Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:02):
Farm Farm.
Speaker 2 (00:10):
I Love My Angel is your book, Walter, and you
wrote that that's about your own experiences and what you
remember about all the things. What was the what was
the craziest day that you can remember when you were serving?
And then was it the first time you hit the
beach over there? Was it the three days you know
after you let those guys out of the church, What
was the what was the time over there that stands
the most in your mind? That's just like it was yesterday.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Well, we had to retake the town of Wing and
France w I n g E and and we had
to be out in the open while the Germans were
in the town and the houses. And I'll never forget it,
and I can't get it out of my head about walking, running,
jumping through that town, wondering if I was going to
(00:58):
be hit any minute. And that is a traumatic thought
in your mind, if you are trying to find the
enemy which is in the houses and you're out in
the open. And I can't get that out of my head.
I was so vulnerable standing up and approaching the houses,
throwing grenades in the windows, yelling at people to come
(01:21):
out and give up, and thinking, oh boy, they're going
to get me next.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
I like your story, Walter about the mirror when you
had been out in the field. Tell that story.
Speaker 3 (01:33):
One time I was up on top of the Voge
Mountains in France and we were on the defense, and
of course we have a hard time eating. We ate
k rations, and we took water out of a creek
and put Allison tablets in it to drink water, and
we could make coffee with the back off of the
(01:56):
k ration and it would heat can team full of
water and make coffee.
Speaker 4 (02:03):
Well.
Speaker 3 (02:03):
Anyway, one day they called me back to headquarters and
I had to go down the hill and back into
the town. And when it was nighttime, of course they
didn't move in the daytime. And I walked in the
front door of headquarters and went through a blanket which
was a stop all the light from coming out. And
(02:27):
I saw this terrible looking fellow who have a worse
looking g I'd ever seen, had a red beard, and
had everything dirty. The jacket was dirty, and everything looked horrible.
And I come to find out I was looking at
a mirror. It was me, and I'd been up on
the front line for thirty days and couldn't shave and
(02:49):
couldn't do anything except stay alive. And that was me,
What a shot.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
That's our good friend, Walter Cox. He used to come in,
you know, we'd get him out on Veterans Day for
many many years. And that's probably a segment you know,
that's several years old. But he was a big fan
of the show, a good friend of ours, a client
and many a friend of many people around Lexington and
the uh trust business. He was doing those trust for
people and uh and just a great guy. But uh man,
(03:19):
he had some crazy stories and true stories. He wrote
a book called Angel on My Shoulder. And remember he
told us that one time, Tim, if you ever made
a movie of it, who wanted to play him?
Speaker 5 (03:28):
Hum?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
True? But he was you know, right over in Lancaster, Kentucky,
I believe, and just uh, you know, great guy to
have on the show and a true hero and just man.
I remember picking him up one time in the corvette,
got him in there, took him over to do the
radio show he was doing at the radio stage. He
had never been to Coovere's. I never set this low
on the ground in anything. But he was a good
(03:51):
guy and we appreciate him doing the show with us.
And we missing. But I hope you guys enjoyed debt.
But Veteran's Day, he was, he was a he was
on it with us, but they recognize him at the
UK game out of Keenlan and as a veteran and
so on and so forth, and he was a he's
a great guy. So we hope you enjoyed that part
of it. But we've had many people be a part
(04:11):
of the show, you know, and I've been fortunate to
get him on here and talk to him, let him
share a story, and yeaut and hour long sell us
on six and eighth on a thirty or six, five
and a half on a fifteen or twenty, you know,
in low closing costs and we've racked up I don't
know about three and a half billion dollars worth of
loan servicing in the Union and Guardian Savings Bank offers.
But you know this radio shows helped us get that way.
(04:33):
So we're going to take another break. I hope you're
listening to the final show. We hope we want you
to know you're listening to the final show. But welcome
home show today and we'll were eight hundred and seventy
five episodes we've done and hope you enjoy what we're
a little jogged through memory lane and get some of
our friends on here. We'll got Sarah Bettterry on here
as well. She was going to talk with us this
fall about her new song stuff, so we'll be right
back him. Madams, Larry Franks, you've been listening Welcome Home
(04:55):
Show by Guardian Savings Bank on news Radio six thirty
w lap be right.
Speaker 6 (05:02):
How was your first night up in heaven? And did
you get a chance to look around? Did the Lord
say he was pleased and handed you the keys to
that bigger old mansion?
