best. So what Isee and what we see at the Clearinghouse
(01:44:59):
is number of programs agencies that aretrying to elevate and also celebrate the importance
of dads. And so for us, this time of year is important because
we get to release our PSAs withthe AD Council this year, we're actually
focusing on three specific fathers, Alex, Jose and Sammy because we're looking at
first, you know, the firstkiss, the first joy ride, the
(01:45:23):
first bicycle ride, the first booglewith your kids, and so for us,
our effort, you know, youremember the first bugle with your kids.
Our effort is really to encourage andyou know, really incentivize folks to
support dads. What I've learned overthe years as a dad myself, my
oldest is eighteen, is that westruggle sometimes. It can get lonely sometimes,
(01:45:45):
and so for a lot of ourfathers, we do our best to
appreciate, accentuate and acknowledge that theyare important so that they can be the
best father that they can be well. And the thing to remember, I
think too, Patrick, and Ithink you'll agree with me, is that
nobody is perfect all the time,and sometimes nobody is perfect most of the
(01:46:09):
time. But you keep on trying, you don't you don't give up.
And I think that's that's maybe themessage that you want to send down is
hey, you're gonna make mistakes.You're a human being. But the thing
is yeah for us, ah,no, no, if you had something
to say, yeah, I justwant to say I think you're you're spot
on. We looked at particularly prekedand post COVID. You know, the
(01:46:33):
number of men who are amongst othersbut are lonely is real. The number
of men who are facing depression oranxiety because of the weight that they feel
to take care of a family ortake care of themselves. And so for
us, we just want to givethem a safe space that they can actually
connect but also be reinvigorated with therole of being a dad. So for
(01:46:53):
us as a clearinghouse, public youknow, practitioners, dads, churches,
nonprofits, we are that one stopshop around everything fatherhood. Our website is
www fatherhood dot gov. And forus, we just want to elevate that
not over moms, not over kids, but with moms and with kids well
yeah, and that's the thing.A family unit should all be working together,
(01:47:17):
but a father is an important componentof that equation. Patrick Patterson,
thank you very much, the managerof the National Responsible Fatherhood Clearinghouse. And
again you can find more. What'sthat website again, Patrick, wwwfatherhood dot
gov. And Happy father Day toall your listeners. Happy Father's Day to
(01:47:38):
you, sir, and are yougoing to to be able to be with
your kids this weekend? Are weall in the house? Is the anniversary
as well? Yeah, happy anniversarytwenty seven years and still going strong.
That's great, Thank you. Itis seven thirty eight now on this Friday,
ahead of Father's Day on fifty fiveKARC the talk station fixing your car,
(01:48:00):
per things around the comforting to hearthat genterle rain this morning outside the
window as I was headed in.Those showers are not going to be a
part of our day for much longer. By this afternoon, high in the
mid eighties, and the clouds andthe sunshine come back. It is sixty
eight degrees right now. Fifty fiveKRCD talk station from the UCL Tramping Center
(01:48:24):
of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Centeris the region's first and only provider of
specialized primary care services for cancer patientsand survivors. Called five one, three,
five eighty five. Uc CEC Highwaytraffic in pretty good shape. All
wings are now open northbound seventy fivecoming out of downtown from the overnight accident
that have the highway shut down nearNinth Street for a couple of hours still
(01:48:45):
working on getting the ramp clear fromsixth Street to northbound seventy five Chuck Ingram
on fifty five. Care and seethe talk station. So last night,
Courtsey, and last night at NewportItalian Fest and our grand opening ceremony,
something that happens every year to startthe festival officially is one of the things
(01:49:12):
is the presenting of the honor guardof both the American and the Italian flags,
and then we recite the entire crowdthe Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag
of the United States of America andto the Republic for which it stands.
No, this is not truly ademocracy. It is a republic and the
(01:49:34):
flag represents that. And there's beenno better description of why this particular pledge
is important and should be important toall Americans. And nobody broke it down
better than comedian and actor Read Skeletonyears ago in a schoolroom setting, teaching
(01:50:00):
kids the importance of every word inthat Pledge of Allegiance to the Flag of
the United States of America. Soon this Flag Day, it's important,
I think that we do seven fortythree. Here once again is Red Skeleton.
I remember a teacher that I hadnow only I went through the seventh
(01:50:20):
grade. I went to the seventhgrade, and I left home when I
was ten years old because I washungry, and I used to do I
work in the summer and I goto school in the winter. But I
had this one teacher. It wasthe principal of the Harrison School in Vincennes,
Indiana. To me, this wasthe greatest teacher, a real sage
of my time. Anyhow, hehad such wisdom, and we were all
(01:50:40):
reciting the Pledge of Allegiance one dayand he walked over, this little teacher,
mister Lasswell was his name, misterLastwell. He says, I've been
listening to you boys and girls recitethe Pledge of Allegiance all semester, and
(01:51:00):
it seems as though it's becoming monotonousto you. If I may, may
I recite it and try to explainto you the meaning of each word.
I me an individual, a committeeof one pledge, dedicate all of my
(01:51:25):
worldly goods to give without self pity, allegiance, my love, and my
devotion to the flag, our standardold glory, a symbol of freedom.
