Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:08):
Billy Cunningham, the Great America work on this Friday afternoon
in the tri State fifty thousand watch but sounded like
a million. And I have some announcement to make later
on about yours truly, and we'll deal with that later.
But first of all, we have many fallouts from the
last few days about what happening in Providence and what
happened in Massachusetts, mit, etc. Plus we have sometime around
(00:28):
three o'clock today supposedly the Epstein files are going to
be released, at least those not redacted. We've got that
going on, and more so, joining you nine now is
the great Leland Vitter. The main character, the main host
on News Nation is Leland Vitter. I'm promoting you and
Leland welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show. And I
like to think this is a great year for Leland Vitter.
(00:49):
Number one, you have a new bride and number two
a best selling book. So what do you think about
this year from a personal perspective?
Speaker 2 (00:56):
Well, I am blessed and as you, as you pointed out,
got married, have a new nephew, my parents' first grandchild
came and Rachel somehow had been completely flummixed and totally
disregarded both her better judgment and everyone's advice and actually
(01:17):
walked down the aisle in June. And then, as you noted,
Born Lucky, my book about growing up with autism and
my dad's adapting me to the world has done well.
I think the best part of Born Lucky, really, and
I think the part of it this year that's been
the best is helping so many people. You know, we
say Born Lucky is hope for every parent of a
(01:40):
kid having a hard time, and that has proven out
by the hundreds of letters that I have gotten from
families not just of kids with autism, but ADHD, anxiety,
difficulties with bullying, all sorts of different things who said
that Born Lucky really gives.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Them this real sense of hope.
Speaker 2 (01:58):
And I think it's why it's taken off, why it's
been such a huge Christmas gift, because there's so many
families who are looking to realize that they're they're not alone,
and that is the Born Lucky story.
Speaker 1 (02:08):
Something just clicked in my mind, which occurs now and then,
is that having autism and you still have it and
uh being so successful. I'm thinking about Minneapolis, Minnesota, and
I'm thinking about a program there made up by Tim
Waltz and others to assist specifically Somali kids with autism,
which is needed. And then they have that program looted
(02:30):
by criminals who are buying villas in Spain. Fancy joins
fancy food to loot the money intended for kids with autism.
How did that strike your heart?
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Offensive but unsurprising.
Speaker 2 (02:45):
And the therapy that was used in the fraud right
was called ABA therapy is highly effective and it's by
far the best thing that can happen for kids in
The idea that at the Somali community figured out basically
how to fake a massive number of autism diagnosies and
(03:07):
then not give the services obviously to the kids who
had had fake diagnoses, but also to the kids who
had real diagnosises.
Speaker 3 (03:16):
Is just offensive at so many levels.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
I think it's unsurprising, but it goes to the level
of suicidal empathy that I think we are seeing as
it relates, especially in Minnesota, but also around the rest
of America. When it comes to the broader threat of
radical Islam or of just Islam itself into the United States,
(03:41):
I think we're going to look forward to twenty twenty six.
One of the big stories and through lines is going
to be the rise of the threat of jihad in
America and the rise of the incompatibility.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
Of Islamists and Islam with Western values.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
But he was intended for the best purposes. Tim Waltz
is going to run for a third term. I think
it's likely he'll win because if you're a Democrat in Minnesota,
that's ten amount to being re elected. And now he's
going to be the policeman. Well before he was kind
of a Putts and allowed to happen because you can't
win in Minnesota, I'm told by talk show hosts of
Minneapolis unless you have the support of the Somali community
(04:22):
who vote in block So there might be about ninety
five thousand Somalis, there's about forty thousand that vote, and
if you begin the election forty thousand to zero against
your opponent, that's the way to get elected. In fact,
they pander so much that the mayor, guy named Fry
in Minneapolis has begun to learn Somali so that he
can speak to Somalis in Somali. That's the pandering. And
(04:43):
you use the term suicidal empathy, and I see that
almost everywhere in the SNAP program, et cetera. And I'm thinking,
somehow will Minnesota's buy the idea that Tim Waltz is
really serious about cracking down on fry. That might be
I've seen reporting with you between one and three billion dollars,
(05:04):
which in Minnesota is a huge amount of money, and
the FEDS paid for a chunk of that too, and
it must be stopped. And if not, and you talk
about g had And I watched your interview the other
night with Debbie Wasserman Schultz Schultz, she's a Florida congresswoman,
and you asked her a good question, which is, you know,
a congressman, she's leader of the Democratic Party, how much
(05:26):
of a threat in America? How big of a threat
is jihad? We see it happening out all over the world,
that this Christmas marks and Mars and Europe shutting down.
That I guess Paris is not going to have a
New Year's Eve celebration this year because of the threat
of terrorism, not from Catholics, I might add the threat
of terrorism from Islamist And she had a startling answer
(05:50):
that Donald Trump is going to damage America more than
Islamic terrorist. And you were stunned and you push back.
Can you imagine if that's the minds of the Democratic Party,
she's one of the leaders. You would never work with
someone who's worse than an Islamic terrorist that killed innocent
people in Australia, your comments, you.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
Are seeing a situation where.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Western way of life, and by that I mean liberal
democracy in the classical sense, not liberal democrat or republican liberal,
is under threat by the rise of Islam.
Speaker 3 (06:35):
And we're seeing it in Western Europe, you know.
Speaker 2 (06:37):
To the point is you pointed out where Christmas markets
are now being closed or having to have barricades around them,
or being drowned out by the call to prayer, where
New Year's Eve celebrations are being canceled. So rather than
protect against the threat of terrorism, or to kick out
the people who would be terrorists or to arrest them,
(07:00):
Titians in western countries Europe and Australia are capitulating and
are are are are so afraid of being called Islamophobic
or not bowing to the needs of.
Speaker 3 (07:15):
The few, of the of.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
The Muslims, that they are willing to transform the life
of the many.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
And you could say it'll never come to let me
tell you it can and it will.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
And you're seeing you're seeing the little tiny flippers of
it in places like you're born, Michigan.
Speaker 3 (07:33):
You're seeing little.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
Tiny slippers of it in places in Texas where where
groups are trying to do this, where the where the Islamist.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Community there is trying.
Speaker 2 (07:41):
To supersede Western values with Islamist values. And that, by
the way, is what the Quran says to do. And
anybody who wants to have a debate about this with me,
bring it on. Spent four years in the Middle East,
interviewed a lotogy hotties in my time, when people tell
you who they are, if people show.
Speaker 3 (08:01):
You who they are, you should believe them.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
And when you don't, you do so at great risk
to yourself.
Speaker 3 (08:08):
And that's what's happening.
Speaker 1 (08:10):
They compare it to church bells ringing before Mass, which
is the call to prayer. In dearborn, Michigan. We have
the new mayor of New York City, Mamdani, who will
not criticize globalizing the Intafada. He beats around the bush there.
He runs around with the worst elements of Islam. And
I would add that Cincinnati and other great cities have
(08:31):
a lot of Musques around at Toledo, Ohio, for example,
as a large one. There's a large branch of Islam
that is extremely violent, treating Jews and Catholics and Christians
and Americans like mice and cockroaches. There's another branch of
that tree where the word Islam is peace, wanting to
live with others. Have you noticed that American Muslims living
(08:53):
in peaceful conditions with families and work and businesses are
not speaking up. There's no leader of Islam like there's
a pope, like a pope and a cardinal or whatever.
And have you seen circumstances or Islamic leaders speak up
and say that's not us. Have you seen that?
Speaker 2 (09:11):
Right that? That is the issue here right in? What
you are seeing is the quote unquote moderate parts of
Islam not speak up and not police their own And
that is the really dangerous change.
Speaker 3 (09:29):
And you know what you want to call it Islam
and peaceful religion, there's an argument to be made for that.
Speaker 2 (09:33):
But then those who preach peace must stand up to
those who preach hate, and they must turn them in
and they must call them out.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
And that is not happening.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
And you know, you come to you know I think
about this as my grandparents who came came to America.
You come to America because you want to embrace American values,
not because you want to bring your values here. And
what we're seeing, especially.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
In the Somali community in Minneapolis.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
Is groups people who are bringing their values to America
and saying America must adapt to us. Yeah, that's not
how this deal works. And if we allow that to happen,
you are going to have the same thing here that
you have in Sydney, Australia, where there are large parts
of the city that have turned into little Damascus, no
(10:20):
different than places in the United Kingdom that feel much
more like you know, Islamabad than they do, like Birmingham,
and where Islamic values are effectively viewed as replacing Western law.
And that is a extraordinarily dangerous thing because of what again,
separate any individual Muslim of whom I have friends and
(10:44):
of whom I think many are wonderful people, from the
values of Islam, from Mohammedism. And there's a big difference.
And I think we are finally now starting to be
able to have an honest conversation about whether or not
Islam is compatible with Western values, and the answer really
(11:05):
is that in let that no one of them is
going to have to adapt, and that is a real problem.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
There are Brits in England that are arrested at three
o'clock in the morning in their homes by London police
if they post something online against the Islam religion. Are saying,
why are we doing this? It's not hate speech. They're
criticizing the practices that they see in their hometowns in
London and England, and they're arrested by the police in
(11:32):
their homes at three am and put in jail many
times for months until they until they reckon order their opinions.
Speaker 2 (11:40):
So it's unbelievable if you or I said in the
United Kingdom what we are saying right now, if we
said what we are just said on the radio online,
we would be arrested in the United Kingdom, we would
this would be considered anti social behavior to say what
we have just said. In America has to be honest
(12:01):
with itself about if that's where we want to go.
Speaker 1 (12:04):
No, well we have to fight. Minneapolis is at the
breaking point, I think. But you know, we live in
a republic who with democratic overturns and the people of
Minnesota have got to say this is not going to
become the Islamic Republic of Minnesota. And if Tim Waltz
gets re elected, if Fry gets reelected, Keith Ellison, the
AG gets reelected, well that's what you get. And it
(12:28):
is sick. I often say, we get the government we
deserve and the times that concerns me greatly. Now secondly,
I mentioned this earlier at three o'clock Eastern time today,
In about three hours, they're going to release the Epstein files. Man,
I share with you one thought of mine on that matter. Please,
I'm watching. It was either you or it might have
(12:48):
been I might have been a CNN. It's been about
four or five months, and they had on one of
the US attorneys from the Southern District of New York
who in seventeen, eighteen and nineteen thoroughly investigated the Epstein
matter because they assumed, like I assume, like I assume
you assume. I can't assume what you assume, but I assume.
