Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
We've made it to your Easter Sunday. Hopefully it's a
(00:02):
good one for you when yours lots going on. Red's
on the road taking on those arrangers in Texas looking
for a serious sweep after back to back wins to
start off their first road trip of twenty twenty six.
We'll get the inside pitch after one thirty five and
the news there and a good bit of ground to
cover between then and now. Of course, Kevin Carr also
(00:24):
going to join this conversation we had talking about that
new Super Mario movie and a bunch of other stuff too,
and good news with an update coming up in about
twenty minutes or so. Really just an amazing thing. Apparently
the missing F fifteen airman who was lost for some
period of time in waiting on his own in a
(00:46):
rarely uncomfortable, desolate kind of location apparently in Iran where
that aircraft went down, has been rescued, which is amazing,
with some type of daring raid as it's been reported,
So there'll be updates on that. Also, a new deadline
a couple of days away dealing with the straight of
Horn moves too, so hopefully that will get settled sooner
(01:07):
than later in the meantime, try to have a little
bit of fun, maybe with the kids in the car
or otherwise coming home from church or whatever else you
got going on.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Pass Over also happening. I'm just kind of curious.
Speaker 1 (01:17):
This is one of those things that as a kid
growing up, it was always there were the good jelly
beans and the crap jelly beans. And then as I
got older, what I used to think was good is
not so much now.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
Maybe a little too sugary.
Speaker 1 (01:29):
Now I've embraced sort of the Amish jelly bean kind
of thing or fruit flavors. It's probably still unhealthy as
all get out, but boy do I like them. It's
just a good times and debate of all debates. And
I'm gonna ask you this, and this isn't this is serious,
serious can be? Liam knows. You get yourself like Easter Bunny,
(01:51):
and I personally I like the white chocolate or dark chocolate.
But a lot of people are into the milk chocolate.
That's fine, but you get a hollow bunny, you get
a solid bunny. I think when you get a hollow bunny,
at this point, I feel like I've been robbed. I
remember it as a kid I felt like I had
been ripped off and taken advantage of. I wanted a
solid bunny that I could slam onto the counter and
(02:12):
then break apart, and I personally would depending I would
either gnaw in the ears first or I would bite
the head off first. And some would argue, depending on
how they were designed, to get the feet or the
butt or the bunny first and go from there. And
I know there are some people they're very passionate, they're
very very involved with the whole idea, and they like
(02:33):
a hollow bunny. They don't like the idea of me
saying that I'm going to attack the bunny and take
the ears and take the head or the butt or
whatever wise, But I mean, it's it's who I am, right,
So I'm just curious for you do you go? What
do you eat first when it comes to the bunny?
If you're into just such stuff. I wasn't allowed a
(02:55):
lot of sweets as a kid, so anytime there was
any type of way to get my hands on jelly
bean or chocolate or I was all for it big time.
Five one, three, seven, four, nine, seven, eight hundred. The
big one. Your chance to get interactive. Now you can
pick up the phone give it the finger. And also
if you got the iHeartRadio app, which you should, because
you can stream all of us on demand whenever you
(03:16):
want if you miss a show. You can also get
interactive that way by clicking on the microphone and you
can leave a message there too. And I am on
X not the nineties party. You're a calm down. It
used to be called Twitter at Sterling Radio and get
interactive that way too. The other question of questions when
it comes to Easter stuff, and I'm just wondering this.
(03:37):
I liked the hard boiled egg. Deviled eggs seem to
always be around Easter dinner, Easter lunch kind of things
around the house and over consuming the deviled eggs. Well,
it's in the name. The devil could be a problem
in that it can come back to hurt you later.
It's just one of those things, the hollow eggs with
(03:58):
other candy and other gifts and like that two prizes
in there, that's kind of nice. I'm just wondering what
you were your kids may be a fan of. And
of course the easter spread. A lot of people are
all about the ham. Half of my family not so
much into the ham or the pork stuff, but that
there's other things to eat as well. I'm wondering what
you're into. Five and three seven hundred, Big one to
(04:19):
La and Mike and Sterling on the Big One. Happy
Easter man, what's going on?
Speaker 3 (04:23):
Hey, Sterling? I always get a kick out of you.
Did she make my day?
Speaker 4 (04:28):
Whenever I get to hear it.
Speaker 2 (04:29):
I appreciate it. Thank you man made mine hare.
Speaker 3 (04:34):
I was having trouble getting the app so I just
called and I asked, I asked, a gentleman taking the call. Well,
I said, what's Sterling talking about? He said, he's talking
about eating chocolate bunny?
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Well, I mean it's Easter. I mean, let's be honest.
As a kid, what's the first thing you look to do.
Give me my bunny, right, give me my jelly beans.
I mean, it's just the way kids are. And I'm
just a big kid.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
I'm told.
Speaker 3 (05:00):
I don't even know if I can talk to them,
damn hard. Hey, hey, do me a favor if you can,
Can you google real quick deviled eggs?
Speaker 2 (05:10):
Okay, I'll search get.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
A background on deviled eggs.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
I'm not a I gotta be careful with the deviled eggs.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
You know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
You over indulge, they come back to haunt you. What
do you want to know?
Speaker 3 (05:21):
I mean, I got I just don't want to know
the origin of the origin of the deviled egg.
Speaker 2 (05:26):
Let me, let me investigate. Yeah, but you gotta have this.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
It's a matter of I think moderation that sort of
goes into it. Apparently they started in Italy, that's what
they said, that they were Italian in origin, and then
they've spread everywhere to the southern US. They got spicy
ones that they have other variations, which I mean people
do all kinds of things with eggs.
Speaker 3 (05:49):
Yeah, do you like them with the black olive or without?
Speaker 1 (05:52):
I don't know that I've ever had that. Since is
a very strange conversation. I I don't know that I've
ever had a deviled egg with olives in it.
Speaker 3 (06:00):
Yeah, it's pretty cool. I haven't had it with a
greenholme of black olive. But I'm kind of all over
the place, so you probably hate a better collar than me.
Speaker 5 (06:08):
Mike.
Speaker 2 (06:09):
It's good to talk to you.