Wherever she waves, there's respect becauseyour loyalty has given her a dignity that
(01:51:49):
shouts freedom is everybody's job. United. That means that we have all come
together states, individual communities that haveunited into forty eight great states, forty
eight individual communities with pride and dignityand purpose, all divided with imaginary boundaries,
(01:52:15):
yet united to a common purpose.And that's love for country and to
the republic. Republic a state inwhich sovereign power is invested in representatives chosen
by the people to govern. Andgovernment is the people, and it's from
the people to the leaders, notfrom the leaders to the people. For
(01:52:42):
which it stands one nation, onenation, meaning so blessed by God,
indivisible, incapable of being divided.With liberty, which is freedom, the
right of power to live one's ownlife without threats, fear, or some
(01:53:08):
sort of retaliation, and justice theprinciple are qualities of dealing fairly with others,
for all, for all, whichmeans, boys and girls, it's
as much your country as it ismine. And now, boys and girls,
(01:53:30):
let me hear you recite the pledgeof allegiance. I pledge allegiance to
the flag of the United States ofAmerica and to the Republic for which it
stands one nation indivisible, with libertyand justice for all. Since I was
(01:53:54):
a small boy, two states havebeen added to our country. Two words
have been added to the Pledge ofallegiance under God. Wouldn't it be a
pity if someone said that is aprayer and that would be eliminated? From
schools to fifty five KRC, onein four Americans suffers in the listening area.
(01:54:23):
The rain that we had earlier thismorning is on the way out.
Decreasing clouds and move on through theday. I hive this afternoon of eighty
six. It is sixty eight degreesstill and here is Chuck Ingram with the
latest check on traffic from the UCLTraffic Center. The University of Cincinnati Cancer
Center is the region's first and onlyprovider of specialized primary care services for cancer
(01:54:47):
patients and survivors. Called five onethree five eighty five u se se see
highway traffic now in pretty good shapethe earlier accident clear. All ways are
open northbound seventy five coming out ofdowntown. All ramps are open as well.
Southbound seventy five. Not a problemat all through Wakland. In bound
seventy four looks good too. ChuckIngramont fifty five k S the talk station,
(01:55:15):
The dulcetones of George Allen O'Dowd BoyGeorge dedicated to our friend Westside Jim
Kiefer, Boy George's birthday, andit's a special day for Kiefer. You've
got like a shrine in his house. Have you ever been to west Side
(01:55:36):
Jim's house? And only those ofus who are special have been. On
a mantle he has a portrait ofboy George in full garb back from the
eighties. There are various little trinketsthat are dedications to boy George on this
(01:55:58):
mantle, and he's got a coupleof Culture Club albums back they still had
some vinyl back in the early eightieswhen Boy George and Culture Club was popular
on MTV, and that's where Jimfirst fell in love with George, was
on MTV. I mean, likethe rest of us, but especially west
(01:56:20):
Side, Jim has an affinity that'salmost otherworldly, that's indescribable really and inexplainable,
and it disturbs me sometimes when Ithink about it, and in fact
I'm disturbed right now thinking about westSide Jim and little tribute and the shrine
(01:56:44):
to Boy George that's in his home. But I know it's a special day.
It's Flag Day, it's Donald Trump'sbirthday. It's also Boy George's birthday.
And it's one of west Side JimKiefer's favorite days of the year,
June fourteenth, I mean outside hisbirthday obviously, or Barnabas or Domino's birthday.
The dogs. So in the OhioHouse, they are finally making a
(01:57:11):
stab at protecting people from discrimination oftheir hairstyle. This is all spurred on
by Cleveland Heights cosmetologist Ladosha Wright,who was also a Big Boy George fan.
I understand she believes that textured hairgels discriminated, are discriminated against.
(01:57:36):
And we know for certain that texturedhair so called in America has not been
treated very well. She said acouple of years. So a lot of
that, well, the bulk ofthat has stemmed from not having a history
about our hair before slavery. Sothere was textured hair before slavery. I
(01:57:57):
didn't know this. It's funny thatthey call it natural hair when there's so
many chemicals and processes on the hairthat it's natural, is the last thing.
I guess. Hair extensions that wouldbe natural hair too leditia and protected
under the Crown Act that's being proposedand has passed in the Ohio House was
(01:58:20):
bipartisan and you know what, theyare concentrating on so many important things in
the Ohio legislature, and I'm gladthat this is at the forefront of the
work they're doing on your behalf asan Ohio taxpayer. The Crown Act stands
(01:58:42):
for creating a respectful and open worldfor natural hair. Again, textured hair,
hair extensions are not natural. Wewant to make sure that if you're
having a protective style, no matterif it's braids, it's locks, or
it's puff, that you were ableto wear with that discrimination within the state
(01:59:03):
of Ohio. And this would themeasure is supposed to prohibit Ohio public preschools
in K twelve from penalizing students,especially students of color, because really people
of color are always victims for embracingtheir cultural identities. And then one of
(01:59:33):
the people that spawned at Wan,Eita Brandt, said, we've been ran
mostly by old white dudes, oldwhite and bald. They're the ones who
are making decisions. But they're alsonot the ones who have to receive this
type of level of discrimination. I'ma white dude. Now, I'm an
old white dude. I'm not bold. But as a sixteen year old,
(01:59:57):
a fifteen year old, even intomy graduating year, my senior year,
eighteen year old, I have naturallycurly hair. I picked it out.
I had a full blown white man'sfro when I graduated high school. I
wasn't discriminated against at all. Oh, but then I'm white. I have
(02:00:18):
the white privilege. Whatever. Thankyou for wasting our time and our money,
Ohio House seventh. Actually I livein Kentucky, didn't waste mine.
