Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:23):
Hey, yo, they they should calm down.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
The show is about to style on the radio.
Speaker 3 (00:28):
Turn it up, turning it up, turn.
Speaker 4 (00:32):
It up, lound like a dream come true.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
Due to the nature of this program, discretion does not exist.
It's Race on the radio right now on w t
i C News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 5 (00:49):
Let's get it, yeah, Gallowax not Mega across the protect.
Speaker 2 (01:07):
Play what's going on in Treats on the radio.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
With so much news and so much news on WTIC
News Talk ten to eighty, Welcome to the program. As
many of you did yesterday and plenty of you contacted
me about the breaking news in New York City. We
learned that an individual traveled all the way from the
(01:35):
state of Nevada to the Big Apple to commit a
heinous act which everyone is talking about top of the
news anywhere and everywhere, and as much as speculation was
going on online. I gotta commend all of the cyber
(01:56):
sleuths who were able to get this guy's information in
Lake and he split faster than the news media could.
But sadly we do have to give a little bit
of the price is right wrong answer Horn to John Miller,
(02:21):
who a lot of people were talking about last night.
Now I know John Miller. I've had to deal with
John Miller in the past. He was a abcie witness
news journalist back in the days. He always involved himself
in police stories. And after September eleventh, in two thousand
(02:45):
and three, John Miller went to the LAPD where his
job was, and I want to get it right here,
he became the Los Angeles Police Department's Bureau chief for
counter Terrorism and Criminal in intelligence under William Braxton. This
(03:07):
guy who made again one of the biggest faux pause
as a journalist at a time where people are trying
to get answers, John Miller.
Speaker 2 (03:22):
They do not know who he is.
Speaker 6 (03:24):
They know he is a male, possibly white.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
Talk about intelligence. Everybody who saw that picture, that grainy
picture of that man, not one person suspected him of
being white, except for John Miller, again, the two thousand
and three Los Angeles Police Department Bureau chief for counter
(03:56):
Terrorism and Criminal Intelligence. To this day, and it has
not been twenty four hours, Jonathan Miller has not come
forward to apologize or to recant that.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Statement at all.
Speaker 3 (04:15):
CNN has not released a statement as of yet.
Speaker 2 (04:19):
Will he I don't know, But if he does not.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
What does it say about CNN? Probably what we always knew,
no accountability. But I don't want to talk about Jonathan Miller.
I wanted to get that out of the way, because
that's all anyone wants to talk about. I'm going there, folks.
Am I alone in this? Am I alone in thinking
(04:53):
that this twenty seven year old murderer showed up in
New York City to attack the NFL. I know that
there are reasons to believe this. There was a letter
in his pocket, the NFL is in the building.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
I know that there are a lot of reasons to
believe this.
Speaker 3 (05:22):
I get it, I do, But if I can, I
need to express something to you, folks why I'm a skeptic,
and you will probably.
Speaker 2 (05:33):
Consider this after I say it.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
I don't want to. I'm not trying to be a
conspiracy theorist here. I don't want to be lumped in
with Quanon and Earning of those folks. Not that I
have anything against them, but I just want to weigh
out what we know. This twenty seven year old man
(05:56):
played high school football, graduated in twenty six, sixteen irrefutable,
but he never even played for a minor league team,
didn't play in any facet of the NFL, but claims
that his mental illness was a direct result of CTE
(06:22):
and blames the NFL for it. Now, what would be
the reach that I would have to make to associate
my high school football career with the NFL. Let me
lay it out for you, because it's the only answer
that makes sense, unless, of course, you can give me
something different, which I doubt you can hear me out
(06:44):
because I thought about this all night.
Speaker 2 (06:48):
We could suggest that this young man.
Speaker 3 (06:53):
Started a career in football, maybe in Pop Warner, maybe
making it too his high school football team and being
quite successful, that all of that influence of the NFL
is what prompted him to join Pop Warner and his
high school football team. Right, you can say that the
(07:15):
glory of possibly becoming to the coming to the NFL,
the lure of possibly being amongst the NFL alum, that
motivation would have to be the only reason why he
would blame them for the CTE that.
Speaker 2 (07:34):
He thinks he had playing high school ball.
Speaker 3 (07:40):
Right, that the brass ring was tempting him and we
need to destroy the temptation.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Isn't that fair? Tell me where you can think of that?
Any other place? Or you can think of any other
reason why he would blame a league.
Speaker 3 (07:57):
He was not a part of.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
That.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
From we learned, no prospects unless the NFL had turned
him down. So far, we've heard nothing about that. But
can I tell you where my suspicions lie. In one
story out of the UK Daily Mail about the background
(08:22):
of this twenty seven year old murderer, it turns out
that in Nevada he was a private investigator. Anybody wonder
why that would stick out to me? Again, he is
(08:44):
a private investigator. That's the reason why he had to
permit to own firearms, because as he is doing his
private investigations, he may run into some you know, people
who wish to do some harm, may be nefarious to
protect himself, he's not a detective or police officer, but
(09:09):
he's kind of like a detective and a police officer
because he had to obtain a private investigator's license, as
all people do, which allows him to be registered to
have a firearm. And being a private investigator means that
you can deduce, you can discern, you can investigate. Why
(09:38):
is all of that relevant to this story? Well, let's
get to last night. This private investigator with a firearm
who did not play in the NFL, drove all the
way from Nevada in three days.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
To go to the wrong floor.
Speaker 3 (10:07):
He didn't investigate where the offices at three forty five
Park Avenue housed the NFL's offices, which are floors five
through seven. In walking into three forty five Park Avenue,
(10:30):
he starts off by just firing rounds. In the lobby,
he kills a woman who we now know worked for
the company Blackstone, as she tried to shield herself in
a building from behind a building column.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
He then pushes the elevator button.
Speaker 3 (10:59):
According to the police yesterday in their press conference, the
elevator door opens, a woman is inside the elevator, and
the murderer, who has just shot up the lobby indiscriminately
allows the.
Speaker 2 (11:19):
Woman to leave unharmed.
Speaker 3 (11:25):
He then travels up to the thirty third floor the
elevator doors open, to then have that individual fire round
indiscriminately again. Yet no one has told us, And I
would like to ask, because again I don't have a
(11:48):
private investigator's license, but I am, let's just say, I'm
curious like that this individual, a private investigator, gets up
on the thirty third floor and there are no signs
of the NFL, not a picture, not a poster, nothing,
(12:10):
But I am positive that there are signs that read Blackstone. Right.
He doesn't leave or come back down or try to
find any other offices. He just starts firing immediately when
the elevator doors start opening. And I'm supposed to believe
(12:37):
that he showed up in New York a private investigator
who did not know what for the NFL was on
at the office that he intended to go to. He
had done all the research to know the building, but
just said to himself with a note, a specific suicide
(12:59):
note that he when he got there after all of
those travels, said, ah, screw it, I'll just shoot up
any floor. Somebody's got to explain that to me. I
get the note, I get it, I get all of that.
(13:20):
That makes sense to me. If it was that simple,
it would be. But I've got I've just got to ask,
where's the footprint? Where is the footprint? I'm not hearing
anything about this young man talking about the NFL and
(13:41):
nausea until.
Speaker 2 (13:42):
They can produce it. I hope they do.
Speaker 3 (13:45):
I will be completely shut down where I can say, okay, okay,
I was wrong. But none of this makes sense. Why
go to the thirty third floor? No one has expressed
that he just pushed any button. How did he end
(14:08):
up on the thirty third floor? Specifically, if he doesn't
know where the NFL offices are, why doesn't he meticulously
go from floor to floor to floor until they can
find them.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Any reports of that, folks, No, there are not.
Speaker 3 (14:25):
Now sure in another investigation it comes out they may
tell us what we did find out that he puts
several floors the elevator went to every floor to try
to find it couldn't have been in that particular bank.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
Why why simple.
Speaker 3 (14:43):
Because in that building and we notice it be true
because Mayor Eric Adams has already told us as are
have investigators. And if you're not familiar with this, let
me just hip you to this. When they say the
wrong elevator bank, elevators in New York City you might
be familiar with, have intermittent and different floors that are
(15:11):
in starting points from the lobby. So one elevator bank
might go first floor to the twelfth floor. Another elevator
will go from first floor to the twenty fourth floor
to the top floor. They'll skip all the floors in between.
(15:33):
Why Because in this case, this is a building that
is sharing offices.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
They all share offices, a sort of a communal deal.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
The NFL's offices have a specific elevator bank for the
five to seventh floors, where you have to have a
security key card.
Speaker 2 (15:55):
Again begs the question.
Speaker 3 (16:00):
Why this individual does not even give the impression that
he's inspecting where he's going. Hey what floor? What bank
do I go to? Do I need a key card? Hey,
give me your key card? None of that. Just walks in,
starts firing, heads to an elevator bank, pushes the thirty
(16:22):
third floor, ends up firing.
Speaker 2 (16:25):
Something stinks. And I know I'm not alone in this.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
I just know I'm not. Now, I have some ideas,
and I know I'm putting it out there because somebody's
gonna say it was like Greece, what are you doing?
I'm just asking questions, and all of these questions are relevant.
A private eye drives all the way to New York
City and goes to the wrong floor, doesn't know where
(16:57):
the NFL is located, knows the other is responsible, and
does no research on where the NFL is in that building.
Speaker 2 (17:05):
But he knew where the building.
Speaker 3 (17:07):
Was gets to the floor of the Blackstone and doesn't
realize he's on the wrong floor and just says, screw it,
I'll just shoot up the place anyway. Doesn't make sense.
It can't make sense. As they was it the merk.
(17:29):
Taw and Riggs would say in the first to lead
the weapon, it's too thin, just is it's too thin.
Speaker 2 (17:38):
I was gonna talk about a theory that I have,
but I don't know.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
It's dangerous, it's riskue, but I'm not I may have
to do that privately. It's not it's worth a question,
but I suspect something else. But I want to hear
from you. It's like zero five w T I C.
Eights and zero five two two nine eighty four two
Am I off my rocker?
Speaker 2 (18:05):
If I am, I can take it.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
I can take the ree you're crazy or Rese now
that makes no sense or your own theory. Just don't
go off the rails here, Okay, We'll be back, more news,
more views, and your phone calls. Eightsg zero five two
two w T I C. I'm Tom Ohantlin, and you're
listening to Reese on the radio on w T I
see News Talk ten. We're back wt i C News
(18:30):
Talk ten eighty Rowland. Did you get the email that
I sent you?
Speaker 7 (18:34):
Yeah?
Speaker 8 (18:34):
I did?
Speaker 3 (18:34):
Okay, all right.
Speaker 2 (18:35):
I was just asked you like five times and you
didn't even answer me.
Speaker 9 (18:37):
It's like you couldn't even Oh, you know what, I
didn't have the that's my phone.
Speaker 3 (18:41):
I didn't have the monitor on.
Speaker 8 (18:44):
Yeah, I didn't have the monitor on.
Speaker 3 (18:45):
Okay, no problem. I was like, why the hell did
you not hear me? Anyway? All right, you did get it, okay,
if you don't have any questions. By the way, let
me know. I just want to get that our way.
Little housekeeping. Also, by the way, I forgot to mention,
Jonathan Debarrows is going to be on the prom today
at four o'clock. He is running for the fifth district
against Johanna Hayes. He's the second person to do it
(19:07):
in the last what three years, no right, three times,
running against Johannah Hayes. We'll talk about that. We'll talk
to him about that and about his strategy to do
so and what he is actually bringing to the fifth district.
He's got some T shirts made. You might want to
be you might be interested in them because they actually
look kind of cool. I've seen them online. We'll talk
(19:29):
to him at about four o'clock. Also, some other important news.
I gotta get to this as well. Some housekeeping. Let's
start with this one one. Yesterday's opening monologue I talked
about Save the Sound. Well, today I had a conversation
with the spokesperson for a very long time. I need
(19:52):
to tell you about that conversation later on today, so
you cannot miss it.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
We'll talk about it around the five o'clock hour.
Speaker 3 (19:59):
It is a very astonishing revelation that came out about
my conversation with Save the Sound. Plus, they've released a
second statement. It was a first one, now there's a second.
The second statement was released because of my criticism of
(20:19):
the first. I'll lay all that out for you as well.
Another bit of housekeeping is one that I'm really really
excited to get information on. Let me lay it down
this way. So in a couple of weeks, I'm going
to be speaking to someone who has a very like
(20:43):
what's the best way to put it in depth background
on human trafficking into Mexico. I am going to have
a conversation with someone who was paid by the cartel
to smuggle people into the United States through Texas and
(21:11):
I can't wait to come back to till. I mean,
I'm going to probably record it. I'm probably going to
have to alter thereway, but I am going to have
an intense and I think this is happening in the
next week. I'm going to be traveling to see this
individual to talk about the trafficking of people into the
United States.
Speaker 2 (21:30):
This person has first hand knowledge.
Speaker 3 (21:31):
This person was a trafficker of people into the country
and work for the cartels. And this story is harrowing, scary, crazy,
And what makes it even I guess more interesting is
(21:52):
that this individual is a woman who's going to be
giving me this information, So you don't want to miss that.
I will keep you updated on that. I think that
I'm going to see them in the next two weeks.
I'm going to visit with them and we're going to
have an extensive conversation, so we'll have that for you
as well, so stay tuned for that. Now to the
(22:14):
phones we go eighte and zero five two two WT.
I see friends in Middletown. How are you doing so?
Speaker 10 (22:18):
Hey, good so about the shooting. When I first heard that,
I immediately when I heard there was a new.
Speaker 11 (22:28):
York City cop killed.
Speaker 10 (22:29):
I said, okay, sounds like a false flag. And then
when I heard then he went up to the thirty
third floor, I said, false flag. They're all about numbers.
The people who do this kind of thing, right, and
they like to leave some kind of a sign, like
you know, a death card or someone who got killed
(22:50):
for snitching. They swell a roll of dimes down, you know,
and here there was the dimes murder. So the thirty
third floor that's telling you who did it, you know,
like thirty third degree free.
Speaker 3 (23:00):
I guess I saw that. I saw that online.
Speaker 10 (23:04):
I don't do the detail on any of this stuff
because you know, I let other people carry the details.
I heard everyone's favorite conspiracy theorist, theist Fluke call another
show this morning with a theory about the He just
started out by saying the false flag, and then he
gave the drug captagone that you put these that these
(23:27):
people are on, like where they got that? You know,
I want to kill, I want to kill. But yeah,
nothing about it makes sense. I'd say, the official narrative
of this drops faster than Building seven, in other words,
free fall speed, and that's pretty fast.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
Well, yeah, I've noticed that a lot of people have
completely deviated off the de story, away from this story
because I guess in some way it's like case close.
We have a suicide note, we know what the motives are.
Let's move on. And I'm again not that I want
to breath life into this already.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
It is a tragedy that took place in New York City.
Speaker 3 (24:05):
However, I just had to ask the question what seemed
odd about all of this? And when I read the
Daily Mail article about him being a private investigator and
then going to the wrong floor after traveling some you know,
twenty five hundred miles in three days to go to
the wrong.
Speaker 10 (24:25):
Floor, and the detail I didn't have any of that
is I didn't know what floor the NFL was on,
and you need a special thing to get the right floor.
They have security the other Okay, all that guy doesn't
know that. I'd say, there's not a one percent chance
this is legit. I would I would like bet the
(24:46):
farm that this is a false flag.
Speaker 7 (24:49):
Now why Well, NFL.
Speaker 10 (24:50):
Is coming under some heat with that chronic traumatic and sephonopathy.
So now here's a guy blaming the NFL like, hey.
Speaker 11 (24:58):
We're a victim.
Speaker 10 (24:59):
Gear interesting, I have a great poem. It's a little long.
I'll spit it next time about when Travis Kelsey and
Taylor Swift were hooking up.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
Yeah, that was you know what I said.