Speaker 1 (06:09):
This is nice Elizabeth who I don't know if she
said Elizabeth the other day, but it looks like the
same message address Uh. Liz says that she likes a
spicy bloody Mary deviled egg. I've never even heard of that,
but I like a bloody Mary, so I mean, why not. Alan,
It's your turn with Sterling on the big one talking
(06:30):
Easter stuff and whatnot.
Speaker 2 (06:31):
What's going on, man, how are you?
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Hey?
Speaker 5 (06:34):
I'm good. I'm good looking, looking forward to a great
Easter with my grandkids.
Speaker 2 (06:38):
Nice. Hey, I grew up.
Speaker 5 (06:40):
With four brothers, and you know your Easter bunny. First
of all, I like the white chocolate one best.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
Yes, there's not a lot of us out there. I
mean I like dark chocolate better than white chocolate. But
if there's something about with the bunnies, or you get
the Reese's eggs or the little teeny things that are
and they're hard to find, the white chocolate, uh.
Speaker 5 (07:01):
Yeah, they seem to be more of a The white
rabbits are definitely harder to find. But if they've got
those kind of separate uh candy type eyeballs, I always
had to eat those first because my brothers would would
puck the eyeballs off and then make fun that my
rabbit was blind. So I either ate those first or
(07:21):
hit them.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Manrect So you had a sight challenge bunny after they
took their eyes. I mean, that is a brutal household.
You know what I'm saying. That is hard times on
Easter just is just brutal.
Speaker 5 (07:33):
Oh yeah, you had to hide. You had to hide
your bunny or they were gonna like take the ears off.
There had to be some sacrifice to the older brother
just to show their dominance over your bunny.
Speaker 1 (07:45):
That's a terrible thing. Now, solid or hollow chocolate.
Speaker 5 (07:49):
Well, I I'm with you. If you ever got a
solid one, you felt like, oh man, I got a
lot of chocolate here. But the ones that you thought
were you thought they were they were solid and and
and then you feel how light they are, and it's like, uh,
I got I got a hollow bunny, and uh it
was always kind of disappointing. I felt like the rich
(08:10):
kids were getting, you know, solid bunnies, and you know,
we were stuck with the hollow bunnies.
Speaker 2 (08:17):
Hard times.
Speaker 5 (08:17):
You know, enjoy what you got.
Speaker 1 (08:19):
It's right, hard time. You gotta enjoy it. At least
you got a bunny. Not everybody gets a bunny. I mean,
that's that's it's it's it's difficult. I mean it's just
one of those things. What about for the meal, like
a full on throwdown spread on an Easter Sunday?
Speaker 2 (08:32):
Do you go ham? What do you do?
Speaker 5 (08:35):
Uh? Yeah, with spiral ham. But my wife also likes
to uh to make a caucious and she'll make about
four or five different keishas and make those like the
day before and then warm them up and then each
daughter will well then have that. They're adults, say, they
(08:55):
all have something to contribute. And uh Jad was making
a chocolate chip cookies this morning and some devil bags.
And by the way, I love I told her, I said,
you need to put like a small pickle but on
top of the devil egg just gives it a little
bit of a twang.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
I'll try it. That's a great idea I want. So
I have a like a sweet pickle, or like I
have spicy pickles at the house, like the zesties. That
might be good too.
Speaker 5 (09:27):
I would go with a vasty pickle as opposed to
the sweet. We're gonna get enough sweets anyway, yes, or
even even the green olives. The guy who likes black olive.
That's just weird, you know.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
See, you know this is a tough place, man, because
you man, you can't have that olive. You got to
have the other, the right olive. You're not living right.
This is a hard crowd. Alan, I appreciate the call.
I hope you enjoyed the rest of your Sunday Eastern. Well,
you take care of yourself, man, I appreciate it. Trade
Dog was sterling on the big one. And you know,
let me just say, I've learned something new and I've
always wondered. There's the key, there's a frittata, and then
(10:01):
there's an omelet. I know there is a variance. I
don't know when. It's all based with the egg, of course.
And then here we are Easter Sunday talking about all
variations of eggs because we're solving the world's problems. Ken
ken Brew like to say that all the time about me,
Trace Jog. I think you know it's true. What's going on?
Speaker 6 (10:16):
Tre Hey, I had to tell a funny story to
you guys. It's about Joe knuxall.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
Okay, and.
Speaker 6 (10:29):
He they pulled him out of the game. Bernie Stowe's
wife used to make devil eggs.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
Oh no, don't keep it clean. Now, don't go someplace
weird on me. No, okay, noo.
Speaker 6 (10:44):
Bernie Stows. Bernie Stowe was a.
Speaker 2 (10:51):
Clubhouse manager.
Speaker 6 (10:53):
Yeah, whatever, But anyway, Joe Knuxall.
Speaker 2 (11:03):
Got pulled out of the game early.
Speaker 6 (11:07):
And he went down and he had all those deviled eggs.
Speaker 1 (11:12):
I remember hearing vaguely a story about that, and I
don't know the details of it, so you just remember
he ate like a mass quantity of eggs that were
in the clubhouse or something.
Speaker 6 (11:23):
He ate the whole team's eggs.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
He might have missed another start after that. There's a
lot of danger to that tray. I appreciate the call man,
thank you. That is an odd thing. As a kid,
I didn't like the deviled eggs at first. And then
I remember being just high enough in height to where
you could sort of meander through the kitchen, in through
the dining room where there might have been like a
(11:49):
bunch of food laid out, and you could just sort
of cut through and nobody paid attention and you could
just reach up and grab like deviled eggs or whatever
else was nearby. And they always had like a lot
of fruit and vegetable tray stuff and everything else going
on alarm that too, and I gotta say that's Uh,
that's just where did the devil eggs go? And it
wasn't me. There was a lot of kids that would
(12:11):
do the same thing. Five point three seven four nine,
seven thousand, eight hundred, the big one.
