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October 22, 2025 90 mins
The average American fills in for the Great American discussing the latest in the shutdown standoff, the situation with the Cincinnati police Chief, and

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Speaker 1 (00:04):
All right, the great American is out, the average American
is in, and here we go, Here we go, here
we go on this Wednesday. Great to have you along
with us. And I say that not capriciously, as you know,
because whether you're listening on the great medium of terrestrial
radio or perhaps on the iHeartMedia app, we welcome you
on in here to seven HUNDREDLW. Well, the government shutdown continues,

(00:28):
that's what everybody seems to be talking about in town,
nationally and whatever. But how many people have actually been
affected by the government shutdown? Have your has your life
been affected by it yet? And if it hasn't, when
do you anticipate it will be? And with all due
respect to those that work for the federal government and
have not received a paycheck in or at least once

(00:49):
and maybe another one coming up here at the end
of the month, how much sympathy do you feel for them?
And quite frankly, it's starting to get serious. If our
troops and are air traffic controllers and other people that
we rely on on a day to day basis for
a safety if they're not getting paid, I mean they
gotta pay bills too, And so we play the game

(01:12):
of politics in Washington, d C. And when politics comes
into the equation, there's only one voice I want to hear.
There's only one person I think we should listen to
because his voice is always a voice of reason. This
is a man who is largely referred to as a
Reagan Republican, somebody that understood that all sides need to

(01:32):
be heard and then a decision has to be made.
Kind of a winsome man. And because of that he
has written some winsome books, The Winsome Way, the winsome candidate,
the winsome politics. The winsome Man is here in our
presence right now, and it's a good day here on
seven hundred W welwd to welcome in Dan Snell. How
are you on this glorious Wednesday?

Speaker 2 (01:54):
I am dandy ken Brew, Thank you for all those words.
I hope I can live up to this where ken
Brew on day twenty two that rhyme day twenty two
of the shutdown, who's gonna blink first? That's the question, right.
It's sad for America some of the things you were
talking about.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
It's true.

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I think we're really reaching that stage now where paychecks
aren't being made and it's going to get a little
bit ante even in the farming. You know, I'm out
here in Kansas, Nebraska, Missouri, Ohio's like in the top ten,
I believe, still in farming and agriculture. And I know
that they're talking about maybe some support there for that.

(02:35):
And there's just so many things going on right now
in America. It's always great to be on the Ken
Brew Show. And here we are.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
Listen. Look, I'll have you on every day if you're
going to be like this, Thank you. Okay. So here's
what the facts are. There was a clean CR that
was passed by the House. When it got to the Senate,
that's when the problem began. And a clean CR, for
those that don't know, is a continuing resolution that funds
the government we came to keep. We seem to get

(03:05):
kicking this budget thing down the road, down the road,
down the road. But the Dens have already have always
been in favor of a clean CR. Just get it done,
just the biding error. Just get it done. This federal
government gets funded. We'll figure all these other details out. Well,
all the other details don't get figured out here. And
now here we are Dan in October and the Dems

(03:27):
don't want to clean cr They want to add things
in about healthcare, about provisions for Obamacare that are set
to expire at the end of the year. The Republicans
are saying, look, let's just get the federal workers paid
and we will talk about those things. And then you
have the whole issue about illegal aliens. The Dems say, no,
we're not asking for that. The GOP says yes. And

(03:48):
we just saw something on the internets a couple of
minutes ago the Ways and Means Committee Chairman Jason Smith,
a Republican representative from state not too far from yours,
the great state of Missouri, and he outlines exactly what
is going on here about government funding for illegal aliens
and healthcare, and he says Democrats shut the government down

(04:09):
in order to put illegal immigrants ahead of Americans. My
point at all of this is that both sides are
dug in. What's the folkrum in your opinion, that moves
this thing one side or the other. There has to
be a blink moment, and I'm just wondering when you
think that might occur.

Speaker 2 (04:27):
Wow, Yeah, there's a lot there, And to me, the
blink moment should be the moment when leadership rises up
into the hearts of from the White House to the
halls of Congress, House and Senate. Is everybody is sounding
good with the sound bites and the microphone when you're
in the hallways and at the media conferences. But what

(04:49):
I want to see, and I think most Americans in
Cincinnati and wherever we are, we want to see the
wisdom be in a room of closed doors where they
get together and put it together and say, Okay, we
can't have everything that we want from the Democratic side,
but this is the one bottom thing. But they're not
even talking. It disappoints me when I hear leaders say

(05:12):
we're not going to talk unless you know what. We
send them as the American people to go and do
the job to make the place we call home better Ohio, Kansas, Nebraska,
wherever it is. And I just simply believe my belief
the Winsome approach is the ass of Winsome stands for
be a solutioneer. Right now, everybody's digging their heels in

(05:33):
make great sound bites, but let's get to the into
the room. The one thing, the only thing the Democrats
I think have to stand on is because it's really
not the end of the year. It takes place now
because of next year and the way insurances are is,
the subsidies for the Healthcare dot gov do need to
be approved now otherwise it will kicking. I personally know people,

(05:56):
including my daughter, that would be affected almost double by
those subsidies.

Speaker 3 (06:00):
They're not there.

Speaker 1 (06:00):
You're talking for healthcare dot gov. Are you talking about Obamacare?

Speaker 2 (06:04):
Yeah, Obamacare. It's Healthcare dot Go Obamacare yet.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
Okay, all right. So the latest is Thune is considering
ending the filipbuster, which would require only a majority of
the votes to get the troops paid. In other words,
the troops, the ATC folks, and all of that to
get to get them paid. And that could come according

(06:30):
to Tommy Tubberville, Senator from Alabama, who may or may
not have coached football here at the University of Cincinnati
a few years ago. And they believe me, there are
plenty of people here Dan that think may not have
coach football your at the University of Cincinnati a few
years ago. But any event to end to end the philipbuster,
the Republicans have been reticent to do that and just

(06:50):
require a majority of fifty That though, would require the
House of representatives under leadership Mike Johnson to bring everybody
back to Washington, d C. And here again is a
winsome question, what the hell are all these representatives doing
home in their districts for an inordinate amount of time.
Why aren't they in Washington, D C? Trying to figure

(07:12):
out how to solve this thing that to me is
mind baffling. Is someone that you know, presents that as
a nonpartisan question Democrats and Republicans? What are you do
at home?

Speaker 4 (07:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (07:22):
I think both parties have responsibility here and a little
bit disappointed and Speaker Mike Johnson, because he's his stances
keep everybody at home. We don't know that there is
a reason why behind the scenes or that you know,
there's always talk of that, but there are things yet.
Their staff isn't there, and there may not be all
the people in the Capitol, but you know what, Hey,

(07:44):
they can suck it up and lead the country. And
there are other issues besides the budget that need to
be taken care of the national debt. There are all
kinds of things that Mike Johnson could have the House
working on, and he does need to bring them back in.
And I believe John Thune of all the people in
the arena is probably the adult in the room when

(08:06):
it comes to trying to reason through things. So I'm
hopeful that John Thune is going to rise up to
be a leadership role that we're all going to pay
attention to, because I think he wants to be a solutioneer,
not just follow what the talking points or the bullet points.
You know, you hear both sides have their talking points,

(08:26):
and it's time to end the talking points and get
into a room until something has worked out.

Speaker 1 (08:31):
You know, Dan Snell, It's been my contention since twenty
fifteen that the Democrats are a party devoid of any policy.
Their whole strategy since twenty fifteen has been stop Trump,
get Trump, Orange Man bad, And that's exactly what we're
seeing at every turn here. And I think it's beyond
disappointing for a party that at one time and not

(08:51):
so long ago, had some really good ideas and the
difference between Republicans and Democrats back then it was basically
funding the dollars in the sense how to make dollars
and cents. But now we see nothing from that party
really for the last eleven years, and now the big
point of contention is a ballroom that Trump wants to
put on the White House. And if you listen to

(09:12):
the Democrats argue with this is this is the greatest
and most despicable defacement of anything that's ever been erected
anywhere in the world. But it's all being paid for
by and large with Trump money from his pocket and
from people that he knows and trust, big, big, big donors.
Lucky Martin a settlement from his case against YouTube, he

(09:35):
sued YouTube for censorship. He won like twenty four and
a half twenty five million dollars. From that, twenty two
million is going to go to this ballroom renovation Google alphabet.
They're all kicking in money. I don't understand why that,
why this is? These are the hills that Democrats continually
want to die on. Why why are they doing this?

Speaker 3 (09:55):
Well?

Speaker 2 (09:55):
I think I think the whole let's get Trump agenda,
stem frum and God bless me. He's the president of
the United States. We should all support him as president
or campaign for somebody else. But sometimes he gets himself
in trouble with the words that he uses. He does
a lot of good things on policy, and America cheers
him on. He takes nine steps forward, but then he

(10:17):
takes five steps back. I think with this ballroom thing,
he allowed himself in this situation specifically to get pointed
at because he said we won't touch the existing building.
And then of course you have media and photos that
show the whole East Wing and the First Lady's offices

(10:37):
being torn down. So I think what happens is when
he makes a statement as if it's fact, and then
that fact has proven that it's not fact. It's a
small thing, but it just gives the opportunity. And I
think what happens is Donald Trump says things that then
open up opportunities. Like he said, oh, I've got the
next meeting with Putin planned already and it's going to

(10:59):
be in Hungry.

Speaker 3 (11:00):
We're all set to go, and then.

Speaker 2 (11:03):
That happened the day before, and then we have Ukraine
come and then the Bootin meeting is off. So there
are things that he gets himself in trouble with. It
would be like if I came on your show and said,
you have low ratings, ken Brew has the lowest, like
trump Oy said, every reporter doesn't you have the lowest
ratings ever? Terrible? You know you wouldn't have me back

(11:24):
on I love you, I love Cincinnati.

