Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well, well, well we've made it to the weekend. We
survived the snow. We're living through the cold. And Joe
Waddell's producing says he's kind of used to the cold.
He didn't like it for a to leave, but he
he's gonna navigate it. I think that's what we're gonna do.
How you doing, a's sterling hanging out five point three
seven four nine, seven, eight hundred, the Big One. A
lot of ground to cover Tonight. Later on, Kevin Carr,
(00:21):
fat guys at the Movies and the Silver get go
on substat gonna join us after your nine thirty report.
We'll get an update on what's going on around planet
Earth and here the tri state of course with news,
and then he'll give us an idea of what's so
cool to see the movies that we're gonna venture out
into the cold. And I have to say, I don't
think Joe Waddell's alone. I don't think a lot of us.
(00:42):
I think are getting acclimated, are getting used to, or
at least finding a way to just deal with this evil, bitter,
uncomfortable cold. I realize it's the January thirtieth. I know
that you know February is two days away. But I
am again. No one asked me about the cold. It
is what happens occasionally here. What I want to know
(01:05):
is this, are you acclimated? Could you get through this?
I mean, is this like a chilling you to your bones,
rattling you to your emotional foundation? Are you physically unable
to cope and navigate this? I mentioned last week with
all the snow and the ongoing issues in the Twin
Cities and around Minneapolis. Saint Paul, excuse me. When I
(01:28):
had gone there for some work stuff a couple of
years ago, number of years ago now, it was in
the dead of winter, and they opened the door of
the aircraft and the life was like sucked out of you.
It was so cold. It was around zero. Not too
much better than where we are right now, but or worse,
(01:49):
I should say, I mean right now we're at fourteen.
I think it was. I'm trying to remember when I
got the rental car. It was zero ish to blow
and the girl I was with at the time, as
we were trying to figure out if we were going
to make a move or otherwise, she was like, there's
no way in hell move into this and then some
expletives about the cold. Uh five point three seven four nine,
(02:11):
the Big One talk back the iHeartRadio app if you're streaming,
unless it's July, at which point I can't help you,
but you can certainly leave a message by clicking on
the microphone. I'm also on ex at Sterling Radio if
you're on that particular platform, and socials and so forth.
I want to know, though, what's the coldest you've ever been?
And is this a big deal for you or not
a big deal for you. My neighbor is special. Let's
(02:36):
just say. He tells me that when he was in
the service, and I can't remember exactly which branch, which
is a shame on me for not recalling. I'll probably
hear about this that he had been stationed someplace up
in and around Alaska. May have been Air Force, I
don't know. And he said that you got so accustomed
(02:57):
to it, other than the darkness, which is where his
head was, and I totally grasped this. He said he
couldn't get used to the swings of long term dark
and then light, even when he spent in his particular
time at his hitch navigating it. But he said the
cold is something that somehow, after a short period of time,
(03:18):
you get used to and I have to say, I
don't buy it. I thought I could for a couple
of days this week, I'm out with the dog. I'm
trying to run errands. I'm still digging out of the
snow like a lot of people. I mean, I was
here all last weekend and with the help of a
whole lot of people, which I'm not even sure. I'm
(03:41):
pretty sure, I think to everybody as we were trying
to navigate all the big snow and fern in the
big storm, and still a lot of a mess out there,
and the cold is going to make it stay and
stick around for quite a while. But I mean, we
had to Jennifer Ketchfork from Channel nine. We had Gary
Sullivan on talking about keeping your pipes from freezing at
the house and other stuff to keep that stuff running.
We had a Kathleen Fuller from ODAD all over the
(04:04):
place keeping us tight and comfortable with the situation as
best as possible. I'm just curious, one, if you navigated
the cold, are you used to it? Could you get
used to it? Could this be your everyday way of life?
I after a couple of days I felt like I
was okay with it, but now a couple of days
more of it, because it's been this entire week. I
(04:28):
hate it. It's the only thing I can tell you.
I am eagerly awaiting spring. And I realized this cold
won't last forever. But for some reason, it just down
to my bones and down to my core, and I
was out so much. I left here at the beginning
of the week and let me get Chip here real quick,
and then I'll tell you about my ordeal leaving Monday
(04:50):
after staying through the weekend basically here only it was
with me and Dank Carroll, and I think Ken was
doing a lot of people in news all over the
course and producers as well well. I mean, it was ridiculous,
Dannic Lison and me and a bunch of us and
it was just a wicked bat Mont for heights. Chip,
how are you were, sterling on the big one? Are
(05:11):
you living the life of life with this cold? Are
you good with it and acclimated or are you against it?
Speaker 2 (05:17):
Hey? Brother? I think what they say is living the
dream and surviving the nightmare, you know, true?
Speaker 1 (05:25):
I guess the dream is living and the nightmare is
getting through the cold.
Speaker 2 (05:29):
Well, I mean, I'll take living versus.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
Time, so you know, yeah, I've only done the living
part as far as I know. So yeah, I'm not
really quite real to go yet. Ship, that is for sure.
Speaker 2 (05:41):
Well that's that's a story for another time for me.
But hey, listen, So you say, you know, coldest you
ever been. I'll tell you what, Man, A couple of
years back might have been one of the first time
Bingles went to the playoffs. Several years Man, they played
in one of the coldest games, I promise you back then,
(06:04):
and man, there is nothing we could do to get warm.
We are staying in cardboard boxes. We stand on top
of each other, you know. There there's just absolutely nothing
you could do to stay warm. And I'll tell you
you know, uh but you know, not colder than you
(06:25):
know that just being cold.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Yeah, it's true. And you're in the stand on the
concrete unless you've got that, you know, a little bit
of insulation like that cardboard ship. You're absolutely right. I
appreciate the cold and it will down to your core,
it will rattle you. And I know Lance has talked
about this, and he actually was there. I don't know
if his face was painted in the whole deal. But
I know he was there for the so called Freezer
Bowl Bengals, you know, when they beat the San Diego's
(06:47):
Chargers when they were still in south southern California below
La and it was a chance for the Bengals to
move on to, you know, the promised land of a
Super Bowl. And Lance talks very vividly about how cold
he was and navigating that too. What's the coldest that
you've ever been? I'll tell you. I left here Monday,
(07:10):
and the guy who was supposed to take care of
a driveway walk and everything was behind had not gotten
to my place. I thought this stay in here. I
might have gotten lucky and I wouldn't have to deal
with it. But there was no one else that had
cleared like the front of their houses. All the trucks
(07:31):
pushing snow out of the way. It was unbelievable. I
had six to eight feet of snow over twelve inches
high and piled up even more as the big plow
truck had left it in front of the driveway. And
I know everybody's navigated. This is my first chance to
sort of complain about it. So and I grasped that
we'd had a water main break a couple of days earlier,
(07:51):
which was great down the road, so I don't know
if they were being tepid as far as when they
dropped that blade to get it through, to not tear
up whatever they had. Somehow in the midst of the
snow comes gotten the leak fixed apparently, but obviously there's
still a bit of construction and roadwork there that needs
to be done. But the snow came, so that might
(08:12):
have been why they weren't getting all that much closer.
But it was a lot of time to get that
cleaned up, and the best of all, so my buddy
couldn't come do the work to clear stuff while I
was out my cousin's kid, who's I guess technically my
second cousin. I'm getting way in the weeds here.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
I know.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
I'm sorry. He was gonna come by, but then I
called because I'm like, well, I'm on the way, don't
worry about it. I think we're set. So he didn't come,
I figured, and he wasn't gonna take my money. I'm like,
I'll pay you, and you're like, oh no, and so
he's not coming. I get there, I can't get it.
I'm driving around the neighborhood trying to find an open
driveway or anywhere I can park other than the middle
(08:49):
of the road so I can at least get into
the garage to get out the implements to get the
snow out of the way, and then after and this
is embarrassing, but I'll admit it after talking to Gary
Sullivan on the air over the weekend about the snow
thrower and the gas stabilizer, And it worked a couple
of weeks ago when we had the other snow and
(09:10):
it was a small snow, but I went out there
and just messed around with it, filled it back up,
seemed fine, And maybe I don't know if I didn't
put the more stabilizer in or what I thought I
had it in the fuel all together, and I fought
with that thing for the better part of an hour,
and I'm like, the hell with that. So I go
out and I'm shoveling and shoveling and shoveling, and I
finally get into the driveway or whatever, and then I
got more to do, and it's just ridiculous. And now
(09:33):
it will melt, probably by opening day, don't you know
I can whine and I can cry. Joe Waddell is
like enough already with this, and I get that. I'm
just wondering coldest you've been. Are you completely dug out?
I know a lot of people still navigating that as
kids have gone back to school. Depending on where we are,
and then obviously in older neighborhoods, streets are smaller people
(09:55):
parking on streets trying to get people into their driveways
or somewhere else so they can clear it's and enjoy
five one, three, seven, eight hundred. The Big One your
chance to get interactive. Uh, let's get to Richard and
Danery or yeah, dicking Dayton. How are you with Sterling
on the Big One's been a while.
Speaker 4 (10:10):
Ster Hey, I'm never I tell you, Sterling, it's this.
I can remember it lows almost twenty years ago, about
four months after my dad died and I looked outside.
I never did the car my car had. It was
so high, Sterley, you could not do anything. So the
(10:30):
snow clouds came down to help me. But this here
is where I'm working. Cars are still in this lot. Sterling.