Speaker 7 (05:23):
N out on the hedge a tain?
Speaker 6 (05:28):
And what did you say when you met Jesus? And
how cool to hear him call you by your name.
It's down herever, mad and scarped, and it's all thoughts
and prayers, but we know it'll never be the same.
Speaker 5 (05:54):
It's well done, my good and faithful son.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
Good morning. Like they said, your listen to Welcome Home
Show about Guardian Savings Bank, very freaks, Tim Adam's and
you're with you this Saturday morning. Glad to have you
tuned into us. You're gonna catch a special show today
We're gonna have a few guests with us, and this
is actually our final, last and final episode here with
a welcome home show for Guardian Savings Bank after over
eight hundred and seventy five episodes. This is the This
(06:29):
is the finals, So we hope you enjoy it, and
we appreciate everybody's tuned into us all this time and
made Guardian Savings Bank what it is in the area.
And I'm gonna have a few guests on her today
that planned on having this fall. We didn't realize this
show was the contract was gonna end as quickly as
it did. We thought we had a few shows that
were preempted. We had a little bit of time here.
But so I've got Chris Bentley with me on the
(06:52):
phone right now, and then we're gonna get Sarah Beth
Terry hopefully and maybe another person or too, just people
we had plans to visit with. They got some new
music out, some different things going on. Banks open a
day from nine to one. Phone numbers eighty five, nine,
eight nine, nine one nine three six that's in Hamburg
South and drives eight five nine two six three three
three three five. So Guardian Savy's maaked down to six
(07:12):
point one twenty five on a thirty or fix and
five and a half on a fifteen or twenty nine
hundred and forty eight dollars in closing costs most of
the time two fifty otherwise. So still doing the same
thing there, but the radio shows winding down and going
from there. Ten, what do you got a calls about
our two ninety nine special. We are running some advertised
rate specials right now, So call us to know are
(07:36):
different options? Yeah, call us at the local number eight
five nine, eight nine nine one nine three six. But
Benny go, this is our final episode. Steve, our show
producer that's put all together for us on these weekend shows,
is uh is uh. We've been doing them for many
of you, ope, for eight hundred and seventy five episodes,
and he's done everything all but maybe one or two.
I think you heard the video kill the radio star.
(07:57):
I think the Internet killed the radio star Mayhea. But
you know, we had some people we planned on having
out on this fall and having out to a visit
with us. One of them is Chris Bentley and he's
a friend of mine. I met him through friend of
ours and Chris is an artist and got most of
his experience with Sunday Best. But now he's not letting
his own. He's got a new album, ount and I
wanted to kind of get him in and go over
(08:19):
a little bit in the station. So we've got him
on the phone. We're gonna talk to him a little bit.
Speaker 8 (08:22):
Chris.
Speaker 2 (08:22):
Thanks for taking some time out of the day with
us today and joining us. And how's everything going with
your new album.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
Yeah, I just released my second album within the past year.
We put out The Protector's One album last Thanksgiving, and
The Protectors Too just came out, so kind of just
piggybacking on the sound that we've created over the past
three years. Though that are accustomed to hearing me with
(08:48):
Sunday Best, you know, it's quite a bit different, but
maybe a little more reflective of my influences and you know,
the kind of music that I grew up on, which
was a lot of rock and roll and motown and
soul music.
Speaker 2 (09:04):
So it's just been diving into that. I've heard several
of the songs on it. I love the album and
and I know we're going to get to hear one
here a little bit. Stevel Q one up so we
can get a good quality sound of it on Spotify
and and all of your music is on Spotify and
what other social media outlets, Chris, where people can look
it up and listen to it themselves.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
Yeah, so the biggest thing to find me is under
my full name. You know, I've played in different bands,
most notably you know Sunday Best and and it's spelled
without an A, So that was a hurdle, you know,
for years just to get people to spell it right.
But my name is it's Christopher Lee Bentley and it's
k R I S t O f e R.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Being an English major, I'm.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
Like, man, I've got I've got some projects that are
you know, just spelled differently. So but if you know
how to spell it, it's easy to find. All the
major social media outlets, you can find me Christopher Lee
Bentley dot Com, where there's a merchandise and gets updated
with you know, the dates of where I'm going to
be and stuff like that.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Stee, if you want to go ahead and you got
one qued up and we'll listen to it and then
talk to Chris a little bit after that and then
we'll go from here. Well, what we got is what
we got and what we ang do deserving it.
