All Episodes

October 31, 2025 • 137 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Stay Informed at the top and thirty minutes fast on
fifty five KRC The talk station.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Five O five A fifty five KRC the talk station.
Happy Friday. Who it must be Friday? Thank you Joe

(00:40):
Jrekker for that one. Brian Thomas right here, glad to
be and uh wishing everyone indeed a very happy Friday
and happy Halloween. So is a funny article the Wall
Street Journal potatoes headline, how the potato became a coveted
prize for trigger treaters. I didn't know that was a thing,
but apparently it is indeed a thing. So not something

(01:02):
I would be looking forward to getting if I was
a tricker treater. Ah, let us see here, Juste Trecker,
you got candy given out today? No, don't knock on
Streker's door. This is tradition, nothing new about that response.
Glad to see your keeping true to your prior years.

(01:22):
And just you keep the lights off. Absolutely, Joe's not home.
That's the bottom line for just Trecker. Good for you,
and I'm looking forward to the one doorbell ring we
typically get at the in our neighborhood. Just one singular
doorbell you just putting pretty much every young person in
the neighborhood kind of goes around the neighborhood together. Our
neighborhood is not very big, so not a destination visit

(01:44):
for trick or treaters. Anyway, I'm inviting phone calls. Love
to hear from you. Maybe you got something you want
to prioritize. In terms of conversation. We got some great
news from Signal ninety nine, former police officer, current police officer.
Don't know. Signal ninety nine remains in terms of I
identity elusive to me, but on Facebook she is extraordinarily
popular and very well connected. I don't know if she's

(02:07):
still a police officer. Like I said, former police officer.
But the video is now out, the video that aftab
Provall was trying to keep from you before the election,
it's out, so we'll get some details on that. The
actual beatdown videos start to finish. No, the white guy
was not responsible. The entire group just literally got surrounded
and got the crap beat out of him for literally

(02:28):
no reason. And that's what aftab Provall, Cheryl Wong and
all the rest are city manager didn't want you to see.
So we get to see it. You know what, Early
voting's going on. Hey, look, it's all my rundown. Last
day to early vote is Sunday. Thank you Joss Chrekker
for reminding me about that. I knew that, but it
gives me an opportunity to remind you you can vote.

(02:49):
Do you want status quo in the city. Fine. I'm
so worried about this in the sense that I want
to be optimistic, but I can't be. Corey Bowman's joining
the program today. He'll be in the studio at eight
o'clock for a full hour or his last opportunity to
convince you there's a better path, and there is a
better path. Just what yeah, yeah, right, yeah, Like Marty Python, Joe,

(03:14):
shrubbery with a path in the middle, a po i
like the Laurel create a two level effect with the
second shrubbery. Thank you, Joe, just like Cathy. Audience that's
listening right now is like, what the hell is he

(03:35):
talking about? It's Friday, folks, Give me a break. It's
in the five o'clock hour two. I'm not awake yet.
I'm admitting it. Tech Friday with Dave Hatter coming up
at six thirty. Chinese hackers get inside a Massachusetts Town
Utility network, there's a red flag number two. What is Crocopedia?
And finally, more and more potential speech deep fakes are

(03:56):
being created. You know, this artificial intelligence deep fake stuff
scares the living crap out of me. We are a
moment in time away from our not being able to
believe our eyes and our ears. Most notably, look at
Signal ninety nine's posts and all the video that came
out about the beatdown of the end of July. I

(04:16):
believe the video is real. I believe the video is accurate.
But something tells me, in this artificial intelligence generated world
that we have here, someone is going to suggest that, no,
it's fake, and I weep for the criminal justice system
sowing the seeds of reasonable doubt is going to be

(04:39):
so easy for defense attorneys just by suggesting, well, you know,
we do have artificial intelligence, we do have deep fakes.
It's become almost impossible to determine whether or not a
video or in the case of Dave Hatter's conversation audio
is real or it's fake. I talk for four hours
every day Monday through front alrighty, pretty much, go ahead,

(05:01):
fake my voice. There's nothing I can do about it.
Dave Hatter's pointed out many times over the you know,
the last year plus, they only need a few seconds
of your audio to create something that sounds remarkably, if
not completely like you. So I'm just saying out loud
right now, wait for it. It's going to happen. And

(05:23):
in terms of getting in court, just sowing the seeds
of reasonable doubt is going to be a lot easier
in the future. So Patty Scott Hart for seniors, I
love that organization heart the number four seniors back in
studio at seven point thirty prior or after our rather
preceding Cory Bowman at eight oh five. It's a fantastic organization.
And you know, I was talking to my wife about this.

(05:44):
My wife is attorney for the largest hospital system in
the country. I was just mentioning these wonderful maybe for
like one hundred bucks. This apparatus that hooks up to
seniors and garments their diapers essentially, so the staff work
at these healthcare for these assisted living facilities know right
away who needs to be addressed and who doesn't. Otherwise,

(06:07):
it's on a regular schedule, and you show up in
a somebody's room every four hours or every six hours
or whatever the schedule happens to be. They might have
been wallowing in their filth since the moment in time
you walked out of the room after the last check.
This is real time help for folks that truly could
use the help. Why not? Why doesn't every hospital system
in the entire country adopt this? The savings that you

(06:29):
would reap from the reduction in medical care and this
would help well, it could could facilitate a reduction in staff.
It's hard enough to get staff to work in these facilities,
but if you know right away what job needs to
be done, it seems like well, it oils the machine,
it streamlines the process. It's just awesome technology. And Patty
Scott's going to return today and talk about it. Sevenh

