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January 31, 2026 105 mins
Sterling and Donna D cover the Minnesota protests and immigration questions from a number of angles. First the political side with Dr. Donna Schlagheck of Wright State University. Then from the legal side with NKU Law Professor Sharlene Graham. We're about a month in to 2026. How is the new year treating you?

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Call it night right, Stirling and donnade back together again.
I got electrocuted by the microphone. Donnad you all right?
What mic are you on there? What number is at four?
I think Mike four. We need to get loved there. Yeah,
there you go, I go, yeah, all right.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
I mean the technical issues all day. Who it sounds
weird too, That's all right. Maybe I should live to
another I don't know.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
We'll figure it out. Who knows.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
There's a lot of ghosts in the machine. Russ Jackson's
producing another update with Brady and news coming up in
about twenty one minutes and change later. Charlene Graham, Professor
law Chase and Kay, you're going to talk about election
and interference issues and also some stuff dealing with I
think with the sex trafficking, right.

Speaker 2 (00:46):
Yeah, the Epstein file. Something's wrong with this. Mike is
here you Yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Let's grab another switch and while you do that, I'll
interest the introduce the well Informed, lovely talented Now Professor
Emerita Cincinnati Kidd, former had a political science at Wright State.
Doctor Dona shleg Welcome back to seven hundred WLW with
Sterling and Donnadee.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
How are you.

Speaker 4 (01:08):
Doing well? Enjoying the cold weather advisory weather. But I
have to say he got lucky this time. They plowed
the snow and it stayed frozen. So that reminds me
of Minnesota.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
Yeah, it does.

Speaker 1 (01:22):
And you spent a little bit of time there obviously
a number of years ago. We know the stuff that's
been going on there. Let's start if we can, And
I don't know, with so much news happening so fast,
what seems to be a really major topic a kind
of concern is the Atlanta Fulton County, Georgia ballots that

(01:48):
were seized by the FBI, with apparently from the Secretary
of State and Georgia saying no receipts, no documentation, no
way to look and compare and contrast with anything that
may come out or be said or inferred or accused
or whatever else about what has already been disproven as
far as it being a Shenanigan's with the outcome of

(02:10):
the twenty twenty election, what do you take away from
what you know of this circumstance right now?

Speaker 4 (02:16):
Boy, it leaves me with a lot of questions. I
would start with how many times does the taxpayer have
to have those ballots recounted. They've been recounted at least
twice that I know of, and then the whole system
was audited again. So as taxpayers, it's like, you know,
how many times until we like the outcome, And you're right.
The presence of the Director of National Intelligence at an

(02:40):
FBI search and documents issue is strange. I've never heard of.

Speaker 5 (02:46):
Such a thing.

Speaker 4 (02:47):
Her mission is coordinating, you know, foreign intelligence. FBI's job
is to be working on the ground, so it leaves
us to speculate that she may be looking for some
foreign interference in the process. You recall after the twenty
twenty election, there was talk about machines being reprogrammed in
Italy or Venezuelan ownership of you know, one of the

(03:10):
voting machines, none of which were true, and they've all
been looked into. I think the cybersecurity people said it
was the most secure election we have conducted. But notwithstanding
a judge you know, signed the search warrant and all
of those documents. As you said, the job of the
election officials in Atlanta, in Sulton County is the sanctity

(03:34):
and protecting and preserving those ballots. Typically you just have
to preserve them for a couple of years after an election,
but there was a court order to preserve them, and
there's obviously been an effort by people who believe that
the election was fraudulent, you know, to get their hands
on these documents. But you know, Sterling, the real question

(03:55):
for me is why did they also seize voting records?
You know, why do you need to why? What is
the interest in the federal government in citizens? It won't
have much to do with the twenty twenty eight voter role.
You know, voter roles can change every day, right, people die,
people get eligible. But those voting records were also seized.

(04:20):
Lots of questions, lots of questions about where this one
is going. There were questions about Tulsa Gabbert, the Director
of National Intel, whose job is to coordinate foreign intelligence,
who was completely cut out of the operation in Venezuela
to bring President Moduro and his wife to the United States,
which is odd you'd think that, you know, CIA, NSA,

(04:43):
all of those foreign intelligence agencies would have been coordinated
in order to make that that mission operational.

Speaker 5 (04:51):
She was cut out.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
So you raise Tulsa Gabbert, and it is nothing but
another series of questions what do they want them for?
The voter rolls as well? Lots of questions. It is
a curious move, and yet the president continues to insist
it was a fraudulent election after multiple how many sixty

(05:14):
court decisions, multiple recounts, Sterling, it appears to be looking
for evidence to support someone's case. I have no idea
what they told a judge was happening in order to
seize all of those records and no receipt. It doesn't
sound like my government.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
Does it.

Speaker 4 (05:32):
Typically you'd expect there'd be some sort of a receipt
at the end. So in court, what could you argue
about those ballots? They've been audited twice, they recounted twice
and audited again. What will they find? What will we hear?
Is this another red herring to distract us from Epstein files.

(05:54):
We are close to a possible military operation in Iran.
You know, the government of Saudi Arabia basically publicly informed
Iran that no missile attacks on Iran would be coming
from Saudi territory. How embarrassed. I mean, it's interesting on
every front, Sterling, with a lot more open questions.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Doctor Donna. So you know, I every day is a giant,
crazy news story. I mean, if you for the last
two weeks, I think we're all exhausted from it, you know,
trying to take over Greenland and the ICE agents breaking in,
you know, you know, breaking into people's cars and windows,
and the violence going on across the country with the

(06:40):
Ice and border patrol and people having access to your
home without a warrant. I mean, the Epstein files. They
they you know, stealing the voter information out. It's literally
it's one and then we all get upset and then
it goes away because there's another thing. I mean, what
is going on here? Do you think?

Speaker 4 (07:01):
I am struck by the fact that this is our
second government shutdown pending hopefully it will be extremely brief.
But I would point out that the two issues that
have brought things to a grinding halt, albeit temporarily, are
you know, the health insurance premiums back in in November

(07:21):
and now trying to throw some light on the conduct
of ICE and you know, the border patrol teams. Apparently
some of the conditions the Democrats want to talk about
is I hate to call it this rules of engagement.
When you are deployed, you know, in an American city. Uh,

(07:42):
you know, questions about masks, those administrative warrants that you
said that are being used to kick indoors, not signed
by a judge but by an administrator, maybe requiring them
all to wear body cameras, rules of engagement for domestic operations.
You know, call me pussy tATu. You know, my head
starts to spin at this point, Donna about the way

(08:04):
boundaries are being pressed. But I would suggest that the
Democrats picked two very relevant issues, obviously the cost of
health care and very unexpectedly now the conduct of you know,
people who are part of ICE. It's also unfortunately bringing
us to a government shutdown. It's exactly the time you

(08:25):
don't want air traffic controllers, for example, or TSA agents.
The military will all the active duty will be working
but not paid. It hopefully will just be a couple
of days the irs, you know, Will it be funded.
It happens to be the beginning of taxis And there's
never a good time obviously for a shutdown. But the

(08:47):
conversation in the next two weeks if the House passes,
you know, the two weeks sort of interim so we
can talk about details. Has to do with accountability of law.
Enforcement when they're in a domestic American city. Boy, that
concentrates the thinking. I will stay tuned for the NKU
conversation that you have coming up.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
It's a very disturbing list of things that both of
you just sort of laid out there. I'm just trying
to enjoy the saturdays. You know, you people are driving
me crazy.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
There's a ton of other things on the list. We
just mentioned the top seven thinking.

Speaker 1 (09:22):
I love you both, Doctor Donna Schleike, by the way,
it is with us Professor Merit, a former head of
political science of Right State.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
She is a Cincinnati kid.

Speaker 1 (09:30):
Stirling and Donnade hanging out later Charlene Grant, professor of
law from kau Chase School about a number of things
sort of intertwined with this as far as the shutdown
is concerned. Because I thought they reached a partial deal.
So there is a partial deal, but it's not a
full deal deal. I don't understand what the deal means. Yeah,

(09:50):
I mean, I don't understand who's doing what, who's not working,
who is working? We're working, you're working. You're not even
getting paid. You're a professor, Marita. Holy crap, Rus Jackson,
He's just worried about he's watching the you know, the
dogs on the TV and waiting to visit the kids.
I mean, what is going on, doctor Vannah?

Speaker 4 (10:08):
Well for mental health, I definitely recommend the agility trials, right,
That's definitely the best place on television. And you know,
the good news is sterling to your comment that the
Senate pass to bill five of the six major bills
includes you know, defense, et cetera. You know, the mail

(10:28):
will continue to run Social Security, but the House cannot
vote on a bill without seventy two hours notice to
their members, so it cannot actually be voted on and
approved until Monday, and then it's only for two weeks
so that they can write out the new conditions under
which I send Department of Homeland Security can resume their operations,

(10:50):
but with some of those guidelines, those rules of engagement.
So the five bills are ready to go, but we've
got this two week hold. Particularly they want to lay
down some ground rules. I think it's a conversation. People
who are interested in law and order and who want
to be safe and secure in their homes and their

(11:10):
property should be very interested in hucking Jeffries, the speaker
of the you know, the leader of the minority in
the House basically just said he doesn't plan to work
too hard to help Michael Johnson get this bill passed.
And you know how narrow the Republican voting majority is
in the House, so all eyes will be watching that

(11:32):
vote on Monday. And again it's just that stop gap
to get us through, but it involves people that include
national security, you know, obviously air traffic controllers, people you
want on the job twenty four to seven and who
you want to be paid on a very reliable basis,
so they are. It is cobbling it another you know,

(11:55):
stop gap, stop gap.

Speaker 5 (11:56):
Set of bills get us through.

Speaker 4 (11:58):
But with this very pregnant pause on the Department of
Homeland Securities, whose budget has ballooned. If we have a
form of GLPS for the Department of Homeland Security, now
would be the time to start prescribing it. But I
think what we might get are some ground rules to
try to prevent you know, the motion that Minnesota had

(12:22):
filed try to get Ice to withdraw was actually filed
before either of the deaths happened in Minneapolis couples.

Speaker 5 (12:31):
That's interesting.

Speaker 4 (12:33):
It could not go well, yes, and it went badly quickly.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
So, doctor Donnad. The temperature here in Cincinnati's thirteen degrees
and it's been minus degrees sometimes in the double digits
in Minneapolis, and there are people out protesting, a lot
of people. There were people last night in downtown Cincinnati protesting,

(12:59):
and it is freezing. I mean, I can't stay out
for more than ten minutes with my dog. But are
the politicians listening to that? Do they care? I mean,
what is your take on that. I mean, I know
that that that some of them are and are trying
to do something, But overall, do they just dismiss people
like that are out protesting in this kind of weather?

Speaker 4 (13:22):
I don't think so, Donna. I was struck by the
account of President Trump's return from the Davos conference, and
that was when, you know, the big storm hit and
the President stayed in Washington, d C. To obviously catch
up on things and travel to mar Lago would have
been well, even more complicated, but he was stuck in DC, watching,

(13:43):
watching the protest that whole long, cold, bitter weekend. I
know we've all tried to push it back into the
you know, the back of our memory. He was watching
it personally and it's this is not a win or
a loose situation. But did the administration blink? Was mister Bovino?
You know, the head of the Border Protection guys moved out? Yes,

(14:05):
Tom Home and head of ICE was sent in.

Speaker 6 (14:08):
Yes.