Speaker 6 (10:21):
We'll find a smooth way to step into what.
Speaker 5 (10:26):
We got God to show his brand.
Speaker 9 (10:31):
Until we get the hang of it, until we get
to hide, until we get the hang of it, until
we get the hade.
Speaker 8 (10:50):
Lean into deed.
Speaker 2 (10:52):
Hey, Chris, that's a that's that's a god. Yeah, good
sounding tune. What's what's What's behind the song? What's what's what?
Where'd it come from? Where your heart and minds all
left wrong?
Speaker 4 (11:02):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (11:02):
So I mentioned, you know, I grew up and even
to this day, I love motown music. You know, my
dad's from Kentucky, but he he grew up in southern Michigan,
so I got a lot of his style and influences
musically as a child and even to this day, and
(11:22):
that song, you know, it's funny. I was in a hotel,
which I'm pretty accustomed to these days. You know, be
on the road and traveling, you're in a lot of hotels.
And I was in the bathroom one morning and there
was like, you know those door hangers on the hotel rooms,
you know, most of them say do not disturb. Well,
(11:44):
at this particular Hampton End, there was one that said,
get the hang of it, and I guess it was
for like laundry, like you wanted to put your laundry out,
And I was like, that would be that sounds like
a song, just you know, reading that, I was like,
that's a that could be a title of a song.
And then that day, you know, I pretty much wrote
(12:06):
the song in my head thinking of it as like
a Motown kind of song. So I took it to
the guys and it ended up being a little more
rock and roll, but it's it's in the spirit of
what a Motown song would be. And uh, it's one
of my favorite tracks on the album. I think it's
most people's favorite song on the record, and it's just
(12:29):
a banger. The first time we played it live, people
were asking, you know, what song is that?
Speaker 5 (12:35):
You know?
Speaker 1 (12:35):
Where can we hear? So it's a I think it'll
be one of the more recognizable tunes from that collection
of music. And it's a good it's a good driping
song and about getting the hango.
Speaker 2 (12:48):
Nothing wrong with that. So what's where you going to
be playing at around this area? Christ We will take
up too much more of your time, But what all
is on the schedule? Where people can catch in central
Kentucky or anybody else that's listening to the show out
around Louisville since that or wherever they might be listening from.
Speaker 1 (13:00):
Yeah, So the Protectors we're taking a short break because
we've been in the studio for a long time. We
just played a show at the Burrow, so there'll be
some dates coming, but I'm going to finish the year
out doing the Sunday Best gigs, so you can find
me there too. We'll be at renfro Valley November fourteenth,
(13:21):
and then we'll be at the Paramount Arts Center in
Ashland December sixth, and I'll be doing some pop up
gigs with The Protectors back in Popville, Kentucky the next
couple of months. So just keep in touch on social
media and you'll see that. But yeah, kind of slowing
down this time of year. It's more of a more
of a relaxing time touring wise for me.
Speaker 2 (13:44):
Yeah. Well, I know you're busy. You got a lot
of stuff going on, and I was glad that we
was able to get you today. Like I say, this
kind of snuck up on us to be the final
episode and I'm super proud to have you be a
part of it and have been on the show time
or two and then you know, I just appreciate our
friendship and your professionalism and always including this and making
us feel relevant if we need you, and you know,
(14:05):
and I hope that you continue to write good songs
and do stuff. Of course you're going to see me
around pecking on you and taking pictures and and shooting
bull crap at you. But man, I appreciate you letting
us call you today and take some time and visit
with you, and good luck with this album. That's a
killer song. There's more on there that are good. And
you know, everybody likes something and I like them. I
like it all and I like your style, so stick
(14:26):
with it. Best of luck with all of it, man,
and let's stay in touch.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
I appreciate it. I'm Larry. You've been a good friend
and always kind when I see you, and I'll take
that best of luck with me as I go into
Keeenland today, I'm gonna try to catch the last couple
of hours of Kenlin. I've not been in six years,
I guess, so I'm headed out there right now and
enjoy this this beautiful fall Lexington day.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
All right, man, enjoy the rest of your day. Thank
you for your time. Good luck at the track, my man.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
Thanks guys, Chris.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
You know, we appreciate him joining us today. And and Tim,
I mean, what a what a what a guest to
have And like I say, this is all kind of
last minute trying to piece it together. And you know,
we've been doing this show over eight hundred and seventy
five episodes, you know, on Saturday mornings here, and we've
entertained a lot of people, give had a lot of information.