Soul frows up that snow dress over over by the
mall uh where probably at least get those roads anybody
travel It was at least the dress was ten feet
(10:51):
you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Yeah, you're not seen them. You never gonna that's good
to climb and have fun and if you're a kid
or something, but yeah, it's not a it's going to
be there till spring.
Speaker 4 (11:00):
Yeh. Yeah, but you know stealing. That's the most I've
ever seen since like December. But I know I just
used to not make it to work. It was just
especially the driveway I had there. But you know, it's
too boring because nobody's I know, everybody person know. All
the cars are still in the driveways. They were just
all were just chipping in. I was helping all day.
(11:23):
But you know where you come in there from the mall.
They've got places, but the cars are just froze over
with snow, you know what I mean?
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Oh, I do know they're gonna be hating that for
a while. Dick, I always good to talk to me,
and thank you. I hope that you get through this
without too much pain and too much suffering. And then
the other thing and the runky guys and whoever else
is been taking trash. The last couple of days and
it was like a day off of delay, and they
were there at the crack of dawn, might have been
(11:52):
before sun up. They got the recyclables, they got the
other which was tremendous, and that's just got to be
a nightmare trying to get out and navigate a lot
of those streets and everything with that. So we appreciate that,
and I know they'll be doing some work tomorrow to
go along with that as well. So I've went three seven,
four ninety seven, eight hundred, the big one. Your chance
to get interactive. Kevin Carr going to join me on
(12:13):
the other side. You're ninth theiry to report talking movie stuff,
maybe some streaming as well. Since a lot of people
it might be a little cold to go out, although
a whole lot of people out and about is a
lot of people getting food, having a good time. I see.
That's my point about the acclamation. At some point you go,
you know what, I got to get out of the house.
Enough of this, and then on you go and forward
it gets and so forth. It's not just you know,
(12:35):
people towing cars and moving snow out of the way.
Everybody else has to get out and live too, And
it's been a week of this, and I am whining
and crying and complaining, and because I'm just good at
doing that very thing, I do suppose a lot of
stuff going on with that. Anyway, Here here's the other
thing to sort of get involved with. Good news. Apparently
(12:58):
not going to be a government shut down. Lawmakers have
figured out a way to sort of get their business handled,
so that can has been pushed or kicked down the
road a little bit further, and that will be, I
guess talked about in the months ahead. We'll see exactly
what this means when it comes to issues of homeland
security and all that funding and so forth, with the
(13:20):
changes up in the Twin Cities as they move ahead
and deal with some stuff as well. But at least
that's good news. The expectation was that it would be
like it has been I don't know how many times
last minute, which accounts for pretty close to that, and
then of course the shutdown that was related to other
things aside from just funding in general. What a couple
(13:42):
months and a half ago, give or take. It's just
all blur. Everything moving so fast it's ridiculous, but it
is what it is. Five three, seven, four eight, hundred,
the Big One, your chance to get interactive Friday night.
This is pretty wild. Joe Flacco is going to go
to his first Pro Bowl. He came in and sort
of carried the Bengals, got one win his time under center,
(14:05):
while Joe with the toe burrow was having the issues
that he happened to be having. He's forty one years old,
just turned that January sixteenth. He's an alternant on the
roster for the AFC, so you'll see him and t
Higgins and Jamar Chase no playoff action form, but at
least some Pro Bowl action. So good for them in that.
(14:25):
I'd rather see him playing in the Super Bowl or
AFC Championship. That's just me. But good for Joe Flacco
to get that. We'll see if he ends up coming
back as a backup situation here, if he goes somewhere else.
Higgins Chase, I mean that's a no brainer. Don't get
much better than that. I mean, they are the elite
of the elite. Let's get one or two more calls
here or if we can. Before the break, Mark, you
(14:47):
was sterling on the Big One. What's going on?
Speaker 2 (14:51):
Me?
Speaker 1 (14:51):
It's you? It's me too. Mark what's going on? You're
on the big one, sterling.
Speaker 5 (14:55):
I'm an older guy. I'm an older guy. You were
talking about weather. Yeah, nineteen sixty eight Thanksgiving Day, and
I don't remember the dates, but we got the upstate
New York allmans. We got twenty well they called it
twenty four of because actually about twenty seven inches of snow.
Speaker 1 (15:12):
See that's Thanksgiving Day. There should be a lung open.
Speaker 4 (15:16):
Oh well, you know what.
Speaker 5 (15:17):
Here's the thing. But my buddy and I walked through
the snow independently, because you know, you so any call
each other by the phone. But we went outside independently,
and we walked each other. We met this place till
the ladder, and then we turned around and walked back home.
Three days later, they were still not back at work
(15:38):
untill the ladder, making more than the letters because the
snow was so impactful on Thanksgiving Day that absolutely nobody
was working.
Speaker 1 (15:48):
Where in New York are you talking about? What party
of the state of New York? There you go, Yeah,
and that's where you guys are supposed to be used
to the snow.
Speaker 5 (15:58):
Well, I'll tell you what. My mother most of my
childhood until I got literally into my later seventy years,
our later teens. It was impactful every single year. Then
it just became more rain and rain and rain and
cloudy and cold.
Speaker 1 (16:14):
There you go.
Speaker 5 (16:15):
So we got ice, but we didn't get ice all
the time. It was just very oh the environment for
three to five years. And now I'm living in Cincinnati
and I see these guys getting the same stuff that
I grew up with.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
Yeah, that's it. And if you all you have to
do here, unlike you know in New York, Mark is
just say snow and then chaos or RUPs. Appreciate the
call man your ninth thirdy report straight away, a guy
who knows from cold, who knows from snow, and most
importantly knows from movies. We'll get into a silver gecko
on the sub stack. That is in my man, Kevin
Carr on the other side of news straight away, your
nine thirty report was Sterling on seven hundred WLW. The
(16:52):
weekend is here. It's a Friday night Snling seven hundred WLW,
Kevin Carr, silver gacko on the sub stack. US fat
guy's the movies as well. The Stirling seven hundred WLW. Kevin,
how are you house everything? Have you absorbed the cold
or have you become acclimated to the frozen tundra this
part of the world, in this wonderful time of January.
Speaker 6 (17:15):
Oh yeah, No, I actually I wear shorts year round.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
I know you do.
Speaker 6 (17:21):
I was out today, I had shorts on, and uh,
it's almost I'm like, hey, my legs aren't cold, right exactly?
You know, the head and the chestual area, that's where
you lose the most teeth.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Sure, the chester area is yeah, because you got your heart,
your lungs, that's all fairly important. And then your head
is where Mom told us all as kids that that's
where you lose your heat, which none of us believed.
But I do. Yeah, I love.
Speaker 6 (17:47):
Well, especially you, and I go for the the the
the parampt of baldness. Yes, and and it'll yeah when
the wind hits. But you know, here's the thing. I
also just go from my car to the bank, hard
to a restaurant, my car to home. I don't really
I'm not outside that right.
Speaker 1 (18:06):
If you're out there moving snow or walking the dog
rather than letting dogs out or just doing what you're saying,
then that's a whole other story. I got you. But
I mean, you know, I just hate the cold. I'm
against it.
Speaker 6 (18:18):
I'm I love the cold. But I was wrong. I
will say this, and I when I'm wrong, I will
fess up to it. When we talked last week, Yes,
I said this, that it was going to be a
big nothing burger. Yes I was wrong.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
Yes, that's good. I wasn't going to hammer you for it,
but I was going to mention it. So that's good. Yeah,
you were wrong by about fourteen inches around My place
drifts more than that. But it's great. Everything's just fun.
Yeah that that that doesn't sounded bad, didn't Wow? Okay, Yeah,
all right, let's move on, shall we?
Speaker 5 (18:54):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Let's where do you want to start? Because I know
you saw the state of the movie and you you
know what, you're limited. You got to pick one movie.
I guess that was the one you picked. Let's start there.
Then we lost the fantastic Katherine O'Hara. We didn't really
lose your she passed away, which is just devastating. Start
wherever you want to start?
Speaker 6 (19:11):
Well, let's just start Katherine O'Hara. I mean, she was
she she was brilliant, the original Second City, and you
know she did all the great comedies with Christopher Guest,
you know, stuff like waiting for Guffman and show. I
mean she was and you know, she just did a
Super Bowl commercial last year. You know, we got a
super Bowl coming up this year. Didn't she and Willing
(19:32):
Dafoe do that that Michelobultra, I didn't. They were betting
on it.
Speaker 1 (19:37):
I don't remember what she was in, but I know
that she was in an ad that was like a
you know, my profile by.
Speaker 6 (19:42):
So yeah, and she was in she was in Beetlejuice,
Beetlejuice relatively recently. So yeah, that's really sad. I mean
it's it was unexpected, you know, it's it's always and
she was because she was actively working. I know she
had had at an illness, but you don't expect that,
like if it's some who's like when when Gene Hackman
passed away as sad as that was, he had taken
(20:04):
himself out of acting for so long that you didn't
even realize he was still around because he didn't have
a public persona from that. And you know, David Hedison
was somebody who nobody remembers he was. He was in
the original to Fly. He played Felix Lighter in a
couple James Bond movies. He was well into his nineties
when he passed away, and it kind of surprised me
(20:25):
because he hadn't heard from him in a while. But
but yeah, Catherine O'Hara, that that kind of came as
a shock.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
Yeah, I mean, shit's Creek in a Beatle Juice, the
Home Alone movies, SCTV. But I mean, all these things,
and she just seemed like just the sweetest, coolest lady.