(06:52):
five since ava's Joy accresson, We've got some VA information
to pass along with you. Well Joy does anyway, and
of course tech Friday six thirty, there's your run now
on five one, three, seven, four, nine, fifty five hundred,
eight hundred eighty two to three talk found five fifty
on AT and T phones uh Signea ninety. Iine working
with Tricia mackew Fox nineteen and got a couple of

(07:14):
releases and the signal ninety nine. Just go over to
Facebook and follow signal ninety nine, so without the order,
and she just breaks it down with the video that's
now been released tonight. We are releasing the videos at
the mayor, the prosecutor of the judge, all kept from
us to help facilitate the mayor's reelection. Why because the
mayor lied to us about what really happened only on

(07:37):
Fourth Street in July. The beat Down, Part one, Part two,
Part three. She breaks it down. This is part one.
This is the start where it starts, three CDC's cameras
with no sound, no excuses. She points out, watch the
group swarm of the victims waiting for rides. Every punch

(07:58):
and kick that they told you was provoked. Remember it
was the racist Russian he started. It's his fault issue
with citation for him. No, sorry, that's not what happened.
Every punch and kick that they told you was provoked.
See for yourselves. The video never lies, unless, of course,
you believe it's artificial intelligence signal. You know that's coming.

(08:18):
Second angle, different angle, same story and other feed city
had haul buried, no slurs, no provocation, raw violence, blowing
up the mayor's quote mutual combat close quote narrative, And
that's the narrative you wanted. You believe this wasn't just
sort of collective people surrounding without provocation and beating the
living crap out of another human being. No, no, no,
he deserved it, didn't we hear a council members say

(08:41):
they got what they deserved. Oh that's right. No obligation
for you to vote her out of office. She's not
running for reelection. Part three, as Signal points out, the
sound of they's silence, the audio that destroys their entire

(09:03):
cover up. She writes, no racial slurs from Alex the
Russian or anyone with him, only the attackers yelling quote
sleep him close quote and quote they slept that white
lady close quote. I do believe that's a reference to Holly,
the woman that got the living crap beat out of
her with a punch to the face, that knocked her

(09:25):
out cold without provocation while she was rendering aid to
someone who was already beaten up. She got what she deserved.
Sleep him. Signal points out, this is the proof they
hid from you because it didn't fit the politics or

(09:47):
the optics. They were driving racism, hate and division, says
we didn't add this. We didn't add a thing except
our watermark. These are the videos that the mayor three
c D see some members of council, notably Scottie Johnson,
Vice Mayor Jea Michelle lemon Kearney. What a mouthful that is?
Victoria Parks, the county Prosecutor, Iris Rowley, the city prosecutor,

(10:09):
the city manager Damon Lynch, Cecil Thomas Tracy Hunter, and
Judge Allen Triggs kept from the public the same one.
They didn't want to release them before the election. Thank
you Signal ninety nine for saying out loud. Truth doesn't

(10:32):
fear exposure. Lies do. As a subsequent post, maybe it
was a preceding post, but breaks down moment by moment,
by moment by moment, every minute, all showing the video
and breaking down the story. The timestance show when it
happens down to the second, she points out, starts at

(10:55):
thirty eight seconds after three am. Boom boom boom boom boom,
a way through the beatdown, showing that the mayor is
a liar or at least wanted to cover up the truth.
Got an election come in We can't have this kind
of thing, you know, clouding up people's hearts and minds.

(11:16):
What the truth? The truth, that pesky little thing called
the truth might impact an election? Five sixteen fifty five
kr CD talk station, Feel free to give me a call?
Five went three seven four nine fifty five D eight

(11:37):
hundred and eighty two to three talk pounds five fifty
on AT and T phones. Be right back after these
brief words. Fifty five KRC dot com Sunday. Right now
it's forty degrees at fifty five kr CD talk station time.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
I'm Donald J. Trump.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Can I improve this message?

Speaker 2 (11:52):
Appreciate that five twenty fifty five kr CD talk station
comforting words from let me to start Friday? UH five

(12:12):
on eight two three talk pound five fifty on eighteen
and T phones. Fifty five casey dot com. Get tryheart
Media AP stream the audio. It's good for the show,
and well it's good for my uh I guess review
with my boss. Thank you very much for tuning in
and listen to the morning show. And I appreciate everybody
who clicks on the podcast page. Later in the day,
Crime Stoppers, Bad Guy the Week. We'll be doing that later.
Andre Ewing outspoken. He is on the show yesterday. You

(12:36):
can hear Andre and what he had to say. Thirty
year police officer, retired and still a very profound community activist.
So we got that coming up, or that we got
that from yesterday the empower Use seminar. I hope you
enjoyed the propaganda poster seminar last night. Congressman Warren Davidson yesterday.
Everything's right there at fifty five k RC dot com.
We will be able to find tech Friday's Dave Hatter

(12:57):
jd Vance. I really appreciate what he had to say
the other day at the Turning Point USA event on
Wednesday University of Mississippi, big, big gathering. But he made
a great point with regard to illegal immigration in this country,
a young immigrant woman. Apparently that he was wide open
for questions and took a lot of questions from people
who do not agree with the current administration's policies. Gorgia

(13:21):
d Evans right up there at the top of the
current administration, so he's confronted by this described as a
young immigrant woman who was in most cases generally polite,
who objected to Trump's immigration policies, saying the following when
you JD. Vans talk about too many immigrants here, When
did you guys decide that number? Why did you sell

(13:45):
us a dream? And this is a peculiar take. You
made us spend our youth, our wealth in this country
and gave us a dream. You don't owe us anything.
We have worked hard for it. Then how can you,
as vice president stand there and say we have too
many of them now and we're going to take them out. Huh,