Speaker 3 (25:11):
You know, if you remember Fred back in the days,
we had the Korean, the North Korean hacking scandal, right
when they had hacked it to all of these people's emails,
they got everybody at Paramount and UH and the the
the the some other movie thing revealed some horrible things.
I was thinking that if the same hacking scandal happened
(25:32):
with the NFL at the time that Taylor Swift was,
I bet you you would find an email between the
front offices at the Kansas City Chief and Roger Goodell
saying keep the cameras on Taylor. Yeah, you know, you
know what I mean. So I thought that, you know,
because look, it wasn't beyond the pale, because we do
(25:52):
know this. In that same hacking scandal, we found out
that Roger Goodell and Jerry Jones of the of the
Dallas Cowboys had exchanged emails trying to get the Dallas
Cowboys or telling the Dallas Cowboys to hire Michael sam
the first openly gay NFL athlete onto their practice squad
(26:14):
for pr reasons.
Speaker 10 (26:18):
Dude, the NFL asked Frank, next time you talk to him.
They're probably a lot more corrupt than the mild.
Speaker 3 (26:26):
Imagine a lot more money at stake. Thank you, buddy,
I appreciate it.
Speaker 6 (26:29):
Thank you.
Speaker 2 (26:30):
Ban got it.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
Let's go to Georgie Porgy in Saint Louis. Hello, George, Hi, breeze.
Speaker 12 (26:36):
I want to talk about Joe Biden's secured documents case
the States. Back to February twenty twenty four, Judge her
ruled that Joe Biden was incompetent to stand trial.
Speaker 7 (26:55):
Do you remember that point?
Speaker 3 (26:56):
Oh yeah, Robert Hur's Yes, investigation, Sandy, the the jury
would not find him guilty. They'd find him to be
a endearing old man who lost his memory.
Speaker 12 (27:08):
The point I'm making is, since February twenty twenty four,
nothing signed by by Joe Biden has any validity.
Speaker 3 (27:19):
I don't Agreeve, I don't agree. I mean I don't
believe so.
Speaker 12 (27:22):
Either not by not by the auto pen, nor by
nor nor by his personal signature. What I'm saying is
all of the pardons, all you know, all of the appointments,
say Judge appointments has any validity the last eleven months
of the Joe Biden presidency.
Speaker 3 (27:44):
I think we're learning that from the testimony of what's
his former chief of staff's name, George. But I don't
know why it's slipping my mind. He just he just
testified to the UH to the committee on the auto
pen scandal, and for some odd reason, I'm just his
former chief of staff. It's just blowing forgot. I'm forgetting
his name immediately like that. But yeah, he just said
(28:06):
that he believes that even Hillary Clinton had spoken to
Jake Sullivan, the NSA director, and said that they believed
that Joe Biden was not a viable candidate before the debate.
Speaker 12 (28:21):
Well, actually, Joe conducted his campaign from his basement in
the twenty twenty election. He was already mentally his mental
capacities were obviously going even then.
Speaker 3 (28:38):
Yeah, his sisters reportedly said that his sister said in
twenty nineteen, when they were talking about a run, she
had publicly stated that I don't think it's a good idea,
so his memory is shot.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
That was she said in twenty nineteen.
Speaker 12 (28:53):
The point is, you don't know who was running the
autopn from I guess after his first year of presidency.
You know, you can't prove whether he well, you can't
prove whether Joe Biden approved of any ANON signings, but
you can you can't inequivocally say the last eleven months
(29:17):
of the Joe Biden presidency was was invalid. Nothing signed
either by Unalton or by Joe Joe Biden has any validity.
That whole eleven months period should be stricken and reversed
from from from history.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
Yeah, if we're to believe the reporting by the New
York Times, they even suggest that Jeff Zience had approved
the signing of of of what do you call it?
Of pardons within three minutes of a correspondence while they
knew Joe Biden was in bed. So this is so
(30:00):
likely that there'll be some connection with Jeff Science and
the signing of certain pardons that he approved and not
through not as a proxy of Joe Biden, because he
may not have been aware. And again, like I said,
we're gonna believe the New York Times. They have that
detail in an email that arrives three minutes after the request.
Speaker 12 (30:19):
So yeah, anyway, that's my point, Thank.
Speaker 3 (30:22):
You, you got it. Certain Yeah, that investigation is not over.
I think we're gonna go way, way deep into that.
But look, I'm telling you I know this, and going
back on the subject of this shooter in New York,
it just begs the question what happened, Why did it happen?
(30:44):
And from what I'm learning now, why does this guy
not have a digital footprint Because they're saying that after
high school he got off social media and that was
in twenty sixteen.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
I don't know.
Speaker 3 (31:02):
Well, when we come back, I'll tell you what my
off the beaten path theory is, and it involves a
New York Post story from twenty thirteen that may give
some insight. So stick around, more news, more views, and
my theories when we return. It's Reesa on the radio
on WTIC Newstock ten eighty.
Speaker 1 (31:22):
Listen to WTI S News Talk ten eighty on the
free Honyssey app. Download in like WTIIC today for alerts
on special programming.
Speaker 3 (31:31):
Oh yeah, you gotta do that. You know it might
be special programming involving me Reesa on the radio.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
So let me throw my theory out here.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
And some people were talking about it online and I
would have never gone here if not for the private
investigator portion again. If not for that, I wouldn't have
gone here. So I was directed through some cyber sleuthing
on my own to a New York Post article from
(32:07):
twenty twenty three. And it's hard to believe this, but
I'm like, I'm saying to myself, it's like, wow, has
it really been that long?
Speaker 2 (32:15):
It has been?
Speaker 3 (32:18):
I kept asking myself what is going.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
On with this thirty third floor thing?
Speaker 3 (32:25):
And this article in twenty twenty three says that there
was a map that was put out that everyone tried
to blur.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
They didn't want it out, but they had.
Speaker 3 (32:37):
To report on it because they were concerned about what
would happen should it get out, should this photograph go out.
I'm not gonna post it here. You're not gonna see
it on the cam. But it was a photograph of
a map in Manhattan. It's a map about globalizing the Intafada,
(33:06):
it just is. And the map had a list of
companies that have interests in Israel. Number five on that
list was yesterday's shooting number five three forty five Park Avenue.
(33:35):
Take a while, guess what company it was that was
on the list, Blackstone. Now, if you don't believe me,
go look it up. You can sow. It's your business,
do what what you want. But like I said, think, folks,
that's what it ain't. It ain't illegal. Yet they got
(34:00):
travels all the way from the West Coast.
Speaker 2 (34:05):
To New York.
Speaker 3 (34:07):
To go to the wrong floor to ambush a company
he wasn't a part of and ends up on the
thirty third floor and nothing else but a note that
miraculously shows up. Does anybody remember they told us there
(34:29):
was no uh manifesto by the Minnesota shooter, though they
found and sure enough there was one in the vehicle. Huh.
All of a sudden, I out of nowhere. Once they
had him in custody. A manifesto appeared weeks later. Remember,
(34:50):
they wouldn't release the manifesto on a shooter at the
Coventry at the religious school where three young children were killed,
with three administrators or teachers. Wouldn't release I said, why
because the shooter was transgender. Sorry, folks, this is just
one of those things where I'm just not I cannot.
Speaker 2 (35:09):
Trust the official rule here. The official word just can't.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
Too thin, as Nick said in the chat room, is thin,
very thin.
Speaker 2 (35:22):
It's too thin. It's too buttoned up.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
Private investigator would not investigate the floors of where the
NFL is located at three forty five, one of the
most famous businesses in the world. Just it seems too
have And this whole thing about mental illness, none of
this reeks of mental illness.
Speaker 2 (35:50):
To travel, I've seen mental illness cases.
Speaker 3 (35:52):
You know what I was thinking about when I found
out he drove all the way from Nevada. Who remembers
this story, the ash d Not Love Triangle? Anyone remember
that story? You gotta remember that story. When was that
two thousand and four, two thousand and five, I can't
remember what year it was, but I remember that woman
was wearing a diaper a depends.
Speaker 2 (36:16):
She got in her car. She drove all the way
to where was it, Florida.
Speaker 3 (36:22):
To go find her paramore's lover and kidnapp her. She
drove all the way across the country. That's the first
thing I was thinking about when I heard it. I went,
that's a hell of a way to travel. But remember
that woman drove all all the way from Texas, got
(36:43):
all the way to Florida to go find this woman.
She knew exactly where to find her. She had her
address in everything, so you're gonna tend to sit up
here and tell me that this guy who they claiming
has bout some mental illness taking medication, had to wear
withal to bring to medication with them, to drive all
(37:07):
the way over there. Come on, It's just it's too thin, folks.
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I just again, just too too thin.
I can't I can't take it anymore. It's just that
everything is just it's never what it seems. I can't
trust it. Maybe I'm becoming cynic. Well my kidding. I'm
(37:28):
always I was always a cynic. That's all I'm saying.
Take what you want. But I just had to get
it out there. Okay, if you want to chime in,
you can. We got headlines coming up. It's now time
for the WTIC newsroom. John Silva's back with your news.
We'll be back in streets on.
Speaker 1 (37:47):
The radio making sense of the news. Yeah, even when
it makes no sense of TIC News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 3 (37:58):
All right, we're back, it's recent radio. Before we get
in the headlines, let's take Tony in Talin. How you doing,
Tony Hirie. Sorry, I'm pretty good, sir. What can I
do for you?
Speaker 6 (38:10):
Just a quick question I heard something about you having
an upcoming interview with some and running against Johanna A's correct.
Speaker 3 (38:19):
At four pm, we're gonna speak into Jonathan Debarros.
Speaker 6 (38:24):
Okay, that's that's I didn't catch the name, but uh,
I'm glad to hear that you're interviewing Jonathan because I've
spoken to him a few times and he's an excellent
he's an actual American and he's uh, he's he's a
black individual.
Speaker 7 (38:44):
From the Waterbury area.
Speaker 11 (38:46):
I don't don't know if you're familiar with my.
Speaker 6 (38:47):
Background, but he would. I'm glad to see because I
was even gonna either call his office and suggest that
he got in touch with you and your program, or
or to see if you knew about him and you
were trying to get him on the radio. But that's
what I wanted to confirm that it wasn't that it
was Jonathan.
Speaker 3 (39:08):
Yes, I didn't hear the name.
Speaker 6 (39:09):
I just heard that you had somebody, uh, you know,
upcoming on an interview.
Speaker 3 (39:15):
No problem, but I'm going to hear that.
Speaker 6 (39:17):
I'll stay I'll stay in tune.
Speaker 3 (39:19):
Okay, you got it, Thank you, Tony. I appreciate you asking.
All right, We'll see you soon. Yeah. So yeah, as
you just heard Tony say, we're gonna have Jonathan Deborrow's
running against Johanna Hayes in the fifth district coming up
in about an hour.
Speaker 2 (39:35):
Now, it's time to get to.
Speaker 3 (39:35):
Some news, and our headlines today start with, uh, something
that I knew. I said it, folks, and I hope
they do it now. I hope they do it now.
State Representative Rahim Ali Brennan turned himself into the Best
(40:00):
Police on Monday in response to a new arrest warrant
on larceny charges. The Bethel Democrat was arrested in June
for allegedly stealing merchandise from his Target store in his hometown.
At the time of the June arrest, Ali Brennan claimed
in a written statement, as I was in a rush
to bring items home to my grandmother in the hospital.
(40:21):
The store didn't have bags, and I was juggling multiple purchases.
While I do not have a record, I take full
responsibility for the error and aim on working through these
legal processes to resolve the matter quickly and respectfully. But
it turns out that he has charges for a warrant
that precede the June incident. That's what just came out
(40:43):
that there's another warrant. It's likely that it was supported
by video that Ali Brennan was in the store in
his district. Now there has been a statement that I
just came out and I want to read that to
you from the Connecticut.
Speaker 2 (40:57):
Sentinel, they said.
Speaker 3 (40:59):
House Speaker Matt Ridder said that he spoke with Representative
Ali Brennan about the new charges on Tuesday and he's
in a privately expressed his concerns. Ritter has issued a
statement saying I've spoken to Rep. Ali Brennan about the
recent charges and have expressed my concerns with him privately.
(41:20):
He'll take some personal time away from the legislature over
the next month to deal with the legal, political, and
personal ramifications.
Speaker 2 (41:28):
We are not in session and committees are not meeting.
Speaker 3 (41:32):
I will reconnect with him after Labor Day to talk further. Now, folks,
if you remember this story and I talked about it,
I said, the one thing the media never covers, which
is important to the story is what the items are.
They must be asked what were they that it must
(41:53):
be in a police report, the exact items, a police
report of the items that were so called taken allegedly
must be a part of the report, So we should
find out what they are. Now that we know that
there's a second warrant, or there was a second warrant
that he's turning himself in for now, now, maybe we
(42:14):
could ask the question because look, in my view, this
could quite possibly be a simple case of kleptomania.
Speaker 2 (42:23):
It could be.
Speaker 3 (42:25):
Perhaps the representative has a problem that he might need
help for. It's possible. I'm not just gonna crap on
the guy's he may have a problem. Oh he's just
not now, thief. I don't know. I don't know, but
I'm saying, this is the reason why you have to
report on that stuff.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
You think that stuff is miscellaneous, It isn't.
Speaker 3 (42:49):
It isn't.
Speaker 2 (42:50):
You got to do your homework.
Speaker 3 (42:53):
You may have heard this at the top of the hour,
our John Silver talking about it.
Speaker 2 (42:56):
I was like, damn, he stole my thunder. But I
gotta ask folks. Six hundred thousand dollars in fines.
Speaker 3 (43:05):
During the first month of speed cameras six hundred thousand
dollars in fines and according to this the devices are
located on Root sixty six between Woodgate Drive and George Street,
where the speed limit is thirty five miles per hour
approaching and leaving the business zone. They managed to get
(43:27):
six hundred and six thousand dollars in fines. What speed
are they doing? Also need to get that information as well,
based upon the report, you at least to get what
the average rate of speed is that's over the speed
limit of thirty five or we look at it fifty
fifty one. Okay, I'll admit I shouldn't eve, I have to.
(43:48):
I have to say yes, I once did fifty one
and thirty five. It is only because the speed limit
changed on me. It was forty five in one section
of the street and then thirty five, and I didn't
see it. Everybody does it. I don't know if that's
the same case here. But folks, let's be honest. This
isn't a news story. This is a warning. Okay. So
(44:12):
if you're traveling on Root sixty six between Woodgate Drive
and George Street, slow it down. Six hundred and six
thousand dollars is a hell of a lot of money.
Slow it down. If they put that stuff up there,
you gotta be careful. Former FBI agent Peter Struck, you
remember hear he was in a love affair with Lisa
(44:34):
Page has deleted all of his posts on social media, well,
on x he's deleted all of them because the Director
of National Intelligence, Telsea Gabbart, is releasing documents and a
memo on who released it on July eighteenth, detailing what
she calls a year's long coup against President Donald Trump
(44:55):
after he defeated former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in
the twenty sixteen presidential race. Struck has been a key
player in the unfounded allegations that Trump's twenty sixteen campaign
concluded with Russia, including intervening to prevent the FBI from
closing a probe into retired Army Lieutenant General Michael Flynn.
(45:17):
So it's quite suspicious that Peter Struck is now deleting everything.
But he should know that the Internet is forever, so
if there's anything that he may have posted, it.
Speaker 2 (45:28):
Is probably still going to be found.
Speaker 3 (45:30):
Now, let's get to our stupidest thing of the day. Yes,
you do active, It could.
Speaker 1 (45:41):
Very well be the stupidest person on the face of
the earth.
Speaker 3 (45:48):
Well, the stupidest person on the face of the earth
turns out to be none other than our homegirl, Jasmine Crockett.