I mean, I realized she's was an actor, so that
I mean, that's kind of the gig she had if
they were just characters. But I mean, she just I
don't know if you can necessarily silly, very very good
(20:51):
at hiding that. She just seemed like a cool mom
is what she kind of reminded me of always. So
it's a bummer. Now you mentioned Bond stuff and you
see Chris a message. Let me let me read it verbatim.
And I'm not going to cap on him, but he
was kind of he says, hey, Sterling, I know your movie.
Dude doesn't take questions on air. I heard the entire
James Bond series is going to be on Netflix for
(21:13):
a limited time. Ask him if it's true or fake news.
Speaker 6 (21:17):
I haven't well, let's put this way, I haven't gugged
deep enough to like be like, oh it with some
weird posts. But I've heard that too. And the reason
I find that odd is because Amazon owns yeah, James
Bond franchise. But it's a great way to get more
people with their eyes on it if they're certainly going
(21:39):
to be rebooting it, which they're they're looking to, and
it wouldn't be a bad idea to do that and
get it seen by more people because what's happening with
streaming is what I you know, tip of my hat
to myself, I predicted this a while back. People would
consolidate into their own services, so not everybody has Amazon
Prime right, which I believe they're on now, and a
(22:01):
lot of people have Netflix, so that gets more eyes
on it, and Netflix will pay Amazon for the rights
to it. So it's kind of a win win for
that from a business dealing sort of thing, because there
used to be everything. Everything was just one service and
you couldn't get it elsewhere, but it's sort of diversified.
It's been put on other places now.
Speaker 1 (22:21):
Talking to Kevin Carr, by the way, is Silver Gecko
on Substack Sterling on the Big One talking about this
James Bond stuff, and it is interesting, and it does
say that all twenty five films, that's a lot. It's
hard for me to process that that's the case. But
I guess twenty five is what it is. And do
we know what kind of money because there is a
lot of that stuff that moves from one service to another.
(22:43):
Some big franchises. I don't know how many. You're bigger
than the Bond films, honestly, but I mean it is
like you said, it's a nice feeder from one service
to another and you make money while bringing more people
into under your tent or umbrella too.
Speaker 6 (22:56):
Yeah, well you can get licensing fees or somehow. Some
times it ends up weird, like Yellowstone. Yellowstone is a
Paramount show, but they licensed Yellowstone the original series to Peacock,
and so Peacock it was what was carrying Yellowstone, But
then all the other ancillary programs is on Paramount Plus
(23:21):
now like's if it's a series. A lot of times
they try to consolidate it and keep it so you
watch it on their service until it gets old enough,
and then they'll kind of cycle it out or if
it's already old. Like I don't know how much. Netflix
pays an exorbitant amount of money for the to be
able to string Seinfeld. So they because that's the popular show,
(23:44):
people will rewatch and that sort of thing. But I
don't think they put on stuff like the Office or
parks and rec That stuff is kept on the NBC.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
The Peacock property, Yeah, which I get that too, some
of that moved around. That's crazy that show, the Seinfeld
was on it. We discussed this before. It's bewildering to me.
So for nine years that was on, it has been
streaming longer than it was on. It continues to be
incredibly popular, and it is a show about nothing that
somehow relates to everything coat it is.
Speaker 6 (24:16):
Well, I mean, it is a show about nothing, but
but it's really your basic three friend show. I mean,
each episode was certainly about something. And what's really funny
is I talk every Christmas about the Festivus episode that's right,
which which isn't named about Festivus. Nobody remembers that the
the episode was about. It was about like there was
a bagel store something that was striking or or or
(24:39):
somebody was striking and Kramer owned a bagel store or
or had a free I had had a stake in it,
and it was called the strike, so it was like
somebody was striking this. But then it had that subplot
with Festivus, which is now what everybody remembers it for.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Yeah, it's an amazing thing and good for them for
doing that. So, uh, I just I like something to
last that long. But then I guess everybody does, right,
I mean, I mean, how many people have something that
they put together that somehow stands the test of time,
because as Dave is as, it may be like some
of the clothes and some of the stuff, but it's
still just three freaky weird or for whatever you know,
(25:15):
ensemble cast a weirdos hanging out that somehow just fits
and works.
Speaker 6 (25:19):
Well and no one needs to work again with just
the royalties. I mean, and it was interesting to watch
where they went. I mean, you know, Michael Richards decided
to torpedo his career, but he's going to be financially fine. Yeah,
and you know George Casanza, that's that. That was Jason Alexander.
He he continued doing other things. I mean, Julie Louis
(25:40):
Dreyfus kept it. She did movies. I think she did Deep.
Deep was after she did Seinfeld New Adventures of Old Christine.
She's had about three or four recognizable shows, and she's
already famously wealthyen without the Hollywood stuff. But yeah, Larry
David is just like, I'm going to do something, and Elise,
(26:00):
I'm going to do a show. Oh they're going to
keep showing my show on HBO. Great, I'll just collect
more money. And then Seinfeld kind of didn't you know,
and he occasionally come out of his hobbit hole.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
He does some stained stand up. He quit for a
while and did it all that, you know, all the
old stuff, and then threw it away, which nobody does.
That's just crazy. And then he still comes around. I mean,
what else are you gonna do? Though? I mean, aside
from the amount of money, if you're passionate and love
something that you do, which is a blessing in itself,
why wouldn't you just keep doing what you do whenever
(26:37):
you want to do it?
Speaker 6 (26:38):
Well, that's why I always tell people when they when
they want to figure out what they're doing, you say,
imagine you won the lottery, the big, the big jackpoty,
you know, the eight hundred million dollars and not some
paltry one or two million times huge jackpot that you
are not going to have to work over again in
your life. And as long as you don't blow it
on you know, drugs and prostitutes, you're gonna be fine.
Speaker 1 (27:00):
But nice weekend though.
Speaker 6 (27:03):
After you get it all out of your system. What
do you do when you wake up in the morning
and then you make that your your job?
Speaker 1 (27:09):
Right? Yeah, that's it's a good way to put it.
Speaking of a guy who just keeps working. And how
old is Jason Statham? Now, it seems like that guy's
been making movies since we were kids, and I know
that's not possible.
Speaker 6 (27:22):
Well, his close, I mean close is well not that close.
But his first one that really kind of anyone knew
him from was Lockstock and Two Smoking Barrels Guy Ritchie movie.
I believe that was around the turn of the century.
It was like maybe ninety eight something like that. So,
I mean, we weren't kids in but he's been around
(27:45):
for a while. He's got to be. I don't have
his I was going to fifty eight. Yeah, he's pushing sixty,
but I would love to know because he still dies
his here, no matter how short it is, because his
signature is like of a five o'clock shadow. Everywhere that's correct,
it's still dyed, you know. I mean at it's a
(28:06):
certain points, some like like in this movie he's got
a little bit of it's got some salt in the
pepper on the cheeks. Yeah, but I'm not dying.
Speaker 1 (28:16):
Do you think that's I mean, he's producing some of
these or has a hand in it. I don't know
if that's my title in just an extra revenue stroom
or if he's actually doing it. But I mean, do
you think they go, dude, you've you've got to at
least dye the hair on your head or just why
not shave it and leave it just as it is?
It worked obviously for Bruce Willis.
Speaker 6 (28:34):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, well yeah, there works for and
Statum's done him where he's kind of pretty much shaved
on the top. But yeah, he he he has different
later you know, lengths of stubble.
Speaker 7 (28:46):
You know what's weird.
Speaker 6 (28:47):
I guess what you would describe him. He would look
strange with the full had of hair, though, wouldn't he?
Speaker 1 (28:53):
Yeah, I have no idea I don't even know what
the dude that would look like that way, And it
seems really weird that we're discussing his like facial and
dome grooming at this point rather than the actual movie.
I'm a little uncomfortable and still bothered.
Speaker 6 (29:05):
Well, I still think he should like growing out, and
they like to do a Harper Marx level of or
Larry Fine from the Three Stooges, not that I would
love to see.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
Yeah, I pay you to see that on a big screen,
that's for sure. Now that this new thing is called
Shelter and it's got some people at Bill Nya'd liked
everything that guy's done. He's just tremendous. And Naomi Aki
is kind of cool too. I don't know if I
say their name right, who's in? What is this about?
Is this worth our time?
Speaker 6 (29:30):
Well, okay, so here's the thing. It's January, so we
got to have adjacent Statham action movie. That's just kind
of the rules. Now, it's how you get Yeah, I mean,
when you see we've you've seen. I can guarantee you
you've seen this movie. The different characters and names and locations,
but you've seen this movie. And if you like Jason
Statham action movies, and you kind of just they kind
(29:52):
of know their place. They're not trying to become a
big blockbuster, and they're not even trying to like compete
with the Fast and Fei movies, which he's in. But
you know, they're not trying to be They don't think
that this isn't gonna make a one hundred million dollars
even in the theaters. But they put them out there
and it's a nice little cottage industry, and and that's
basically what you got. He's he's a he's an ex
(30:14):
assassin for m I six and he's retired and he's
hiding out and he basically left and he's he's in
his old handler tracks him down and then they send
people after him, and he's got to defend himself and
a sort of an an orphan girl that that he
sort of picks up along the way because she needs
(30:35):
somebody to take care of him, and so you get
a little you get his action, and you get a
little bit of that sort of you know, gruff fatherly
figure type type thing. So he's you know, being trying
to protect her and get her safe and hence the
name shelter. But yeah, I mean that's what it is.