Speaker 1 (11:28):
I'd have you back on. No. Absolutely, you just have
to tell the truth. The uh. I'm just amused. Teddy
Roosevelt built the West Wing, FDR put in a pooled
Truman gutted the entire White House and rebuilt the thing
from the inside out. But it just seems like that
the Democrats to me are just like they're losing at

(11:51):
every place. They want to plan a flag and it's
it's kind of baffling. I don't know how much you
think this is at work, but you know you've got
Chuck Schumer is the wrath of the Republicans right now,
and Schumer appears to be vulnerable somewhat from the left.
In fact, the left seems to be coming at a
lot of the established Democrat representatives and senators right now

(12:15):
that the left wing of their party are coming at them.
And so I think there are a lot of Democrats
that are afraid to vote for something like a cr
right now, that they are afraid that they can keep
doing that than in twenty twenty six, in twenty twenty eight,
or whenever they're up, they're going to be in a
lot of trouble. I really think that a lot of
these people, including Schumer, although he hasn't directly admitted it,

(12:38):
are afraid of getting primaried. My god, they asked AOC
about it at some meetings she was at with Bernie Sanders,
some conference she was at with Bernie Sanders last week, Dan,
And the minute they asked her, Bernie jumped in and
tried to put that fire out. I think it's I
think the far left primarying the middle left is a
real problem in that party right now. Would you agree?

Speaker 3 (13:01):
I degree one hundred percent?

Speaker 4 (13:02):
Can they?

Speaker 2 (13:03):
The Democratic Party right now seems to be floundering. They
really don't have a go to leader. You know, as
history is recording, it's funny. I have a lot of
Republican friends, and my friends are saying what a reasonable
president Bill Clinton was and if you you know, five
years ago, ten years ago, oh so bad. But really,
when it came to the economy and successful things, Clinton

(13:27):
moved to the center. And if the Democratic Party doesn't
learn that where the American people were seventy percent of
the American people, not the fifteen percent that are extreme
on either side, is in the middle. We just want
the place we call home to be better, and that's
common sense and in the middle, and Schumer's in trouble.
I get a kick out of the talking points because

(13:48):
I listen all across the country to media, and I
hear every single House of representative they say. I think
they're told to say it three times because they always
say Schumer, shutdown shumor shutdown shumor shutdown copy point and
on both sides. But the Democrats, you know, they attacked Trump,
and both sides need to get in a room and
be leaders. You know, it's not about the greatest quip

(14:13):
in front of a microphone, but it's the greatest success
of wisdom in behind closed doors.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Right.

Speaker 1 (14:18):
Yeah, you want to win the SoundBite of the day,
and you want to get on TV. And but I
want one more question, and you alluded to it just
a few minutes ago. I don't have a lot of time.
But Trump's meeting with Putin is off. Says he mayo
goes he may go to China and see she next week.
I guess he's got a plane ticket he's got to
cash in on. I don't know, but he uh, But
the meeting with Putin is off, And Zelensky said he

(14:39):
was going to be at the meeting. Look, let's just
say that you have infinite powers, and you've been appointed
by President Trump to settle the war between Ukraine and Russia.
Tell us in thirty seconds, Dan Snell, the winsome candidate,
tell us in thirty seconds, how you would settle that
so that all sides are happy.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
I would simply say to Putin that we have twenty
one days to solve this or we are going to
provide the horsepower, the firepower to Ukraine to make.

Speaker 3 (15:14):
It a fair war.

Speaker 2 (15:16):
And I think Putin understands power in twenty one days
is fair enough and it's time. It's time, enough, enough,
let's get this done right.

Speaker 1 (15:25):
He's a bully, and the only thing bullies understand are
is power. And I think you're right. And he may
be marching down that road. Now you might see tomahawks
in the Ukraine. Might have to stend into Poland too,
but you're going to see tomahawks in Ukraine if this
thing doesn't come, if Putin doesn't come to heal quickly
on this thing. Well, you know, I've always I've always

(15:46):
looked forward to our talks, and you know, we've settled
a few things here. I'm not sure if the world's
a better place, but I know I'm in a better
place right now after talking to you, Dan Snell. And
until we talk again, you stay well because, as I
tell you all the time, need to hear your voice.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
Well a Ken love Cincinnati, love you, and you all
stay winsome out there.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
Yes, sir dance Nell, all right, we're coming up on
twelve twenty four. It's the average American in for the
Great American and it is seven hundred WDLW twelve thirty six,
and welcome back, seven hundred WDLW. It's the average American

(16:29):
in for the Great American on this Wednesday, windy Wednesday,
I think falls here. I think the days of those
eighty degree temperatures are blowing in the wind. As they say,
coming up at one o six, I'm going to have
on guests that I have on a lot, it seems
like these days. And for good reason. Michael Letts is

(16:51):
someone who is one of the biggest and most vocal
supporters of what police are doing coast to coast, and
in particular what's going on with ice agents and lack
of cooperation from police departments. It is absolutely outrageous the
attacks that are going on with these ICE agents, It

(17:13):
is absolutely outrageous. Now local police departments in major cities
like Portland are not at least protecting these people from
doing their jobs. We saw yet another example the other
day when it appeared that Portland police officers were protecting Antifa.

(17:34):
The visual was them protecting Antifa from ICE agents trying
to do their work. And a little history lesson. You know,
everybody is not everybody, but the left is all up
in arms as to what's going on with ICE and
apprehensions and deportations. Just take a little look at history

(17:56):
and what kind of numbers there were of illegal aliens
in this country deported under Barack Obama and Joe Biden.
Just take a look at the numbers, and take a
look at the numbers of the amount of illegal aliens
that entered this country under Joe Biden, and then maybe

(18:16):
we can have a civil discussion anyway. That's coming up
in one oh six, two oh six. Stay healthy until
you die. You know a lot of people the final
years of their lives are spent in health hell and
they're just being propped up by devices and medication, and
they're not healthy. Well, how do you achieve a long

(18:36):
life and live healthy until you die? It is what
medicine is basically working towards and on the cusp of
and it's starting to figure out that it's a lot
less expensive to do that than to just keep pumping
pills and putting people on machines to keep them alive
in their final five or six or seven years. All
that before we're done today. The big story glory of course,

(19:00):
around Cincinnati, is that the police chief is out. She's done.
She's trying to keep her job. The city manager wants
her out. She's on paid administrative leave. She's trying to
sue to get her job back. And for whatever the
security lapses that have been in this town, and that's

(19:21):
a nice way of putting it, they're going to hang
on on Teresa Thiji, the Cincinnati police chief. Whether she
belonged there in the first place, I don't know. I'm
not a policeman, I don't know police work. I know
she comes from a long line of police officers. The
mayor doesn't have any confidence in her. Of course, the

(19:41):
mayor was the guy that disappeared for what six days
while the city was being hammered by the largest and
most watched news organization on the planet, Fox News. Of course,
he disappeared on a family vacation. Now he's trying to
weasel out of it by saying, well, this is the
city manager's problem. It's not my man, it's not my problem. Well, okay,

(20:01):
maybe technically, but it's a weasel answer. We've had Ken Kober,
the FOP spokesman, on a lot, I mean a lot
on this radio station. I had him on last Thursday,
and I asked him basically, look, is she just a
scapegoat for what are really failings of the underpinnings of
this particular city government and its relationship with its police force.

(20:23):
And this, I think is the most significant thing that
cover has said on this radio station when asked, is
she just a scapegoat? And are there other problems?

Speaker 5 (20:33):
Oh, without a doubt, I mean, this is the problem.
And I've told other media outlets the same thing is
getting rid of her is not fixing the problem. It's
just not You have a mayor that is telling her
what to do, and she does it perfect excuse me,
perfect example, the chief has asked the mayor for the
last year to go meet with CPS figure out what

(20:54):
we're going to do with these kids that are coming
down her.

Speaker 6 (20:56):
At these bus stops, and he just refuses to do it.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
She's gone to the mayor and say, listen, you've got
to do something with these judges. Put pressure on these
judges to give high bonds, put pressure on these judges
to lock these violent people up and keep them locked
up because the police are doing what they're supposed to
be doing. And the bottom line is the marriage hasn't
done it. So to use her as escapegoat when she's
done anything that the mayor has asked her to do,
it's not going to fix the problem. We're going to

(21:21):
continue in this until we have either a chief that
works independently of elected officials, or we have a mayor
that's going to fully support protecting the city. That's the
bottom line.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
You know, the city government, the mayor and the council,
city manager, they put the fund in dysfunctional government. So
what they'll all be re elected those that are up, Really,
they'll all be reelected. Elections have consequences. Who said that. Anyway,
we're on top of the story. You hear it up

(21:53):
date every half hour here. But really and truly we've
had a lot of these voices on a lot and
I I thought that was the most significant thing that
I've heard that Ken Cober has said. I saw this.
This is disturbing as much as anything else, and I
think it speaks to where we are as a society
and where we are with regards to how we take

(22:14):
care of the people that are younger. There's a lot
of crime, A lot of crime is committed by young men.
Whenever there's a shooting, invariably it's a young male that
does the shooting. Young Men, especially those with college degrees,
are struggling to find work because there has been a
major shift in the job market and it's more of

(22:38):
a female more of a female drug I would say,
more of a female driven job market right now because
those where those are there, where the jobs are healthcare,
social services, and the way the whole government, of the
whole industry has shifted from college degrees to working in

(23:04):
jobs that require a skill HVAC, electrical plumbing. But it's
not it is a fact. It is not a fantasy
that a young man is with a college degree has
a more difficult time finding a job than a young
woman with a college degree. David Kathy is someone who

(23:26):
knows all about that. David Kathy is someone who understands
that finding work for younger people, male and female is
a problem, but particularly for men. He is with Unity Search.
He's with a company that is a career building company,
and his job there is basically to help people find
jobs and build careers. And when I saw this, and

(23:49):
I saw the amount of people that are out of
work in this country anyway, and it is a significant number.
It's not an overwhelming number, but it's a significant number.
I wanted to get him on to talk about this,
and he's kind of enough to give us some time
here on seven hundred WLWL David Taffy, how are you
on this glorious.

Speaker 7 (24:05):
Day, fantastic and fantastic happy to be here.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Well, you're fantastic, you're employed. A lot of people in
this country, aren't. Seven point two million unemployed in the
US seven point eight million job openings, But as you
and I both know, those job openings are really a
little I think deceptive companies can post openings, it does
not necessarily mean they're going to fill those openings, right.

Speaker 7 (24:33):
That is correct, and we've seen that quite a bit
recently and it's been impacting new grads and people who
are trying to begin their career one, two, three years
in significantly. And the interesting thing, ken is it's impacting
males more than it is impacting females.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
And this would be why why would it be gender
balanced that way?

