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October 24, 2025 95 mins
Willie talks with WLWT's Brian Hemrick about his interactions with City Manager Sheryl Long following the suspension of police Chief Teresa Theetge. Also Sarah Perry discusses the effects of left wing politics on education. Finally State Rep Adam Bird explains why a local school district now needs an income tax to provide education, and why some municipalities are manipulating crime statistics.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:07):
All right, now, Billy Cunningham, the great American from the
Double Wide and Naples and New Year, I'm back.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
My little week's.

Speaker 1 (00:13):
Vacation was wonderful. It was a stay vacation. I monitored
five nine twelve nineteen, our newsroom. I read the Inquire
every day. I talked to Tony Bender at least three
times a day, which is half the time I talked
to Joe Dieters. So it was a wonderful week off.
But now I'm back at it. And while I monitor everything,
you have to point out to Tony Tony Pike, remember
that guy. He's back. Tony Pike is in the Hall

(00:35):
of Fame with UC. We got the UC Bearcats tied
for first place in the Big twelve, the Big eleven,
the Big fourteen. Then we have the BEng Galley's of
course on Sunday against the lowly Jets, and that we
could have a quarterback controversy. If Wacko Flacco keeps playing
like this when Joe's ready to come back Burrow, he
may not get his old job back. But that's another matter.
Joining you and I now is the great Brian Hambrick

(00:56):
of the Power of five, and Brian Hamrick. Welcome to
the Bill Cunningham Show. My first guest after a week
off from my double wide and near Naples. Welcome to
the Bill Cunningham Show. Brian, how are you good?

Speaker 3 (01:08):
Thanks for getting mister Cunningham.

Speaker 1 (01:10):
Well, I was there monitoring events. There was a classic
scene I had from your newsroom. When you're running down
the hallway of eight to one Plump Street trying to
chase down share along. She was morphing into various objects,
and you got close to her, she became a chair,
and then when you walked away, she suddenly popped up
and came like a water cooler. And then you moved
a little bit, she became a door. In other words,

(01:31):
she avoided you like you had the plague or you
had COVID and you were chasing share along eight one
Plump Street for what reason? In the hallways she ignored
you completely explained that.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
One well, you know, I mean James Brown didn't have
better moves sometimes, you know.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
I feel good, I feel good, or.

Speaker 3 (01:53):
Any one of them to try and get out of
the way of the questioning. I mean, Walter Payton could
have not moved more swiftly, agilely. It was unbelievable. You know,
people think maybe, you know, we get a kick out
of this. You know, it's much easier for me if

(02:15):
they just come out and tell us what they're doing.
You know, we don't choose to walk them down like this.
But the reality is we have been trying over and
over and over to talk to anybody in the city
managers and mostly the city managers. That's what everybody wants
to hear from. She is at the center of this

(02:36):
entire event. Good batter indifferent might be the greatest thing
that ever happened, But that's the person that you need
to talk to because everybody else can just debate this thing.
We can all talk about, well, you know, this city
council and wants to do it this way. He likes it,
or he doesn't like it, or he's not sure what

(02:57):
it's about. The mayor is not sure what it's about.
Nobody knows. She's the only one who has the information.
We got to go to the person with the information. Now,
you know, on their side, their side of it is,
it's a personnel matter, it's an ongoing investigation. We can't
tell you anything. Well, that's that's just not enough. I mean,

(03:17):
there are things you can tell us. I mean, you
can tell us. There is no reason why you can't
give us a basic understanding of what the investigation is about.
You know, there's no information on that. So we go
down to City Hall and I had already prepared that
this is what it was going to be. Like, I

(03:38):
knew she was coming into this. It was a with
some sort of a pressor. Now, if you don't want
to see me or any of the other TV stations,
why would you hold a press conference on a very
It was like she was getting an award for hiring
folks with disabilities or something. Why would you hold that

(04:00):
press conference that day? Put it off until next week,
you know, do something else you don't you don't put
up press go who do you think is going to
show up? We're all showing up. We all want to
know the same thing. So I go up there coming, Yeah,
so I think I show up. Yet the chief wants
to know, you know. Apparently she's not even sure the

(04:21):
folks her attorney said, they have no idea why they
fire or didn't fire, but they put her on this
administrative leave. They fired, they haven't yet. Well here's the thing,
there's two different u uh. There's two different ways of
looking like at this. Apparently under the charter there's one
set of rules and if she if uh, if they

(04:43):
have her under the charter, there's one set of rules.
And if she is a contract employees, there's a second
set of rules. Under the contract, they can just fire her.
So if they're looking at like she's under the contract,
then they need to just fire her.

Speaker 1 (04:59):
Right, she serves for the pleasure of the city manager
and if you're not giving me pleasure. And until she
was fired, ill used the term fire discharge. She was
the greatest thing since sliced bread. I've seen all the news.
We're all on the same page. Thinks she's doing a
great job. July twenty six, she kind of went after
the media thing. You shouldn't be publicizing what happened to

(05:19):
Holly in July twenty six. She's doing a great job.
But let's go down history's hallway just a little bit.
Let's go back to Cheryl Long, who was the assistant
city manager at North College Hill, the home of the Trojans.
Assistant city manager at making little or no money, and
at that point and North College Shill was in financial
and physical emergency there were gunshots fired to the football

(05:41):
field a couple times. North College Jaill shall always say,
is not well run. And so the city gets together
that huge after they paid off the last guy millions
of dollars to a search committee to find the thirty
seven best candidates in America to be the city manager
of the City of Cincinnati. And the search form one
in the background of all the candidates, and and behold,
I think af Tip Peeroval whispered in the ear of somebody,

(06:03):
and the search committee said, we want Cheryl long a
DEI higher from North College Hill, and they bring her in.
Then within a week it surfaces that she'd filed personal bankruptcy,
had numerous tax liens. And then af Tip Peer of
all diverted to the search committee saying, well, why didn't
you tell us this? They couldn't find an information out
And then Seth Walsh and others are saying, now, wait
a minute, do we want someone who's filed bankruptcy with

(06:26):
numerous tax liens to run the city of five hundred
million dollar operation If she's the most qualified, the mayor said,
of those thirty seven candidates, I want to see the
qualifications of the other thirty six. Are they in drunk
tank somewhere. I'm thinking, how in the hell is this
the most modified? Explain that one to me and then
let me continue. And then one of the first things
she does is fire the police chief, a guy named Washington,

(06:49):
and he came up through the ranks and he was
fired allegedly for not promoting enough minorities. And he is
a black guy. He was fired. He files the lawsuit
and now we're going to pay. We're gonna pay him
millions of dollars. So they find this guy named McKinley
from Dallas. McKinley's the new fire chief. The first thing
he does is take an extended leave of absence. He
leaves and then comes back a couple months later. Then

(07:12):
over the next several months, coding the inquirer, he took
ten thousand dollars of wrongful money and fictitious overtime. And
when he was caught, instead of giving it to the
county prosecutor, what they did was say to say to
the new fire chief, McKinley, you pay us back. He's out,
I don't have the money. And then say we got
to garnishe your wages? And that's the fire chief. Now
let's move on to Fiji. For God's sakes, and I'm

(07:35):
looking at this. Let's put us put some canvas top
on top of the shirt.

Speaker 3 (07:39):
Get halftime there.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
Look what the hell's going on around this place? Can
you explain any of.

Speaker 3 (07:44):
This to the mayor? List then there was you know,
quite a bit more to go.

Speaker 1 (07:48):
I'm thinking okay, And then you're trying to find out
why Fiji, who come up through the ranks, did exactly
what the mayor told her to do every time he
stood next to her and patted her on the back.
You're doing a great Keep doing what you're doing. It's wonderful.
Then she gets fired what she serves as the pleasure
of the city manager. You can get fired for a
good reason, a bad reason, or no reason. But the
mayor doesn't want that. It looks bad, so he wants

(08:11):
to hire a big time law firm to spend millions
of dollars more to find out why I fired her?
What you're the guy that fired, right? Can you smell
when I'm cooking?

Speaker 3 (08:22):
It is? But these are all the things, and this
is the reason why we felt like it was very
important to try and get something, get some answers from
the city manager. You know, but as you saw there,
if you watch that, there is no intention what's over.

(08:43):
In fact, when we came into the first sip of
the hallway there at the bottom of the stairs when
you go into city Hall, there were the mayor's offices
to the left, and so she was apparently in there,
and I see all of her staff out in front.
I'm standing out there waiting for because I'm like, well,
we'll just ask her. If she comes out, maybe she'll
stop and talk to us. They go inside and then

(09:06):
circumvent and try and go around the way that we weren't.
And that's when we caught up with her in the hall.
And if you watch that carefully, she puts the she
puts the folder she's holding over her face like like
I'm like, what is that about? Well, I'm looking at it,
going why is she doing that?

Speaker 1 (09:24):
I'm hiding. I'm hiding to hide my folder, like we.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Don't know who she is. I mean, it was I
couldn't understand it. And you know, if I thought, well,
maybe she thought the lights were bright, you know, or something,
but she put it down pretty quick and the lights
were even more bright, so I couldn't explain why it
went down like that. But then she comes through. I
had two or three questions. I knew I would have

(09:49):
a short time to just ask her quickly the top
of mind things. You know, is she being made a
state goats? Yes or no? That has nothing to do
with with personnel matter. I couldn't see it. You see,
I had my sunglasses on. I couldn't see the prescription glasses.
I had to put them on because I want to
make sure I was, you know, finding the right person.
Here she is coming down the hall.

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Behind her foller oah.

Speaker 3 (10:14):
Walking behind and and trying to get like. She's got
some of her staff over there running interference. I mean
it looks like a screenplay, is what it looked like.
You know, you put all those guys out in front
and are trying to knock off the people and they're
answering for you. She has to go to a press conference.
I mean, it was it was absurd, and she'd never
come to that. It was bizarre. So then she goes

(10:37):
into the press conference, gives a little dog and pony
show about whatever that press conference was about.

Speaker 4 (10:44):
So we're waiting, we'll say, well.

Speaker 3 (10:45):
We'll Shai again I didn't want to be disruptive in
the press conference. It was her moment with some award,
so I didn't even ask the question. I'm like, I'll
wait till she comes back out. I'll try again. Maybe
she'll think, well, it's probably be better for her. It
would have been one hundred times better. She's gone. You
know what here, Look, here's what I got to say.
We are working and doing everything we can to fight
crime in this city, and sometimes we got to make

(11:06):
hard decisions. And that's what we're doing here. That's all
I've got to say. Stay tuned. We got the boom.
She left, and you know what, I wouldn't have been
able to use any of that. I wouldn't have used
one second of me trying to ask her questions. It
would have gone away and she would have had that
as the sound bite that everybody would have used. Everybody.
But you know what they did. They didn't come out.