But you know, you could just re you roll the
(30:57):
dice and say, okay, he's an next CIA agent. He's
an uh you know, am I six agent. He's the
next Massad agent.
Speaker 1 (31:04):
You know, he that's what he's Take a movie, pick
a year that those are pretty much the things that
have happened too. That's funny. Why not?
Speaker 5 (31:12):
All right?
Speaker 6 (31:12):
So it's basically it's basically like Liam Neeson did.
Speaker 1 (31:15):
That's true. I mean how many of those. I mean
you're taken to it's still gone took again? Uh, don't
take me. I mean I don't know.
Speaker 6 (31:23):
But then there are others I think like uh, decent
got sold that he just he then had to drive
everywhere and then you know he played he played like
a ice flower or you know, with a snow.
Speaker 5 (31:39):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (31:41):
I mean it's seasonally correct right now. So I mean
why not. I mean, if you're gonna do battles out there,
having a blade on the front of your vehicle in
this weather might be good.
Speaker 6 (31:51):
I have a soul, I'll put one on mind, just
this massive one that you normally see on a giant
forward truck, right.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
I just imagine the ads they had with those when
they first came out, So that, yeah, that's funny. Is
all good out? Anything else this weekend worth watching? I
mean there's so much stuff. I mean we've discussed it,
whether it's streaming or otherwise, and I mean, you know,
it's just overwhelming.
Speaker 5 (32:12):
Yeah.
Speaker 6 (32:13):
No, I've heard a lot of good things about Scent Health,
which is the one with with the Dylan O'Brien, Yeah,
Rachel McAdams. Yeah, And and they're they're they're they're you know,
enemies at work that get trapped on a desert island
or something. I don't know, I'd be happy being trapped
on a desert island with Rachel mcgaddam's you.
Speaker 1 (32:32):
Know, yeah, of course, yeah.
Speaker 6 (32:35):
But you know it's it's I've heard a lot of
good things. Sam Raimy he knows how to make movies,
he he he did that great movie with her before
he did Red Eye. You ever see Red Eye with
Killian Murphy as the guy who's just next to on
a plane and he's he's a blackmailing her or or
extorting or something like that. But I've heard a lot
of good things about that, And I know you're gonna
(32:55):
get this this weekend, next week, there's a bunch of
little stuff that's come out. Uh, Like next week is
because Super Bowl, no one's gonna be going to the theaters.
But you got a couple of things coming out next week,
like the Dracula remake, and there's Kevin James is in something.
So there's a lot of smaller movies coming out this
weekend next and yeah, those are your choices.
Speaker 1 (33:16):
There you go. Should send me help or send help?
I might need help to but that's neither here nor there.
Speaker 6 (33:22):
Rachel McAdams.
Speaker 1 (33:23):
Yes, lease, I will take the call. You can find
Kevin Carr. He'll show up in your mailbox. There'll be
comics and all kinds of other stuff too for you
to produce. Silver Geck is on the substack. And yeah,
anything else before I let you bounce that I forgot.
Speaker 6 (33:37):
I think we're good. I'm not predicting whether this week.
Speaker 1 (33:40):
That's a good thing. Yeah, stick to what you're doing.
Stay in your lane, as they say, and I'll try
to maintain mine as well. Kevin, have a great weekend,
Well you later. That's mister carr is silver Geck on
the substack straight away. Ten o'clock report. Lots more to
do Nation Station where the Reds play. Why because HiT's
the home of the Reds. May not feel like spring,
but it won't be long. We are what is that,
(34:00):
February twenty seventh. I'll be on before spring Training Baseball
right here on seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati. Well, well, well,
here we are the weekend Friday Night Sterling seven hundred WLW.
Glad you're here. So for how long have people been
(34:21):
waiting for the release of documents about the Epstein files?
And I think it's supposed to be the last dump
of files or the latest release of files associated with
the investigation of Epstein and Maxwell are the only ones
(34:44):
who went away to do time for all of the
stuff associated with this. You know, I'm curious one has
this come out fast enough for you? Two? Do you
think it's fair and reasonable and rational? And it was
so many documents, I mean, it is astounding amount of
information that has been culmbed through, gathered and dealt with.
(35:08):
Some three million pages from the Department of Justices. Epstein
files were being released today according to the Deputy Attorney
General Todd Blanche And somehow they still did not redact
the personal information, names, etc. Of some of the victims
(35:32):
of Epstein and the predators that were taking advantage of
these young girls, sometimes even children when they were engaged
in violation and abuses by those that were a part
of this sex ring and sex trafficking stuff. It's bewildering
to me that something that is supposed to be for
the victim's benefit, something to you know, at least get
(35:56):
the information out there so there is at least some basis,
if not for retribution, for knowledge and perhaps understanding as
to what was going on and why so many people
of positions of power and authority have been protected for
the amount of time this has gone on. I mean long,
long time for some of these and it's pretty wild.
(36:21):
They apparently have some two thousand different videos. I don't
know how you even get through all that one hundred
and eighty thousand images associated with this as well. It's crazy. Epstein,
of course, died by suicide, as it's been reported. That's
the allegation a lot of conspiracy theorists about that, that
whole video thing and missing and so forth, going back
(36:44):
almost to twenty nineteen, while he was waiting for trial
and charges he had exploited sexually and abused some minor girls,
dozens of them, and as places in Florida that would
be Palm Beach in Manhattan and other places. He had
an island of his own as well, and using a
cash money of some sort and moving money around, laundering
(37:07):
money or whatever else. And some of the victims are
thought to have been as young as fourteen years old,
which is as a child. It's pretty bizarre. I'm just wondering,
if you've been waiting for these, have you been perusing them?
Is this something that matters? Is it going to make
any difference? My guess is that none of the people
in positions power and authority behind this, beyond who you
(37:28):
already or that I and we together collectively are aware of,
are really going to see much in the way of
any type of penalty or anything else, or they probably
already would have, or it's been handled so that there
will be no penalty to be paid, no retribution, no justice.
Let's call it, yeah justice for that matter. I'm just
taken back. There is no justice in the idea of
(37:52):
releasing all of this and exposing the victims. That is,
you have one job, How would that be possible? How
did they miss? That is that deliberate? Is that an oversight?
How do you have that kind of oversight with something
so important? Five one three seven eight hundred The Big One. Uh.
(38:13):
Maybe maybe this will solve all the problems. Maybe these
victims will will somehow be vindicated fully. Uh, because there
are still some people who some you know, want to
point the finger somehow with them or whatever else to
Wes Union and Steve was Sterling five one three seven
eight hundred The Big One, what do you think about this?
Are you satisfied? Are you checking these videos out or what?
(38:34):
Steve Sterling?
Speaker 3 (38:37):
I wish everybody would just put all this F scene
it stuff in a in.
Speaker 8 (38:44):
A private kind of situation and kind of leave it
away from the public.
Speaker 3 (38:49):
This is not the public's domain. Also, I'm really curious
how F scene guys in in custody and this Maxwell lady.
Is she better stay in custody. I'm telling you, if she.
Speaker 8 (39:11):
Were to get out, I think there would be a
lot of people wanting to make her go away.
Speaker 1 (39:18):
You mean others that were behind this, You mean that
we're victimizing these girls.
Speaker 8 (39:23):
It's a you know, she she's in a world of danger. Actually,
I don't know why she's not somehow disappeared by Now
she's the one who has all the names and numbers somewhere.
You know it now, I know it, ev seen. He's
(39:44):
just a typical dumb ass guy. He has to have
somebody behind him that knows what to do. She used
to ride on a submarine.
Speaker 1 (39:54):
You know, I would think that the lock up. I mean,
if in fact it wasn't a suicide. There's a lot
of people or you know, the idea that somebody got
rid of Epstein is the fact that somehow she ended
up in a more cushy, comfortable lock up situation that
what she was in previously is kind of odd to me.
Speaker 8 (40:12):
Well, I've bet intective custody, and that means you can't
touch anybody the ear where yellow suit can't touch anybody
in jail. If she were to get out of sudden,
like pardoned or something, it'd be her worst nightmare.
Speaker 1 (40:27):
Yeah, she'd be vulnerable. I mean, I don't know where
you hide. It's hard to hide in prison or jail too.
I mean, with people who have that type of resources
behind them and connected that way. It's pretty wild. But
you know, what's also true to this point, it seems,
is that she didn't rat a bunch of people out.
All that's documents and everything else. It doesn't seem that
they had enough on anybody to do anything actionable, or
(40:49):
they likely would have, especially the last year or so,
one would think, don't you or no, I.
Speaker 8 (40:55):
Really need to stop persecuting these people well, that have
already been persecuted. And I can't imagine one of these
ladies sitting at home just just with anxiety waiting for
her face to be released to the public. That would
be awful.