(14:10):
painting with a rather broad brush. I don't understand the
whole concept that you what you forced us to come here,
You made us spend our youth as she's referring to
people who came into this country who are citizens of
some other country and ah denying that there are some
people who came here and did work hard, and they
were lured by the idea of the American dream, which
is still a great lure compared to any other country
in the world. But this make and forced and you

(14:33):
know we sacrificed and now you're kicking us out. Oh,
she's confusing illegal and legal, which is exactly where JD.
Vance went me right out of the gate. I'm talking
about people who came in violation of the laws in
the United States of America. Then she interrupted. She said
Trump's policies hurt all immigrants. What did he say in respond,

(15:01):
I can believe that the United States should lower its
levels of immigration in the future while also respecting that
there are people who have come here through lawful immigration
pathways that have contributed to the country. How can you
deny that that's a straightforward statement. Of course, this is
when he gets into the idea of legal versus illegal.

(15:22):
But he pointed out just because one person or ten
people or one hundred people came in legally and contributed
to the United States of America, that does not mean
we're thereby committed to let in a million or ten million,
or one hundred million people a year in the future. No,
that's not right. We cannot have an immigration policy where

(15:43):
what was good for the country fifty or sixty years ago.
I would go back even farther than that. Jdvans binds
the country inevitably for the future. There are too many
people who want to come here. This is the point.
There are too many people who want to come to
the United States of America, and my job as Vice
president is not to look out for the interest.

Speaker 4 (16:01):
Of the whole world.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
It's to look out for the people of the United States.
Thank you, jd. Vance. That's an intellectual slap in the
face of this woman. When did we lose sight? Well,
certain segments of the political community anyway, are elected officials.
When did they lose site that their job is to
protect the American citizen and the territorial boundaries of the

(16:25):
United States of America. When did it become the job
of the United States the sort of care feed you know,
put on the welfare state the entire world. I mean,
there have been numbers crunched about the number of people
in this world who would be desirous of moving here
if they had the means, the ability to even show
up at our border, legal, illegal, doesn't matter. If they

(16:48):
could get in here, they would. It's hundreds of millions
of people in a population global population of literally billions.
It's not hard to fathom the notion that hundreds and
hundreds of millions of people might want to come here.
Why because we have the best system of government on
a planet. We have freedoms and liberties here and oh gee,
there's that dangling Carative and senator want to move to

(17:09):
the United States. You get hooked up to the biblical
court of government just by being present here. How's that
system going to survive? It can't, It isn't right now.
It's an artificial reality. It's like telling you get a
supplement in your you don't have to pay anything for insurance. No,
somebody's paying for it. It's your neighbor next door. That

(17:31):
premium didn't disappear, just got offloaded the American taxpayer. Wooh magic,
it's free. How does a social welfare safety net which
is supposed to be American taxpayer dollars supporting American citizens,
Because Lord Almighty, are twenty seven or whatever trillion annual
economy cannot prop up and support all of the welfare

(17:54):
state for the entire world when we can even support
it here under the current numbers thirty eight trillion and
growing in terms of our national debt. So is security, Medicare,
Medicaid and apparently every human being who walks into our
country is eligible for that. How screwed up is that
as a concept? Jadvans, thank you very much. We cannot

(18:18):
cannot be the world's brothers keeper. There aren't enough dollars
in the world five twenty six fifty five KRCD Talk station.
The local stories coming up, alternatively phone calls, which I prefer,
but will go either way. You want to go, you
right back.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Fifty five KARC the tox dage warning clouds and afternoon sunshine.

Speaker 2 (18:44):
Fifty six for the high it's forty degrees right now,
fifty five kr SEED Talk Station. I love this song, Truth.

Speaker 5 (19:08):
Truth.

Speaker 2 (19:09):
I'm things from amen across the board.

Speaker 3 (19:16):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Joe Strecker made my day with that little SoundBite there.
All I want is the truth, folks, All I want
is the truth. Got the truth with the video has
been circulating. Now we know what started the beatdown, we
know who the victims of the beatdown were, and we
know the administration lied to us. Let score on the phone.
Five two three talk Tom. Good to hear from me
this morning. Happy Friday to you, Yes.

Speaker 5 (19:39):
Good morning, and old DJ Joe Strecker back there spinning
the vinyl or what what what's the old terminology for
the DJ?

Speaker 2 (19:49):
Joe said it was an eight track he pulled, he
pulled out the track.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
That's even better, man, eight tracks. I remember that. I
one in, I put one in, put my headphones on
and tray. I mean of course, we're going way back.
What we in the early eighties, late.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
Seventies, that will be a seventies phenomena. By the eighties
we had to set Tom come on, you gotta remember that.

Speaker 5 (20:13):
Yeah, we actually and we actually got well, you know,
some of us still had an eight track player and stuff,
but we got into CDs in the eighties. I remember
getting my first CD player in the eighties.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
So I do too. I do too. My first CD
purchased making movies dire Straits awesome CDs, the first one
I ever bought.

Speaker 5 (20:30):
You fall You fall asleep with the eight track playing,
and you wake up and it's still playing. It is
keeps going over.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Wait a minute, let's let's let's walk down memory way briefly,
Tom for you to the point remember that that would
the music would fade out and then the track would
change and then fade back up. Who whose concept was that.

Speaker 5 (20:49):
I don't know, but it was. I mean, it's goods,
good stuff. I mean stupid tech things that we got,
the things that we got to enjoy. And I'm gonna
put enjoy because I mean, I really enjoy my youth
and music was a was as big a part of
it as anything eighties music to me is right that
that's when eighties music is on. I'm in a good mood.
So even some of the even some of the horrible songs,

(21:13):
because there was some there was.