Speaker 2 (12:15):
Glad you're here.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
It's a Sunday Easter sterling in the midst of passover
as well, Reds and Rangers getting at it later this
afternoon inside Pitch coming up about one thirty five conversation
with Kevin Carr two about that super new Mario Galaxy movie,
and we'll get into other stuff with him as well,
And still wondering about how you go about attacking the
Easter bunny. And I don't mean like someone in the suit, which,
(12:38):
by the way, I saw people when I was leaving
to come here in the neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (12:43):
They had a whole they had rented.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
It looked like one of those inflatable jump houses or
whatever else. And the kids were out already and must
have been in between, like already after a church or whatever,
and they were hunting easter exit in the in the
yard and shrubberies and everything. And you see like the
smaller kids, which I always remember being in that spot
(13:05):
where everyone else was quickly seeing them and getting them,
and I just could never seem to find them and
get them quick enough, and always kind of felt like
I was getting robbed out of the deal. And you
could see some of the older people, parents, probably other
relatives sort of walking through with the little ones, trying
to point out in a general area so they could
feel like they found the eggs themselves. So I mean
(13:26):
that's the kind of day they're going through and navigating
a lot of kids. So not as warm as yesterday,
but it's still a beautiful day for it. So hopefully
you and yours are having a good one. And I
mean just all about now, see talking about all this
and this is not healthy. I am really craving and
I've already gone through two bags, not today, but because
(13:47):
you don't see them very often, which is one of
the guys I talked to a few minutes ago mentioned
it's hard to find sometimes that the white chocolate like
Aresie stuff or any of the white chocolate bunnies and things,
and unless you get them early. So like a last
couple of times, like through Kroger, I've gone through and
I see it, I've grabbed like a bag or two.
Speaker 2 (14:03):
So I've had a couple of those bags.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
I may not sound like I need any more candy
or caffeine at this point, but after the show I'll
be hitting it, you know what I mean, because this
is the time.
Speaker 4 (14:15):
What do you go for?
Speaker 7 (14:16):
First?
Speaker 1 (14:16):
You go for the ears? Do you go for the head?
Do you take the eyes off? Which I never had
the super deluxe bunny with eyes that would come off
of the bunny. I mean, Mom was always she would
say she was frugal and we didn't have a lot,
and she was conservative. But now I feel like she
went cheap on the rabbit, which is a little hurtful
(14:37):
now that I think about it. Five point three seven
four nine seven eight hundred the Big One and talk
back the iHeartRadio Act and clip on that microphone. You
can leave a message that way too.
Speaker 4 (14:47):
Quick?
Speaker 2 (14:47):
What does this say?
Speaker 5 (14:47):
Here?
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Hang on a second, let me check this message, so Sterling,
love you, you love the show. Why don't we hear from
Liam or any of the other producers more? I don't
know they're in there. They could say something if they
want to, just because I'm here, and you know, I
don't know. Limb can pop in anytime he wants. I'm
sure he's doing okay over there producing the show, keeping
us on time, in line and so forth. Let's see
(15:10):
here she mentioned to the bunnies, we like the small
hand sized bunnies for the kids. They're perfect size. And
you're right, solids are great. Okay, so that's good, thank
you very much. And new followers Jacob and Meatman and
a bunch of others too at Sterling Radio looking to
get interactive too. So coming up you get your twelve
thirty report update on what's going on all over the place.
Reds and Rangers later look to get their first sweep
(15:32):
of this season, this time against the Rangers on the road,
and a couple more games before heading back next weekend.
A great American ballpark to play some ball down by
the river. Felt like summer almost the last day or two,
and today feeling a little bit more as it should
be for the fifth of April being the easter. A
little bit chilly, a little bit overcast, but the shoe
(15:52):
of the trees as you're driving around, depending on where
you are, those leaves are popping out, Flowers are happening. Grass.
Listen closely. The grass is growing and I need to
hit mine. It's a bad scenario when the neighbors around
you have done yours, and I like to wait usually
till this is way too much information. I know you
(16:12):
didn't ask, but I like to wait usually till at
least the grass seeds one time before I mow it,
just because my uncle taught me that way as a kid.
He's got to fill those spots. You don't have to
oversee that way or save you a little bit of money.
I'm like, okay, but right now it looks like I
am the problem in the neighborhood and nobody wants that
sign that comes. They drop a sign out that says,
(16:34):
you know, a notice to mow, and then they hit
you if you don't do it, they hit you with
A buddy of mine was on vacation and they his
people didn't show up to do his lawn. He came
back and they mowed it for him, the city or
the county, whatever it is. And then he said they
charged him like three hundred and fifty dollars that they
assess the cost for them to come out and mow,
(16:56):
which you don't want to be in that situation now.
Straight away Ling conversation with Kevin Carr talking New movies,
Super Mario, Easter and more with Reds Baseball in the future.
Keep it on the Big One. It's a Sunday Sterling
Nation Station seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 7 (17:15):
I can describe the taste of the waters of a
pure mountain stream, but.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
It's something you should experience yourself.
Speaker 7 (17:24):
I can tell you of the man and his message
a Bill Cunningham is something you should experience yourself.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
Bill Cunningham. Tomorrow at noon, I'm seven hundred wl Bill
Cunningham here. If you want the best malts for your yard,
you got to go to Ohio Maults. Especially they're pine
bark Multterling.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
Hanging out fine, begin underway. Kevin Carr sever Gecko on
the sub stack in your mailbox. If you ask him
to be there, he'll just show up and have like
a story in u art and random other things. Kevin,
how are you? How do you feel?
Speaker 4 (18:04):
I'm doing okay. It's it's it's nice weather. Maybe maybe
a little rainy for some people, but I like it,
you know, yeah, before it gets super hot in the summer.
I love the spring weather. I love the green grass,
but by the time it gets to August, the grass
is kind of.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
Turned crunchy, brown crunchy, depending on how you are with
their watering or otherwise.
Speaker 2 (18:24):
Yeah, I get it. Yeah, I totally understand. Uh.
Speaker 1 (18:27):
You know the other thing that's really cool right now,
and I noticed it driving in down seventy one, uh
is and in just the last couple of days it
has that green hue or random other like hue of
colors of leaves and foliage starting to pop on everything
driving around, and that is like just in a magical
time for me.
Speaker 4 (18:47):
Yeah, it seems those like cherry blossom trees with the white, yeah,
the white and pink petals that then and then of
course you know about a week or two they're gonna
shed those.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
And I'm already eating laratidine like it's nobody's business more
allergy medicine. My face feels like it's gonna fall off.
I was trying to. I mean, it's all like it
just itching and from the inside and the sinus.
Speaker 2 (19:07):
It's great, everything's fine.
Speaker 4 (19:09):
Y you love it.