Speaker 1 (41:15):
Yeah, it would be. I mean, it really is victimizing
that these women, again in many cases, were children before. Steve,
I appreciate the comment. Go ahead, I'm sorry, go ahead.
Speaker 8 (41:23):
Wells, hey, take care guys.
Speaker 1 (41:25):
You too, okay, I mean, it'd be brief with it,
or at least cut you off before you were finished.
I'm just taken back by the sloppiness of it now
and I realized it's an enormous sum of data and
a ridiculous sum of documentation. Eighteen I'm sorry, one hundred
and eighty thousand images related to the Epstein case, somewhere
(41:46):
in the neighborhood of two thousand videos as well. In total,
six million documents, but because there was a child abuse
material victims rights obligations part of that. Not everything has
been made public, but they adhere to that concern in
that worry. Yet there has been not a full redacting
(42:08):
of all the victims, and now that some of them
are complaining about this or at least their representatives too,
seems sloppy for something that was supposed to be about
protecting the victim, something about doing something for the victim victims,
it seems bewilderingly sloppy and irresponsible and arguably maybe venturing
(42:32):
on the neighborhood of malpractice in some fashion to put
this out and then expose victims who were a part
of this horrible nightmare scenario five three seven, four nine, seven,
eight hundred The Big One. Your chance to get interactive.
But I'm curious what you think about the release and
if this is ever going to come to anything more
(42:53):
than we've seen, and my guess is probably not. I mean,
there's so much other stuff going on it's in the
news cycle is also just bewildering anyway, It's just so
quick and so much happening. It's it's exhausting. Five point
three seven four nine, seven eight hundred, the big one Max,
who gets interactive pretty regularly on Exax Stirling Radio. You
can follow along that way too. Excuse me, Max mentions
(43:16):
Haiti or wait to get it right, He says, Haitians,
He's spelled wrong. I'm sorry. I'm not capping on you,
but he did spell it wrong. Haitians in Springfield need
to leave. He says, Well, apparently that order is coming
uh with the expiration of their temporary protection UH, so
that it will be happening, and apparently Ice and all
those a part of whole land security with that will
(43:38):
apparently be making their way to uh the Springfield area,
which is north of Dayton and sort of headed towards Springfield,
sort of in between, closer to Dayton though, of course.
But you know, there are a lot of employers you've
heard of Mike Dwaine, the governor of Ohio talk about this.
You've talked and may be seen in some of the
news reports. Also. Some of these employers are concerned about
(43:59):
their employees. They're about to lose their well being as
well as their business. And a lot of people said tough,
these people need to go. And Max, I get what
you're saying. I mean and I don't know what the
hell they have to go back to in Haiti, but
they'll be forced to go someplace sooner than later unless
something else changes. But these businesses in the Springfield area,
(44:23):
as it's been reported, and many of them have come
out to talk about, have said on numerous occasions that
they weren't getting employees to apply. They couldn't get a
hireable population to come in and do the work that
these Haitians have done, which has helped continue to grow
their business and support the community. So now you're getting
(44:43):
rid of the people who came to work that were
contributing and paying taxes and getting ahead and not having
to be dealing with all the nightmare that is Haiti,
and they'll go away. So these businesses are going to
be I guess, in other words, probably going to be
some job openings if you want to move to Springfield,
if you're not already there. If you're in the Springfield area, look,
(45:06):
we're thirty eight states at night over the year, the
iHeartRadio app is effectively global. What I want to know
is this, if you're in the Miami Valley, if you're
in the Springfield area, and it doesn't matter from anywhere else.
How is it that you navigate a loss of this
type of a population of employees and workers and people
that are contributing and doing the right things in the
(45:27):
economy and in the community, and then as you see
them get the boot, which I think is kind of
poor honestly because of the circumstance from which they came
and what they've done to come here and do all
the right things. Seemingly it's going to be really bad
for the economy, And isn't this supposed to also help
with that? And if you couldn't get people to do
the work anyway, and you've got people that were needing
(45:50):
a place for shelter and security and they've come there
and helped, that's what you want, that's what you need.
So I think that's being lost. Five point three seven
four nine seven, eight hundred the big one. To know
what you think you're on a Friday, sterling, lou it's
your turn on seven HUNDREDU wlw hay lou hey.
Speaker 2 (46:08):
Man, how you doing?
Speaker 7 (46:09):
Was wanted to come in on the Epstein stuff? Yes, sir,
I don't think we're gonna see the light of it
manytime soon. Because Bill Clinton is definitely somebody of interest
on Epstein Island, and so is Trump. And you know
that you've seen all the pictures of the Trumps and
the Clinton's all chubb, chummy chummy back in the day,
(46:32):
in the nineties, in the early two thousands. They're friends
and it's one big party, and you and I aren't invited.
As long as Bill Clinton is alive. There's sort of
a code, I think among presidents that you don't turn
in the guy that's still alive, even though it might
have been a political enemy at one time. A sitting
(46:54):
president's not going to turn over and get behind pushing
that to get out and see the light of day
for all of us to read and all of its glorious,
disgusting detail. So I think there's a lot of covering
for the fact that Bill Clinton is still running now
when hey, when Clinton maybe passes away and Trumps out
(47:15):
of office, that's when I'm predicting we'll see some of
the truth.
Speaker 1 (47:19):
Well, you may be right. I don't know about the etiquette,
and certainly President Trump doesn't seem to care much about
in the way of etiquette it generally, so I guess
unless it's the I won't do you if you don't
do me kind of scenario as far as getting somebody
called out and then you may be onto something. But
if that's a lot of assumption, I don't like to
(47:40):
do that. Benny Hill taught me when I was a
kid watching those reruns on Channel nineteen. You make an
ass of you and me if you assume, but you
may be right. It's you know the thing about this also,
they've taken the time to go through these supposedly, how
do you not redact the information about the victims in full?
(48:01):
That's tricky.
Speaker 7 (48:02):
I mean, yeah, that's you've got the Protection of Victims
all throwing its weight around and adding a big monkey
ranch into the release. It's it's something that requires real
expertise and nuanced And I don't think that Trump is
going to out Clinton because Trump is culpable as well.
Speaker 1 (48:27):
Now let's just be honest, that might be Lou. I
appreciate the call, and in the midst of that dump
of information, I just aside from culpability for anybody who
we may be aware of is a big name who
could be a predator in this situation. You know, who
is a customer or a client or a party or
what I mean I don't know what you call it,
(48:48):
but it sounds like a really creepy, uncomfortable, inappropriate circumstance.
But having victims. All this information that's been released is
about the investmentstigation, right, that was associated with going after
people who were victimizing young children and young women mostly right,
(49:10):
if not all minors, certainly not much above that. So
under the guise of protecting them, you release documents that
then expose them, which is sloppy ass work, is all
I'm saying. And if you can't get that proofed and handled,
how detail oriented incorrect is everything else associated with this too?
(49:32):
I'd like to know oopsy on the victim, but somehow
the predator never sees exposure. How does that happen? It's
something else. Straight away, we will give you a look
at your ten thirdy report, Brady Hopkins will let you
know about the ongoing ridiculous issue of cold and water
main brakes and all the other stuff that goes along
(49:54):
with that. A whole lot of basketball being played tonight
will get you some scores as well. NKU was in action.
Let's see in Wright State was playing, you sees doing
some stuff as well, So we'll see how that plays out.
I know at this point I've got the final for
NKU The Norse Fall ninety to seventy seven to Detroit
(50:16):
Mercy at Callahan Hall in Detroit. They'll play again on
Sunday in that same part of the country. Of course
they stay close on these trips. They'll tip off three
o'clock against Oakland and try to bounce back. I'll give
you updates on some other scores news straight away, and
on the other side, a lot more ground to cover
on a Friday Sterling seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 9 (50:40):
Some scientists believe early Man began speaking between fifty thousand
and two million years ago to teach each other how
to make stone tools.
Speaker 1 (50:49):
Thud zud what wrong me?
Speaker 9 (50:51):
No, can't get bloodnuts off card tire with hand here
whoo dry my impact drivers.
Speaker 1 (50:57):
Ah zud zug.
Speaker 9 (50:58):
Lucky to have friends like you, and thanks to our
Paleolithic predecessors, we have the Eddie and Rocky Show. They
want to hear what you have to say Eddie and
Rocky NDI after do it at three on seven hundred.
Well get the podcast of their show on the iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (51:15):
Are you running for office?
Speaker 2 (51:18):
Well?
Speaker 1 (51:18):
Well, well, it seems appropriate Joe Waddell producing tonight Little
Death Leopard and pouring some sugar on me. Going back
to what about nineteen eighty six? I think if I'm
not mistaken at a hysteria album. Yeah, sternally hanging out
and I have a serious question. How much Lovin do
(51:40):
you make with your mate regularly? Five one, three, seven
four nine, seven thousand, eight hundred The Big One. You
can change your name, get yourself some type of avatar,
fake name, whatever, pseudonym. I don't care what you use
your real name are. Otherwise, you can talk back the
iHeartRadio app. Believe a message there, click on that microphone
(52:02):
if you're streaming as we speak right now on a Friday.
Five three seven, four nine seven eight hundred The Big One,
listen uh. One in four couples in the United States,
a full twenty five percent of loss make love once
a month or less. I'm gonna say that again, twenty
(52:24):
five percent. One in four couples in the United States
are getting it once a month or less. I don't
know how that. How do you could get it less
than once a month? That would mean the nothing or
maybe just some a little something. I don't even know.