Speaker 2 (21:15):
Something Joe, you will Joe, you will not be playing
Genesis later.

Speaker 5 (21:19):
No, come on, have a cab.

Speaker 2 (21:22):
I hit the button? Man does the dump button work
over bumper music? Joe, can I hit that?

Speaker 5 (21:30):
I got I gotta come up. I gotta I gotta
come up with a good eighties tune for my walk
up music, just to just to aggravate you, right lord, Uh,
I did want it real quick. You're you're talking about
the Heart for Seniors thing, yea. And you started talking
about that, it reminded me of my dad's situation. Uh

(21:51):
when before he passed away, and it was, yeah, he
had an issue and in August of nineteen and he
wind up asking away in March of twenty and between
those two times, he was in a he was in
rehab facilities. Uh pretty much the whole time. Uh, he
went home briefly because he I mean, he had a

(22:13):
range of he mentally, he was like it was like
talking to a I don't know, an eight year old.
I get on the phone with him and talk to him,
and it was and it's like I knew it was
my dad, but it's like his meant because he had
a stroke is mentally was not there. And when he
started getting better and coming back and and he almost

(22:33):
got all the way back to where he was before
the stroke. You know, he's talking about being in a
rehab facility and he and he's like, you know, Tommy,
one thing you lose here, you lose your dignity because
of the of what you just physically can't do things.
One of them was you know, you can't you can't
go to the bathroom yourself. It's just it, it's crazy.

(22:54):
And so that kind of technology is awesome. You're you're
going to help people that just cannot they can't do
things and they can't take care of themselves. And and
instead of, like you said, laying around in their filth,
you're gonna help You're gonna help them with their dignity.
And that that's probably one of the most important things
that elderly people need to try to hold on to.
And you know, I wonder why people get grumpy and stuff,

(23:17):
because what they're going through, what they're enduring, so if
you're ever dealing with some elderly person and they and
they seem grumpy and and all, and maybe there's a
good reason for it, you know what, what they're having
to a door and go through. So be thinking about,
you know what what other people are going through before
you pass a quick judgment on them. And the Lord
knows we're all guilty of doing that.

Speaker 6 (23:36):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (23:37):
As far as real quick politics, the uh we got
elections coming out of the case that nobody's noticed. Anybody
get getting on here for the first time, I know.

Speaker 6 (23:47):
Uh.

Speaker 5 (23:47):
Cole Rain's being very low key about the two levees. Well,
one's a county levee, but the other ones a police levee.
And you you're you're the homeowner making the decision. Do
I want money added to my property taxes? That's the
question you're asking. So you got to decide for yourself
do I want them to add money or do I
want them to maybe figure out how to use the
money there? And yeah, so, but I was talking to

(24:10):
a younger person yesterday and not a homeowner, and then like,
I'm not gonna you know what, it doesn't affect me, Oh,
yes it does. It affects you if you're paying rent,
it affects you because the owner of that that building
that you're renting is getting charged for it, and he's
passing along to you. And later, when you get older
and you become a homeowner, it's really gonna matter to you.

(24:30):
Don't wait till then, because that it'll be too late.
And the people that you that are getting elected now
are making policies, making decisions that are gonna affect you later.
They're gonna affect your children. Be paying attention, do your research,
look up who's what, who's in favor of what, who's
endorsing who, what's going on. You got a couple of
days left to do this, and uh and to make

(24:52):
it real easy on you, don't vote Rhino and don't
vote Democrat. Have a great weekend, Brian, Thanks man.

Speaker 2 (24:57):
Always good to hear from you. Five thirty five fifty
five Care CD talk station. We can get into a
stack is stupid. It's well, you know, fill with naked
people again because it is Fridays. Enjoyed doing that by
forty one fifty five Air CD talk station. Of course, Yes,
good morning, Jeff, I know one listener is happy about it.

(25:19):
Get a message from there, every morning. Please looking forward
to John the Fisherman.

Speaker 3 (25:29):
Over to the.

Speaker 2 (25:29):
Phones five one three hundred eight two three talk found
five fifty on AT and T phones, the naked guy
running them up in Walmart. We'll wake while we talked
to Jay. Jay, Welcome back to the Morning Show. Happy Friday.

Speaker 7 (25:42):
Man.

Speaker 6 (25:42):
I don't know if I deserve.

Speaker 2 (25:44):
Hey, you called putting them callers take over naked people
on a Friday and the stackers dupid?

Speaker 3 (25:53):
Jay?

Speaker 2 (25:53):
Go ahead?

Speaker 6 (25:54):
Yeah. I feel like every listening person in their audience
is just kind.

Speaker 2 (25:57):
Of boomed out. Now they're coming after you.

Speaker 6 (25:59):
Just in Jay time is awful.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
Doc's Jay because he interrupted the naked people on a Friday.
Go ahead, Jack, get your point out.

Speaker 3 (26:07):
Hey.

Speaker 6 (26:07):
First, First of all, I don't know that I've said
it before, but I really appreciate what you and Joe do.
I appreciate all the callers. I love the program.

Speaker 5 (26:17):
I feel like, especially this.

Speaker 6 (26:19):
Time of year, it's like sitting around a Thanksgiving table
and we have a go at each other, and I
love it, and I appreciate which which you guys do
and the listeners. But every once in a while I'll
hear something from a listener or from another caller. That
just absolutely clears up what I was trying to say.
And and Tom put it so well yesterday that when

(26:42):
when you and I were having to go at each
other about the government shut down a little bit, he said,
he said, look, the discussion is how soft or hard
of the landing do we want to have with this,
with this, with this deficit and this debt that we
currently have. And I thought, man, he absolutely nailed it. That
that's exactly the debate I think going on across the

(27:03):
country and also occasionally on your radio program. And I
guess what frustrates me is that we aren't even I
think that we that we're being taken hostage, is what
I feel like.