Speaker 4 (14:09):
Conversations happening with local governors and the local mayor. They
do pay attention. The sizeable protests New York and LA.
I think had the other two big ones. Okay, granted
they had slightly better weather in LA, but large, you know,
tens of thousands of people in the city. Politicians pay attention.
Your federal politicians paid attention. That's why we have the snag,

(14:33):
the massive snag and the budget process right now. Democrats
knew they had an opportunity to raise these questions to
tie the budget directly to the violence and the protests.
So Donna, I think we have evidence this time around
that they were paying attention from the very top down.

(14:53):
Are people in Minnesota watching to see what actually happens
on the street, Oh yeah, absolutely, that want to make
sure that the drawdown that Tom Holman said would be
coming comes very promptly. But the protests at the large,
they've been peaceful, but they have been on television constantly.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Doctor, I think I'm sorry.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
I would just say I think we have a leadership
in elected office and wanting to be back in elective
offices who are paying attention.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
Doctor Donischle former had a political science of right state
with Sterling and Donnady. Look, we only have about a
minute and a half left. And this is in relation
to what is coming into the Springfield area where there
are ten fifteen thousand people that are from Haiti who
had temporary protections here that we're filling jobs and opening
businesses and contributing for an extended period of time jobs
that could not be filled. Is these businesses now are

(15:45):
going to be searching for new people. I guess there's
opportunity for domestic American citizens apparently, is what we're talking
about with that. But the question about considered with protest
in calling protesters in general domestic terrorist when it was
you wrote the first book and published the first book,
a textbook on terrorism. In about a minute and a half,

(16:07):
can you explain what domestic terrorism does that fall into
the idea of protesting not engaging with a you know,
a Department of Homeland Security and on those with ice
but from a distance watching, observing, and making sure that
sunlight is on their behavior.

Speaker 7 (16:23):
Absolutely not.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
I think you have amendments. If I recall correctly, that
speaks directly to that right to assemble and to speak,
and the implication is, of course non violently. No, the
domestic terrorism, that was a smear. Let's just call it
what it was. It was a smear. They had the
worst possible motives when you call someone a terrorist. It

(16:47):
was very unfortunate. I believe I was in a conversation
with you about the Renee Good killing and I was
upset and angry about it. Then it is meant to be.
It's like calling, you know, someone a pedophiles. There is
nothing lower. Now, we don't actually have a law called
domestic terrorism. You have to resort to the sorts of

(17:08):
behaviors that you're talking about, damaging property, you know, threatening people,
et cetera. But you are absolutely right, there's a very
clear line. One amendment after another gives you the right,
including in the case of what happened to Alex Preddy,
to be at that protest with concealed cary. He was
completely within his legal right.

Speaker 1 (17:30):
Let's leave it there, because we're against the wall in time,
always good to talk to you. A vast resource of
information and experience from Cincinnati, but the former head of
political science at right stage, she is now Professor Meredith
doctor Donna Shlake. Thank you for making time for us
on a Saturday Stirling and Donna d show.

Speaker 4 (17:47):
So interesting again. Thank you good nice.

Speaker 3 (17:49):
Take care of yourself.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
You're six there to report straight away, your chance to
get interactive. A whole lot of ground to cover besides that,
including issues with the sex trade, the Epstein.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
Files, movie speak. We'll have some fun.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
It's not all serious. It's making my head hurt. We
can't have that, no straight away. Sterling Donna d coming back.
Seven hundred WLW. It's just like when I was growing
up after school and there are runs a Samford and
Son Sterling and Don and Pan hanging out. Seven hundred WLW.
Demon Wilson. He was Lamont Fret, Samford's son is in

(18:24):
Samford and Son. Word of his passing out today and
that was like his biggest, most notable role.

Speaker 3 (18:31):
But he did some other stuff too.

Speaker 2 (18:33):
Yeah, I mean I think everyone would know this actor
by Lamont from Samford and Son's seventy nine years old.

Speaker 3 (18:40):
It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
Did you say he went to be a pastor.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
I mean, or I should look it up.

Speaker 1 (18:46):
I just remember at some point when I was a kid,
I saw him on some show. I was like, what's
he doing now, because I had no idea. Yeah, and
they were like, oh, he was out like spreading the
good word of God Johove out there, and I'm like, okay, cool,
good for him and doing that. And he had talked
about a lot of the like just to this pressures
and the crazy stuff about Hollywood, and he said he
just had to kind of like get away.

Speaker 3 (19:04):
As I can recall, how great was that show?

Speaker 2 (19:07):
You big dummy?

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Yeah, Brad always comeing home, you know, the other thing
that's disturbing about that. And as good as Demon Wilson
was as Lamont Fred of course, and the ensemble cast
was risdiculous, and all kinds of people that you see
later on that were on it. And it's still airing
and rerun someplace almost always aside from streaming.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
You know, back in the day with those sitcoms, it
was all in the family. It was Norman Stuffy, Norman
lear stuff. I mean, the Jeffersons, even Sam fri and
Son was a little bit before that time, but those
were the days when sitcoms were really funny. The writing
was so so.

Speaker 3 (19:45):
Good, tremendous and timely.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
I mean, it was funny, but it also hit on
some social issues or whatever.

Speaker 2 (19:52):
Writ Oh there are times where, you know, with Edith,
when she talked about, you know, being a stay at
home mom and trying to make honey. Oh my god,
that was a google that episode. YouTube that episode it is.
I mean I was bawling on that one.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
You know what's crazy also, And this is what I
didn't know, because I just assumed Fred Sandford, you know,
which was of course Red Fox. And I remember going
to my uncle else when I was a kid, and
he'd be downstairs and we'd mess around with the CB,
you know, which we weren't supposed to do, talking to truckers,
and then going through his records and he had all
these old comedy records and some of which were Red

(20:31):
Fox records and stuff that I was not supposed to
be here. I had no white I mean, because he
worked Blue. Oh yeah, it was the best party records
or whatever else that they had. But I thought that
Red Fox was like like old, old old, and he
really wasn't that old, playing a fairly old guy. How
old was I mean, he was in his early fifties

(20:52):
when that was going on, early to mid fifties, and
I away assumed, for some reason, because he was calling
Holme to Elizabeth, that he had to be like one
hundred and twenty six years old something. I mean, I
was a little kid watching reruns. I had no idea.

Speaker 2 (21:04):
No, I was horrified when I found out the Golden
Girls were in their early fifties, all retired in Florida
with the hair, and that they were all in their fifties.

Speaker 1 (21:14):
You know what those the generations before us. I mean,
they were road worn and haggard. Life was hard.

Speaker 3 (21:20):
I mean, I don't know what it was. You watch
all those shows.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
I don't know if they were like hitting the butts
too much, drinking, party and doing I have no idea,
but it is not the way people in their fifties
today is like the third No I.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
Did the I remember remember when Norman Lear came back
and they did that revisit of the of All in
the Family and Marisitomee played Edith, and it was so
funny because everyone said she's too young to play she
was older than Edith.

Speaker 7 (21:50):
In the Cari.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
She played the character, so that was crazy. It's talent,
you can play that well. A lot of it was
the hairstyle. You know who else us away. I was
so sad to hear this yesterday texted you. We both
always go when we when someone dies at a young age,
we go. Time flies true, it is so funny. Catherine O'Hara, Oh,

(22:13):
my gosh, actress from Well. She's best known for Home Alone.

Speaker 3 (22:17):
Yeah, a bunch of stuff and sheet's great. Okay, here,
listen to this.

Speaker 7 (22:22):
What's the matter, honey, Darren?

Speaker 2 (22:29):
Feeling that we didn't do something?

Speaker 3 (22:35):
Now, you feel that way because we left in such
a hurry. We took care of everything, believe it, we did.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
Did I turn off the coffee?

Speaker 5 (22:41):
No?

Speaker 7 (22:43):
I did?

Speaker 5 (22:44):
Did you lock up? So?

Speaker 3 (22:45):
Did you imagine that feeling though? What's missing?

Speaker 1 (22:48):
You got to had a whole letter of children. Do
you ever do that when you're in a hurry get
on the airplane?

Speaker 3 (22:54):
You're like, no, I locked the door?

Speaker 2 (23:00):
Yeah? Did I leave my curling iron on?

Speaker 3 (23:02):
I've never had that problem, It's definitely not. Now.

Speaker 2 (23:07):
This clip is the longest.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
It is a long clip. But I remember that feeling
of panic and not knowing Kevin.

Speaker 2 (23:13):
Yes, finally, Yes, we got there, Kevin The Big Home Alone.
She was also in one of my favorite series ever,
Shit's Creek.

Speaker 3 (23:21):
Yeah Trying.

Speaker 2 (23:21):
Oh, she just got such high accolades from from uh
that role as Reira Moira. I mean it was so
great and of course Beetlejuice and and on and on.
I mean, what a great actress. She was so good
and never knowing.

Speaker 3 (23:37):
I think she's on a Seth Rogan show too.

Speaker 1 (23:38):
That it's one of those twenty five thousand things that
are on my wait list or watch list or with
Bouse to see which I think it may be an
Apple thing. Up a second, she's supposed to be great
and that she's still working, so imagine being that.

Speaker 3 (23:51):
I mean, you have people that are depending on you.
I mean, we all have to go sometime.

Speaker 1 (23:54):
But I mean it's not like she was aged and
gone away and been you know, a past memory. She's
out there getting it done.

Speaker 2 (24:02):
Yeah. That's how I want to go out too, though,
to be honest, I mean, I want to work up
until the day that I don't. There's there's no cause
of death, so there's no we still don't know exactly,
do you look.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
She had a weird. I forget what it's called.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
And I she had taken ill yes recently, yes, but
I trying to think of what the disorder is. And
I know you're looking at me strangely as I'm grabbing
my chest. But apparently all of her internal organs were
like if you looked in a mirror, they were reversed, okay,
which on one hand, I'd think, well, what's the problem.
It's still the same stuff in there, if it's working.

(24:39):
But apparently there are problems when your things are not
all the way we are supposed.

Speaker 2 (24:43):
This was a condition obviously she's had her entire life.

Speaker 1 (24:46):
Then that apparently they found out later or something. I
don't know all the details, but I saw that, and
then my mind was wondering. Late last night after I
got home from the show, I'm like, what the hell
is that about me? Oh, you're stuff on the wrong side.
I mean, that's scary.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
I've never even heard of that before. She was only
seventy one. That seems so young, My goodness, gracious.

Speaker 1 (25:03):
Absolutely live every moment, Like you know, Warren Zevon, the
legend that he was an incredible songwriter and performer, had
it all. I remember him talking to Letterman years ago
now talking about you know, he knew that he was
leaving us. He was sick and had been suffering with
some stuff for a while, and it was, you know,
words of wisdom. He said, enjoy every sandwich.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Oh boy, and just an interesting choice.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
I mean it really is. I love my sandwiches too.
I'm like, hell, yeah, I'll do that.

Speaker 1 (25:32):
Let's get to Milford and Jim, let's talk about Katherine
O'Hare too, with Stirling and Donade on the big one.
What's going on Jim?

Speaker 8 (25:39):
First, I remember you saying you when you sit down
and make a sandwich, don't you make it like literally
like six six inches high or something. I remember you
talking about that.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
I sometimes, after like Thanksgiving, depending on the leftovers, I
will go forward.

Speaker 2 (25:55):
How many pieces of bread is that?

Speaker 1 (25:56):
I mean, you feel like a triple a good nice
rye toast did with a little bit of sauce, you know,
everything a little on their pare go.

Speaker 3 (26:03):
Yeah, but I'm not.

Speaker 1 (26:04):
Going to go through the whole thing. But that's like
just after Thanksgiving, regular sandwich. I don't know whatever Phil
feels good, you know, I don't. I don't know that,
you know, I'm not like a crafts sandwich man.