And they say, fatigue may be the reason. So if
(52:45):
you're not getting it that once, it's so such strange.
But if you're only getting it once a month or less,
is it because you're too tired or what exactly is
the problem? They say lower frequencies. Most couples, though even
at once a month, they feel pretty good about the
loving that they're getting in their sex lives. Overall, they say, yeah,
(53:09):
fatigues the biggest problem when it comes to, you know,
getting it on intimacy. About thirty eight percent of couples
say that's the reason. Younger couples report are having more
frequent sex. That makes sense, along with more date nights
and daily texting, which I don't know that that means
they're sexting in relation to this or what? Don't worry
(53:34):
about like a lost attraction or affairs being the problem.
Apparently it's just the bottom line is that maybe AI
will help people get some more you know what I mean?
Because they say that. Look, if Elon Musk is right
and he says work will become a choice, work will
(53:55):
become unnecessary, Work won't be something we have to do,
It'll be a passion and something that we want to do.
Forget about trying to figure out where the money comes
from in the commerce to get the resources in your
hand in your bank account so you can get the
stuff and live the life that you want to live
with goods and services and so forth. Which I'm not
(54:17):
necessarily talking about that servicing, because if you've got the money,
you usually can get the honey, if you know what
I mean. And I'd like to hear from some ladies
on this too. I want to know how often you're
getting it. Are you getting it once a month, are
you getting it less than once a month, And if
you're not getting it that much or more whatever it is,
is it because of its exhaustion or otherwise they say?
(54:41):
In this research study. I love research studies. This is
this is big. They serve a two thousand adults and
some type of relationships. This is not single people that
are just you know, occasionally on bumble or whatever else,
wiping left, wipe and right, pick a n app and
get in some on you know, out and about in
the world or dating in some type of fashion. But again, relationships.
(55:05):
Two thousand adults in them fully a quarter say they
barely make it. And it says to the bedroom of
the way it's written, but they basically mean getting it on.
Fourteen percent describe their sex lives is outright unsatisfying. Yeah,
I understand that. Lead low and talk research check this
(55:27):
out and they say it's really about energy, not enough
caffeine not they're just worn out, beaten down by the
world as we know it. You know. The other thing
that could be a part of this too. And I
was talking to a friend of mine earlier, and what
she said is that for younger people, maybe it's that
they don't see a whole lot of optimism and hope
for the future. So why are they doing it if
(55:48):
it's not to have kids. Listen, I've done a whole
lot of doing it. It could always do more doing it.
But I got to tell you, I've never I don't
have any little sterling or sterling ads. So it wasn't
like I was looking to like put a baby in
any woman at this point. You know, we've joked abou's
you can put up with a baby. No, no, not,
but we're gonna have fun and then we're gonna do
(56:10):
this or that. I mean that's just me though, right,
But if you're in a committed relationship of some sort
of situation. Does that fit you, they say, besides exhaustion
being a part of this, it's also about sex drives
that don't quite connect. Since we're talking about some type
of connection or something along those lines, they say, just shy.
At thirty percent at this point say it's about health
(56:32):
issues and also sex drives not quite connecting. He wants
it less, she wants it more. He wants it more,
she wants it less. Often, if you're not getting it
at home, maybe over time you get it somewhere else,
or maybe it's just you tend to show yourself some
love and stuff like that. Work stress, they say, is
a part of intimacy disruption as well. Somewhere in the neighborhood.
(56:55):
About twenty seven percent of couples responding to this also
parenting demands, so, in other words, they've already got kids.
And about twenty two percent say, I got to deal
with those those little freaks, or we've already got three
of these monsters. We don't need any more. I just
want to go to bed. We don't need to make more.
But you know, I never went out in the idea
(57:18):
of just making a little more little people. I was
more like some people are in the idea that the
lovin is only for making little people. I've never wanted
to make the little people. I've just wanted to get
the love and you know what I mean. They say
the average American couple surveyed just four sexual encounters a month,
like I mentioned, lasting all of U just shy of
about I'll be generous nineteen minutes. So they say that's
(57:43):
only fifteen hours of physical intimacy for an entire year
if you break that down, and that seems pretty low.
So is the conversation has talked about the fact that
we in the United States are having fewer kids, and
we're kicking a lot of people out of the count
that are here illegally. I want to know where the
(58:03):
workers are going to come from, but people are getting
it less and making fewer people. I guess the AI
doing more of the work is probably a good idea
because there's not going to be anybody to do the
work besides the robots in the future. Anyway, possibly that
could be the case. I could be I could be
maybe a stretching, you know, the possibilities of the future,
but it seems that way. And they believe also that
(58:25):
technology is a part of it, which is pretty wild,
and it can help and it can also hurt. They say.
A third of those who have responded say they've sexed
their partners. And sometimes obviously they can get They can
get like, you know, during the day while you're like,
you know, at work, hey baby, thinking of you. I
(58:45):
can't wait till you get home. I'm gonna, I'm gonna whatever. However,
you take that right. They say about sixteen percent of
people to mix stuff up and to have tried to
video calls in sex. Probably not I mean that in
separate rooms at the house. You do that while you're
at work. That could be a problem. Gen Z. They
say these numbers a lot more of them regularly sex
(59:07):
fifty five percent, but that's because they're younger. I guess
the way this research shows is that the older people
have either already got kids, don't want them, and are
too damn tired. Young people got time, They've got energy,
and they want to knock some out, you know what
I mean. Fifty five percent regularly sexting, sixty percent sharing
intimate photos. You've got to have a lot of trust
(59:28):
in that situation, or no identifiable features that could end
up being exposed that might affect you later at some
point in time. I'm just saying. They also say that
it allows the distance between people with technology to be shrunk, so,
in other words, that long distance relationship can possibly help,
but there's nothing helping with us being tired and exhausted.
(59:52):
Nine percent of couples overall blame technology is a distraction
in the bedroom. In other words, they're not watching the
right stuff. They're either distracted by the lou light of
the phone or a tablet or some other technology or
that big TV on the wall, meaning that it's not
about the fatigue, it's about being distracted rather than turning
it off and saying, hey, I'd like to turn you on, baby,
(01:00:12):
or turn you over. I don't you know whatever. It
is five point three seven four nine seven thousand, eight hundred,
the big one. And they say, despite all of this,
seventy one percent of those who have responded say they're satisfied,
So twenty five percent getting it once a month or less,
(01:00:33):
seventy one percent supposedly satisfied, with that forty three percent
saying extremely satisfied. I'd like to see the breakdowns. My
guess is if they're satisfied that they're like, were they
old and tired, have no urges anymore? Maybe and they're like, well,
that's fine any whatever she wants it, I do what
I gotta do, or or something along those lines. Or
(01:00:55):
maybe it's the younger people that are pushing that number
higher and then the older people are dragging it down
that that is somewhat of an issue. I suppose five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven,
eight hundred the big one. Does this sound like you
or someone you know? Is that the problem? I just uh,
(01:01:16):
I mean, you know, when you're younger and maybe you're
you're just figuring stuff out literally and figuratively. Uh. There
might be more of a rabbit kind of mentality, maybe
not with making more and more and more rabbits, but
at least doing the act that the rabbits are known
to do in mass quantities, they make more, whether they
(01:01:38):
like the act or just driven to it or otherwise.
I find it interesting. But you know, China also has
a problem with making fewer babies in a shrinking population
over time. So whether it's China, whether it's the United States,
a lot more of the so called First World countries,
those that have seen economic growth and success over time
(01:01:59):
seem to be making more decisions about maybe abstaining from
adding to the propagation of more people on the planet.
So maybe that's a part of it. But listen, you
can have a whole lot of loving and not make
little people too, depending of course on your habits and
choices and stuff that go with that. But I am
blown away by that number. Maybe I just have a
(01:02:21):
different understanding of things and needs and wants, I suppose,
and everybody has a different drive when it comes to
like once in needs, of course, but I find that interesting.
Five point three, seven, four, nine, seven, eight hundreds the
big one. Are you one and four that get it
less than once a month and are happy about it?
Is it because you're too tired? Or is that a
(01:02:43):
really absurdly low amount. I would imagine for some people,
if you're not getting it at home, you're going to
go get it somewhere else. That goes along with that,
And that may be the case, you know, I don't know,
or maybe as we get older in that situation where
we all just are kind of like, yeah, I'm pretty
much good with what's going on. You want to see
what's on. I want to check out a podcast. Hey,
you want to you want to play backgammon. Uh, I
(01:03:05):
don't know what you do if you're not doing that.
I mean, I mean, so there's other things with companionship
and so forth, but that intimacy and stuff doesn't that matter?
Doesn't that give you a connection in some type OF's
of yelderness beyond that? Five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven,
eight hundred, the big one, your chance to get interactive.
It's Sterling on a Friday night, seven hundred Wulw Sterling
(01:03:28):
hanging out a couple minutes away from here. Eleven o'clock report,
Brady Hopkins with news. You know, so it's up. Let
us know what's going on. Shoe Wadell's producing, Glad you're here.
Kevin Carfat guy's the movies conversation I have with him
coming up about eleven thirty five, but some new movies,
New State in a movie, and a bunch of other
stuff as well. Uh, this was sent to me. I've
had this conversation a lot in the last couple of days.