(11:29):
She went straight to the back. There's another room in
that room. Once fifteen there in the in the city building.
They found and I even asked God janitor there who said, no, no,
there's no other way out of there. They found a
way out. There's a trap door. A rat hole. There's something,
and you can go and circumvent everybody. And they ran

(11:53):
out the back. They ran out the back, and we
never saw them after that. My lord, I mean, would
you do that? That is a bad look for anybody.
Just come on. You know. I worked at in public
relations to University of Oklahoma and and and there were
some folks there that had the same theory. The theory

(12:15):
is if you don't say anything, you can't say anything wrong.
So just don't tell anybody anything. And this was many
many years ago, and I was there, and I remember
some of the looks I got. So I know in public,
sometimes in public the public forum, people don't want to
do this. But I said, listen, we're reasonable people, we

(12:38):
make reasonable decisions. Why don't we just go out and
tell them why we made the decision we made. Not
everybody's going to agree with you. You're gonna you'll tell
them what you did and why you did it. I mean, look,
take somebody who does that and you can agree with despise,
love him, hate him. But Sheriff Jones guy, he will

(13:01):
do what he does and then he stands there and
tells you what he did.

Speaker 1 (13:04):
And that's what that's Trump.

Speaker 3 (13:06):
Pumbviously agreed.

Speaker 1 (13:07):
Trump's the same. He'll tell you he's gonna he's gonna
be Trump's gonna be gonna it's gonna demolish the White House.
He just says, I'm not going to ask permission within
two days.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
I'm just gonna do it.

Speaker 5 (13:19):
Yeah, you know it.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
What he did there.

Speaker 3 (13:24):
When you when you ask and when you ask somebody
like that about it, though usually they double down on
it if they're you know, if they're happy with what
they did, or they believe in what they did, you know,
hiding and running and not answering questions and hide them
behind you know, really flimsy. Well, it's under investigation. And

(13:46):
what investigation are you going to circumvent by saying we're
fighting crime in this city? There's none, it's made up.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
Well, you know, Brian, Brian Hemry Channel five. I mean,
it's to watch this show, and it's happening because of
the election, which is about ten twelve days away. We're
going to find out if the city wants to take
a different turn, which politically, all my political friends tell
me republican democratic. Otherwise, the city's not going to go
some different direction. It is simply holding the status quotes

(14:17):
after the election. It is absurd to think that if
Cheryl Long indeed and the mayor work closely with Thigi
Chief Thiji for not just months, but two or three years,
they knew the ins and the out. She did exactly
what they told her to do, and all of a sudden,
if they say that she's doing a bad job, do
a one to eight of the opposite direction. All you

(14:37):
got to do is call her and say, look, things
aren't going the right way. We have to let you go,
and you get full pension for the rest of her life.
She makes like two hundred thousand bucks a year, she'll
make that for the rest of her life. She got
thirty some years and she's in the drop program for cops.
And you don't hang her out to dry and make
it look as if she did something so wrong and
so disgusting that we knew nothing about that. We got

(14:58):
to fire her and keep keep this under control until
November the fourth and fifth, when the votes are announced.
At that point we're going to know. And so they're
hanging out to dry. Is to dirty her up. The
mission is to dirty up Thiji right now because we
were so incompetent. We can't manage the city. We can't
manage the cops. We screwed up the fire department. We

(15:19):
screwed up the police. We can't fill the potholes, we
can't shovel the snow. Someone's going to take the fall,
and it's going to be Thiji. And they want to
hire a firm to come up with all the dirt
on her, and then they'll go to her and say,
look at all this dirt we found about you. We
we'll pay you two million dollars to go away if
you sign the NDA. They want the NDA to be signed,
and that's what's behind.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
This, that's what they want. They want something that whenever
she walks out of that building, she cannot say a
word about what she knows.

Speaker 2 (15:47):
Correct.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
And you know, there are a lot of people who
believe she knows a lot. And if she's able, if
they just went and fired her, she'd be able to
walk right out. And I can guarantee you I wouldn't
have to walk her down. No, he would have stopped
and talk.

Speaker 1 (16:03):
Let's talk.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
She been fined on the spot. Yeah, yeah, we'll be
glad to you. But wait, wait, I think I see
some other stations a half mile down the road. He'll
be here in a minute. We'll do it all, you know.

Speaker 1 (16:13):
Yeah, Oh my god.

Speaker 3 (16:15):
So that's what's happening. They're going this is that's the
bottom line. They want a deal where she can't say
anything when she leaves, because you know, some people believe
she knows where all the skeletons are buried.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Absolutely absolutely, and they want to keep the lid onto
after the election. Get the law for him to give
him some dirt on her, call her in. You're a
good woman, You've been here a long time. You'd exactly
what we told you to do, and it failed. We
can't take blame ourselves. You got to blame you. Here's
two or three million dollars. Sign this, you'll be rich
and away you go. Well, we got to run, Brian Hemrick.
But one of the best things I saw the last

(16:50):
few days was you chasing down a folder named Cheryl
Long MS folder who is talking about nothing except hiring
the disabled, which brobab the ways a great idea, but nonetheless, uh,
Brian Hemrick, thanks for coming on the Bill Cunningham Show,
and may you continue to have great success in what
you do.

Speaker 3 (17:07):
Thank you Brian, I've got that folder filed under bizarre.
Thanks again, mister Cunningham.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
Thanks again, Brian Hemrick of the power of five. Thank you. Well,
Let's continue with more folder running, city hall, bankruptcy, tax leans,
unexcused absences, garnishing wages. Let's get dirt on Fiji to
put on top of that pile of crap. News Radio
seven hundred ww Dave hit the music, not much music,

(17:39):
by the way, good with me this afternoon for my
double wide near Naples, Florida. Went down there for a
few days to shoot some golfs with my buddies. Loved it.
Got back monitored everything when I was gone five nine
twelve nineteen The Inquire our newsroom. It's wonderful the way
the world works today, but it doesn't all always work

(18:00):
well for many. One of the things we're losing in
our society indirectly or maybe directly, because of the Unaffordable
Care Act by Barack Hussein Obama, the chickens are now
coming home to roost in healthcare, it's the fact that
local pharmacies are closing. In fact, Walgreens has hundreds of
its pharmacies closing. You might know the CBS is either

(18:22):
going out of business. Soon, we'll be out of business.
Thousands and thousands of pharmacies all over the country. Rite
Aid is closed, liquidated completely. And that's what Deep said
is I announced that I think the best pharmacy in
the world is Adrian Pharmacy and Madeira at the corner
right there went there. The owner, Wayne Morris and his

(18:43):
lovely daughter Linda, had worked out business for like fifty years,
put together by Evan Adrian about sixty years ago, and
after years and years and years, they just can't make
it anymore because of the way the pharmacy business has
changed fundamentally. And that's true. And almost everything in medical care,
whether it's the hospitals, the docks, the technicians, the nurses,

(19:05):
whatever it is, it's it's awful. And because market forces
were not allowed to operate, it had to be government
subsidies with less care and more expense, which is that's
what's happening with the exchanges now and the fight over
healthcare premiums. I'll get to that at a moment, but
I learned a couple of days ago that the Adrian
Pharmacy is closing. That's one of thousands and thousands of

(19:28):
local pharmacies that have closed, our closing or will close
because you can't make it. You can't make a buck.
In fact, the reimbursements on prescriptions were about a dollar
and four cents per script, and out of a dollar
and four cents, it's pretty damn hard to make a
profit and make things work. And of course Wayne Morris

(19:49):
and Lynda are rich. Nonetheless they've taken care of business.
But at their ages. I think Wayne's in his seventies
and probably his daughter Lynn is in her fifties. They said,
why are we doing this? We can't make any Money's stifffficult.
The local pharmacy where we know our customers. Every now
and then you get a script from a doctor that
doesn't make any sense. So Wayne Morris and Linda would
call the doc and say, you want to do this

(20:10):
and want to do that. He has the only computerized
bank a prescriptive drugs in the region in which within
about thirty seconds, the auto pilot of the computer will
produce that product right there in front of front of
you and never make a mistake. Has been there for
five or six years. The automatic dispensing system of a pharmacy,

(20:31):
and only Wayne Morris invested in it to make sure
there's no mistakes being made. Within thirty seconds you have
your script, and in four or five years it made
a total of zero mistakes. And so what's happening indirectly
because of the Unaffordable Care Act by Barack Husein Obama,
local pharmacies are closing. And to be a pharmacist today

(20:51):
means you work about twelve hour days over five or
six to twelve hour days, five or six times a week,
and you're worn out. Young America can come out of
pharmacy school and they're making forty fifty thousand dollars a
year working fifty or sixty hours a week filling scripts,
which is critical in the medical business. They have the
right script of the right time, fell the right way.

(21:12):
So Adrian Pharmacy is closing on Monday, and behind them
are thousands of other local pharmacies in which they know
their customers. They will deliver you a script if you're sick,
they will make sure they give it to you in
your house. Call them any either day or night, and
they're there for you. And that's a critical part. Pharmaceuticals,
the drug business, pharmaceuticals of medical care is getting the

(21:34):
right script at the right time and the right dose eage.
And no one in the history of America was better
off than doing a better job than Wayne Morris and
Linda Morris at Adrian Pharmacy. Now they say, you know what,
life's too short. Let's go ride some motorcycles and live
our lives and keep it going as far as some
other investments he's got. But behind the counter fifty sixty

(21:55):
hours a week, it's just not cutting it anymore. Right,
AID couldn't cut it, CBS couldn't cut it. Walgreens is
not cutting it. And it's because of the reimbursement factors
of the insurance companies in the government. You may recall
about fifteen years ago, Barak Usain Obama gave us the

(22:15):
Unaffordable Care Act, in which you like your doctor, keep
your doctor, like your plan, you keep your plan, and
that the cost of medical care will go down on
the average, according to Obama, twenty five hundred dollars a
year per person. This is going to save the medical business,
the medical industry, the pharmaceuticals, to hospitals, the docks, and
the research planks. In fact, they destroyed them because more

(22:37):
and miller Americans had their premium subsidized by the US government.
It's certainly as true that once inn entitlement program begins,
and once you habituate people to some generous government handout
at someone else's expense, they grow dependent on the handout,
and it becomes politically perilous, if not impossible, to fully

(23:02):
claw it back. It doesn't work that way. So Obamacare said,
We're going to get everybody who goes through the exchanges,
I get all the information of each person, and then
those exchanges will market that application to large medical insurance
companies all over the all over the country. Right now
there's down to four or five. They will compete for

(23:22):
your business and drive it down. It didn't work because
of Medicare, Medicaid cutbacks and clawbacks, and the fact that
the taxpayer was subsidizing the premiums of those in Obamacare.
There's about twenty five million Americans in Obamacare of the exchanges,
and now that they have received this government benefit in

(23:42):
which the taxpayer is picking up about fifty percent of
the premium cost. God help anyone who says to anybody
at any point the government is going to take back
an entitlement. It doesn't work that way can be social security,
can be food stamps, a disability program, or support for farmers, pharmacies.
Guess what, at the end of the day, once you
try to claw it back because it's not working, good

(24:03):
luck the party out of power this case, the Democrats
will blame the Republicans for everything they can. And so
even the Washington Post now says a month ago and
an editorial that the Affordable Care Act, put together only
by Democrats in twenty ten, has been a failure. It
didn't work. It's called the Unaffordable Care Act. That's by

(24:26):
the Washington Post, for God's sakes. And as a consequence,
we see good local, great pharmacies like Adrian Pharmacy closing
in this case on Monday, and others can't make a
buck because the government will charge more. In government and
efficiencies will not cause more efficiencies than the medical system.
The opposite takes place. And so for those of us

(24:47):
that have great relationships and good insurance programs, we're going
to be okay for a while. But eventually the problems
of the exchanges are going to go to every part,
every part of the medical industry in this country. We're
all going to be less for the wear and Americans
now demand subsidies. You're at taxpayer's expense and the cost,

(25:08):
the ability to hold down expenses is not in the
system at all. So for those of us that need
medical care, and I'm one of them, you never go
to a doctor or hospital and say, by the way,
what is this going to cost me? It's irrelevant. The
bills are passed on to either medical insurance companies who
whack down the expenses, or to the federal government or
not incentivized for innovation and to hold down expenses. Capitalism works,

(25:32):
not socialism, and the Washington Post has said Obamacare has
been a dismal failure, and it has so congratulations, I
said to Wayne Morris this morning and my telephone call
with him, thank you for being part of the community
of Madeira, Indian Hill, Sycamore Township, Kenwood Deer Park for
the last fifty years, and congratulations on a life well led.

