Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is seven oh five here Kentucky. This Morning News
with Nick Coffee on News Radio eight forty whas Happy Thursday, everybody,
whole cruiz here. We got Scott Fitzgerald, John Alden and
you just heard John Shannon. And the NBA to Louisville
used to be used to be like an actual organization,
and maybe they still exist, and if so, I apologize
(00:22):
to act like they're dead, But I just there used
to be a lot more noise locally. At least I
feel like about people pushing the NBA to Louisville saying
it would work, how big of a deal it would
be to the economy, And I mean personally, I would
love if we had an NBA team here. And the
reason I bring this up is because Adam Silver, he
(00:43):
was on yesterday with Dan Patrick, and Patrick asked him directly, Hey,
I'm retiring in three years. Will we have NBA expansion
in three years? And the response was honestly not sure.
I don't mean to tease people with this, but this
is the summer. We're going to look at it seriously.
So I wouldn't be shocked if those that are real
(01:05):
big supporters of bringing the NBA to Louisville used this
as maybe a chance to have another push, And I
don't know exactly what goes on and how you end
up on the radar of the NBA. Clearly Louisville would
be in a list of ten cities as far as
expansion deserving. Yeah, that's so. I've always felt like the
(01:29):
time was, the timing was there, it just didn't happen.
You had a chance a couple of different times to
bring an NBA team here, and there's different stories as
far as what kept that from happening. It wasn't a
secret by any means that when Tom jurch was the
athletic director at the University of Louisville, he was very
much against having an NBA team here, and a lot
(01:49):
of people listened to Tom Jurich and he was a
great athletic director, but he was also somebody who was
very good at persuading people. And it is wild to
me that there were people that believe that the NBA
being in louisvill would be a bad thing, I mean,
be phenomenal, and yet I think the noise just more
so became well, yeah, but it would take away a
lot of the corporate support that you get that, you
(02:11):
get the U of L gets because then there would
be more of a push to maybe have that towards
the NBA franchise. And that isn't like a crazy thing
to bring up, but it's a win win for every
single person. If an NBA team was here, I just
I find a hard I think now you have fallen
to where they used to be unheard of to think
(02:33):
about a professional sports team in Las Vegas. Las Vegas
will now be the next will now be the next
city that has an NBA team. I don't think there's
any question. Well, Lebron James wants to own it, and
he but he can't be a player and own it.
So when he when if expansion happens in three years?
And in Vegas, Vegas, we've seen now that the NFL
(02:55):
works in Vegas, the NHL works in Vegas, the w
n B a is in Vegas. Is there a base?
Is that where the a's are going to Vegas? So
the NBA is going to go to Vegas at some point,
and obviously Seattle also will be first in line. Right
outside of Vegas. I think Seattle was first in line
to get an NBA team before before Vegas until it
(03:15):
became a clear thing that it can work there. And
now sports gambling is embedded within how we consume sports content.
So I just think we missed the window.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
Do you think that the NBA is more inclined to
give a franchise to a team that already has a
w NBA franchise.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
I don't. I wouldn't think that that matters a whole lot,
because there's just it's a different planet when it comes
to the support and the reach. I mean, the WNBA
is not in any way profitable, and it without and
I mean this is just fact, Without Caitlin Clark, it's
not a needle mover for most people. It just isn't.
That's just that's just that those are facts. It might
(03:53):
hurt people's feelings, but that's just the way that it is.
So h There's other cities that come up, like Kansas
City has has been as a place that is big enough.