Speaker 2 (27:16):
That We've got.

Speaker 6 (27:17):
People on the left that are saying, because right now
we have Joe Biden's budget, don't forget about that, we
don't have a Republican conservative, libertarian budget. We cut nothing
from Joe Biden's budget.

Speaker 8 (27:30):
And we've got.

Speaker 6 (27:31):
People on the left saying, if you don't give us
another trillion dollars, we're going to take your groceries when
you come out of the grocery store, and we're going
to do this, and we're going to threaten violence, and
this is this is hostage taking, so our choices are
continued to throw another trillion dollars at it. If we

(27:51):
were saying we were going to cut the budget by
fifty percent, I would say, Okay, maybe we can back
off to a thirty percent cut. Even if it was
if it was twenty percent. At ten percent, I would say, no,
we still need to cut this thing to ten percent
and adding one point seven trillion dollars. This is this
is how Tom, you know. Again, back to what Tom's saying,

(28:14):
when do we think so if we're in a truck
and we're heading for a cliff and we can either
veer off and go left or right or straight ahead
and hit the accelerator, it's kind of where we're Atah,
And that that's kind of I thought.

Speaker 2 (28:28):
Anyway.

Speaker 6 (28:28):
I want to compliment Tom on how he phrased that yesterday,
but also compliment you guys that I just love listening
to the show and all the callers. But well done, Tom,
And don't vote don't vote Rhino and don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
Yeah good. The question of how quickly we tear the
band aid off, you tear it off quickly and experience
great pain all at once or do you pursue like
a Senator Paul plan where you just cut gradually over time,
which you can see the goal in sight when you
do it. Either way is the only thing we should
be focused on. Thirty eight trillion dollars in the hole

(29:07):
by forty five fifty five kar CED talk station. Well,
the naked Walmart guy will wait we' get to that
ruck station by forty nine fifty five KRCD talk station
check ard of me. Dave had to come up at
six thirty. Joy Akersson since at VA's Joy Ackersson at
seven oh five Patty Scott Hart for Seniors. Awesome organization.
Thank you Tom for bringing it up. We'll hear from

(29:29):
her at seven thirty in a full hour with Corey Bowman. Please,
Dear God, hopefully the next mayor of the City of Cincinnati,
given that we were absolutely lied to by aftab purv
all End City manager. Long thank you Woo and again
thanks to signal ninety nine. Follow her on Facebook you'd
be glad you did. I reader. The naked guy twenty
year old man arrested earlier this week, please say he

(29:52):
chased customers inside a Walmart as this tradition while naked,
please call her the store Richmond Highway about nine am,
after the suspect, fully naked, chased other customers in the
in the store, According to Prince William County Police Lieutenant
John Parrock in the news release quote, officers arrived and

(30:12):
detained the accused, shocking no one who was determined to
be under the influence Lance Indeed, Lance Irving Lesson Junior,
making Dad proud of the name. Charged with indecent exposure,
disorderly conduct, and public intoxication. Thanky another naked person, This

(30:33):
will be frightening. Police and Coastal Georgia arrested a man
broke into a woman's house and took his clothes off
while she was sleeping. Chatham County Police said a woman
reported she woke up in her apartment and saw a
naked guy in her bedroom. She screamed. Police say the
man ran off. Suspect identified as forty year old forty
three year old Rashaun Gerald Newton, captured on multiple surveillance cameras.

(31:03):
You know, let me interject, I hate the Orwellian state
we live in, and I hate the idea that we
are twenty four to seven all day long, all year long.
Being videos surveiled. But at some point I think the
criminals are going to get the message. It's like being
lied to by the mayor. Isn't it great that we
have video cameras everywhere because we can prove the mayor
and the city manager to have been liars in trying

(31:25):
to change the narrative on what happened to Holly and
the Russian guy. So the Orwellian state does have its pluses,
doesn't it much like it may have an impact on
crime long term? The criminals are going to finally realize
that they're under video surveillance and they will be captured,

(31:45):
like forty three year old Ray Shawn Gerald Newton Senior.
Before identifying police shared photos of Newton on social media
in the hopes that the public could identify him. Guess what.
He was found a few days later and arrested. He
was booked into the Catham down A Detention Center on
charges of burglary, aggravated assault, attempted rape. And it just says,

(32:07):
Peeping Tom.

Speaker 7 (32:10):
What.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
All right, Joe, We're gonna bundle the award this morning?
Three people receiving the award this morning, Grand County, Indiana
deputies arrested a Marian man allegedly sent explicit sexually explicit
photographs to ha ha haha, a decoy he thought was
an underage girl. According to Grand County Sheriff's Office, thirty

(32:35):
eight year old David Francis arrested this past Sunday after
an investigation and a possible child solicitation, according to the police,
who collaborated with the local Catch a Predator group HM,
which reported a decoy had been exchanging text messages with
Francis on Facebook. Content with the messages soon escalated. Francis
allegedly sent and sexually explicit contact content, including a nude photograph,

(32:58):
to the decoy he thought was a thirteen year old girl.
Placed under rest taking a Grand County jail where he
was probably molested by the inmates. Moving over to second
award recipient sharing the award, fifty one year old Valley
City man arrested earlier this month, charged with possession of
certain materials prohibited after police found a video of a

(33:21):
nude eleven year old girl on his cell phone. Gregory
Allan Gibson sharing the award with aforementioned what was that guy?
I guess it doesn't really matter that Francis guy taking
it into custody after the execution of a search warrant. Police
say the information that Gibson possessed a video on his

(33:42):
cell phone containing the eleven year old girl naked. Police
got search warrants for Gibson and his residents to search
his electronic devices. He answered the door provided copies of
the search warrant. He then voluntarily handed over his cell
phone and agreed to speak with officers after being read
his Miranda rights. Officers found the video with a girl
in a hidden folder under the cell phone camera roll pictures.