Speaker 1 (19:10):
Yeah, So this would be a good time to escape
into a theater maybe where there's some good clean air
and oversized beverages and pretzel bites.
Speaker 2 (19:18):
What what are we going to see? What is the
one pick I think, I know, I think.
Speaker 4 (19:22):
Well, the big movie this weekend, and it actually started
Tuesday night because they had they always do like previews
shows the night before, so this is like almost going
back to last weekend, but Tuesday night and then Wednesday
they opened the Mario What is it the Super Mario
Galaxy movie. There's a lot you know, you don't know
if there's a if there's brother in there, you don't
know if there's a the you gotta keep looking that up.
(19:44):
But yeah, I believe it's the Super Mario Galaxy movie.
It's a sequel to the Super Mario Brothers movie from
three years ago that was a massive worldwide hit, which
is rare for a video.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Game movie now when you say rare, but it's an
animation thing. So there is a differentiation between We've had
this talk before between just regular animation and that that
is associated with the video game. Some stuff is a
video game inspired then other things sort of went the
other direction, I think, or at least one or two.
Speaker 4 (20:11):
Right, Yeah, well, I mean like back in the nineties,
they did a lot of video game movies. They did
some in the eighties as well, but they were trying
to do live action versions of stuff, like probably the
most successful ones from the nineties were Mortal Kombat and
Resident Evil, which were a shooter games, you know basically,
and they they tried one for Doom and it was terrible,
(20:33):
you know. And they did a Super Mario Brothers movie
from the nineties and it makes you wonder what kind
of drugs everyone was taking. And the fact that I
don't think anybody who worked on that movie actually played
any game from Nintendo that it was ever produced, because
it's such a bonker's movie and not very good. But
(20:55):
it's always difficult for a video game movie to do
well because the plot of a video game you kind
of have to it's somewhat open ended. You did have
to go from world to world and beat bosses, and
there's not a real plot in the in the way
that a real movie would have it, And so they
they may have a great setup and have a great world,
(21:15):
but you kind of just wander that world, and Hollywood
is finally figuring out how to put a story to these.
I would describe it as the difference between like like
just a traditional like like radio song like you know
with verses and music versus club dance mixes, which are
(21:36):
structured totally differently and and don't work in either other's contexts.
And I think that's kind of how you got to
take the video games versus film.
Speaker 2 (21:45):
Gotcha all right?
Speaker 1 (21:45):
Well that was very heavy, like educated, like you know,
scholarly breakdown. I have to make my brain work a
little harder. I'm thinking Sonic too, I'm thinking Tetris, I'm
thinking Grand Turismo, I'm thinking the Minecraft movie and how
to navigate it. And they're like, well, you know, you
gotta change things a little bit for the world, get
a sort of self.
Speaker 4 (22:04):
I'll send you a tuition bill next week.
Speaker 2 (22:06):
Thank you.
Speaker 1 (22:07):
I'll take the hit for everybody in this Talking to
Silver Gecko on substat Kevin Carr about this new Super
Mario Galaxy movie.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
I think I got the name right.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
So is this like one of these things where if
you've got kids who want to see it, are they teenier?
I talked to a neighbor earlier. One older teen rolled
their eyes. The younger, who just a teenager, seemed excited like,
can we just stop talking to Sterling and get to
the theater. And mom just was like, this is my life,
so you tell me where this fits.
Speaker 4 (22:38):
Yeah, I saw a lot of that this week, well,
because I went and saw the movie in the afternoon,
and if the audience is any indicator, it's it's going
to be younger kids because of the cartoon and silly,
and it's fun and it's brighton. It's got a lot
of action and movement and stuff like that. There's always
going to be somewhere somewhere in the between child and
(23:00):
and young adults that's gonna roll their eyes at anything
that's the popular. This thing made like something like seventy
million dollars globally on Wednesday.
Speaker 2 (23:11):
In today's that's big.
Speaker 4 (23:12):
Right in the middle of the week. I mean, it's
spring breaking a lot of places. But yeah, it's still
it did extremely well, it seems to me, at least
from what I've just witnessed, as there's a lot of
it's a younger kids movie, but I know adults who
who love this kind of stuff. To part of it
is it's it's really this is very much a fan
(23:33):
service movie. And the first movie I thought was clever
and cute. It wasn't great, but it was fun. But
if you played the game, you felt like you were
inhabiting the game, and that was kind of cool because
they kind of nailed that that attempt that they've been
trying to do for decades. This one definitely feels like
you're in the game, but I there's not much of
(23:55):
a story here. It's just kind of hopping from world
the world as they're trying to Bowser's son kidnaps princess
us some Rosealia I don't know, Rosamund Pike, I don't know,
but they kidnapped Peach's sister and they he's holding her
for ransom to get Bowser back, and then they kind
(24:15):
of go from world to world and go through a
bunch of you know, trials and stuff and then which
is very much like a game, but I kind of
felt like I was watching somebody else play it. And see.
Speaker 1 (24:25):
That's the other thing I don't understand. That's like those
videos that they have them all over YouTube where you
can watch somebody else play and they give you tips.
I understand about like being able to negotiate and navigate
the world and getting help, you know, but I don't
want to watch somebody else play.
Speaker 4 (24:44):
Well. I think at least where the mindset is for
for like, and this certainly is a gen z Jen
Alpha type thing. They you know, they don't want to
spend countless hours in their basement trying to figure out
how to do. They want to see somebody do and
and succeed through. Like do you remember that movie Dragon
not than that movie the game Dragon's Layer when we
(25:06):
were kids.
Speaker 2 (25:06):
Yeah, it was.
Speaker 4 (25:08):
It was Don Bluth from Disney did the animation, Selly animation.
It was on laser disc and it was Dirk the
Daring would go through and he had to go through
and you you had to take him into the dragons
layer and save the princess. That was really really boring
to play because you you had to warn it and
it took hours and hours and a lot of quarters.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
But just what owner loves keep pumping those quarters ton.
Speaker 4 (25:33):
But but when when if you ever saw somebody go
through it it? Actually, I think that's sort of what
we're doing. I mean a lot of the other games
back then. You know, Cubert was only fun to watch
for so many because you just hopped around it on
squares and swore occasionally.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
That's correct. I remember that very well. Yeah, that's hilarious.