(25:54):
I said to Wayne Morris. You know, father time is undefeated,
untied on, scored on, and he tried to keep the
pharmacy going and selling it to another but there is
no feasible way to make it happen in this climate
because of Obamacare, because of the government involvement. Capitalism works,
socialism doesn't. And it's just not a business someone can

(26:15):
get into today and make a buck. And in the
future of there'll be demands for more subsidies, more government involvement,
crack down more, more, more and more, and nothing's going
to change. So I wanted to congratulate Wayne Morris and
his daughter Linda for lives well led for enriching the community,
and I understand completely why enough is enough. They can't

(26:36):
take it anymore now. Secondly, I spend time with the
great Brian Hamrick on what's happening in the city of
Cincinnati that has metastasized and the complete incompetence, complete in competence.
It begins at the top. You know, a fish rots
from the head on down. The head of the fish
is half temp pirival. There's no clue what he's doing.

(26:57):
He's an apostle of the radical left for regressivism, which
is present in almost every major American city and an
After Pierreval's case, when it came time to hire a
city manager, having fired the other guy and paid him
millions of dollars, they hired a national firm, the best
in the brightest to find the best candidate to be

(27:18):
the city manager in charge of a half a billion
dollar budget in the city of Cincinnati at a critical time.
And so this national firm looked and looked and looked,
and lo and behold they found a person in North
College Hill. Not in Timbuctoo or New York Ortlanta, Chicago.
We found somebody in North College Hill. Have you been

(27:39):
to North College Hill recently? Take a look. At one
point they were in fiscal emergency, couldn't pay their bills.
Another few nights they had gunshots fired of the football game,
quit having activities at the night time. And the assistant
city manager of all that was share a long. I
want to see the applications of the other third who

(28:00):
didn't get the job. Are they in drug reham or something.
She was the best candidate, but one little thing she
didn't tell the headhunter. I've filed bankruptcy and I have
numerous tax leans had been filed against me. This a
little part five hundred million dollar business, and the person
in charge has severe financial problems. Now, I like individuals

(28:25):
who have second, third, and fourth chances in life. It
happens all the time. My mom used to say, you know,
I got the blues. I've been up, I've been down,
I've been in, I've been out, generally up by the way.
But nonetheless, most Americans have had financial difficulties in one
type or another. I understand it.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
I get it.

Speaker 1 (28:45):
The expectations of your life don't meet your paychecks sometimes,
so you get in debt. And I think cher Along
blamed one of her ex boyfriends or husbands for getting
her in debt, which is entirely possible if this was
a phoenix riding out of the rising out of the
ashes of defeat. It's a great human story. I love
that none of us started zero and get to a
hundred not having ups and downs along the way. And

(29:06):
I'm sure she's had many. But one thing you have
to do is be honest. And she did not tell
the headhunter that she had filed bankruptcy and that she
had tax leans filed against her. That's it. And at
the end of the interview, you're asked, is there anything
I'm not asked you that you think we need to know?
She kept her mouth shut. When she was interviewed finally

(29:27):
by the mayor who controls everything in city Hall, she
didn't tell him. By the way, this is North College Hill.
I have filed bankruptcy when it was discovered, I think
the inquiry discovered it. Beryl loves operation. I think they
discovered it, wrote some stories about it. I'm looking at
and she didn't tell anybody. By that time, the employment

(29:51):
was down the road, so I have to have pureval
and others get a hold of the head hunter and said,
why don't you discover this little fact that a person
that we're going to put in charge of a half
billion dollar operation has filed bankruptcy in his tax leans.
That's kind of important, would you agree? And there was
no answer, So Seth Walsh and others Seth Walsh makes
some sense on council that may hurt him politically me

(30:13):
complimenting him, but nonetheless he said, what the hell are
we doing? By that point it was too late, So
here we go. Okay, you got the job. You probably
didn't have the props to get it. You didn't have
the background to indicate you could run this huge organization.
One of the first things she does is fire the
sitting fire chief, guy named Washington. He come up through
the ranks because he didn't hire enough minorities. And this

(30:36):
guy's black. I don't know, so she fired him. He's
got lawsuits pending. He thinks it's a bunch of bs.
She hires the new guy, guy named McKinley, I think
from Texas. First thing he does is come to work
and going on extended leave of absence. There was another
an explanation why he left his job when he comes
back over time. According to one media account, he submitted

(30:58):
ten thousand dollars and fictitious overtime payments. I don't know
how a chief gets overtime, but when he was caught,
he said, well, you know, I'll pay the money back.
And he didn't have the money to pay it back.
So the city is garnishing the wages of the of
the current fire chief. Now we go onto Thigi matter.
Theresa Thiji, the police chief, came up through the ranks.

(31:20):
Her family's been in law enforcement for about one hundred years,
and she did everything the mayor and the city manager
told her to do at the news conferences. They were
joined at the hip until they weren't. All of a sudden, politically,
the mayor thinks, I might be in some difficulty, might
be in some trouble here, So what I better do?
Is fire the police chief, which she is the right

(31:42):
to do. You know, she's not in the union, and
you serve with the pleasure of the city manager. And
so the rolling billboard of ken Kober and the fop
is wonderful. Has got the puppeteer as they have to
have pierrival telling a Putts what to do, share along
and she does it. Now thinks she's got a case
of the Fiji Goo go. I got a case of

(32:04):
the Google. You're gonna smear me when I did what
you told me to do.

Speaker 6 (32:08):
I did it.

Speaker 1 (32:09):
Now I'm the one that really followed your policies. And
once I did what you told me to do, and
things want to a miss. You're gonna blame me for
the failure of your policy. I'm not quitting. You can
fire me and they don't want to do that either.
She's on some extended leave. Well she's fired. To make
things worse, they want to hire a big time law

(32:31):
firm to investigate the chief of police. Thiji find out
why I fired her? What hell afteb you fired her?
Don't you know why you fired her? Just say what
it is. Let the ships find out. We want to
spend more money and kick the can down the road
past election day in about two weeks. All I can

(32:51):
say is, what the hell's going on around this place?
This is my city in a cin Cincinnati, completing competence.
So it's going to be up to the voters of
our fair city to issue judgment whether you want to
run your life like this?

Speaker 2 (33:06):
You want this?

Speaker 1 (33:07):
And no city workers ever talk. Now they're going to
be fired by Shara Long a tad peer of all,
he's the dawn, wants to run a tight ship. He
has no clue what he's doing. Don't get me started
on this. Let's continue and we'll see how it works out.
And they want her to quit so they don't have

(33:28):
to pay her millions of dollars. She's in the drop program.
She gets her I think she makes like two hundred
and five thousand bucks a year, where she's going to
get for the rest of her life anyway, And uh
so in the money's not going to be a fact.
She does not want a reputation to be smeared by
a political hack like af tap. Peer of all, she's

(33:49):
a police officer's police officer who did what the civilian
Savilian authorities told her to do because the policies failed.
She's going to take the fall. She's the escapegoat for
the hack. Who's the mayor of Cincinnati. Have to have
peer ofval and his stooge in office share along. The
blind is leading the blind. Now let's continue and coming

(34:13):
up later we have Adam Bird's going to be here
a state rep about marijuana and Delta and all that
kind of stuff, and also the property tax rollback and more.
Plus tonight's big game of courses Deer Park and Wyoming.
Deer Park's gonna polled a major upset and beat Wyoming
Tonight twelve fifty five home a year. Bengals News Radio

(34:33):
seven hundreds WLW.

Speaker 2 (34:35):
Mike Allen summons you to appear tomorrow morning at nine
on seven hundred WLW.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
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Speaker 1 (36:10):
Bill cunning immigrant American. Of course, so many times left
wing radical liberals want to engage in discriminatory behavior which
is acceptable to them as far as the objects. As
long as the objects that discrimination is a white or
an Asian person, it's acceptable. And what's happening in Minnesota
right now Minneapolis is truly disgusting. And Sarah partial Perry

(36:33):
is the vice president Legal Fellow for Defending Education, And
first of all, Sarah, welcome again to the Bill Cunningham Show.
And you have filed a civil rights complaint with the
US Department of Education against Minneapolis Public Schools. Can you
explain what's happening in Minneapolis Public schools, which I'm sure
there's superintendent and those involved do not understand it whatsoever.
Explain what's happening to the American people.

Speaker 6 (36:54):
Yeah, this is a really shocking case. They are actually
separating classes by rat We all remember nineteen fifty fourth
Brown versus Board of Education. Remember that the Supreme Court
then made very clear that racial segregation is patently unconstitutional.
But I seem to think that Minneapolis Public schools have
forgotten that because they offer two classes, one only for

(37:17):
black men and one only for black women. Now that
strikes me not just as being a violation of brown
versus board, but also a little law called Title six
of the Civil Rights Act, which prevents race discrimination in
any federally funded program, including education. So we have asked
the Department of Education to open an investigation to what's

(37:38):
happening in Minneapolis Public schools because the fact that they
thought this would have constitutional muster leaves many of us
at defending educations tracking our heads.

Speaker 1 (37:47):
So this behavior is not only against a board of
a US board of education, it's against civil rights actors,
against the ecal protection clause of the fourteenth Amendment. What
it does, let's put the cheese on the cracker. So
Minneapolis Public Schools and the state run by Governor Tim Walltz,
the vice presidential candidate with Kamala Harris in Minneapolis, they

(38:07):
specifically state that black students sit in this room, White
students cannot, Black women or girls can sit in this room,
and white women, white girls cannot do that. Do I
have that correct? And is that true?

Speaker 3 (38:22):
That's exactly right.

Speaker 6 (38:23):
These two classes are only open to black students. Again,
this is a federally funded academic program. It's a publicly
funded school, a government school, and all of these laws,
the Fourteenth Amendment, Title six, Browndee Board, even students for
para mension versus Harvard, which made clear that race and
education is constitutionally and permissible. We just heard them say

(38:47):
that two years ago at the high court level. We
are now at a point where we have gone so
far afield in terms of our predilections towards so called diversity, equity,
and inclusion, that we're seeing arguments that in order to
prevent race discrimination, we have to consider race. That is

(39:07):
not only not with the law says, it's completely illogical
and it's unconstitutional. But again, both those propositions seem to
be lost on Minneapolis.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
They in their own minds, they're acting racially and they're
acting racist in their own minds. Do they understand what
they're doing or not?