Oh baby, Well, it turns out there may be a
reason why she hasn't been in the news as of late,
and it is because of the news magazine called The Atlantic.
Speaker 2 (46:10):
That's right.
Speaker 3 (46:12):
Jasmine Crockett has reportedly tried to shut down an Atlantic
report about her when she learned that the report would
not be one hundred percent a glowing review. Senior Democrat
staffers explained that some of her colleagues find her undisciplined,
but are reluctant to criticize her.
Speaker 2 (46:33):
Publicly quote she likes to talk.
Speaker 3 (46:37):
One of the staffers told The Atlantic she's also a
loose Oh no, They asked if she was a loose cannon?
They responded, sometimes does that cause headache for other members?
One hundred percent, they responded. During her time with Crockett,
Godfrey observed that the congress woman speaks casually and can
(46:59):
also be brusque.
Speaker 2 (47:01):
Crockett also, this one is my favorite.
Speaker 3 (47:05):
Crockett also monitors social media engagement like a day trader,
and is highly conscious about her self presentation. The reporter
found during many of our conversations Crockett war acrylic nails
painted with the words resist and a set of heavy
(47:26):
lashes over her brown eyes. Godfrey wrote that, noting that
her lockscreen on her phone is a headshot of herself.
So now it is coming out exactly what people could.
Didn't you all think that Jasmine Crockett was the face
(47:49):
of the Democrat Party, But now The Atlantic is reporting
not so that people in her own party don't like
her and say that she's a bit over the top
and loves to talk. That's, by the way, code word
for you talk too much and you need to shut up.
Speaker 2 (48:06):
That's what the problem is. Can I just add this?
I wanted to.
Speaker 3 (48:09):
I needed to add this piece to the news bid today.
Yours truly said on the program yesterday behind the Sydney
Sweeney controversy with American Eagle jeans that if they brought
too much attention to this thing, it was going to backfire. Well,
(48:30):
ABC News did a report about it just yesterday. This
was their coverage of Cindy Sweeney and the American Eagle controversy.
And also remember that your humble correspondent told you that
the producers write the copy for the hosts. This is
(48:51):
not their assessment of the news. This is what they're
told to say. Listen to what the reporter. The mail
says about the Sweetey campaign and Sweetey herself in a description.
Speaker 13 (49:10):
Check the polls.
Speaker 14 (49:11):
We begin with the backlash of our new ad campaign
featuring actress Sidney Sweeney. Yeah, the ads are for American
Eagle and the tagline is Sidney Sweeney has great genes.
Speaker 7 (49:20):
Now.
Speaker 14 (49:20):
In one ad, the blondehair, blue eyed actress talks about
genes as in DNA, being passed down.
Speaker 7 (49:25):
From her parents.
Speaker 8 (49:26):
The play on words is being compared to Nazi propaganda
with racial undertones.
Speaker 14 (49:34):
The pun good genes activates a troubling historical associations for
this country. The American eugenics movement and it's prime between
like nineteen hundred and nineteen forty weaponized the idea of
good genes just to justify white supremacism.
Speaker 3 (49:53):
Yeah. Yeah, like the Homegirl Margaret Sayer, that's exactly what
she thought. Yeah, it does spark something exactly, But that
wasn't really the reason why I brought it up. It
was what I said yesterday about the scandal. Keep bringing
attention to it. The obvious follows. American Eagles Outliner Outfitters
(50:16):
Stock has experienced a significant upward movement since the launch
of Sydney Sweeney's ad campaign, which began around July twenty third,
twenty twenty five, and sparked controversy due to this. Sydney
sweeney has Great Gens tagline and has perceived eugenics undertones.
Reports indicate the stock surge by four percent to twenty
(50:36):
eight percent in the days following the campaign's debut, with
and after hours gains, with after hours gains reaching up
twenty two percent on July twenty fourth of twenty twenty five,
boosting the market cap to approximately two hundred and twenty
eight million, yeah, two hundred and twenty eight million dollars
(51:00):
by July this date, twenty twenty five. The stock has
reported to be up twenty one percent since the campaign dropped,
with some sources noting a twelve percent jump during trading
and a communicative increase over the fifteen over fifteen percent
within days. So again stock rising due to controversy. If
(51:27):
they're smart, they should back up and go leave it alone,
but they'll keep pushing it. In fact, more and more
people are posting videos. I think rapper Doja Cat is
now a commenting on it as well, saying that.
Speaker 2 (51:42):
She is a I don't know she's not happy with it.
Speaker 3 (51:46):
Who cares? I just want to let you know that
this black conservative man is happy that we're representing the
blonde white woman. I'm just saying, I'm just I'm all
of you blonde white women out there.
Speaker 2 (52:00):
I want you to know that you have a home
here on recent You just don't. You don't get the
love that you did back in the days.
Speaker 3 (52:10):
Barah Fawcett, Suzanne Summers, Huh, who.
Speaker 2 (52:14):
Else is in that? Who else is in that that camp?
Speaker 3 (52:17):
Ryl Ladd Hall? We'll throw her in. They don't give
enough love to blonde women anymore. Whatever happened. I used
to be the standard bearer. What's wrong with it? I
think it was Anna Nicole Smith who kind of ruined it.
Not and again, I want to say anything hurtful about her.
I'm just saying that it's I think that that she
(52:40):
gave off the let's see, she personified the dumb blonde thing.
Speaker 2 (52:47):
I always thought that was unfortunate, you know.
Speaker 3 (52:52):
Just a Pamela Anderson, thank you, Matt Absolutely, pam Anderson.
So and I'm just saying that Sidney Sweeney, she's making
blonde cool again. And it's nice. It's nice you know,
we've been seeing people, you know, color their hair fake
(53:12):
blonde for the longest. We have to see their roots
growing in because they obviously not taken care of upkeep.
I don't know, ladies, I like I said, ladies, don't
don't get me wrong. If you have you know, brunette.
Brunettes are fantastic. Absolutely well. Let's be honest, right, haven't
(53:33):
the blonde having blondes gotten a bad rap for the
last twenty thirty years?
Speaker 2 (53:38):
Haven't they that they should get some shine?
Speaker 3 (53:41):
Everybody gets a turn, right, everybody gets some shine. You know,
we brought back bell bottoms, didn't we Let's bring back blonde.
I'm just saying, Roland, didn't you have a Did you
ever have a blonde in your life that ever said?
Do you ever say to you was so god, she
is a gorgeous blonde woman.
Speaker 8 (54:02):
Gorgeous blonde woman.
Speaker 2 (54:03):
Yeah, well a woman with blonde hair that you said, damn,
she is gorgeous. Yeah, of course you don't have one.
Speaker 3 (54:09):
Can you name one of the off the rip? Anybody
that you can think of right now that you you
said in my life? Yeah, in your life? Like maybe
even like a crush from back in the day.
Speaker 9 (54:18):
Oh yeah, I have several. When I was in college,
I had really, yeah, quite a few. Uh, Britney Spears.
Britney Spears was not one.
Speaker 8 (54:28):
Was not one of them. Obviously everybody loved Pamela Anderson.
Speaker 3 (54:31):
Yeah, Pamela Anderson. You can't go wrong there.
Speaker 2 (54:33):
I just can't.
Speaker 3 (54:34):
What was the other girl who was also on Baywatch
that was a blond? Nod to Yasmin Bleathed. If she
was another one on there who was blonde, I can't think.
Speaker 9 (54:42):
Of her either, Erica Hominiac. That's what John Silo just said.
Speaker 3 (54:51):
Oh yeah, yeah, you know, she is absolutely gorgeous. But John,
there's gotta be John silver gott to know this as well.
There's another one that was just after Pamela Anderson retired,
and she was kind of like her replacement.
Speaker 2 (55:06):
Did you even watch bay watched?
Speaker 3 (55:08):
John?
Speaker 2 (55:08):
I don't think think that's probably the reason why I
can't remember.
Speaker 3 (55:14):
Oh we got to go to a test stand by everybody?
All right, we're back, all right, we are back, okay,
(55:35):
So Rama says it's Gina Lee Nolan was one. Rama
also mentioned Dion Parkinson, who was a Barker beauty from
the Price Is Right. I don't I rarely remember her.
Mark in West Harford says it's Connie Stevens. That was
a good one. That was a good one, Connie. You
(55:57):
can't go wrong with that. To think of some other ones, gosh,
it with just so few now that I think about it.
And of course there's none other than the woman who
made me want to visit Nicole Egert. Thank you White Mike,
Nicole Egert. That's her name, that's her name. And last,
(56:17):
but not least, this woman made me want to visit
Corpus Christi, Texas when I saw her on Battle of
the Hollywood Stars. And that was none other than Farah Fawcett.
Speaker 2 (56:31):
Hi, I'm Parah Fawcett.
Speaker 3 (56:32):
I'm from Corpus Christi, Texas, And I went gotta get there.
Speaker 2 (56:36):
Where do they make them like that? That was?
Speaker 3 (56:40):
That was definitely it. So we gotta take a break.
We'll come back more news, more views, and coming up
very soon. We got Jonathan Tomorrow's running for a rep.
In the fifth district against Joanna Hayes. When we returned,
it's recenta radio on wt I see news talk Tennady. Hey,
we're back, it's trees on the radio. My wife was
in here asking me a question about Donald Trump straight art.
(57:00):
Just so you know, he said he made two hundred deals,
not two hundred countries. Anyway, I don't even know what
that's about. Anyway, we're back. We are got traffic and
weather coming up very soon with Jason Klerina and Mark
Christopher in the BPS Traffic Center, and of course we're
taking your phone calls at eight six zero five to
two two w TIC. I just want to say this
(57:23):
on the air because I was talking about it behind
the scenes because some.
Speaker 2 (57:26):
People now are chiming in with blondes that they like.
Speaker 3 (57:30):
And Steve l on YouTube great person I hadn't thought of.
And I like her even though she's kind of a
weird lib but I like her because she's pretty and
she's funny and funny works. It goes a million miles
for me. He mentioned Elizabeth Banks and the role that
she played in Modern Family. She had a recurring role
(57:53):
on that show as Cam's good friend.
Speaker 2 (57:58):
I love her on that show.
Speaker 3 (58:00):
She is funny. She did a movie that I think
she produced called The Walk of Shame. It was a
little indie film that she directs. She ended up directing
a new Charlie's Angels that was real feminist and got panned.
But she did this movie called A Walk of Shame
that she started, which was hilarious. But you're right, Elizabeth
(58:20):
Banks is absolutely perfect. Somebody mentioned Marky Post from back
in the days on Night Court always had.
Speaker 2 (58:28):
A crush on her.
Speaker 3 (58:29):
But another person who's on the new Night Court is
a woman by the name of Melissa Rouch. She is
this kind of a mousey voiced woman, blonde on Big
Bang Theory. She's from New Jersey, also very pretty an
awkwardly attractive in a weird way.
Speaker 2 (58:51):
But she's funny as well. I love it. Always love
funny women. You know.
Speaker 3 (58:55):
It's kind of like my thing with Carol Burnett. I
always love Carol Burnett. I've aways let she was hilarious
Lucille Ball as well. Let's get to the phones. Eight
six zero five two two w T. I see Joel
is in Windsor. How are you, Joel.
Speaker 12 (59:07):
Good?
Speaker 7 (59:08):
How are you?
Speaker 3 (59:08):
I'm okay, what's up?
Speaker 11 (59:10):
I haven't talked to you in a while.
Speaker 3 (59:12):
I know I have two.
Speaker 11 (59:14):
Blondes for you. Elizabeth Dintgomery from Bewitch can't.
Speaker 3 (59:19):
Can't beat it, cannot beat Elizabeth Montgomery unless okay, I
almost who Doris Day. Yeah, you know what, I was
gonna go with Doris Day. Somebody else mentioned Dolly Parton
as well?
Speaker 4 (59:36):
Oh no.
Speaker 11 (59:38):
As well?
Speaker 3 (59:39):
Sure, yeah, absolutely dars Day.
Speaker 2 (59:41):
That's you know what.
Speaker 3 (59:42):
People don't really talk about Doris Day in that regard,
just like they don't mention another woman who's a blonde.
I believe she was a blonde who's very attractive back
in the day.
Speaker 2 (59:52):
Debbie Reynolds is.
Speaker 3 (59:57):
She is Debbie Reynolds red. You know, when I'm I'm
going on black and white film, I always thought w
Reynolds was was was blonde. She may very well.
Speaker 11 (01:00:08):
The unthinkable Molly Brown.
Speaker 3 (01:00:10):
But I think it was a redd. Okay, that's fine,
whatever doesn't doesn't matter. I still think she was adorable.
But Elizabeth McGovern is always great. How about women? Was
Barbara Eaton blonde?
Speaker 7 (01:00:23):
She was?
Speaker 3 (01:00:24):
Yeah? I'm sorry, you have to ask yourself this question though, Okay,
what was more attractive on Barbara Eden The blonde hair
or the belly button? I don't in my view that
made look the look her suit? Yeah, the outfit. Yeah,
(01:00:45):
that was completely risque for a boy my age watching
that in syndication. I looked at that Yeah, that was
that was like for me, it was almost like, you know,
it can only be described as a woman at being
half naked when I was and I was just like,
well you can wear it on TV? Where's that allowed?
I agree?
Speaker 11 (01:01:06):
Make them low?
Speaker 3 (01:01:08):
Thank you, Joel. Yes, sir, you're welcome.
Speaker 11 (01:01:10):
Hey, do you know what happened to Todd Steinberg?
Speaker 3 (01:01:13):
Todd has taken He did take a leave a little
more than six months ago. Uh no, I can't, to
be honest with you, I don't know. I haven't really
kept up with it. I do know that he has
taken some personal time to deal with some health issues.
But he did make a statement that is public and
I think it's on the WT I see website somewhere.
I'm almost certain it is. If it isn't, I'll make
(01:01:35):
sure that they put it up.
Speaker 7 (01:01:37):
Thank you.
Speaker 6 (01:01:38):
I I do like your show, but I also miss
his I understand.
Speaker 3 (01:01:43):
Yeah, I miss him too. I do too. I wouldn't
be here without him, so, but I appreciate the inquiry
because we all miss him a little bit every day.
Speaker 7 (01:01:53):
Than you have a good day.
Speaker 2 (01:01:54):
You got it, Sirry you too. Let's go to Ken
in Meridan.
Speaker 4 (01:01:58):
Hello, Ken, Hey, how you doing today.
Speaker 3 (01:02:01):
I'm all right, so what's up?
Speaker 4 (01:02:03):
He got a question? I was hearing the guy talking
the last caller, and I I dialed to call in.
Speaker 7 (01:02:13):
And I don't know if he said it or not.
Speaker 6 (01:02:14):
What you guys are talking about?
Speaker 11 (01:02:16):
Risk?
Speaker 4 (01:02:17):
Did you mention Barbie Eaton?
Speaker 3 (01:02:19):
Yes, that's what we were talking about when we said risk. Yes,
but we.
Speaker 6 (01:02:23):
Thought I wasn't wasn't sure about that, So that's why
that's why I was gonna call about to mention her.
Speaker 4 (01:02:29):
And if not her, Ursula andres.
Speaker 3 (01:02:34):
Oh, come on, yeah, well you know what. I it's
funny that the fact that anybody brings up any other
blonde bond girl blows my mind because it's not that
they weren't pretty, not that the other women weren't pretty,
but you can't get better than Ursula. That's just for
(01:02:56):
some odd reason. That is raw, you know, It's like
you can't it's very raw. It's very it's exactly what
a bond woman is supposed to look like.
Speaker 2 (01:03:08):
Anything less is a slap in the face to.
Speaker 3 (01:03:10):
The to the character.
Speaker 4 (01:03:12):
Yeah, she set the bar.