Sorry about you if you live inOhio seven fifty seven at fifty five KRC
the talk station. World das don'texactly happen on a schedule. What the
(02:00:38):
latest tomp dates do at the topof every hour fifty five krc D talk
station or morning news getting ready forwork at all day in fault and check
in throughout the day. Fifty fiveKRC the talk station. Oh, we're
rolling out to Beryl again. Mustbe shults in fast time, the colping
(02:01:00):
Society, folks in the studio,This morning to talk about this great three
day event that begins today, broughtto you by the Colping Society should Infest.
They have a grand raffle. Theygot all kinds of great food,
some of which they brought into methis morning. These huge pretzels which are
like, I don't know that they'reat least the size of your standard horseshoe,
(02:01:25):
although a mite softer than that,and delicious and a diabetics a type
two diabetics best friend apple strudel andcherry strudel. We have Tom Musback and
Paul Arnsen here from the Colping Societygetting ready for the big festival. They
got their hats, they got theirtraditional garbon, and it's great to see
a gentleman welcome well, thank youfor having us. We enjoy being here.
(02:01:49):
And this is I don't know manytimes, four or five, six
years we've been coming to WKRC forit. I know, a great event
kicking it off starts tonight six toeleven. So yeah, so where is
this I've never been out. We'reout there at one two three five Mill
Road, which is in Springfield Township. It's kind just north of bound Healthy
(02:02:12):
off Hamilton Avenue and a lot ofpeople, free parking, lots of open
parking, and hopefully the weather begood. Sounds like your weather man has
predicted a good day, so we'reready for it. Oh no, no,
it's going to be a beautiful weekend. So Paul, tell me you
are the ninety ninth what I amthe ninety ninth Shultson King. So every
(02:02:33):
year, the whole reason around theShutson Fest is legend has it In the
fifteenth century an eagle attacked a child, an alert marksman shot the eagle save
the child. Townspeople were so happythey proclaimed him king for the year,
and we continue that tradition on hundredsof years later. So are you in
charge of shooting the eagle this year? No, no, I have to
(02:02:56):
wait ten years to do again.But yeah, we've got members that they
carve a wooden eagle. It's aboutthree foot wingspan. And he's going to
say, because there could be aproblem if you're shooting eagles in America Flag
day. No, No, it'sa wooden eagle, and we shoot it
all the way down till there's justa small piece of wood left. And
whoever shoots that last little splinter ofwood left is the king for the year.
(02:03:23):
All right, so you are theking for the I am the king
for this year, but next inthree days, we'll have the hundredth king.
Now, who's the gentleman who wasreluctant to come on the air,
didn't want to come in the studio, Hair Jim Stuckenborg. He is,
he's the brains. He's been incharge of the festival for ten years.
He recently handed it over to ournext group of great people, the Freezes.
(02:03:45):
So they're doing great job. Butyou're telling me that that Tom is
going to be the king next year, the one hundred Tom. How do
you feel about assuming that responsibility thatbecause that's a heavy weight to have on
your shoulders, you know, themantle of being he he's he's just he's
just destroyed my happy home. Becausewhoever is the king normally well has a
(02:04:08):
queen, and the queen is normallythe wife, and of course, as
Paul can attest, there's no goodking without a queen. Oh no,
So how is your wife taken tothis responsibility? Paul? She's a wonderful
queen. So you're not going tosay anything else, but I mean,
(02:04:28):
did she accept that that mantle ofresponsibility. Well, I first had to
go to Munich to buy her aDarndal, So we did that a couple
of years ago. So that washer last excuse that she that she had.
So the kids went there and wegot her at Darndl and then she
ran out of excuses. Now,Tom, have you been to Germany as
well? I have been to Germanyseveral times? Yeah? Where are your
(02:04:53):
answers? And my ancestors are fromSaxony, which is up the dressed in
dressed in area which would have beeneastern Germany prior to the ball coming down,
and uh uh yeah, and metup with a distant, distant cousin
over there, Andreas, and uhconnected me with the whole family tree over
there. So is it a beautifulpart of the country dressed and dressed it
(02:05:14):
as a lovely, lovely town?It was dress Yes, it was really
destroyed badly World War two. Yeah, dressen, I mean it was relentlessly
bombed by the Allies. But they'vemade a granted, concerted effort to put
it all back together. The frowncriquet, that's just a major church in
town and the main plot's perfect,beautiful, lovely place and it's just a
nice it's just a nice relaxing place. The Elbow River runs through there,
(02:05:36):
and it's a lot of good thingsto see over in Germany. And then
you know that part of town andthat's just not the only place, you
know, you get out the Byronbav area. I mean, that's that's
gorgeous down there. I think peoplein this country, unless they've been overseas,
don't understand that when you're in Europegoing from country countries, like traveling
from state to state, right,right, you know how big in size
(02:05:59):
is Germany, you know, Imean, say the size of compared to
something in the United States, andI've heard it was about the size of
Wisconsin. Okay, it's not thatbig. But so if you want a
part of Germany this weekend, yeah, it's it's the Coping Shots and Fest.
We bring Germany to Cincinnati, that'sright. And we've got King Ludwig
beers from Bavaria especially brought in forus, and we've got all kinds of
(02:06:25):
entertainment too. I'm looking at thelist on the flyer here for Shoots and
Fest, which begins tonight. Thealpen Echoes Trio you go performing as well
as the Berg Strass Boys. Ilove their first album. They're great and
and everybody knows the remains. That'sthat's a pretty big headliner to have it
(02:06:45):
at your fest. Yeah, we'vewe've got some of those bands for those
who maybe not be quite as involvedwith Polka's. So we've got some rock
bands on Friday and Saturday night,right, some contemporary music that will appeal
to a wider course than just thenormal German heritage in Cincinnati. And the
food is just I mean, youbrought this strudle in the big pretzels here
(02:07:09):
this morning. But I'm looking downthe list and I like this would be
enough to make me want to goto the schutz Infest right here, guys,
well you have it. You haveit, the Jagger Snitzel and chicken
dinners, the genuine Snitzel, potatopancakes. My wife, she's half Irish
and half German, which means thatshe spent her whole life militarily trying to
(02:07:31):
take over pubs. Great combination,great combination, homemade sour kraw balls,
Shutz and worst Limburger sandwiches, thesmell and all kinds of pastries and pretzels.