Speaker 2 (26:14):
I literally just said he want sandwiches.

Speaker 8 (26:16):
I do, though his sandwiches are so tall he has
to lamb on the side and cut them with the knife.

Speaker 3 (26:22):
Yes, correct, that'll be all right, It'll be all right.
But yeah, it's true.

Speaker 8 (26:27):
That's not why I called no, no, I call her back,
Catherine Man. I just I'm sixty so see the big
see your face and name and guys of seventy one.
I mean, maybe I'm a little narcissistic, but I look
back on myself, I'm like, whoa. I remember watching her
as a teenager and she must have not been that old.

(26:50):
And so what it was a Saturday Night Live and
after that was a.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
TV second cit the TV was her and John Candy
and John Flaherty, I mean Eugene level the I mean, yeah,
so many people went through there, and like you, when
I was a little kid, I was just I was like,
I don't know what they're doing, but I couldn't turn
it off.

Speaker 9 (27:08):
I know.

Speaker 8 (27:09):
So so, Katherine, thank you for making me overtired to
church the next day because I would stay up till
like two thirty fourth, fell asleep. But yeah, with Catherine, uh,
that disease, like marrying and stuff. Yeah, but now I remember,
see I'm getting sixty, I'm forgetting why I called in.

(27:31):
The reason I called in was home alone. Wasn't it
kind of comforting yet brilliant that she brought John Candy
and is like, yeah, German.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
Uh poker, the poker guy.

Speaker 8 (27:47):
Because they worked so well together. I couldn't imagine what
what the outtakes were in the back of that you
haul truck was John Candy's hum her Yeah.

Speaker 1 (28:02):
Just unbelievable, Jim, And thank you. I appreciate it and
being a part of the show and listening and yeah,
great memories. It's tough, you know, in what I used
to do, and I still get like a little bit
of a smattering of celebrity dead stuff when some un
notable passes away. And I did this for a long time,
and I started to feel bad when it was people

(28:22):
that I had come across professionally or somehow gotten you know,
interviews or whatever. Not like they remember they talked to
people all over the place. But I'm like, hey, I
know that guy. Hey, you know I had drinks with her?

Speaker 3 (28:32):
Yeah, whatever else.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
We're starting to see a lot of the ones that
came up with us. Yeah, and Jim eloquently said, man,
I started thinking about myself. You know, you're sixty one,
she sixty or sixty one, and she died at seventy one.
You can't help but think of your own mortality. And
I was like, oh, man, the clockt is tickets.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
You just never know, you don't And I'm leary about this,
and driving in I was thinking about this. Do we
or don't we do the trif to celebrity death because
I kind of we don't want to be the prophet
of doom. We're not wanting to wish death upon anyone.
We don't want anyone to die, but we all do
have an expiration date. And for some reason, whatever it is,

(29:13):
because maybe they're notable, because we know who they are,
because they're famous or whatever, they seem to go in threes, right,
the trifecta of celebrity death.

Speaker 3 (29:23):
So is it? Should we do this?

Speaker 2 (29:26):
You ask me single time. I don't love this.

Speaker 3 (29:31):
I feel dirty and wrong about it. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (29:36):
We can hear you screening the call RUSS over the air,
or at least in our ears, So you don't know
if I don't know if that's going over the air
or not you asking about sandwiches. Okay, yeah, okay, so
there you go. So he's doing that, he's hitting the
wrong button. I thought I was hallucinating. Which does that

(29:56):
mean that I should be on the list aseudo celebrity
that we are do.

Speaker 3 (30:00):
This, We can do it, but we only have a
company do it.

Speaker 5 (30:03):
All right?

Speaker 1 (30:03):
So who do you think is next in the trifecta
celebrity death? Katherine O'Hare, demand Wilson who we just lost.
Of course it was Lamont, Sandford and Sandford and say
there's one more comedy. There's always going to be a third,
and you have to look at it again. By the possibility,
by lifestyle, by age, there's the wild card because anything
could happen. You could walk off a curb, get thumped

(30:23):
by a bus and you're like, well, wow, I didn't
expect to be on the grill THEO Cota bus or
you know whatever it is you know in that type
of situation, or it could be what age infirmity wild
card is or something else.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
Well, when you put age lifestyle, yeah, lifestyle, you know,
like you're looking at Rod.

Speaker 3 (30:42):
Stewart because he's about one hundred and eighty and he's.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
Still as mc jagger, Yeah, Jaggers in his eighties. I mean,
you know I hate these more open The phone will go.

Speaker 1 (30:52):
Rapid fire for phone minutes because again again we're not
wishing death. We don't want anyone to die. We wish
we could all stay here together and hold hands a
love one another five one, three, seven, four nine, seven,
eight hundred, the Big One. You can talk back the
iHeartRadio app. Look, there's a lot of serious, heavy stuff
going on. Death is part of that.

Speaker 2 (31:11):
Death. If you look at it, it can be funny.
I mean, we all have none of us are getting
us out of here a lot, you know, unscathed.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
Oh oh, so no, you want to send it on
the air, RUSS or just tell us because it'll sound
like we're encouraging it and you I mean the RUSS
just popped the microphone. If somebody called and they were
reluctant to be heard, to share their voice or whatever else, right.

Speaker 3 (31:34):
And they were saying, who would be next, possibly.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
Let's just say lou Holtz, Oh yeah, Holts, he's getting
up there. And see then you upset a whole lot
of like Notre Dame people. So again, we don't want
it to happen. We don't, but I mean it gets
us all eventually to Western Hills and Hank with Sterling
and Donnade on the Big One. Do you have a
third for the trifecta celebrity death after Catherine O'Hare and
Demon Wilson, who was Lamad Samper from Sanford Son.

Speaker 10 (32:01):
No. I was just gonna mention how Red Fox passed away.
He and a bunch of cast members had some kind
of reunion and he did the routine where he's clutching
his heart. He collapsed my couch and everybody's sitting there
laughing for like two or three minutes, and then they realized, Hey,

(32:21):
this is for real.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
I didn't know that.

Speaker 2 (32:25):
I had no idea.

Speaker 10 (32:27):
Yeah, wow, They're all sitting there laughing. He grasped his heart.
They're all sitting there laughing for like two or three minutes,
and then they realized, Hey, this is for real.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
That is amazing that how to go? How do how
a comedian came like that?

Speaker 3 (32:44):
I mean, on one hand, it is strong.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
Everybody laughed at the end of his.

Speaker 1 (32:47):
Life, but but on the other hand, he was serious,
like helping me my God, just like crying Wolf.

Speaker 3 (32:53):
He was like.

Speaker 1 (32:55):
Went it was awesome, and Elizabeth of course was you know,
fictional character. So I mean, that's kind of I want
to get one more year before the break gets the
reading and Larry was sterling and donnade on the big one.

Speaker 3 (33:05):
What do you have on sandwiches?

Speaker 11 (33:08):
Uh, well, I'll give you another person off front though,
don Lemon, how how about that for the track that.

Speaker 3 (33:13):
You figured that? What like of the third? Are you
wishing that to happen?

Speaker 11 (33:16):
He's not a lot of stress now you never know that,
but yeah I did. I heard he's talking about sandwiches.
And I didn't know if you ever heard of the
song cold cut Cowboy.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Cold cut Cowboy? Who did that?

Speaker 11 (33:31):
I don't know who did it?

Speaker 5 (33:32):
Is probably coal or drinking.

Speaker 11 (33:36):
It's like you're nothing about a coal or drinking cow
cut cowboys something like it does something like that. But
I didn't know if you know, I didn't wanted to
answer if you like sous or souths hed cheese South's
I don't know.

Speaker 3 (33:49):
I like my uh Colby, you know what I mean.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
I don't know about the sticky sticky cheeses or whatever
else to go with that, like that little pepper Jack,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (33:59):
A little one other things going on a limb. I
don't like to get stinky cheese.

Speaker 12 (34:04):
I remember when I was at school, I had a
teacher who like, at lunch, you'd come in and you
did it in the room, just like fourth or fifth grade,
and he would have like those type of stinky cheeses
and Brunschweiger and all this sud.

Speaker 1 (34:16):
You'd walk in the rooms and you know, and I
enjoyed my little like pizza from the lunch room as
a little kid, and you'd pop in.

Speaker 5 (34:22):
There, what is this?

Speaker 3 (34:23):
It smells like feet, you know, And everybody be like.

Speaker 2 (34:25):
No, that was his lunch.

Speaker 3 (34:27):
You're like, oh, thanks, buddy, that's fantastic.

Speaker 1 (34:30):
Your seven o'clock report straight away, Professor a Law from
Chase to a Law in Nku, Charlie and Graham gonna
join us. We'll talk on issues of sex trafficking, maybe
some immigration issues which are gonna be coming to Ohio
sooner than later in a major way, and the latest
on everything else that matters around planet Earth and to
us here in the Tri State. Straight away, believe Berdy

(34:51):
Hopkins has it. Your seven o'clock report coming up, Sterling,
Donna d Calming. After that, on the Home of the
Reds and unfortunately losing about bsketball Beer Cat's Day in
Houston today, but Xavier one, so you got that going
on seven hundred WW Cincinnati.

Speaker 3 (35:06):
Now in the.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
News, on and on it goes issues of Immigration enforcement, ICE,
Homeland Security coming to Ohio sooner than later, Governor Dwaine,
you may have heard the news talking about the fact
that they'll be looking to be a buffer and to
make things go smoothly with an excess of ten fifteen

(35:28):
thousand Haitians who had temporary protected status here in this
part of the world, up in Springfield and in the region,
filling a lot of jobs that were going unfilled as
businesses are growing, the economy is bounced back, and they're
yanking them out, pulled their status, and now perhaps ICE
will be coming yanking them out of the community as
well and upwards. I believe of something like five thousand

(35:52):
US citizen children here also that are going to be
in limbo. Someone who knows about law, who knows about
immigration issues, is kind enough to give them some time.
From a Chase College of Law NKU, that's Northern Kentucky University,
it is Charlene Graham with Sterling and Donna Die on
the Big One. Welcome to seven hundred w l W.

(36:12):
How you doing, I'm doing great? How are you doing?

Speaker 3 (36:16):
Okay, we're called We're all dealing with it absolutely.

Speaker 1 (36:26):
If we can start with immigration issues, and you know,
we know about what's going on in and around the
Twin Cities, we know about Chicago, Land Area, New York,
a few other places. This has been ongoing. ICE is
constantly doing their work, as is Homeland Security. Uh, there
are issues of concern. I want to start with. One
thing that I found very provocative and disturbing to me

(36:48):
is the show me your papers. I'm not on the road,
I'm not driving, I'm observing. I'm in my own community
and my own neighborhood, watching law enforcement of some type,
perhaps in out that soup of federal agencies, maybe not
even identifying themselves visually at all whatsoever, in the middle
of traffic or in a neighborhood, pulling people out of cars,

(37:11):
spraying them, asking for ID or not, and yanking them
away and locking them up. When did we become a
place where someone could approach me like a jack boot
thug and ask me for my ID, as if somehow
I don't belong.