I just in the scheme of things, So this is
good for the kids. Anybody else, you're kind of like, eh,
I get more if.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
You played the game right. And there's a lot of
adults who play this stuff too, of course, but it's like,
you know, it's one of those things where you do
have to there is that, you know, because Nintendo's a
Japanese company, and you have to respect that Japanese business mindset.
The people who were able to continually make Pokemon a
(26:21):
wildly popular, very involved game for generations. That's the mindset
behind Nintendo. And that's why Mario, who was just your
protagonist from Donkey Kong back in nineteen eighty two or
whenever that came out, they built an entire world around
him and they have little you know, everything is there's
(26:42):
so many different characters and types of characters and different
gumbas and different you know, turtles and all that kind
of thing that if you really play the game, and
you play all the Mario games, there's a lot of
fan service there. And who am I to get in
the way of that. I don't get it. But you know,
if you like it, go watch the movie. Yeah, if
you if something gives you joy, go see it. As
long as you're not hurting somebody else there.
Speaker 2 (27:03):
You go.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
I mean, we're not here to hate on. It's Kevin Carr.
I'm sterling seven hundred WLW. You're talking about the Super
Mario Galaxy movie, Elizabeth, and Oakley said she's still a
fan of the Angry Birds movie. That's all she could.
But that was just I don't know that that's the
entire text that sent to me here. So you know,
(27:25):
I don't even know when that came out. I vaguely
remember talking to you about it.
Speaker 4 (27:29):
I hate to tell you, it was not a thing
that just happened.
Speaker 2 (27:32):
No, it's like a decade.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
Me though, my kids were, like my oldest son's turning
twenty five this summer. He was in high school when
that came out. Okay, and it may have been the
second one when that came out, So it's been a while.
But but you know, she's right, The Anger Birds movie
managed to make a in universe story that made sense
(27:55):
with the joke and with the elements of gameplay, but
not feeling like you're watching somebody a game that actually
there was a story. They were trying to save these
these eggs.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Right now, of all of all the kids movies that
you had to watch and take the hit four for
the family, Yeah, and then all the kids stuff that
you've taken the hit for for the rest of us
regular people, how money, What are the ones that stick
out for you that are like, Okay, these are the
really good kid movies for grown ups because I think
there's a topic of conversation here.
Speaker 4 (28:25):
Well, definitely, certainly anything from early Pixar, and I'm not
hating on later Pixar, but like the run of like
their first ten movies was just banger after banger, and
it it It captured the the intention of children, but
it also had a lot of stuff in there for
the adults, and that that's what makes a great movie great. Now,
(28:49):
some of the later Pixar movies are good or bad everybody.
I think Brave, which is as good as a movie
is Brave, is that was kind of the tipping point.
And then you had the good Dinosaur and there's some
stumbles along the way, but yeah, anything from Pixar. The
other thing you had to realize with kids movies is
I remember taking my children when they were little to
that first Alvin in the Chipmunks movie, like gosh, twenty
(29:12):
years ago, and yeah, it's stupid. I know it's stupid.
It's an Alvin and the chipmus Well, it's.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
Still fun if you just let yourself get into it,
but you gotta have kids with you or watch it
at home otherwise.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
And we've discussed this time and time.
Speaker 8 (29:28):
Yeah, well, but the thing is I want it and
taking my kids and watching it, and then I'd look
over at them and you'd see them just beaming and smiling,
and you're.
Speaker 4 (29:40):
Like, you know, you could get into it because the
kids liked it so much. I really kind of carry
that movie with me, knowing that it's not a great film,
but it really was something the kids thoroughly enjoyed and
that was a great moment. That was a lot of fun.
Like the Madagascar movies were the same thing. I remember
taking my kids to those, and it's just the fact
(30:01):
that we had such a great experience together helps color
that movie to be much nicer for me and much
more fonder to remember.
Speaker 2 (30:09):
There you go, see, it's all very emotional. That's pretty good.
Speaker 1 (30:14):
Fritz the Cat's see, that's a whole other thing, right,
because there's also cartoons and animation stuff made really not
for children at all whatsoever. Because somebody like Fritz the Cat, Yeah,
and that's what somebody just messaged me now, and that's
like what the late sixties, early seventies.
Speaker 2 (30:31):
I mean, that's all it was.
Speaker 4 (30:33):
It was like early seventies and definitely not for the children.
It was X rated, it actually was. It received an
X rating. And here's a little interesting little piece of
trivia with that. The guy who voiced Fritz the Cat
was one of the people who was on the Electric Company.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
Oh.
Speaker 4 (30:53):
I don't know if he ever got in trouble for it,
because we didn't have social media in the Internet, and
you really had to That was a deep cut in
terms of you'd have to know who that guy was,
and you'd have to know the guy the actor's name
on the Electric Company. But he did a kid show
and then he was but it's just his voice. But
uh yeah, I mean Fritz and Cats is fun. But yeah,
(31:14):
it does have some stuff I certainly wouldn't show children.
Speaker 1 (31:17):
Yeah, I mean that sort of goes into it, like
all the South Park stuff, even the like the Beavis
and butthead which is far removed now. I mean that's
a generation or two technically, even though they brought it
back for New Right. I mean yeah, so I mean
that that's one of those I remember my aunt at
a holiday get together. It may have been Easter time,
I don't remember. And if I've told you this, probably
on the show where I remember being there with family
(31:38):
trying to track her down. The people wanted her for something,
and she was in you know, this other family room,
tucked away watching it. And she was embarrassed and told
me not to tell anybody. But she loved Vivis and butthead.
And she's now, you know, a bit older than we are,
obviously in her eighties, and I still bring that up
to her and she still laughs. It's funnier than all hell.
Speaker 4 (31:56):
To me, that's a whot that she was. She was
sneaking that. The fact that she's doing it pretty huge family.
She doesn't do it late at night when no, no,
it's TiO huge family things. She sneaks away to what
the Beavis and butt head in private, so nobody knows it.
Speaker 2 (32:09):
Was just what she was passing through.
Speaker 1 (32:10):
I know she turned it on or it was on,
But I mean, that's a nice guilty pleasure. And I
think a lot of us have those type of like
sort of like the things that were like a sweet
spot for us.