Speaker 3 (01:03:13):
She definitely did. I appreciate it. Thank you man, thank
you too. Yeah, people really love this The blonde one again. Look,
here's what here's what I'm recognizing in all of this, Folks,
think about it, the fact that Cindy Sweeney is the
subject of this controversy talking about good genes, and as
(01:03:38):
I mentioned, hey, it's time for the blonde woman to
come back and to have a resurgence in the mainstream.
Listen to everybody who's called in in the chat room,
who's called in on the phones.
Speaker 2 (01:03:52):
Listen to what they're saying.
Speaker 3 (01:03:54):
The names of the women that they're given, have they're
giving haven't been popular almost forty years, like thirty years
for people like Pamela Anderson and Nicole Egert.
Speaker 2 (01:04:10):
These are nineties women. So we can't even come up
with women within.
Speaker 3 (01:04:14):
The last what twenty years, like we've got to scrape by.
So I think that Cindy Sweeney is just about do Okay,
I think it is. I'm just saying, let's go to uh,
let's go to West in Glastonbury. How are you Wes.
Speaker 7 (01:04:33):
Good?
Speaker 3 (01:04:34):
I got to Yoke.
Speaker 7 (01:04:36):
And Kate Upton.
Speaker 3 (01:04:38):
Okay, Now both of them are just beautiful women, but
neither of them are blondes. The criteria, the criteria are blondes.
But no, no, no, nothing to take away from them.
First of all, Kate Upton, she's kind of a ladies.
Don't be mad that I said the term. I don't
know if it's politically correct, but you may give me
(01:04:59):
some crap about it. Uh, she's what what's considered a
dirty blonde, if that's appropriate.
Speaker 5 (01:05:07):
Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:05:07):
But Jessica Alba no offense, looks great as a blonde,
Don't get me wrong. She was in a Fantastic four
movie as a blonde. She looked fantastic. So she looks
good as a blonde. And of course she's a knockout
no matter what. Heather Lockley or Todd put in a
chat room and Heather Thomas, I'll go with both of them.
(01:05:27):
Heather lockleyer and Heather Thomas. Yes, Wes, Yes, I know
you agree with the two of them.
Speaker 15 (01:05:35):
Well yeah, I mean I'm only in my thirties, so
I can't go back to.
Speaker 3 (01:05:39):
Okay, you can't go okay. So fine, you're exactly a
demographic I'm looking for. They may blonde within the last
twenty years, with the exception of Cindy Sweeney that you
can think of, what's a knockout that that gets props today?
Maybe Hillary Duff Okay, I'll give you Hillary Duff.
Speaker 2 (01:05:58):
Oh you know it's another one, Margot Robbie.
Speaker 7 (01:06:03):
I have a friend that thinks Hillary Clinton is hot,
which I don't talk to him anymore.
Speaker 3 (01:06:07):
But you know, you know what you get an applause
because you're a wise man. Be careful. You gotta be
careful of people who think Hillary Clinton is a hot blonde.
Speaker 4 (01:06:19):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (01:06:20):
Yeah, we brought it, Kathy. We brought up Pharah Fawcett
Jeanie Garth from nine oh two one Ohero not bad.
You can't go wrong there. Rita Hayworth is really your
red head, but she did make a striking blonde at
one point. Rom also says Debbie Reynolds was a strawberry
blonde Nicole kidman. Yes, at the height of her career
(01:06:42):
she was. And I'll even go so far, I'll go
one step further. I will even throw in Bridget Jones
herself before the crazy facelift.
Speaker 2 (01:06:53):
Was her name zel Wegger renee zel Wegger.
Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
She was cute, she was cute, and then something else
happened and things went crazy. I'm not even sure what
I can make of that. Let's go to white mic
what's going on? So I know you've got a list
of blondes to go down this list?
Speaker 4 (01:07:11):
Uh, no, man, you guys have covered it all.
Speaker 15 (01:07:14):
Yeah, I guys have a different direction to go. Okay,
you know I've been the last few days. Here comes
a controversy. So in the last couple of days in
the news, we had the story you talked about from Cincinnati, ye,
where the white people got stomped at the jazz festival.
Speaker 2 (01:07:30):
Yeah, in fact, it's on Fox as we speak.
Speaker 15 (01:07:33):
And then there was a mass shooting in Atlanta yesterday
or the day before, and like four people died or something.
And what shocked me is the press conferences from the
mayors and police chiefs of these cities both kind of
leaned into, well, we don't know what made this happen,
and perhaps we should have some programs to help these
(01:07:55):
people not do this anymore. And they talked about black
criminals like they were mentally challenged and didn't know any better.
Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
It couldn't help themselves.
Speaker 15 (01:08:06):
But maybe we have the midnight basketball that will stop.
Speaker 3 (01:08:11):
Club You know what, That's always been the answer when
I was growing up, that was you are not kidding.
When I was growing up, midnight basketball was actually thrown
up as an idea to keep kids from hurting one another,
and then those things ended in shootouts and they stopped
talking about it.
Speaker 15 (01:08:29):
It's like my epitome of a police officer.
Speaker 3 (01:08:33):
Is Okay, we lost them by accident. Okay, something went
on there. I apologize. Let's go to Steven Middletown. How
are you, Steve good?
Speaker 7 (01:08:43):
So you's one for you? John Dye herself, Deborah Harry.
Speaker 3 (01:08:48):
Deborah Harry of Blondie. I don't think she was a
natural blonde. I no, no, I really don't. And the
reason why was because I remember that controversy in the
eighties saying why did they call the band Blondie when
she wasn't the natural blonde? Why do I remember that
as a kid.
Speaker 2 (01:09:13):
Yeah, I don't know why, but I thought, I just thought.
Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
I just thought to myself, I'm going I know that
I knew that as a kid because I kept hands
with myself. Why would they call the group Blondie? If
there is like, is that her name? But it's a
it's a good entry. Nonetheless, because I was a big
fan of Deborah Harry growing up. I thought she was cool.
That the fact that she even wrapped on a record
as a young kid.
Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
Was cool to me. It was like, hey, look there's
a rock band rapping.
Speaker 3 (01:09:38):
I thought that was cool. Oh we got to take
a break. Oh damn, we have to take a break.
Thank you, Steven. We'll be back folks, more news, more views,
your phone calls, and more people are being added to
the list. I didn't forget about those two people, but
I will mention him. We'll be back in Tresa on
the radio on WT I see new Stock ten eighty.
Speaker 1 (01:09:57):
On the radio. Ask your doctor if common sentences right?
For your news talk tennady w T I see.
Speaker 3 (01:10:05):
All right. Let me take these last calls because I
know everybody is chiming in on the blondes.
Speaker 2 (01:10:08):
By the way, I just want to make sure somebody
mentioned Hillary Clinton.
Speaker 3 (01:10:11):
What's wrong with you? Heidi Cloone, Not sure. Christy blink
Brinkley not a natural blonde. Emily Van camp may be
a blonde from Revenge. Not certain, but I will look
it up. Somebody most mentioned also Taylor Swift Fair, Farah
Fawcett mentioned her, Cheryl Latt mentioned her, Cheryl Tigues did
not mention her. Did not mention her. Also a couple
(01:10:36):
of other people that were on the list, that I
did not think of, and I want to thank everybody
in a chat room who's thrown this. Rees Reese Witherspoon.
Claudius Schiffer was another one, and I think we got
Heather Locklear and Heather Thomas. We've already mentioned those. Let's
get to these calls real quick before we get out
of here. Jeffson Marlborough, how are you, sir?
Speaker 16 (01:10:56):
Ain't not bad?
Speaker 7 (01:10:56):
How about you?
Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Man? I'm all right, what do you got?
Speaker 4 (01:11:00):
So?
Speaker 16 (01:11:00):
I got one from way back in the day who
was one of my favorites, and I got one from
more modern i'd say last twenty five years.
Speaker 3 (01:11:07):
Okay.
Speaker 16 (01:11:09):
The only thing is I'm not sure either one of
them is a natural blonde.
Speaker 3 (01:11:13):
It's always the case so from way back in the day.
Speaker 16 (01:11:17):
I don't know if you've ever I know you're a
movie guy. If you've ever seen this movie, maryel Hemingway
in Star eighty.
Speaker 3 (01:11:23):
Without a doubt, Mariel Hemingway Grant. Is he granddaughter or
great granddaughter of Ernest Hemingway.
Speaker 17 (01:11:30):
Yeah?
Speaker 16 (01:11:31):
Absolutely, Oh, totally beautiful. I don't know if you've ever
seen that movie.
Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
I've never, but I know maryel Hemingway, I've always been
always thought she was.
Speaker 2 (01:11:39):
I always thought she was beautiful.
Speaker 16 (01:11:42):
Oh, she's really pretty. And then from more modern Anna Faris.
Speaker 3 (01:11:48):
Oh, not a natural blonde. But I totally appreciate the
sentiment because she looks fantastic. That's a blonde. She looks
like she should be a natural blonde.
Speaker 16 (01:11:57):
Yeah, I had doubts about that.
Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
Yeah, but Anna Faris is again also what puts her
into running puts her high on my list because she's funny.
What you gotta you gotta be funny, you gotta be
able to just tickle the funny bone. She's absolutely up there.
I gotta put her up there. Thanks, Jeff, I appreciate you, sir.
Let's go to Chester and West Hartford. Hello, Chester, Hey,
(01:12:21):
what's going on?
Speaker 18 (01:12:23):
Well, I've got two of them for you, and I've
been listening kind of intently here now.
Speaker 7 (01:12:30):
The first one is.
Speaker 3 (01:12:32):
Charlie Okay, fair beautiful, right, And the.
Speaker 4 (01:12:37):
Second one, going back a few years is uh Drew Barrymore.
Speaker 3 (01:12:42):
M Okay, I'm gonna accept. I don't know if she qualifies.
I don't know she qualifies that one. We may have
to that one may have to go under review. But
let me tell you why. Charlie Stern is an exceptional
mention by you, my friend. Here's the reason why is
because Charlie Stern is a officially the only natural blonde
(01:13:03):
African American. Why yes, So she ticks so many boxes
that she's a complete anomaly if you think about it.
On Thank you, buddy, I appreciate you. Let's go to
Bill and windsor Hello windsor loockx, I apologize. How are you, sir?
(01:13:28):
I'm good?
Speaker 7 (01:13:28):
What do you got?
Speaker 11 (01:13:30):
No one has mentioned Christina Applegate.
Speaker 3 (01:13:33):
Somebody did in the chat room, and you got to
it before I mentioned it. But that's in fact what
Eric said in this in the chat room. He said,
Christina Applegate Kelly Bundy is a smoke show. His exact words,
You're one.
Speaker 1 (01:13:46):
Right, it's Reese on the radio. Brind dn't say we
didn't mourn you on News Talk ten eighty w T
I see I see back.
Speaker 3 (01:13:57):
Let me tell you this.
Speaker 2 (01:13:58):
I will tell you this that I am absolutely stunned.
Speaker 3 (01:14:01):
Roland.
Speaker 2 (01:14:02):
You gotta tell me if you even noticed this.
Speaker 3 (01:14:04):
Did you notice that during that segment talking about blondes,
people out of nowhere started calling people we haven't heard
from in months, if not ever, called the show to
name who their favorite fond was. Is that wild? Like,
I've never talked to half of these people who have
called in, which again one, it shows, of course the
reach of the show. But what certain things animates them
(01:14:27):
to call up and express their interest.
Speaker 9 (01:14:31):
Yeah, they had their callers. They didn't even want to
get on. They're just like tell them Christy Brinkley in.
Speaker 3 (01:14:37):
Which again, there are two things to this. Like I said, one,
I love the fact that people are listening and they're engaging.
That's fantastic. From bottom of my heart, I love you
for it. But again I think it goes right to.
Speaker 2 (01:14:50):
My point that is, you know, this Sidney Sweeney thing.
Speaker 3 (01:14:56):
The reason why people or at least positively are responding
to her, it would all the negativity is the fact that, look,
people are now questioning who is and who isn't a
blonde because we've never had a natural blonde to celebrate
in so long. People don't even know who is a
natural blonde anymore. So again, thank you guys for codifying
all of this. I'm not gonna be able to take
(01:15:16):
any calls down because of course I gonna get another
check of weather in traffick. So do you guys clear,
clear the roster. You can all call back a promise.
After my conversation coming up with Jonathan Debarrow's who's running
for the fifth district against Johanna Hayes. All right, let's
get to another check of weather in traffic with Jason
Catarina and Mark Christopher, who's in the BPS traffic center. Mark,
(01:15:39):
real quick, name the first blonde you could think of?
That's a celebrity actress, TV. Whatever is the first famous
blonde you could think of?
Speaker 2 (01:15:48):
You know, it's funny you mentioned it early. I dream
of Genie?
Speaker 3 (01:15:53):
Yeah, who doesn't?
Speaker 4 (01:15:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:15:54):
And that's right in your wheelhouse. Oh yeah, we were
talking about how risk a it was. Actually see it.
Speaker 2 (01:16:02):
I was thinking, uh, now, who was the Who's the
star that was?
Speaker 8 (01:16:08):
Oh god, why can't I remember his name?
Speaker 2 (01:16:10):
This the star that was? That was the astronaut? Who's
the star?
Speaker 12 (01:16:13):
Oh?
Speaker 19 (01:16:13):
Oh Dallas Larry Hagman and I as I got older,
I was thinking he never took advantage of that. She
would have done anything for him, all he had, all
he had to do his ask and and he was
just fumbling around. I'm like, I was thinking, to my
what dude, what are you doing?
Speaker 6 (01:16:31):
Last?
Speaker 3 (01:16:31):
Yeah, he was just mumbling. It shows you exactly in
TV world how God works. They put a guy like
him and gives it to Barbara.
Speaker 19 (01:16:39):
If I was starring Officer Her, it would have been
a whole different show.
Speaker 2 (01:16:45):
It probably would have been Arable.
Speaker 1 (01:16:47):
Hey, president of the Chris Murphy Fanclub on the radio
on news talk ad w T.
Speaker 3 (01:16:53):
I see now I know how to get you fellas
riled up. Start asking you about famous blondes. Maybe next
week we'll talk about famous redheads. I don't know. Let's
get to our guest who's calling in today out of
Don't Drink the Waterberry of Waterbury, Connecticut. None other than
(01:17:16):
Jonathan Debarrow's is on the line with us running for
the fifth district against Johanna Hayes. How you doing, Jonathan.
Speaker 6 (01:17:25):
Great?
Speaker 4 (01:17:26):
Thank you for having me. I appreciate the opportunity.
Speaker 3 (01:17:28):
It's my pleasure, sir. And everyone who I know was
telling me that we gotta get we gotta link up.
You and I both we kind of have the same
sort of smacky in a face approach to our conservatism,
which I thoroughly enjoy. You've got a little different sort
(01:17:49):
of approach than I do. I consider you a lot
more urban than I am, and I use that term loosely,
but I like it. I like it because it's got
to be authentic in the sense of people who you're
trying to reach.
Speaker 2 (01:18:04):
Who normally don't vote for conservatives.
Speaker 3 (01:18:07):
You can speak to them in a way that sort
of not only appears authentic, but in essence you're one
of them. You understand them, they understand you, and you
can articulate what your point of view is without talking
down to them or you know, diminishing who they are.
Speaker 2 (01:18:23):
You just explain it to them in a very plain way.
Speaker 3 (01:18:25):
And it's not so much as coding as we saw
in the Kamala Harris campaign. You just are who you
are and your approach is real.
Speaker 4 (01:18:35):
Yes, I mean, because we all want the same thing.
We all want to be left alone. We want opportunities,
we don't want no handouts. You know, once we present
the American dream the right way in the context of
Frederick Douglas, and you know, we have to explain what
conservative values truly means to us, because it was the
(01:18:56):
values of our ancestors, it's the values of all of Africa.