Speaker 5 (37:28):
Great questions. I think we have to start with what
is their authority and the extent to which there are good,
robust arguments about them stepping beyond their authority and really
crossing the line into constitutional pair. So I think as

(37:51):
a general proposition, you know, I thing, border patrol, they
do have authority to question individuals that they suspect of
being in the United States improperly illegally. That is what
they are supposed to do. Their role, however, is somewhat limited, right,

(38:16):
I mean, they need all law enforcement, even federal law enforcement,
have to have some degree of reasonable suspicion. And that
is a very low standard. It's lower than probable cause
that most people are familiar with. They just have they
just have to have some sort of reasonable suspicion that

(38:37):
you are not a US citizen. Now, this is where
the question comes in, Right, what are the criterion that
they're using in order to determine whether you are a
US citizen or not? And I think this is what
the issue is, you know, to the extent to which
we have pending lawsuits that are questioning the ateria of

(39:01):
you know, are we just pulling people over who fall
within a particular demographic. Are people who speak a particular language,
you know, do they speak Spanish for example, or you know,
or are we targeting people who are I'll just say

(39:23):
varying shades of brown. We're not really sure whether they
you know who, what their ethnic affiliation is, you know,
what is the basis? You know, do we have a
reasonable basis and in some a reasonable suspicion. So I
think on some level we are really at the threshold

(39:44):
of asking some very hard questions and I will say,
some uncomfortable questions about who we are as a nation,
as a country, or are we you know, this whole
episode is exposed the gaps in our expectations and our

(40:05):
understandings and the way that these law these laws are written,
where you have individuals who are dancing in the gray
area of ambiguity here, right, I mean, they're they're taking
advantage of the gaps and some of the norms that
we assumed that everybody agreed to. We are finding out

(40:25):
that people do not. And so that's really where we are.
I think, you know, you know, do we not want
ICE to enforce integration? Not entirely, you know, we you know,
every nation has the right to determine who it wants
to include in its citizens among its citizens. That's true. However,

(40:49):
it's you know, what other protections are we going to
afford those individuals?

Speaker 7 (40:54):
Right?

Speaker 5 (40:55):
And I think that that's you know, that's where where
the issue becomes. Right, I can you know, ICE can
detain you, they can stop you, they can ask questions,
and if they have a reasonable belief that you're not
a US citizen, they can arrest you. They have the
ability to do so. Now the issue of can they

(41:15):
enter your home or other private spaces, that's another problem.
And you do need a warrant signed by a judge,
and that is not an administrative judge. It was an
administrative judge of ICE, but it requires a state or
federal judge to actually sign that warrant to because we

(41:38):
do have Fourth Amendment protection sports fifth sixth Amendment protections there.

Speaker 2 (41:42):
I was going I was going to ask you about
that too, Charlene. And I think the issue of lack
of training for these ICE agents has come up, and
rightfully so, they've taken the training for UH down quite
a bit to get them on the street. My question is,
because Sterling started with his issue, I have issue with
this because it seems unreasonable or out of the norm

(42:08):
at the minimal amount to shoot and kill a US
citizen and not know the name of the ICE agent
that has done it. I mean, if you hear of
a shooting from a police officer, you know his name is,
badge number, and things like that. I've never witnessed anybody
you know, hiding or from dosing. I mean like that

(42:29):
kind of stuff. What are your thoughts on that?

Speaker 5 (42:34):
Well, I personally is my personal opinion. I agree with you.
I think we give law enforcement, and I absolutely support
law enforcement, but we give them a tremendous amount of power.
And I was always taught to beoing much is given
much as required. I think that we as a country

(42:55):
must decide that if we're going to give these individuals
a certain amount of authority, then there is a responsibility.
No hiding of the mask, now hiding of the face,
no wearing of the mask. When you do stop me,
detain you, mut's produce your shield? You know, what is
your name? What is your badge number? If I need

(43:17):
to call a supervisor, I have the ability to do that.

Speaker 8 (43:20):
There is a.

Speaker 5 (43:22):
Discussion about what the proper policy and protocol ought to
be for this type of enforcement and these types of agents.
I think this is a worthy conversation, and we have
to balance the interests of law enforcement against the principles
that we profess to believe, the First Amendment, to protest,

(43:46):
to assemble, to freedom of press, all of these things
get balanced against you know, our reasonable concerns about safety
and other things, but you raise from their very important issues.
And here is where I said that there are certain
gaps in our system that we have made assumptions. Well,

(44:07):
we can no longer make those assumptions, and to the
extent to which we are, as they say in perhaps
in very perilous times, we are in a position where
we now have to face the gaps.

Speaker 6 (44:24):
The areas of the law that are not defined and
are perhaps uncomfortable to discuss.

Speaker 5 (44:35):
We're going to have to get comfortable with being a
little uncomfortable in order to resolve some of these very
serious problems and to protect the principles we say.

Speaker 4 (44:45):
We believe in.

Speaker 1 (44:46):
You know, it's an interesting thing in that. Oh, it's democrats,
it's republican. This is about all us citizens, our rights
and our freedoms and our liberties, and about the infringement
upon those Charlene Grant, Professor of Law NKU this' Northern
Kentucky University's Chase College of Law with Sterling and Donnade
on the big one. One of my other concerns, and

(45:08):
I've had other people on who have dealt with sex
trafficking issues and so forth. And the fact is that
undocumented people, just like others who were cast off from
families for one reason or another, runaways, et cetera, are
people that can easily get lost, manipulated, taken advantage of
hiding in the shadows. Sex trafficking a big issue. Epstein

(45:29):
files in the news about this, So I think having
people documented and showing light on them their lives and
giving them protections is a very important thing. But with this,
where is the line? As far as well, let me
restate this, because I think this plays into it. How

(45:51):
does one navigate this and keep people safe in a
circumstance like this when you already have information with a
high profile thing like Epstein files, people with victims' names
being exposed seemingly fairly liberally part of the use of
the language, in some cases even more than those that
are thought to be perhaps privors.

Speaker 5 (46:13):
Well, let me say this because I think these are
two separate questions. I think the issue of privacy, the
issue of protecting privacy, protecting information is something that in
any category you asked me about, if you asked me
about seizing of voting records and the kind of private

(46:33):
information that is contained in state voting records like your
driver's license, your solid security number, over those sorts of things.
If you're talking about which I think was reported on
MPR recently, you know, the self security files that were
uploaded to some server when when there was a you know,

(46:56):
DOGE was operational, there are some concerns about where private
information I think the issue of privacy and where our
information is being stored, where that data is being held,
those are serious conversations. Those are conversations that we have
only scratched the surface of. And you know, we have AI,

(47:17):
we have so much happening technologically that these are problems
that we're going to have to resolve. And I and
and that's not to say that officers are concerned about it,
as every human American human being now is concerned about
doxing and hacking and all the rest of that. Okay, well,
let's let's deal with that. Let's deal with security. Let's

(47:39):
deal with educating people how to protect their data. Let's
just deal with with with educating our population, not hiding
away from some of those those challenges. Let's set up
those rules right now. We just don't have enough attention
being paid to the protection of that sort of information.
So I understand that concern. But there are ways to

(48:01):
protect individuals. We know some of those. We have.

Speaker 9 (48:06):
You know, we have.

Speaker 5 (48:06):
Officers, We have individuals who have protected status. Okay, somebody
knows who they are. But what you're addressing is the
issue of when someone who has been given this authority,
who is a some form of a law enforcement officer,
is stepping beyond their role. That's really what the issue is.

Speaker 9 (48:32):
Now.

Speaker 5 (48:32):
I know people throw around this phrase. You know, people
may understand what qualified immunity is, but most law enforcement
officers do enjoy a certain amount of qualified immunity so
long as they are operating within the scope of their jobs.

Speaker 3 (48:47):
They have to obey the law. Right, Charlotte, the law Matt.

Speaker 1 (48:52):
Let me reintroduce you Charlette Grant's professor of Law NKU
Chase College of Law with Sterling and DNA D on
the big one. So again following, and the law is important,
and it would seem, and this is from across the
political spectrum, that that has been lost somehow in some
of this immigration stuff. In the midst of the enforcement
on the street and people may be crossing a line

(49:13):
and protesting and so on. We also want our law
enforcement to be able to work in concert with the
federal authorities to avoid some of those engagements, because that
has turned extremely ugly and made it very difficult for local, state,
county authorities to do their policing as well as the
federal authorities. And meanwhile, the rest of us are just
sort of going, we don't know what the hell is

(49:34):
going on. That's a very uncomfortable circumstance, let alone the
fact that even US citizens have been deported.

Speaker 7 (49:41):
And you are.

Speaker 5 (49:41):
Absolutely correct, because the standard is if the officer is
plainly incompetent or knowingly violating the law, that's what the
issue is. That's the threshold, right, And I think that's
the issue that needs to be defined here, because you know,
trying to force their way into homes, private end places

(50:03):
without a judicial warrant. These think they're problematic, and I
do think that that's where when all this is over,
you know. Unfortunately, I think people will be held accountable
for the extent to which they knowingly violated the law. Well,
and the qualified immunity will not protect them.

Speaker 2 (50:22):
Yeah. So in terms of and we touched on this
a tiny little bit on the Epstein file some we've
seen some documents released, but what was ordered that we
were supposed to have the full release of the Epstein file.
Some of the stuff is so creepy that I've read
it's awful to put your eyes on anyway, But if

(50:44):
it's been ordered about a month ago to release all
of the documents, how are we not seeing those yet?

Speaker 5 (50:51):
Well, because people are not obeying judicial orders or congressional mandates.
Congress has issued a variety of subpoenas to request the
release of this information. You had the Epstein Files Transparency Act,
which which became law, which set a specific request in

(51:15):
deadline for when these documents were to be produced in
their entirety, and they weren't. They have been severely redacted
in ways that is not entirely clear. It's one thing
to react to protect the identification of victims of this
particular crime, but the act was very specific about you

(51:37):
could not do any redaction if you thought it was
to address someone's reputation, if they were a government official
or someone who was otherwise names, you couldn't protect that right.
And I think we you know, this is a broader

(51:58):
point that I know you don't have I'm to discussed,
but I mean the broader point here is, you know,
are we going to be a nation of laws? Will
that we require everyone, including the president to adhere to
the rule of law and all under him, whether they

(52:20):
be appointed, elected, or whatever, they have to obey the law,
judicial orders, the law as enacted through Congress, find by
whatever president. You know, are we going to require this
or not law?

Speaker 1 (52:39):
We need three branches of government to do each of
their jobs respectfully. We are out of time. I hope
you will be willing to come back. I enjoyed this conversation.
We could go on and on. There's so many things
going at the same time in the world. Charlene Hars absolutely,
professor of law from nku's Chase College of Law. That's
how that works. Thank you for making time, have yourself.

(53:01):
You're so welcome rest of your weekend. It was a
pleasure to talk to you. Take care of you so
You're so welcome, Please stay warm. Yeah, it's a little
late for that, that's for sure. Yeah, absolutely, that's a
Charlene Grant Professor Law from NKU Chase the School of
Law with Sterling and Donna deal on the Big one
straight away, you're seven third or reporting. A whole lot
more ground to cover on the Big one seven hundred
WLW W man, a whole lot of action. Earlier today,

(53:25):
hard times for basketball. Bear Cats in Houston town. Love Houston, boy,
but the Bearcats did not loving Houston so much. They
got pounded seventy six fifty four by the Rockets in
a Big twelve matchup your Xavier Muscu. Yeah, yeah, Donna
knows that for sure. Sterling and Donna hanging out, Russ
Jackson producing keeping us in line. Brady Hopkins with news

(53:46):
again in about twenty minutes or so. The x Men
sixty eight sixty six dramatic win over to Paul's Blue
Demons at Sentas Earlier. NKU took one on the chin
last night at Detroit Mercy and a Horizon League matchup
ninety seventy seven my right State Raiders. They won, and
I think it played up around Detroit area also or

(54:09):
no where were they now I'm trying to think either way,
they handled their business and continue to lead the Horizon
League at this particular point in time too. And that's
inside activities. I'll tell you what I've enjoyed the last
couple of days watching is warm weather from down Under
because the other hemisphere it's like summer in the midst
of us and having what is our current temperature now

(54:31):
that is from thineen think twelve, it's fifteen, which feels
like two. So I was watching people sweat in the
stands and enjoy themselves with the Australian Open, which, of course,
now I hear that everybody was using the acronym AO,
which sounds like a movie or something. And you ten,

(54:52):
you and Dave Keaton, I know, always talk about the tennis.