They've clearly had success with their pro teams there. I
just don't think for a long Louisville, I think, has
always been known as a basketball city. Kentucky's been known
as a basketball state. Obviously, the Colonels were here in
(04:14):
the ABA long ago, and I think it's been viewed
as a city that would embrace and want the NBA
in the last you know, ten to fifteen years. But
I just think it's just hard for me to envision
when they're looking at expanding by two or expanding maybe
by four. I just feel like we would miss the
cut as a city, not because of anything specifically wrong
(04:35):
with us, it's just I think for what the NBA
is looking for, market size, proof of high level professional
sports succeeding, I just think it makes it tough. And
I guess maybe one thing you could say is that, well,
you know, Louisville has never had a major pro sports
team before. Now we have Racing Louisville, but never an
(04:58):
MLB team. Actually they did way way back in the day,
like hundreds of years over one hundred years ago. So
maybe they would get the benefit of the doubt because
we are known as a basketball city. But I just
feel like when the opportunity was there with the Hornets,
and I believe also might have been the there was
another potential, not expansion, I mean it was it was
basically taking over for a team that needed a new
(05:18):
home and was looking to move. I feel like that
would have been your best window. I think expansion, You're
not going to be as attractive as other cities to
where your best chance of ever getting an NBA team
in Louisville, in my opinion, would be the Kings or
the Grizzlies or somebody like that. And I'm not saying
this is realistic New Orleans. Maybe if those teams it
just wasn't working there, it had run its course and
(05:39):
they realized there's no ceiling here, maybe then you could
you could get somebody to relocate. But as far as
an expansion candidate, I think you're in the mix. I
just I think you have to have a big expansion
for that to happen.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Do you think that keeping on comparing the Colonels to
success here is kind of unfair because that was so
long Ayeoh and of course yeah. All it's a different
time right now than it was in the NBA.
Speaker 1 (06:01):
I mean, I've always believed that we would support an
NBA team, but that's just my belief. Maybe that's wishful thinking.
You know, you just don't know until until you have one,
and I think you getting one at this point this
in the current climate, I just think you're you're better
off getting you have a better chance of getting one
if if somebody is looking to move, then looking to
expand and start a new franchise. All right, we got
(06:22):
an update of traffic and weather coming your way right here.
It is seven to eleven a news Radio eight forty whas.
It is seven seventeen here at news Radio eight forty whas.
It is Kentucky Anda's Morning News with myself, Nick Coffee.
I hope you guys know who I am. If not,
now you do, and I hope you remember, and I
hope you come back and start your morning with us
(06:42):
each and every day, and just know that whatever you're doing,
wherever you're going, take us with you. Listen live on
the iHeartRadio app. Also listen live at whas dot com.
I've been mentioning throughout the morning that we have a
way for you to interact with us, and that is
with the talkback feature on the iHeartRadio app. Where I
come from in sports radio, interaction is a big part
(07:03):
of it. Right People call in and yell and talk
about their favorite teams and tell you how stupid you are,
how stupid the coach is. And there is a part
of me that will miss that world. It was a
lot of fun. Obviously this is a little bit different,
but I do think it's important to let listeners know
that they have a way to interact with us live
on the show. And obviously you can get in touch
(07:24):
with us on Twitter and Facebook and all that, and
a lot of people still do that. But the talk
back feature is really easy, and it's a tool that
iHeart has implemented that we'd be foolish not to really
utilize to where if you're listening on the app and
you click the microphone on your device, it will then
prompt you to record up to thirty seconds of whatever
(07:45):
you want. What I always say is questions, compliants, compliments, insults,
feel free to send them in. Not everything, of course,
would be and look, there may be people that just
want to share something that maybe they don't expect to
be played on the air. We're not going to just
play everything that comes in. But if we are to
talking about something that you have a strong opinion on,
we're talking about something that you you know, you really
want to express the way you feel, you have the
(08:07):
option to do that, and we'll certainly try to mix
in some of these What do we call them. We
can't call them talkbacks, like what do we We got
to figure out a way to smoothly reference what this
is because I'm a company man. But talk back feature,
I don't love that. I don't love the way that's worded.
I can't come up with a better one necessarily, but uh,
you know, let's let's hit the talk back. Let's you know,
(08:30):
and there's ways to to to to word it. But anyways,
if you want to share something and it is a
different perspective than maybe we are discussing or thinking about,
you know, that can always continue the conversation. Sometimes you
could potentially help take our conversations in a different direction.
So again we'll we'll try to utilize that more so
here on the show. And again, whatever you got, feel
(08:52):
free to uh to send it in. That'd be nice.