We paid a lot of tuition along the way, and
the radio show has been good to us and w
(15:19):
l A P and iHeartRadio and everybody's done a great job.
And we appreciate the loyalty of the listeners and the
people that call. And if you do call, call us
at the local level. Don't get online and fill out
paper work. Tim is we you're gonna get the same deal.
But you know, deal with somebody local, and you get online,
you're gonna find get somebody from Cincinnati or that same thing.
(15:39):
Bad against them. But Tim, how we make a living
doing loans, It ain't this radio show. So if you
get a chance to call eight five nine, eight nine,
nine nine six. I'd like to talk to somebody about
a mortgage. Please do that. You can get online and
do it, or if you get online, say I want
to work with somebody in Lexington at least. But you
know you're gonna get a good deal and you're gonna
get a good professional treatment wherever you go. But we
(15:59):
want to call us and loans and feed our kids.
We're gonna take a break. We're gonna be right back.
I'll see if we can round up a couple of
these other people that we had to promise a little
lair of time over this fall session. But uh, we'll
see what we can do. Banks over the eight from
nine to one pon numbers eighty five, nine, eight, nine,
nine one nine three six. Your listen to Welcome Home
Show by Guardian Savings Bank right here on the whole
log cats New's Radio six thirty w LAP. We'll be
(16:21):
right then. Your back list to Welcome Home Show by
Guardian Savings Bank. Larry Frank, Tim Adams in here with
you this Saturday morning, and we're glad to have you
tuned in to us. It is the final episode for
the Welcome Home Show, but the Bank is still going
to be open for business Monday. So with rates at
six point one twenty five one a thirty and five
and a half on a fifteen or twenty, give us
a call eight five nine eight nine nine one nine
(16:44):
three six and so let us help you out. You
get online, asked to work with somebody in Lexington, Tim
and I got bills to pay, kids to feed and
things to take care of. It's about nine hundred and
forty eight dollars in closing costs generally. We've got a
special right now two ninety nine in closing costs that
covers everything you're pray have, the filing fee that covers
your appraisal, title work, loan processing, all the things we
(17:04):
need to put your loan together. We got checking and
saving CDs and all that good stuff over there too.
So this is the last episode on this due to marketing,
different different strategies that they're gonna try, but we're still
gonna be helping for business. And we appreciate you tuning
into us for all these years. And I mentioned earlier
that I was going to have a few guests on
here that we thought we'd have this fall as we
went along before these changes are being made and unfortunate
(17:25):
enough to have a lady that I've listened to seeing
and I've seen and keep up with her on Facebook
with all the stuff she's got going on. Recently, she
has written a song that became very popular for and
we talked about that a little bit, and she might
talk about it a little bit. But Sarah Bets Harry,
thank you for coming on and visiting with us today
and taking some time out of your busy schedule to
(17:48):
chat with us and be a part of our final show.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
Well, I appreciate you having me. I mean, I'm always
good at closing down the house, you know that. I
guess it's it's all over to the Fat Lady sing.
So that's why I'm the last guest on the show.
It's very rare you hear that the bank out last
the singer. You know, normally it's the singer has to
quit because the bank's closed down. You know, I wrote
a check during COVID that bounced higher than my career,
so you know, it's good to know that there's still
(18:13):
a good bank in town where where we can go
to if things get rough.
Speaker 2 (18:17):
Yeah. Yeah, we do a good job, but it's and
I appreciate you takes the time. I know you've been super,
super busy, and I know that you know, you know
that I post stuff all the time when you when
stuff started getting really good, when you was on Fox
and Friends after the song you wrote there about Charlie
Kirk and people would say, Man, I love this song,
you know, And I'm trying to get on there and
say they that's a great song. Listen to it, but
really go check out all of her other stuff. And
(18:37):
I know that you know, you've got a lot of
exposure from that and you love the song, but you've
got some other nice songs out too, And we're gonna
play one here. You want to tell us a little
bit about it and then we'll listen to it.
Speaker 7 (18:47):
Well, sure.