Like we talked about you got afamily zone with inflatables for everybody,
balloon artists, and of course beer. You brought me a little Warsteiner here.
(02:07:56):
Yeah, we've got the Dunkleg pills. I'm a dunk fans. Some
people like pilsner, but this isall good. Any other advice for anybody
coming out, Well, you know, the wonderful pretzels and strudle that you're
talking about came from Servatis, oneof our major sponsors. Servanti has been
providing pretzels and strudel for many yearsto should infest. And since you are
(02:08:18):
in fact an officiato aficiado of sausage, yes, we have sausage that won't
quit. I mean we have broughtsand mets that many different locations. You
can pick up a brought in amet and we'll get the schnitzel sandwich.
And it's just a great place toget your sausage fixed. I love it.
(02:08:39):
Again, that alone would be enough. There is the one K Beer
Dash Fun Run tonight. I'll behanding out shots after starting at seven thirty.
Well it's one k. I'm sureit's more beer than run exactly.
Yeah, you're allowed to walk ittoo. It's a it's a drinking run
with a fun problem or something likethat. Right. Also, the opening
(02:09:03):
ceremony and keg tapping is seven o'clockright in there in the pavilion stage.
You have the team target competition tomorrownight. Tell me about that. Well,
we have a couple of fellows whostarted the team. We could.
We talked to other German clubs intown, asked them to put a little
team together. It's kind of awarm up for the major King shooting event
(02:09:24):
the next day. And they shootpet pelt guns into hay bales and try
and get the best score. Andit's an elimination, so one team against
another and that one goes on tothe next and so on. And if
you win, you get a coupleof anniboys. So and there's a traveling
trophy, yeah, the traveling trophythat goes with it. Yeah, all
(02:09:46):
right, And then of course Sundaythe big event is shooting for the King
to determine who will be number onehundred. That's right, that's right,
and take your place. I'll bedethroned. You can't, you can't continue.
Is there a term limit? Everyyear? There's a new that's right.
We have term limits. All right, two o'clock the opening parade,
the shooting for the King, andthen the grand Parade and the crowning of
(02:10:07):
the King and Queen of shots Infest. It all goes on this weekend again
at one O two three five MillRoad in Cincinnati, just north of what'd
you say, Mount Helen Healthy andif you want more information, any details,
you can go to the website wwwdot Copingcincinnati dot com. KO L
P I n G. Thank you, Tom and Paul. I appreciate your
(02:10:28):
time this morning. Thank you somuch. Fun staff, yeah, prost
and Jor Scrouder. Yeah, bringme some sausage nextear. Okay, all
right, fifty five KRC the talkstation our iHeartRadio Music Festival. Here's your
forecast for shuts, infest or anythingelse you got planned today by this afternoon
(02:10:50):
Partley cloudy to Partley sunny. Sky'sin eighty six for a high chep overnight
sixty one, tomorrow sunny eighty five, low humidity. I mean you talk
about perfect weather for June sixty eight. Right now, here's a check on
the roads with Chuck Ingram from theuc held Traffic Center. The University of
Cincinnati Cancer Center is the region's firstand only provider of specialized primary care services
(02:11:16):
for cancer patients and survivors, calledfive one three five eighty five ucc See
Highway. Traffic continues to look good. No major time delays to deal with
right now northbound seventy five heaviest pastMitchell, making your way towards the lateral.
But even that's not going to costyou a whole lot of extra time.
Teal Town's blocked Baldwin to round bottom. You're the Nature Center due to
(02:11:37):
a wreck. Chuck Ingram on fiftyfive KRS the talk station. She is
a rainbow. It's twenty minutes pasteight o'clock, and supposedly our friend Ron
Wilson, who's in the garden withyou every Saturday morning here in fifty five
KRC, will be joining us inthe last half hour. Was one of
(02:12:00):
the things that I always look forwardto filling in for Brian was Friday conversations
with Ron, because invariably Ron wouldalways bring me some kind of cool plant.
And I'm not saying that so wewill this time because I'm sure that
he will. And I see Ronevery Saturday morning when I do my show
(02:12:22):
on seven hundred WLW. That I'vebeen doing for like twenty seven years.
And when Ron does the show fromColumbus, which he occasionally does, it's
just not the same around here.Nobody makes coffee, and I just love
seeing Ron Wilson. So I'm lookingforward to that here in a few minutes.
(02:12:45):
In Connecticut. Another reminder of whenthere is construction on the highway,
you gotta keep an eye out forthose guys working, and we make fun
and dread the orange barrel and theconstruction zones that seemed to be just ubiquitous
all over the country because well,the road construction's never done. You know
(02:13:09):
that. I know that it's jobsecurity and they got to keep on spending
our money doing something. Hopefully theydo a good job. That aside.