Speaker 4 (32:18):
Yeah, and well you always remember the stuff you watch
that you weren't supposed to as a kid. And here's
something that's this seems to be uniquely American. You know,
I mentioned Japan as well. The Japanese culture animations for
everybody they have, they have well they have really hardcore too,
but they also have the whole sections of anime that
(32:40):
are not for kids at all. It's got some very
extreme stuff happening. And I'm not talking about like ken
Tai and so, I'm talking about like you know, Demon Player,
that's that is a that's not something you want to
watch with kids. It's it's bloody, it's violent, yes, But
the Japanese you know it be an animation does not,
I mean it's for kids. America has sort of that
(33:03):
that seems to be a thing that's like, that's not true.
And it wasn't until like really the nineties that you
started seeing stuff like The Simpsons. I remember when The
Simpsons was big in taboo, and now it's kind of
like it's a kid show.
Speaker 1 (33:17):
Well it's been on like longer than just about anything
other than sixty minutes in Nightline like this.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
It's the Lawrence Welk of animation.
Speaker 1 (33:24):
It really is. It's tremendous. I mean, the South Park
stuff is good. Somebody else I think that's Elizabeth again
Ghost in the Shell, which, yeah, that's like the nineties stuff,
same type as thing.
Speaker 4 (33:33):
Yeah that was a Japanese movie, and yeah, there's a
whole bunch of there's several movies of that.
Speaker 1 (33:39):
Yeah, all right, so I guess we found Elizabeth in Oakley.
So Wheelhouse is she's now obtaining regularly. So thank you
for listening to being part of the show. She may
reach out to you if you're not already going into
her mailbox anything else before we let you go to
think about this weekend movie stuff or otherwise. I mean, obviously,
Project Hail Mary's going to be in theaters for quite
a while, right. Joe Wadell produced it, says he wants
(33:59):
to it again in a bigger screen.
Speaker 2 (34:01):
He loved it.
Speaker 4 (34:02):
It is. It is definitely one of those event type movies.
Poor as much people like we're like, oh Interstellar, you know,
Christopher Nolan, Big Street, and this is way better as
a big screen movie. I'll say that for space movies.
Speaker 1 (34:15):
Yeah, it's kind of why and sort of timely now too,
because everybody's thinking about you, you know, getting around the moon
and Artemis too. I mean, it's it's sort of right there,
except you know, if no talk of an alien into
their little teena or Ryan capsule.
Speaker 4 (34:28):
Well, Ryan Gosling went a little farther than the moon.
Well how setti, which is like eleven and a half
light years away or something like that.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
Well, yeah, I mean, but it's Ryan Gosling, So I mean,
you know, I don't even know what that means. Sellar
right right, exactly exactly, all right, Kevin, thank you for
doing what you do.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
Man.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
We appreciate it. Silver Gecko sub stack find him there.
He'll come and visit you in your mailbox electronically subtly too,
and then you'll hear him here with me because he's
kind enough to give us some time.
Speaker 2 (34:56):
Enjoy the rest of your weekend, dude, all right, you too.
Speaker 1 (34:58):
Sterling on the home of the Red seven hundred WLW Cincinnati, Texas.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Was waiting on the refund you needed yesterday.
Speaker 4 (35:06):
All right.
Speaker 1 (35:07):
Ah here we are Easter Sunday, hopefully a good one
for you and yours, passover and full on effect as well.
And good news that missing US airman rescued in Iran,
apparently hiding in a ridge line of some sort with
that Vegan and they were able to get him. So
we'll see exactly what the next couple of days bring
in and Iran with the more warnings from the President
(35:29):
about the straight oh Horn moves and threatening infrastructure and
everything else. So you keeping on the Big One for
details on that. Reds Baseball coming up as well. Red's
Rangers in Texas their place in Arlington, looking to get
at it and looking for a sweep of this weekend series,
first road trip of the year. Chase Burns on the
(35:49):
Hill for the Reds already got his first win, seven strikeouts,
his era blank zeros in the space and Jack Lighter
which is out Lighter son, if I'm not mistaken, which
is crazy, because I remember going to see how Ler
pitch for the I think it was what the Mets.
If I'm not mistaken coming into the what was Riverfront
and maybe I don't know if he was there ever
(36:10):
a great American ballpark, think back here on time on that.
We'll give you a starting lot. In fact, I may
as well because I have him in front of me
and I mentioned I'll give you a red starting lineup today.
Speaker 2 (36:18):
TJ.
Speaker 1 (36:19):
Friedl is gonna lead off in center field. Matt McLean's
back at second, hitting for second. Elie de la Cruz,
who is so wearing that sweatshirt under his uniform and
everything else in a crispy seventy degree plus the like
dome like a facility there in Texas, just doing what
he does. He'll be back at short hitting third, in
front of Sal Stewart playing first, and in the cleanup
(36:39):
spot in front of au Haano Suarez. He hits fifth,
he's going to d h and left field, Spencer Steeer
is there and you'll hit six. Tyler Stevenson back behind
the plate, calling the game and receiving for Chase Burns.
Noel v Martes back in right field hitting eighth, and
keep Brian Hayes vacuum cleaner at third, hopefully finding a
little bit more action with the lumber is going to
(37:00):
hit ninth. That is your starting lineup against Jack Lighter
and those Rangers with the red first pitch at two
thirty five, and I'm about the thirty minutes away, give
or take a little less than that from the inside pitch,
kicking the door open on that all right, So Easter,
I'm just kind of curious, what is your Easter meal?
I want to keep it light. We're not going to
solve all the world's problems. We're leading into reds baseball.
(37:21):
It's a nice day. Kids are hunting Easter eggs, people
are going to church, people are hanging out, They're going
to the buffet. They're throwing down big spreads of food.
What is it that you when you think Easter is
a prime rib? Is it ham? What is it that
you're doing, Sarah? At least I saw, of course you're
here with kid Chris. In the mornings on EBN, you
(37:41):
hear doing all kinds of stuff on the big one
and elsewhere too, she said one of her family members,
I'm trying to see here. It was on my feed,
and now I've lost it, she put out on x.
I think it was a skyline bit of lasagna or
something one of her relatives brought to the get together,
which is kind of nice. It looked fantastic. I'm sitting
(38:04):
here behind a microphone or a room with the window
into a hallway, hopped up on way too many suites already,
I've grabbed a handful of stuff on the not a
well balanced meal to start the day.