(01:03:50):
Had a few people call over last weekend as the
snow was falling in questions about shoveling walks. I'm not
on attorney. I don't want to play one on the radio.
But I have friends who are and even our Willie
I think, talked about this, at least in video form.
We were joking around. Somebody sends to me said, you agree,
and like, well, I'm not an attorney, will he is.
But a lot of people kind of concerned, especially since
how much snow we were dumped on over the last
(01:04:13):
weekend and it being so cold. A lot of people
haven't either had the time, the energy, the physical prowess
sort of like the sex stuff we were talking about earlier,
but not with the snow, but not shoveling their walks,
even if they were in and out of driveways and
so on. And the question, of course is liability if
you shovel. Some people are like, well, then don't don't
(01:04:34):
shoveload at all, and then you don't have to worry
about it. But as I understand it, and a counselor
after counselor who's talked about it, people in the no
dealing with this is and what I was the impression
I was under is if you make an attempt to
clear it and then there's an accident and ups, then
they can come back and say, okay, I want everything
(01:04:55):
you've ever made and everything you could possibly think of
making because your your walk was slick. But the real
is this is Ohio, this is northern Kentucky, this is
southeast Indiana. It's this part of the world in January,
and if it's snow and icy, there's inherent danger associated
with it, and you've got to assume some natural risk.
So unless you are exacerbating the problem, making some type
(01:05:18):
of thing worse to where it's hard to make their
way through, then you're probably in the clear when it
comes to liability. According to people who are legal experts,
I am not one of those, so that hopefully answers
some question. I've done as much as I can do.
It was all I need to get im. I've already
(01:05:41):
complained about this tonight. I've had so much catch up
stuff because of last weekend, like a lot of people.
I mean, I was here for a couple of days
and not at home, so I came back and then
had to clear all the snow. My snowblower vomited and
not in a good way, so I got to get
that thing worked on or replaced. Otherwise it's just full
(01:06:03):
on shoveling, and that's what I've been doing. So you know,
you kind of like limit how much you're going to
do depending on you know, the size of your situation
when it comes to walkways and everything else that you
have to deal with. But if you know you got eight, ten, twelve,
fourteen inches, depending on where you are in the tri State,
some people had less, some people more. With drifting, you
(01:06:23):
just got to kind of navigate it. And there are
still areas around where it's tough in neighborhoods in some
cases just to get in and out of driveways, let
alone parking and everything. As they continue to just still
try to get it. It would be nice to think
that this is all the snow we're going to get
from the season. But we've got, what I mean, three
months basically until opening day pretty much, and I have
(01:06:47):
seen snow on opening day. I'm hopeful that it will
be irregularly warm, maybe not shortsweather, but not snowy. We'll
have to wait and see so that we'll probably get
more cold and we will probably get more snow, and
that's just one of those things you got to deal
with straight away. You're eleven o'clock report A guy who
knows from snow and cold and leaky pipes and water
(01:07:09):
mains and everything else that matters to us in the
tri state discendity mass quantities of information. Food for our
head is Brady Hopkins the eleven o'clock reports straight away,
Kevin Carr joins me about eleven thirty. A lot about
the ground to cover as well, and we'll talk freebies
on the other side, and if you've got an agreement
for one, had a little fun on a Friday Sterling
(01:07:32):
where the Reds play sooner than later, and you got
the basketball bear Cats tomorrow with a noon tip as
they do it up in Houston, and another big twelve
matchup right here on seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati. So a
lot of people we were talking about the one in
four people in a relationship situation getting some love and
if you know what I mean, some coital interaction once
(01:07:54):
a month at bast sometimes or once or less than
a month hard times. And apparently a lot of people
actually satisfy with that, which is also be woodering. But
the hell do I know, I've not jumped the broom,
tied the knot, or say I do, although I have
lived in sin on more than one occasions. But I
will say this. By the way, it's a Friday sterling
seven hundred W wellw Glandeur alone. I have stayed in
(01:08:18):
these committed, you know, monogamous relationship cohabitation situations with women
in my life longer, and I joked about it with
one of my buddies for years now. He's been divorced
on his third marriage now in his first two marriages
have lasted less than two of my cohabitation situations, and
yet he still wants to bust my balls, like somehow
(01:08:39):
I am not able to commit and handle my business. He,
on the other hand, is lost half twice. And if
you do that, what's that leave him with? Like a quarter?
Half of half is a I don't even know. And
now on three, I'm not sure how that works out.
But what are you gonna do? So here's my question
to you, because we were talking in the midst of
that about a freebee situation. And I don't mean like
(01:09:01):
you went to the restaurant and they were like, here
we got here's an extra dessert for your table. You
guys are great, you know you've got this extra enjoy
this pie or whatever else it goes along with it.
I'm talking about a freebie is in like a chance
to step out on your relationship situation, and that for
some people you have that agreement. I've had that with
(01:09:22):
an X of mine too, and it may date me
a bit. The one she was like, you could have
Selma Hike. I'm just like, Okay, cool, that'll ever happen,
but great, it'd be nice if there was a I
had a shot, but she's married, and I mean, you know,
here I am and she's off Gallivan in the world
and it's Selma Hike for christ Naku. I mean, there's
a number of those that are out there, so let's
(01:09:43):
just say that that would be like the big one.
And then another friend of mine she was like, well,
you could have Jennifer Aniston, and I'm like, I don't
know that she'd be interested, but yeah, she's kind of
like the girl next door. Yeah, I think she's kind
of like the marrying kind. I would take that too,
And that's in a certain window of age. I don't
want to be a gin appropriate with the freebee scenario
that goes along with it. Girl on the other side
(01:10:05):
of it's like, oh, and I've had two women in
my life do this, so they are very apparently similar
in their musical taste. Two of them were like, well,
Pete Yorn, which you may or may not know who
that guy is. And I'm like, sure, if you get
a chance, go ahead hit that, see how it goes.
And then another one also mentioned I mean, I'm trying
to think like random other actors and stuff that go
(01:10:27):
along with that, and I'm like sure. Most of the time,
I think when people do this, it's the likelihood that
it's never ever going to present itself. I don't know
if that's the thing I would be interested in if
anyone who's had a freebe agreement the free pass to
step out in a relationship situation, right, I'm wondering one
(01:10:50):
if it's actually come to fruition where it was like,
here it is, I had a shot, I took a shot.
Do you tell her or him or not? I think
most of the time everybody I've talked to it, I'm
kind of curious about this. If you have a freebee agreement,
is it a plausible freebe In other words, is it
a chance that it could possibly happen, or is it
(01:11:11):
so out of the possibility of occurring that it's almost
like not really a chance at all whatsoever. Not quite
like winning the super like a Macdaddy large lotto winning,
because that's like getting hit by lightning twice in the
same day, once on the way to work, shaking it
off and being like, I feel pretty good, I'm going
to go in, and then leaving work, and then getting
(01:11:32):
hit by lightning again and shaking it off, going I
feel good, I'm gonna I think today's the day I
get a lottery ticket and then cashing in as a
result of it. That's probably more likely than occasionally maybe
having you know that freebee come to be, but maybe
not five point three seven four nine seven eight hundred
the big one. Do you do this? And I know
(01:11:55):
that it's not just outlandish, it's it's offensive to a
lot of people. The idea of staff being out and
I not being married will tell you that I, you know,
I have looked at it more or less as the
same type of commitment. Otherwise why be committed? I mean,
that's sort of the point of it. I may not
have had the ring, I may not have had the
(01:12:15):
legal contract, but I had an agreement and a contract
and have had those with women over the years, and
I kind of look at it like, it's us or
it's not us. No, not everybody has that same view.
But I'm kind of curious, So have you ever considered
having a freebie situation available where you've had that, where
(01:12:38):
it's been you know, possible or not possible either way
where you say, Okay, these are your two, or this
is your one, or this is your three another one
of those. She was like, well, George Clooney, of course.
I'm like, well, of course, I mean, you know, and
he's from the area, so I mean he could be
in town at any given time and possibly make that happen.
He's married also, But I mean she's very because she's like, oh, yeah,
(01:13:01):
that could happen. I'm like, okay, sure, why not. It's
kind of a tough thing. What do you think, I mean,
if that's the case, I mean, do you if somebody
were to follow through with it. I mean, I think
it sounds great. I think it's almost like the threesome
idea for some people, right, I think it may you're like, yeah,
(01:13:24):
that'd be cool, but then once it happens, the viewpoint
may change. And I think for a lot of us guys,
we think, well, sure she could. There's another woman there's
two women, is the wife or the girlfriend and then
another female? Strong got to like that, right, But the
idea of another guy getting with your girl is revolting.
Speaker 7 (01:13:46):
I mean I just.
Speaker 1 (01:13:48):
Nearly vomited in my mouth just now thinking about that.
And I think that's probably the way a lot of
people actually are in their thought process. I mean, maybe
I'm wrong. Is that the case for you? And women?
I'd love to hear from you on that situation too,
because you know, if you're in that, and I don't
care if it's other you know, women and women and
men and men, whatever whoever you are, and how you're living,
good for you, be happy if you can make it so.