Speaker 3 (54:55):
This is like monumental. We were talking off the air.

Speaker 9 (54:58):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (54:58):
Well, first they had the women's final this morning on air.
You know it's way behind, so like the men's final
is going to air at three thirty.

Speaker 1 (55:07):
Thirty ahead behind the head there us already tomorrow. Yes
they're ahead. Sabalanca lost to Robi Kina.

Speaker 2 (55:17):
I can't ever say her name, but anyway, very very
good match. The two men's semifinals were amazing, Carlos Alcarez
and Zverev and Alcarez came on top and he's in
the finals. And then Djokovic versus Cinner. Everybody had Sinner
to win, and it's been Carlos Alcarez and and center

(55:38):
for the matches in the finals, and but Djokovic pulled
ahead and he actually won that two big five setters.
But what what's interesting is there's going to be history
tomorrow made for the men's finals. Well, Djokovic, Novak Djokovic
is thirty eight years old.

Speaker 1 (55:59):
I mean he's agent, right, I mean that's long and
he's like one hundred and eighty six years old in ten.

Speaker 2 (56:03):
Yeah, I mean he's he will be if he wins tomorrow,
the oldest man to win the Australian Open. This is
his eleventh final at the eleventh Open. Now, Carlos Alcarez,
the young end is only twenty two years old.

Speaker 3 (56:18):
Doesn't know.

Speaker 1 (56:20):
My mom had twenty two. She didn't know anything either.
She told me she's like, I had no idea.

Speaker 2 (56:24):
Well, if he wins tomorrow, he's going to be the
youngest Australian Open winner. So it's age and wisdom versus
youth and vitality and athleticism. But I mean, I gotta
be honest, Djokovic looks amazing. I was talking to the
women at the at the tennis club this morning about Joseavic.

(56:46):
We've got something jumpets into absolutely and but we were
talking about how Djokovic still looks the same ten years ago.
I mean, you know, he takes very good care of himself.
He's he's plant based and he talked about it all
the time. But how does he win? Yes, he still
has skills, he still has agility, still does.

Speaker 1 (57:05):
The smells now in tennis years right, So he's a
sneaky bastard. I mean he knows things and how to manipulate.

Speaker 2 (57:10):
Mental it is his mental game is what says sets
him apart from all the other ones. He knows he's
got to keep steady and that's what's going to win.
So how fun would it be to talk about you
know what? You know? What are you better at now
with all the wisdom that comes with age then you

(57:32):
were back when you were twenty two.

Speaker 1 (57:34):
So, in other words, after the world has beaten us down,
after we have been in it and slogging through the
mess that is life.

Speaker 2 (57:41):
Through heartbreak, money issues, COVID Like, we've been hit by
all kinds of stuff.

Speaker 3 (57:48):
All kinds of crazy stuff. Yeah yeah yeah, So wisdom
and age.

Speaker 2 (57:52):
Yeah, wisdom and age. What would you you know? What
do you think you're better at now? Sirling with this
wisdom and age versus your twenty two year old self?
What would you try and talk to your twenty two
year old self?

Speaker 1 (58:05):
I tell him not to care anymore. I I mean,
because there's something to being able to kill.

Speaker 2 (58:12):
It is that bad.

Speaker 3 (58:14):
I mean, I care, but you can care too much.
It will kill you if you.

Speaker 1 (58:17):
I mean, listen, there is so much going on that
I think you have to at some point know how
to disconnect and compartmentalize.

Speaker 3 (58:26):
I'll explain it this way.

Speaker 2 (58:27):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (58:29):
Some women I have known in the past have accused
me being able to U maybe too effectively compartmentalize your feelings, sure,
and coping with things and dealing with things. It's sometimes
like this has nothing to do with that, right, So
I can work and have the relationship and all this stuff.

(58:49):
But I mean, each of them have their place in
my brain, in my mind, in my life as I
carry on, But as a younger man, I probably was
not able to keep and check my emotions and.

Speaker 3 (59:00):
Care too much. So now I've learned to not give
a damn. I don't care any more.

Speaker 2 (59:04):
A weird way to push that, A.

Speaker 1 (59:05):
Bad way, I mean, But caring less, isn't I mean?
Because it was killing me on the inside. No, of course,
And this is the best.

Speaker 8 (59:14):
I mean.

Speaker 2 (59:15):
First of all, I love your roundabout answer because it
would be mine too. Emotional intelligence really like the way
well I.

Speaker 3 (59:22):
Am emotionally now? More intelligence?

Speaker 2 (59:24):
Yes, yes, because you stop let you stop. You've stopped
let letting your emotions run away with you. So you've
been able to manage how you feel about things and
be able to That's like the greatest thing to learn.
And it would be my skill too, would be communicating

(59:44):
and having a lot more emotional intelligence, investing in myself
in terms of my own happiness and what I want.
I didn't do that at twenty two.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
Well, you don't know enough. You don't even know what
you don't know. You don't know, right, Yes, So I
mean part of that is knowing what take care about,
what to worry about. Because here's the thing. The trick
for me, and I've had this conversation with a friend
of mine very recently, and she was very upset with me.
I said, I can't control it. I'm not happy about

(01:00:15):
this stuff going on, but it has nothing to do
with me, and I can't affect the outcome, so I
have to leave it behind. It's not my problem. I
can't there. I have no state of play in there
at all whatsoever. I'm aware of it. I'm concerned about it,
but I've got to worry about me and you do
a bit, and that's it. And she was saying that

(01:00:37):
I was insensitive and uncaring and I had problems, and
I do have problems.

Speaker 2 (01:00:41):
Let's all admit it right here. I know it brush
those that everybody knows.

Speaker 5 (01:00:45):
Really.

Speaker 2 (01:00:46):
Oh, by the way, guess who's guess who's dealing with stuff? Everybody?

Speaker 5 (01:00:53):
Everybody?

Speaker 7 (01:00:55):
Nobody?

Speaker 3 (01:00:56):
And am I right about that though?

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
And she's a little bit younger, but I mean she's
age appropriate, let's put it. I mean, you know, yes,
it's not like she's twenty two. And I mean, well,
women evolve this faster than Yeah, you are more emotionally intelligent,
there is.

Speaker 2 (01:01:08):
No question, but there is there's a sense of a
feeling of this is all happening for a reason to
awaken a public of you know, sometimes it has to
get worse before it gets better kind of a thing.
So there's so so if you look at it that way,
it's supposed to be. Now, do we need to continue

(01:01:28):
to suffer? I don't think so. I mean we've created
so many I'm talking about human race. We've created a
lot of pain and suffering, and we continue to do
it in ourselves and in our relationships. That's why I
talk from nine to midnight. I'm doing that tonight.

Speaker 1 (01:01:44):
If west Coming is exactlysfunction, I like to put the
fun in this function, well I do too.

Speaker 2 (01:01:50):
I mean that's what we try and do. But we
also try and help people understand that. Listen, you can't
and I don't disagree with what you said to her,
You can't. You can't fix everything. So how are you
going to carry this on your back like bricks in
a backpack? Correct and make yourself miserable? I think that's

(01:02:11):
what people are doing right now, and we got to
figure out a different way to handle that.

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
So let's open up the phone, give people a chance
to sound off. And there's no question that I was
not as eloquent as you and I sometimes here's my problem,
my filter. This job has been a blessing and a
detriment over the years, and I've been doing this quite
a while, whether you know, here, part time, fill ins
whatever else and bounced here or there and back again.
Radio people, Yeah, yeah, so you gotta know your spots

(01:02:36):
or whatever. So five point three seven four ninety seven thousand,
you got to pick your spots. Eight hundred the Big
One talk back, the iHeartRadio app. You can leave a
message there on the mic. I don't know what I said,
but it clearly maybe not as I intend it. So
I guess the question is what are you better at
now with life and wisdom and time under your belt
as a human being, So with wisdom and age that

(01:02:59):
you can handle now better that you couldn't in your
earlier years.

Speaker 3 (01:03:01):
Correct? Is that a good question?

Speaker 9 (01:03:03):
Is?

Speaker 10 (01:03:03):
Is that?

Speaker 3 (01:03:03):
It's just really wordy?

Speaker 2 (01:03:05):
So think about it. Djokovic versus Alcarez in the finals
in Australian thirty eight to twenty two. Is there a
chance he's gonna win? Yes, there's a big chance he's
gonna win. Is Carlos Alkarez favored because he's got those
young legs and he's got all heart and crazy. But

(01:03:25):
but Djokovic has wisdom.

Speaker 1 (01:03:27):
And sometimes when you don't know, confidence encouraged. When you
don't know what you don't know. Sometimes that can be
a benefit too, because you're ignorant to the circumstance.

Speaker 2 (01:03:37):
It was nice when you didn't know back in the.

Speaker 3 (01:03:39):
Dude, there's a lot I didn't know.

Speaker 2 (01:03:42):
No, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:03:44):
What do you do better now that you didn't do
in your teen's, twenties, thirties, whatever years you are. If
you're a hundred, then in your eighties you're like, yeah,
I've learned over the last two decades. I'm hitting the
cesshary mark. I'm not going to care or whatever else.
It is five three, seven, four, nine seven, eight hundred,
the big one. Your chance to get interactive here on
a Saturday, Sterling and Donna de There's a lot of
stuff I think in life about that earned business, about

(01:04:05):
that right. I mean, whether you're in sales, or whether
you're you know, cleaning wind shields or putting them in
up in dating at the Foulo or whatever that place
is called that does all the windshields and everything, or
whether you're working at ge or whatever it is, with experience,
with knowledge, with understanding of whatever it is that you're
involved with that you kind of go, Okay, this is

(01:04:25):
the stuff to worry about. This is stuff not to
worry about. This I have to handle and I think
that is better for everybody.

Speaker 2 (01:04:32):
Yeah, I think certainly in sales there's a there's a
level of growth that happens you and it's not about failing.
It's about getting there, trying, trying something and learning the
lessons and getting better at it.

Speaker 1 (01:04:47):
There you go to bond Hill. Let's talk to Raphael
with Sterling and Donnade on the big one. What are
you better at now Raphael that you were not in
the past and why?

Speaker 9 (01:04:56):
I would say, Well, first of all, you know, I'm
still operating from the playbook, the blueprint that my grandparents
and parents laid out for me. I carried with that
were with me every day. But I would say now
I'm better as a human with listening.

Speaker 7 (01:05:18):
And I would.

Speaker 13 (01:05:21):
Say the managing and of finances, money and when it
comes to investing, because you know, when I was younger,
guys just had what.

Speaker 9 (01:05:33):
My you know, parents and grandparents instilled in me. And
I'm not saying this is unique to you. Know, a
black household how old. In a sense, it can run
across racial demographics. But I know from where my parents
and grandparents and great grandparents came from, they didn't have much.
So what they had they had to save it just

(01:05:56):
in case they showed they it wouldn't be taken away
from them or they would lose it, they would run out.
So there was no investing type you know, you know,
information or education. When I was coming up with my parents,
it was you know, passed down to them from their grandparents.

(01:06:16):
Work hard and save your money. Now, and that's why
I'm saying that now. You know, well, I would say
maybe over the past maybe two decades, I started investing
and I like it a lot and preparing for retirement.
But before then, you know, like I said, you know, early,

(01:06:37):
you know, younger, I was taking the page from my
parents and grandparents, just working hard and saving money.