Speaker 8 (24:54):
Yeah, great question.

Speaker 7 (24:56):
So there's a couple of reasons that just talking to
some of my clients and looking at some of the
statistics that we can come to that conclusion. And so
two of those that are probably the most prominent ones
is number one, males still dominate graduating with technology, computer
science in business, and the business market has cooled.

Speaker 8 (25:22):
It's cooled for different reasons.

Speaker 7 (25:23):
A little bit of economic instability, it's cooled for care
for reasons. It's actually cooled, interestingly enough for housing reasons.

Speaker 4 (25:31):
People don't want to move.

Speaker 7 (25:32):
There isn't as much movement in the United States because
they've got a really low interest rate on their current house.
They don't want to pay seven eight percent on a
new house, and so they're staying put in their job.
The other reason is that females in their category is
a lot of them are graduating with degrees that service

(25:54):
the healthcare community. And when you think about the healthcare
community in the United say, we've got an aging baby
boomer generation, and so that's going to require a lot
more healthcare. In addition to that, we in the United
States spend the most out of any country on healthcare,
but yet we are one of the sickest countries and

(26:15):
that trend has continued. So while the mix between men
and women in the healthcare industry has even out slightly,
it is still heavily dominated by females.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
Well, I'm looking at this. It was some research that
was done by the Bipartisan Policy Center. A good luck
finding bipartisan anything in this country. But apparently Democrats and
Republicans are involved in what this research is all about.
It says it kind of supports what you just said.
One hundred percent of the labor force growth over recent months,

(26:48):
and according to this spokesperson, maybe the last couple of
years essentially has been coming from the healthcare industry, and
that industry is overwhelmingly female. So it would stand a
reason that when men are a little bit more employable
right now than men, and men, as you mentioned, go
into a lot of jobs that are based in the
tech industry, and here we go around one hundred and

(27:09):
thirty two thousand tech industry workers have been laid off
just this year alone. So I mean there probably is
the problem right in a nutshell, right.

Speaker 7 (27:20):
That's exactly right. And I can speak from firsthand experience.
I'm married to a lady in the healthcare industry. Both
of my daughters are in the healthcare industry, and they
get calls all of the time.

Speaker 4 (27:33):
Of course, I own.

Speaker 7 (27:34):
My own business with my business partners, and we serve
clients in business, and we've seen that market cool. So
I have first hand experience in exactly what we're talking about.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
Okay, so we know what the problem is, the problem
specifically here male female. I think the overriding problem is
is there's great hesitancy for a lot of these companies
to expand or even film well what's open. And I
think the hesitancy may come from the fact that we're
not really sure economically where this country's going right now.

(28:08):
The President's got tariffs. We don't know if tariffs are
going to work, and if they don't work, then what
happens to us here at home. I get the feeling,
I know you may feel differently, David. I get the
feeling that it was either tariffs or taxes that he
had to go down to start addressing some of the
things that we're wrong economically with this country over the
past five years. He chose tariffs. But I think everybody

(28:31):
is kind of holding their powder, keeping it dry until
they can figure out exactly whether or not these tariffs
are going to work. That's how I see it. How
do you see it?

Speaker 8 (28:41):
I would agree with you, Ken, But here's the thing.

Speaker 7 (28:44):
We know that these things take a long time to
manifest and work its way through our system. So what
do we do in the interim? What's the advice that
we give to college graduates coming out of school right now,
particularly men?

Speaker 8 (28:56):
And here's what we've seen. We've seen three things. We've seen.

Speaker 7 (28:59):
Number one, they go back to school and they further
their education and whatever discipline it was, and hope that
increases their value. Number Two, we've seen a pivot to healthcare. So, yeah,
I got a business degree, but I see that this
if I had a healthcare job, I'm much more employable.
So I'm going to pivot and I'm going to go

(29:19):
healthcare or social work or nonprofit or something like that.
The third thing is what is not going to be
taken over by AI. You still got to have a
plumber come out and fix your toilet. You still got
to have an electrician come out and put some lines
in so you can rev up that new fantacy toy
you got that you bought that's battery powered. And so

(29:41):
the trades, we've seen a lot of people. Yeah, you
have a four year degree, and that's great, but those
trades are increasing in value significantly.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
Sure, and if you go back to school, all you're
doing is running up your debt. Chances are you're probably
borrowing money to go there, and your debt is going
to be significant when you get out of whatever school
you go back to. I saw a statistic the other
day that was staggering. Less than forty percent of the
people that go to law school actually work in the
law profession. Yet they have all of this debt that
they've got to retire in somehow, some way, and nobody

(30:14):
wants to declare personal bankruptcy. So, yeah, I think you're right.
But for the longest time, it was, you know, it
was imbued in kids by parents. You got to go
to school, you got to get an education, you got
to go to college. Well not anymore. You don't if
you want to work and get a decent paying job.
So I think maybe the American dream here is shifting

(30:35):
a little bit, and I think it's a good thing.
I think it's a good thing because, as you said,
those kinds of jobs are always going to be there.
So maybe that's maybe that's the direction all of this
is going in, David, And I'm not sure that's a
bad thing.

Speaker 8 (30:51):
Yeah, And if you think about it, yeah, the American dream.

Speaker 7 (30:54):
Might be shifting. We see we saw that start with COVID,
and we haven't seen it really slowed down. And now
it's not driven by COVID. It's actually driven by AI
and our economic conditions. And we're kind of coming full
circle because that was what was the American dream long ago.
You can open up your own business. It's a capitalistic market,

(31:15):
and now we're seeing that come full circle with this
trade industry.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
Yeah, David, how do people get a hold of you?
Because you are a hiring expert and people want to
get hired. So how do we get a hold of
the Unity search group?

Speaker 7 (31:27):
Yes, you can go to unitysearch dot com and me specifically.

Speaker 8 (31:32):
You can find me most commonly on LinkedIn.

Speaker 1 (31:36):
Where everybody seems to be these days. David, thanks for
your time man, good insight to all of this. Stay well.
We need to hear your voice.

Speaker 4 (31:44):
Always appreciate it. Keim, have a great day, No.

Speaker 1 (31:46):
Worries, Kathy c at h e y. I mean, just
look the tech industry, which is why and large male
dominated the tech industry already this year has laid off
about one hundred and forty five hundred and fifty thousand workers.
That's on top of two hundred and forty thousand that
were laid off last year. And right now, if you
just look at young men ages twenty to thirty with

(32:08):
bachelor degrees, unemployment has jumped to six percent, just three
and a half percent for young women. So you got
to really think is college worth it? And then you
also have to think, well if it isn't, where can
I make some dough? I mean the whole thing about
plumbing that he talked about and Hbasa and all that,

(32:28):
it's exploding with work and workers needed some to think about.
If you think all you should do when you graduated
from high school is go to college, it's coming up
on twelve fifty three, on this Wednesday, this Wednesday, one
day closer to Bengals Sunday, one day closer against the Jets.
The Jets are awful. Just the kind of game that

(32:50):
the Bengals have had trouble with in the past. See
that there's Cincinnati thinking right there. We hope for the best,
but we brace for the worst. Twelve fifty three News
Radio seven hundred WLW. It is one oh eight in
the tri State and welcome back the average American in

(33:14):
for the great American on this Wednesday. The DHS, the
Department of Homeland Security, has arrested nearly a half million
illegal aliens in the last nine months, almost a half
a million, seventy percent of those. According to DHS Secretary Christinomes,

(33:36):
seventy percent of those nearly five hundred thousand, have criminal
charges against them or have been convicted of criminal charges.
That is en root to be on a record shattering pace.
Six hundred thousand criminal aliens will be arrested, according to

(33:58):
projections from the DHS in calendar year twenty twenty five.
File that under if you voted for Donald Trump, this
is exactly what you voted for, and of course it
is sparking great protest from the far left. How much
of it is legit. How much of it is sponsored

(34:19):
financially by far left groups, we don't know. Apparently DJ
is about to dig in and find out. How much
of it represents the real feelings in the country. We
don't know, but we can only guess by the way
Donald Trump promised what he was going to do during
the campaign for the presidency in twenty twenty three and

(34:41):
twenty twenty four, and what he said he would deliver
on if elected. Well he was elected. And now here
it goes. But all over in a lot of blue cities,
the local authorities, the police, state authorities, whatever, are being
placed at odds with the ICE agents that are going

(35:02):
in and getting rid of people that just came into
this country illegally and have been here for a while.
For example, there was a Cuban that was in this
country illegally by the name of Eric Carlos Artis Romano.
He was convicted of homicide, kidnapping, robbery, armed carjacking, and

(35:23):
drunk driving, ordered deported by a federal immigration judge in
two thousand and eight, but was not picked up by
ICE agents until just two months ago. And a lot
of what ICE is doing is cleaning up judgments that
have been dropped on a lot of these people that
have simply not left the country. Standing by the way

(35:47):
in on all of this is a man who is
doing God's work when it comes to law enforcement and police.
We have Michael lets On a lot on my show
because simply his job is to protect police officer's coast
to coast. One of his passions is raising money. So
every police department, be it local, be it state, and

(36:08):
even at the federal level, have bulletproof vests because, believe
it or not, there are people out there that want
to do harm to police officers. Imagine that concept and
imagine why that concept exists. But that's the goal of
his company, his organization, invests dot Org. We'll get into
how you can help out about that in just a moment,

(36:29):
but for now, let's welcome in Michael. Let's how are
you on this glorious Wednesday?

Speaker 9 (36:35):
Jan has always approved to be on your show. We
thank you for what you're doing for America and we
can't do without you. Tom Bless, you can't say it's
a proved should be with you.

Speaker 1 (36:44):
Well, I appreciate that, Michael. Look. President Barack Obama deported
two point five million people during his eight years, not
including self deportations. Joe Biden just in twenty twenty four,
This is a stataggering stat but in twenty twenty four
deported two hundred and seventy one thousand people in his

(37:06):
last year, and Bill Clinton in his two terms eight years,
twelve point three million illegals were deported. A lot of
those self deportations. But still those are three Democrat presidents
that did what seemed to be their job. On Biden's case,
not necessarily so, but still a number that is of significance.