Speaker 6 (39:27):
Well, I don't think so, because either they've got a
really bad school lawyer who advised them that this was
constitutionally found, or they just want to ignore federal law
because they're so committed to playing politics with race. We
are tired of race playing into education from the preschool
levels all the way through graduate school. The Department of

(39:48):
Education has started to crack down at the federal level.
It's our desire and our hope to assist them and
that enforcement effort. It's part of the reason we file
twenty to thirty civil rights complaints ear because where we
find mal seasons like this, where we find schools playing
faft and loose with constitutional and civil rights laws, we

(40:08):
want to call them to account because that is the
only way to return American education to a colorblind meritocracy,
which has always been the aim of public education in
the first place.

Speaker 1 (40:19):
This is kind of a little bit off the issue,
but I would imagine Minneapolis schools in Minnesota do a
terrible job of educating the children. I would imagine it's
not much different than Chicago or Cincinnati or Pittsburgh. Am
I correct about that? As far as the text test results,
students that can read their diplomas, students I can do
simple mathematical chores, et cetera, I would assume Minneapolis public
schools have a terrible education record.

Speaker 3 (40:41):
Correct, they absolutely do.

Speaker 6 (40:44):
And in fact, it's interesting where we see the worst
incidents of race discrimination is generally correlated with lower levels
of literacy in math and English. Now, listen, we just
saw our National Safe Assessment of Education progress rankings come out,
what are called their NATE scores or the nation's report card.
We have abysmal numbers generally and specifically so in Minneapolis

(41:08):
public schools. We are looking at national averages of only
twenty two percent literacy in math and only thirty five
percent literacy in English for American twelfth graders. That means
that we are graduating nearly eighty percent of our high
schoolers who don't have basic functionality in math. And where

(41:29):
we find the worst scores correlates with where we find
the most rape discrimination. It is uncompcionable and Sarah.

Speaker 1 (41:36):
As far as those numbers twenty two percent in math,
thirty five percent in English at the twelfth grade level,
whether they're ready to go into the world, you're eighteen seventeen, eighteen,
nineteen years old, you're done with public education. You want
to work, you want to go to college, you want
to do something. Does the twenty two percent in math
and thirty five percent in English take into account all
the public schools in suburban areas that do a great job.

(41:59):
I know in greater Cincinnati, northern Kentucky, we have a
lot of really great public schools in which they have
eighty ninety percent sufficient proficiencies in math and English. So
is it fair to say that the public schools and
urban areas control by the Democratic Party?

Speaker 2 (42:12):
Am I dad?

Speaker 1 (42:13):
The Democratic Party? The Democrats have worse than twenty two
percent and thirty five percent. If you put into the
mix the public school systems that do a great job,
I would assume those numbers in urban areas controlled by
the Democrats are even worse.

Speaker 6 (42:27):
I'm absolutely right. In fact, what these are the name
scores are always an average of how all schools that
participate in the score reporting have averaged out coast to coast,
So that takes those schools all over the country, both
traditional public schools and public charter school which you're absolutely right.
We see suburban enclays where they're not playing politics with rape,

(42:49):
where they are not democratically or socialistly run programs, We
see those schools perform better. Why because those are programs
that are dedicated to affic brigger, no matter what the
color of the student's skin is. I find it absolutely
amazing that Chief Justice John Roberts, when he just wrote
the Students for Fair ad Mission Report, when he wrote

(43:12):
the opinions from the Supreme Court two years ago, had
to remind the entirety of the world the way to
stop discriminating on the basis of race is to stop
discriminating on the basis of race. How many decades of
jurisproutings from civil rights law and race discrimination do we
need before we get back to color blind equality? Otherwise,

(43:33):
what else was brown versus Board of.

Speaker 1 (43:35):
Education for It's almost as if in these democratically controlled areas,
the major cities, almost all of them, they specifically intend
a certain result, which are students coming out of schools
in which they cannot read the diplomas they can function
in the real world, in which case they must go
on disability programs, they must go on other programs. White,
black and brown kids simply can't get a job as

(43:57):
a consequence, they think Democrats think that'll be a loyal
vot for life. I want to get in some of
the area about your public records request, because of course
Minneapolis public schools controlled by Governor Tim Watts about the worst,
but you have Chicago, San Francisco, you have Cincinnati, you
have Atlanta, which have worse results. But through a public
records request, what did you find out the Minneapolis public schools?

(44:22):
What were the features of what they were teaching in
these race only classrooms.

Speaker 6 (44:27):
Well, among other things, they were specifically dedicated to driving
narratives on for example, white privilege, decolonialization, and institutional racism.
None of this surprised of us. But what we've also
discovered is Minneapolis, in many respects, for the state of Minnesota,
is ground zero for gender identity programming. Minneapolis public schools

(44:50):
hied gender identity information on minor kids. We are talking
under the age of eighteen from their parents, in many respects,
asking them directly to lie to parents when talking about
a particular student. When these students go to school, many
of them are using different pronouns, different names, different bathlized facilities.

(45:12):
Sometimes they've been computing in other sports teams. But when
they go home, they are reverting back to exactly who
they are and God made them.

Speaker 3 (45:20):
And it took our.

Speaker 6 (45:21):
Floyer requests to discover the fact that this was taking place,
which is not just a violation a federal privacy law.
But it's also a violation of what the Supreme Court's
recognized for one hundred and two years since Meyer versus
Nebraska in nineteen twenty three, in that there is a
constitutional right to direct your child's education and rear them

(45:44):
in accordance with your own values. The fact that Minneapolis
public school administrators think they can somehow shoehorn themselves, that is,
the position of the parent during the school day, is
not only unconscionable. There are two cases, depending on review
petitions that the Supreme Court right now on precisely this
issue in two different federal circuits that we are playing,

(46:06):
will ultimately bring this issue to the Supreme Court's attention
and shorten down these policies once.

Speaker 3 (46:11):
And for all.

Speaker 1 (46:12):
Let's stay on this point. So if you have a
twelve year old boy and goes to school and they're
told in the first, second, or third grade in Minneapolis,
what pronouns do you identify and explain that it is considered,
how we say, acceptable in urban areas, especially controlled by
the teachers labor unions, to identify differently than what you are.
It used to be a mental illness, used to have

(46:33):
a metal difficulty. I'm a male. But if I identified
as a female or identified as an ardvark, that I
would have to go see somebody to see what I'm
doing wrong mentally, and I need some help. But in many, many, many, many, many, many,
many public schools that students are told in the first, second,
or third grade, what do you identify ass And by
the time you get to be seven, eight, nine, ten,

(46:55):
maybe through puberty at eleven, twelve, and thirteen, that it
is culturally accepted, in fact, the norm to be in
school with different pronouns because advantages are given to you.
And then you go back, you go home, mommy and
daddy sound a boy to school and there comes a
transgender girl back out after five or six years, and
the parents are told in these school systems, do not

(47:17):
The kids are told, do not inform your parents what
we're doing to you. Is that correct?

Speaker 3 (47:24):
That is exactly right.

Speaker 6 (47:25):
And what we're seeing is a social contagion of unprecedented proportions.
Remember now that even about five years ago, the numbers
were at about three hundred thousand of American high school
students ages fifteen to seventeen identifying as transgender. That number
is continuing to rise, and part of the problem is
specifically the way these kids are being educated in public school. Remember,

(47:48):
eighty five percent of American school kids are educated in
the public school system. We want the Department of Education
to go the way of the DODO. We want it
blown up, just like every other organization does. But we're
realistic about the fact that public education is a necessity
for most kids, and most parents who cannot homeschool, cannot
afford just in the private school or has to have

(48:08):
two parents working for one reason or another, and that
leaves public school is the only option.

Speaker 3 (48:13):
That is where the teachers.

Speaker 6 (48:14):
Unions are institutionalizing gender theory and gender identity programming for
students as young is kindergarten. Listen, we just saw the
Supreme Court have to rule in a case called mom
Food versus Taylor, in which these kids in kindergarten, we
are talking four or five and six year olds. We're
getting lessons on drag Queen's non binary I identifiers and

(48:37):
reading books like Pride Puppy about a puppy going to
his first Pride parade, where yes, there were even individuals
in bondage here. Listen, they start them young, and I'm
looking directly at the teachers unions and the teachers colleges
who are producing teachers who believe they should be indoctrinating,
not educating, and the result for American students is catastrophic.

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Todaysyo, we had a teacher in a so called I
think her name was Martinez, who simulated the shooting of
Charlie Kirk. Have you seen that Lucy Martinez?

Speaker 6 (49:12):
Not only have I seen Lucy Martinez, I have actually
recognized the fact that she may have a First Amendment
right to say what she wants on her own time
and even make that deplorable gesture she doesn't have a
right to stay employed by Chicago public schools. But what
else should we be surprised by? We saw in the
way of Charlie kirk assassination an uptick in public response

(49:36):
from teachers, disproportionately represented by educators who somehow felt it
appropriate to celebrate the assassination of a political commentator. These
are the people in charge of our children, and it's
no wonder that we are having to fight so hard
for things like colorblind meritocracy when we have the ideologies
of Marxism being shoehorned in at the youngest levels for every.

Speaker 1 (49:59):
American kid Sarah partial Perry. Is this common other than Minneapolis, Minnesota?
Is this common in most public school systems in large
cities about transgender rights? Teaching about colonialism, genocide, white supremacy,
exploitive culture, or Western culture that leads to slavery. Is

(50:19):
this unusual to Minnesota or everywhere in the whole country?

Speaker 3 (50:24):
Now?

Speaker 6 (50:24):
Unfortunately, we're seeing it in the whole country right now.
And I've got to tell you, every time you see
something that indicates ethnic studies, you need to look at
it with a very critical eye. Ethnic studies is being
utilized now as an opportunity not just to push themes
on decolonialization of white institutions and implicit bias and inherent

(50:46):
racism and privileged, but it's also pushing narratives on communism
and Marxism. In fact, what we've discovered among some of
the particular programs on Asian studies have utilized Mao as
an individual to admire and have decried capitalism, which by
the way, seems to be an economy and a theory

(51:06):
that is working so far for the United States. They
have decried that as being greedy, as being destructive to
marginalize communities, and they have actually platformed Marxism as a
better alternative to governance. We're shocked at what we find,
but this is part of what we do with defending education.

(51:27):
We file Freedom of Information Act requests and then with
the information we find, we file civil rights complaints, and
when necessary, we file federal lawsuits. And that is precisely
our goal is to get this rot out of public education.

Speaker 1 (51:39):
Well, the goal appears to be to produce a bunch
of Marxing marching Marxists, and not producing children that can
confront the academic challenges of the twenty first century. But
I don't know what colonialism and genocide, white supremacy, and
transgender rights and pronouns have to do with reading, writing
and arithmetic. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (52:00):
Well, they absolutely don't. And listen, that is part of
the arrangement we exist, right. We want high quality, value,
neutral education for every American kid. Because for the kids
who can't go to private school, they can't go to
parochial school, they can't be high school, that's their option.
They should not be left out in the cold. And
we refused to, We absolutely refuse to see the entire

(52:21):
cultural institution of public ed to the left. There was
a point at which public education worked for all kids.
What we could produce, you for best official citizens of
humanity who could go out and succeed and get a job,
people on to grad school. And now we're not seeing it.
But that's where it starts, is with removing in doctrination

(52:42):
and getting back to basics.