Speaker 4 (18:48):
The song that we're gonna play today is that it
was a single that came out this past June. And
the story behind it's actually really funny. My now husband
at the time was my boyfriend. It was between gigs.
You know how it is in the wintertime, Larry, you've
been in the music business for a long time. It
kind of slows down when it starts getting colder, because
it's hard to sing songs on a patio when there's
(19:08):
snow on the ground, you know, and a lot of
fairs and festivals and a lot of them during the
snow season, and times were hard and we were actually
my mother had sent me a care package from home,
you know, she's going through all of the she's in
her sixties, empty ness, and like do you want this?
You know, and she's hit this big box and it
had probably one hundred Blue ribbons and just as many
Susan B. Anthony dollars from every fair, festival, talent show,
(19:31):
baby show I'd been in my whole life. And we
were so poor, Larry, that we went and bought Paul
Malls because we couldn't even afford Marlboroughs with Susan b
Anthony dollars that I had won in a baby show.
Like that's how poor we were that time of year.
And I said, well, I don't have nothing to give
you but this song. And he said, well, honey, you
trapped me with the song. You've kicked me with the song.
You might as well keep me with the song. So
(19:52):
when we got back on our seat and the song
came out on the radio, and that became our wedding song,
and that became our song.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
To the world.
Speaker 7 (19:58):
And so it's kind of our love song.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
Like, you know, even if you're down and out, like
you just can't get enough love. Like just like no
matter how rich you were, how poor you are, like
you just can't get enough.
Speaker 7 (20:07):
A good stuff, you know. So that's what the song's about.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Yeah, I appreciate it. Lifted a little bit.
Speaker 5 (20:12):
Holloe another few to California Allvo babb Kentucky Me Harvel
Congre that came from Grey's Kitchen, Novice, Willie Nelson. Verything not.
Speaker 8 (20:45):
Get enough, Hock can.
Speaker 9 (20:54):
Get enough, Lie I.
Speaker 8 (21:00):
Can, Sarah. That is a killer song.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
I mean, I've listened to tons of things that you've
written and some of the stuff that you do, and
I see you playing the piano live on Facebook or
you there is there any instrument? I got to ask
you this. And I love the song, and I appreciate
the story behind it and everything, and you know, I
love the Charlie Kirk song and all that stuff. Till
you get a ton of stuff? Is there an instrument
that you can't play?
Speaker 7 (21:30):
Fiddle?
Speaker 4 (21:31):
Actually, uh my daddy bought me one. I'm better with
trimming than bowing. He bought me a fiddle when I
was in high school, and after about two weeks he said,
you're gonna have to kill whatever animal that is out.
Speaker 7 (21:39):
In the yard. So I finally said, Okay, I'm better
at picking than I am at bowen. So that's the
only thing.
Speaker 4 (21:45):
If I can pick it, if it's got strings and
I can pick it with my fingers, awesome, mandling, no
big deal.
Speaker 7 (21:50):
Fiddle. For some reason, I can't.
Speaker 4 (21:51):
Get my elbow and whag. I'm more of a risk person.
So but that's the only thing I can't do. You know,
we've always laughed. I said, was there anything you can't do?
I said, not yet, But it's fiddle. That's the only
thing that so far I found that just I can't tackle. Yeah,
thank god, there's people like Alison Krause that that's that's
like I got it. You know, if the Devil Liver
challenged me to a fiddle contest, we would be beat.
(22:11):
That's all I'm saying, Like we would be in a
bad shape.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
What about what kind of shows the stuff you got
going on around in Kentucky in this area where Fundi's
listeners that may catch up with you.
Speaker 7 (22:20):
Well, we're we're hitting at the.
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Tri State pretty pretty hard this the next couple of
months because I love to come home for the holidays.
We're playing in Huntington, West Virginia later on in this
this month, which is right on the line. You know,
they're from Ashland, but we're gonna be at Campton, Kentucky,
which is the closest I think to everybody in the
listing area on November the first, for their big annual
Halloween party at the one.
Speaker 7 (22:39):
Forty five Roadhouse.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
We love to go and hang out with Hope and
Crean down at the Roadhouse and it's up put it
for the whole family. You know, you can come and
have a big time and have a steak, or you
can also bring your kids and get good chicken tenders.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
But regardless, they're gonna be entertained and you're gonna be
treated like family.