(37:28):
And yet now it seems like the far left is
up at arms over what the Trump administration and on
the ground the ICE agents are doing. Why is that?
I mean, all they have to look at is their
own history. Why are they so bent out of shape
right now?

Speaker 9 (37:43):
Well, they have a region being been out of SPC before,
when the Clinton's, when Obama and the rest of them
their deportations, they knew the borders were open, they knew
that they could have and come right back.

Speaker 4 (37:55):
It still keep those numbers.

Speaker 9 (37:56):
And still keep in fact it worked out to their
advantage because they've already been counted once in a sensus.
They send them back out, let them come by gaining
you counted twice plus they already had addresses for them.
They knew that the mail haand ballots were going to
come to that portion of people they were deporting. Hopefully
they from their standpoint, they could get back. They get
two ballots from them. So it was all about maintaining

(38:18):
power and control. And that's what it's always been for them.
They regulations to make sure they keep that. Well, what
has happened. We've got a new administration. The American people
saw what was going on, wanted to change, kicked them out,
came in with the Trump administration to drain all that,
remove all that remove them from power. And boy, they

(38:40):
just don't like it. Can and they can't stand it.
They're searching for every way to get back into power.
So what does it mean to search for every way?
Or first of all, anything positive does the Trump administration doing,
We can't say it's positive, automatically say it's negative.

Speaker 4 (38:55):
To find a way.

Speaker 9 (38:55):
So when you take a look at what the president
dealing with his policies on closing the borders, removing illegal
criminal immigrants, a reduction the crime. Because of that, we
got to find a way to criticize that, So what
are we doing now because of the fact that during
the by the administration and the Obama administration, we began
to lose so many officers, whether it was because of

(39:17):
defund the police, Black lives matter, whether it's because of
the COVID madate. You know we're gonna use it a
guinea pig. You don't take it, you got to get fired.
So many things happened that we lost basically half of
our law enforcement force across the country.

Speaker 4 (39:32):
That's how far down we are.

Speaker 9 (39:34):
So there's no way we could accomplish keeping you safe
hand and the rest of America unless we start doing
some matrix gavity deporting these criminals.

Speaker 3 (39:42):
But we don't have the resources.

Speaker 9 (39:44):
That's why we had to declare a national emergency, which
the President did. By the way, that's why we had
to declare that. The car tells that the gang members
treading Agueta, the Heete Tech trafickers were all domestic terrorists,
which then made them qualified them as enemy combatants. The
Tenth Amendment has a provision to provisions either if you

(40:07):
declare a natural emergency or if you have enemy combatants
on American soil, the president is authorized that's funny about it.
If your regional language, that doesn't even have to go
to the judiciary, and he's immediately authorized to go ahead
and implement and bring in active troops to take care
of the situation as deemed necessary. That is what the

(40:28):
President's been doing because we don't have.

Speaker 3 (40:29):
The resources, but have enough cops.

Speaker 9 (40:31):
We're not trying to be a military state. We're going
to just simply bring it back into order, bring our
law enforcement numbers back up, and the military will pull out.
They won't be involved. But because of having to do that,
what are they doing now? All so we can discredit
the Trump administration on the positive issue of reducing crime.
Oh no, he's not a reducing crime. He's a military dictator.

(40:52):
He's overthrowing and making himself from the dictator and king
for the rest of his life.

Speaker 4 (40:59):
And that's what they're trying to do.

Speaker 9 (41:01):
It's it's stupid, can it's no facts to it, but
they've got to do something. So the first thing they
have to criticize. The second thing they have to do
is they have to find some kind of an allied
to make it look like there are doing something and
why they come up to be handed their kid.

Speaker 1 (41:18):
Yeah, no, they are, Michael. And you know the No
King's Day was a joke by there. The Left Zone
estimate there were seven million people. That number is in
you know, in great question. Well let's say it's right,
seven million people. There are three hundred and forty million
people in this country. Seven million decided that they were
going to go to New King's Day. By my math,

(41:38):
that's two percent of the population, which which doesn't even
cover every Democrat that there is out there. So I
just I mean, it's it's crazy. But yet, what what
happens in a lot of these cities, particularly I'll take
Portland as an example, is you have this mob that
comes out, probably funded by a particular group, because they

(41:58):
all seem to be chanting this same thing. They all
appear to be holding the same signs, and their method
of attack seems to be the same thing said confront
police officers. The local police out there is not in
sync with what Ice and the National Guard is trying
to do. So the President sends in the National Guard.

(42:18):
Of course, it was challenged in court, but amazingly, the
Ninth Circuit, about as liberally as you can get, sided
with Trump two to one. That said the National Guard
can come in there and let they come in there
and we get reports. Now this is coming from Hermit Dillon,
who is the top civil rights chief in the Department
of Justice, that the city police have protected Antifas and

(42:42):
their attackers on the federal facility. They've been protecting Antifa
as they tried to go after the National Guard. To me,
that's absolutely outrageous. Now you've pitted What you've done in essence,
if you're Portland is you've pitted your local police against
what is right and federally right. And yet what you're

(43:02):
devolving into there if you do that, it is complete chaos.
So what's going on there? In your opinion, And if
you're a local cop in Portland, what must you be
thinking right now?

Speaker 9 (43:14):
You've got to be telling how fast you can get
out of there, because there's another element we've just discovered
that has not been made public.

Speaker 4 (43:21):
Kid, we're going to make a public now.

Speaker 9 (43:22):
And you're show tin and the President is aware of this,
and we're contemplating a reaction.

Speaker 4 (43:29):
What stemps should be need to be taken.

Speaker 9 (43:31):
There was the warehouse we thought was suspicious in Portland
that we put a bead on being judic simply.

Speaker 4 (43:38):
Tracking located toure out what's going on with.

Speaker 9 (43:40):
It, discovered that its owner was a member of the
Chinese Communist Party. I notice what I said. He's not
just a Chinese citizen. He is actually part of what
they call the pulta Bureer. He is one who determines
war events for China, Okay, for the government of China.
Conners see a member of the companies trying this party

(44:02):
they had in that warehouse. We decided to wait on
rating it to see who came. I guess who came?
Antify all their members dressed in black pull up. They
open them doors.

Speaker 3 (44:12):
What's inside?

Speaker 9 (44:14):
Bulletproof shields, bulletproof, best tactical gear, ordinances, ammunition. They're outfitting
these people. We now have a communist country who is
attacking the very sovereignty of America on our soil.

Speaker 4 (44:29):
Is a very serious situation.

Speaker 1 (44:31):
Michael, Who discovered this? Who you said there was a
homeland security They discovered this warehouse in Portland? When was this?
When did this happen?

Speaker 4 (44:41):
Twenty four hours ago?

Speaker 1 (44:43):
So they discover a warehouse in downtown Portland that when
it was what was it rated? How did they actually
get inside?

Speaker 9 (44:54):
We just rated it when they were starting to hand
out the ammunition.

Speaker 4 (45:00):
So this is an all going story.

Speaker 9 (45:02):
Just I know the mainstream media is not going to
say a word about it. But what sparked our curiosity
is we got a tip. Homeland Security got a tip,
We ran it, found out this is in our thing.
He tax to hold. But I remember the Communist Polka
Bureau gone with a Chinese party. Let's wonder what they're
doing with the one with the gut inside. Let's go
in there and get a warrant bustet. Now, why don't

(45:22):
we wait and see who are hits? The warehouse has
always got to be something in that they're giving out.

Speaker 3 (45:27):
Let's see what they're going to get act to.

Speaker 4 (45:28):
Let's put on a surveillance.

Speaker 9 (45:30):
Sure enough here because the caravan and ANTIPA members and
somebody meets them and that opens it up and we
began to see and then we move in and that's
exactly what happened.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
And this is in Portland in the last twenty four hours.

Speaker 4 (45:43):
That is correct.

Speaker 1 (45:44):
It's in a sense it's shocking. In another sense, it's not.
There were an inordinate amount of military aged Chinese nationals
that came through the southern border of the United States
during the Bike administration one hundred thousand and Uh. All
you need to know is that China is not a
country that allows military age men out of their country

(46:09):
without their blessing. So everybody seemed to think, well, what
are they doing here? Well, the communist Chinese were buying
up farmland. They were buying up land next to or
close to military establishments, close to infrastructure, electric water and whatnot.
So on one hand, what you're saying is shocking, but
on the other hand, not so much. I mean, these

(46:30):
people came into our country for a reason, and it
wasn't because they were, you know, great National Football League fans.
There was a reason why they came into this country here.

Speaker 9 (46:42):
You're right, Jinn, and I think what's so shocking is
they're not doing it by the self supporting. Let me
give you another quick info that we just got in
the last few hours, last couple hours out.

Speaker 4 (46:51):
Of Homeland Security.

Speaker 9 (46:52):
Well, we begin to track the money, we found out
we have just run the map. Two hundred and forty
six million, that's with yah a million. Two out of
forty million was contributed and spit for King's Day alone
for the last two days for Sunday, Saturday and Sunday.

Speaker 4 (47:09):
We've got a list of the people that did it.

Speaker 9 (47:11):
Uh, you know you're everybody, you suspect Sorrows, NML Gates,
I mean, were Ford Foundation, Alt I broke my heart.

Speaker 4 (47:19):
So he used to love for police cars.

Speaker 9 (47:21):
But I mean, it's just it's shocking when you begin
to look at how much money millions, ten and twenties
and thirty millions of dollars were donated by these foundations
to undermine and to try to fund the rallies and
the fund ANTIFA to try to overthrow the government.

Speaker 1 (47:40):
Michael lets is our guest invest Dot Orgust's company, and
we're talking about ice and attacks on ice officers and
who's behind a lot of this this unrest in this country. Okay,
So we know about Portland, we know that Trump has
gone into Memphis, and we know he's got it sets

(48:00):
on Chicago. There's only a finite number of troops that
he has to work with. So where is his next
hot spot? And where do you think he goes? And
how successful do you I mean this is a three
point question and I apologize for it, but how successful
do you think he is? Knowing that there are these
activist judges all around the country just lying in the

(48:23):
weeds waiting for one of these cases to wind up
in their court.

Speaker 9 (48:28):
Well, here's where we're at. Quite frankly, he is, let's
work our way backwards. Where are we going, Chicago? You
just try to hang out Chicago. We're coming and we're
going to be there, probably before we can get done
with this broadcast.