Speaker 1 (52:44):
Sarah partial Perry, what is your website with defending education?
What is your website?

Speaker 6 (52:50):
Our website is very easy to remember.

Speaker 3 (52:52):
It's defending ed dot org.

Speaker 6 (52:55):
And you also can follow me on x at Therapy
Perry where I talk about research. It's an investigation on
education every day.

Speaker 1 (53:03):
Long way to go, Sarah, thanks again for coming on
the Bill Cunningham Show. And Sarah, you're a great American.
Thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (53:10):
Thanks so much.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
God bless you. Let's continue with more news next at
your home of the Bengals and the Bearcats News Radio
seven hundred WLW.

Speaker 7 (53:18):
The city is it's just one another step and a
long spirits of steps where they embarrass themselves. I think
it's an outrageous that the city council acted the way
they acted.

Speaker 2 (53:32):
Oh hello, quiet, and I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (53:40):
God and I'm say twenty five years ago Sily said
those words, then.

Speaker 2 (53:45):
You gotta he said him right then, right now.

Speaker 1 (53:47):
It hadn't changed. But sega, we have golfing royalty in
the house from Bishop Fenwick and Middletown, your hometown. We
have joining us also coach Scott Dalton, who's here to
introduce the girls who've done so well in the state tournament.

Speaker 2 (54:00):
Fenwick Falcons are here, will he?

Speaker 1 (54:02):
They flew in. They didn't walk in. They flew into
the building.

Speaker 2 (54:04):
Third in the state and Division two.

Speaker 1 (54:06):
You know why they were third? They canceled the second
day because oute outrage. A Democrat was probably in charge
of that. This all right now, Coach, introduce these fine
young ladies.

Speaker 5 (54:16):
Okay, I want to start with senior Sophie King.

Speaker 1 (54:19):
Sophie, I understand your father listens, is it? What's your
dad's name, Daniel? Have you ever heard of me?

Speaker 4 (54:26):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (54:27):
No, you hadn't not tell them the truth. What's your
best score in the golf course? Seventy eight? What's your
handicap if any? Oh, my dad told me he calculated
it the other day and it was like six nine. Yeah,
I'd had to give you three strokes, Coach introduced. The
next story.

Speaker 5 (54:42):
Next is a senior Libby Haas Lebby.

Speaker 1 (54:45):
I understand you're the smart one. Is that correct?

Speaker 6 (54:47):
Sure?

Speaker 1 (54:48):
What's the square root of thirty six six? What is
the capital of the state of Kentucky Louisville?

Speaker 6 (54:55):
Wrong?

Speaker 1 (54:56):
Yeah, named Frankfurd. That's correct. She's got a Mulligan right there. Now,
where do you normally play golf? I like to Who
is the sheriff of Butler County?

Speaker 3 (55:08):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (55:09):
I don't live in Butler County. Who lives in Butler County? Nobody?
Introduce the next girl?

Speaker 5 (55:15):
Okay? Next is only a sophomore team? That's Kinsey Blankenship.

Speaker 1 (55:19):
Kenzie. How are you doing? Come up to the Mike Kinzie?

Speaker 3 (55:23):
Uh?

Speaker 1 (55:23):
Name the Five Great Lakes Lake Michigan, Ontario?

Speaker 5 (55:31):
Secure in.

Speaker 1 (55:33):
Very good? Not bad at all? What's the capital of Pennsylvania?

Speaker 5 (55:44):
Coach?

Speaker 1 (55:44):
Please continue?

Speaker 5 (55:46):
And number one player is senior Emma Loman.

Speaker 1 (55:50):
She's at Tiger Woods. Of the team, now, Emma, what
is your best score on the golf course? Seventy one
one under?

Speaker 2 (55:57):
Whoa?

Speaker 1 (55:58):
Excuse me?

Speaker 3 (55:59):
Wow?

Speaker 1 (55:59):
Willie? Where do you normally play?

Speaker 5 (56:01):
I like to play?

Speaker 1 (56:03):
And what's your handicap? Four?

Speaker 3 (56:07):
Time? Yeah?

Speaker 1 (56:08):
To give me one aside?

Speaker 2 (56:09):
Hello?

Speaker 1 (56:10):
Now who was the second President of the United States?
Number two? Good, that's not bad at all. Give me
some gimme some scores here. We got to go back
to the girls.

Speaker 8 (56:19):
Will he the Stootu reports of proud service of your
local tame Star Heating and air conditioning dealers, Tamestar quality
you could feel in Cincinnati Coach Schmid Heating at Coolie
five one three five three one sixty nine hundred or
sports there's roxy and we thank a Lear's Prime Market
for our lunch today. Will He located in beautiful downtown

(56:39):
Milford with a deluxe Delhi Learsprime dot com.

Speaker 1 (56:43):
Lears Prime always a cut above. Let's see, uh in say,
don't make a full of yourself. It's the final week
of the regular season in Ohio high school football.

Speaker 2 (56:52):
Will he?

Speaker 1 (56:53):
What about golf?

Speaker 2 (56:53):
The Indiana playoffs begin tonight?

Speaker 1 (56:56):
What about dere Park and Wyoming?

Speaker 8 (56:57):
Well they play tonight and then more football and could
Entucky high school football tonight show at six Fox Sports,
thirteen to sixty.

Speaker 1 (57:04):
Girls, do you like Deer Park versus Wyoming? Who do
you like? Bishop?

Speaker 2 (57:10):
Answer Verry? Good, good answer.

Speaker 1 (57:12):
She might be in radio later on continue.

Speaker 2 (57:14):
College football tomorrow.

Speaker 8 (57:15):
Those twenty first rated Cincinnati Bearcats co leaders in the
Big Twelve's take on Baylor. The Bears are coming to
town and three o'clock right here on seven hundred WLW
three o'clock Tomorrow, Miami will host Western Michigan. The RedHawks
are co leaders in the MAC. They've won four in
a row.

Speaker 1 (57:32):
You forgot about the Bengals on Sunday, I.

Speaker 2 (57:34):
Know I haven't. Tonight Special Night in Clifton.

Speaker 8 (57:38):
One of our own, Willie Tony Pike, He's one of
six will be inducted into the University of Cincinnati Athletics
Hall of.

Speaker 1 (57:45):
Fame, deserves it mightily.

Speaker 8 (57:47):
Bengals Up Day brought you by Good Spirits and Party
Town thirteen locations in northern Kentucky. Trey Hendrickson questionable against
the Jets. What Sauce Gardner their best corner? Former UC
star will not play. He's in the concussion protocol.

Speaker 1 (58:02):
I got a question for you, seg Man. Yeah, if
Waco Flaco plays this well for the next several games,
does Joe Burrow got to beg to get his job back?

Speaker 3 (58:11):
No?

Speaker 1 (58:11):
Please continue. Linebacker Logan Wilson has requested a trade from
the University of Wyoming he once and you how Bengals
are trading players? Not likely, they don't not likely. Let's
see best Bengals coverage.

Speaker 8 (58:24):
Sunday RNL carriers pre game Sports Talk presented by Cincinnati
Northern Kentucky Toyota Dealers Live from the Holy Grail and
the kickoffs at one Coche.

Speaker 1 (58:33):
Now, why did you not play the second day? We
had in alt and Madeira. What happened to them was
an outrage. Explain what happened.

Speaker 9 (58:42):
We got up in the morning, we had one one
door tee off, then they called it it was raining.
We got about two inches that day. So the course
was why didn't you play the next day? Demand third
is not good enough for these girls. They wanted to
win at all.

Speaker 1 (58:55):
You have to ask each SAA that I understand Neil
money is coming to high school athletics. Do these girls
know they can compete next year for thousands and thousands
of dollars? Might you stay in school and not go
to college? On yes or no? You want to we
want to get paid to play? Not real. She's not

(59:18):
a capital. Wait a minute, what's going on around this place? Coach?
How does that affect you? If the players? If these
girls playing next year come up to you and say,
no money is available, name, image and likeness. We want
to be paid ten thousand dollars to play.

Speaker 3 (59:30):
What do you do?

Speaker 5 (59:32):
What would the coach do?

Speaker 1 (59:33):
Coach we were I don't know where do you get
the money from?

Speaker 3 (59:36):
You?

Speaker 8 (59:37):
You're living mattertount, You're having a lot of trouble with
tax levies. You're going to put a levee on for
Nil Levey? Yes in various areas of town. Scott Dalton
says yes.

Speaker 2 (59:47):
Oh, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (59:48):
I mean give me some more sports and quick babbling.

Speaker 8 (59:51):
Let's see will eat college basketball? Tonight the Bearcats basketball.
Bearcats are at Arkansas against coach cow Really and rupp Arena,
the site and number preseason number one per Due against
number nine Kentucky.

Speaker 2 (01:00:04):
So your exhibition play.

Speaker 1 (01:00:05):
Everything's happening, plus the World Series starts tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:00:07):
World Series Game one in Toronto. Blue Jay's host the.

Speaker 1 (01:00:10):
Dodgers cochon you like Dodgers, Dodgers girls, what do you say?
Blue Jays are the Dodgers? I want the Blue Jayson
when they beat the Birds, the Birds, the Falcons, blue Jays,
you get it? Segment Falcons eat Blue Jays Hockey.

Speaker 8 (01:00:23):
Tonight, Willie, our beloved Cyclones are home along the Big
River against Fort Wayne.

Speaker 2 (01:00:28):
How about this?

Speaker 8 (01:00:28):
You know the NBA scandal hit yesterday big time former
NBA star Kevin Garnett. What now among several former athletes
that attended private poker games tied into the Operation Royal Flush.

Speaker 2 (01:00:45):
You're a NBA. NBA might not have enough players to
play after they get this done.

Speaker 1 (01:00:51):
This is unbelievable what they did. They have X rays
of the cards? About the X ray tables. Yeah, that's
something like that of James Bond. I don't get it,
don't under the coach? Next year is the season bright
for the Falcons? Next year are kind of dull? Will
we lose five seniors?

Speaker 5 (01:01:07):
Six?

Speaker 1 (01:01:08):
That's not good? Can these girls pick up the slack?

Speaker 5 (01:01:12):
I think so.

Speaker 1 (01:01:13):
I think you can. Will you, sophomore?

Speaker 4 (01:01:15):
Will you do it?

Speaker 1 (01:01:16):
Will you rise like a mighty phoenix or a falcon
in the ashes and a rise over your opponents and
pick their decaying bodies and put them in the dumps
of light? Will you do that next year?

Speaker 3 (01:01:25):
Yeah? You will?

Speaker 1 (01:01:27):
There you go, you will? And girls, you can't play
soccer when you're fifty years old, but you can play
golf the rest of your life. You're onto a sport
that's going to make you a better person. Now I
got a few more academic questions. Are you prepared? There
are five There are five rights guaranteed by the First
Amendment the US Constitution. Can you name three of the

(01:01:48):
five rights in the First Amendment? To individual? Citizen, speech, meeting,
and god bliss America. That's it right there, that said coach, congratulations,
will see you next year. At the same time, thank you.
These girls are said heights.

Speaker 2 (01:02:07):
Moving up to one and no more rain.

Speaker 1 (01:02:09):
These girls would have won all right segment with your permission,
get me out of the Studge Report, will.