Speaker 4 (22:52):
So we always love getting to come home and play
for basically family, you know, like we love to get
to come and see everybody. So Campton on November the first,
at eight o'clock, we'll be there to party in with you,
and then we're starting to fill in our Christmas schedule.
So if anybody back home wants to have a house
concert or get us to come and do a little
bit of holiday grooving with them. Just let us know,
(23:12):
because we'd love to be able to come back and
see everybody and kentuck you for the holidays. We always
try to schedule touring through the home state during the holidays.
So we were like, oh, we'll be home, we'll be
there for Thanksgiving, we'll be there for Christmas, because you know,
we're playing down the road.
Speaker 7 (23:24):
So but the closest one.
Speaker 4 (23:26):
Coming up in the next week or so is going
to be out there in Campton, and we'd love to
see everybody. And if you tell them tell us I'm
here at the show, that you heard us on the radio,
you get a free sticker when you come to the
show on Saturday the first. So make sure you mentioned
Larry Freaks and Stave and the good boys over at
the radio station, because we'd be glad to thank them
kindly for having us on the air and knowing that
you all come to see us because of them. So
(23:47):
if you mentioned that at the show, we'll be glad
to give you one of the new stickers.
Speaker 2 (23:51):
Yep, that sounds great. Now, sir, let me ask you something.
How can all these people they can find you on Spotify.
What's all the social media is that where people can
find Sarahbeth.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Terry anywhere that you want to look Google, Amazon, Ituned, Spotify, Pandora,
even my website Sarahbethterry dot com, Sarah Smith and h
and of course on all the socials, I'm sarahath Terry.
Speaker 7 (24:09):
Music people leave out the H lot.
Speaker 4 (24:11):
I don't know why they can still Beyonce that can't
spell Sarah, but it is Sa or Ah Sarah Beth Terry.
Speaker 7 (24:16):
Three first, thanks, and you'll find this in of course of.
Speaker 4 (24:19):
You googles, I mean anything will come up with a
cigarette mom, Queen Bee, Sarabhath Terry that says there's plenty
on there.
Speaker 7 (24:24):
And at this point I'm at the age where I
don't clear up any rumors. If I didn't do it,
I might, you know, So just just check his back
out is an open Facebook.
Speaker 3 (24:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (24:34):
I know, you got some other stuff to do. You
got a meeting and the other stuff going on today.
Let me ask you something, and I don't know if
you're gonna know the real number not how many songs
have you written?
Speaker 4 (24:41):
Oh?
Speaker 7 (24:41):
It was upwards of thirty thousand at the beginning of
the year.
Speaker 4 (24:44):
And we've been on a bench for a couple of
months now, and I say way because my poor husband
just has to walk around with the microphone like he's
on a reality show.
Speaker 7 (24:50):
He's how I'm singing.
Speaker 4 (24:52):
I would say we're sitting probably strong out about thirty
two thousand songs.
Speaker 7 (24:56):
And still one of the biggest unsigned catalogs in Nashville.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
But the go next year is to get a thousand
cuts and and you might hear my songs before you
hear me on the radio.
Speaker 7 (25:06):
Next year.
Speaker 4 (25:06):
We've got about one hundred and fifty artists who are
all chopping through the Sara Battery catalog. So even if
you've not heard my voice, you might have heard my words.
So just stay tuned to the radio.
Speaker 2 (25:16):
Yeah, stick after it. I know you're a songwriting I
mean you are a songwriting all the time. And you know,
even while watching you live on Facebook playing the piano
and doing different stuff. So it's fascinating.
Speaker 7 (25:26):
And you talk about having kids to fade.
Speaker 4 (25:28):
You know, we've got one hundred birds in this backyard
and it's like having hungry teenagers, like they eat all
the time. So I've basically just been working for chicken feed.
And I mean if that's a country all kids your
are in, you know, but that's you know, somebody executed
to my show and brought me a fifty pound bag
of feed and I was like, they watched me on
the Facebook, like they.
Speaker 2 (25:45):
Know that's killer, that's killer. Well, I appreciate you letting
us visit with us, and you know, I'm so happy
to see all of the exposure. And you're just you know,
I say it and you say it. You know, it
ain't always the best artists that make us a people
understand the business. And you sure darning Lille to understand
the business because you're out here humping it and getting
it done and getting your stuff out. And I love
(26:06):
it and I love the humor and the fun and
just you being you. And I can't thank you enough.