Another construction worker died after he washitting killed by a speeding driver working on
Wednesday in Connecticut. I don't knowif this is Hartford. I believe this
(02:13:31):
is Hartford, Connecticut. Yeah.Police say they're called about a crash that
occurred at the intersection of West BoulevardSouth Whitney Street, where work was being
done in a Metropolitan District Commission project. The worker, fifty four year old
guy, just trying to support hisfamily and doing a good job. Jose
(02:13:54):
dis Nieves Nevez rather hit and killedby a vehicle track at a rate of
a high rate of speed through theconstruction zone. I mean they did find
the vehicle, They tracked down thedriver, twenty five year old Tommy when
(02:14:18):
taken into custody at the scene afterhis car became disabled again. Two passengers
in his car taking to the hospitalfor non life threatening injuries. He was
booked on a million dollar bond,and I hope he gets the justice he
deserves. That being said, thespeeds are crazy on the highways around here.
(02:14:46):
Seventy one seventy five. I mean, I like going fast like the
next person. But if you're goingunder seventy or seventy five on I seventy
one, I mean you better bein a far right lanter you're gonna get
on over and maybe even being inthe so called slow lane you might get
run over. It's like they're reenactingfast and furious on the roads, just
(02:15:13):
trying to go from point A topoint B. And road rage a constant
problem. But keep an eye outfor construction workers, please, I mean
that guy. I don't know anythingabout the man who was killed in this
particular accident, sees fifty four's Heprobably had a family who was supporting,
(02:15:33):
a wife, of kids, somebody'sdad, somebody's brother, somebody's son who
is no more because some idiot wasgoing too fast through a construction zone.
(02:15:54):
See this guy on viral video fromSaint Louis apparently is just stealing everything at
Walmart. You know they got toself checkout isle and this gentleman in question,
named Bill Astell, the subject ofa viral video that shows him appearing
(02:16:18):
not to scan any of his itemschecking out at an area of Walmart.
The woman can be heard saying inthe video, this man is really just
stealing everything, so open about it. Look at the screen. Nothing is
ringing up. He said, I'mnot a thief. I'm being pictured and
painted as a thief on the internet. According to this guy, he works
(02:16:39):
for Spark, a Walmart delivery service. When shopping, he says, he
scans the items from his phone.When he grabs him, everything's done off
the phone. So we get tothe register, we're not actually scanning,
is sing Why would you even goto the register at that point he was
unwittingly being film. Last month,millions and millions of views. You may
(02:17:03):
have seen it because the video hasbeen viewed over sixteen million times, with
many calling Astil a shoplifter and askingfor peace police to arrest him. He
said, as I've had customers say, hey, didn't I see you on
the internet. Didn't you steal stuff? And I have to explain to people
what I'm doing. And he hasthe receipts to show he was working,
(02:17:28):
as he's trying to clear his name. But yeah, you can imagine you
go up to somebody in one ofthe self checkout kiosks at a Walmart or
a grocery store and they're there atthe checkout, but they're not scanning anything,
just putting it in a bag orwhatever and walking away. Oh well,
(02:17:50):
eight twenty six at fifty five KRCDE Talk Station, let's say fifty
five KRC and iHeart Radio Station,the exclusive audio home on NBC's coverage of
the twenty twenty four Paris Olympics,The Simply Money Minute. It's hours this
morning, but for the most partthey are over now a partly cloudy to
partly Sunday afternoon ahead and a highof eighty six, mostly sunny and not
(02:18:15):
humid. Tomorrow eighty five and forSunday Father's Day, a little bit warmer,
a little bit more mugginess in theair in a high of ninety three
than if you got shuts Infest,you got Newport Italian Fest. Whatever you
do in the weather is just fine. Thank you. Sixty eight now and
here is Chuck one more time witha check on the roads from the ucl
Tramfics Center, the University of CincinnatiCancer Center. It's the region's first and
(02:18:39):
only provider of specialized primary care servicesfor cancer patients and survivors. Called five
one three five eighty five U seCE see northbound seventy one's moving a bit
slow through blue Ash past Peiffer dueto a broken down over on the right
hand side. They had the rightlane blocked off for a short time.
Tealtown's blocked off between Baldwood and RoundBottom due to an accident near the nature
(02:19:01):
Center. Chuck Ingram on fifty fiveKRC the talk station Flat B flat Man,
No Man. He is the oneand only Ron Wilson who is now
chiseling into his cherry strudel that thefolks from schutz Infest brought. As he
(02:19:26):
puts the bite into his mouth.The mic is on. It's eight thirty
on a Friday. How is itoutstanding? See, I often I got
both the where's the sausage? Iwanted sausage. Well, obviously it's a
different club. They have sausage atthe colping Fest all you were talking about,
where's the sauceage? Bring me thesausage. I love the sausage.
(02:19:50):
Well, they got schnitzel. Youknow. Oh, I'm happy right here
with this strudel. Well and again, as a type two diabetic, this
is the next thing to a comafrom, wouldn't it. Just looking at
it? Let me eat that.My blood level is yeah, don't eat
that. Let me eat take careof that for you. I want the
apple strudele. The cherry's fine,but I'm an apple strudel guy. If
(02:20:11):
I'm gonna have some strudel and itlooks delicious, and I'm sure it's got
enough sugar for the next month anda half for me. Probably I counted
during that segment you said Schutzenfest atleast seventeen times. I love to say
shutze. I'm saying I could tellyou like saying it, because you said
it seventeen times. It was likeI was talking this morning in our history
segment because this was the day thatthe Falkland Islands War was over in nineteen
(02:20:35):
eighty two, when Argentina finally surrenderedto the British. But as a young
radio person number one, I gotto say Falkland a lot on the air
and not get in trouble for sayingFalkland. And I got to say frigate
because one of the major ships inthe battle was called a frigate, so
(02:20:58):
we had the frigate Fox, thefrigate. Falklands were fully in full flagrante
in our vocabulary, and it wasperfectly legal to say frigates and Falklands.