(34:05):
Despite his initial claim that it was a Snapchat video
post of the victims posted to the victim's story, court
documents say the video was obviously not a Snapchat video.
They discovered photographs of other pre hubess and girls who
were clothed. Photos appear to be screenshots of videos focusing
on the genital area of the females. He later admitted
to officers he is attracted to nine year olds to

(34:28):
thirteen year olds. There's his window and he sexually attracted
the children. Denied physically touching the minor, but acknowledge that well,
there may be a child erotica that's in quotes on
his electronic devices. Yes, apparently there was also sharing the award.

(34:49):
A former Woodlawn High School English teacher arrested for having
sexual relationship with an underage students while employed in the
Monterey County, got a combination of jail time and probation
for her. At her sentencing, I should say Mika Marie Yonda,
twenty six years old pleaded no contest of five felony
counts of unlawful sexual intercourse with a minor under the

(35:12):
age of sixteen. Faced up to eight years in state prison.
The judge sentenced to a year in county jail and
two years of felony probation. Also imposed a ten year
criminal protective order for the victim why only ten, and
ordered her to register as a sex offender for ten years.

(35:34):
Additional charges in the case, including sodomy, oral copulation with
a miner, as well as meeting a miner for lout purposes,
were dismissed in exchange for the plea. The court records
show let them have it, Joe Strecker, Ye is the.

Speaker 9 (35:48):
Biggest douche of the universe. In all the galaxies. There's
no bigger douche than you. You've reached the job, the
pinnacle of Dou's the good going Dudes, your.

Speaker 3 (36:03):
Dreams have cold.

Speaker 2 (36:08):
Coming up on five fifty six stick Around were to
talk about between now and Tech Friday with Dave Hatter.
That'll take place at six thirty, as is tradition every
Friday in the fifty five KRC Morning Show, learn something.
He'll try to keep you out of trouble. If you
just take his advice, he'll be right back.

Speaker 1 (36:21):
Today's top headlines coming up at Voices. You know what,
I'm gonna give you a piece of my mind.

Speaker 6 (36:27):
It's gross, gross incompetence of October.

Speaker 5 (36:29):
People are scared.

Speaker 2 (36:31):
Fifty five krs The Talk Station six six to fifty
five kr CE the Talk Station. Brian Thomas wishing everyone
a very happy Friday. Invitation head on a fifty five
kr seed dot com podcast when you can't listen live,
and of course Tech Friday with Dave Hatter at six thirty.
Coming up, Chinese hackers getting inside Massachusetts Town's utility network,

(36:52):
scary U, what is Grockipedia? And finally, more more political
speech deep fakes are being created. Those are three topics
with interest its ad or coming up. Bottom of this
hour seven oh five, we'll hear from the since ava's
Joy Akerson, Patty Scott, I'm one of my favorite charity organizations,
Hard for Seniors. She'll be in studio and what an
amazing group of people they are. Corey Bowman, he'll be
in studio at eight oh five, last opportunity to speak

(37:14):
to you the listeners, and of course vote for Corey
Bowman mayor. And now we have even more reason because
we know full well and completely that we were lied
to by I have to have pur Ball City manager
and everybody else who's involved in his administration in so
far as this insane beatdown that happened to late July,
all the videos out. Thank you to Trisha Mackie over
at Fox nineteen for working with and salute to Signal

(37:35):
ninety nine. I keep giving her credit. Trician Mackie gave
her credit headline Signal ninety nine. Never before seen video
shared by Signal ninety nine facebook page shows minutes leading
up to viral bra. Those minutes reflect that the Russian
guy didn't do anything except got the crap beat out
of him, period. End of story, full stop. I'm gonna

(37:58):
give props again to Signal nineteen. You know what like
Todd Zen's or citizen Watchdog Todd Zenzer follow his podcast.
He doesn't get paid for what he does. He's a
citizen activist, a watchdog. He crunches numbers, he breaks down
facts and figures. He does this all on his own
because well, he loves the city and he sees corruption.
He sees things that can easily be fixed to make

(38:19):
it better for every single taxpayer in the city of Cincinnati,
every resident of the City of Cincinnati. Does he have
to do it? No, does Signal ninety nine, either a
current or former police officer. Does she need to put
herself on the line. Does she need to face these
citizens who support the woke ideology of aftab Pervoll in
his administration. She doesn't have to do it, but she
puts herself out there and puts truth in the face

(38:41):
of everyone. Got to deal with it, and good for her.
And she wrote just yesterday, the truth about what happened
on Fourth Street in July was never lost, It was buried.
Three CDC's cameras didn't miss a thing. They caught every stomp,
every kick, every punch on Fourth Street that hot July

(39:01):
night after the jazz festival, a large group of She
pointed out black men and women swarming and beating a
small group of white men and women who were waiting
for their rides. No sound, no audio, just violence. The
victims trapped against cars, pavement and chaos. Yet city hall
flipped the story upside down. The mayor, Iris Rowlie, Damian Lynch,

(39:24):
Cecil Thomas, and some members of the council. They didn't
want to justice, they wanted optics. They needed a villain
before the next election, so they chose Alex the Russian.
The Russian men beaten in the streets, as she writes,
as their target kind of prosecutor refused to file charges
against them, the victim, but the mayor leaned on the
city prosecutor until an M four disorderly conduct charge appeared

(39:48):
out of thin air. That's right. The current police chief,
interim police chiefs the one that issued the citation because
the police who were there at the scene didn't think
a crime had occurred. Jarre your conclusions on that the
victim became the criminal because that's what the mayor demanded,
she writes, pandering and optics. They built a false narrative.