Speaker 4 (48:43):
Second of all, we're going to California.

Speaker 9 (48:46):
Any other state doesn't make you enter the red or
blue to we think that there is a criminal element
that the local officials are not willing to deal with.
It's not that they can't, it's that they won't gonna
go in all across.

Speaker 4 (49:01):
The country, he said, we.

Speaker 9 (49:02):
Should have a limited number of Yeah, but we had
the active We can bring an active military as well.
And you're gonna start seeing that. Why because now we're
looking at the Interaction Act. When you begin to see
there's a foreign government involved financing this as well, and
now becomes a horse of a different color. And if
the president needs to and he's he's looking at it seriously,

(49:23):
of declaring and enacting the Insurrection Act, we.

Speaker 4 (49:27):
Don't need to go to the judge anymore. Very clear.

Speaker 9 (49:29):
He said, why do you need to go to the
judge anymore? Let me tell you why the interaction actor
is done. If there becomes an uprising, okay, and people
are in the streets marching.

Speaker 4 (49:39):
And shooting and you know, losing.

Speaker 9 (49:41):
And killing, et cetera, you don't have to say hey,
cause you don't wait for a minute, I'm not you're
gonna bring an army there to I'll pull you. But
I got to check with a judge first to make
sure he's gonna sign off on it. That's why the
Insurrection Act was written. President doesn't not accountable to anyone
of that situation at first. He's accountable for one thing.
Put an end to it. The President's sakes for reaching
to that point that we're going to have to compare
on the Insurrection Act across the country, not in just

(50:03):
one area, and put it into all the schoolishiness is
going on.

Speaker 1 (50:07):
Yeah, Michael, your company is invest dot org. I outlined
what one of its major purposes is, and that is
to provide every single police officer, state, federal, local, but
particularly local with bulletproof vests. Invest dot org is easy
to find. You'll take any amount of donation.

Speaker 9 (50:26):
Correct that is correct, And let me tell you why
it's so pertinent. Well, you and I are talking about Ken.
Now this is probably about three days old, four days old.
We now have the intel from the cartels in southern Mexico.
We have now put a bounty on ice border patrol
and basically, anyone who wears a badge in the United
States ten thousand dollars ahead, you kill one, we'll pay

(50:49):
ten thousand dollars. And that has just gone out in
the last twenty four hours. What are we going to
do about it? You remember, I think I was on
your Showken, and we talked about.

Speaker 4 (50:58):
Where the nor.

Speaker 9 (51:00):
The cartels in northern Mexico had said, you know, if
you come across here, we're going to We're going to
hurt you. And we let them run their mouth until
they killed the tortured nine American college students. And you
know you haven't hear anything else out of the Northern
cartel war has been clear. I told you we were
going to god advertise it, but we've got the best
special forces in the world. We're going to eradicate the problem. Well,

(51:22):
guess what, Southern Mexico. You just made a threat on
American lives and We took notice, so you can expect
a little visit. So did the President of Mexico. We
took care of northern Mexico. We're going to take care
of othern Mexico. Is there anything else we need to
take care of while we're down there, because we won't
be there long because trust me, when we get there,
we move in it out very quickly.

Speaker 1 (51:44):
Invest dot org is the organization. Okay, Michael, good to
hear your voice, good information on this show today. You
stay well and we'll be in touch.

Speaker 9 (51:53):
Thank you, God, bless you, God bless America. Can't keep
telling them the truth. God knows we needs you.

Speaker 1 (52:00):
There you go. And it's amazing how many officers in
our police departments coast to coast are not outfitted with
bulletproof vest. So whatever you can, if you believe in it,
you should Without them, there's absolute chaos to protect police
officers coast to coast. It is one twenty seven. It's
the average American in for the great American seven hundred

(52:22):
wylw Now looking at some of the people that work
here at seven hundred Wylw, and I would put myself
at the top of the best, looking very close to
the top of the best looking people that work here.
I would at least put Bill Cunningham in the top five.
I think Bill would be in the top five. But
I think i'm I'm I'm in that upper stratosphere.

Speaker 10 (52:48):
Hello, buyet, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (52:56):
That was before I had my cataract surgery.

Speaker 10 (52:59):
Does that mean that mean you are you the hunk
of the big one?

Speaker 1 (53:01):
Then? Don't listen to the bar is pretty low on
that one. That's true. You know, every day is good
because you're alive. But you know, you look in the
mirror every day and you see wrinkles and crevices and
things that just weren't there like the day before.

Speaker 10 (53:15):
That's for sure. Yeah, yeah, I know what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (53:18):
And there are a lot of people that they age gracefully,
and you just say, well, how do these people look
when they're like seventy, like they're forty again? And you know,
obviously there's plastic surgery, but I wonder if it's a lifestyle.
Maybe if you drank a lot of beet juice when
you're I don't know, A might just something I could
have done because I just, you know, I was you know, I've.

Speaker 10 (53:38):
Had a lot about is prune juice.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
Big well it is on you know, certain times in
my life it's been huge, but it helps. Yeah. Yeah,
If he gave news anchors prune juice, they'd all weigh
three ounces. So I suppose there might be something to that.

Speaker 10 (53:53):
Ken Brew The Stood Report as a proud service of
your local Teme Star Heating and air Conditioning dealers, Kuala
D you can feel in beautiful southeastern Indiana called Joe
Eckstein at Xstein Heating and Cooling at eight one two
twenty twenty six spots. Those Bengals are on the practice
field today, get ready against those winless New York Jets.

(54:17):
The Bengals Update brought to you by Good Spirits and
Party Town with thirteen convenient locations in northern Kentucky. Bengals
wide receiver Jamar Chase is the AFC Offensive Player of
the Week with that Bengals single game record of sixteen receptions,
one hundred and sixty one yards and one TD in
the Pittsburgh victory last Thursday. Fifth time in his career

(54:38):
he's won this award. How about this The Jets quarterback
Tyrod Taylor, who had a chance to start Sunday against
the Bengals now considered day to day with a knee injury.

Speaker 1 (54:49):
Oh my gosh, Oh my gosh.

Speaker 10 (54:53):
Reports are Joe Namath or Richard Todd come Richard Todd
will come back? And uh and quarterback for the Jets
on Sunday.

Speaker 1 (55:03):
Maybe they could get well, swing a deal with the
Bengals and get Jake Browning for this game.

Speaker 10 (55:09):
There you go, let's see junior Jets.

Speaker 1 (55:12):
They stunk, you know that?

Speaker 6 (55:13):
Amen?

Speaker 10 (55:14):
The Jets corner and former UC standout Sauce Gardner, he's
in concussion protocol. Who knows who what he's going.

Speaker 1 (55:21):
To be doing or what he's thinking about it this week.

Speaker 10 (55:24):
The National Football League is not considering dropping Bad Bunny
as it's Super Bowl halftime headline. Performer commissioner Roger Goodell
said today.

Speaker 1 (55:37):
Well, you know, seg I you know, I I don't
really have a problem with that because I don't watch
halftime acts. I never have, you know. But nevertheless, the
only problem I had he doesn't sing any of his
songs in English, right, I don't think I don't know,
I've never heard in one of his songs. I think
he I think all of his songs. So I would
literally have to take a course just to understand what
what he's singing. And I realized that's a problem for

(56:00):
people all over the world if I don't speak English
and these American acts are out there, but it would
for me. It's just involving too much work if I
have to go somewhere to understand what somebody is singing about.
I just that's why, you know, halftimes at Super Bowls,
you know I, you know, I take care of whatever
eliminations I need for my body and just put in

(56:21):
more stuff than I'm going to have to eliminate later.

Speaker 10 (56:23):
You know what I'm saying. I know what you're saying.
The Pro Bowl Games, Ken Brew, I know you're a
big fan of that.

Speaker 1 (56:28):
I can't wait.

Speaker 10 (56:29):
The Pro Bowl Games are also going to move to
Super Bowl Week, so it would be Tuesday, February third,
oh for the Pro Bowl Games.

Speaker 1 (56:37):
Will that involve any kind Will that be up against
Dancing with the Stars or I think yeah, I think yeah,
I think so. Who wants to clean my gutters? Willie
Anderson on TV.

Speaker 10 (56:47):
Willy Anderson and Louke Keikley are among fifty two modern
era players that advanced in the voting process The Pro
Football Hall of Fame Class of twenty twenty six.

Speaker 1 (56:57):
Hinkley's in. Yeah, I don't. I don't know about Willie.
I'm not just bad. Yeah, no, he's I mean what
he's saying, I mean it's got. I mean, you know,
you can get into it. I like the you know,
the the rhythm and everything, but I just don't know
what the hell is saying. If he's got his thing,
i'd have to I would have to go to I'd

(57:20):
have to know what his act is, what the songs
are right, right right, and then I would have to
see what the lyrics are, and then I would have
to learn. And it's just for like ten minutes. It's
just too much work for me. I'm just I'm sorry.

Speaker 10 (57:30):
I'm just college basketball, ken Brew. You can get the
latest on those Bearcats tonight the basketball team on the
West Miller Show Live from the original Montgomery and An
eight oh five right here on seven hundred w WELW.

Speaker 1 (57:42):
With Dan Horde, Yes and Terry Nelson.

Speaker 10 (57:45):
Let's see Baseball World Series tickets will cost you for
Game one Friday night in Toronto eight hundred and seventy
five dollars.

Speaker 1 (57:55):
Well, that's why I'm watching it on TV.

Speaker 10 (57:57):
Nine and sixty three per tick for seat in Game two.

Speaker 1 (58:02):
No, by the way, I was about basketball. You know
the show tonight with Wes Miller. Did you see this
story in the Inquiry today that Rick Pattino says that
that Savior is not going to be any good this year.
Rick Patino said that his son Richard, his basketball team
is not going to be any good this year. See

(58:23):
what happens the pick day. You know, I mean, come on,
I would be the old man. Yeah, come on, Dad,
what what the hell are you doing here? I was thinking,
you know, thanks a lot. Yeah, I mean you know what,
you know, I had your back all these years and
now you're telling me this. Come on.

Speaker 10 (58:38):
Also, this year's National League Slug Silver Slugger Award finalists
were revealed.