I don't know how important that isto you. Apparently not. You're looking
at the shits and fest flyer.I was mentioning to people how much I
(02:21:22):
look forward to seeing you on Saturdaysbecause we're just a studio apart. I
didn't bring a plant. We're astudio apart and we see each other every
Saturday morning for how many years now? How many years have you been doing
in the gardens. I've done usabout twenty two years now. Yeah,
and I've been doing the Saturday showfor twenty seven. So for a majority
of the time that I've been doingit, you've been doing a show right
(02:21:43):
down the hall from me, andwe see each other, and it's like
it's like your family almost. Butyou summed it up. Why you missed
me not being here on Saturday morningif I happened to be in Columbus because
I don't make coffee, I getit. Okay, I get it.
You are Gary Jeff Walker. I'msupposed to be drinking decaf anyway, we
(02:22:05):
don't have any of that. Whatis that big thing over there? That
is my holy unsweetened decaffeinated iced tea, and I carry that with me everywhere
I go pretty much. It's mybinkie, I see. So if I've
got ice and I've got my icedtea, I'm happy most of the time,
even without your Saturday mornings. Youcome in here with like five of
(02:22:28):
those big gulp things iced tea,and then I serve your car. I
like to stay hydrated. I likemy liquid, and I like sausage,
and I like free plants. Bythe way, either Ron about five six
years ago, gave me a lubbageplant. Lubbage is an herb. It's
a perennial and it is celery onsteroids. And I remember the first time
(02:22:52):
you brought lubbage into me to taste. I said, what's celery? Said,
well, yeah, kind of.It's kind of kind of soapy celery.
But it once I planted it inmy front yard, it never goes
away. I mean it it dies, It dies in the winter. It
comes back and it's even more heartyand stronger the next year. We've got
(02:23:15):
a nice, nice bush of lubbageout inside outside the front window. What
kind of like you kind of comeback stronger every year after I die,
Well, you just kind of whitherback and then come on strong exactly.
So is there anything? And bythe way, I want to thank you
for coming in. I know youhaven't been coming in lately on Fridays.
You stop doing that. We takea little break in the spring, spring
(02:23:41):
season, get into summer, andthen we come back in the fall.
Right, But you were nice enough. You were nice enough to come in
because I was ushering today. Andthat's serve off the world. How important
is Did you bring any coffee?Did you make any coffee? I did
not? Well, plants either.Why don't you get busy during the break.
(02:24:01):
I didn't bring any sausage. Getbusy, make some coffee. Jo's
in there with the reason back whatJoe's in there with the reasoning? I
know. It was funny. Theybrought him the wine and said this is
for Joe and his young lady.I was like, ooh, Joe,
even fast, I didn't I didn'trealize Joe had good for Joe and quickly
transitioned from being lonely to not beingso lonely anymore. I'm not sure,
(02:24:26):
Joe, do you have any commentson any of that? Absolutely not.
I's gonna say, yeah, Itake a break, you know, And
there's one in every port with thatguy. Eight thirty five fifty five KRC
the talk station. We rains outof the way. We got a great
weekend to head for Father's Day.Enjoy, Enjoy, enjoy right now,
(02:24:48):
clear or clearing up anyway? Anduh kind of a nice sixty eight degrees
at fifty five KRC, the talkstation from the UCLP TRAMFIC. The Center
of the University of Cincinnati Cancer Centeris the region's first and only provider a
specialized primary care services for cancer patientsand survivors called five one three five eighty
(02:25:09):
five UCCC northbound seventy one now lookingbetter the you earlier accident. Clear out
of the wave above Peifer no longera delay from the Reagan Highway southbound seventy
five that slows just a bit throughLackland Tealtown's blocked Baldwood to round Bottom near
the Nature Center due to a wreck. Chuck Ingram on fifty five KRS the
talk station, Oh we are grazingin the grass with the Great Hugh Masekela
(02:25:37):
and Ron Wilson on a Friday morningon fifty five krs DE Talk Station Carrie
Jeff Walker in for Brian Thomas allthis week and it has been my pleasure
to do so. Ron Wilson,I'm not a snatch, but why are
you eating in the studio? Thoughtthat was against us? You told me,
you told me, don't worry aboutit, just caw about it and
(02:26:00):
I do whatever Jeff Walker says,so I could tell on you. Yeah,
is that what it was? Ittakes a lot. I was encouraging
you to misbehave just so I canreport you later to the authorities. Thank
you so much. Of course youcan report me because I'm drinking Warsteino,
Dunkel, big dogs out there rightnow. Tony ben Listen is here.
He's listening, and I'm drinking aWarstein or Dunkel in the studio, consuming
(02:26:22):
an alcoholic beverage. Not really,He's just faking it. But that's me,
a big faker. You know,you used to plan a lot of
tomatoes and a pepper and things likeyou still do that. I'm not doing
it this year. I'll tell youwhat I used to bring in, like
a different selection every year. Lastyear, I just didn't have great success,
(02:26:43):
and I didn't make the time toget out and get the soil that
I needed to redo my bed,and I just decided to let it go.
I said, I'll let somebody elsegrow the tomatoes this year. I've
never had good success growing pepper plants, and I don't know why. What
is the one thing that people dothat's a mistake when it comes to growing
(02:27:05):
peppers or any other kind of vegetableplant like that. What's the biggest mistake?