(40:08):
Alex used the n word, Alex started it, Alex slapped someone.
None of it's true. The footage, frame by frame, shows
the attackers were never even inside the club. The victims
were outside waiting for rides at the time of the attack.
And then she breaks down, minute by minute by minute,
every single beating that took place, noting this wasn't a
brawl or a fight, it was a visceral mob assault

(40:30):
that was started intentionally. The mayor refused to watch the
full footage, she claims, just the single clip that made
his version look right. He called it a slap. It wasn't.
It was a desperate man who knew he was surrounded
and had already been sucker punched and kicked several times,
as confirmed by the newly released video. But the mayor,

(40:52):
acknowledging that the truth would torch his campaign narrative of
unity and equity until he buried it, he told three
CDs he to keep the footage sealed only to the city.
Three cdc obeyed, and the county prosecutor, County Pillage, and
Judge Allan Triggs went along with the blackout. Public records
requests for this video were by the media were denied.
The public was never supposed to see the video until

(41:12):
next year, after the ballots were counted. She asks why
the answer because the truth doesn't serve the politicians, It
threatens them, because a brutal, race charged street attack doesn't
fit the mayor's agenda. Because keeping this video hidden fuel's

(41:33):
division that drives voter turnout, stir up anger, pretend to
heal it later. That's the game, well, noted Signal ninety nine,
and then she says, you know, naturally, Signal ninety nine
got the footage, amen, all of it. Several members within
the city, with within criminal justice system made sure we
got the videos, the same videos that city Hall pretended

(41:55):
didn't exist, The same footage of three CDC locked away
for months. The same evidence that shows who was hit
when and by whom is undeniable, and it's coming out
piece by piece. Watch the facts, watch the truth they
tried to erase. Ask yourselves this. Why would city hall
push a false racism narrative that could have ignited riots
in our streets? Why would they protect attackers while criminalizing

(42:19):
a victim. Why would a mayor is so desperate for
control risk the safety of an entire city for a
re election campaign. She says, this isn't leadership, it's manipulation.
This isn't justice, it's corruption wrapped in activism. Cincinnati deserves better,
The citizens deserve the truth. The mayor, the city manager,
of the council members who played along, every single name

(42:42):
tied to this cover up. They've got to go. Hey,
guess what early votings open. You can even vote on Sunday,
the elections on Tuesday. You can vote on election day.
The footage doesn't blink, she writes, it doesn't lie, and
now it's out. She asked that everyone circulate the videos
many people have, noting we as a city have not

(43:04):
healed from this. We as the city, should have been
shown these videos months ago. Then we could have come
together and healed together and rebuke this violent incident together,
side by side, regardless of the color of our skin,
instead of being pitted against one another. Man, she issues
a plea to come together. It's for the city, It's
for the good of all of us, so we can
enjoy the city. The city, I guess the way it

(43:25):
used to be, she writes, sitting on the front porch
watching kids playing the street, a street maybe that ultimately
would be paved if we had a new administration that
care a wit about the condition of the roads. Sorry,
there's my interjection signal ninety nine. I know you didn't
write that part, but I had to go ahead and
comment on that, and it was noted and CPO had

(43:52):
an article Paula Christian talking about Lovo to turn out.
It was just a couple of days ago.

Speaker 3 (43:59):
I vote.

Speaker 2 (44:00):
Low voter turnout could create an unpredictable race for city
since I city Council, especially with twenty six running for
nine seats. David University political science professor Mac Mariani, interviewed
by Paula, said, I think very very low turnout creates volatility.
It makes it easier for a relatively small group of

(44:22):
angry people to make a difference. He said, Amen, brother,
if you're expecting only twenty five percent voter turnout, which
is the expected turnout, and that's sad, empathetic, I know that,
But your vote means so much in a low turnout election,
you can change the system. You who do not vote regularly,
you who do not like the conditions of the city
that you live in, who've thrown your hands in, thrown

(44:44):
the towel in, thinking it's an exercise in futility to
go a different direction, to vote for a party like
Charter Eyed candidates, or an independent like Smith Aman, or
maybe even, oh God, Heaven forbid, a Republican named Corey Bowman,
who I've gotten to know, who really truly believes in

(45:09):
the city. He loves so much, and he wants to
make it a better place for every man, woman and child,
regardless of color or neighborhood. Who's interested in safety and
paving the streets and prioritizing things that matter so much
to our day to day lives, not some distant one
hundred two hundred years in the future climate issue that

(45:30):
we might be facing and we cannot control. People want
the roads pave. You know what, you can vote for
Corey and Bowman. Maybe your road will get paid. It's
sure as hell ain't gonna happen under the pur of
all administration. Oh, I'm exhausted with this. Someday it just
and yeah, I'm a practical realist kind of guy. I
don't expect necessarily to wake up on Wednesday morning unless

(45:52):
you go out and vote. I don't expect to wake
up on Wednesday morning expecting a different path that the
residents finally said no, Moss and decided that, you know what,
in the best interests of the damn street that's in
their front yard and the best interests of crime and
safety and neighborhood and stability and self direction and the