Speaker 1 (58:44):
Is Key Bryant Hayesen on.

Speaker 10 (58:45):
The and not a single player from the Reds are
on the roster. Wow, not even La Da La Cruz.

Speaker 1 (58:51):
Oh, they didn't hit the ball very well.

Speaker 10 (58:54):
This San Francisco Giants already to announce their next manager
Universe of Tennessee baseball coach Tony Vaitello. That's a first,
which is a first and being a big league manager
being taken from a college program without any experience as
a professional coach. But the Giants are apparently gonna pull

(59:16):
the pull the do the deal.

Speaker 1 (59:18):
Yeah, I don't know. I don't know how that's going
to translate, sake translate like like some of those bad
Bunny songs.

Speaker 10 (59:23):
I just don't I just don't know. That's my kids,
also ken Brew. In high school sports, Congrats to Dayton
Carroll boys soccer coach Scott Molefener. What did he broke
the OHSAA record for most wins all time in the
state of Ohio. He got career win number five and
seventy seven last night. Wow, congratulations. And he didn't have

(59:46):
Evander on his team. I know he didn't or Pele
or Messi or or Diego or Kaka or anybody.

Speaker 1 (59:56):
Oh, Mark Cummings or any of those. Now, you didn't
have any of those, Now, Segon, I got to get
out of the Stewge report. I'm going to tell you
how to not not to just live long, but how
to live healthy. Yeah, people want to live long. If
you look, you know, you said to yourself many times,
I'd love to live to one hundred and ten, right, Yeah,
Well a lot of people that live long. The last

(01:00:16):
few years are just an absolute hell. It's it's pills
and it's machines, and it's everything keeping them alive. Well,
how can you eliminate that? So the day you die,
you die healthy. You're in the middle of a sentence
here on seven hundred w wel w and then like
that you're gone, but you live healthy right to the end.
Who would want that?

Speaker 10 (01:00:36):
Ken Brew and honor of a beautiful day here in
the tri State. We leave you with the immortal words
of the Stewed Report. Because I suck up the Republicans,
I get the goodies.

Speaker 4 (01:00:48):
Good boy.

Speaker 1 (01:00:49):
He probably said that on the fifteen Green today as
he was stealing wait a minute from their social Security end.

Speaker 10 (01:00:55):
Then in line and bunch of Morrison's cafeteria.

Speaker 1 (01:00:59):
Yeah, much right, because today is soft food Wednesday at
Morrison's in Naples. I mean him has here in line
right now because they can pop their dentures like the
night before and just kind of moosh the food together.
Oh it's unbelievab. Yeah, everything everything, everything. They just throw
everything in the mashed potato, great corn and just yeah,

(01:01:19):
just just purate it. Say guy gotta go yes, or
me too, I'll see in an hour. I want to
talk to and Roethlisberger thinks the Bengals cheated last week
when they played the bad I'm gonna talk about I'm
going to talk about that. I need your thoughts right
on seven hundred wyl W all right two nine News Radio,

(01:01:42):
seven hundred wl W the average American into the Great
American on this Wednesday. We all want to live longer, right,
that's the goal in life. I want to live as
long as I can, and I want to get as
much out of life as possible. But of course, does
longer always mean healthier? And does anybody do you want
to just kind of hang around, be a potted plant
in the corner of the room, and in other instances

(01:02:06):
maybe even being a burden on their family. Where do
we where do we? Where do we draw the line
between living longer and living healthier? And then what does
the gap look like in between living longer and living healthier?
A lot of people are trying to shorten that gap
so that you don't die, just as somebody that's barely

(01:02:28):
existed for five years. But you do want to go.
I think that you have. You have taken everything possible
out of life and given back as much to those
you love in life. Well, there's a couple of new
studies out about this, and a lot of research going
on about what keeps the brain sharp. Super Agers are
what they're called superagers eighty years old or older with

(01:02:50):
cognitive function that's on par with say, somebody who's forty
or fifty. How do you do that? How do you
keep the brain sharp? Standing by somebody that understands a
lot of this because his brain has never faltered. He's
somebody who, to my knowledge at least he was the
last time I saw him, cognitively sharp and really engaged,
and someone who has written maybe the definitive work on

(01:03:14):
healthcare in the United States and how we can solve
its ongoing problems. He's our good buddy, Todd Furnace. How
are you on this glorious Wednesday.

Speaker 6 (01:03:25):
Ken, How the heck are you now?

Speaker 11 (01:03:26):
I got to tell you that the short answer this
question is you go to the Cincinnati Open.

Speaker 1 (01:03:31):
Todd, of course, is heavily involved in tennis. In fact,
he has one of the major major licensing ordeals that's
with the Cincinnati Open for your your company LS, the
Great Peril Company LS. Yes, exactly saw that all over

(01:03:53):
Mason at the tournament this year. But you're you're a
guy that you're not young, you're not old, You're sharp.
I want to think I'm still sharp. I want to
think if I'm lucky enough to make it into my eighties,
I'll statementtally sharp. But it doesn't just happen, and it
does not necessarily have everything to do with what you've
got going on from a family history, does it.

Speaker 11 (01:04:14):
It is not, And I want to I want to
frame the conversation with a shout out to an epidemiologist,
nam Chris Linley, out of Veil Health, who's a buddy
of mine and who's coined the term health span. So
he wants to change the dialogue or change the conversation
from life span, which is how long your body remains animated,

(01:04:35):
to health span, which is how long you have a
high quality of life, which then also necessarily incorporates things
like cognitive capability, to which.

Speaker 4 (01:04:43):
You earlier heard.

Speaker 11 (01:04:44):
And there are a couple of things here that are
really really interesting. The studies are now showing that people,
particularly those people who are very social later in life
and throughout their life, have done very well on these
cognitive tests there in their eighties, and part of that
is addressed by the release of oxytocin, which is a neuropeptide.

(01:05:08):
And then, of course, don't mean which makes you kind
of happy, but if you And then the other aspect
of this is, which is that socialization necessarily includes a
bunch of sensory auditory sensory inputs and what I would
call multidimensional thinking perceptions.

Speaker 6 (01:05:25):
If you will.

Speaker 11 (01:05:26):
So if I said to you, Hey, Ken, how are
you and we're talking only on the telephone as we
are now, that would be a different experience than when
I say, Hi, Ken, how are you and your wife doing?
And I see you in the sweet the Cincinnati Open.
I've got context, I've got visual cues, I've got auditory cues.
And so the brain is working on every in a

(01:05:46):
bunch of different ways.

Speaker 6 (01:05:47):
As a result of that.

Speaker 11 (01:05:49):
So the socialization is helpful as well as it feeding
into neuropeptides.

Speaker 6 (01:05:54):
A chemical response.

Speaker 11 (01:05:56):
And couple the coupling that further with the multidimensional aspect
act of the engagement itself.

Speaker 1 (01:06:02):
So you're talking, it's interpersonal communication, is what you're talking about,
the ability to communicate, develop relationships that will carry you
on through a majority of your life. But where you are,
as you just mentioned, you are sitting there talking to someone,
which I think raises a whole different conversation about the
current generation and texting and doing things that way as

(01:06:23):
opposed to meeting in person. We'll leave that for another time,
but that's one of the ways that you can avoid
becoming an old old man. That's what you're saying.

Speaker 11 (01:06:32):
I think, well, yes, and what they're saying, and some
of these studies is that isolation is can be as
bad for you as smoking, which is a big that's
a big, tall order, right, and it is actually not
a step too far to say, hey, we need to
address this issue in terms of how young people are
growing up. And what we're seeing is a whole lot

(01:06:52):
of challenges for young people as it pertains to interpersonal
interactions ranging from dating to you know, to longer term
relationships to the sense of isolation. There are a number
of factors weighing in here that we need to be
mindful of. And I can tell you right now, my
wife is babysitting our grandchildren and she's observing as a

(01:07:14):
result of our our children limiting their screen time to
good things occurring as a result of that, and I
think that the tendency is to go the other way
because it's you know, it's very convenient and easy to
simply give your child or grandchild a screen have them
play quietly for a long time.

Speaker 6 (01:07:34):
But the problem is that has a bunch of deliterious.

Speaker 11 (01:07:35):
Effects on the individual child's cognitive capabilities, and we got
to be mindful of that.

Speaker 1 (01:07:41):
No, one hundred percent on that. I think limiting screen
time and the availability to get to tablets or the
laptop or whatever is not only great parenting, it just
makes sense on a number of different health levels. In
addition to your fine book the sixty percent Solution, I've
read another book called Outlive, The Science of Art and

(01:08:02):
Longevity by doctor Peter Attaya, and it's fascinating the four
things that this is his theory. There are four things
that are going to get you and kill you in life.
One is heart disease, the other is cancer, the third
one is diabetes, and the fourth is Alzheimer's. And if
you understand that going into your life, it will make

(01:08:23):
you live your life. He would hope, I would hope
better so that those four horsemen come to you later
in life. Then he talks about medicine one point oh,
medicine two point oh, which is more than just giving
somebody pills and saying go take a test. Medicine three
point oh attacks the problem before it becomes a problem,
so that you can live not just longer, but you

(01:08:44):
can live a normal, healthier life longer. And I think
that's what we're talking about here, your work with your
doctor in Colorado and whatnot. It just is it's attacking
one of those horsemen. And you do it by just
simple ways again being so being attached to groups, volunteering,
whatever it may be, just when you have I always

(01:09:05):
tell people, I don't know if this is this makes
sense to you, But I hear people say, well, I'm
going to retire, I'm done, I'm done next year, I'm
going to My question is, well, what's your plan? What
are you going to do? And invariably it kind of
strikes people. They say, well, I'm going to play a
lot of golf. Well, no, you're not. You're not that good.
You have to have a plan for what you do

(01:09:26):
later on in life. And you better formulate that plan
when you're in your forties and fifties, not just financially
but from a lifestyle standpoint.

Speaker 6 (01:09:35):
Absolutely.

Speaker 4 (01:09:35):
My my wife married me.

Speaker 6 (01:09:36):
For better or for worse, but not for lunch.

Speaker 1 (01:09:40):
That's right.

Speaker 11 (01:09:41):
So I think you're spot on, and you know you
recall ken in the past, we've talked about this.