Speaker 8 (01:02:14):
He and honor of the Fenwick Falcons. We leave you
with the immortal words of the Stood Report.

Speaker 3 (01:02:21):
Always should be with you Bill, See you later.

Speaker 2 (01:02:24):
Girls.

Speaker 1 (01:02:24):
You know who that guy is. Who's the governor of Ohio?
That's him right there. Girls. Congratulations, You've been champions in golf,
now'll be champions in life. Coach, Thank you? Girls. Is
there is there a uh? Is there like a high
school song or something you can sing as we go

(01:02:44):
into a break? Let me hear it this singing? I
don't know mine either. Seven hundred w l W. You,

(01:03:05):
Bill cunning in the Great America. Many things happening in
the state House in Columbus Cony you and on all
in the leadership positions is Adam Bird of Claremont County,
New Richmond. Adam Bird, welcome again to the Bill Cunningham showing.
First of all, let's talk about Delta eight and marijuana
things of that character. I know things are happening. I
know many parents are quite unhappy when their children can
go to a gas station to buy a marijuana derivative

(01:03:30):
product and against the wishes. I know the governor wants
to include that to the dispensaries. Can you give us
an overview what's happening with Delta eight, before we talk
about the state income tax, before we talk about the
property tax tied to inflation, before we talk about the
problems in public education. Give me a full report on
Delta eight.

Speaker 4 (01:03:50):
Oh, well, it's great to be with the Great American
like you, Willie. And yes, the Ohio House just pass
changes the Citabul fifty six earlier than week. This would
regulate intoxicating hemp beverages and would clarify the use of
adult use marijuana. And for instance, this would say that
you can only purchase marijuana in the dispensary, you can't

(01:04:12):
smoke it in public, You can't smoke it in a car,
and your passengers in a car can't smoke it. You
have to limit the targeting of children, and so some
real good common sense protections there which I think the
Ohio Senate should approve forthwith. Now, on the hemp side
of that, we are going to try to We want
to regulate the hemp drinkable hemp products, which are all

(01:04:35):
the rage right now, and so we've got I think
some some common sense changes to that would say that
if you're going to sell a hemp drink, if five
milligrams will last, you can do that in a bar
or restaurant. If you want higher doses like ten milligrams,
you can do that in a grocery or gas station.
But higher than that they have to be sold out

(01:04:55):
of state. So we've got some common sense hemp drink
and marijuana provision in this bill, and that bill now
goes back to the Senate to see if they all
concur with our changes.

Speaker 1 (01:05:05):
What do your crystal ball tell you? And that many
times the Senate doesn't do what the House wants it
to do. The governor wants this done. What would they
do in the Senate. You'll be there one day yourself,
probably what is it?

Speaker 3 (01:05:16):
Well?

Speaker 4 (01:05:17):
I do think that I've heard rumors that they think
that we're a little lacked, a little loose. They want
some some tighter guidelines. So they if they vote to
not concur next week, that means it'll go to a
conference committee. That means it'll be two or three Senators,
two or three House members that get together in a
room and they duke it out until they come out
and approve some changes and change. Both chambers will have

(01:05:41):
to approve what this small conference committee decides to iron
out the differences between the Senate version and the House version.

Speaker 1 (01:05:47):
HI now, secondly about the income tax. I have great
feeling for the people in New Richmond, the home of
the Lions. When I played basketball at Deer Park, it
was my highest game ever, forty two points at New Richmond.
I love it right there. Now I find out the
New Richmond schools are in trouble that could be a
fiscal emergency or watch going on. They lost their tax
base when the utilities left, and now the citizens are

(01:06:10):
going to have to be voting on imposing upon themselves
a new income tax in New Richmond. Tell me why
the schools are in such stress?

Speaker 4 (01:06:20):
Well, you know this is the schools into Richmond have
been reliant, blessfully so on by two power plants. Unfortunately,
those two power plants have closed, and certainly there's a
lot of lobbying efforts to try to reopen Zimmer at
its early at convenience. The owner of that power plant
is Vistra Energy in Houston, Texas, Texas. So if you

(01:06:42):
know anybody in Houston, welly, maybe you could convince them
to reopen that. But yeah, it's property taxes are a problem.
That the number one issue that I'm complained of to
by voters. And so we made some We passed a
couple of bills this week and make some common sense
changes to property taxes. One of them is House Bill

(01:07:03):
one eighty six, which says we're going to limit the
growth of your property taxes to the rate of inflation,
and we're also going to apply that back to the
previous two years, and so that we don't hurt public schools,
we're going to give public schools a payment in August
of twenty six of three hundred and sixty million dollars
so that they're held harmless. And then in August of

(01:07:26):
twenty seven will make another payment of one hundred and
five million dollars so that our public schools are held
harmless while we're trying to provide this property tax rely
to islands. And so as far as New Richmond goes,
they're trying to pass an income tax levee. I think
income tax levees are the way to go in the
future because they can grow. When your community's incomes, your

(01:07:48):
all of the household incomes grow, so does your income tax.
So I think it's a good, good effort on the
part of New Richmond, and I do believe that that
they need it. They're struggling right now.

Speaker 1 (01:08:00):
Are you going to vote yes on that? In New Richmond?

Speaker 4 (01:08:03):
I am going to vote yes on that because income taxes,
I think are a better way to fund our schools.
And you know, we're seeing this willie with the property
taxes across the state of Ohio, and we've got this
moment movement going as you're aware, to put elimination of
all property taxes on the ballot in November of twenty

(01:08:23):
six and when if that happens. I you know, the
early polling shows that sixty one percent of Ohio and
say that we should eliminate all property taxes. And if
that vote were to occur, we would not only lose
the current tax base for schools, but also for police
and fire and villages and townships and commissioners, and so
that would have a big impact on the state of Ohio.

(01:08:46):
That's why I think we should transition more and more
when we can to sales and income tax.

Speaker 1 (01:08:50):
Well, Representative Bird. One thing about the income tax, it
goes up and down based of all once economic activity.
Same thing with the sales tax. The more you spend,
the more you pay. I worry about seniors that cannot
have money. Their property taxes keep going up. In fact,
in Butler County, headed up by Don Dixon and Richard K. Jones,
they're giving the Butler County real estate owners a break

(01:09:14):
and sending money and lowering the real estate taxes in
Butler County. Hambleton County given an equal opportunity, he said, no,
they're going to keep high property taxes because of the
impact on the so called social service agencies and others.
It's a terrible problem. And I know, when I had
Senator Huffman on about a month or two ago, he

(01:09:34):
said that the property taxes go away completely, the sales
tax would have to be twenty to thirty percent, and
that is ridiculous because that would crash the Ohio economy.

Speaker 4 (01:09:46):
Yeah, that's that's not feasible, of course. And so in
the recent budget that we passed back in June, Willie,
we put in the budget a provision that allowed count
commissioners to piggyback onto the homestead homestead tax and and
give a small break to the local community. And to
this point, I think there's only been four or five

(01:10:06):
counties in the state of Ohio that have taken advantage
of that on behalf of their property tax payers, and
Butler County obviously well known for being one of them.
And you know, we're giving local communities the right to
give additional property tax relief should they want to grant it.
And so, you know, this is all in an attempt, Willie. Honestly,

(01:10:26):
this is an attempt to slow down property taxes because
if if the movement to eliminate all of them were
to occur, it would be a tremendous, tremendous issue for
the General Assembly to try to solve next November and
next December.

Speaker 1 (01:10:43):
Now you're a lawmaker and what you're in leadership in Columbus.
There's a story in the inquir today written by David
Ferrara about the City of Cincinnati enforcing state law. The
article says Cincinnati has made a concerted public effort to
reduce police rec response to low level, nonviolent calls for service.
The department set of goal by reducing responses to state

(01:11:07):
criminal violations by five percent. Now identifying more ways to
reduce officers responding, which is keeping the lights on in
basketball courts. By the way, according to the mayor, it
is time to start enforcing the law. And we know,
although they never admit it until now, that there's state
criminal statutes such as open air drug use, such as

(01:11:29):
homeless individuals living in public spaces legally they cannot do
such as speeding violations, reckless operation, etc. Under the state code,
which people shouldn't do. But by saying for the last
three or four years we're not going to enforce criminal
statutes in the city of Cincinnati, you've seen what happened
to otr into a business district where crime is rampant,

(01:11:52):
Now the chief of police has finally been fired. She's
on paid administrative lead, but she's not coming back. She's
been fired because she was told by the mayor do
not enforce criminal statutes. Now, having fired the person who
was listening to what her boss, the mayor, told her
to do, now the mayor has gone out to hire
a big time law firm to spend millions of dollars

(01:12:13):
to find out why I fired somebody. It's like, you
got to be kidding me. As a lawmaker in Columbus,
how do you react to the fact that a city,
a large city, Cincinnati, three hundred thousand residents, have a
mayor that's telling the police do not enforce criminal law.

Speaker 4 (01:12:27):
It's outrageous ly, this is why people are leaving city
of Cincinnati, and droves are moving to Crimeonut County, Warren County,
Butler County, Northern Kentucky because they want to leave this
kind of nonsense. You cannot artificially say that we're going
to cut crime by five percent. That tells me that
you're trying to artificially cut the enforcement of crime by

(01:12:48):
five percent. And you know you cannot dictate what the
amount of crime is going to be whatever it is
is what it's going to be, and you have to
enforce the law, and you've got to take the law
to its fullest extent. And when you refuse to do that,
you know, it's it's hard for the community. It's hard
for the business community. It's why people are are hesitant

(01:13:09):
to go downtown. It's why there was another shooting after
the Bengals Steelers game last week. And this has got
you know, it's got to stop, Willie, And you know,
elections have consequences, and I would I would implore this
residence of Cincinnati to elect Corey Bowman so that you
could have some sanity to your criminal law law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (01:13:30):
You don't practice a lot of criminal law. But one
of the reasons, and I've seen from Pete Whitty in
Western Hills that the last two days has been increased
enforcement of speeding violations. And from a speeding violation and
reckless operation leaving your land of travel, having fictitious plates.
When you pull somebody over, there's a possibility of going

(01:13:50):
hands on and cops don't like doing that, and the
social activists on City Council and Cincinnati don't like that.
So what happens when you pull somebody over for beating,
you say, let me have your license. You say, well
I don't have a license. Let me see your insurance.
Well I don't have insurance. We'll get out of the car.
I'm not getting out of the car. And from that
you'll find guns and drugs and a bunch of other stuff.

(01:14:13):
And the mayor believes, being a social engineer and a
social activist himself, that government programs are more important than
police officers. And so now, beginning now, because of his
failure in office, and because we have an election coming
up in about two weeks, the mayor wants to start
enforcing criminal statutes. And from a simple traffic stop, for example,

(01:14:34):
you might find somebody out with several warns for their arrest,
someone wanted on felony charges, and not about you. But
I don't want to be driving on city streets with
individuals without a license without insurance. You don't want to
do that. And so when you have a city leader
ignoring federal criminal statutes and state criminal statutes that lead
to some other good stuff, it sends the message the

(01:14:56):
law doesn't matter you and Columbus can pass all the
criminal statutes you want, but it takes the it takes
the guy or the woman on the beat to pull
over someone who's criminally misbehaving in some fashion, identify yourself,
show me your license, show me your insurance. It sends
the message that there's a new sheriff in town, which
is we're going to start enforcing the law. We've gotten

(01:15:17):
to such a point, Adam Bird, that in the city
of Cincinnati, the mayor has to announce we're going to
follow the law. That's a news story.