And Tony Bender assumed that there's all these important guys
(13:13):
from Bill Gates to Bill Clinton, Donald Trump, does this
name the person Wechner, etc. That had sex with teenage
girls inappropriately. There's no inappropriate sex with the teenage girl,
and I assume that even sitting here, I guess that's
the case. However, may I use the term? For eighteen
months to two years? The US Attorney Southern District of
(13:35):
New York perceived as the best law enforcement agency in
the country by themselves, they said. This US attorney who
worked on those cases said, of course, I can't speak
about grand jury matters, but he said that everyone that
could be criminally indicted in this, and that entire Epstein
matter was, which was Jeffrey Epstein and Glainne Maxwell. So
(13:55):
I'm watching this and the interviewer said, would you say
that again? Everyone? He said, everyone who criminally is liable
in our opinion probable cause has been indicted. And if
that's the case, Leland vinter are we going to learn it?
And this will be kept alive for a long time
because it politically benefits some. Is it possible that the
(14:17):
men whose photos ninety five thousand photos released, all these
famous famous guys, that none of them engaged in sex
with teenage girls or in a situation where a young
woman was sexually traffic Because if that was the case,
one of the members of that office was James Comy's daughter,
the one who hated Trump. They wanted to get him,
(14:39):
They wanted to get everybody involved. Is it possible, There's
no there, there is that possible.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
Of course it's possible.
Speaker 2 (14:47):
And there's also a middle ground. Bill, there's a middle
ground that there is no there there. I don't believe
there is that there there when it comes to Trump, because,
as you point out, I think if there was a
number of different DJs and prosecutors would.
Speaker 3 (14:59):
Have gone there and right.
Speaker 2 (15:03):
But there is a there is a middle ground here,
which is that there were men who perhaps were not
trafficked underapemen, but who were perhaps at the island or
in other places and engaged in behavior that may not
have been criminal, but may have been really icky and awful.
(15:25):
They have gotten the past, and I think the best
journalist on this is a woman named Tara Palmery, and
she has pointed out that in the depositions of these
alleged victims that there have been other names that have
been mentioned, and there have been other names that have
been mentioned as men who had sex with them.
Speaker 3 (15:45):
Now, were they under age at.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
The time, That that is a different story, but it
is very clear that there was a lot of other
things going on, and you know, now again, and I
think what the US Attorneys of the district in New
York setting where I think what's really important is everybody
(16:08):
that we could prosecute we did, Yeah, which means everybody
that we could prove guilty.
Speaker 3 (16:13):
Beyond a reasonable doubt.
Speaker 2 (16:15):
And that's that's a very different standard than is this
person a good person? Right?
Speaker 3 (16:22):
Yeap?
Speaker 2 (16:22):
Yeah, Like those are different things.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
I like your use of the ikey shuffle. You know,
we think of ikey woulds, but it's ikey to have
a sixty five year old guy having sex with a
twenty two year old woman's but it's not criminal unless
she was trafficked. Well, look, we got to run, but
born Lucky's still out.
Speaker 2 (16:41):
There that happy no merry Christmas.
Speaker 1 (16:45):
Well, we deal with the news, and we take the
news as it comes, and I hope we have a
successful twenty twenty six. Keep doing what you're doing. I
love our relationship. We've met I think one time at
a place in Naples called Old Old Collier, and I
hope to see you again down there at some point.
But let's keep it going. I love the term I
may take it from you. Suicidal empathy. That's a great
(17:08):
term to describe what's happening in America. But Leland, give
my best to Rachel and all your family, and may
God bless you. God bless America, and to you and
yours Leland, Merry Christmas, Thank you, Bill, God bless you.
Let's continue with more and that could be the case.
And of course the women. There have been dozens and
dozens of class action lawsuits, tens of millions of dollars
(17:30):
paid out to the victims of Jeffrey Epstein from insurance companies, banks,
and brokerage firms. And I'm saying, well, they were paid
financially for the injuries inflicted upon them, and that's a
good thing. So let's continue with more news. Next your
Home of the Bengals News Radio seven hundred ought by
(17:51):
Billy Cunningham Dave Keaton hit the music That's All good.
I followed this thing in Rhode Island in Massachusetts, as
I like to do anyway, and it was amazing. Who
kind of broke the deal, broke the case wide open.
It was a homeless guy named John who lived in
the basement of the building where his two students were
(18:11):
murdered in cold blood. So I read about John, I'm thinking,
how in the hell is John involved in it? He
was the second photo of the guy walking around with
bushy eyebrows, and I thought, Okay, how's John involved in
this case? And the answer is the police thought that
that guy, whoever that guy was named John by the way,
(18:32):
might have seen the murderer and might have seen the
vehicle in which he pulled away from the scene in
and so the homeless guy, first name is John, as
a graduate of Brown University, appears to be about thirty
five years old. He's homeless, he's drug addicted, and he
lives in the basement of the building where the murderer entered.
(18:55):
Who was here, by the way, on the kindness of
our hearts as a diverse city visa recipient. That's another issue.
We'll talk talk about that later. The homeless guy told
police when he stepped forward, you might recall the authorities.
The DEI authorities in Rhode Island and Massachusetts put out
(19:16):
a photo of this guy, the witness, so to speak,
saying if you know this person, or if you are
this person, please come forward. So he walked up yesterday
afternoon to two police officers in Providence and said, I
think that's me, and the cops looked at him and said,
that's you. So they took him into headquarters and the
(19:40):
homeless guy, John, a proud graduate of Brown University, told
the police that he sleeps in the basement of Holly Hall,
which is the building in which the murders took place.
And he told them earlier in the day, just before
the shooting, he said, he saw someone that looks suspicious
in the basement area of that building where he was sleeping.
(20:03):
And so John, the homeless guy, you talk about how
unusual things that her in life. All the FBI, the CIA,
the Marshall Service, all the police, state police, it was
a homeless guy that broke the case. And he told
them that he approached the subject because he didn't fit in.
He looked a little bit unusual, wasn't a student, so
(20:25):
to speak. And he said, I saw him walk toward
his car unlock it with a key fob, and uh,
the murderer noticed a homeless guy, fortunately didn't kill him,
and he got into the key fob and at that point,
he said, he told the police. He told the police,
(20:47):
I want you to look for a gray Nissan with
Florida plates, probably a rental. Aren't too many Florida plates
and Rhode Island, by the way, except for rental cards,
and went on to say, I think he might have
been involved because he used a key fob to open
the car. He looks a little suspicious to me. And
(21:07):
when I kind of followed him out, he kind of
walked away a little more quickly. He unlocked the car,
and he said, I found an odd that when he
circled the block in the car, that's when I saw
the Florida plates. That started to unravel the entire case
for the homeless guy named John who broke this thing
(21:30):
wide open. So two things come to mind. The FBI
had posted a fifty thousand dollars reward for information leading
to the arrest and or apprehension of the murderer who
was here. Sh I was saying, a green card, and
he's going to get the fifty thousand dollars. Hope he
uses it well, I might say. And he also the
(21:55):
police were asking the question, why are you living in
the basement? He said, I have nowhere to live, and
I can walk into cafeterias and get fed. And it
was cold, and normally I live outside, but Rhode Island
that time of the year is cold. In fact, the
next day it snowed like hell. So talk about the
(22:16):
twist and turns such as the guard of Abraham Lincoln
outside of his private box at the Fort Theater just
happened to leave to get a beer next door. Or
Lee Harvey Oswald, the mother in law he was living with.
The mother in law, she told Lee Harvey ols, you
(22:38):
got to get them. You have to work. And so
a friend to his I don't know how friends said
that the Texas Cool Book Depository is hiring try there.
So they hired his two facilities, one in fort Worth,
one in Dallas, and he was assigned to work in
fort Worth, but a week before they had a pregnant
(23:00):
and see as someone on leaving, somebody else quit, so
the foreman and fort Worth transferred him to Dallas, Texas
School Book Depository. The rest is history. Despite all the
thousands of man hours, all the money spent, it was
a homeless guy named John who broke the case wide open.
Likely is going to get the fifty thousand dollars. Now,
on another matter, I looked into this a little bit.
(23:22):
How do you get one of these diversity visas to
come into the country, and how are these people selected?
And last night I spoke to a friendly FBI agent
who explained it to me a little bit how you
get these things. But essentially you go into some lottery
system and in response to that, the if your number
(23:45):
comes up, you get entry into the United States of
America for reasons unclear to anyone. When this came out,
the Christy Noan put out the following message. The Brown
University shooter, Plaudio Manuel Nevez Valenti entered the through the
Diversity Lottery Immigrant Visa program dv ones they're called in
(24:06):
twenty seventeen and was granted a green card. He'd been
here before the murderer in like two thousand, two thousand
and one, and he went through it. He might have
it's unclear at this point where he spent the intervening
fifteen years between two thousand and three and twenty and seventeen,
(24:27):
other than the fact he's a Portuguese citizen. But we
have this system in which you can apply in your
home country. There's a quota system for Portugal and if
your number comes up, guess what you got? The golden
ticket coming to America, and Christy Noom went on to
say that this heinous individual should never have been allowed
(24:48):
in our country. Amen. And this happened during the first
year of the Trumpet administration. And I'm sure those involved
in the Trumpet administration had no idea about the diversity
green card system. Well, now, because of the generosity that
we have for others, by the way, generosity is going
to kill us at some point. Because of that, that
(25:08):
mister of Valente was permitted an entry in the US
and the rest is history. That particular program now has
been stopped, it's been delayed, and analyze how does this
stuff happen? Why does it occur? But a homeless guy
named John solved the Brown University case and many are asking,
including the parents of students at Brown University. By the way,
(25:31):
they recruited me to play basketball there, but that's another story.