Speaker 4 (26:12):
And thank you guys a lot too, because you're some
of the few people that support crazy dreamers like us
here a foolishness to try.
Speaker 7 (26:18):
So we appreciate all the support that we get from
from you guys.
Speaker 4 (26:22):
And you give us the spot and give us the
stage and give us the mic most times when most
radio's bumps. So we appreciate that very much because if
we can't if we can't win over our hometown crowd,
then what's the point, you know, So we have to
start a time. And I appreciate you so much for
always having faith and in the local music, saying the
independent artists that are trying to put Kentucky on the
map for something other than a crooked governor and an
opioid epanemic.
Speaker 5 (26:43):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:44):
Yeah, we had Chris. We had Chris Bentley on the
show a little bit earlier today too, before we were
able to get up with you, and you know, and
I love him, of course, Sunday Best. They've done a
great job and Chris has not been Buddies and uh,
you know, just great people and there's a ton of
you know, I just I was, you know, we talked
about doing show. I'm going to do this, and then
all of a sudden, you run out of time, you know,
and like and we just thought we had a few
more episodes, and so we're jamming everything that you know,
(27:08):
we'll you know, try to fit in here in this
last last hour that we have. And I appreciate you
being a part of it with us, and I hope
you continued. Wish you to continue success and keep doing
your thing. We'll keep promoting you, keep watching and sharing
your stuff, and keep on keeping on.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Thank you.
Speaker 7 (27:22):
That's how we all get there. I believe at this age,
you know, there's always room for everybody at the table.
We just got to bring something to the table.
Speaker 2 (27:28):
You know, yep, exactly. And I appreciate you and taking
your time at Sarah. I love you, and I'll catch
up with you on Facebook and call you and I'll
catch you around here, and thank you again for your
time today.
Speaker 7 (27:37):
Well, thank you guys again, thanks for keeping the music alive.
Speaker 2 (27:40):
Appreciate it. Have a great weekend, be safe traveling, feed
them chickens.
Speaker 7 (27:43):
Well, I appreciate you.
Speaker 2 (27:44):
Well, you guys, get to here, little Sarahbeth Herry today
once again. Banks opening today from nine to one on
numbers eight five nine, eight nine, nine one, nine three six.
We're six and an eighth on a thirty year fix,
five and a half on a fifteen or a twenty
year fix, nine hundred forty eight dollars in closing off
on some of the deals too, ninety nine and others.
Bard to Tim give us a call out here. We
got bills to pay, kids to be and things to
take care of. So eight five nine eighty nine, nine
(28:06):
one nine, you'd be right back to listen to Welcome
Home Go by Guardian Davy's Faith on news radio. La
be right back, and we just have to keep running.
Speaker 10 (28:17):
And I don't know how many miles it was. I
don't know, uh, if Coach Hall came up with the
route or if they were just driving aimlessly and let's
see where we end up. But one day we ended
up at Coach host class house and we had a
big cookout and then he treated us for one of
the first times as I remember.
Speaker 8 (28:36):
It, but he treated us with this concoction.
Speaker 11 (28:40):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
But it was so good.
Speaker 10 (28:42):
I mean it was so good, and and it became
a habit after that, it just became habit and we
couldn't wait to enjoy it. And he gets we can't
give him all the credit for this, but I take
it anyway, cause Ms Holst clothes the one that put
everything together. So I have to give a little bit
of the crab.
Speaker 11 (29:01):
I tell Coach Hall that you guys would never have
won that seventy eight game in Saint Louis. Have we
not checked in that hotel with that Wildcat's lush. It's
you know, can you imagine getting off a bus care
in his throat five gallon containers of fruit flush and
then asking for a freezer.
Speaker 2 (29:18):
Talking about it a little bit about having Joe b.
Hall and Roy Holt's Claw and Jack Gibbings in here,
and we've heard some stories and we've had some conversations,
and Tim's been falling through with it, and with Roy
Holt's Claws connections here, we're able to get these guys
in here and talk about something that maybe some of
you guys have heard about, maybe you haven't. It's called
wild Cats Flush and uh, it started, I guess with
(29:41):
the letter and you guys having the fortitude to put
some stuff together, But tell us a little bit about
what that is.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
It actually started with leg crams, yep.