I mean, depending upon the plant, I guess, but yeah,
selection obviously picking the right one.But sight, you know, and I
think you got to have at leastsix seven hours of sunlight to be successful,
whether it's the peppers or the tomatoes. I pull off some pretty good
tomatoes at my mom's house. She'sgot kind of a there's a maple tree
(02:27:26):
or top of a patio, soit's a filtered sun it's pretty bright for
about four or five hours, thenfiltered, and she's able to pull off
a pretty good crop. And they'reall in containers of tomatoes and they're good
and it's not as they're not asheavy a producer obviously in a situation like
that, but she's got them tocarry her through the whole summer. Pepper's
on the other hand, if wedo plant peppers there, she never gets
(02:27:48):
a really good crop of peppers becauseit just doesn't have a good amount of
sunlight. They really like other thanthat, lots of sun for lots of
sun and you know that's why Isay six to seven hours. And you
know that's pretty much true with anyof the vegetables that you grow that actually
produce a fruit, peppers and tomatoes, things like that, they want at
least six or seven hours of sunlight. On the other hand, what's interesting
(02:28:09):
is in some cases you'll see DannyLeeson sent me a picture of a tomato
that was curling up. The leaveswere curling. I want to know what
was going on. And tomatoes areso suscepful all kinds of stuff. Too
wet, too dry, too sunny. If it really bakes on them all
day long and they get that reallyhot afternoon sun and they're dry, they
curl right up. So they're suscepfublto the whole kinds of things like that,
(02:28:30):
and it doesn't really bother the plant. It just looks funny. But
you know, when you get ina situation where you don't have enough sunlight,
yeah, it doesn't produce as well. So that's probably the biggest thing.
And I think watering is the other. You know, water can just
people get so confused on when Ishould water, when I should not water,
And especially when the plants are younger, how important it is to keep
(02:28:52):
good even moisture as they're coming along, and then once they get established,
start to back off a little bitwhen they're producing fruit, making sure they've
got good moisture. If they don't, they don't produce it. You know,
that type of thing. So sometimesthat can be a little confusing as
well. I've always told folks,if you've never gardened before, Uh,
do it in a container. Tryit a couple of times in a container.
Cherry tomatoes probably the easiest tomato foryou to grow. You basically just
(02:29:15):
put them in the pot, fertilizethem and water and you got it made.
You have cherry tomatoes coming out ofyour ears. Uh. And herbs,
most of all the herbs are planted. Cherry tomatoes in my ears?
Really, what is that green stuffcoming out of there? And herbs are
another one that are outstanding growing incontainers because they besides water and really don't
(02:29:37):
require a lot of care. Ohyeah, basis, we've we've we've done
those in containers and they're phenomenal.And then once you get the hang of
that, then you can start doingwhatever. And again I've gone tell again
younger folks that have not garden before, vegetable garden. You move into a
house and you were talking about preppingthe bed before you plant. H Well,
(02:29:58):
that's another thing you want to do. The better prep you are in
that bed, the better your plantsare going to respond. And a lot
of these homes that you move intothe soil is horrible. I mean,
it's just hard it's okay. Youknow, we grow stuff in it,
and trees and plants grow in it, but this clay can be a little
bit tough, so you amend iton a regular basis. Somewhere ten years
down the road it finally starts tocome together. But if you do container
(02:30:20):
gardening or you do raised bed gardeningwhere you build the bed and then fill
it up with your own soil mix, it's pretty much instant. So now
you've got a really nice base towork with it. It makes it a
lot easier for you too, Soyou know, if you've never considered it
before, raised beds are the wayto grow. I mean, it's just
that's the way to do it.And there's so many things you can do
(02:30:41):
with a race bed or container gardeningon patios and things like that. Container
gardening affords everybody the opportunity to dosomething and growing, whether you're two or
ninety two. I mean, asI've always said that, you know,
you can grow just about anything,and a container that you can grow in
the ground and sometimes even better becauseyou control everything that's there. Biggest drawback
with container gardening is the watering,because obviously they're counting on you for watering,
(02:31:05):
you know, and if you wantto go on vacation or go away
for three or four days, yougot to find somebody to water your containers.
That is the biggest drawback I thinkas far as growing in pots.
But otherwise it's pretty darn easy.How often do you need to water tomatoes,
for example, Well, you know, we get into this type of
weather, we start getting into theeighties and nineties, and once it's really
starting to produce, you may bewatering every day, depending on the size
(02:31:26):
of container. And that's Folks alwayssay, well, what size container do
you use for your tomatoes? Iuse a twenty or twenty five gallon pot
that's twenty to twenty four inches indiameter, fifteen eighteen inches deep. And
they said, how many tomatoes shouldput in there? One? One?
And they're like, really, yeah, you do one. Now you can
put some basil around the bottom orsomething like that, but it's one.
(02:31:48):
And the bigger the pot for thosetomatoes, the better off they're going to
be less watering, you know,the whole nine yards they root in better.
So the larger the pot, thebetter you are. Now there are
dwarf varieties of tomatoes, like thepatios. Some of the bush tomatoes that
stay smaller and can grow in smallercontainers, But for the most part,
if you're doing them in pots,you want a twenty or twenty five gallon
container. Potting soil is another one. You can buy a thirty a fifty
(02:32:11):
pound bag of potting soil. Yeah, for two ninety nine, Well,
you get a two ninety nine qualitypotting soil. A three qbic foot bag
of potting soil is probably going tocost you twenty or twenty five dollars of
professional grade. But the thing ofit is it's an excellent mix. It's
a light mix. They drain well, but yet it holds moisture at the
same time. It's a great comboof ingredients, and you reuse that every
(02:32:33):
year. You don't dump it outand start all over if you did.