Speaker 3 (08:55):
It's a great feature, Nick, because it does give listeners
a chance to be part of the show. And as
a matter of fact, you know, something's going on out
in town, and you know, I can't tell you the
number of times that people have called in and said, hey, listen,
by the way, I'm on my way sixty for them
at the WADDI exit, and I just witnessed an accident.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
That's right, those are the ones I love.
Speaker 3 (09:13):
I mean, Bobby Ellis does a great job with our traffic,
you know, and I love that folks call in. Don't
get me wrong, don't stop calling in. But Bobby's pretty
on top of that. Where what Bobby needs help with too.
What we all do is when you're we've all seen it,
we've seen an accident happen when we're in our car.
And if a listener can reach out to us and
let us know, hey, look this just happened. You know
how many times people have emailed me and said, thanks
(09:35):
to you all, I was able to get off before
the Waddy exit and make the detour.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
Yeah you can. I mean they listeners can then be
a resource for us, right.
Speaker 3 (09:42):
Even with an app's not going to pick it up
that quick. So use that talkback feature Nick's talking about.
That's amazing.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Have you have you heard some of the commercials that
Our Heart runs promoting it that I like. I like
leaning into it because there are some people that that
don't realize that it is a for it's a platform.
It's a feature that you can tell us you could
share something with us. Some people click the microphone and think,
you know, hey hey Alexa or hey Siri. They think
(10:09):
if you hit the microphone and tell the app what
you want, then it'll do it. And I mean your
your echo speaker may or whatnot. But the app on
the microphone that's there when you're listening to us live
is for you to yell at us or yep or
give it or tell us how great we are. We
love that, we love that. I'm kidding. We wouldn't. We wouldn't,
would we. I don't know, maybe we would. Maybe maybe
(10:31):
we would just play nothing but people praising us. Everybody
likes some compliments. That's right, every stuff all right, trafficking weather.
Your next update is now. Also another update on sports
coming your way right here on news radio eight forty whas.
Thank you, John. It is seven thirty five here Kentucky.
His morning news with Nick Coffee on news Radio eight
forty whas. We'll talk coming up in about an hour
(10:53):
a little under an hour with Rory O'Neill of NBC
News and get his get his thoughts on the latest
with the is stems going on, not only in California,
in La. LA's gotten the most of the attention as
you could expect, but you're seeing it here in Louisville
protests that I think have mostly been peaceful from what
I've gathered, but cities across the country are preparing for
(11:17):
what I guess they hope is a peaceful protest, but
you really never know, and you need to be prepared if,
in fact, it turns out to not be peaceful. So
this weekend there I think there are a total of yeah,
there are a thousand, says here. The protests are part
of over a thousand demonstrations planned nationwide that are opposing
(11:40):
President Trump' immigration policies and these ice rates. So here
in Louisville there are at least three that are scheduled
for Saturday, one downtown and two in the Highlands, with
additional protests planned across the river in Indiana. These follow
I guess the smaller peaceful anti ice protests that took
place in louis on Monday, and again, from what I've gathered,
(12:01):
they seem to be peaceful, certainly compared to what you've
seen at times in Los Angeles. However, there was footage
pictures surfacing of I can't think of which road it
is I can get anywhere I need to go downtown,
but I'm terrible at remembering specifically building. Yes, I'm oh
on Broadway? Was that Okay? I was going to say Broadway,
(12:23):
then I thought about main Street, and then I'm thinking, no,
it's not main Street. So you know, those that want
to really make a big deal about the protests going on,
and I'm not saying that at times they're not worthy
of making a big deal out of it. But the
one thing that they were really able to put out there, see,
see this is an issue. See, somebody's got to fix
this is that they were in the street to where
(12:43):
if you wanted to drive down Broadway you wouldn't be
able to do so. I don't think it turned into
anything major, but you you've got to be prepared. Again.