Speaker 6 (01:09:46):
You can distill my book.

Speaker 11 (01:09:47):
Down into, you know, largely a couple of points, which are,
you know, basically that living a good, healthy life boils down,
and having good healthcare boils and a few things that
likely your mother told you, which is eat right, sleep right,
and go out and play. The only thing I would
amend as result of this conversation is play with others, right,

(01:10:07):
don't just play. You know, you can't throw the football
with yourself. You can't play baseball by yourself. But you know,
the idea is you have to take care of those
two things. If you do that, then you're likely to
take care of at least three of the four horsemen.

Speaker 1 (01:10:20):
Right. Well, the good news is there was a study
done by United Healthcare that says that the premature death rate,
which kind of came down, went up quite a bit.
I'm sorry. The number of years lost before the age
of seventy five. It decreased in the last couple of years.
So hopefully we're coming back to pre pandemic rates on that.

(01:10:41):
But you mentioned sleep. Sleep is so important. Sleep is
a killer if you don't get enough of it, and
I think that's a major factor as well. Why aren't
we more attentive to sleep? Why do we think that
there's something so important at one am in the morning
that it can't wait until eight am in the morning.
Why are we why are we wired like that as people?

Speaker 11 (01:11:03):
Well, I'm afraid that that question is designed for our
good Lord and not me. So that's above well you
very generally above my pay grade. But I think that
we haven't medically this.

Speaker 1 (01:11:16):
Ain't they haven't hit line Todd. Yeah, well, it's it's
a it was a serious question. I I don't know.
I mean, it's a pondering more than a question. I
suppose we'll go ahead.

Speaker 11 (01:11:27):
No, I think it's it's it's exactly the right question.
And unfortunately are our good friends in the medical community
haven't figured it out because they don't study sleep very much.
You know, the things that I mentioned earlier are actually
the three things almost least studied in medical school. But
there are emerging disciplines around sleep, uh that are important.

Speaker 6 (01:11:45):
But what most people don't realize.

Speaker 11 (01:11:46):
And this is very much on your point, which is
that you actually will will die faster from lack of
sleep than you will from lack of food or water.

Speaker 1 (01:11:56):
Wow. Uh, and that that is that is a fact
not fit right.

Speaker 6 (01:12:01):
That's correct?

Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
Yeah, Todd furnas our guest, he of the author of
the sixty percent Solution rethinking healthcare. This is anecdotal. It's
certainly not it's certainly not based in any fact, but
it's from observation, and it goes back to what we
initially talked about about staying active, but staying active on
an interpersonal basis that will increase your life and make

(01:12:24):
it a healthier life. I think when someone is married
for a very long time and their spouse dies, I
think it's easier, and I think statistics would bear that
women live longer than men do when that happens, simply
because women are more social than men. They have a
lot of friends. Men traditionally don't have a lot of friends.

(01:12:46):
You're not going to go out and have a beer
with a guy or a couple of guys and bemoan
the fact that your wife passed away. I think it's
easier for women because they live a more social lifestyle
than a man does. Now, tell me I'm crazy when
I said that place.

Speaker 11 (01:13:01):
Now, I don't think that I could argue with the logic.
I think it shortly makes sense to me, and I think.

Speaker 6 (01:13:07):
That men are are very much more.

Speaker 11 (01:13:12):
Tended a tendant to being isolated than that women are
for that very reason.

Speaker 1 (01:13:16):
Yeah, so this is good stuff, and if you're not
familiar with it, it's up there. Why the brains of
super agers tell us about what they tell us about
staying sharp and healthy for a longer life. I think
we're making progress, Todd, I do. I really do think that. Unfortunately,
maybe because of a medicine more than anything else than lifestyle.

(01:13:39):
We're making progress of people living longer. But it's making
that curve of living healthy closer to when you die,
as opposed to being this large gap of when you're
merely surviving through medication and otherwise. I'd like to hope
that I think we are. Do you think we are?

Speaker 4 (01:13:55):
I think so.

Speaker 6 (01:13:56):
And here's another example of that.

Speaker 11 (01:13:57):
When we started social security, the security benefits kicking at
sixty five, the life expectancy was sixty three.

Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
Well, that's why I sted at sixty five.

Speaker 6 (01:14:12):
Exactly.

Speaker 11 (01:14:13):
Yeah, So we found it a lot of people, and
then the life expectancy made got all the way to
sixty seven, and we found a lot of people actually
started passing away about two years after they retired.

Speaker 6 (01:14:23):
So I'm circling back to your original.

Speaker 11 (01:14:24):
Point, which is, hey, if you think you're retiring, you
better have a plan for how you're going to spend
your time. And it ought to be social and all
you ought to include, you know, a bunch of other good,
healthy habits in order to be successful in living a
good life and having a longer health span than life spent.

Speaker 1 (01:14:40):
Well, one of my habits is having you on this
show as much as possible. Todd Furnace again his book
The sixty Percent Solution rethinking healthcare. All right, my friends,
stay well and you will we will talk down the road.

Speaker 6 (01:14:51):
Thanks great, visit with you, Ken, Thanks much?

Speaker 1 (01:14:54):
Bet you bet. Yeah, it is one of these four
things are going to get you. I mean it is.
It is almost a statistical one hundred percent fact that
one of these four things you're going to get you.
But some people say, well, old age, he died a boat.
Well yeah, maybe not your heart cancer, diabetes or Alzheimer's

(01:15:18):
if you can stay active and interpersonal, it'll probably take
care of the fourth one. Not not completely and certainly
not genetically, but it'd probably take care of the fourth one.
The other three it's all lifestyle. And by the way,
the other thing the other book I talked about again
was and this was one of my doctors told me

(01:15:38):
about this book. And it's a terrific grea little medical ease,
but other if you can get through it, it's okay.
Outlive the Science of Art and Longevity.

Speaker 7 (01:15:47):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:15:47):
And it's doctor Peter Attire Attia, doctor Peter Attire in
the rumored I want to be around a long time
just to torment people. To twenty three News Radio seven
hundred WYLWT.

Speaker 10 (01:16:00):
Gazed on my Beckoning Sphere of Delight. Hello, buyet, and
I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (01:16:14):
What happened to your Beckoning Sphere of Delight? Sig?

Speaker 10 (01:16:17):
Where did I think that guy was supposed to be
in the Hall of Fame with a cool ghoul and
Bob Shreve and skiper Ryle and Tony Pike and Larry
Smith and his puppets?

Speaker 1 (01:16:28):
Yes, of course, who could forget the puppets? That's true,
Addy the Witch, Patti the Witch did you mention Bob Sve, Yes,
I did you know? I've passed prime playhouse. I've always
feel guilty about this. The day that Bob Shreeve died, Uh,
he was like on page a ten of the Inquirer,
and I was front page because I had just left

(01:16:51):
Channel five to go to Channel twelve. And I'm thinking
to myself, you know, that's not fair to Bob. Bob
should have been front page, not me all those years ago.
That's one of the things, one of the things I
live with, Seg is guilt. That's one of the guilt
part of the you gotta get over it. I don't know.
I mean, I've been through therapy. It doesn't work.

Speaker 10 (01:17:11):
Ken Bruce Is The Stooge Report is the proud service
of your local tame Star Heating and air conditioning dealers,
Tamestar quality you can feel in beautiful Milford, the home
of one Main Gallery and Little Miami Brewing. Right down
the street is Baker Heating at five three eight three
one fifty one twenty four spots.

Speaker 1 (01:17:31):
When was the last time that you were in Milford, Seg.
When was the last time you paid Mili? How's a
long time ago? Well, you just get in your car
and just drive home. You should go through Milford sometimes
it's the lovely community, and.

Speaker 10 (01:17:42):
I know it is if you've come like sixty five
miles out out of my territory.

Speaker 1 (01:17:46):
Well, but you could always stop in for a refreshment
at Little Miami Brewing.

Speaker 10 (01:17:50):
Get that you got a beer named after you?

Speaker 1 (01:17:53):
Right? Well, actually not anymore. The keg Blew they ran out,
ran out, They're gonna have no popular out. They're going
to have another one named after me here shortly. I'm
not sure what's going to be. We know one thing,
it will not be thc and anything like that. Bengals up.

Speaker 10 (01:18:09):
They brought to you by Good Spirits and Party Town
with thirteen convenient locations in northern Kentucky. Bengals right now
on the practice spot, getting ready for the Jets. Speaking
of the jets they have, Well, the Jets aren't saying
if it's going to be Tyrod Taylor or mister Justin
Fields on Sunday. Let's hope it's Bothy. You know what

(01:18:31):
I was looking. I looked up the names. I can't
believe we forgot. You know, we mentioned Joe Namath, Richard Todd,
how about Ken O'Brien in the eighties. Yeah, and and
Boomer asiasin, well, he's.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
Going to be here. Boomer's going to be here because
it's it's laughs getting inducted into the Hall of Fame
with the legal Lamar Parrish. There you go, and they
you know, they wouldn't give Boomer a hotel room, so
he bought. He bought hotel rooms, so he's going to
be here. There you go. I think that could be
what said play here sig is. I think this whole
thing is geared towards Boomer suiting up for the gets

(01:19:06):
on Sunday. I could, meanwhile, to see this. Ben Roethlisberger's
on some sort of podcast that he does, and he
said that, well, he said the Bengals white uniforms and
white paint on the field or the blame for all
those interceptions by Aaron Rodgers. The Roethlisberger's quote. I know

(01:19:28):
it sounds crazy. With Aaron, he's incredibly good, he sees everything.
But the Bengals were all white. They painted the middle
of the field white, and I think there's a chance
that the safety was camouflaged in the middle and Aaron
didn't see him. So because the Bengals were out in white.
They painted the field white. Roethlisberger thinks that's one of
the reasons why Aaron Rodgers threw two interceptions in this game.

Speaker 10 (01:19:49):
No disrespect for the former Miami Redskin great, but he
might have had too many icy lights that night.

Speaker 1 (01:19:57):
I'm just saying. This is what the man is saying
in his podcast.

Speaker 10 (01:20:02):
Willie Anderson and Louke Keighley are among fifty two modern
era players advancing in the voting process now in the
Pro Football Hall of Fame Class twenty twenty six. They're
not gonna, They're not. Roger Ganel said they are not
going to replace Bad Bunny in this year's not Hall

(01:20:22):
of Fame, the Super Bowl halftime, the Pro Bowl games.
Everybody's invited. Moving to Super Bowl Week Tuesday, February third.