Speaker 2 (38:16):
But you know it's all right, I'll get to it U.
Speaker 1 (38:18):
Five point three seven four N eight hundred, the big one,
your chance to get interactive. And the other thing I'm
thinking about this, we've got these astronauts doing something that
is monumental, sling shotting in their way around the Moon.
I think tonight or tomorrow they should make that loop
around if I'm not mistaken, and then start heading back
(38:39):
home and they basically are falling through space. Had conversation
with Mikey Wall from space dot Com about that the
other day and just talking about the stuff that they're
dealing with, going to work and exercising and a lot
of research in and around the Moon. Because what they're
doing obviously is putting it all together, planning and plotting,
in research everything is they look to actually touch ground
(39:03):
again on the Moon's surface, not this trip, but a
couple of trips from now, and then also put together
some type of base there, which is a pretty wild thing,
and then utilize that whether it's.
Speaker 2 (39:17):
I guess a way station for one of a better
way to describe it.
Speaker 1 (39:20):
Sort of like a you know, flying into one airport
that's a hub and then going from there somewhere else.
That's the idea to get to Mars or somewhere way
way out there, which is a pretty wild thing. It's
got to be an amazing sort of inconceivable circumstance to
be so far from home and just literally they describe
(39:43):
it as falling through space because they're in this orbit
so they don't have to use any thrusters. There's no
energy being used. They're just whipping around and going to
work with the incredible views of Earth, incredible views of
the Moon up close, other than landing on it, which
these guys won't do, and ladies, but they'll be there.
I'm just wondering if you were going to take this trip.
(40:04):
And I talked about this briefly yesterday, but I think
we'll give you a chance to sound off on it,
and you can talk about the Easter stuff and whether
you're and I wonder if they have like Easter eggs
of some sort or they got some chocolate bunnies. I
didn't see any video of that. I'm kind of a
geek watching all this stuff. Not a lot of space,
they say, less than four hundred cubic feet of space,
(40:25):
and that orion capsules they are up there making their way,
So not a lot of privacy, not a lot of
elbow room, and not a lot of cargo space, which
then leads me to what do you carry on to
take with you? And in brief yesterday, I mean, one
of the things, some of these spectacular pictures that we've seen,
aside from the camera that's on the solar array that's
(40:47):
on the exterior of that capsule, which is obviously powering
a lot of what they're doing, you could see it
was really disturbing to me the scientists that it was okay,
like normal and reasonable, were exercising, at least one of
them inside it, and the camera that's on attached to
the solar array giving you a look at it part
of that capsule and then nothingness or everything space, whatever
(41:11):
it is that's up there, and it was vibrating and moving,
swaying as they were exercising.
Speaker 2 (41:19):
They're like, oh, yeah, I'll do that. I don't know
about you.
Speaker 1 (41:23):
I'm not quite a white knuckle flyer, but if I'm
on an aircraft and it starts to bounce around and
do some stuff like that, and I know it's a
long way down, I mean, I guess the upside is
that they're they're falling, but they're in a pathway. It's
not like they're going to come careening down. But that
would mess with my head. It would take a lot
for me to process that circumstance. But they took a tablet,
(41:46):
and some of the pictures that we've seen of Earth
and outward towards the Moon have been from literally a
tablet like you probably have maybe in your hand right now,
or you know, kids in the backseat of the car
or whatever else with it, which is a pretty astounding
circumstance to imagine that being the case. I mean, you
take your phone. They wake them up with music that
(42:07):
they pipe in from a mission command and so forth.
But I mean, I would want a soundtrack. I'd be listening.
Maybe they can have the iHeartRadio app up there. I'm
not quite sure if that's a possibility, but what an
amazing thing they could be streaming right now, Hello astronauts,
how are you? We look forward to her splashing down
and coming home sooner than later. It's possible they could.
(42:28):
I mean, it's not like I have friends in the
UK and they tell me that they will use VPN
to be able to change where they're getting their Internet
that way, so that they can check out the show
and other stuff on the iHeartRadio app. I would imagine
that they could do that from space. I don't know
how the VPN works from way out there, but that.
Speaker 2 (42:48):
Would be something. Five point three seven four nine seven
eight hundred. The Big One.
Speaker 1 (42:52):
What would you take with you lucky rabbit's foot, which
wouldn't be so lucky for the rabbit, especially today talking
about Easter and everything with that? Maybe, I mean, I
think the music player would be great. Something to read
which could be on the tablet, but I still like
to see, feel and touch and turn pages on occasion.
But there is nothing quite like the convenience of being
(43:12):
able to have something that holds almost an endless supply
of reading material and information that you can put in
your pocket or in your brief bag or a briefcase,
whatever it is, carry with you, which is a pretty
astounding thing. Five three seven four nine seven eight hundred
The Big One. Tons of people on social media, by
the way, whether it's on X or Facebook, posting pictures
(43:35):
in various states of a celebration of Easter or passover,
what have you. Rick Flair, the Nature Boy, perhaps the
greatest showman of all time when it comes to big
time professional wrestling. He's put out a poster with theater
WU and him with some bunny ears out and about
my guess is some Ai, but who knows.
Speaker 2 (43:56):
And he's out there.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
He's got a very colorful blazer and a big basket
of Easter eggs. I don't know if he's dropping them
off for kids to hunt or him picking them up.
I guess you could go either way on that. A
bunch of different bands doing the same thing and so on,
and I had somebody message me back. I was asking
about the chocolate bunny and how I always as a
kid felt like I have been robbed in somehow not
(44:21):
getting what I had hoped to get when it was
a hollow bunny. I wanted solid chocolate bunny. I mean,
that's how you know you're living right, you know. And
you could take it and you can either break off
an ear, you could break off of Paul like the
rabbit's foot and eat that first non it or otherwise
whatever it is that makes you happy, I suppose, and
a whole lot of jelly.
Speaker 2 (44:42):
Beans I'm imagine being consumed.