How did they not know that the homeless are living
and university facilities and walking around. And by the way,
John has some drug problems and mental health difficulties and
in and around the students. And John, I don't know
how he gets some money. I'm sure he's on a
(25:52):
disability program. But university may want to look into that,
just to see what the hell's going on around this place.
Be more follow up. I mentioned this to Leland Vedder
and others that I kind of suspect this could be
a Ted Kazinski situation where this guy who was brilliant Valente,
brilliant physicist, was in Portugal seemingly ran into the MIT
(26:17):
professor twenty seven years ago when they were students together
together at a university in Portugal, and he might have
known obviously he knew the guy and targeted him, and
then he picked a building on campus at Brown University
to kill. Why he picked Brown University, no one knows,
No one knows, don't know, But he picked the physics building.
(26:41):
So the connection is a failed physics student attacking and killing,
shooting eleven people two or dead because they were in
a physics class, and then he sought out a physics
professor to kill an MIT that he may have known
twenty six years earlier. Over the few weeks, will learn more.
(27:01):
That's what we know at this point. But a homeless
guy broke the case for the FBI, and now he's
likely to get to get the fifty thousand dollars reward.
We will move on to the next situation. Secondly, with
leland Vinter, he brought up the idea. And by the way,
leland Vinter, I've only met him twice, talked to him
quite often as a good man, a good guy, spent
(27:25):
four years in the Middle East, a long time in
the Middle East covering Middle Easian stories. And when he
says that we got a problem and it could ruin
Western civilization, he is absolutely correct, because the great majority
of Muslims in this country, there's about five million, have
nothing to do with jihadism, have nothing to do with extremism,
(27:48):
have nothing to do with killing men, women and children.
The list of Islamic attacks in America and throughout the
world are incredible. One estimate is at least a half
a million have been killed by islam make extremism in
this century, and the great majority killed, by the way,
are fellow Muslims. They kill you. For example, in the Gaza,
you might recall there were thousands of Gazans protesting against
(28:11):
Hamas as their so called representative that they elected democratically
to represent them. Having watched it for a while, they
want them out of it completely. And so when these
protests started, the Hamas. The Hamas murderers took the leadership
out of the peace movement in Gaza, hung them up
(28:33):
by their feet, beat them to death in a public square,
and shot them and bled them out like pigs on
the ground. The message was sent, if you oppose us,
you're an apostate, you will be murdered. And so the
peace movement in Gaza didn't get off the ground. As
Leland Viddert said that if he and I were in London,
(28:55):
and if Leland Vindert said the things he said about
Muslims in London, he would be and put in jail
for up to seven years because of his opinions. You
can't get elected in Minneapolis, Minnesota unless you're endorsed by
the Somalis who are largely ripping off and looting the
US treasury. They rewarded our generosity with theft, and we're
(29:20):
at a tipping point. Give you some more facts and figures. Egyptians,
the last poll was taken in twenty thirteen, because it's
dangerous to take a poll anywhere in Egypt if you
get the wrong result. How about this, ninety percent of Egyptians.
This is not Amos terrorists, but Egyptians say that if
(29:42):
a Muslim leaves the faith and converts to some other
religion or simply becomes an atheist, ninety percent believed that
that Muslim should be killed. Forthwith that, ninety five percent
believed that Sharia law should be imposed in Egypt, in fact,
in the United States of America, in which Sharia determine
the outcome of any dispute of any type. Ninety five
(30:06):
percent of the girls in Egypt are sexually mutilated today
when they have their first period or before that, the
mother and the aunties get together and a ritual and
sexually conduct some sort of klitterectomy that sexually mutilates girls
in Egypt and girls at the ages of seven, eight, nine,
(30:28):
and ten. Muhammad himself had at wives that were seven
eight years old. That the girls who do not consent
to being sold or being conveyed to an older man
a temporary wife, shall we say, by their fathers, could
have acid thrown in their face. So we're dealing with
(30:49):
a little bit something different than American values, would you agree?
And so it's being incorporated into the United States. It
can't happen here. I know it can't happen here. Who
was just elected the mayor of New York City. Which
political party dominates the state of Minnesota. Oh, you got
(31:10):
your answers, plus fifty one Muslims, we're elected to political office.
Inside of America, great majority of whom believe in globalizing
the into fada, such as in Australia, globalize the Intafada.
What it can't happen here, absolutely fool it can Now.
We do, have, of course, the First Amendment. We do
(31:33):
have freedom of speech, but what good is it if
the fear of speaking is so great you lose your
life for your job. So when Leland Vindert says, don't
let this happen in America, he knows exactly what he's
talking about. So let's continue with more. By the way,
this is my last show of the year twenty twenty five.
(31:56):
We'll talk further about the future later and we'll see
what happens down the road. And coming up after one o'clock,
I'm gonna call Steve Gorm. We've had some conversions when
it comes to climatology, you know, garbage in, garbage out.
The great majority of young folks believe the climate is
about to wither away and die because they've been told
that for years, and we have a guest on and
(32:18):
give you some facts. I think Bill Gates have seen
the light. He's seen the Promised Land, and he's flipped.
And hopefully American can save itself. But morally and ethically
we're in trouble, great trouble. The average American female produces
one point six babies per female, and that female must
(32:38):
produce two point one to stay even with population. We're
in a falling population situation. Not as bad as Japan,
which is zero point eight per female, not as bad
as other Western European countries that are one point four.
But the average Muslim female has five children. And we
are a democracy within a republic after all. Put that
(33:01):
in your pipe and smoke it for the future. I't's
continue with more bline becomes available five one, three, seven, four, nine,
seven thousand, twelve fifty five Home of Your Bengals News
Radio seven hundred wut of you build?
Speaker 3 (33:22):
Cunning?
Speaker 1 (33:22):
In the Great American Verse. One thing we share is
the weather and the climate meteorology, et cetera. One of
the good things is that the federal government's not hired
back about four thousand meteorologists. Is if we need more
weather reports. Every time you watch television any extent, it's
nothing but an extended weather report. I know what the
weather is going to be. But one thing I hate
(33:43):
to always say that things are terrible, things are awful,
Things can't get any worse. Every now and then I
see the green sprouts of an April day with the
truth bursting forward about the green energy movement. What it's
cost us is literally trillions of dollars resulting in nothing.
I think Shakespeare said sound and fury signifying nothing, and
(34:04):
all the times of al Gore, etc. Is now crashing.
And of course Steve Gorm is one of the apostles
of a not agreeing demand made climate change to a
significant extent, and his new book Out has been out
for a while, is knocking him to green breakdown the
coming renewable energy failure which is happening, but the Democrats
(34:25):
are not giving up. Steve Gorm once again, welcome to
the Bill Cunningham Show. And first of all, Steve, Merry
Christmas and happy New Year.
Speaker 4 (34:33):
Hey Bill, Merry Christmas, is having New Year. I've never
been called an apostle before, so thanks.
Speaker 1 (34:37):
Well, well, I mean it's like you know, I've been
doing this for years, and I'm thinking maybe what we're
saying is breaking through, and that is that the climate
is always changing. It will always change. So the argument
is climate is changing one of the answers, Yes, but
man made climate change is a completely different matter. But
(34:57):
talk about several issues. Bill Gates, for example, has now
seen the lights, seeing the promised Land, and he's kind
of rejected the idea of climate catastrophes, and that's made
the liberals quite unhappy. They're going after Bill Gates hard
about net zero, etc. Explain the conversion to the American
(35:17):
people about Bill Gates.
Speaker 4 (35:20):
Yeah, this was really quite a turnaround. Mister Gates, as
you know, as one of the wealthiest men in the world.
I think he's worth more than one hundred billion dollars
and he's had foundations that have been contributing billions of
dollars for years and years to try and fight global
warming and reduce emissions. He wrote a book in twenty
(35:42):
twenty one that was titled How to Avoid a Climate Disaster.
Speaker 3 (35:46):
But just two weeks before.
Speaker 4 (35:48):
The Climate conference in Billiem, Brazil, he came out and
sent a memo to the UN Climate Conference, also put
on his website and he took a different point of
view on many things. Some of the things he said, quote,
(36:09):
climate change is a serious problem, but it will not
be the end of civilization. Secondly, he said to quote, unfortunately,
the doomsday outlook is causing much of the climate community
to focus too much on near terms mission, near term
emissions goals. And then he also concluded with quote, our
chief goal should be to prevent suffering, particularly for those
(36:30):
in the toughest conditions, who live in the world's poorest countries.
Speaker 1 (36:34):
Wow.
Speaker 4 (36:35):
Wow, And this is this is just a big, big
change for mister Gates. This is very sensible and and
and I think he was the press attacked him and
many of the climatists, and the press said, you know
what's he's saying. And then the the climate realists the
skeptics said, you know, welcome to the sensible side of
the street. So really a big, a big, big change.
Speaker 1 (36:57):
I mean, Donald Trump is the instigator of much of this,
because he also believes it's a hoax. He said, it's
a hoax. I'd love the speech at the UN about
four or five months ago, in which he stood up
at the United Nations, looked them all in the eye
and said this is a hoax. And I can imagine
the puckering because you have to hold certain opinions to
get paid. And when you paid for poverty, you get
(37:19):
more poverty. When you pay to hold an opinion and
get studies and jobs, etc. From it, you better stay
on the company line. And therefore the liberals et cetera. No,
you have to hold one definitive opinion in order to
get paid, and the liberals after money like anyone else.
And one thing you point out is that during winter
it gets a little cold at times. And Cincinnati's had
(37:42):
some record snowfall in December. And here we are winter.
We're at the doorstep of winter. And this every time
it's hot or cold, windy, or still dry or wet,
it's always climate change. It's pounded into your head. Is
America experience saying a severe cold winter right now, which
(38:02):
is so unusual, and these temperatures are due, of course,
the human cause climate change is that bs.
Speaker 3 (38:09):
Well, we have a it is a little bit.
Speaker 4 (38:11):
Yeah, we have a good old fashioned, really cold winter.
I'm in Chicago. We had record snowfalls for November. We
had ten inches in Chicago the last day or two
a week ago, we had zero in Saturday and Sunday
in early December. And I've got some friends around here
they're saying, I'm sure hoping fall gets over with quickly.
Speaker 1 (38:33):
But Noah.