That's why all the African has the state are supporting
President Trump and they love them. You know, they they're
not most of the policies, if they have any at all.
Democrats are very destructive to the Black news, as you know.
(01:19:17):
But you know, I'm just pushing back against that, and
I'm bringing the truth back to the forefront, and I'm
pushing back against them. I'm ready to fight whatever we
got to do. Now I'm a rumble with them.
Speaker 3 (01:19:30):
I love the fact that you've already gotten sort of
a response that says, you know, watch out for this guy,
you know, and it's a very very negative tone. You
gotta be careful with these guys. He's got a particular
approach that almost gives you the impression is if you're threatening,
which I'm loving coming from the left and what I
(01:19:50):
want to really get to the bottom of. And again,
people always ask me, and I'm sure they ask you,
they say, where did you get your conservative ve values from?
Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
Which, in some ways, when I hear it, I used
to say this.
Speaker 3 (01:20:04):
I used to be somewhat offended when they would ask
me because I kind of felt like maybe it was
a misnomer, maybe it was always baked in the sauce
that being African American that means that I was inherently
going to be a Democrat or a liberal. And when
someone asked me that, I always sort of took it
as an affront, but just to ask, because it is
(01:20:26):
a question to ask, because we know what the status
statistics are. What brought you to your conservative leanings?
Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
And was it?
Speaker 3 (01:20:33):
Maga? Had you been a conservative before? I mean, had
you been a Democrat before?
Speaker 4 (01:20:40):
I wasn't. I wasn't a Democrat, okay, And and and
what I would say is I was a little bit
worse than a Democrat actually, And and the reason being
is I was programming and poisoned by the Democrat control
of public school system. African Americans tradition, nearly from a
historical perspective, we are conservatives. I believe we're conservative by nature,
(01:21:08):
you know, is moving into our DNA as human beings
to be conservatives, you know, But we're taught to the
other than conservative in the public school system with the
indoctrination of this victimhood mentality that has been brought to us.
I mean, even if you go back to the to
the times of W. E. B. Du Boys and the
(01:21:30):
n of Act, which was which is a Marxist organization,
they've been trying to indoctrinate the black community, to turn
us against our own country for a long period of time.
Speaker 3 (01:21:40):
If not, if not even against our country, but even
against ourselves. You know, uh, you bring up Dubois, Well,
people call them duboys. I've always pronounced his name Dubois.
But anyway, but you know what a good point of view,
a good perspective to have with regards to w EV
du Bois is his conflict with guys like Booker T.
Speaker 2 (01:22:02):
Washington, who was very critical of w E.
Speaker 3 (01:22:07):
B when he talked about how certain individuals used grievance
to line their.
Speaker 17 (01:22:12):
Pockets exactly, and that's going on to that to be
it with BLM and and you know, these these these
white liberal democratic platforms like BLM, which is basically to
promote this victimhood mentality the government.
Speaker 4 (01:22:33):
And the white man's against you, which is which is nonsense.
You know, I just you know, I was on the
left side. I wasn't a Democrat. I was I was
sort of independent. I'm not part of the Independent Party,
but more so I was more focused on the social
justice issues that people like Bernie Sanders was talking about,
(01:22:56):
not getting free stuff with free medical but just the
sense of fighting against the military industrial complex and these
wars and the pharmaceutical companies. And two I realized that
Bernie Seeingders was in on it, and he was a
cond man himself. Once I, once I discovered that Bernie
Sanders and AOC and the squad and all of them
(01:23:17):
were being used to manipulate the disfranchised younger voters, people
that didn't still connect it to the Democratic Party, the
old vanguard. And once, you know, once I started seeing
that Bernie was full of crap and AOC and all
of them, all the rest of them, I started to
(01:23:38):
pay more attention to what President Trump was saying. And
once I started to discover because once I realized Bernie
was full of crowd, I was like, well, let me
look into Trump because if they telling me that Trumps,
you know, I know he's not racist because obviously he's
been moving into black cultures from the hip hop ERASU
(01:24:00):
Prince even prior to that. I mean Jesse Jackson, Yeah,
George Jesse Jackson for president, and he helped Jesse Jackson
with the Rainbow Push coalitions and he received n w
A CP awards. We we know deep down the side
that President Trump is not a racial But you know,
some people want you to believe that he became he
(01:24:20):
was hiding his racism. I mean, mam and I Muhammad Ali.
We know it was was a firm advocate of of
of of being proud of being black, and you know,
certain values. And he was he was friends close friends
with and so was Yeah, and so was Jim Brown.
(01:24:44):
And you mean to tell me that these icons of
black culture didn't realize that they was friends with a racist.
Like it's just it's just ridiculous the stuff that they say.
So basically, Donald Trump actually brought me back home where
I belong, which is the Republican Party of Frederick Douglas.
Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
Let's get it in. Let's get into a little bit.
Speaker 3 (01:25:07):
And by the way, if you're just joining us, we're
on the phone with Jonathan Debarros, who's running against Johannah
Hayes for the office of the representative seat of the
fifth district. Jonathan, let's talk a little bit about it,
because I know we're gonna get into it a little
bit later in the interview. Go, I want to talk
about two things, or two very key things. One about
your visit to the White House or Washington for that matter,
(01:25:28):
what that visit was like. But I want to talk
a little bit about your race against Johanna Hayes, and
if I may ask you some behind the scenes stuff.
I don't want you to give away anything that you
can't because not that everything is a secret, but you
do have to have a tactic in order to beat
her in this election. And one of the places I've
(01:25:50):
noticed that you're going is in the urban community. You
understand you need that vote in order to you need
to turn out in that community for you for Johannah
Hayes to lose. What is some of the ways if
you can mention two people that you're getting folks to
endorse you and if not show up at the polls
(01:26:11):
aside of you know, driving them to the polls, But
what is your messaging If there is a message that
you could give to them that says, you know, the
Democrat Party has never been for you, this is what
I want to do. What's some of that?
Speaker 4 (01:26:24):
Well, the message is I'm I'm first and foremost. I
was born in the city of Waterbury, Connecticut. She's from Waterbury.
We know the same people. We got several mutual friends.
You know, my sister used to date her brother for
five years. You know, our family knows each other, okay, friends,
(01:26:50):
So she's in trouble. She got a diaper on probably
right now. My approach to her is and to the
people that know her, introduced them to the real g
in age head, to the people of Wardvieerers and the
people of the fifth District that don't know her by
using her voting records. Right, she voted against securing our border,
(01:27:13):
our southern border. Right, she had an opportunity to vote
alongside fellow Republicans to make sure that our southern border
was secured, and she went against the Green And they
used FEMA dollars to fund the caravans to get twenty
million illegals into our country because they wanted to stack
the debt for the next midterm elections because they know
(01:27:37):
that they was losing that voting block the African American
and spending voting blocks. So my message to them is
they spent over one hundred and fifty billion dollars on
these illegal migrants nationwide and voted Connecticut. Yeah, in the
state of Connecticut, we got over two hundred thousand illegals
(01:27:57):
currently residing in our state. They spent over one twenty
three billion dollars on them. You look around in the
city of Waterbury. These people got tackle trucks, Mexican restaurants,
all at the expense of the black community. They gave
them one hundred thousand dollars grants or more to open
up their own businesses. They opened up the red carpet,
(01:28:18):
rolled it out, gave them the American dream, and left
the black community to death. Over ninety percent of African
Americans voted for kambld On, Joe Biden and Kamberla Harrison.
Didn't get anything in return but fetanoh overdose and higher
crime rates. Because all these vener swelling gangs, these games
foot par role, they dropped them off and dumped them
(01:28:38):
into our community. When the prisons was opened in the
Latin American countries, they believed about they said about eleven
thousand known convicted murderers was released into our country, rapists,
all types of cycopaths, and they dumped them into the
black community. Look at Chicago, yeah, Loo, look at New Haven.
(01:28:59):
Look and this is the thing. Puerto Rican, the Puerto
Rican community, the Dominican community, they're on my side because
they don't want to deal with this easy and all
the line of Americans that came to our country legally,
they are on our side as well, because they spent
thousands of dollars to come into this country the right way,
(01:29:20):
and these other people are being pushed, pushed ahead of us,
you know what I'm saying. I mean push ahead of them. Yeah,
And it's just this terrible thing that people that come
into this country the right way now they gotta pay
taxes to take care of people that came in here
the wrong way. Doesn't make no sense. Gave them fully
furnished apartments, new cars, college college tuition, free medical, all
(01:29:42):
at the expense of the black and Hispanic community. What
did they get in return? Nothing to Hanna Hayes. First
of all, she didn't come at the public's office because
she wouldn't deserve the community. She got selected by Christopher
Murphy because Christopher Murphy that was his seat, he would
he gate. Somehow she got she became a Teacher of
the Year award. Conveniently, when Barack Obama was president, they
(01:30:07):
used that opportunity to take her to the White House,
take all the pictures, the catapul her into the position
as she's in it right now. Because she's just a
rubber stamp for Christopher Murphy. She don't got no mind
of her own, she don't have no policies of her own,
and she don't give a damn about the FID district.
That's a fact.
Speaker 3 (01:30:23):
Hold on for me. Jonathan Deborros is our guest. We're
gonna talk to him a little bit. We've got, of course,
some bottom of the hour news. We've got, of course,
handles the weather in traffic. Dude, you were better than
I expected, and you are better than to advertise, my friend.
Let me tell you that right off the bat. And
I know the audience is loving hearing from you. So
(01:30:44):
that's why I'm gonna keep you on. Folks, stick around.
We are going to talk more with Jonathan Deborros. He's
running against, of course, the aforementioned Johanna Hayes in the
fifth district. He's got a strategy that works. I'm not
gonna lie. I'm listening, and you guys know me long
enough to know that I'm a critic and I look
and not everybody gets a stamp of approval, even if
(01:31:07):
they sound or look like me.
Speaker 2 (01:31:08):
They don't just get a samp of approval.
Speaker 3 (01:31:10):
But Jonathan's doing very very well as far as my
litmus test is concerned. So I got a couple more
questions to ask of him. Jonathan, thank you. I appreciate
you being patient with us and coming on. So stick around.
We'll get back with him in a second.
Speaker 1 (01:31:24):
Stay Race on the radio is on wt I see.
Speaker 3 (01:31:32):
We will be back with Jonathan Deborrows in a moment
to talk to him about his campaign to win against
Johannah Hayes in the fifth district. We'll get all that.
And by the way, John, why you're listening on hold,
make sure you come up with a blonde that you
remember growing up that you may have had a crush on.
The audience wants to know. I literally got that message
(01:31:55):
and says, make sure you ask him who's his favorite blonde.
So I'm going to ask him, sence you people care
so much about this subject. So we'll get into that.
We'll get an opportunity to talk about some other things
when we come back. What we'll ask Jonathan about is
his stances on plenty of things, what some of his
(01:32:16):
platforms are. Because I know you are listening who are
in the fifth district who are interested in possibly giving
him your vote. So there are things that you want
to note. We'll get all of those answers from Jonathan
in a minute, so stand by for that. Also, if
you guys have any questions you might want to ask
(01:32:36):
outside of whether or not he likes blondes, put him
in the chat room and I'll see if I can
get to him in due course. As we go into
some more conversation, we'll also talk about Jonathan's stance on
Second Amendment rights. I was watching a podcast with John
talking about getting of course, his right to carry, which
(01:32:57):
is you may know in some liberal states and comment, well,
is very difficult to do. And of course, you know,
with everything that's going on yesterday in New York with
the shooting, of course, people like Representative Richie Torres have
come out and talked within five hours or comprehensive gun
(01:33:17):
control and all of that other nonsense. We'll get his
take on that a little bit. I'll try not to
get him into answering all of that other stuff. Also,
we'll ask him about Mom Donnie Zorn, Mam Donnie and
his campaign in New York and if he believes that
that has any effect on Connecticut politics. There was a
(01:33:38):
story I do want to add this is actually interesting
in the talk. I think it's I think that's the
name of the publication. I might be wrong, but there
was someone who was rejected for being a democratic socialist
right here in Connecticut. I let's see if I can
find that story. We'll talk about that as well, So
stick around for that. We got more news and more
views of course coming up, and more of John than
(01:34:00):
to Borrow's running against Johannah Hayes in the fifth district,
So stand by for that. Like I said, if you
have any questions, put him in the chatroom. Now, go
to Rese on the radio dot com. That's r E
E s E on the radio dot com. You can
put your questions there, or you can find us on
Facebook and put them in the chat room. All right,
So I go through them and ask with that, Let's
get another check of our weather and traffic. And it's
(01:34:21):
a scorcher coming up this week, and the traffic, of
course may play a role. Let's get that from Jason
Katarina and Mark Christopher's in the BPS traffic center. Hey,
Mark one.
Speaker 19 (01:34:31):
Hundred and two on my kar thermometer, coming home damn
uh from uh Farmington this afternoon. I don't think it
was quite that hot, but when you're on the pavement,
my temperature jumped up to one.
Speaker 3 (01:34:43):
Oh two of my car as fault does it every time?
Speaker 2 (01:34:46):
Yeah, Absolutely pretty intense out there.
Speaker 1 (01:34:48):
Today's self proclaimed love child of Rush Limbo running a
strange program. You already sell the radio on News Talk
ten ad WT.
Speaker 3 (01:34:57):
I see all right, So folks are we are are
back and we got to do this and we got
to give a congratulations to Steve l of Avon, Connecticut.
(01:35:17):
He is the latest recipient of a dozen bagels a
month for six months courtesy between Rounds the Bagel Bakery
and Sandwich Cafe located in South Windsor, h Vernon and Manchester.
If you'd like an opportunity to win, be sure to
go to rees onerradio dot com.
Speaker 2 (01:35:33):
That's our e E s E on the radio dot com.
Speaker 3 (01:35:37):
To enter, you must live in the state of Connecticut
and cannot have won within the last six months so
of this date. By the way, So if you'd like
to go to resella radio dot com, that's our E
E S E on the radio dot com. We'll send
you an email if you are chosen, and we'll also
name it roughly about this time during the program. All Right,
(01:35:57):
thank you for that. Let's get back to Jonathan de Barros,
whose campaign is at Debarros for Congress dot org again
D E. B A R R O S. Debarros for
Congress dot Org. He's our guest today. Jonathan. You you're
a Second Amendment guy. You are, of course you you
(01:36:20):
believe and of course the right to bear arms. You
understand that it is probably in my view, the NRA
is probably one of the most pre eminent civil rights
organizations in our lifetime, even though the Democrats will tell
you otherwise. Talk to me a little bit about your, uh,
your stance on the Second Amendment and your personal journey there.
Speaker 4 (01:36:43):
Well, I'm a I'm a firm advocate for the right
to bear arms just from you know, my personal experience
of you know, I've grown up in the city of
Waterberge during the height of the crack cocaine epidemic, when
we had a lot of gang violence in the nineties.
I was attacked by an armed perpetrator who was a
(01:37:07):
who was affiliated with a gang whether he had a
loaded firearm, and I was forced to defend myself. You know,
it was it was one of those situations that if
I didn't respond the way that I did, I probably
wouldn't be here to that wow. And unfortunately, you know
the deceased, you know, the perpetrator was you know, I
(01:37:27):
had to use deadly force. And the district attorney office,
who was a Democrat at that time, his name was
John John Conley.
Speaker 7 (01:37:39):
He wanted to secure a.
Speaker 4 (01:37:40):
Murder conviction, so he hid the evidence, which was a
loaded firearm connected to the victim. He hid this from
the jury. In my trials, you're a murder conviction even
though they knew it was a self defense case. So
I was actually sentenced to a life sentence in prison.
Speaker 7 (01:37:57):
I had to fight these charges.
Speaker 4 (01:37:59):
My family came together and hired this attorneys out of Bridgeport,
Connecticut's name is John R.