Speaker 1 (44:45):
And the other thing here and Lucas by the way
in a Madeira, I think that, Yeah, it's a Madeira
Lucas and Madeira says that he likes the malted Easter eggs,
and I guess that's like a malted milk ball. Yeah,
I'm not I don't understand that. I remember as a
kid getting those and I'm like, what is this chalky, crusty,
crunchy stuff, Give me chocolate. It was like I was
(45:07):
all excited, thinking I'm getting the chocolate, and then there's
no chocolate. It was an emotional letdown. Is really what
it is? Five point three seven hundred, the big one.
I'm just wondering what it is that you look forward
to when it comes to Easter, whether that's your services,
whether that's the feast with friends and family, whether it's
the spiritual nature of it. Obviously that's a big part
(45:29):
for all of us in one fashion or other, at
least most of us. It's it's a telling time, and
of course, on the cusp of a lot of other
things going on in the world right now, it maybe
has some more resonance in some cases when you see
the volatility of where we are in the world, with
what's going on in Iran and elsewhere, uh, and so
(45:51):
forth with some tensions and so forth. And something that's
interesting to me is you you hear it from astronauts
who have acted gone to space, not just the ones
who have gone to the Moon, which is just a
handful and a fewer of those around than there used
to be, because well, we get old and go. But
they talk about feeling minuscule or humbled and seeing you
(46:14):
know how fragile all of it is, you know, stepping
away in that perspective of seeing where all of us
are inhabiting that one particular planet that we call home,
this Earth, and so forth with that, which is a
pretty wild scenario. I want to know what you think
your chance to get interactive quick break come back. It's
a Sunday Easter sterling on the Nation station with the
(46:35):
Reds and Rangers getting atted on seven hundred WLW.
Speaker 7 (46:39):
I am working to better myself. That's why I'm digging
this survival bunker in my backyard so when the big
one hits, I'll be fine. Well, my neighbors get vaporized snuckers.
That's also why I listen to Scott Sloan. He has
common sense answers for the problems we all face and
he's pretty funny. I face the same problems you do,
(47:00):
so let's talk about him and have a little fun
along the way.
Speaker 2 (47:02):
Dot Sloan's the Bomb.
Speaker 7 (47:04):
Check out Sloaney tomorrow morning and nine on seven hundred WLW,
and be sure to catch you this podcast on the iHeartRadio.
Ad ken Brew here my wife Pat.
Speaker 2 (47:15):
I like this mark on the west Side.
Speaker 1 (47:18):
Message me at Sterling Radio on x Sterling by the way,
seven hundred WLW. Mister McMahon producing, keep me online in
time and inside Pitch coming up after your one thirty report.
Brady Hopkins has news and then we'll get the door
open and get you ready talking about some red baseball
as it look to make a sweep of this trip
into Arlington, Texas, their first road trip of the season.
(47:40):
They got work to do this afternoon. We'll give you
details on that soon enough. The message, though, is the
best stuff I've ever found inside an Easter egg, meaning
plastic geagaster egg. He followed up with says, cash money,
fifty bucks. I was clearly not living right as a kid.
That's tremendous. I'm trying to think of candy inside those.
(48:03):
I think maybe change I remember like maybe a quarter
or something when I was a tiny sterling doing some
Easter egg hunting or whatever else. But fifty bucks, that's huge,
that's all right, it's tremendous.
Speaker 2 (48:16):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (48:16):
As a kid, though, I think I probably would have
preferred the candy and not been able to put two
and two together, or fifty in that case into the
idea that that fifty could buy me a whole lot
of like candy and then have some change left over.
Speaker 2 (48:27):
But that's pretty strong.
Speaker 1 (48:29):
And I'm just wondering what else if you found anything
special inside these? I mean, jelly beans were just enough
for me to be happy and satisfied with my day
and my find and everything along with that. And I
don't know what the kids were finding. Is at church
down the way from where I lived to and they
were all out there today running around with balloons and
(48:51):
looking for eggs and doing all kinds of stuff too
as I was headed here, which was kind of a
nice thing to see, just in brief as I was
looking and going through sort of peeping and seeing those.
He has a lot of happy, smiling faces. And the
funny thing is, when when we were really small, we
don't really have a full understanding of what's happening, which
is always where the assistance comes in is go look
(49:13):
over there, go look in that area. And with the
grass growing at this point, uh, I would imagine there
might be some eggs that are lost that end up
being found with the mower in the days ahead. I
could be wrong, just because of how fast it's all growing,
whether you've hit the wheat and feet or otherwise. Uh,
it's it's a lush time. The leaves are popping on
(49:34):
trees and everything else. This is between this and fall,
and then you get the sound of all the leaves
in the wind all summer. It's a nice soundtrack to
like the backyard and life and so forth, absorbing a
lot of the you know, sounds of traffic and everything
else with that. Uh It's it's pretty nice, pretty pretty cool,
just all in all. And then of course, you know fall,
(49:55):
when they start to change and go the other direction.
We're on the front end of that. I'm not trying
to bring anybody down. I'm tired the snow, I'm tired
of the cold. I'm ready for the warm h And
you know, that whole idea of being in the backyard
and get the big one on. You can listen to
some Reds baseball and maybe get the grill going or
whatever else. Bonfire's pretty al right. Uh so that's not
(50:15):
too bad. Elizabeth, who is a regular from Oakley at
Sterling Radio, says, Uh, lottery tickets in easter eggs would
be nice too. I suppose maybe for grown ups. I
don't know that you want to be given like kids
easter eggs loaded up with you know, lottery tickets. But
you know, if it makes you happy, Uh why not,
you know, I guess, But it's an odd way to
(50:38):
I can only imagine like a three year or four
year old sort of like meandering through the yard getting
excited and the crack over. But it's oh, it's it's
a lottery ticket. I don't even know how many kids
at that age even know what that would be. It's
somewhat disturbing.
Speaker 2 (50:52):
All right.
Speaker 1 (50:52):
Braddy Hopkins coming up, but he's got your one thirty report.
The other side, the RNL carriers inside pitch as we
tee it up and get ready for Reds and Rangers.
They look to make it three wins in a row.
They've gone back to back against the Rangers. We'll see
if that momentum carries on, they've got a series win
under their belt and ready to roll. We'll see if
they can get a sweep before they get out of
(51:13):
town and head on to the next spot before coming
back home next weekend. News time now inside Pitch straight Away,
Home of the Reds Sterling Sunday Easter seven hundred WLW
scoreless so far