Speaker 4 (01:15:26):
Well, well, you know, my sources within the FOP tell
me that the police officers, the the beat walkers, the
guys that are are that are you know, doing the
job every day, they want to they want to enforce
the law, and you disincentivize them from doing their job
when once they've done their job, they don't get backed
up and the criminal gets released without fail before the

(01:15:48):
police officer even gets back to their home. And and
so this is a huge issue. Now you bring up
the fact that what are what's the state of going
to do about that?

Speaker 3 (01:15:56):
Phi, Well, we do have a bill.

Speaker 4 (01:15:58):
We have a bill, Willie that that would defund cities
that don't uphold the law, that don't enforce the Heights
Code you know that don't cooperate with federal law state law,
and we've got to build I don't know whether it's
going to move or move quickly, but something has to
be done at the state level to keep people from

(01:16:18):
you know, you become a law onto yourself when you
decide to ignore law. And that's where we're at right now.
I implore, for the benefit of southwestern Ohio, even though
I don't live in Cincinnati, the city of Cincinnati should
elect Corey Bowman so they can have some sanity when
it comes to criminality in their town.

Speaker 1 (01:16:38):
Well, they believe in social justice and all that kind
of stuff. They believe in light sentencing judges, they believe
in judges setting no bonds. They believe in getting a
criminal element back on the streets. They believe in not
enforcing traffic statutes whatsoever. That is the essence of being
a big city mayor in the city of Cincinnati. And
I'm looking at this thing that the city's in workshape economically, fiscally,

(01:16:59):
it's in terrible shape. With the law enforcement. You have
the FOP ken Kober, Sergeant ken Kober paying for a
rolling billboard going around the city of Cincinnati with the puppeteer,
I e. F ted peer of all who say putts
the puppeteer is manipulating the fire chief and the police
chief and the city manager. And whenever something bad goes

(01:17:22):
goes on, which is happening all the time, mayor pirival,
blame somebody else. When something good happens, he's up in
front pounding his chest. Somehow that's got to end. We've
got to run, Adam Bird. But whatever you can do
to lower the property tax burdens, especially when senior citizens
have got to be done. And Adam Byrd, you're a
great American. Get that thing past the new Richmond. The
lions deserve a quality education. And thanks for coming on

(01:17:44):
the Bill Cunningham Show. Thank you, Adam.

Speaker 3 (01:17:47):
It's great to be with you.

Speaker 4 (01:17:48):
Well, Billy and I I just it's always an a
hundred to be on your show. And you know, we've
got to continue to provide property tax relief for taxpayers
in Ohio and that's what we're going to.

Speaker 3 (01:17:59):
Kee working on.

Speaker 1 (01:18:00):
Adam Bird. You're a great American, and good luck and
God speed, let's enforce the law. What a novel concept,
Adam Bird. Thank you very much.

Speaker 3 (01:18:08):
I know it.

Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
God bless you God, Thanks Wallie, thank.

Speaker 2 (01:18:10):
You very much.

Speaker 1 (01:18:11):
I let's continue with more news coming up your home
of the Bengals and Tony Pike he's back. Plus you
see tight for first place in the Big twelve, the
Big eleven, the Big fourteen, and more on News Radio
seven hundred ww all right, let's continue and never stop.
We simply continue. You know, the director of Hamley County
Voard of Elections tells me, not only about twenty five

(01:18:32):
percent of the voters in the city of Cincinnati will vote,
and the next election about two weeks in a day away,
twenty five percent will vote. That means seventy five percent
will not vote. And of those living in the city
of Cincinnati eligible to vote, only about half a register.
That means about thirteen percent of the city is going
to determine the outcome of the election. And I am

(01:18:53):
just fairly certain that the Democratic voters in the city
of Cincinnati suffered from the Stockholm syndrome, in which they've
been told so many lives for so long, they can't
recognize reality, and they believe what they're told by their
Democratic leaders that life could be better. Just keep voting
for us, and things are going to change. The schools
will be better, Housing costs will go down, the poddles

(01:19:14):
are going to be fixed, the bridges are quit falling down,
the snow will be picked up and more. And you
know it's a lie. You've been told lies so many
times by so many Democrats. You can't recognize reality. Well,
now it's your chance to change the course of your life.
Will you take it? Two thirty Home of your Bengals
Bengals News Radio, seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati.

Speaker 10 (01:19:35):
Cincinnati is terrible. It's a terrible place. It's a tough economy.
You know you should. You should be lucky to be alive.
It's just so miserable. Gee, why haven't you left yet?

Speaker 3 (01:19:48):
Hello?

Speaker 2 (01:19:50):
Quiet im Skulls, I'm broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (01:19:57):
Hit that again. I want to hear Rocky here, Mark
Mallory the Farmer, Mayor.

Speaker 10 (01:20:00):
Cincinnati is terrible. It's a terrible place. It's a tough economy.
You know you should. You should be lucky to be alive.
It's just so miserable. Gee, why haven't you left yet?

Speaker 1 (01:20:09):
Mayor Mallory? AI gotta be, Ai, rock gotta be. I
gotta put the hat on your head. Are you prepared?
Are you prepared fire away.

Speaker 3 (01:20:17):
What do you got?

Speaker 1 (01:20:18):
You played professional football?

Speaker 3 (01:20:19):
Is that good? I did?

Speaker 1 (01:20:20):
You probably ran around with the NBA types all the
time in these booker part Yes, tell me how the
X ray machine, the special Superman, the X rays shuffler,
How the shuffler work. Explain that to me. I don't
know that, but I don't know.

Speaker 11 (01:20:35):
If you go my Twitter at Rocky Boyman fifty, you'll
see the the X ray glasses and how they were
used Superman.

Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
Front.

Speaker 11 (01:20:43):
Yeah, they contact lenses too, Carter A face down on
the table you put these glasses on, it shows you
it's a king of spades, just all the way.

Speaker 1 (01:20:51):
How's that fair to the to the fish? How's that
fair to the What do you think I saw behind
every day? What do you see?

Speaker 11 (01:20:58):
You walk around the sales department? Don't try If you're
Terry Rose here and you made one hundred and sixty
million dollars in your career, why are you? Why are
you get involved with this stuff?

Speaker 1 (01:21:08):
I mean, what are we talking about here? I guess
it's non taxable, but still if you got if you
left one hundred and sixty and just the S and
P and just let it get it, just keeps you
don't care about money. Do you know more names? Segment,
give me the more names. Rocky Boyman is his name?

Speaker 2 (01:21:26):
Apparently apparently Willie.

Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
Former NBA star Kevin Garndell is among several prominent athletes
that went to these private poker games. That's under investigation
in Operation Royal Flush. It's one thing he went to
the poker games. Did he throw any games? Did he
did he do something?

Speaker 5 (01:21:47):
Did he not score?

Speaker 1 (01:21:49):
Should have got a growing problem. So this one guy
who was in the Rosier playing for the Heat, they
had some prop bets, which is under so many rebounds,
under so many points. After he played about six minutes
of the game, he suddenly had a growing problem, couldn't
play anymore, and somebody bet two hundred thousand dollars on
the is Do you think that Rozier is the only
player that did that? No, no prop bets. You think

(01:22:11):
the FBI knows? Yes? Yes, you better come forward now,
rock if you know something, let me know. How well
do you know Kevin Garnett? I don't know him. So
speak the truth to the American people. Weren't you involved
in these high end poker parties where you've been in
the past I have played a lot of poker. I've
played a lot of blackjack. I would never scheme, give

(01:22:35):
me some give me something. He's gone.

Speaker 8 (01:22:39):
Here will he the STU reporters and proud service of
your local Temestar Heating in their conditioning dealers, Tamestar qualer
you could feel in beautiful Cincinnati, Carl Sheldon Braun at
Broun Heating at five one, three, three.

Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
Eight, five seventy seven sixty five.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
Spot on the picture of Lebron James right here, as
in the locker room, one of the players learned you
weren't going to play that night.

Speaker 8 (01:23:04):
That's the smart that's the former Cleveland Cavaliers player and
assistant coach with his name mos Jones.

Speaker 11 (01:23:10):
See, this is the thing that I've always wondered since
gambling has become legal with sports, is if I'm in
the locker room, I know if our quarterback is not
playing tomorrow. I know if our two of our safeties
are not playing. And if I happen to tell a
friend who told a friend. I feel like players don't
don't look at it as they're involved in gambling. They're

(01:23:33):
just like, well, you know, I kind of know this
and I'll tell you about not playing tomorrow, right, and
nobody knows that.

Speaker 1 (01:23:40):
I've known a hundred times.

Speaker 11 (01:23:42):
But a player, Yeah, we're telling the meat he's gonna
play and he'll do the fake thing where he puts
the shoulder pads on for the ten minutes the media
is there and I'll throw the ball, but he ain't playing.

Speaker 1 (01:23:50):
Why did coaches do that then? Why did it trick him? Well,
because they don't want to give an edge to the
other side.

Speaker 8 (01:23:55):
And Aaron Glenn's not saying whose quarterbacking for the Jets?
Nobody's talking. I bet your Boomer puts the green and
white on again, number seven? What about he's in town
ring of honor? What about s who's paying for Boomer
to come here? As Sauce Gardner's not playing, who's paying
for Boomer to come here? I assume Boom Engles Bangoomer

(01:24:15):
Bengals Boomer Bengals Boomer.

Speaker 2 (01:24:18):
That was the big uh maybe thing right. They wasn't
for him.

Speaker 1 (01:24:21):
Now they decided to pay. I bet he'd be welcome
in the brown suite. What do you think? Yeah, come,
here's a voucher. Yeh, go get some popcorn? Than give me?
Have you given me sports show, give me some sports. Well,
don't you College basketball tonight?

Speaker 8 (01:24:38):
You got exhibition play Those Cincinnati bear Cats up against
coach cow in Arkansas tonight at eight o'clock. Ye rupp
Arena of the site. Preseason number one perdue the number
nine Kentucky at six on ESPN fifteen thirty.

Speaker 1 (01:24:55):
Kevin Garnett And was he a fish or was he
one of the perpetrators? I assume he was a perpetrator trader,
which is Shauncey Villas, who, by the way, made, according
to Sports Elder in his career, one hundred and eighty
million dollars, and he's involved with it. It's the com.

Speaker 11 (01:25:10):
Modument, I guess the Jews. It's the it's you know,
the ability to win. And that's what Michael Jordan gamb
would because he just wanted very competitive. But this is
the way you're winning without well, you're not really competing.
You're not competing because it's all rigged.

Speaker 1 (01:25:25):
This one fish lost one point eight million in one session.
He kept getting like five uh four of a kind,
five straight and he kept losing. He couldn't figure it out.
He said, Okay, I'm going He kept betting one point
eight million in one session a whale?

Speaker 2 (01:25:39):
Why could I see through this table?

Speaker 8 (01:25:41):
We're sitting in cool high school football final week of
the regular season in Ohio, Indiana playoffs began tonight and
more into Bluegrass. Get Ready, Rock, Let's see the skyline
Chili Crossdown Showdown.

Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
Game of the week is Lebanon and witten Woods.

Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
How about the big game Derrick Park and Wyoming Rock?
What's your record? Say? Go ahead?

Speaker 2 (01:26:02):
Park has not done well the past few weeks.

Speaker 1 (01:26:05):
Rock, Go ahead?

Speaker 3 (01:26:05):
Say uh?

Speaker 8 (01:26:06):
College football tomorrow Cincinnata Bearcats and Baylor.

Speaker 2 (01:26:10):
The Bears are in town for homecoming?

Speaker 1 (01:26:12):
What's the spread on that game? Can we talk about
the spread of with draft games?

Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
Can't say?

Speaker 1 (01:26:15):
Can't say? Coverage begins at three about what about Tony Pike?

Speaker 2 (01:26:20):
He's back.

Speaker 8 (01:26:20):
Tony Pike gets in, gets enshrined into the University of
Cincinnati Athletics Hall of Fame. Tonight after seven o'clock, I
love with five of their former Bearcat athletes.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
If he was a woman, I kiss him. Run on
the lips.

Speaker 8 (01:26:32):
Wrangle's update brought to you by Good Spirits and Party
Town thirteen locations in northern Kentucky. Linebacker Logan Wilson has
requested a trade rock your reaction to get the ESPN's
Ben Baby. You can question and it's probably justified, but
they're not going to give it to him.

Speaker 2 (01:26:48):
Correct.

Speaker 1 (01:26:49):
You can request anything's not going to get it. Trey
Hendrickson is questionable for Sunday not playing. Sauce Gardner out
with concussion protocol got the big deal will be.

Speaker 8 (01:27:00):
It Justin Fields or Taylor or Tyrod Taylor. Nobody's saying
or Joe Namath the way Sunday.

Speaker 11 (01:27:07):
The UC Baylor game is Cincinnati minus three and a half,
So their favorite, you know, basically over undernet game.

Speaker 1 (01:27:14):
You think forty seven and a half, sixty seven and
a half. What sixty seven and a half. I'm going
the under. These team's gonna score thirty four.

Speaker 8 (01:27:22):
I'm going the under. Sunday Willie Bengals and Jets Best
Bengal covers. Nine Am RNL Carriers pregame sports talk show
presented by Cincinnati Northern Kentucky toil To Dealers Live for
the Holy Grail kickoff at one, then Big One Tri
State Chevy Dealers. Postgame show presented by RNEL Carriers at
Buffalo Wings and Rings and Ohio Pike and beach mont Is.

(01:27:44):
Bruce Kazerski is going to be the special guest and
congrats mister Bengal himself, Dave Lapham and Leap and Lamar
Parrish will be inducted into the Bengals Spring of Honor
on Sunday.

Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
Oh deserve a Rock breakdown the Sunday game because of
Flaco Placo.

Speaker 11 (01:28:00):
Wait, well, hold on, you guys won the first five
games and you've lost the last four straight, including last
week the Indian Hill forty eight to six.

Speaker 3 (01:28:09):
Is that?

Speaker 1 (01:28:09):
How's that possible? You're changing the subject to continue what
I what I'm seeing here. The park will arise again.
I'm not saying when, but the park will rich the record.
Now Rock five and four five and four?

Speaker 2 (01:28:20):
Are they going to make the playoffs?

Speaker 11 (01:28:21):
Guys hit that transfer portal that oversees transfer portal? Yea,
they are so fond of hitting.

Speaker 2 (01:28:26):
No have the have the They're not.

Speaker 8 (01:28:28):
Nobody has talked come to the house, and I'm from
Alabama to talk to the Rocks. They about the ni
hell and great since coming to high school. Focused on
that breakdown.

Speaker 1 (01:28:38):
Sunday afternoon at one o'clock, got the Jets j E
T s against the Bengals with a refurbished quarterback position
who's playing great. Well, Burrow los his job if Flacco
keeps playing like this. No, but I can sense that
you're wanting that to happen.

Speaker 5 (01:28:52):
Yes, I can sense.

Speaker 8 (01:28:53):
I want to start dating trying to get to Burrow
the backup, and he wants a trade.

Speaker 1 (01:28:57):
I want Burrow to start dating Georgia.

Speaker 11 (01:28:59):
They discussing what what if it's December and and Flaccos
let him to like, that's my.

Speaker 1 (01:29:05):
Point, he better start dating Jordan Hudson. How about how
about Joe Burrow and Jordan Hudson? Does that make sense?
Would not help his problems at would that do mess
him up? You do know that Joe Dieters Cincinnati. Yeah,
I was here when nothing about the futures right now
we're Cincinnati. Was his nephew or something? His nephew He

(01:29:27):
this wedding, wedding, and there Jordan Hudson shows up. Belichick
was in California getting beaten by the Golden Bears, and
so Jordan Hudson asked Joe to get a picture taken
with Justice. Joe, Well, we'll see what happens, won't Well,
you know what's gonna happen, And I said, Joe, you
gotta if that if that was me, if that was me,
oh my god, you miltown.

Speaker 2 (01:29:49):
You would, you would, the internet would go away.

Speaker 1 (01:29:53):
But but Joe left early. But it was like nephew
or something. How do you leave Jordan Hudson at the Older?
And the hots for Marcia? Who is that? Somebody who's
Joe deaders got the hots for Marcia? She works there,
She's a She's a dignified woman. What hell was Joe
talking about? I would expect prosecutors to act like prosecutors.

(01:30:16):
It's a good cutch from him. Where's the act? Get
him back? Speaking of that, Marcus Freeman is going to
be the next coach Florida? Is that correct? No, that's
not that's what I heard. What about L s U?

Speaker 2 (01:30:30):
What about him?

Speaker 11 (01:30:31):
Brian Kelly's going to be kicked out soon? You don't
think that Bandy loss is going to help him?

Speaker 3 (01:30:36):
Not?

Speaker 1 (01:30:36):
No, L s U losing at Vanderbilt by the way,
they're pretty good. No, Vandy's real. I had him this year.
I had him a couple of weeks ago. No, I'm not.

Speaker 11 (01:30:46):
If you look at their roster and how it's instructor
that head coach they got. Clark Lee is the real deal.
Coach at Notre Dame.

Speaker 1 (01:30:52):
For two years, a couple of years, good quarterback, Diego Pavia.

Speaker 2 (01:30:57):
It used to be the dorm out of the SEC.

Speaker 11 (01:30:59):
Now understatement, it's like he literally did the impossible at
vander literally literally did the impossible. Now the question is
does he try to take some bigger jobs he goes,
but he's a Vanderbilt grad.

Speaker 1 (01:31:13):
That's another issue, Park and I want to revitalize.

Speaker 3 (01:31:18):
He would leave it.

Speaker 1 (01:31:18):
He would leave that gig for Notre Dame for sure.
When because he coach, you could, Yeah, well, what's Freeman's
next gig? He'll be out of there soon. Why they're rolling,
for God's sakes, killing everybody? How many games they lost?

Speaker 2 (01:31:33):
Two games making up for lost time?

Speaker 11 (01:31:34):
Brockert, Yeah, last week beat him like a drum and
we had two running backs go over two hundred yards.

Speaker 1 (01:31:41):
Love and Price. I liked love. I've always enjoyed love.
Love was good. Where's love from? How much you're pain
for him? Talk about Nil? Talk about deer Park, what
about Notre Dame? And saying next perfectly you want to
talk about what about you know?

Speaker 11 (01:31:55):
I mean because apparently an i L is paying high
school athletes is legal at least time.

Speaker 1 (01:32:00):
We talk to Harry Yangey and others. We're gonna see
what we can do. Got to revitalize the program. You
know what I'm saying. Here, we go talk to Mike Lane,
other rich people. Hey, your park needs some help. N
I OL money, let's go.

Speaker 5 (01:32:14):
So you're gonna the.

Speaker 1 (01:32:14):
Forefront of that.

Speaker 8 (01:32:15):
So some of these some of these school district are
gonna have tax levies on the on the ballot and
nil on the ballot.

Speaker 1 (01:32:24):
So you picked what amazing as people will probably vote
for that.

Speaker 2 (01:32:27):
Probably right, yep.

Speaker 11 (01:32:30):
Players, we were in Lakota and you already got Tom
Bolden as a coach, and you're like, okay, yeah, pay
seven dollars a year times how many residents they have.

Speaker 2 (01:32:40):
Let's go.

Speaker 1 (01:32:41):
But I just guarante turned down to tax levy. We
don't want any buses, no no, no, no football, no libraries.
I'm done with all that. But paying the athletes.

Speaker 2 (01:32:53):
Let's go.

Speaker 1 (01:32:53):
It's on the big show this afternoon at the game.

Speaker 11 (01:32:56):
We got Richard Skinner, We've got making John Matteris at
fifty at four o'clock. Don't miss this one. We got
a man by the name of Mark Elfinbine. He is
a gambling expert and break it all down.

Speaker 1 (01:33:09):
Yeah, and the mob's involved. You don't pay, they'll break
your legs. I'm not breaking it down, they'll break your legs. Yes,
how do you get involved with the mob? I thought
the Five Families? Is that still a thing?

Speaker 11 (01:33:20):
I would have I would have said the thing I
thought it was, you know something that was in the
seventies early eighties, And.

Speaker 1 (01:33:26):
I guess it's a thing. You can make seven million
dollars net. There's still a lot of money in gambling
and drugs, so they're involved. So it's girls and getting high.
That's it. That's missed. The gambling. The whole of the
GE's in life. Golf, grins, gambling, girls, the four.

Speaker 2 (01:33:43):
Jees of life. Right there, I got a couple more.

Speaker 1 (01:33:47):
Say get me out of the Stooge report, please, we
have nothing but issues, and then we'll see what happens.
But be going back here my double wide. Well I'm
playing golf. It's eighty seven degrees. Why didn't you stay
for the whole weekend? He came back on Fridays. A
lot of people thought you were nuts about going leaving
Thursday and coming back Thursday.

Speaker 2 (01:34:03):
They thought you'd be back on Monday.

Speaker 1 (01:34:05):
My double wide needed attention. And secondly, the People's Judge
had a bunch of meetings on Wednesday and come Thursday,
she was saying, let's go back, and I said, okay,
I like what I If I worked, I wouldn't be here.

Speaker 2 (01:34:18):
We know who runs a household there?

Speaker 1 (01:34:21):
Say that again, if I worked, I wouldn't be here.

Speaker 3 (01:34:23):
What is that?

Speaker 1 (01:34:23):
I enjoy what I do. It doesn't work, I said, sake, yeah,
give me out the Stude's report.

Speaker 2 (01:34:31):
Please, Will everybody have a good weekend? Who day? Who day?
We leave you sit here.

Speaker 1 (01:34:36):
On Monday, bear Cats win, Bengals win FC you'll win,
and Deer Park beats Wyoming.

Speaker 2 (01:34:44):
We leave you with the immortal words of the Stooge Report.

Speaker 3 (01:34:49):
The Highway patrol story next week is a very unusual one.

Speaker 2 (01:34:52):
We hope you'll be with us until then. Remember the
clowns at the circus are real funny. Put on the
highway the murder. This is Roderick Crawford saying, so.

Speaker 1 (01:35:03):
You next week, all you illegals in California. About that
on news radio seven hundred WLW

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