Speaker 7 (01:38:06):
Gulaz, Junior, and he fought the.
Speaker 4 (01:38:10):
Case, brought it to the appellar court. A three judge
Piano went through the evidence, saw that the evidence was
being withheld exculpatory evidence. They ruled that that evidence should
have been introduced to help both of my self defense
and they ordered a new trial, not knowing that in
the meantime of me waiting for me to get this
appellate decision the District Attorney's office and a and a
(01:38:34):
judge ordered the water to be a police department to
destroy the physical evidence.
Speaker 18 (01:38:39):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (01:38:40):
So yeah, So it was a nineteen year journey fighting
my way out. I was finally released and then I
received a full and absolute part in from the state
of Connecticut. The one one of the one good things
that NELAMN did signed off on that after they dude
(01:39:00):
all the information that I presented to the border party,
which was the police reports, transcripts, testimony statements, witness statements,
and they saw that I was railroaded, and I spent
nineteen years of my life in prison. And once I
received a full and absolute party and I was able
(01:39:22):
to get all my rights restored back to me, which
was my gun rights. And I became a member of
the NRA and the USCCA and the CCDs, and I'm
a firm advocate of to a rights for all Americans.
Speaker 3 (01:39:36):
My man, look, and I knew a little bit about
that story, which again is just amazing of a journey
because considering how long you had to wait, how long
you had to fight, which again makes you the perfect
candidate in my view. And if I may ask, is
(01:39:58):
this story kind of the template that you are using
in getting people to understand the importance of not only conservatism,
about you know, Second Amendment rights, about conservative rights, just
all of those things. Because look, I literally, if I
was your campaign manager, I would take that story to
(01:40:18):
tell everyone in the community that if not for your fight,
they would secure the death of everybody in your community
were they to ever fight for their own life. In essence,
this prosecutor was almost he was giving you a life
sentence which would not just you would have to live
(01:40:39):
that everyone in your community who maybe face with that
same ordeal would just have to eat a bullet if
you think.
Speaker 7 (01:40:47):
About it, exactly exactly.
Speaker 4 (01:40:49):
And what pisses me off is people like William Tong
and Chris Murphy who wants to take away people's gun
rights here in the state of Connecticut. They got armed
they got armed guards, they got armed guards, and they're
actually gun owners themselves. So the hypocrisy of these elected
officials to dictate to us what could what capacity magazines
(01:41:14):
we could have, what type of rifles that we can
have in our homes to protect our homes. Who are
they to tell us what guns we could have. I mean,
from my understanding, it says the right to bear arms
shall not be your friends upon and from my understanding,
the founding fathers put that in the Constitution to protect
us from people like will you Talk and Chris Mursey.
(01:41:35):
So I'm trying to figure out why everybody is so
concerned about them taking your guns away when you're an
American patriot. So I'm just saying, we gotta start running
our own candidates if you want to take the state back.
You had over forty eight uncontested seats in the state legislature.
Democrats was uncontested. Why who's not doing their job. We
(01:42:00):
gotta start looking in the mirror and we got to
start running our next door neighbors. We gotta start running
our co workers republic office, and we got to kick
these people out of out of these seats. I want
to organize a United Republican Front, and conservative Democrats are
are tired of these Democrats because of these weird old
policies or putting boys in girls sports or chopping off
(01:42:22):
little kids' penises. Come join our campaign. You don't got
to change your affiliation if you don't want to, just
vote for me during the general election. But anybody else unaffiliated.
I don't care if you don't like the Republican Party.
I need you to register as a Republican because I
know Ben Proto they're gonna run some rhino against me
to try to take me out. I need your support
(01:42:43):
register as a Republican today, and and Batman in the
primers because I'm not gonna back down. I didn't take
the money that all the rest of them took, So.
Speaker 3 (01:42:52):
Talk to me about that. Talk to me about that
a little bit, because what I definitely hear from my
audience all the time is establishment Republicans in this state,
Ben Proto in particular, because I don't Again, I don't
go after him, although you know I could pick that
fight if I want to, but since we're talking about him,
let's do it. You know, you are a Mago Republican.
(01:43:14):
You make no bones about it. You're very honest and open.
You don't shy away from supporting Donald Trump. Talk to
me a little bit about the frustration of conservatives and
Republicans and MAGA folks.
Speaker 2 (01:43:27):
Like you at Ben Proto, and what.
Speaker 3 (01:43:31):
If there is an opposition by folks like him who
are party you know, party affiliated, who are giving you
guff or pushing back on you. What's that like and
what are some of the things that or tactics that
are being used against you?
Speaker 4 (01:43:46):
Well, first and foremost, when I decided to run because
I got tired of the run at George Logan in.
Speaker 7 (01:43:51):
My district, knowing that person right.
Speaker 4 (01:43:54):
So once once I once I knew I had to
get him out of the way. I went to Ben
pro though, and I introduced myself respectively, and I told
him that I'm the guy that's gonna be jan Hayes,
And you know, he gave me his card.
Speaker 3 (01:44:08):
We talked.
Speaker 4 (01:44:09):
The first thing that Ben Proto came out of his
mouth was he says, I'm gonna tell you like I
tell everybody else, you guy, to explain to me how
you plan to raise a half a million dollars by
the end of the year. I told him, I said, listen,
the money is gonna come. It's not about the money,
it's about the strategy of winning. So now he trot
me off because first and foremost, the first thing that
(01:44:31):
should have came out of his mouth was why do
you want to run for Congress? Second thing should have
been what's your policies? Then he should have asked me,
what's your strategies of women. Then we could talk about
how he's gonna raise the money to do. The first
thing came out of his money his mouth was the money,
because that's all he cares about. He's getting paid. From
my from my understanding, you know, from my my opinion
(01:44:54):
is he's he's in it for the money. He doesn't
really care. He has a woner. We haven't won a
federal election and over twenty years as Republican. So my
whole thing is I believe is done is done intentionally.
The Independent Party somebody, somebody from the Independent Party wanted
to meet with me. I made sure I had two
(01:45:14):
witnesses at this meeting. He was a former marine African American.
He sat down and he said that they were interested
in getting across the door. Stet I already had a
rest flag as soon as you said you wanted to
meet with me, because at the time I had just
fired with the SEC. Now now now to get that
to I gotta get back to Ben protal To. Once
(01:45:36):
they they've tried to block me. They wanted to block
me from getting a campaign treasurer. I kept asking, because
you lea me a campaign treasurer in order to file
with the FEP. Nobody wanted to help me.
Speaker 17 (01:45:49):
Nobody.
Speaker 4 (01:45:50):
I had to go all the way to Wisconsin, to
the birthplace of the Republican Party to get me a
campaign treasure.
Speaker 3 (01:45:57):
You got blocked. Wait, you got blocked by the party.
Speaker 4 (01:46:01):
Yes, they did not want to help me. Nobody wanted
to help me. Nobody, So they kept they kept closing
the door because they knew they wanted. They wanted to
basically block me from filing with the sbec becoming the
active US congressional candidate. I knew I had to start
early if I wanted to win this seat.
Speaker 3 (01:46:21):
The road, you know, the roadblocks were there, so you
had to get in early so you wouldn't fall.
Speaker 7 (01:46:25):
Behind, exactly right.
Speaker 4 (01:46:29):
So now, so now that's that's that's the reason why
I gotta I got something against Ben Product. So now
let's go back to the Independent Party. The Independent Party
wanted to sit down with me. I made sure I
have witnesses because I felt the kind of odd that
they wanted to meet with me so early when I
didn't even have a.
Speaker 7 (01:46:46):
I didn't even have a website up yet.
Speaker 4 (01:46:49):
So now they offered across endorsement, and I'm like, you know,
what's your policy. What policies do you have that you
still of though will align with me since I haven't
released my policies yet. And he says, well, it all depends.
I said, what do you mean it this is? He said,
it depends on the candidate. I said, well, made me
three policies that you won't compromise with. He said, it
all depends on the candidate. And I'm like, you don't
(01:47:10):
have your own polities. So I said, well listen. Then
he says, well, we're thinking about, you know, we could
possibly get you a campaign contribution from ever source up
where's to one hundred thousand dollars. So as soon as
he said ever source, it was like, whoa hold on?
Why would ever source want to give me money? Yeah?
Speaker 3 (01:47:26):
Exactly, Nah, I said, yeah, So now I.
Speaker 4 (01:47:29):
Said, I asked him. I said, come on, man, let's
let's cut to BS. Why why do you want to
talk to me? Who sent you and what do you want?
He says, his chairman, the chairman of the Independent Party,
does not like Donald Trump, and they want me to
tone down my support for Donald Trump. And they said
I can mention his policies, but they don't want me
to say his name. So then as soon as he
(01:47:51):
said that, I said, listen, man, I'm not George Logans.
I know George Logan's hands was tied behind his back.
And Jean and Hayes new it too. That's why she
kept asking him on the debate stage. You could YouTube
if you guys.
Speaker 3 (01:48:01):
I've watched it. I've watched it.
Speaker 4 (01:48:03):
Yeah, well he was like, say his name. He would
not say on a presidential ticket, Trumps president is just
another Sea Bis proto in in the Rhinos. They'll tell you, oh,
you can't. You can't win a Republican race as a
magie candidate. I'm brink this down to you. Trump got
(01:48:23):
seventy seven point nine percent of the vote in Connecticut
against Nikki Handy in the primiery the Republican primary in
the fifth district where I resied because I live in
I lived in Plymouth, Connecticut. I'm a riginally for Waterberry,
but me and my wife been out here in Plymouth
one for ten years now. He got over eighty percent
of the vote in our district. So why would you
(01:48:45):
want an entire Trump candidate in a in a in
a predominantly Trump district. Doesn't make no sense unless you
want to lose.
Speaker 2 (01:48:55):
Yeah, that's and I think that's you know what you said,
someone slight.
Speaker 3 (01:48:59):
You have no idea how often that sentiment is echoed
here on that show, on this show, about this status
quo Republican party here in Connecticut. Look, I listen. I
gotta let you go, John, But listen. What I want
to do is I want to have you back. I've
got your cell phone. We'll talk during this week. If
(01:49:19):
not the weekend, I would have talked to you some more.
I want to bring you back. I don't want to
oversaturate everybody just yet, but I need people. Look, folks,
go to his campaign website. It's duborros Forcongress dot org,
so that you can contribute to find out who he
is and what he's Doingathan, Jonathan, I gotta tell you, man,
I hate the term breath of fresh air, especially when
(01:49:42):
it's used on me, But damn, I'm loving every word
that's coming out of your mouth. Man, I don't think
I've ever been excited about a guy running for office
the way I am about you.
Speaker 4 (01:49:53):
Thank you by that. I appreciate the opportunity. I thank
you for sharing your platform. August ninth through the tenth
I'll be at the American First Ground Zero conference out
in Las Vegas, sponsored by Joe Hall. I'll be out
there with Steve Being in General, Michael Flynn, Roger Stone,
Rudy Giuliani, and Laura Logan.
Speaker 3 (01:50:14):
Doing big things.
Speaker 2 (01:50:15):
Sir, when you come back, I want to talk to
you about your visiting at the White House.
Speaker 3 (01:50:18):
I didn't think. I thought we'd had some time, but
you got a lot to cover. Jonathan Deborrows, thank you, sir,
really really appreciated. We'll keep in touch, all right, thank you,
You got you got it, so take care. God bless
Let's get another check of news, weather and traffic. John
Silver's got news. Jason Katarina with weather, and Mark Christopher
he's in the BPS traffic center. How are we doing, sir?
Speaker 1 (01:50:38):
The punch punch, It's Reese on the radio on w
t I S News Talk ten eighty.
Speaker 3 (01:50:46):
We're back and we got more news and more viewsic
on other stories that I did not get to yet,
and we make sure that we will. I want to
talk about the CBS, MSNBC report talking about I think
we're like a day way from more Russia Gate stuff dropping,
so I want to talk about that a little bit
and of course we'll take your phone calls at eight
six zero five to two two wtiic aights LIKEX zero
(01:51:08):
five to two two nine A four two. I do
want to say this post my interview with Jonathan Debarrows. Yeah,
if I can say this to the Conservatives or the
Republican Party here in the state of Connecticut, because I
know that they listen, and I appreciate them listening, but
I really want them to listen to what I'm about
to say. Jonathan Debarrows is exactly what Republicans need in Connecticut.
Speaker 18 (01:51:39):
Now.
Speaker 3 (01:51:39):
I want to make this abundantly clear because I know
it sounds like an endorsement, probably because it is. His
story is exactly the story that takes Conservatives and Republicans
out of the darkness of reaching African American men, if
(01:52:00):
not African Americans period, or even people of color. The
guy's story is exactly the representation you want in your party.
And if I have to lay it out for you,
let me grab a couple of bullet points just from
the interview, and I gotta give it to Mattio in
(01:52:23):
the chat room for pointing it out. He says, the
fact that this guy wants to give back after twenty
years of his life was taken from him.
Speaker 2 (01:52:35):
Speaks loudly of his character.
Speaker 3 (01:52:39):
He had a Democrat prosecutor try to bury him after
a gang banger wanted to take his life and he
defended himself, and the guy still came out maga.
Speaker 2 (01:52:52):
On the other side.
Speaker 3 (01:52:54):
You ignore him. There's nothing to save this party here.
You ignore his efforts. Why bother do you understand that
if you don't latch onto that, what good are you.
Let's get another check of whether in traffic with Jason
(01:53:16):
Calerina and Mark Christopher and the BPS Traffic Center.
Speaker 1 (01:53:18):
Race on the radio is getting ready to drop some
knowledge on wt I see.
Speaker 3 (01:53:26):
Rob Yeah, man, my phone is going off the hook
with messages and early stuff about him. By the way, Jonathan,
I've already got your like two more interviews that people
want to have with you to talk to you again.
As I said, folks, it's just look, it's it's.
Speaker 2 (01:53:41):
Real, real simple.
Speaker 3 (01:53:44):
You know, when you think about it, I know that
people are very much invested in the idea that nothing
ever changes, things change, stay the same. People might view
me as idealistic. You don't know, this is just the
way things are done. Don't come in there and try
to mess things up. Don't try to get these people
(01:54:07):
to change. They just are the way that they are,
and I find that incredibly odd. But they do. And
I totally understand the whole to give up. I get
it in my heart of hearts. I understand the give up.
That is just too frustrating, just frustrating. Sorry, it takes
(01:54:29):
too long, you know, banging your head against the wall,
the definition of insanity. Time takes time, Time takes time,
and I'm just not Look, I'm just one of these
people who I can't stand conventional wisdom. When I hear
(01:54:54):
everyone telling me how it is and it doesn't make sense,
I push back on it.
Speaker 2 (01:55:02):
I used that look.
Speaker 3 (01:55:03):
One of my biggest problems as an employee against my bosses.
Speaker 2 (01:55:09):
Was when they explained to me this is how it's done.
Speaker 3 (01:55:15):
I had a boss who used to say, you know,
when I worked at U Hall, he said, I can't
stand the answer no, And his remedy to not hearing
no is just ignore the question altogether and do whatever
he wanted to.
Speaker 2 (01:55:29):
I always thought that was problematic.
Speaker 3 (01:55:31):
He had this sort of idea of like apologizing, you know,
rather asking for forgiveness than for permission, and I thought,
that never sits well. It never It never sits well
in the long run. People don't want to work with
you after you've shown them up. However, they do need
to be influenced and shown the way. We used to
(01:55:54):
say that about kids growing up because all kids are
from Missouri. They show me state. You can tell a
kid don't do this, don't do that, they won't believe you.
In fact, sometimes they're influenced to do it anyway, no
matter how many times you tell them not to do it.
But in order for them to realize that it's wrong
or good is you have to show them you actually
(01:56:15):
provide the evidence. Think about it with the whole d
quat thing and the eco harvester. How did we get here?