Speaker 3 (01:06:42):
Yep.

Speaker 9 (01:06:43):
And so those are two things I would say listening,
and I would say, because like you were saying, Dondee,
you know that you know, with age is wisdom. And
Djokovic even though he has you know, wisdom and he
has that experience, and don't forget he has a heart
that because you know, Djokovic and Kobe Bryant were close,

(01:07:05):
and Djokovic has that mama mentality. I'm not saying Carlos
Alcaraz doesn't have it eat as well, but you know,
Djokovic has an incredible heart.

Speaker 2 (01:07:15):
Did not agree, l And two of my favorites are
Kobe Bryant and Novak Djokovic. What a great call. Yeah,
they were listening. Is such a good, amazing tool. I
can't believe you said. That's so good for you, Rafel.
I'm always going to talk to me and thanks for
listening to being a part of the show. That's fantastic. Yeah,
Refi's always good. I'm trying to listen more.

Speaker 1 (01:07:34):
But you know what's funny when you take calls like
this and you'll then they'll go, are you there, And
I'm like, I'm listening like they're shop.

Speaker 3 (01:07:39):
Yeah that I'm actually.

Speaker 2 (01:07:40):
Gonna we give a lot of space too. It's nice
to sit and listen to our listeners.

Speaker 1 (01:07:44):
That's exactly right. Five point three seven hundred.

Speaker 3 (01:07:48):
The big one.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
Want to know what are you better at now with
a little experience under your belt. In the past, you
weren't so good at necessarily, what have you learned to
Madeir and Tom with Sterling and Donnade on the big one.

Speaker 3 (01:07:57):
What do you have?

Speaker 4 (01:07:57):
Tom?

Speaker 3 (01:08:00):
Are you there?

Speaker 13 (01:08:00):
Tom?

Speaker 1 (01:08:02):
Once twice so you can sort of sounds like you,
But I don't know. I always get concerned when that happens.
Where did they go? Well, they went into the drive
off the road, abyss. It's very unnerving to me. I hope,
I hope he's all right. He was waiting a minute

(01:08:22):
to call back. Yeah, please, I hope you're okay. It's
a it's a difficult thing. It's tough. I think a
lot of life is that way. And when you're younger,
at least when I was, I was in such a hurry.
I wanted to do grown up stuff, wanted to be
a man, wanted to handle my business, didn't want to
be a burden on mom. She did it on her
own basically anyway. I mean she didn't. Dad helped it.
I mean as far as putting me in there.

Speaker 3 (01:08:44):
And then that's about it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:46):
That's about it, right, And then uh so she was
she was doing what she had to do to make
sure it roofed on my over my head, food on
a plate, and she was on my feet, and I
was like I want to.

Speaker 3 (01:08:55):
I'm want to be mine to handle it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:57):
So yeah, and and you kind of forget and lose
your way sometimes about I wish I would have goofed
off more, you know, like my buddies would be like
all work and no play. That's something that in hindsight,
you never get that time back unless you're able to
like cut away and like retire and have a lot
of money to go goof off later on.

Speaker 2 (01:09:15):
Yeah, and and and you know, it's nice to be
able to enjoy the journey and goof off while you're
doing some working and stuff. I was talking about that
today because you know, I have a five you know,
nine to five, or I am over forty hours a
week on my other job, and then I come and
you know, I teach you on the weekends like a
six hours show.

Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
It's unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (01:09:35):
But I said to her when I was talking to
her today, I said, this isn't even like work. It's fun.
So we goof off and laugh and joke. And yes,
you still have to be here some at a certain
time and stay a certain you know, length of time,
but it's still fun. So you can work and have
fun at the same time.

Speaker 3 (01:09:55):
Think so we're doing it now.

Speaker 2 (01:09:56):
I just wanted to clear that.

Speaker 3 (01:09:57):
No, I mean, this is what does it seem like
I'm not having fun? But I mean you know what
I mean though as a kid, because like my friends
would be like, oh work and no play.

Speaker 1 (01:10:04):
Make Stirling a dull boy because I'd be working or
whatever else. We only have less than a minute, so
Madeira Tom called back, Tom, can you get it in
less than a minute?

Speaker 11 (01:10:13):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (01:10:14):
What do you have?

Speaker 7 (01:10:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 14 (01:10:15):
I think so? Can you hear me?

Speaker 5 (01:10:16):
Okay, yeah, you're good, go ahead, Yeah, okay.

Speaker 14 (01:10:19):
I My question was actually when the professor was on before,
if I live right next to you guys the street,
I lived there for every thirty seven years. Okay, and okay.
My question is I've got a wife whose wheelchair bound.
She can I get around at all. And I've been
watching a lot of this and I've seen storm agents

(01:10:41):
just storm people's homes and break in. If somebody comes
to our house or whatever, and we decide just not
to answer the phone, I mean not to answer the door.
Don't answer the door, then, I mean they can't really
do anything to us, can they.

Speaker 2 (01:10:56):
That's a great question. I wish you and I'll send
her a text. I will text her and see if
we can mention that on the air afterwards, because that
is a fantastic question.

Speaker 1 (01:11:07):
There you go, tom So, just keep listening to and
we'll hit back at you on that. Absolutely appreciate you listening.
Appreciate and your neighbors nearby. It's hardy to be brief,
but there you go. Let's take care of some business.
Eight o'clock reports straight away, another hour to go together
on a Saturday, Sterling in Donnade, where the basketball Bearcats
fell earlier Xavier one and of course this the home
of the Red sooner than later, tuning up in the

(01:11:28):
desert where it's probably significantly warmer than our fourteen degrees
right now, News Radio seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati.

Speaker 3 (01:11:36):
He's Sterling, Donnade, hanging out.

Speaker 1 (01:11:39):
You know, we're about a month into this baby New
Year twenty twenty six, starting to crawl a little bit.
If it's a baby, right, it's probably a toddler. We're
close to it at this point. I don't know how
fast I mean to get a year that. I don't
know how quickly it expands. Listen, the bald eagle has
come back big in this part of the world, and
they will have babies and within like three months there

(01:12:00):
flying and going and trying to find food on their own,
much quicker than most other creatures out there.

Speaker 3 (01:12:06):
Here's the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:12:07):
So we've had a lot going on and a lot
of people like a lot of resolutions. I'm gonna live better,
I'm gonna make more money, I'm gonna take care of
you know, whatever it is that you have to go on.
How is this New Year twenty twenty six treating you?
Are you feeling good about things? Are you happy about
the way stuff's going? Are you frustrated and angry? There's
a lot of stuff going on all at the same time.

(01:12:28):
Five one, three, seven, four nine, seven thousand, eight hundred
the big one. You can pick up the phone, give
it the finger. On the iHeartRadio app. You can click
on the microphone and leave a message that way as well.
Sterling dot donnad dot twenty twenty three on Instagram, on
x or Twitter, call it whatever. It hasn't been Twitter
for a long time, but I still get people who
tell me, hey, I can do at you. How come
you didn't get back? And I'll be like, well, you

(01:12:49):
got the address wrong. It's at Sterling radio and then
you can follow along and get interactive that way too.
So Donna, here we are. This is the last day
of January. You should have your W two's and your
oh man should all be postmarked by today, if I'm
not mistaken, if you haven't already gotten them digitally, so
you can start dealing with the tax man. How am
I doing? We'll see you after tax season. How are

(01:13:11):
you doing, Donna?

Speaker 2 (01:13:12):
You know, this has been a very cold winter, and
you know I love my love. I mean started in November.
It's been cold and it has been icy. I can't
remember Cincinnati being so cold, so that has affected me
a little bit. The politics have been you know, the news,
watching and paying attention to that has been really challenging

(01:13:34):
on my nervous system. You know, seeing people being beaten
up and that kind of stuff is hard for me
to watch and pay attention to. So that's been challenging.
But you know, professionally, I got a raise. I started
doing some coaching on the side, so you know, I'm
I I'm doing well in other areas and other areas

(01:13:56):
you know. Plus there is a full snow moon that
is right say tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (01:14:02):
I mean, it brings more snows me.

Speaker 2 (01:14:04):
It means it brings. It's bringing clarity and transformation, which
I am all about in my mid fifties city. You
don't think the moon Listen. I'm not a big astrology
person or astronomy. I don't you know all those things.
You're a science guy. I love science, Sue, science. Scientists

(01:14:25):
show me the data. It's the secret truth. But you
know that the moon, you know, affects the tides and
all that other stuff. So there is energy with that
big beautiful moon which is going to be tomorrow night.

Speaker 3 (01:14:38):
I don't I just never heard of it. I wasn't
discounting it. I'll say this.

Speaker 1 (01:14:42):
I have friends that are like an emergency medicine, friends
that are police and so forth, and anybody you know
who deals with like an er stuff or law enforcement. Hell,
you work at a bar or restaurant even for that matter,
people will say, you know, well, a full moon things
get a little weird sometimes, so there may be some
truth to that.

Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
I suppose you know, uh, maybeys.

Speaker 1 (01:15:06):
And one less thing to worry about it, you know,
or one more thing to worry.

Speaker 2 (01:15:12):
How are you doing it?

Speaker 3 (01:15:14):
I'm good.

Speaker 1 (01:15:15):
Look, I think a lot of people I don't want
to speak for anyone else, right, but the fact that, uh,
you know you you've got enforcement going on, however sloppily
it may be being done and maybe trying to be
improved upon. When it comes to making sure that people
are here documented legitimately for their benefit and for the
nation's benefit, that's a positive, right, Uh, not necessarily the

(01:15:37):
way it's being executed now. Pardon the use of a
pun or language there. That could be somewhat challenging to some,
but I don't judge me.

Speaker 3 (01:15:44):
But but I.

Speaker 1 (01:15:45):
Think it's important to know who's in your yard and
who's you know in your house, certain, right, So I
think that's necessary. There's a better way maybe to go
about it than what we've been seeing. But a lot
of people happy about that, depending on the stock market
on the day.

Speaker 3 (01:15:58):
It's great.

Speaker 1 (01:16:00):
Old is good to own right now if you have it,
although the other day was a little tough. I'm still alive.
I'm sick and tired of the cold. I could whine
and cry about the most basic stuff. Yeah, but it's winter.
It's almost you know, it'll be February tomorrow, and so
it goes. I'm not dead yet. I feel fine. I
think that's how I'm doing. I mean, you know, you

(01:16:21):
get up and I go, I'm still here, So I
got it to get the dog out and go about
my business and until I don't wake up, That's what
I'm doing.

Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
It does look like it's gonna stay cold for the
next little bit, like a week. For see, I don't
for see.

Speaker 1 (01:16:33):
Well wait, I'm feazing for like a week almost. I'm
not bitter and angry, but I'm bitter and angry. I mean,
I still have so much snow on my driveway it's crazy.
Let me just yes, I did.

Speaker 2 (01:16:47):
And I use the scarf that you bought me, by
the way for Christmas, which I love, and the hat
and the scraper.

Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
For me because now I know I remember going out
and seeing we were about ready to leave and look
what that?

Speaker 3 (01:17:01):
Where's your car?

Speaker 1 (01:17:02):
And you're like that, like that's that's like an iceberg.
I'm like, let's scrape your windows.

Speaker 3 (01:17:07):
Wrong with you? You've been back in Ohio for how
many years?

Speaker 2 (01:17:09):
Now Here is the sweetest part though. A nice neighbor
and I don't even know which one it was, shoveled
the back of my driveway out because there was at
least two feet of snow at least with the yeah,
and somebody shoveled that for me. I mean that was
a nice thing. That was such a lovely thing, And

(01:17:30):
those are the moments that mean me and everything. Yeah,
I love my neighbors.