Speaker 4 (38:35):
The National Shanic and Atmosphere Administration came out and promoted
an article, and in the article it said, quote accelerated
Arctic warming, known as Arctic amplification, has been evident since
the nineteen nineties as one of the more robust.
Speaker 1 (38:48):
Signs of global warming.
Speaker 4 (38:50):
Currently, certain hypothesis established Arctic amplification as a contributor to
more severe winter weather have ignited intense debates among climates.
But you know, the credibility is not very good with
the climate this. If you will, I love to quote
doctor David Weiner of the Climate Research Unit of East
(39:11):
Anglia in East Anglia.
Speaker 3 (39:14):
Is where they were.
Speaker 4 (39:15):
They've been holding and keeping the global temperature records for
many years in England. He came out in two thousand
and said, quote, children just aren't going to know what
snow is.
Speaker 1 (39:27):
Yes, they do.
Speaker 4 (39:28):
Your listeners can go to a website at Rutgers University
called the Global Snow Lab, and they have charts there
and they show that the snow extent in winter months
in the northern hemisphere, the amount of snow that's on
the ground of the use satellites to look at this. The
snow extent has actually been increasing since the nineteen sixties.
So the idea that snow is disappearing really is false.
(39:51):
But that's that's what many of the people say. And
the idea that that warm weather in the Arctic is
causing polar vortexas, that's it's just you know, we used
to call these coal snaps, and now they're polar and fortexas
made up.
Speaker 1 (40:05):
Well, you know, you and I both know that when
it's real cold and icy and snowy, that's caused by
global warming. You and I know that the warm temperatures
cause ice and snow. Now, one thing I saw this
in the news a couple of nights ago, that Chevron
is pulling out of the state of California, the largest,
one of the one or two largest oil companies in
the world. They can't handle their regulations put out by
(40:28):
Gavin Newsom, and they say they're done. They're pulling out
a billion dollars of investments, leaving tens of thousands of jobs.
And it's predicted that the cost of a gallon of
unleaded gas in California by summertime will be six dollars
a gallon. And so when I read that, I just
filled up my Chevy Blazer and it was two dollars
and nineteen cents in Ohio and it goes up between
(40:51):
two nineteen and two seventy. But in Chevron's case, Californians
are going to spend six dollars for a gallon of
gas because of the policies, not because of the climate.
Well Californians ever figure it out.
Speaker 4 (41:06):
Yeah, Bernie Sanders just went down to the COP conference
and crowe about how California was becoming more renewable.
Speaker 1 (41:13):
But you know, they talk.
Speaker 4 (41:14):
About this affordability crisis. California is a perfect example of
an energy affordability crisis. Gasoline prices are much higher than
the rest of the nation. Prior to this recent decrease,
they were about four to fifty dollars a gallon. And
as you say, there used to be forty refineries in California.
Now they're down to ten, and two of them are
(41:35):
looking to close, and they're predicting the prices are going
to be up at six dollars per gallon.
Speaker 3 (41:40):
They have the.
Speaker 4 (41:42):
Second highest electricity prices in the nation, behind Hawaii, and
they're catching Hawaii very quickly, and it's just a very,
very expensive state to live. So it's a perfect example
of how not to do green energy, how not to
make energy unaffordable. But they're still marching down this road.
Mister Newsom is pitching this crazy green stuff.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
And politically he appears to be popular in California. Politically
he's leading the Democratic nomination for president in twenty twenty eight.
Could you imagine having Gavin Newsom in charge of America's
energy policy.
Speaker 4 (42:23):
Well there's another there's going to be a big issue
next year, and that is you know, we're in the
middle of an artificial intelligence revolution. We've talked about that
in the past. They're building data centers all over the country. Well,
we now have two hundred and thirty environmental groups that
signed a letter to Congress calling for a halt to
data center construction in the United States. And we just
(42:44):
had Bernie Sanders come out this week, Senator Bernie Sanders
who urged a ban on data center construction. What's going
on is astonishing. The big guys Microsoft, Meta, Google, Amazon
are spending two hundred to eighty billion dollars this year
to build data centers, and that's more than the g
(43:06):
the gross domestic product of more than one hundred nations.
Speaker 3 (43:09):
Around the world.
Speaker 4 (43:10):
But now it looks like the Democratic Party is starting
to line up on the side of banded data centers.
So this could be just a huge chop trait next year.
Speaker 1 (43:18):
Can you imagine if the policies at California are going
to be across America, say between twenty twenty eight to
twenty thirty six, and that all of a sudden, we're
back to the solar batteries, We're back to the windmills,
and we're going to make it hard for oil and
natural gas companies to reduce products, and that would plunge
America into a new dark age, maybe literally. So talk
(43:42):
tell the American people about these nuclear power plants that
are being put together that are different than Three Mile Island.
It's different than Chernobyl and today here we are and
that could be the answer. And the cleanest energy imaginable
is a nuclear power plant. Explain how things have changed
the last fifty years when it comes to those technologies.
Speaker 4 (44:02):
Yeah, well, we still need them to get the cost down,
but that's another thing going on. The artificial intelligence revolution
is driving a resurgence in nuclear power. We have nuclear
plants that are being restarted now in Iowa, in Michigan
and Pennsylvania, and there's some that were construction with stop
that are starting again in South Carolina. President Trump also
(44:22):
issued an executive order in May, actually four of them
on nuclear, and one of them said he wants to
quadruple nuclear capacity by twenty fifty. We currently get eighteen
percent of our electricity for nuclear in the US and
he wants to boost that way up. And then, as
you say, there are new technologies called small modular reactors.
They're trying to be able to build reactors and factories
(44:43):
put them on trucks and trains, ship them to the
site and install them. And the goal here is to
get the price way way down. So we'll see if
this happens. Is they still need cost breakthroughs. Nuclear still
is very expensive, three or four times as expensive as
gas takes can take a decade to put in a plant,
which is very slow, But we may have a nuclear resurgence.
(45:08):
We now have like twenty five companies in the US
working on small modular reactors. So just another big change
over the policies in the past.
Speaker 1 (45:17):
So we have the technology available within the next five
or six or seven years to manufacture these small reactors,
put them on a truck to take them to a
city and install them. And why does the green energy
movement hate nuclear power when it's the best kind of power.
Why what's the reason?
Speaker 4 (45:36):
Well, I think the history has been you know, many
many years. That was one of the drivers of the
environmental movement in the sixties, seventies and the eighties was
to oppose nuclear before they got into the you know,
we've got to stop global warming as the big thing.
We also have had some disasters. We had three mile
island issue, We had the Chernobyl in Europe, and we
(45:58):
had the one in Japan who's escaping me right now?
And so safety has been a big issue and the
cost of these things, they're overregulated. I spoke at a
plastic pipe group a while back, and the guys said,
if I ship pipe to a regular factory, because I
have to have two pages of paperwork. If I ship
it to a nuclear plant, I have to have an
(46:19):
inch of paperwork. So we have big regulation issues, and
those are things that have retarded nuclear around the world.
But we now have many countries building small modular reactors
also and trying still experimental. All of this stuff is,
but I have hopes that it's going to break through
and we won't have to subsidize nuclear plants anymore.
Speaker 3 (46:37):
They'll be able to compete on their own.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
So you're optimistic, Steve Gorm. You're optimistic politically. If we
keep the same political leadership and don't go back to
the John Kerries, the Al Gorees, the Gavin Newsom's of
this world, we're going to come out of this. Okay,
I need some optimist.
Speaker 3 (46:53):
I think.
Speaker 5 (46:53):
So.
Speaker 4 (46:54):
Yeah, Well, we have a rising number of political parties
that are pushing back against climatism and then zero. In
the US we have Trump and the Republicans. They haven't
said they're a post in net zero, but the policies
are pushing that way. And now we have four major
parties outside the US, the Reform UK led by Nigel Faraj.
In England, they've coined the phrase stupid zero.
Speaker 3 (47:16):
We have the and their pole.
Speaker 4 (47:18):
They're leading in polls in the UK, a second in
the polls in Germany is the Alternative for Deutschland, and
they said they want to get rid of all the
wind turbine.
Speaker 3 (47:26):
Towers in Germany.
Speaker 4 (47:27):
That's one of their party planks. And then just in
the last two months we had two parties in Australia,
the Nationals and the Liberal Party have come out against
net zero. They say it's just too expensive. So around
the world we have all these groups that are saying,
you know this, this green energy thing isn't going to work.
Let's get back to sensible energy policy.
Speaker 1 (47:47):
One good we have about a minute remaining evs. The
EV sales in America are collapsing, mainly because the government
is not bribing people with seven and a half thousand
dollars to buy one. And secondly, when you've had an
EV for a while, the last thing you want to
do is get another EV. So I still see lots
of tesla's flowing around. But those who've had evs they
(48:09):
did it. I guess to show how great I am.
I'm just exhibiting my social consciousness. But what's the stat
on if you've had an EV the odds are buying
another EV, which are expensive.
Speaker 4 (48:22):
Well, you know they're cool cars, cool second cars. But
as you say, they removed the text credits for them
and sales have plunged. It's possible that that Tesla is
going to show a loss actually in this next quarter.
Speaker 3 (48:34):
Are waiting to see.
Speaker 4 (48:36):
But they're about the last winter, they were about seven
percent of US new car sales. Now they're probably dropping.
They dropped in the summer and with the subsidies gone,
so they're kind of a niche thing. And you know,
Ford just canceled their f one fifty Lightning and took
a nineteen billion dollar charge against that for canceling that,
(48:56):
so they've got some issues. I think they're going to
get better and better. But the idea that we should
force everybody to drive evs to to stop to make
the storms less severe, that's your silly stuff.
Speaker 1 (49:07):
So you're saying that Ford one the most one of
the more popular pickups in America. How much did Ford
lose on that.
Speaker 4 (49:16):
Well, this is the Lightning, the the electric version of it.
But they just took a big charge nineteen billion dollars.
H that's an awful big thing. They're still going to
have hybrids and and they'll do some things, but uh,
you know, we do see the manufacturers stepping back now
from from the EV craze.