I had to push back, I had to do influence.
I had to make a case. I had to do
all of the hard and the heavy lifting to make
sure that I got to the right person, no matter
(01:56:36):
where was and got them to listen and to consider.
And now we're going to be a place where more
and more people are informed about an alternative to d
quay and we have least started the process. We may
not even be successful, but this is also the point
that I make every time, stop thinking about the goal.
(01:56:57):
The goal is great, saying the finish line would be fantastic,
But that is not how you approach an issue. You
never approach a race by considering it's finish. You have
to consider the hurdles. You have to consider it how
tired you will be. You have to consider how fast
(01:57:18):
you must go and how fast your.
Speaker 2 (01:57:20):
Opponents can go. There is a process.
Speaker 3 (01:57:26):
But if you're thinking about the finish, oh, it's never
gonna be We're never gonna win.
Speaker 6 (01:57:31):
Oh.
Speaker 2 (01:57:32):
If you got that attitude, why bother? I really do
believe in the process.
Speaker 3 (01:57:39):
And in this case, look, do I know that there
are going to be people in the Republican Party who
are going to look at a guy like the Borros
and just go, I don't know if he fits with
our brand of Republican Who are you? Who are you
to suggest that there is a brand? Who are you
(01:57:59):
to suggest what the brand is for the people? Perhaps
give him the opportunity to show what he can do,
to communicate with the constituents, to see what they want,
because at the end of the day, isn't it all
about them?
Speaker 2 (01:58:19):
I mean, that's what we all want.
Speaker 3 (01:58:20):
Right at the end.
Speaker 2 (01:58:22):
If we're really thinking about.
Speaker 3 (01:58:23):
The goal, what do we really want? We want the
people to choose a candidate that suits them, that works
for them, that has them in mind. And what if
the Borrows is that guy. Give him a shot, give
him an opportunity to do that. And if you don't, hey,
the hell with you. I say he should just continue
(01:58:45):
to go Anyway. If I can use an analogy that
a lot of you young heads will remember people in
my age group, I will. I'll use a hip hop analogy.
Two very famous artists, Ludacrous and master P. You would
(01:59:10):
not know these names. For those of you who do
know their names, you would not know their names unless
they did what Jonathan Deborros is doing, go against the grain.
Tell the big bosses at the record labels. You don't
know a damn thing about music. You don't know what's hot,
(01:59:32):
you don't know what people like, You don't know crap.
And both of these guys, Ludacris and master P, the
reason why you know them is because they sold their
music out of the trunks of their cars to people
passing by, playing their music, having people listening to it,
and then working their way from the bottom, with no distribution,
(01:59:53):
with no an R, with nobody in the big offices,
and Universal or deaf Jam or Relativity or any one
of those big none of those people that backed them,
them spending their own money, out of their own pockets,
scraping by so they could become household names to this day, millionaires,
(02:00:13):
even award winning artists in the game. How did they
do it? Hell? People forgot. Taylor Swift started her entire
campaign on MySpace. People who did it against the grain?
Some of the most popular people, some of the biggest
(02:00:35):
names in every industry, worked from scratch, famous amos.
Speaker 2 (02:00:41):
Going against the grain in a cookie business.
Speaker 3 (02:00:47):
So you look at this guy and people are talking
about it's like, oh, yeah, you can't do that, which
is all the motivation in the world. A guy liked
Jonathan needs. So all you have to do is tell
a guy like him, no, all you have to do
is tell a guy like him he can't, And the
rest of you sit around and go, I don't know
if I can back that guy. The guy knows he
(02:01:09):
has the actual establishment telling him, are you gonna come
up with a half a million dollars? I don't know
if we should support him. Hey, could you stop celebrating Trump?
And sure enough, he does exactly what he's doing, and
his name recognition is growing, becoming a force to be
reckoned with, against the odds, against the status quo, against
(02:01:33):
conventional wisdom.
Speaker 2 (02:01:38):
When I said that he is.
Speaker 3 (02:01:39):
A person that you can get behind because he embodies
the thing, the secret sauce that Republicans have been missing,
he's the guy. He's the guy. You gotta be blind
not to see it, or it's got to be intentional.
(02:02:04):
That's all I'm saying. In my view, I just again
I can't get it. Let's go with the biggest critics
of all of this, and especially a guy who's not
a big fan of Ben Proto.
Speaker 2 (02:02:20):
Let's go to Mark in West Hartford.
Speaker 3 (02:02:21):
How are you, sir.
Speaker 6 (02:02:24):
Well?
Speaker 15 (02:02:25):
I think you know.
Speaker 20 (02:02:26):
It was almost like Jonathan was talking to me in
an old kindod spirit.
Speaker 4 (02:02:29):
But when you found out, what you found out is
it's not just.
Speaker 20 (02:02:34):
Mark from West hard or Mark Wallace doesn't like Ben Proto.
It has nothing to do with anything personal.
Speaker 7 (02:02:42):
It's you.
Speaker 20 (02:02:43):
You got to hear a little past.
Speaker 4 (02:02:44):
Of what I've known.
Speaker 20 (02:02:46):
And although I did, you know, he brought us inside
a little bit closer than I could sure, but let
me tell you, for years because of me, he doesn't.
He doesn't take calls anymore, and not because I called
him names or insulted him. I insulted him by telling
the truth, you know from you know, I've got audio recordings.
I got to put him on here, So go on,
(02:03:07):
Mark from Westbarboro. I'm going to make sure I put
him up tonight. I got one where he got mad
at me. I called him up because they said during all.
Speaker 3 (02:03:13):
Of COVID he did nothing, no pushback.
Speaker 20 (02:03:16):
In fact, he said ned Lamont did a decent job.
Speaker 7 (02:03:19):
And I said, where were you?
Speaker 20 (02:03:20):
And he goes, oh, well, all this stuff he did
was after I got made chairman. Well, of course, you
know me, I do my research like you do. There
were twenty three executive orders.
Speaker 4 (02:03:30):
Put in.
Speaker 20 (02:03:32):
After he was elected or after yeah, after he was
appointed chair and June of twenty twenty two, I think
it was. But there were twenty three executive orders put in.
And you'll hear me questioning him, and what does he do?
All he does is yell back, he talks over. But
I'll tell you what if you ever did a deep dot,
(02:03:52):
if you're going to support Jonathan and you know the
way I am, and I already kind of sent you
a message.
Speaker 4 (02:03:58):
If you're going to support Jonathan.
Speaker 20 (02:04:00):
You have no choice but to do a deep dive
like you did with like I was thinking about Hydrilla,
and if you ever did that on Ben Proto, my
friend you are.
Speaker 2 (02:04:11):
I don't want to listen, but the truth bes told Mark.
Speaker 3 (02:04:16):
I don't want to make Jonathan's campaign about Ben Proto,
but you make a good point in the sense of
and and I think that's what you're saying. No, no,
hear me out. I think I know what I'm saying
because he's the guy ahead what I'm saying. And I
get where you're coming from, because I don't want to
get I don't want to dismiss that. What you're saying
is is that Jonathan Debarros has an uphill battle because
(02:04:39):
if Ben Proto doesn't want him to be the candidate,
he won't be.
Speaker 4 (02:04:42):
Is that what you're saying, Yes, and what I'm saying.
Speaker 20 (02:04:46):
And the other thing is I want everybody to keep
in mind there are a bunch of Jonathan's out there.
Speaker 3 (02:04:51):
Who have tried over the years, but nobody's.
Speaker 20 (02:04:54):
Ever been able to come out and shay what Jonathan
did today. There's been other people who say the shame.
They're all over social media. I've met these people. And
if you're not in the game, you're not in the game.
So if you ever did, let's say, and I want
to use the word.
Speaker 7 (02:05:10):
Go after Ben Proto. But if we ever exposed Ben Proto.
Speaker 20 (02:05:13):
For what he's doing, guys like Jonathan and women like
whoever fill in the blank, these people might.
Speaker 15 (02:05:20):
Have a shot in Connecticut.
Speaker 20 (02:05:21):
But as long as Ben Proto is in power and
remains in power, and is endorsed and supported by people
like and I know you hate when I bring up
other things. It's almost like every talk show host in
Connecticut supports him, indulges them, and gives them a platform
to gaslight. There's nobody pushing them back. This is a
guy who just lied last August when he was at
(02:05:43):
the DNC, I mean the RNC. He literally lied and
he got caught. He said Trump regretted saying fight when
he got shot, and that they were all told, not
all told at the convention, not they can't fight, fight,
fight in between. It was all made up by him.
Speaker 3 (02:06:00):
This guy, he lies, He's just he You know, I.
Speaker 4 (02:06:04):
Would never want to have dinner with Trump.
Speaker 3 (02:06:07):
I didn't I didn't like that, and again it's one
of my biggest it's one of my biggest issues. But
that's what I think.
Speaker 20 (02:06:13):
More importantly, Let's forget about all that.
Speaker 7 (02:06:15):
Okay, let's forget about all that.
Speaker 20 (02:06:16):
The most important thing is what he's doing to candidates
like Jonathan. That is the most important thing.
Speaker 3 (02:06:22):
And that's almost to me, but that's not that's not
just Mark.
Speaker 20 (02:06:29):
What I'm saying to you, it's almost criminal when moneys
are involved.
Speaker 3 (02:06:31):
Mark. What I'm saying to you here is that this
look regardless of what and I get the urgency of
dealing with Ben Proto on this, but what I'm saying
to you is is that in order to change that culture,
you have to make an attempt to change the culture.
I think you're you're kind of pool pooling on the
idea to just says, look, we're not going to get
(02:06:53):
it unless we get this. What I'm saying is is
that I want to push beyond that to get Jonathan
where he needs to be, because I can't go on
to the guys of saying that Jonathan's never gonna get there,
because then there's no momentum to get people to get
behind this candidate that forces for proto of proto to say, hey,
(02:07:14):
let's let's do what needs to be done. But I
get I take all of your consideration, and we'll have
more here, and I'll leave and I'll just I gotta
go to a break. Unfortunately I would have gotten you
gotta go to a break. Your weather and traffic coming up.
Let's get to Jason Katarina, John Silva, and Mark Christopher.
He's in the Bpstriffing Center. Hey.
Speaker 4 (02:07:35):
Mark.
Speaker 1 (02:07:36):
The Odyssey app lets you jump back to the moments
you missed from wt I see News Talk Tennady. Download
the free Odyssey app. Search w t I see News
Talk Tennady and tap earlier today to get started.
Speaker 3 (02:07:48):
Excuse me, sorry, Normally I would do what had happened
was uh, but of course you guys already know we
talked about my theory about the shooting in New York City. Uh,
with the with the office at three p forty five
Park Avenue, And now, of course, more and more reports
are not coming out saying that questions more questions have
(02:08:09):
arisen as a result of that shooting. As I told
you things, everybody thought it was just buttoned up, but again,
as you heard at the bottom of the hour with
John Silva, people are still questioning the motives of the
shooter in yesterday' shooting in Manhattan. Again too thin, as
(02:08:31):
I suspected. Again, call me crazy, I just don't. I can't.
And again, nothing against newsrooms anywhere, Okay, I get it.
The objective is to deliver you know, the lines, you know,
the news. In that sense, I'm just saying that when
we look at this stuff as a talk show host,
(02:08:52):
I've got to ask questions. If it was just me
coming on the air, just going someone was shot yesterday,
what interest would you have in that?
Speaker 2 (02:09:01):
If we don't do the deep dive. That's what we
do here. We analyze, you know, we do a lot
of punditry.
Speaker 3 (02:09:08):
In that whole bit. Anyway, I just wanted to get
that out of the way. Second, I want to thank
Jonathan Deborros. He's actually in the chat room. If you
want to go chat with him, please go go talk
to him there or find out his Facebook page so
you can communicate with him. I just want to make
it clear the ben Proto thing, which is again the
reason why I don't touch it, because I told.
Speaker 2 (02:09:29):
Everybody you don't want me in that debate.
Speaker 3 (02:09:33):
You don't. It's let's just say it's not out of caution, okay,
it's not. What I want is people to realize on
their own the opportunities that they're missing. Now, Ben Proto
ever wants to come on this program, he is absolutely
(02:09:55):
invited to that as a regular guest. But if you
wants to have a conversation with me about the the
current Republican Party or the state of Republican Party in Connecticut,
I'd love to have that conversation. But if he ain't ready,
If he ain't ready, don't come. I ain't begging, I
ain't asking. But if he ever wants to, you have
an open invite. But I know he ain't ready, okay, because.
Speaker 2 (02:10:20):
I can hear.
Speaker 3 (02:10:21):
I've heard all of the conversations that have been had
at certain radio stations. He does not want to be criticized,
and he takes it. It's an affront dahim. He doesn't
understand his role as a public servant. Maybe that's the problem.
But you know, don't come here unless you're ready for that.
We have a real hard hitting conversation when you're ready. Please,
you are invited. Ask anybody you come here and talk
(02:10:43):
anything you want, but there will be no talking points
and all that other stuff. It'll be a deep dive.
If you want to have one, you can. But I
just I'm again. There's a reason why I don't say
what I want to say. All right, I wish I
could tell you, but I just not being a good
(02:11:04):
guy here. Let's get another check of weather in traffic
with Jason Calerina and Mark Christmas in a BPS traffic center.
Speaker 2 (02:11:10):
Hey, Mark, what's up?
Speaker 3 (02:11:11):
Everybody?
Speaker 7 (02:11:11):
You know who it is?
Speaker 3 (02:11:13):
You know it's on the radio, Frederick Douglas of the
twenty first century.
Speaker 2 (02:11:18):
It's w t i C News Talk. Okay, we're back,
We're almost out of here.
Speaker 3 (02:11:24):
But I understand that my Emmy Award winning producer has
a statement that he'd like to make to the audience.
Speaker 2 (02:11:33):
What's going on, sir?
Speaker 8 (02:11:34):
Yes, sir, yes, sir.
Speaker 9 (02:11:35):
Prepare Okay, your heart's and your minds in years for
what's about to be said.
Speaker 3 (02:11:42):
Okay, drum roll please, Oh goodness gracious Okay, yeah, yeah,
I did have a drum roll.
Speaker 8 (02:11:48):
Yes, Today is National Chicken Wing Day.
Speaker 3 (02:11:53):
Oh goodness gracious, yeah.
Speaker 2 (02:11:57):
Now is it chicken wing like buffalo wing?
Speaker 3 (02:12:01):
Chicken?
Speaker 21 (02:12:01):
Does that same thing chick chicken wing. I did not
know that it was National Chicken Wing Day. Yes, sir,
everybody all type of deals.
Speaker 9 (02:12:14):
Okay, Oh so like everybody want to get one from
from Wingstop and wings over seat and.
Speaker 8 (02:12:21):
All of that good stuff. So it's a lot of good.
Speaker 9 (02:12:23):
Uh if you're if you're not knowing what to eat tonight,
go out there and get you some chicken wings. They
got some free samples and whatnot at a at a
bunch of different places. So you just have to just
google your surrounding area. I see where you get some
chicken wing deals.
Speaker 8 (02:12:38):
For the night.
Speaker 3 (02:12:39):
You know what I have not. You know, that's kind
of we consider that a treat in our house. We'll
go grab like fifty wings. Yeah, absolutely grab that every day.
Yeah right, oh you grabbed that every day. Well, No,
we're doing like as a treat, like when we're trying
to figure out something that for dinners, like hey, let's
go to like wingstop and go get like you know,
a boatloaded a buffalo. So I don't do it all
(02:13:02):
the time, but you know what, I will consider it
today because my wife has been been really really hankering
for like deli meat Okay, Yeah, so she'll go to
like Jersey Mike's has been her place. She goes to
a couple other places that she wants to go. So
today I will at Well, we got a wing place
that's not great. I won't mention its name, but it's
a smaller franchise. I won't go to them.