Speaker 1 (01:17:34):
If you're gonna equate it to clean up of snow,
this is how it went. I was here all last
weekend when firm. By the way, let me let me
just say this, because I said it in passing. You
know what's gonna happen come October November. It'll be gonna
be a whole lot of baby firm babies. There was
a whole lot of people, so it was a lot

(01:17:54):
of people off work in school for a day or two.
It's been ridiculously cold, and sometimes you just want to
get close sometimes just for the sake of survival and warmth.
There'll be a whole lot of babies in and around
the tri State probably popping up. And I'm guessing I
would imagine some obg y ns are gonna start getting
some calls and booking of appointments for some people that

(01:18:17):
are going to be swollen with love children as a
result of Fern's wrath. I could be wrong, but that's
a good thing.

Speaker 3 (01:18:24):
Right, Well, we'll.

Speaker 2 (01:18:25):
Check the stats in October, October, November.

Speaker 1 (01:18:29):
Yes, yeah, I mean so I think the year's going
great long term answer the more I think about it.

Speaker 3 (01:18:34):
In the assessment, it took me a minute to get
a gauge. I just think.

Speaker 1 (01:18:38):
And as a result of that assessment, I say, things
are pretty okay. I mean, don't worry about the world burning.
It's fine. Five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven, eight hundred,
the big one. You know, you can get interactive that way. Really,
how is this New Year treating you? Russ Jackson? He's
back here now, so I mean, I would imagine the
New Year's treating him pretty good. Although he's here with us,

(01:18:58):
so I don't know the answered that on his own.
He hasn't chimed in, so who knows. It's just one
of those type of scenarios that's going on out there.
It's it's tough. You know, what's great to do this
time of year? And really it's it's mind boggling.

Speaker 2 (01:19:13):
What's the super Bowl?

Speaker 3 (01:19:15):
Well, it's coming, yes, and the Seahawks. You know what
I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (01:19:18):
Yes, I'm gonna say ye say yeah, yeah, yeah, that'll
be the thing is going to like Crome Conservatory and
you go in there where like they do the butterflies
and all that other stuff. There's nothing like going there
when it's ridiculously bitter, evil like satanically cold, and I
may be exaggerating a little bit, and you go there
and you see like all this life, all this stuff,
the plants growing. It's a little bit humid in there,

(01:19:40):
and you know, and it's it's awesome. So yeah, I mean,
that's that's one of those things I love doing this
time of year. When I and I used to live
just like right around the corner down the road, right,
so I mean it was just an easy hop, skip
and a jump get there. Newport aquariums another good thing
you know this time of year, a scenario except there
underwater mostly because you know it's the sea.

Speaker 3 (01:19:58):
It's an aquarium, you know, are you?

Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
Because the Grammys are tomorrow night too, biggest, biggest night
in music. We were going to talk about that, but
and I think Bad Bunny is up for several Grammys.

Speaker 1 (01:20:12):
To be careful, people lose their mind. I know bad
Bunny people. It's a love hate thing for some reason
with a Bad Bunny.

Speaker 2 (01:20:18):
Listen, I love that. I don't know one song of his,
so I feel like, if you're going to perform at
the super Bowl, I should know at least one song
of yours.

Speaker 3 (01:20:26):
It helps.

Speaker 2 (01:20:27):
I mean, it really don't.

Speaker 3 (01:20:28):
I don't have a beat and you can dance to it.
I promise.

Speaker 2 (01:20:30):
I'm sure it's gonna be I I saw the promos
and it looks like it's gonna be a fun show.
But it's uh. I mean, there are people that are
boycotting the super Bowl because of the bad Bunny performance
the halftime show.

Speaker 5 (01:20:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:20:44):
I mean, I'm there for the game.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
It's not like I ever tune in and turn it
all watch, but I'm saying I don't go to watch
it exclusively for that. That's entertainment. In between the action
and the entertainment.

Speaker 2 (01:20:57):
It's gonna be one of the biggest stories on Money
day after the super Bowl of how what he performed
and you know, all the stuff. There's going to be
lovers and haters on that. It seems like they're so
extreme on everything. There's not. It's not light hearted. It's
extreme behavior on both sides.

Speaker 3 (01:21:16):
Yeah, I agree, and I'm.

Speaker 2 (01:21:17):
Telling you the bad punting performance is going to get
more talk on the day after the Super Bowl than
probably the game.

Speaker 3 (01:21:24):
No, yeah, I just want a good game. I do.
I do you go back to the Grammys.

Speaker 1 (01:21:29):
This is kind of cool, and I mean it was
a huge Black Sabbath and still am a huge Ozzy
Osbourne fan. And of course he passed away not long ago,
and they're going to have a tribute to him with
the Grammys too, which will be kind of nice. It'll
be Andrew Watt, Chad Smith of course from Chili Peppers,
and he's been played with a bunch of people, Duff
mccag and Guns and Roses, post Malone, Slash of course,

(01:21:49):
who's well, it's Slash. Everybody knows, right, So that's going
to be pretty awesome and all the other stuff that
sort of goes with that too. Rose and Bruno Mars
Suprena Carpenter also do some more honoring of some people
that we lost, ROBERTA Flack, the' angelo of course, I.

Speaker 3 (01:22:05):
Mean, how many babies.

Speaker 1 (01:22:09):
I mean seriously, yeah, a lot of babies happening because
D'Angelo music over the years. That's for sure too, So
I mean, you know that that's kind of cool. And
Reba McIntyre, Lucas Nelson, uh see Brandy Clark also all uh.

Speaker 2 (01:22:24):
I love Lucas Nelson. That's Willie Nelson's son. He's so great.
He's got a great song with Lady Gaga. Bruno Mars's
new album is great. I don't know if you heard that.
It's so good. It's a seventies vibe. It's so fun.

Speaker 1 (01:22:40):
It feels like the seventies now too in a way.
I mean, with so much of the social stuff happening,
and you know, globally and everything kind of has that
same kind of energy and vibe, so that kind of
makes sense.

Speaker 2 (01:22:51):
He's well they always say the greatest artists have a
way to get their finger on the pulse of and
then describing kind of the generation of how it's feeling.

Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
I agree, I mean that makes sense. I mean there's
there's something magical to be having somebody, whether it's the
producer or the artists themselves, sort of figure out what
that is because it's an intangible thing.

Speaker 2 (01:23:11):
Yeah, I mean yeah, I mean Ozzy was pretty good
at it. He's been successful for so many years, decades,
decades as before I had Yeah, right, you.

Speaker 1 (01:23:23):
Know what's amazing to me about Ozzy Osbourne and even
Sabbath to a great extent, and I've been listening to
a lot of that stuff lately again, and more so
when I was a kid coming up, everybody acted because Ozzie,
you know, had his issues with substance and being a
wild child and all the other stuff. That this sort
of went on and got a lot of attention and
probably helped sell some records and bring people to the

(01:23:45):
party too. But if you listen to the words of
so much of his music, whether it was with Sabbath
or on his own through the decades, it was all
about you know, anti you know, authoritarianism and violence and
against war and more about love and everything else and
and and that really I think somehow people who were
complaining about whatever was going on around him at the

(01:24:08):
time and how.

Speaker 3 (01:24:09):
All the mad music's a popping a satan.

Speaker 2 (01:24:13):
He was biting the heads off birds and bats and
things in the record because Sharon actually really pushed him
to do that stuff. I think because he was like, oh,
I'm I'm like a crazy person and you'll have a
fun ride with me, and I'm going to bite the
head off his bird.

Speaker 1 (01:24:30):
Well that, yeah, that was a meeting at Epic or Sony,
as I understand it, right.

Speaker 2 (01:24:34):
Yeah, it was. It was a tactic. It was a tactic.

Speaker 3 (01:24:38):
Did did he do this on purpose?

Speaker 7 (01:24:41):
Though?

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
Yes? The bird, How in the world do you he
might have.

Speaker 3 (01:24:45):
Been drunk or high. I don't know nothing about it.

Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
Probably and then he and then people started throwing stuff
on stage to him too, which is not good.

Speaker 2 (01:24:54):
But you know, so he had his moments and you know,
the of the music.

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
But he wasn't some dark.

Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
Chicken earlier. Nobody's complaining to me it wasn't alive.

Speaker 2 (01:25:05):
That's true, right, it's you try and buy well, you
try and bite the head off of a bird that's alive,
and see how you feel about that.

Speaker 1 (01:25:14):
I have processed a chicken if you want to clarify,
like the language, I don't. I mean, I mean chickens
not but you know, but no, I've never like bitten
the head off of what.

Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
It's a strange thing to do. Many people do that
and wanted to catch attention. He was known as the
Prince of Darkness. He had this dark side, but he
also had this very cool, dad loving side to.

Speaker 1 (01:25:37):
Which everybody when they watched you know, the shows, a
really great show. Yeah, changed everything. But the words and
the music is what I'm talking about now. So you're
saying that a lot of that message kind of got
lost by the kind of the show business of it.

Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
And some of the he'd always have blood dripping from.

Speaker 3 (01:25:57):
Exactly.

Speaker 1 (01:25:57):
But when I was listening to the cassettes in my room,
you know, and listening to the radio like to and
t Ue, when I was a tiny sterling at the time,
when I was supposed to be asleep, and it'd be like, Oh,
we're gonna play a block of Ozzy, We're gonna play
in some black Sabbath. It was about the words I
wasn't worried necessarily about, like eating chickens and random other what.

Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
Like what what what words are you doing? What song
are you talking?

Speaker 1 (01:26:18):
I mean, pig any song any of even his latest
stuff that sort of goes along with that, I mean,
suicide solution, I mean, I mean you name it. Song
after song was really about positive things generally and sort
of lost. Oh, let's get to Franklin and Jim. He's
got something on Ozzie and biting heads of some sort sort.

(01:26:40):
It could be you're sterling and done a d on
the big one. What's going on?

Speaker 9 (01:26:44):
Oh?

Speaker 7 (01:26:45):
Hey, how you doing?

Speaker 3 (01:26:45):
Good man? What's up?

Speaker 15 (01:26:47):
Yeah, on that on the.

Speaker 16 (01:26:49):
On the by biting the head off. He didn't know
that was a real bad He thought it was a prop,
and then when he found out it was a real
one after the show, he went and got a bunch
of tennis and stuff just so a raby shot.

Speaker 15 (01:27:01):
That is fact. He didn't realize it was.

Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
No, I know what you're talking about. You're right, Jim.

Speaker 1 (01:27:07):
I mean somebody threw up like what he thought was
like rubber batch because people were doing that.

Speaker 3 (01:27:11):
One happened to be real. And the you don't want
to buy a bat for sure?

Speaker 2 (01:27:15):
Well he did do it with a dove in a
in an epic meeting.

Speaker 1 (01:27:19):
To the doves are almost like pigeons, though, I mean
at least then they got the head off.

Speaker 3 (01:27:25):
It was like not a lot of suf minutes.

Speaker 1 (01:27:27):
I mean it was quick in their What else do
you have, Ben, I'm sorry, we don't need to talk
about the I just.

Speaker 7 (01:27:34):
Want to do a thing.

Speaker 15 (01:27:35):
There's a group out there from the Cincinnati called that
Arena Rock Show and they do that skit.

Speaker 3 (01:27:40):
With I did not know.

Speaker 15 (01:27:42):
If you get a chance, yeah, if you get a chance,
that's not a real but get a chance to check
out their videos. They played at Bogarts Report called that
arena rock show.

Speaker 10 (01:27:51):
Yeah, they're really good.

Speaker 1 (01:27:52):
All right, well we'll give it a shot and we'll
have to see. That's fantastic. Jim, thank you man. And
a friend of mine I just playing doing some Grateful
Dead music tonight up in Dayton.