(01:14:10):
But in a situation with a freebie, I'm kind of
curious have you been in that? Have you been in
the whole thing of a three sim scenario, because I
think a lot of people the going into that, you're
like yeah, and then the after it's oh. Because then
especially if like maybe she's digging it or otherwise, or
even if you're not together, but you know that it happened,
(01:14:32):
I think that would be hard to come back from.
You've got to be in a really safe, secure mental
space and be okay with things to say, This has
nothing to do with that, and this is just an
activity of some sort I would imagine. I don't know,
I've not lived it, but I know people who have.
That's kind of a wild thing, and it's it's one
(01:14:54):
of those things. Maybe you got to have a serious question.
This sounds like something for Donna Dee and her relationship show.
Maybe tomorrow night. She'll be with me tomorrow early evening.
I think we're on after six. I think chicks on
before us if I'm not mistaken, and then we'll be
on together. And then she's going to do her show
nine to midnight on relationship stuff too, and that kind
of fits into that to a certain extent as well.
(01:15:14):
I think it's pretty wild, but there are people who
live those lives. I mean, you know, you know what's
funny or not. It's been probably a month or two ago.
There was a show that was on A and E
I believe, and it was about like subdivision sort of
swapping or whatever, and one of the couples was here
(01:15:35):
in the Tri State and one of the guys that
was a part of that show that didn't last it
was canceled, didn't get picked up whatever it was. I
don't know how all that came to be, but ended
up being the news because he ended up being charged
with apparently loving his pets too much, and then some
other stuff that went along with it. Now, I don't
think that's how everybody is who happens to be in
(01:15:56):
that lifestyle or whatever and that culture kind of situation,
but it was really sort of disturbing and telegon a
whole lot of level. I mean, The Truth about Cats
and Dogs, which is a movie while back with Jeane
Garoppolo in it, and she plays a talk show host.
She sort of talks about the pets thing or whatever
else and there's some odd caller on the show that's
(01:16:17):
you know, it's all entertainment and all, and she was like, well,
you can love your pets, but just don't love your pets.
That's what that guy, if those allegations are true, probably
should have paid attention to as a warning difference between
stepping out and consenting adults and then to an animal
that doesn't have a thumb or a duke claw that
it can't do anything with. And it's kind of looking
back on is in like what are you doing and
(01:16:40):
why are you here. This is a whole nother thing,
very disturbing to say the least. I mean, at least
in my view. They sort of goes along with that
five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven thousand, eight hundred
to the big one. Apparently there is thank you for
this too. And I know it's a whiplash switch on topics,
(01:17:01):
but you can get interactive if you want to sound
off on that other part of that. Devon or Debion,
I don't know. I just met another one the other day.
It might be the same guy said more cold is
coming in, more snow in the middle of this week.
I'm ready for it. Okay, Debion, good for you. I
(01:17:21):
appreciate you sharing that. It's January into February, and so
I mean, whether I'm into it or not, the fact
is we live in the Tri State. We're in the
Miami Valley. We're here in this part of the world.
We're not in the desert, and even some parts of
the desert have had extreme cold. And I know my
friends that are snowbirds were sending me pictures of the
(01:17:44):
cold down in Florida where they stay, and all the lizards,
what do you call it? Iguanas? I think I think
it's the iguanas that climbed the tree. They look like
a dinosaur basically, but smaller. Thank god, they get so
cold than they fall out of the tree. They didn't
have any mention of the snow, but they were sending
(01:18:04):
me pictures of those. And before you fret, because the
last time I mentioned this and my buddy joked and
sent something on x or Twitter about putting one of
them on a spit and getting it cooked up and
ready to eat some iguana, and people were upset. I
can either confirm her deny any knowledge of that, but
(01:18:25):
they were very concerned with their rental property as they're
down there and these iguanas just falling from the tree,
but they're not dead. They will be revived once the
warmth falls it falls them. But of course, the question
that goes along with that, which is kind of odd,
is the thing that always I wonder about, is how
(01:18:46):
what happens when you know, waking up, how cold? For
how long do they get knocked out and all the
stuff that goes along with it. It's it's disturbing, and
are they confused? And if the fall was too great,
what if they're at the top of the tree, and
they fall crazy long distance. I imagine it would give
you a headache, cause some type of damage. There could
be all kinds of problems that sort of go along
with that. I'm just saying that's one of those things
(01:19:09):
that occasionally may in fact present themselves in some fashion
that sort of go along with that. All Right, Another
thing too. A lot of people are responding about the
Ebstein file at Sterling Radio on x This is Elizabeth,
and Elizabeth says, f those not going after the pedophiles? Yes,
(01:19:33):
I agree, She says it's ridiculous and some other stuff
I can't say. She'd gotten to my DMS here and
she says, why can't you do something about it? Well,
I mean, we're talking about it, but I don't know
what it is. I'm not working for the Department of Justice.
I have no access or control over those. But I
will say that I think it was pretty damn sloppy
(01:19:55):
that they weren't able to redact the information of some
of the victims, even in this massive dump of files
that a lot of people are going to be spending
a lot of time with perusing it, playing detective on
their own, or just trying to see exactly how it
is put together or not, but I know some of
those representing some of the victims that go along with that,
(01:20:16):
and I appreciate you reaching out have in fact talked
and complained about the issue that goes along with it.
In total, there's some six million documents that are overall
put together there, but because of child sex materials, abuse
and victims obligations that go along with that with their rights,
(01:20:38):
not everything can be made public, but apparently they did
by accident, which I find to be hard to imagine.
I mean, the whole purpose of it is that it's
about the victims and protecting them and doing something to
avoid that being a problem with others. Now, tomorrow after
(01:21:01):
I think it's actually tomorrow night, about say seven o seven,
if I'm not mistaken, Donna and I will actually be
talking to a professor of law, Charlene Graham from nk
us Chase College there h and we'll talk a little
bit about this particular issue in sex trapping, trafficking, which
has been in the news. It's a big issue in
(01:21:23):
Ohio is one of the largest areas where a lot
of this trafficking takes place. Part of it is, of
course seventy and seventy five across roads of America, and
you know, easy in and out into a whole lot
of places. But I think it's a sickness affecting a
whole lot of different people. And you know, you hear
(01:21:46):
about it. Here's the difference the low end, everyday people,
as much as you can call an everyday person pedophile
who's wanting to take advantage of children, but those who
are out there doing that in trafficking individuals and hotels
and all kinds of other weird situations here in the
tri State and other parts of the country. If you're
a nobody with no real resources and you're just out
(01:22:08):
there doing it, getting caught and getting appropriately penalized in
the judicial system handling it is much more likely to occur,
clearly than high rollers, big money, big resources, and ways
to make people disappear. I mean, that's sadly the way
a lot of stuff works. And you know, the push
(01:22:31):
for all these documents and for some type of disclosure
and sunshine being exposed to all of this to some
extent might be a benefit, but not when it's you know,
it's not the people that were the perpetrators of the crime,
seemingly getting outed, it's the victims. So if you're going
(01:22:52):
to out the victim and you don't have anything actionable
and you can feel that you can share the information
for those that are the perpetrators. Which when this came
out earlier and the Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche was
talking to the media, he was saying that they didn't
(01:23:12):
do anything really unless there was ongoing investigation. They did
nothing to expose the men or the perpetrators of this
or in some fashion were engaged in some way around
this whole situation. But the females and mostly females and
(01:23:35):
a lot of young girls, or at least they were
at one point in time. Apparently they didn't take as
much time to worry about their vulnerability, which is really poor.
And that's about as nicely as I can say it.
But the dump has been done and we'll see exactly
what happens with all that information that goes along with it.
(01:23:56):
Of course, Maxwell's serving that twenty year stretch. She got
bumped up to a more comfortable prison situation than what
she had been after she met with the Department of
Justice some months ago. I don't know what that exactly means.
The President that talked about maybe trying at some point,
although I don't know if he's backed away from it.
The idea of maybe partnering her or something along those lines.
(01:24:19):
I think a lot of people would have a big
problem with that. But other than Epstein, she's the only
one who's gotten in any hot water er about this.
So I mean, she's done what she did. If she is,
in fact or was the madam that sort of behind
this in some fashion prosuring victims, let's just call it,
in the midst of this, she's done well to protect
(01:24:41):
those who were coughing up the cash or at least
that were being entertained or whatever abused the abusers in
this situation, which probably is the only reason maybe she
is alive or is A guy who called earlier mentioned
that maybe she could find herself closer to being harm's
way if in fact she were ever let out, which
(01:25:03):
you know, she's got a ways to go on that stretch,
and I could imagine that's the case. Epstein. A lot
of people think did himself, and that's what the report was.
A lot of other people think that it's kind of
shady and why would he awaited so long? It may
be with that video missing that it could have been
something else altogether. We may never know straight away. Kevin Carr,
Fat guys at the movies, Silver Gecko on the sub
(01:25:26):
stack talking new movies and who knows what else. After
your eleven thirty report, Travis Laird has news. He will
share it with all of us as we listen, whether
in the iHeartRadio app or right here on the Home
of the Reds, your basketball bear Cats and your football
Bengals with Kenny Anderson getting some love and not that
guy Noll Belichick, which is bewildering. Also, he should be
(01:25:50):
there regardless of Inflategate and all the other stuff with
the Spye. I mean, how many rings does the guy have?
I mean, seriously, it's time for news now. Seven hundred
WLW sins Maddy