Speaker 2 (02:13:23):
Yeah, go find another one.
Speaker 9 (02:13:25):
Yeah, Google and see where you're nearest wingstopper or something
like that is. And and celebrate today eating some chicken wings.
Speaker 2 (02:13:33):
Yeah, because the last time we spent like seventy bucks on.
Speaker 8 (02:13:36):
This is outrageous.
Speaker 9 (02:13:37):
Now you're actually getting it for the price that you're
supposed to be getting it for when they do to
buy one, get one for fifteen bucks or whatever. It
is a nine piece for like fifteen dollars. Wow, and
you get another nine piece, So you're actually eating it
at the price it should it should be selling for.
Speaker 2 (02:13:53):
To Okay, all right, no doubt, you know what I
will consider that.
Speaker 3 (02:13:56):
I'll head on out. Okay, Now, let's get to the
phones before we it up out of here. Let's go
to Laurie and glasson very Hello Laurie.
Speaker 13 (02:14:04):
Hi, there, I have four rapid fire points that I
just want to get out you got when it comes.
When you come to Connecticut, you need to stop at
Jay Timothy's for some wings, because their wings are out
of this world and you need to get them dirt style.
That's point number one, okay. Point number two is could
you get from the band that does the opening? Could
(02:14:27):
you get an ending snippet from them?
Speaker 3 (02:14:30):
Oh? You mean like a close out song?
Speaker 13 (02:14:33):
That's my question. That's point number two. Point number three.
My conspiracy theory is that ben Proto is a Democratic plant.
That is point number three. Point number four is for
mister for Jonathan. I don't want to.
Speaker 12 (02:14:52):
Borrow.
Speaker 13 (02:14:52):
Thank you, mister debas I. He is a force to
be reckoned with. I have no problem support Hi. Everybody
needs to just get their thumb out of their buds
and recognize that this is the future. My only consideration
work thought for him would be maybe looking too public
speaking paths just so he can articulate his ideas a
(02:15:16):
little bit more substanctly.
Speaker 3 (02:15:17):
Okay.
Speaker 13 (02:15:18):
But other than that, I am fuful. If I was
in his district, I would already be a vote for him.
But since I'm not, I will be too steam. I
had to support him regardless.
Speaker 2 (02:15:29):
You got it okay, thank you, thank you, Lorie, I
will said Julie, thank you, Laurie. I appreciate you. Let's
go to Let's go to Tony and Rocky Hill.
Speaker 3 (02:15:37):
How are you, sir?
Speaker 18 (02:15:39):
Hell?
Speaker 3 (02:15:41):
How can I help you?
Speaker 4 (02:15:42):
You know?
Speaker 18 (02:15:44):
I just want to show you. I look at all
the things we're facing right now, and I think the
big problem we have is the fact that they're so
dramatized by individuals within the media just to get an
issue to justify their job in your existence, like your program, that's.
Speaker 1 (02:16:03):
All it is.
Speaker 3 (02:16:04):
My program is about what.
Speaker 7 (02:16:08):
Your programs. You you're an idiot.
Speaker 2 (02:16:11):
Oh oh you might have you might you might have
hurt my feelings.
Speaker 7 (02:16:17):
You're very slow.
Speaker 3 (02:16:19):
Oh, Tony, not listen now, Tony, I don't want to.
I don't want to, like sort of catch you off
guard here, no offense.
Speaker 20 (02:16:25):
But why I think I caught you off Oh?
Speaker 2 (02:16:28):
Why the hell do you listen if you hate.
Speaker 3 (02:16:31):
It so much?
Speaker 7 (02:16:31):
Because I like a couple of yucks before.
Speaker 18 (02:16:33):
I call it a day.
Speaker 3 (02:16:35):
So you sick.
Speaker 2 (02:16:36):
So that's the whole point. You hate the show so much,
you listen to it?
Speaker 18 (02:16:40):
No, I hate I hate the environment. You guys can
get a.
Speaker 4 (02:16:43):
Job in a real war.
Speaker 2 (02:16:44):
Listen, are you kidding me? First of all, I've had
plenty of real jobs.
Speaker 3 (02:16:47):
Tony. Oh, Tony, You're an idiot.
Speaker 2 (02:16:50):
You're a poopy head. You're breaking my heart.
Speaker 3 (02:16:57):
Tony, listen. It's nice to have a fan. I'm gonna
oh please do listen to me. It's nice to have fans,
even the haters. As Kat Williams said, you don't have
enough haters. Go out there and get you some more.
Damn haters. Love you, Tony. Keep coming back if it works,
if you work it. I can't believe people who were
(02:17:18):
addicted to a show that they hate. Those are the
best kind of listeners. Nothing against you, folks, I love you,
but the haters. Oh baby, are you kidding me? I'm
salivating here. Let's go to Tom and Thomaston.
Speaker 4 (02:17:32):
Hello, sir, oh man, he really hate You're an idiot?
Speaker 3 (02:17:37):
That was That was it.
Speaker 2 (02:17:39):
That's all he had.
Speaker 22 (02:17:41):
That was I didn't know what Jonathan's backstory. That was
a very interesting conversation. I will say on a little
side note, Mark had to make your conversation all about him.
Speaker 4 (02:17:55):
I don't get that guy.
Speaker 3 (02:17:57):
Well, I think look he's got Listen again, this is
the thing about this is the Again, it's not the diminishing.
I get the importance of the whole Ben Proto thing.
However that for me that's not motivational. I get what
ben Proto's power is in that dynamic. But again, if
(02:18:17):
the power needs to be challenged, then challenge it. I'm
not a guy who sits around and says he has
so much power and we need to go into No, no, no,
I don't want.
Speaker 2 (02:18:25):
To take away ben Proto's power. I want no parts
of it.
Speaker 3 (02:18:28):
What I want Ben Proto to recognize is is that
if he's interested in winning, really interested in winning, then
he wouldn't throw obstacles in front of somebody who wishes
to win like a Jonathan Debarro's. If he is real
intent on winning and getting the people of the fifth
District a representative who cares about them and is going
(02:18:50):
to do their bidding in office, a guy that would
give of himself when he doesn't have to. If Ben
Proto doesn't see that, then the rest of the people
who have voted him in as chair will recognize that
and say you don't have the best interest of everyone
at heart, and you're only in it for the power.
Speaker 2 (02:19:07):
So the objective is you don't have to worry about
Ben Proto.
Speaker 3 (02:19:10):
You you you use Ben Proto's stance as a litmus
test for the rest of the people who vote for
him and say, hey, is this guy you for the
best interest of the people or is it something else
going on?
Speaker 2 (02:19:21):
And Deborrows is a perfect example of that.
Speaker 22 (02:19:24):
I agree with that because I got no use for
proto h. I will say this, Rees, I had decided
after the presidential election that I was not going to
vote in any state elections because it was like, why bother.
I'm in the fifth district. I will definitely be backing
Jonathan One. I'm voting again in the next state election.
Speaker 3 (02:19:49):
Thank you, sir. And that is I'm sure it's a
pleasure for him to hear. And he's listening now, so
that is good to know. Thank you so much, Tom.
I appreciate you, sir. That before go to my good
friend Craig, let me go to David in Granby real quick.
Before we get to him, HeiG, David.
Speaker 4 (02:20:06):
Hey, how you doing. I just want to let you
know your show is great.
Speaker 3 (02:20:11):
That that guy there is uh, he's a little off,
That's okay.
Speaker 20 (02:20:16):
You can absolutely you can absolutely tell where he's from
coming from the guests you had on earlier.
Speaker 3 (02:20:23):
He's running.
Speaker 15 (02:20:23):
I thought I came in at the tail end.
Speaker 3 (02:20:26):
That's okay. His name is Jonathan Deborrows and he's out
of Waterbury running nineteen years.
Speaker 20 (02:20:32):
Yes, yes, yeah, outstanding, dude, outstanding.
Speaker 4 (02:20:38):
I just that's all I got to say.
Speaker 11 (02:20:40):
You're doing a great job.
Speaker 4 (02:20:42):
He sounds awesome.
Speaker 7 (02:20:44):
I'm not from his district, but.
Speaker 3 (02:20:45):
Man, I'm in you know, absolutely. Hey, And if you
can find a way to you know, to at least
contribute to his campaign, please do.
Speaker 2 (02:20:53):
He will appreciate it.
Speaker 7 (02:20:56):
I'll do it.
Speaker 4 (02:20:56):
I'll do it. Thanks for taking my call.
Speaker 17 (02:20:58):
Reach.
Speaker 15 (02:20:58):
When I got more to.
Speaker 7 (02:20:59):
Say, I call back.
Speaker 3 (02:21:00):
You got it, David, much pleasure, Thank you, you got it. Sorry,
And let's go to my good friend Clegg in the car,
who's practically gonna be hosting me in a couple of weeks.
How are we doing, big guy?
Speaker 7 (02:21:12):
Are you gonna work on that work ethics thing?
Speaker 1 (02:21:14):
Man?
Speaker 3 (02:21:15):
Yeah, I know what's going on with me, right, you know.
I'm dragon, I'm dragontail.
Speaker 7 (02:21:19):
Over two minutes of our lives will never get back. Hey,
I have a new slogan for your show.
Speaker 3 (02:21:26):
What's that?
Speaker 7 (02:21:28):
Ree Hopkins? From Hot Bonds to x Con.
Speaker 3 (02:21:34):
I don't look. Look, I don't understand the whole blonde thing. Look,
when I was a kid, I didn't know anybody who
wasn't great. Look in my neighborhood, Suzanne Summers. Look, it's
not that we didn't have women like Jane Kennedy or
Pam Greer that we weren't. You know that Frank in
Woodbridge Wild be happy to hear that. It's not like
we didn't have beautiful black women that we were all
(02:21:55):
crazy about. However, we all watched threes Company and all
thought the same thing saying about Chrissy on that program.
Speaker 7 (02:22:02):
You don't understand the hot blonde.
Speaker 3 (02:22:05):
You're fibbing exactly exactly. And this idea now to suggest
that it's because it's Americana. It's a blonde in blue
jeans that you're now supposed to frown upon that and
men are going to turn around and look at at
a woman like Sydney.
Speaker 2 (02:22:25):
Sweeney and go, I feel so bad about finding her attractive.
Speaker 3 (02:22:29):
You're bugging. Just everything about that is wrong.
Speaker 7 (02:22:33):
So I'm gonna I'm not in Jonathan's district, and I
do not donate the campaigns or politicians but I'm gonna
throw him a couple of C notes because he's worth it,
absolutely one hundred percent. But he's got to get better
at social media. It stinks.
Speaker 3 (02:22:46):
Okay, right, but you know what he No, no, go ahead,
I'm sorry anyway. I don't want to catch off.
Speaker 7 (02:22:54):
No, no, I want to finish with two hot blondes.
Speaker 2 (02:22:56):
Oh, yes, go ahead, finished with two hot blondes.
Speaker 7 (02:23:00):
All right, you mentioned, uh, what is it? Something family
Julie Bowen.
Speaker 3 (02:23:07):
Oh, yes, modern family, modern family.
Speaker 7 (02:23:10):
Yeah, she's she's smoking, and don't tell me. And this
is only a half blonde. Don't tell me. Terry Nunn
in the eighties from Berlin, from the group Berlin.
Speaker 3 (02:23:21):
All right, not that not bad? No, no, no, not bad.
Speaker 2 (02:23:25):
No, no, it's not bad. No, no, it's okay. I'm
just I can probably find some hotter blondes. That's all
I'm saying.
Speaker 7 (02:23:31):
I dated a girl in high school for two years
that I didn't even like because she looked like Terry.
Speaker 3 (02:23:36):
Really okay, Now, if I can go international, I will
tell you this. The reason why I like this band
is because they have a lead singer who's blonde. And
I'm gonna go there. I'm not gonna lie, folks, this
is embarrassing.
Speaker 2 (02:23:51):
I like Abba.
Speaker 7 (02:23:54):
Oh my god, I don't even know you.
Speaker 3 (02:23:58):
I'm dead to you now, are I.
Speaker 7 (02:24:01):
I have a good friend of mine that's obsessed with.
Speaker 1 (02:24:05):
I know.
Speaker 3 (02:24:05):
I promise you I'll never play it in the car,
but you know I secretly do dance with the wife
to Dancing Queen.
Speaker 2 (02:24:11):
I do, I do.
Speaker 3 (02:24:12):
I have to admit it.
Speaker 7 (02:24:14):
Make me promise you're gonna let me pick your bumper
music for one show.
Speaker 3 (02:24:18):
I promise you I will let you. Thank you, Greg, Yes,
I like Abba. Now if you really, I'm just gonna
say this. Okay, and you know what Mark Christopher when
he joins us, I just I want you to do
this if you're a music enthusiast. Okay, there's a reason
(02:24:38):
why I like the song Dancing Queen. One time I
was listening to in a pair of very good headphones,
and every instrument was crystal clear. In fact, it was
so good I could isolate the instruments and the drumming
in that song is so crisp. It made me fall
(02:25:00):
in love with it, and I've never looked back. So's
the reason why I love the song. I'm just I
just am and I fell in love with Abba ever since.
I even watched the documentary not too long ago. I know,
I know it's an obscure reference. It's an obscure thing
to be into. I'm just saying Abba underrated, always happened.
(02:25:26):
As I always say, radio is free. So we thank
you for paying attention. Remember to keep JC in your
hearts and in your mind. Sean Patrick, you love you
have me, miss you. Remember that panic is not planning,
So plan your work and work you plan me. I'm
an Alba fan reson radio. You have a good night
at pleasant tomorrow, Mark Christophers at the BPS Traffic Center,
Come on, Mark, tell me you love Abba Ah at
(02:25:50):
least musically they were good.
Speaker 2 (02:25:52):
It's your Asian, but it's good stuff.
Speaker 19 (02:25:58):
This song by Freedom's much better, better than anything she
did with Abba. I think, really, yeah, I know there's
something going.
Speaker 3 (02:26:07):
On, not even it's Fernando. Yeah, this is as much Hipper.
I don't know, I don't know, doesn't doesn't move you.
Speaker 2 (02:26:22):
I think my favorite song from them was s O
S great song.
Speaker 3 (02:26:26):
That is a great song.
Speaker 2 (02:26:27):
I'll give you that. That was a great song.
Speaker 7 (02:26:28):
I'll give you that.
Speaker 2 (02:26:29):
But I'm not an Abba. I know that's just not
my thing. But that's okay if you like it.
Speaker 4 (02:26:34):
I don't.
Speaker 2 (02:26:34):
I'm not one of those people that's I'm not a
music now. If you like it, you like it. I
don't have a problem with that. Oh your music's not
totally you too, buddy.
Speaker 19 (02:26:44):
Hey, if you're at West Bend eighty four coming into
Harper Dog, look for delays.
Speaker 8 (02:26:48):
Oh right, look, yes, sir, great show as usual next
week Monday.
Speaker 19 (02:27:01):
All right, well Cromwell through downtown up into Wins All.
Speaker 3 (02:27:07):
Right, we got Joey tomorrow, folks. Yes, I am a
dancing queen. Phil Collins played drum on Frieda's song. Right, guys,
Remember Jonathan is just starting out. It's a dirty world
of politics. Give give him money and he'll get better.
That's right, he does, and I think, look, that's what
it's gonna take, uh to get him over the over
(02:27:28):
the hump. But I really appreciate you guys giving him
a shot and giving him a chance, and especially the
fact that you gave him a listen here on the show, Jonathan,
if you're listening, thank you from the bottom of my heart.
We will keep in touch. I will be calling you
this weekend. Uh, So make sure that your your phone
is by you, and I'll give you a holler. We'll
(02:27:48):
talk some more, folks. I love you.
Speaker 2 (02:27:50):
Please be good to each other, and we'll see him
on Yanna