Speaker 3 (01:28:01):
They're doing a show they're called Hitting Gym.

Speaker 1 (01:28:03):
I don't know where it is, but maybe that's something
people in the area might want to do too. So
this has been fun. We're gonna get to day Thirdy
Report straight away. We'll get a conversation with Kevin Carr
Silver Gecko I had with him about what's new with
the movies, and then we'll be back. Donna's coming up
doing nine to midnight and you want me to stay. Hey,
I want you to say and do the you know,
the toss off.

Speaker 2 (01:28:23):
Give me. It's gonna be.

Speaker 5 (01:28:25):
Like that.

Speaker 1 (01:28:26):
Let's just stop there ways to go. Yeah, and you
got to figure out what you're saying. I think the
news straight away more Sterling and Donna d and Kevin
Carr seven hundred w l W seven hundred w l
W Kevin Carr sober Gecko on the sub stack. He's
Fat Guy's the movies, Well Sterling seven hundred WLW Kevin,

(01:28:50):
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 7 (01:28:59):
Oh no, I actually I wear shorts year round.

Speaker 3 (01:29:02):
I know you do.

Speaker 7 (01:29:05):
I was out today, I had shorts on, and uh,
it's almost I'm like, hey, my.

Speaker 3 (01:29:10):
Legs aren't cold, right exactly?

Speaker 7 (01:29:13):
You know, the head and the chestual area, that's where
you lose the most teeth, It's sure.

Speaker 1 (01:29:20):
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.

Speaker 3 (01:29:30):
But I do. Yeah, I love.

Speaker 7 (01:29:31):
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, my
car to a restaurant, my car to home. I don't really,
I'm not outside them, right.

Speaker 1 (01:29:50):
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 nother story. I got you, But
I mean, you know, I I just hate the cold.

Speaker 3 (01:30:01):
I'm against it.

Speaker 7 (01:30:03):
I'm 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 (01:30:17):
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?

Speaker 3 (01:30:33):
Okay? Yeah all right. Uh let let's move on, shall we?

Speaker 9 (01:30:38):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (01:30:38):
Yeah, let's where do you want to start?

Speaker 1 (01:30:40):
Because I know you saw the State of the movie
and you get you know what, you're limited. You got
to pick one movie. I guess that was the one
you picked. Let's start there, and then we lost the
fantastic Catherine O'Hara. We didn't really lose it. She passed away,
which is just devastating. Start wherever you want to start?

Speaker 7 (01:30:55):
Well, you know, let's just start Catherine O'Hara. I mean,
he was was brilliant original Second City, and you know,
she did all the great comedies with Christopher Guest, you know,
stuff like Waiting for Guffman and the 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 Dafoe

(01:31:17):
do that? That Michelobultra they were betting on it.

Speaker 1 (01:31:21):
I don't remember what she was in, but I know
that she was in an ad that was like a
you know, Lie profile by So.

Speaker 7 (01:31:27):
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 somebody who's like when when Gene Hackman passed
away as sad as that was, he had taken himself

(01:31:49):
out of acting for so long that you didn't even
realize he was still around because we 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 Fly. He played Felix Lighter in a couple of
James Bond movies. He was well into his nineties when
he passed away, and it kind of surprised me because

(01:32:10):
he hadn't heard from him in a while. But but yeah,
Catherine O'Hara, that that kind of came.

Speaker 8 (01:32:14):
As a shock.

Speaker 1 (01:32:15):
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 still be very good

(01:32:35):
at hiding that. She just seemed like a cool mom
is what she kind of reminded me of always. So
that'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, Starling, I know your
movie dude doesn't take questions there. I heard the entire
James Bond series and going to be on Netflix for

(01:32:57):
a limited time. Ask him if it's true or fake.

Speaker 7 (01:33:02):
I haven't. Well, let's put this way. I haven't dug
deep enough to like be like, oh, it's some weird posts.
But I've heard that too. And the reason I find
that odd is because Amazon owns the Jameson franchise. But
it's a great way to get more people with their
eyes on it if they're certainly going to be rebooting it,

(01:33:24):
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 lot of people have Netflix,

(01:33:46):
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 serve and you couldn't get it elsewhere,
but it's sort of diversified. It's been put on other
places now.

Speaker 1 (01:34:04):
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.

(01:34:27):
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 your under your tent or umbrella too.

Speaker 7 (01:34:40):
Yeah, well you can get licensing fees or somehow. Sometimes
it ends up weird, like Yellowstone. Yellowstone is a Paramount
yeah show, but they licensed Yellowstone, the original series to Peacock,
and so Peacock was what was carrying Yellowstone. But then

(01:35:00):
all the other ancillary programs is on Paramount Plus. Now,
like 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

(01:35:21):
to string Seinfeld.

Speaker 2 (01:35:24):
So they.

Speaker 7 (01:35:26):
Because that's a popular show, 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 the Peacock property.

Speaker 1 (01:35:38):
Yeah, which and 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.

Speaker 3 (01:35:59):
That's great.

Speaker 7 (01:36:00):
Well, I mean it is a show about nothing, but
but it's really your basic three friends 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
episode was about. It was about like there was a
bagel store something that was striking or or or somebody

(01:36:23):
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 somebody was striking this.
But then it had that subplot with Festivus, which is
now what everybody remembers it for.

Speaker 1 (01:36:37):
Yeah, it's an amazing thing and good for them for
doing that. So uh, I just I'd like something to
last that long, But 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
data is is 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, ensemble cast

(01:36:59):
a weird those hanging out that somehow just fits and works.

Speaker 7 (01:37:03):
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 Cassanza that's that. That was the
Jason Alexander. He he continued doing other things. I mean,

(01:37:23):
Julie Louis Dreyfus kept it. She did movies. I think
she did Veep Beep was after she did Seinfeld New
Adventures of Old Christine. She's had about three or four
recognizable shows, and she's already famously well seen with out
the Hollywood stuff. But yeah, Larry David is just like,
I'm going to do something else. I'm going to do

(01:37:44):
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 3 (01:37:59):
He does some stay stand up.

Speaker 1 (01:38:01):
He quit for a while and did it all that,
you know, all the old stuff, and then threw it away,
which nobody does. It's just crazy. And then he still
comes around. I mean, what else are you going to 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 you want to do it?

Speaker 7 (01:38:22):
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. You the big, the big jackpoty,
you know, the eight hundred million domes 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 3 (01:38:43):
But nice weekend, though, Do you get it all.

Speaker 7 (01:38:48):
Out of your system? What do you do when you
wake up in the morning and then you make that
your your job?

Speaker 3 (01:38:52):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:38:53):
Yeah, that's it's a it's a it's a good way
to put it, speaking of a guy who just keeps working.

Speaker 3 (01:38:58):
And uh, how old Jason State?

Speaker 1 (01:39:00):
And now it seems like that guy's been making movies
since we were kids, and I know that's not possible.

Speaker 7 (01:39:06):
Well, his close i mean close is well not that close,
but I mean 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

(01:39:27):
it's he's been around 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 hair, no matter how short it is,
because his signature is like sort of a five o'clock
shadow everywhere.

Speaker 3 (01:39:45):
That's correct, It's still died, you know.

Speaker 7 (01:39:48):
I meant it's certain point something like like in this movie,
he's got a little bit of it's got some salt
in the pepper on the cheeks.

Speaker 3 (01:39:56):
Yeah, but I'm not dying.

Speaker 1 (01:40:00):
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 stoom
or if he's actually doing it. But I mean, do
you think they go, dude, you've got to at least
dye the hair on your head or just wmy not
shave it and leave it just as it is.

Speaker 3 (01:40:14):
It worked obviously for Bruce Willis.

Speaker 7 (01:40:17):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, well yeah, there work for and
Statum's done him where he's kind of pretty much shaved
on the top, but yeah, he he has different later
you know, lengths of stubble, you know, what's weird. I
guess what you would describe him. He would look strange
with the full head of hair, though, wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (01:40:36):
He 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 feel bothered.

Speaker 7 (01:40:48):
Well, I still think he should like growing out, and
I'd like to do him a Harper Marx level of
or Larry Fine from The Three Stooges. Not that I
would love to see.

Speaker 3 (01:40:57):
Yeah, i'd pay to see that on a big screen,
that's for sure.

Speaker 1 (01:41:00):
Now that this new thing is called Shelter and uh,
it's got some people at Bill NYA, I'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.

Speaker 3 (01:41:10):
Who's in? What is this about? Is this worth our time?

Speaker 7 (01:41:14):
Well? Okay, so here's the thing. It's January. So we
got to have ad Jason Statham action movie. That's just
kind of the rules. Now, that's how you get and
we've Yeah, I mean you've seen, we've you've seen. I
can guarantee you you've seen this movie. They're different characters
and names and locations, but you've seen this movie. And
if you like Jason Statham action movies, and you kind

(01:41:34):
of just they kind 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 Furious 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

(01:41:57):
he's an ex assassin for am 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

(01:42:17):
because she needs 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

(01:42:40):
roll the dice and say, Okay, he's an ex CIA agent,
He's an X you know, am I sixth agent, He's
the next Massade agent.

Speaker 3 (01:42:48):
You know, he that's what he's doing.

Speaker 1 (01:42:50):
Take a movie, pick a year that those are pretty
much the things that have happened too.

Speaker 3 (01:42:54):
That's funny.

Speaker 7 (01:42:55):
Why not, It's basically it's basically like Liam Neeson dead.

Speaker 1 (01:42:59):
That's true. I mean how many of those I mean
taken to it's still gone. Took again? Uh, don't take me.
I mean I don't know.

Speaker 7 (01:43:07):
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 plowur or you know, a person with a.

Speaker 5 (01:43:23):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:43:24):
I mean it's seasonally correct right now. So I mean
why not.

Speaker 1 (01:43:28):
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 7 (01:43:36):
I'll put one on mind, just this massive one that
you normally see on a giant forward truck, right.

Speaker 1 (01:43:42):
I just imagine the ads they had with those when
they first came out. So that, yeah, that's funny, as
I'll get 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 15 (01:43:56):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:43:56):
Now, I 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 mcaddens, you know.

Speaker 8 (01:44:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (01:44:18):
Yeah, but you know it's it's I've heard a lot
of good things. Sam Ramy 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 blackmail in her or
or extorting or something like that. But I've heard a
lot of good things about that, And I know you're

(01:44:39):
gonna get this this week and next week. There's a
bunch of little stuff that's come out, 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 and something. So there's a lot of smaller
movies coming out this weekend next and uh yeah, those.

Speaker 1 (01:44:59):
Are your choic There you go, shelter, send me help
or send help. I might need help too, but that's
neither here nor there.

Speaker 7 (01:45:06):
Rachel McAdam, Yes.

Speaker 1 (01:45:07):
Please, 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 Gecko is on the substack. And yeah, anything else
before I let you bounce that I forgot.

Speaker 7 (01:45:21):
I think we're good. I'm not predicting whether this week.

Speaker 3 (01:45:23):
That's a good thing. Yeah, stick to what you're doing.

Speaker 1 (01:45:26):
Stay in your lane, as they say, and I'll try
to maintain mine as well, Kevin, have a great weekend.

Speaker 3 (01:45:31):
We'll talk to you later.

Speaker 1 (01:45:32):
That's mister Carr's silver gecko on the substack straight away
for lots more to do. Nation Station where the Reds play.
Why because it's the home of the Reds. May not
feel like spring, but it won't be long. We are
just what is it, February twenty seventh. I'll be on
before Spring Training Baseball right here on seven hundred WLW, Cincinnati,
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