Speaker 1 (49:34):
And car dealers have told me that when you when
they bring in an ev in trade, some won't even
take them in on trade because they can't get rid
of them. And those who need to be towed off
a highway somewhere, tow trucks won't. It won't tow an
ev it's too dangerous.
Speaker 3 (49:49):
Reseal.
Speaker 4 (49:50):
The resale has been very very low priced.
Speaker 1 (49:53):
Who would buy a three year old Tesla? You have
to be you have to be stupid. Well once again,
once again, it's great that I think what you're doing
is having a measurable effect. And what is your website?
If people want to get more about outside the Green
Box and the Green break the Green Breakdown and also
(50:14):
the mad mad world of Climatology. Can you tell the
American people how to get your books?
Speaker 4 (50:19):
Yeah, I'll send them a signed copy if they order
one for my website. Steve Gorham G O R E
H A M dot com. And by the way, these
are color paperbacks and they're a lot of fun. They
have in addition to the science and economics, they have
about one hundred and fifty color sidebars. Here's one from
Green Breakdown. These are real headlines. A surgeon uses human
fat to run his cars. There was a surgeon in
(50:41):
Beverly Hills that was taking the fat from his surgeries
and turning it into fuel. He actually got prosecuted. This
is not something you're supposed to do. But this mad, mad,
mad world of climatism, that's where we are. And the
great reads for people.
Speaker 1 (50:56):
I save Gorm, Merry Christmas, Happy New Year, and escape
the lines of communication open. We're having some measurable impact.
And thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show, and Steve,
you're a great American.
Speaker 3 (51:06):
Thank you, Thank you. Bill.
Speaker 1 (51:08):
Let's continue with more The Truth will Set You Free
on News Radio seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 5 (51:14):
We're going to end the government corruption and we're going
to drain the swamp in Washington. D c Oh, Hello, Piet,
I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (51:32):
Are you and the Epstein files? Yes or no? No?
I'm tired of it. I don't hear anymore. No after
the day. That's it. That's it. I don't want to
hear about that, about it. I don't care. Do you care?
Speaker 3 (51:43):
You with him?
Speaker 1 (51:44):
You weren't on the island, were you?
Speaker 3 (51:48):
Hello?
Speaker 5 (51:49):
What?
Speaker 1 (51:49):
Seity?
Speaker 3 (51:49):
Please?
Speaker 1 (51:50):
Hello? I can't say okay, no, I'm not one. But
the fact is this is a substitute for covering substantive issues.
And by the way, God bless them. But the women
involved are multi millionaires. They have sued everybody. There's a
pot of gold. You come forward say I was sexually trafficked,
(52:12):
which is terrible. I was under I was sixteen years
old with Prince Andrew. It's awful, and I have empathy.
But it's been fifteen to twenty five years ago. And
God bless them. By the way, there's twenty women that
are raped and Providence, Rhode Island and the cases are unsolved.
Twenty women. I can't tell you half the rapes in Ohio,
(52:34):
Kentucky and in are not solved. There's ten thousand women
raped every year in America. Half the cases are unsolved.
Are those women's lives important? Compare that to the coverage
of this. It's like and they want to blame Trump,
of course everything, but he's not involved. But they can't.
(52:54):
They can't take it. They can eve What some different
answer are you in the Epstein files? No one other thing.
I'm glad you brought it up headline. Major cities cancel
New Year's celebrations because of Islamic terror threats. What that's
called globalizing the Intifada right about New Year's Rock and
(53:16):
Eve with the We're still going Dick Clark's dead, isn't he?
Speaker 3 (53:22):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (53:22):
At Ryan Seacrest. The fact is they are dominating the
news coverage. But as you know, I want for the
Muslims living in the Tri State to know that I
love you, I respect you, and secondly, speak out against
terrorism in your own ranks. How many Catholics are out
there blowing up buildings and killing people because of their
(53:43):
gender or race? The answer is none. The bullets and
the cars are coming from one direction. You know what
I'm saying.
Speaker 6 (53:51):
Will leave the ASTUS reporters or service of your local
Tamestar heating their conditioning dealers. Tamestar quality you could feel
in Cincinnati, colwayoming air at one eight eight eight nine nine.
Speaker 1 (54:02):
Six h v A C much. Thank you, Roxy.
Speaker 6 (54:08):
We also want to thank Lears Prime Market today de
Luxe Delhi located in beautiful downtown Milford, Learsprime dot Com.
Speaker 1 (54:16):
Lears Prime always a cut above.
Speaker 6 (54:20):
College football season begins tonight Willie the playoffs Alabama and Oklahoma.
Speaker 1 (54:25):
Who do you like in that matchup segment? Roll Tide?
I like, I like roll tide. But they're are I
think they're a dog. I think so at Oklahoma. What
about the Bengals on Sunday? What about Tua? What about Tua?
Speaker 6 (54:37):
Now he's third string, he's on his way out the
door in Miami. But his third string quarterback, he's rich.
See you would want.
Speaker 1 (54:45):
To be Uh Bengals up.
Speaker 6 (54:47):
They brought to my Good Spirits, wine and Tobacco and
Partytown Willie and open three hundred and sixty five days
a year, thirteen Northern Kentucky locations. Good Spirits and Party
Town make holidays effortless. Bengals and Dolph, It's a beautiful Miami.
On Sunday, Best Bengals coverage begins nine am with Moe
Brew and also Pike RNL carriers pre game sports talk
(55:09):
show presented by Cincinnata, Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers, then the
Tri State Chevy Dealers post game show you can talk
about it hopefully a win presented by RNL Carriers at
Buffalo Wings and Rings in Finnytown with the One and
Only Chickster tell me that Stewart's gonna play and Jim Breach, Jim,
I Love Jim Breach, the Great number three, Joseph Osai,
(55:30):
Chris Jenkins, Noah Fant, and Charlie Jones are out for Sunday.
Speaker 1 (55:36):
Charlie Jones, yeah, broadcast. No, he's the kick returner. That's
why they signed that guy. The other day for the Steelers,
Jenkins is out. He's on IR. So his season is
d U N N done.
Speaker 6 (55:48):
Shamar Stewart is that Higgins is questionable. Shamar Stewart's gonna play.
He's missed the last five games with a knee injury.
He's made twenty million dollars. What's he contributed? College basketball?
Speaker 1 (56:03):
Tomorrow? Xavier looking the rebound him of the Creighton debacle
forty one point loss to my Musketeers on the road
in d C. Maybe the President will be there tomorrow
to face the Georgetown hoyas. Can I tell how many
times I walk by Joseph Hall on the campus of
Xavier University? Now times all because of Billy Kerwin, pinchback,
(56:24):
et cetera, Pete Gillen, Is Richard Patino gonna make it
a Xavior? I say yes, but you can't lose my
forty one points at home to a bird. Life happens,
Life happens.
Speaker 3 (56:34):
Well, they do it?
Speaker 1 (56:35):
Can't do?
Speaker 6 (56:36):
Seven thirty Tomorrow night, seven hundred w WELW ten and
O Miami they may run the table.
Speaker 1 (56:42):
The RedHawks are at ball State. What about Travis Steele
and now he's a foot now he's a basketball coach?
Saint John's and Kentucky Tomorrow, Liberty in Dayton, Ohio State
North Carolina, and how about the Ohio and Ken Bruden
like to hear this supposedly in football coach relations, not
just with a little tequila, right, but with a undergraduate
(57:06):
the coach there in Ohio? U are we looking? Not good?
Speaker 3 (57:13):
Drinking?
Speaker 1 (57:13):
Drinking after the games? And as a country song, didn't
it Georgian? Straight?
Speaker 6 (57:18):
Cincinnati Bearcats are on the road Sunday. Will you up
against Clemson? Let's see what else is.
Speaker 1 (57:24):
Going on here?
Speaker 3 (57:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (57:28):
I think it's about it. Well, I'm disgusted by it all.
And don't we can't celebrate Christmas in New Year's because
of Islamic terror? And who was elected just the mayor
of New York City lom Donnie. Yeah great, but we're
not criticized global Infada? Can you spell Inada?
Speaker 6 (57:47):
I think he plays with the cyclones in't either? Backup
goalie him and Paul Lawlis. Let's see also, Willy don't forget.
The Wish Tree program is celebrating forty one years. This
year began in nineteen eighty five, so forty one years.
It's still going strong. It was a tree around your area.
Just take the little ornament there go buy somebody a
(58:07):
nice Christmas gift.
Speaker 1 (58:08):
The Wish Tree.
Speaker 6 (58:09):
Hotline five one three eight five two, eighteen ninety five
or the Wishtree Program dot gmail dot com.
Speaker 1 (58:19):
How about Greg Biffle your guy? His wife sent out
her last text to her mother was we are in trouble.
Willie Tragedy Yesterday is a former NASCAR driver. Greg Biffle
and his entire family, wife and two kids and then
three others killed when his private jet crashed in Statesville,
(58:39):
North Carolina. Biffel won nineteen races in his Cup season.
He won championships in the Exfinity Truck Series. He also
spent countless hours before the government got involved in with
the citizens of North Carolina and their recovery from Hurricane Helene,
flying multiple times to the area with the supplies, and
(59:04):
Biffel won the first ever truck race, the first event
ever held at Kentucky Speedway in the June of two thousand,
so unfair. Amen. Good guy too. We had him on
the show a few times and he was wonderful. The
fifth I don't know. As they're going down, his wife
sends a text to her mother. We are in trouble
(59:25):
and they all die in a fireball. You never know
when you're gonna be called home segment. You better be
ready to meet the Almighty. That's all I can tell you.
That's true, Willie, your name better not be in the
Epstein files, it's not. What about Sarah Elise, have no idea?
What can you tell me about her? To care less?
What about Rachel Elliott? No showed up yesterday. I know
(59:47):
Rachel back as our holiday gift. Yes, she may come
on more. Queen of country music radio. Country music's the
best format in the world. You know that, and I
know that I segment give me out of the Stude's
Report coming up after two o'clock will be my final
comments of twenty twenty five. I hope I have a
(01:00:08):
few more to make in twenty twenty six. Willie and
Honor of a cold day here at the Tri State
than warm over the weekend, as the weather can't figure
itself out. We leave you with the immortal words of
the Stewd Report.