Speaker 1 (01:20:33):
Name one song by Bad Bunny. I have no idea,
asked Joe Biden. Because he knows the Easter Bunny. So
maybe the Easter Bunny knows Bad Bunny and they can
communicate with each other.

Speaker 10 (01:20:42):
I think one of them is a famous Formula one
race in Monaco.

Speaker 1 (01:20:48):
Oh yeah, yes, I didn't know that.

Speaker 10 (01:20:51):
I guess I think he has Max Erstappen, Lewis Hamilton
and Fernando Alonso backup singers.

Speaker 1 (01:20:58):
Wow, no, here we go. Here's a little bit again.
I don't like to work. I don't need to go
get like, uh, Spanish to English dictionary, so I can
watch a halftime show and I know that.

Speaker 10 (01:21:08):
Maybe don't half caption.

Speaker 1 (01:21:11):
Sorry, See I like that. I like the velody. I
like the music. This is good. I like this. I
just you know, I don't. I don't I'm not fluent
in Spanish. I would have to here we go, but
we got the sheriff mix. This has got I know.

(01:21:35):
But anytime you got to work for entertainment, it's sorry. No, see,
I hear that. See I like and I like this.
This got a little this got a little tropical field
to it. I like this. I don't know everybody's worked
up over. I like it. But I just I don't
understand what the man is saying. Now. I told the
last hour, I said, these guys that sing in English.

(01:21:56):
You know, you go to other places in the world,
South America, you go to like to Germany and France.
Those people are probably saying, what the hell are they saying?
You know, so it's don't see me, SEG, I got
something for you to listen to. Here. Do you know
this song.

Speaker 11 (01:22:11):
I love?

Speaker 10 (01:22:11):
It's a Beach Boys very good.

Speaker 1 (01:22:14):
It's Mike Love. Yeah. But these guys I can say,
I can dance to ye, Ryan Wilson, Yeah, SEG. Fifty
nine years ago to day, this song was number one
in the USA. How about that the Beach Boys and
Good Vibrations. It's it's called getting the Close by the way.

Speaker 10 (01:22:40):
I wonder if I wonder if Bad Bunny's gonna do
this one at halftime in the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1 (01:22:45):
Well, you know what, if he did, he could sing
it in his native language, and I know what he
was singing because I know that the words that are here.

Speaker 10 (01:22:53):
That's true. How about this ken Brew? In high school sports? Yeah,
the OHSAA is going to conduct an emergency reference end
to vote regarding nil within the next forty five days. Wow,
eight hundred and fifty member high school principals will vote
this fall. That's in accordance to that tro issued Monday
and by a Franklin County judge allowing NIL for high

(01:23:17):
school athletes in the Buckeye State.

Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
So you know, let me just say this right here,
and I say this right here and there, right ahead.
I'm just going to say this right here now that
if there was nil money available in his time, Yeah,
I think Rocky Boyman would be a multi millionaire, right,
you're not kidding? Instead of what he is. He's in
Delaware tonight, for God's sakes, doing a football game with

(01:23:43):
the Blue Hens with I don't know whose hands he has.
He might have a bunch of checkings.

Speaker 10 (01:23:47):
I don't dunnen Zager play them every year, the Delaware
Blue Hens.

Speaker 1 (01:23:52):
If they had nil money, but he was in a
high school at St X, he would be a multi
millionaire and he'd probably be living somewhere.

Speaker 10 (01:24:01):
What about water? What about Tony Pike? Tony would have
made good you see Hall of Famer Friday.

Speaker 1 (01:24:07):
That's right, that's right.

Speaker 10 (01:24:08):
Kind of what kind of money would he be making
ready the home of the Blue Devils if.

Speaker 1 (01:24:13):
There was ani already available when Ken Griffy Junior Oh
played baseball and Barry Larkin, imagine the kind of money
that would have been involved in Well, now, what are
these So you're gonna have eight hundred and fifties principals, Yeah,
they're gonna be Yeah, I guess that was a swinging affair.

Speaker 4 (01:24:35):
Yeah.

Speaker 10 (01:24:35):
I was gonna say, I guess they're gonna rent some
hall someplace. Yeah, and I guess principals are going to
vote on this, and you know it's it was. I
think it was a front.

Speaker 1 (01:24:44):
It was.

Speaker 10 (01:24:45):
The suit was brought by a player at Dayton Wayne
High School.

Speaker 1 (01:24:50):
Eight hundred and fifty principals in a room talking about
slide rulers. Oh boy, can I get a ticket to that?

Speaker 11 (01:24:56):
Uh?

Speaker 10 (01:24:57):
Sure you can.

Speaker 4 (01:24:59):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:25:00):
Yeah, they're lined up to hear what those cats are
going to say. Yeah, say, let me ask you this
go ahead. I don't I You know again, I think
about these things. I have a lot of time on
my hands. You know I told you about this, Yes, sir,
think about a lot of these things. So what would
happen if indeed the Jets went like they just had,

(01:25:21):
like like people volunteer from the stands to play quarterback
this week? Do you think there would be anybody that
would come down from the stands and play quarterback for
them this week?

Speaker 10 (01:25:32):
My idea wouldn't be anybody in a Bengal out there.

Speaker 1 (01:25:35):
But you know they're gonna be gonna be Jets fans.
The area with a fire helmet and all that con
that goes on. You know, do you do you think
that if they did that, do you think fans would
It's kind of like what was going on here before
we before the town knew the beauty of Joe Flackaugh, Right,
do you think anybody that pays money to go to
those games?

Speaker 4 (01:25:55):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (01:25:55):
Yeah, the Bengals were to have gone to them and said, look,
we know what we got in Jake Brown, it's not working.
Would anybody like to volunteer to quarterback this team? Do
you think there'd be there'd be fan would volunteer, There'd
be hundreds of them jumping out of the stands. Do
you think so? Exactly? I don't think there'd be anybody.

Speaker 10 (01:26:12):
For the NFL for the glory of the National Football League. Yeah,
we'll play in a game and just just a hand off.

Speaker 1 (01:26:19):
Right, Yeah, no, absolutely. Why don't you come down here
and get your brains beaten in by Aiden Hutchinson because
he's got nothing else better to do right now, except
you know, you just hand mess up the Bengals. Just
hand it off to Chase and get out of the way.
Nobody would, I think they would. Nobody would Bengle Jim,
would would you what else we got here?

Speaker 10 (01:26:40):
Also ken Brew, it's it's about that time.

Speaker 1 (01:26:43):
What was it going home? No?

Speaker 10 (01:26:45):
Well almost, but Christmas is right around the corner.

Speaker 1 (01:26:49):
Yeah, I know. I said that the other day.

Speaker 10 (01:26:50):
And the Wish Tree Program is celebrating forty one years.
And if you want to, if you're a business and
you want to help out the needy children and adults
in our area, get yourself a tree. The wish line
is five one three eight five two eighteen ninety five
or email the Wish Tree Program the wish Tree Program

(01:27:11):
at gmail dot com from more info.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
We should probably explain what that is, right, what is
the Wish Tree Program.

Speaker 10 (01:27:18):
It's it's a program that for the holiday season forty
first year, as I said, and this is a dedicated
space in your business or office to display the wish
Tree and they would drop off the tr your they
would drop off tags and this month and you you
pick up the the tag and go buy a gift

(01:27:40):
and bingo.

Speaker 1 (01:27:41):
Yeah, okay, So that's so that's not the people around
the area. Now here's another problem that I've I've discovered
here in the last half hour forty five minutes. Okay,
Redsfest is in January this year. It's just right January.

Speaker 10 (01:27:54):
It's the first event at the new convention Center.

Speaker 1 (01:27:57):
Let me ask you, this Sega Clause shows up or
has shown up at every reds Fest when it was
in December. So are we being led to believe that
Sega Clause will not be at Reds Fest in January?

Speaker 10 (01:28:10):
Sega Claus has not been at Reds Fest ken Brew
for the last three.

Speaker 1 (01:28:13):
Or four years. You've got to be kiddingmed. They got
somebody else. I swear to god, I thought you were there.

Speaker 10 (01:28:18):
Nope, used to be, but you used to have a
big display with the station and everything else got banned
not anymore. What happened, I don't know. I guess I went.
I think I went free agency and demanded money. I
went nil money for Santa Claus this year I've had.

Speaker 1 (01:28:34):
I've had no same image and likeness for Santa Claus.
I'm getting I'm gonna get rich. I saw somebody running around.
It looked like the Sega clause. If you need a
Santa I'll do it. Okay, I didn't, I didn't know.

Speaker 10 (01:28:44):
But anybody you need a sand at their business or something,
you'll do it.

Speaker 1 (01:28:48):
Why not okay, seg. This has been informative, if not chaotic,
and I appreciate your time here as always. I'll be
in tomorrow.

Speaker 10 (01:28:55):
So it was just like a regular day around here,
ken Brew.

Speaker 1 (01:28:58):
That's what I'm saying. Let's think of out. This has
volunteers coming out of the stands to quarterback the Jets.
I think people would line up. Yeah, the Jets management
may line up. Put him in green put him in
green Sey. Get us out of the Stooge Report before
we liabel anyone else.

Speaker 10 (01:29:16):
Ken Brew, and honor of a beautiful day here in
the tri State, we leave you with the immortal words
of the Stooge Report. At some point, the foolishness has
got to stop.

Speaker 1 (01:29:27):
That's right, Governor. Well, I think it's right now. I
think it's going to stop. Friday when you know who
comes back? Oh that's right, yeah, see running out of
money or people to fleets? What what? What's what's going on?
Why is he coming back up works?

Speaker 10 (01:29:41):
To me, there's a long line outside of the cafeteria.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
Who comes back to work on a Friday? Only him?
He goes, he went, he went from Thursday to Thursday.
I don't get it. He gets super airfares.

Speaker 10 (01:29:55):
That's probably the reason why.

Speaker 1 (01:29:58):
All right, seg, I'll talk to you tomorrow, sir. Through
all right, there he is Bill Seig Dennison. Here I
am seven hundred W d yl w

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