Cities across the country are I'm sure they already have
plans in place. I know L and PD. They're balancing
public safety, but also of course protecting First Amendment rights
here and letting people demonstrate and protest peacefully. So they're
(13:07):
going to have bike patrols, mounted units, and of course
video recording for accountability, which is huge.
Speaker 2 (13:14):
Now.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
I wonder how many lessons we learned in the Breonna
Taylor protests. Then we took away from that, and that's
probably a question for someone like Jody Myman or even
the chief.
Speaker 1 (13:23):
But to your point, I surely I think everybody learned
some things in their own way, given sort of what
that entire thing was.
Speaker 3 (13:30):
Well right, And I watched some of the footage from
the protest yesterday, and for the most part, everybody was
in I guess for all of it.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
Really the people were peaceful.
Speaker 3 (13:39):
As you mentioned, if you were trying to get down Broadway,
that probably was a problem. But let's be honest, this
is downtown Louisville. You're not in downtown Manhattan. I've encountered
not just protests, but a lot of construction this summer now,
which I think is fantastic because we've got to improve
our infrastructure. But I've always been able to find another
way around it, and it hasn't delayed my tripsgnificantly. So
(14:00):
if people are protesting peacefully, I understand, you know, does
it make it to whom you're referring to? Is it illegal? Yeah,
if you don't have the permits, you better believe it is.
But let's put some context here. And so if I
were to see what I'm trying to say is if
I needed to get down Broadway and I needed to
get through that area and there were protesters there, it
(14:23):
wouldn't even occur to me to maybe take a turn
down or wherever and go around the protests and get
to where I'm going. I've got an app that can
get me there as long as people are being peaceful.
Speaker 1 (14:33):
I don't care what you protest, yeah, I just what
fascinates me is to just try to put myself in
the many different shoes of many different people. Right if
you are somebody that was to turn down a road
Broadway and you see peaceful, protesting people walking towards you,
if you've never encountered that before, regardless of what you
(14:56):
think of protests or not, it could probably be alarming
to people or they may be worried. And it's because
a lot of the footage that gets really spread across
everywhere on the internet, all over the new it gets
sensationalized to where you may be fearful. I don't know
what the I don't know if these people are angry,
if they're going to try to make an example out
of me because they feel so strongly about why, you know, whatever,
(15:19):
it is that they're they're protesting. So I don't know.
I just I think even if it is peaceful and
it's not, you know, and they're not being held accountable
by not having a permit, you know, it still could
impact every people's people's every day lives and make them uncomfortable.
And that's just that's what you have to balance here.
I mean, LMPD, it's their responsibility and they know it
(15:42):
to to balance it as best they can. But I'd
be a liar if I told you I think it's.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
Easy, right, right, because although, like you mentioned earlier, with
the school system and whatnot, let's be honest, nobody is
ever one hundred percent. And so I think you raise
up a good question. I'm sure these questions are going
to be thought long and hard about over the next
few days as we see these protests unfold. My bigger
concern with the protest is, like anything else, is they
start peaceful. We have peaceful protests, and then it takes
(16:09):
one offshoot thing to happen, whether it be by accident,
whether it be on purpose, somebody throws a wrench into
the whole thing, and then all of a sudden, you
know what breaks loose.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
That's my concern when it comes to these protests.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
Well, and you just never know. There's no way to
know if how who that is there is truly just
looking to make a change, or if they're there to
wait for somebody to make the first move to basically
cause chaos. And that's what you got to be worried about.
I was.
Speaker 3 (16:39):
I was there when Remember why they went marched on
Daniel Cameron's house.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
Yeah, I remember rolling.
Speaker 2 (16:44):
Up because I had to go over to saying hey,
Albert at the time for an.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Event, had to be a scene, dude.
Speaker 3 (16:48):
There were so many cars with out of state license
plates that were parked outside.
Speaker 1 (16:51):
There's to your point, I'm not surprised. I'm not surprised exactly.