Speaker 7 (01:00:23):
I have yet another vision that has become clear now
and my crystallized cindrical pulsating sphere. I see a roton
man with cherry cheeks in a hearty lab, prancing about
in the snow.
Speaker 1 (01:00:36):
No, it's not Santa Claus. It's Brian Kelly. Brian Kelly
is back as Santa Are you kidding me? Who would
hire that clown? Go Tigers, Go Tiger? Well, right now,
they got the right coach. Of course he may leave
right go back to Alabama. If the coach from Alabama
goes to uh, you know, maybe Michigan Browns or Michigan
(01:00:59):
would go to Michigan. Mischigans should get the death penalty.
They should be barred from playing football until they got
their house in order. Do you agree? I agree? Maybe?
What would Tom Weedman do? Take up for Ohio State?
He's blaming He's blaming Ohio State for figure Anything's Ryan
Days behind this and it's all a bunch of bs.
Let's continue with more one fifty two Home of Year
(01:01:20):
Bengals News Radio seven hundred w O me as You
Mino and Radio we'll take off two weeks from at
the beginning. Now is the nature of the business, which
is a good business, and it's great enjoy it. I'm
(01:01:43):
going to spend some time in the Southern Command, and
I want to thank iHeartMedia for creating in Collier County
a broadcast center, one of the top notch facilities in
the world, so I can be with you quite often
in January February March. You know, Father Time is undefeated,
unto unscored on that the grim Reaper comes for us
(01:02:03):
all we're not sure the moment of our deaths. We're
not sure as many times whether we're prepared for it
or not. And I reflect back upon in one sense
Mike McConnell, then in another sense, Greg Biffle. Greg Biffle
and his family by every objective measurement, Greg Biffle was
a great American married, had a couple of kids, and
(01:02:25):
they're flying off to Sarasota then on to the Bahamas
for Christmas celebration for a week or ten days. Greg
Biffle one of the great NASCAR stars of all time.
I'm sure the kids and he were excited as could
be taking off in their plane and away they go
out of a North Carolina airport and at that point
the engine either failed or something catastrophic occurred. There was
(01:02:50):
sufficient time for Greg Biffle's wife to send a quick
text to her mother saying things are not good, and
so within a few seconds, all of them are dead.
Little children, husband, wife, some other friends of the bid
for family. They're dead. And you don't know when that
moment's going to come for you or for me. When
(01:03:12):
I was with Mike McConnell for his farewell appearance with
us just after Red's opening day, or I spent my
time with Jim Scott and his facility there in Hyde
Park and on that Jim Scott front. I want to
thank you so much. The thousands and thousands of emails
(01:03:32):
that you sent to me that I printed off and
gave to Jim and his wife filled the last days
of Jim's life with joy, as if he had done
something which he had quite good. He gave him himself
freely to every charitable cause that money could buy. But
at the end of his broadcast career, which is like
I think it was about ten twelve years ago before
(01:03:54):
Mike McConnell took over, he thought he wanted to spend
time with more time with friends and faith and things
of that character. I asked him a year or two
after he'd retired from radio whether he missed it. He
said absolutely. The only thing I didn't miss was getting
up at three forty five am in the morning driving
in from Lawrenceburg, especially on cold, wintry mornings. I didn't
(01:04:16):
miss that at all. So I asked Mike McConnell, when's
a good time for a radio man to retire and
walk away. He told me months in advance he was
going to do it after Red's opening day, and I
asked him during our Christmas spectacular on Christmas morning if
you wanted to do it then, and he said no.
He said, I've told the powers that be here that
(01:04:38):
I would like to step aside when on my own
terms and not make a big deal of it. That's
Mike McConnell's character, and simply to announce it within a
week or two and then let it happen. Of course,
we knew here for months Mike McConnell was leaving, and
so it leaves you with a sense of what's next.
At what point is enough enough? As an father time
(01:05:01):
is undefeated untied on, scored on, and I want to
spend more time with friends and family, and I want
to spend more time doing the things I want to
do in my life. The problem is, and this is
a problem, the things in my life that I want
to do at this point in my life are right here.
(01:05:23):
This is what I enjoy doing. I wish I didn't.
I wish I wish I could walk away and say,
you know what I've done all that I can do,
good and bad. I think mainly good. What do you think?
And had this heart to heart with Scott Reinhart and
Stefan and with Tony Benner and Joe Frederick a few
months ago, and they said, you want to stay? Do
(01:05:45):
you want to go? And I told them, you know what,
I want to stay. Great, let's sign a three year contract.
Going back in time a little bit, I said years
ago that I wanted to stay here until twenty twenty two,
which would be the one hundredth anniversary of the founding
of this station by Pal Crosley. I said one hundred
(01:06:08):
years and of the station, and I would have been
here for forty of the one hundred years, which ain't bad.
And so ahead of time of twenty twenty two. Reinhardt said,
you can't go. Do you like doing what you do?
And I said, I love what I'm doing. I'd miss
it like crazy. He said, well, stay for three more
years until you know whatever you want to do. We'll
(01:06:30):
sign another contract until twenty twenty five and expires December
thirty first of twenty twenty five. And I said, twenty
twenty five, December thirty first, that's a long way off.
And that date is now here. It's about twelve days away,
and about six months ago. I know it was hot.
(01:06:53):
Scott Reinhardt. Tony Bender, general manager at that time, DJ
Hodge called me in and said, look on tracks up.
What do you want to do? And I said, let
me talk to Penny. Let me go and go home
talk to her. Came back bout a week later, and
number one thing. She said, of course, Billy sit. Only
my mother and my wife ever called me Billy. And
(01:07:13):
she said, Billy, what do you want to do? And
I said, well, damn it, I love what I'm doing.
I kind of wish I didn't, so I could live
off the fatted calf and play a little more golf
and run around. But she said, if you got up
a Monday morning here in Cincinnati, and you did not
go to the radio and get ready about ten o'clock
in the morning, on what would you do? And I said,
(01:07:35):
I'd have no idea. I'd go nuts. So I talked
to shall I say, older Americans and ask them what
they like, and the great majority. When I talked to
John Barrett and those, He's a little younger than me.
But what are you going to do? He said, I'm
gonna I love what I'm doing, man, I'm going to
keep doing it. So if you're doing something in your
(01:07:56):
life that you truly enjoy, irrespective of the so called
money which comes and goes, and you want to keep
doing it, and this station allows me to keep doing this,
why wouldn't I keep doing it? And so about six
months ago, looked, looked here, look there. I signed a
contract effective January first of twenty twenty six, and we've
(01:08:20):
have a gentleman's agreement that if I told I told
the station that if you don't want me here, if
I'm doing something wrong, if I'm not satisfying the ratings
and the revenues, then simply let me know and I'll leave.
And the differential is this because of different platforming, because
of the podcast and because of streaming live. We have
(01:08:43):
more listeners now in December of twenty twenty five than
we've ever had. And the good old days that weren't
that good, and there certainly were old. You didn't have
other outlets. You simply had the broadcast and that's it.
But today it's on demand. You can listen to pod cash,
you can streaming. Our streaming is one hundred thousand a day,
(01:09:03):
pretty good number. And because of that, these other different
ways of the spoken word being disseminated, it allows individuals
with original content to succeed famously, which is not happening
in television news at all. Within two or three years,
we're going to have two, maybe three local broadcast news operations.
(01:09:24):
And that's it. In every newspaper in America, including The Inquiry,
they used to have three hundred and sixty five thousand subscribers.
I look online now they got about twenty two thousand,
lost about ninety percent of their market. And the one
that is not going down, in fact, is holding its
own and going up is the spoken word. It's radio
because its original content. That's why it's succeeding. So I
(01:09:46):
made the decision to continue on with your permission, assuming
you listen, and assuming you convey your support of advertisers
like I don't know, like Western Southern and Joseph Chevrolet,
and I don't want to mention anymore Paul Luck, McKinley Mortgage,
and about ten others accordinated to financial planning, and so
(01:10:08):
I better quit mentioning names. I'm gonna forget a few.
I'm going to stay. And I told the station that
I promise the Lord willing and some that could strike
me at any moment, that I'll stay at least two
years of the three years, and if I enjoyed after
two years, I'll stay a third year then find someone
to take my place. By that point, I would have
(01:10:30):
been at this for about forty seven years, which seems
like a lifetime, doesn't it, Yes, it does seems. I
can't believe it. One thing I did do. I have
a great relationship with christ Hospital and doctor Dino Cariacus,
who was an altar boy with Dean Gregory when they
were children at a Catholic school. And I said, I
(01:10:51):
see him once a year, and he ran me through
all these tests, catscans, MRIs, blood work, urine work, fecal work,
got it all. And he said, Willie, you have the
body of a sixty one year old. If I take
your numbers and put them up against sixty one year olds,
that's where you are. You're sixty one biologically, you're seventy
(01:11:12):
eight chronologically. I said, I'd rather be that way than
sixty one biologically and seventy eight diverse chronologically. I'd rather
be where I am. So he said, are you and good?
I see, I get up every morning, I sleep well,
I eat properly, I exercise, and my mind. I don't
think I've lost most of it. I think I have
(01:11:33):
most of it. And so, but if something happens to
me I'm unprovoked in some way, I'll move on with
the thanks of a grateful nation. But the reason I'm
here is because of you and the grace that you
have provided to me. For the last of forty three years,
and God willing and the crik don't rise, I'm gonna
do it for another couple of years, at a minimum,
(01:11:54):
maybe three. I can't I've said this the last ten years.
I can't conceive me working past the age of seventy.
I can't conceive me working past the age of seventy five.
I can't conceive me working another three years, But damn
it if I enjoy it. You seem to enjoy listening
to me in different platforms. You seem to welcome to
(01:12:16):
what I have to say, and I seem to provide
something that otherwise is not heard. Give me an example.
Skips out of Contestant is in the first floor of
this building. I go down to. My routine is get
here about ten fifteen, ten thirty, take one or two interviews,
make sure they're right, put them through the machine that
makes everything sounds great. Then I walk downstairs to SKIPS.