Speaker 2 (29:50):
And we were having a range of leg crams and
I spoke about it on my radio show. So we
got a letter from a local doctor, right do you
remember who?
Speaker 11 (30:04):
They was, Doctor Hobbs, right here at office South Will Drive.
And he wrote Joe a letter and said, I'm doing
some research on my patients of potassium depletion, and I
think what you're doing, you're experiencing with your players a
deficiency of potassium an Electrolt and he said, I'll write
you a letter and tell you what I think you
(30:26):
need to do. And he did that and Joe handed
me the letter. I was, let me explain how I
got into this equation. Mister Shaveley, Bernie Shaveley had that
invited me to come on the medical dental staff in
nineteen fifty nine.
Speaker 2 (30:39):
Well, folks, once again we had one of the most
popular basketball coaches ever in my lifetime in this area
and most people here Joe b Hault him and he
came to the show and they were celebrating their twenty
the forty year reunion from winning the teen seventy eight
nineteen seventy eight championship. And that was but February February seven,
twenty eighteen, when he when we had him in. It
(31:01):
was him and Jack Gibbons and Roy Holt's claw and
they put that met the wild cat punched together, all
cats sluts, wild cats flushed. But then they tried to
get take it to and then Gatorade came out. But
I mean they had a little little deal going. Well,
they were selling the you know, the fruit was in
its natural state. They felt like that that helped the
players from cramp because it had bananas whatever. And he
(31:23):
was a really interesting story and Joe Hall really firmly
believed that that helped him, you know, go through the
tournament season and ultimately win the national championship. And you know,
we very well may have. I mean there's a lot
of it is mental and gotta catch a few breaks
and so on and so forth. He was great guests
and we had him more than once. I believe that
he because we went over picked him up with the
church there at launch a time or two. Just a
(31:43):
great you know, just a great community of people here man.
I mean even Jack Gibbons coming with him, and you know,
add to the story and hat Anthony Munyos, you know,
we call him on the phone and uh, you know
frankmin Or, you know NFL, you know, I mean, just
a great guy. A great interview with him, and you
know Young and Carl and Nathy you know obviously you
(32:03):
know we had our people from the office can even
do stuff with us, and it was you know, we've
been blessed, you know, to be able to do as
long as we have. And once again, this is the
final episode for the Welcome Home Show. But it's a
it's the bank still open Monday, So give us a
call six and an eighth on a thirty or six
five and a half on a fifteen and the twenty.
And you know, closing costs are as cheap as you're
(32:24):
gonna find, so you know, take advantage of it while
you can. We've glad to help you put it together
and get it done and look forward to to doing
it if we can. So eight five nine, eight nine
nine three six And Tim, I guess as we get
ready to wind it down, you got any final thoughts.
I mean, we've talked about over this career. We've talked,
We've raised our kids on the show. We've supported PTA,
(32:47):
we've done fundraising, Lexis and Rescue Mission, Realchi Community, Radar
Community and Housing Foundation, Zekiel Foundation, seventeen million dollars, Collar
House over in Louisville, Bob Brown House, Bob Brown House
in town. You know, we've had a lot of stuff
and a lot of from the radio show here has
helped us get where we wanted to go on a
lot of those paths, and we appreciate it. But I'm super,
super proud of the Real Dirt Community Housing Foundation and
(33:09):
the Realator's Association here in Lexington. I mean they kept
us through the turbulent times of the downturn in the economy,
you know, kept us insulated with good property values and
so on and so forth. And they're great stewards of
the economy in Kentucky and property values. And appreciate all
that Dan and all them Appraiser Buddy old Pete Gross
been doing it forever, Shelby Kendred and all these people,
(33:30):
Derek Scott. You know, we got all kinds of good
ones out here, and obviously the loan office at Guardy,
we've been here a long time, about fifteen years. We've
had the same crew, Jamie Mortimer, Aaron O'Brien, Alex Maloney,
Jim mackenzie, Alex Tangle, Lorie Hawkins, Kyle Madaris, Rob McBride,
Tim Adams, and we probably had about four hundred years
worth of Lindon experiencer in office. Now, ain't we Tim.
(33:53):
It's untelling, But anyway, we hope you've enjoyed what we
brought to you over the last several years and eighteen years.
Actually we're eight hurned seventy five episodes. So for the
final time we're signing off the Welcome Home Show by
Guardian Savings Bank. We enjoy the time with you