I can never be a container gardener. Be too expensive. And I've always
kidd and said, you know,I've probably got potting soil in my mixes
that are thirty years old, soyou know, because you just keep freshening
it up and keep reusing it everyyear. So you know, once you
get started in that, you savethat potty so you're telling me that dirt
never grows old. Dirt never growsold. Now, if you're older than
(02:32:58):
dirt. If I was a youngerhorn Cull Troll is sitting here with you,
I would say, mister Walker,Yes, I would say that soil
is what you plant plants, anddirt is what you sweep up off the
floor. Okay, but you're not. But I don't do that anymore.
Have you seen the commercial with MarthaStewart where the guy says you're a dirt
nerd and she goes huge dirt nerdand I'm proud of it, and I'm
(02:33:20):
proud. Yeah, the dirt doesmatter. The soil absolutely well. It's
just like we were talking about growinginto ground, you know, with the
same way amending the soils, gettingit right. Have you soil tested?
You know? So many times wejust throw a Jenner fertilizer out there and
assume that's going to work, andall of a sudden, after three or
four years, nothing performs anymore.And so the first thing you say is
(02:33:41):
one is have you had your soiltested lately? And you typically answer is
no, have your soil tested.It'll tell you your NP's and k's nitrogen
Foster's potash, all that stuff.But one of the big factors is the
pH level, because if the pHis too low or too high, most
of those nutrients aren't available to theplant. You've got to get the p
This was a huge contributing factor tothe dust Bowl disaster in the nineteen thirties
(02:34:03):
because farmers didn't understand that they hadto rotate crops and they didn't know about
pH right, They just all aboutplant and stuff in dirt. What a
disaster. You know, there wasa couple of great books you read about
that. It's just I have phenomenalI mean what they went through, crazy
stuff. It was a perfect stormof ignorance as far as how to keep
(02:34:24):
the soil rotated and fresh and weatherthat didn't cooperate, and you know you
got to have all those things ifyou ever crops and wind breaks. Yeah,
pulling all that together absolutely. RonWilson pulls it all together every Saturday
morning in the garden here from sixto nine, and we'll come back to
close out in just a moment onfifty five KRC, the talk station,
(02:34:46):
the Father of the Year, aweekend ahead in a high of eighty six
today right now, one final checkon traffic from the UCL Traffic Center.
The University of Cincinnati Cancer Center isthe region's first and only provider of specialized
primary care services for cancer patients andsurvivors. Called five one three five eighty
(02:35:07):
five u sec see southbound seventy fivecontinues to run close to an extra five
minutes out of Evandale through Lachland northboundseventy five. I'm seeing no delays in
the cut approaching the Brand Spence DealtownRoads blocked off Baldwin to Round Bottom near
the Nature Center thanks to an accident. Chuck Ingram, I'm fifty five KR
seat the talk station. Love mesome Mungo Jerry in the summertime from nineteen
(02:35:39):
seventies. Wow, looking dude.It was a band actually, but with
the lead singer. Yeah yeah,the hairy guy. Yeah yeah. If
her daddy's rich, take her outfor a meal, if her daddy's poor,
just do what you feel. Speedalong the lake. Well. It
was one of my favorite Songada YadAYadA. Ron Wilson here for the last
few minutes, and he'll be heretomorrow morning with you as he is every
(02:36:01):
Saturday at six for in the Gardenon fifty five KRC. We're bad.
We're nationwide. Now, we weretalking about tomatoes real quickly. Right,
It's Flag Day, by the way, which is an important American holiday.
And I'm not talking about the Maasflag or the Mexican flag, or the
Ukrainian flag, the American flag,the red, white and blue stars and
(02:36:26):
stripes. But I wanted to askyou, is it too late to do
a container tomato, because I mean, you can grow to like October.
Right. Here's my theory, asI will plan it up until the fourth
of July. I haven't planned anythingyet, so you get plenty of time.
As a matter of fact, justabout anything in the garden besides cool
(02:36:46):
season crops, you're good to go. And if I'm out of a garden
center somewhere i've never been, Isee a tomato or a pepper or something
that I've never grown before, andI want to give it a shot.
Always have a couple extra empty containers. I'll grab those. Usually the fourth
of July weekend right around there isabout the last that I'll do that and
then finish out. And course there'sfall crops, so you can plan as
(02:37:07):
well. But right now, ifyou you know, then you'll still find
tomatoes and peppers and things like that. Direct sewing of cucumbers and squashing that
all can still be done. Rightnow. It's striving, nice crop.
Yeah, So you know, andI'll tell you on the sea pack.
You know how long it takes fromgermination to production, and you know many
umber sixty seventy ninety days, whateverit may be, we'll count up.
So tune in titles tomorrow. Thankyou very much for the encouraging news.
(02:37:31):
Thanks to Joe Strucker for the week, and thanks to Brian Thomas for taking
the week off so I could getpaid, And thanks to you for tuning
in. It is Flag Day andwe honor America with the song about our
Star Spangled Banner, written by FrancisScott Key in that Harbor and Baltimore back
in eighteen twelve. Here's our nationalanthem. This is America, and we're
(02:39:13):
falling apart your twenty twenty four electionheadquarters, and this president has to go
fifty five KARC, the talk station. This report is sponsored