(01:12:36):
I get me a bowl of chili. And while I
was down there at Skips, there was a guy whose
name eludes me, who was up on a ladder and
by the way, I don't like ladders, and he was
fixing the pop machine. You know, this was wrong and
that was wrong. And he looked at me and said,
are you willing? I said, yeah, I am. He said,
I want to thank you for providing to me years
(01:12:59):
of entertainment and information I don't get anywhere else. And
I said, I want to thank you because seemingly in
your forties or fifties. You're on a ladder, which I
don't like, up in the air fixing a pepsi machine
so people like me can get a pepsi. I said,
thank you for what you do. He said, no, thank you.
Come back up. A couple days later, they said, delivery
(01:13:20):
guy at the front here to be let in. I
let him in. Said to me, are you Bill Cunningham. Yes,
I want to thank you. I said, well, I listen
to you all the time when people in a restaurant,
in line at the airport, on a plane, if I shop,
which I hardly ever do. The thing that sustains me
now with you is the number of individuals who come
(01:13:40):
up to me and thank me for what I provided
in your life. And that is the wind beneath my
wings that make me feel as if maybe I've done
something productive. Often I say to Penny and my down moments,
and God knows I have down I have blue moments.
I say, I don't think I've accomplished much in my
life at all, and she looks me and he says, yes,
(01:14:00):
you have, and she rattles off two or three things
I've done. I often feel I've wasted my life. On
the other hand. When that guy at the pop machine,
or some delivery guy, or somebody at the airport or
someone in a restaurant comes up to me and says
thank you. She says, see, I told you, and so
I don't know who's listening. They tell me something north
(01:14:22):
of one hundred thousand all the platforms. But as the
year ends, and I hope in two weeks to be
back with you when the new year begins, I want
to thank you. Tom Brenneman said it in one of
the interviews recently that he wishes our society had more
grace and more forgiveness. I'm looking at a Philadelphia Flyer
(01:14:46):
hockey broadcaster who thought the mic was off. He said
something intemperate about a woman referencing a body part, and
he was suspended for two days. You know what happened
to Tom Brenneman some off and remark. I often find
it amazing that I've been able to stay here for
the last forty three years, through the good and the bad.
(01:15:06):
They're rough in the tumble, the ups and the downs,
the deserts and the oceans of difficulties and problems. Beginning
of nineteen eighty three, in the summer continuing now through
towards the summer of I hope twenty twenty eight and
if that works out, good, But as you celebrate the
Christmas season, I would encourage you to spend more time
(01:15:27):
with friends and family. At the end of your life,
if you have time to reflect upon what you've done,
You're not going to talk about a car payment you skipped,
or maybe a mortgage payment that you blew past, or
maybe a home you didn't buy, or a stock you
didn't buy. You're not going to complain about a flat tower.
In I seventy one, almost everyone that I've spent time
(01:15:50):
with as they as they died, and sadly, I've been
with eight family members who have died, and one of
my best buddies of all time, Bruce Roddy. You see,
when he had his difficulties with his heart, came out
of nowhere and each one of them said, to help
my wife, help my kids, do what you can, and
(01:16:11):
I wish I could spend more time with them. And
I think that's the key to life is to have grace,
to have love for God above, to treat others as
you would like to be treated, and you cannot give
forgiveness unless you receive it. If you want forgiveness for
all the crap that you've done in your life, show
the grace and love that you have, and forgive others
(01:16:33):
who have wronged you. So we're going to take up
that as if you want to listen to more of
this Christmas Morning itself, the five heads of the family
will get together. We're gonna have any Fingers in the
rock and Tom Brenneman and Scott Sloan and myself We're
going to talk about life and love, forgiveness and grace
(01:16:54):
and what makes this country work. And it's not acidic comments.
It's not trying to catch somebody in some wrongful comment.
Many times on my side of the fence, if you
say something wrong or didn't hit the dump button quick enough,
the wolves are out there to bite and to bark
and to show how the great Man has fallen. But
(01:17:14):
I will not give and receive grace unless I do both.
I hope to receive it, but I want to give it.
I want to try to help those around me live
better lives and give proper advice. But as I conclude
twenty twenty five, look forward to at least two more
years and the Lord Willing, maybe three. I want to
thank you for listening. I want to thank you for
(01:17:37):
being my friend, and I specially want to thank you
for coming up to me and thanking me for what
I've done. I feel as if, quite often I've not
accomplished hardly anything in my life. And I had a
conversation with that repair man down at Skipst Aleka Tessen.
I said, maybe I'm wrong.
Speaker 3 (01:17:57):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:17:58):
Oh, let's continue Bill cunning in the Great American Live
for a little bit longer. It's your home of the Bengals.
This radio seven hundred w auto just stupid, and so
I explained to everything that happened and honed it and
you know, just stupid.
Speaker 5 (01:18:15):
Oh, hello, Quiet, I'm Skulls.
Speaker 3 (01:18:22):
I'm broadcasting.
Speaker 1 (01:18:26):
Like the last show of the year. For the next
two weeks. We're all off segment. You should take off too.
Any chance of you taking off, I don't know, yes
or no, I don't know. You won't take off now, Rock,
I'm glad you're here to answer some difficult questions to
your turn. Rock last as a year. So what is Boss?
The question is this? What is it that Vanderbilt quarterback
(01:18:49):
Diego Pavia Pavio is catching some serious flack and he
should for dropping the F bomb about you as a
Heisman voter.
Speaker 8 (01:18:58):
Now I am a Heisman voter. McAllister votes. Can you
just ankle the Midwest the anchor? Can you disclose lance
votes for? I can't say Archie Gridley voted for a
three Michigan players, is what he told me?
Speaker 1 (01:19:13):
Really, what the But who did you vote for for
the Heisman and why? I'll give you transparency? Okay? Number
three Fernando Mendoza. Really he usually won.
Speaker 8 (01:19:29):
Over to because I didn't think his is I mean,
I'm not a big stats guy, but his stats were
not anywhere close to what prior quarterbacks have had.
Speaker 1 (01:19:39):
That one about that pass against Penn State with that tiptoe,
how about the.
Speaker 8 (01:19:43):
State's like a five hundred football team. It was, it
was fantastic. But I'm I'm you know, So you're saying
Mendoza didn't have the stats.
Speaker 1 (01:19:50):
I thought he didn't know. I will say this so
I still want a quiz segment Number three.
Speaker 8 (01:19:54):
So now he's performed well in the But but I
always vote before the title games because I don't I
don't want one game swaying.
Speaker 1 (01:20:06):
You know, twelve we got a twelve game sample size.
I choose my my, my top three, which is spectacular
what they've done there, and I think he.
Speaker 8 (01:20:16):
Deserved to win it. But he was number three, number two,
Diego Pavia. Despite his comments, I didn't know about his
comments until he said, Yeah, he's an interesting guy. I
covered him when he was a quarterback in New Mexico
State back in twenty twenty two.
Speaker 1 (01:20:32):
Thirty six thirty nine.
Speaker 8 (01:20:37):
Here he's a I mean, a fantastic unconventional player. Yeah,
I think he could he had one more year, see
he was. He plays one or two years of JUCO
and he doesn't count. You know, he he you know
what one in front of the n C double A
to make a case that he should be able to
have those two years back, and I think they denied it.
Speaker 1 (01:20:57):
So I don't think he can play again. But I
think he's trying to play free. Kid's been through two
divorces already now. Number one. Wait, we can't play in
the NFL, right, he doesn't have the time.
Speaker 3 (01:21:08):
No, he cannot.
Speaker 1 (01:21:09):
You cannot play so the CFL. Yes, I'll tell you what.
Look at look at what's his name there? The former
UC quarterback a Calundu something like that. Zach Calaro's right,
he did number one, five or six round, But number one?
Are you loyal or are you a loyal man or not?
Did you homer it? Did you Homer? Yes or no?
Speaker 8 (01:21:28):
I didn't home or anything. But I voted for Jeremiah Love.
I thought he was the most number fantastic player in
college football this year.
Speaker 1 (01:21:35):
He meant the most of his team. You voted for
Notre Dame. Again. I voted for Jeremiah Love and and again.
Had it been a year where there was a.
Speaker 8 (01:21:44):
Dominant, top top quarterback, in my opinion, I wouldn't have
voted for him.
Speaker 1 (01:21:48):
But this year that there wasn't that guy.
Speaker 8 (01:21:50):
There was plenty y At the beginning of the season,
it was gonna be arch Manning, and it was gonna
be Cade club Nick, it was in Carson Beck and
none of them I thought were Heisman.
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
Trophy Kent Stateton Texas like rank one and two or
two and one. They were a part of the year.
They weren't in the top twenty, not in the top twenty.
That's never happened before. But arch man is gonna go
to the prom I Love average is six point nine
yards per carry. How much of this.
Speaker 8 (01:22:13):
That's seven yards every time he took seven yards every
time he touches the ball.
Speaker 1 (01:22:17):
Bring him here. I think that is significant. He played
for the Bengals, guess he can. Yeah.
Speaker 8 (01:22:23):
Is he coming out Yeah? I mean it has been
the Bengals better getting. Oh no, he's definitely coming out
the Bengals better getting with the first pick, which they
absolutely should not do. No, they should get killed downs
from Ohio State. Unless they're in the top five, then
you can't. You can't waste a top a top five
pick on a safety.
Speaker 1 (01:22:40):
The first thirty one years being the general manager of
your Bengals, the first thirty one years is the GM
Mike Brown got had a total of zero playoff wins
in thirty one years. Is that a record? Thirty one
years in a row for a GM not to have
a playoff wins? Not a problem, that's an issue. That's tough.
It's also the only they got. Yeah. If he didn't
(01:23:01):
win the owner, he wouldn't wouldn't have been. What are
the Bengals need to do? I asked every question everything
they need, the offensive lineman, defensive linemen, linebackers. They need
to say, second crazy players, cornerbacks. I think they're punting
in their their field goal kick. I think money back's
find there got it back. They got quarterback and wide receiver,
(01:23:21):
and I think I think tight ends hand running back.
I think there were I think case Brown did a
good job. You did good. How about the offensive line
which is thirtieth in the league in officials A rookie.
That was a good pick. He was a good player.
So you're defending Mike Brown at this point? Is that correct?
I'm saying, are you defending him? Yes?