All Right, We've got another update of trafficking weather coming
your way right here right now on Who's Radio eight
forty whas seven forty seven here at Kentucky this Morning
News on News Radio eight forty whas. We talked last
week about the Nintendo switch to being a big item
that had people lined up seemingly for miles to purchase,
(17:15):
and the purchase the people that purchased them, I'm sure
they're happy and a lot of you did exactly that
because there's been a record bro Yes. So the switch
To that released released last week managed to rack up
more than three point five million units sold in just
four days, makes it the fastest selling console in the
(17:36):
history of the company. The switch To retails for about
four hundred and fifty dollars. Some stores are already out
of stock of the console, so I'm sure they'll be restocking.
And if you did, if you waited, this is what
we brought up last week. If you waited in line
and you got it and you paid the four hundred
and fifty bucks, you've probably been playing it NonStop because
it's the new toy and you love it. But was
(18:00):
it worth waiting however long you waited, And I guess
that's all subjective, But you know, if you've already, if
you've got the Switch one or the Switch Original, whatever
it was called, I would just the thought of standing
in line. There's not many things that I would like
if it's something that I need as far as a
necessity for like my life, not necessarily my life depending
upon it, but just you know, something that like quite
(18:21):
literally I have to have. That's different. But this is
just a toy. And I don't mean to say that
if you're like a grown up and you waited in
line like you're playing with toys, you need to grow up.
I mean, but literally, it's a video game. It's a toy,
and adults have toys too. I've got toys, so you know,
I'm not passing any judgment, but I just there's not
much that I would that I would say, Okay, yeah,
I'll sit here for four hours just so I can
(18:42):
get it a few weeks earlier. It just wouldn't be
worth it to me, but hey, maybe it's worth it
to others.
Speaker 2 (18:48):
Do you remember the last thing you stood in line for?
Speaker 1 (18:50):
No?
Speaker 3 (18:51):
You know, because when you're talking about that, you're making
me think. Now, did you see the lines on TikTok
when Paul Skemes Bibblehead Night.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Was in Pittsburgh. No? Oh, insane, bro.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
I mean, it was like a guy just walked along
the line and it was crazy to think what people
held out for.
Speaker 1 (19:07):
It was the same with Terror School. Was he signing
them or it was just a bottlehead and it was crazy.
Speaker 3 (19:12):
And people do this, and as we mentioned earlier, you
can hire somebody to sit in line for you and
wait if.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
You want, which is what a lot of people are
doing now, and how many of these intended now I
might do that.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
I would rather because that if I'm making money and
it's just taking my time. It depends upon, of course
the money and the time involved. But I can get
I can get lost on my phone for a few hours.
I can you know, I take a couple of pairs
AirPods and just you know, I mean, it wouldn't be fun,
but if it's if, if there's a price associated with it,
then it may be worth it. But as far as
(19:44):
just to just to spend that much money, yeah, and
know that I could spend the same amount of money
and not have to wait in line as long as
some people did. That would just be my preference. But again,
everybody's got their own their own preferences.
Speaker 3 (19:56):
And do you see how we always sit in different
church or same church, different you in generations? Okay, back
in the eighties it was the cabbage patch kids, people
went crazy over.
Speaker 1 (20:05):
I mean, things never changed.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
And I say, it's about politics all the time, and
we're still having the same arguments. My old man is saying,
it was saying forty years ago, you know, back in
the eighties, it was Cabbage Patch kids.
Speaker 2 (20:14):
You know, now it's Nintendo switches.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
And how many of these were ending up on eBay? Oh,
I'm sure a lot of I'm sure that's that's a
I wouldn't say that's an industry, but that's a that's
that's its own world where you just get your hands
on something and you are willing to do whatever to
get it because you know it's going to be there's
not going to be many of them early on, and
you can probably sell it for double what it retails
for because people are just that desperate to have it
(20:39):
as soon as possible, and that'll probably never change. To
your point, you just made me realize how impatient I
actually am, because I can't remember the line. If I
see a long line, I'm walking away. There's just nothing.
I just I don't I don't wait. I don't like
to wait on things. Yeah. All right, We've got another
update of traffic and weather coming your way, and also
another update on sports right here on news Radio eight
forty whas