Speaker 3 (01:23:37):
Or no?
Speaker 1 (01:23:38):
Absolutely not? What about the billboard?
Speaker 3 (01:23:40):
It's up you.
Speaker 1 (01:23:41):
Forgot about the billboard? Didn't ring Grove Avenue? So right
next to the right, next to the cemetery, what did
it say? I got into my phone right there, buyer
Zach Fier Duke save Burrow. Is that true or not?
Speaker 3 (01:23:53):
Rock?
Speaker 1 (01:23:54):
It's true in that that sign exists. Yes, the paper
the paper bags are out all right, and there's two
more games, right and they play.
Speaker 8 (01:24:01):
But if we lived in a in a city where
manager made changes and demanded it would it would change.
Speaker 1 (01:24:07):
But it's it's not Zach Taylor is not the problem
at all. I think it's period better ingredients for a
better meal and the ingredients are not there.
Speaker 8 (01:24:18):
You can't get credit for drafting Joe Burrow and Jamar Chate.
My wife could have picked those.
Speaker 3 (01:24:22):
It was easy.
Speaker 1 (01:24:22):
I think that's wrong. Is it true or not that
Mike Brown picked Joe Burrow?
Speaker 3 (01:24:29):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (01:24:29):
Yeah, of course about but that was again, that was
an easy one. Five year old said that guy is
probably the first pick. Yeah, let's get that guy.
Speaker 3 (01:24:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:24:37):
And they almost blew it in Miami six years ago.
They tried to win a game in overtime.
Speaker 8 (01:24:41):
Can you imagine how bad would things be then? What
it'd be like, There'd be no Super Bowl run? Two
years of a Super bowls.
Speaker 1 (01:24:52):
Depressed?
Speaker 3 (01:24:52):
Now give me some sports.
Speaker 6 (01:24:55):
Well he is, Dude Reporters, a proud service of your
local temp Star Heating and air conditioning dealer, Thamestar Quality.
You could feel a beautiful Northern Kentucky called Johnson Heating
and Coolie at eight five nine four seven two sixty
fifty one rock.
Speaker 1 (01:25:11):
What about John The homeless guy cracked the case. This
story is unbelievable, and he's living in the basement of
the Physics building at Brown University. He shall we say,
a derelict, got mental problems. He smells he's on drugs.
But that day he sees this guy that doesn't quote
fit in walking around the building in the campus. Because
(01:25:34):
who he starts following the killer. He doesn't know he's
the killer. He's that guy didn't fit in. There was
some intuition he had said that don't look right. Let
me check out out. I said, you've seen his book.
Not good, He said, that guy, that guy's got problems.
So he watches him get into a Nissan with a
Florida plate. They put out his picture. That guy goes
(01:25:55):
up to two cops yesterday morning. He said, I think
I'm that guy, and they looked at it and said
down the headquarters. They said he got in a white
Knissan with a Florida plate which didn't fit in the Providence,
Rhode Island. He said, it's probably a rental car. They
ran the plate, they got the name of the guy
and the other plate. They then went to Massachusetts. They
(01:26:17):
found the same car around the home of the dead
physics professor. There they then run hotel, motel storage units
and the guys and they got to picture of the
guy when he ranted the car from the from the
rental car place. They got the picture and his name.
They run it through and he's got a storage unit
two miles away over there. They surround the place, he shoots,
(01:26:40):
blows his The homeless guy.
Speaker 8 (01:26:42):
So so not not the cops, not the FBI, not
the CIO. John, not yet John, the homeless guy.
Speaker 1 (01:26:50):
Who got metal. I think, say he's got mental problem.
You can always have mental pro for yourself. And he's
a Brown graduate who's in the physics building and no
one just let him alone. And he's he broke the case?
What I got?
Speaker 8 (01:27:07):
Admit there there's so much chaos and cases out there,
it's hard to keep them all straight.
Speaker 1 (01:27:12):
Michelle Obama says, you have to quote pick leaders who
don't rob women of their femininity? Are you robbing your
wife feminity? Does she have? Does that mean I can't
say what I say off there about her? I can't either,
So give me some sports. I'm sorry to interrupt you.
Speaker 6 (01:27:28):
Well, let's see college football. The playoffs begin tonight. Alabama
the Oklahoma got Obama, I say, roll tied.
Speaker 8 (01:27:37):
Oklahoma is gonna win that game. It's going to further
justify why Notre Dame should have been in the playoffs.
Speaker 1 (01:27:42):
And then when Alabama coach to bores. Will you then
go to an opening eyes show that people are saying
what Mike Wilbur said, Yes he did.
Speaker 3 (01:27:48):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:27:49):
What about the new coach of LSU going to Alabama?
Who's going to owe you and coach the game?
Speaker 3 (01:27:54):
Yet?
Speaker 1 (01:27:54):
About? Oh you, he's got he's got girls. Harry Combs
te Jerry Comb's head coach of O you how about that?
See the story out of ann Arbor. He's guaranteed one
point two million dollars. Carry's been there for two weeks. Lord, work.
Speaker 8 (01:28:10):
As he told me, Harry Combs, how do you explain
that one? You know, if you work hard, you live
your life right. Sometimes you catch a break.
Speaker 1 (01:28:20):
Please right you.
Speaker 6 (01:28:21):
Bengals and Dolphins Willy on Sunday, Best Bengals coverage. Let's
see the Bengals up. They brought you by good Spirits,
Winding Tobacco and Party Town. Thirteen locations in Northern Kentucky.
Bengals and Dolphins in beautiful Miami. The weather should be great.
Mid eighties Bengals Best Bengals coverage, nine am, right El
Carriers pregame Sports Talk and then and then the Tri
(01:28:42):
State Chevy Dealers postgame show and then live at Buffalo
Wings and rinks Infinnytown, the chickster and Jim Breach number three?
Speaker 1 (01:28:50):
Did you see this?
Speaker 8 (01:28:51):
Fulton County admits three hundred and fifteen thousand votes were
tallied that lack of poll workers signature, and they're counted
in a twenty twenty election, and I bet you they.
Speaker 1 (01:29:00):
All voted for Kamala Harris. There's massive voter fraud all
over the country. And there's a firm County does not
dispute the allegation. Turn fifteen thousand that costs that the
state and a Senate seat toot two sentence seats to nice.
And I'm thinking, does anyone the media cares about Jeffrey Epstein?
(01:29:23):
By the way, you can admit or deny this immediately
before we leave for the year. Are you in the
Epstein fix?
Speaker 4 (01:29:28):
I am not.
Speaker 3 (01:29:30):
I am no.
Speaker 1 (01:29:31):
I does not answer the question. I did too. I'm
not in there either. Are you answer the question?
Speaker 4 (01:29:36):
Are you.
Speaker 3 (01:29:38):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:29:39):
You pause there, you're in it?
Speaker 4 (01:29:40):
No?
Speaker 1 (01:29:41):
Okay, go ahead Epstein. I've had enough of him too.
And if by three o'clock it's right right, you're in
the city of Atlanta and there's three and fifteen thousand
fraudulent votes one percent for Kamala Harris and the Democrats.
Speaker 8 (01:29:58):
We're gonna find out. I already know the answer, as
do you assume nine? How did Biden get thirteen million
more votes than Obama did?
Speaker 1 (01:30:08):
He was a better campaigner.
Speaker 8 (01:30:09):
He's out there a lot, and he was raising tremendous
amounts of money.
Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Brilliant campaigner. Would you agree? Biden was just wonderful compared
to Obama. He didn't really campaign well at all. He
got thirteen he got there was.
Speaker 8 (01:30:21):
Much more of a captivating candidate than Obama was too.
Speaker 1 (01:30:23):
He was charismatic. I just I wanted to get around him.
I loaded or something. I loved his campaign style. How
did he get eighty one million votes? And Trump and
his You can't explain it. You can't excite candidates right there?
The Democrats cheat? No, I know, but but I'm saying
the other side can't. You can't deny that? Yeah, deny it,
(01:30:44):
seg Man, deny it. Are you in the Epstein files
or not? Well? You Welllita Island with Bill Gates?
Speaker 4 (01:30:50):
No you.
Speaker 3 (01:30:53):
Rock?
Speaker 1 (01:30:53):
What's on the Big Show today?
Speaker 3 (01:30:54):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (01:30:55):
Normal Friday Show.
Speaker 8 (01:30:56):
We got Richard Skinner right out of the gate on
All Things Sports, we have John Matterie at three point fifty.
Speaker 1 (01:31:03):
And from there, I don't know.
Speaker 3 (01:31:04):
I have no idea.
Speaker 1 (01:31:06):
Well, thank you, thank you. Be back on together January
the fifth. But I'll see you at your house on
Christmas Day?
Speaker 4 (01:31:13):
Right?
Speaker 1 (01:31:13):
What's time I'm gonna be there eight? It starts at
seven am. Penny's getting up at four o'clock in the morning.
Speaker 4 (01:31:19):
Early.
Speaker 1 (01:31:20):
Come on, you know I have three kids at them.
Speaker 8 (01:31:24):
They're gonna be waiting for the opening Christmas till until
mid Could you wait till noon or something?
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Well, that's what's gonna have to happen, right, No, but
that's what's gonna have to happen. Ahead of the five
families are here Sloaney, Eddie Rock, and Tom Brenahan to
talk about the issues. I want to thank you all
of us. Don't the only one with small kids. But
just tell the little Rock and you know hel Ronson,
Daddy's gonna be home. Okay, just tell, just.
Speaker 8 (01:31:48):
Wait, just watch all the look at the presence under
the tree seven am Eastern time on Christmas Day.
Speaker 1 (01:31:53):
Bring him to your house. Henny cooking. Andy's gonna have
me the best. She's doing the best. You're gonna you
can help lay another wreath if you'd like. I can't wait,
Miss Rock, Mary, Chris, Marry Chrismer segment Christmas, give me
out suit.
Speaker 6 (01:32:06):
You see you next year, Willie. In honor of this
last stooge the regular crew.
Speaker 1 (01:32:12):
Wait a minute, I got a texta from Tom Whedon.
Uh says is he going to take over in Michigan?
Kerry Combs is going back to Coleraine High School. Go ahead,
seven hundred ww