(46:13):
idea of guiding your own community, the one that you're
living in in terms of what's going to be built
and what's not. Self determination, not the dictatorial reality we
have with the current administration. Choose a different path. What
do you got to lose, Pat, I'll get you in
a minute. It's six sixteen fifty five care see care

(46:35):
CEV talk station. Happy Friday five one three, seven, nine
fifty five eight ten day two to three talk time
five fifty on AT and T phone. David, you're happy,
It's Friday. Happy Halloween. Yeah, David's going to be heading
over to Joe Streker's house. It is Halloween, so the
spirits will be looming around if you believe in them.
I don't Eddie, how thank you, Christopher Smithman and good

(46:56):
morning Christopher Smitheman. He was pretty happy with my spleen
vent there kind of I think it was kind of
like an out of body experience. I am not going
to control over the words that come out of my
mouth sometimes and I have to look back and like,
what did I just say? Well, thank you Chris for
release of the stamp of approval there, and I did
I mentioned that the the insanity of the City of
Cincinnati's administration thinking we can have an impact on global warming.

(47:21):
We can't. Thank you again and nod to the Wall
Street Journal acknowledging what I pointed out the other day.
Bill Gates has rethought the whole issue and he's coming
down on the side as sanity after a provole. Read
the op ed afterab provole. Look what Bill Gates said,
the multi billionaire who funded this nonsense for so long, saying, oh, no,
we need to pay attention to what's going on right now.

(47:44):
Here's what I said. The climate conformity CAUCAUS is breaking
up at long last day man, and the latest evidence
is the change of mind by none other than Bill Gates,
the Microsoft billionaire turned liberal philanthropists now says the doomsday
view about climate is wrong, aftab Look and in his words,
it's diverting resources from the most effective things we should
be doing to improve life in a warming world. Hm

(48:07):
as epiphanies go. This is welcome. Gates, in his advocacy,
has been a leading promoter of the view that the
warming climate is an existential crisis demanding urgent political action.
His twenty twenty one book has the nuanced title how
to Avoid a Climate Disaster Without Innovation. He wrote, we
cannot keep or the earth livable. The effect on humans,
in his words, will in all likelihood be catastrophic. WHOA,

(48:30):
We'll fast forward to right now. I'm the cusp of
the latest COP thirty climate conclave in Brazil next month. Gates,
offering a different advice. An essay released on his website promises,
quote three tough truths about climate close quote the first
of which is that rising temperatures are a serious problem,
but will not be the end of civilization. His words

(48:55):
back to the editorial word, Wait, this is a hard truth.
You mean humanity isn't doing The only people from whom
this is a tough message of the climate zelots who
remain committed to the idea that rising temperatures are total
are a totalizing emergency. They say this to intimidate politicians
into giving them billions of dollars in green subsidies, along
with other powers to remake the modern economy and society.

(49:18):
Gates now sounds like Bjorn Lumberg, the quote unquote skeptical
environmentalists who's riding off and runs in these pages the
Wall Street Journal. Mister Lamberg has been arguing for years
that while warming temperatures are a reality, the world's poor
in particular face far more urgent challenges. He believes, as
these columns of long argue, the best way to cope

(49:38):
with rising temperatures is through innovation, adaptation, and policies that
continue to spread economic growth and prosperity. Now listen to
the new mister Gates quote. Although climate change will hurt
poor people more than anyone else, for the vast majority
of them, it will not be the only or even
the biggest threat. The biggest problems are poverty and disease,

(49:59):
just as they all always have been those quote thank you, Gates.
Health problems related to property poverty, malaria, for example, kill
about eight million people a year, according to his essay,
while about five hundred thousand people a year die from
excessive heat. He says, quote surprisingly, excessive cold is far deadlier,
killing nearly ten times more. Mister Lombard has been assailed

(50:24):
by the climate left from making that same point for
about deaths from cold versus heat. Gates also recognizes that
using more energy is a good thing. Why because it
means economic growth. Yet activists in wealthy Western countries, he says,
to have pushed to keep fossil fuels in the ground.
Quote this pressure has had almost no impact on global emissions.

(50:46):
They have to have per of all, but that it
has made it harder for low income countries to get
low interest loans for power plants that would bring reliable
energy to their home, schools and health clinics. Hmm, how
about that that last part a glory hallelujah, thank you
editorial board to a hard slap, a reality from a
source that the cop thirty crowd can't easily ignore, Bill Gates.

(51:10):
It's also the sign of the shift away from the
catastrophe consensus that has dominated the debate about climate. If
Bill Gates can dissent from armageddon orthodoxy, maybe Facebook won't
censor our op eds in the future. Props. Much credit
for this consensus crack up belongs to the world's democratic voters,
who have made clear over many years in many places

(51:30):
they will not accept a degraded quality of life for
promised climate benefits decades in the future. Maybe Gates is
responding to that political reality. He calls for investment in
innovation with a vision for a world in which quote
almost all new cars will be electric, close quote and clean.
Some men a steal and steal displaced today's materials, But

(51:52):
give the billionaire credit for also urging an intellectual climate
change at COP thirty or, as Gates calls it, a
strategic pivot, prioritize the things that have the greatest impact
on human welfare. Imagine that amen, exclamation point. Somebody send
this over to aftab par ball. Will you six twenty

(52:15):
six right now? If you have KCV talk station coming
up six thirty one on a Friday, It's that time,
one of the most important moments in time of the week.
If you pay attention and you do what you're suggested
to do, you'll stay out of trouble. Online brought to
you by intrust it can find them an interest I
dot com Business Career says they are the best in
the business when it comes to your business's computer needs

(52:37):
to keep you out of trouble, get you on best practices,
or get you out of a jam. It's Dave Hatter.
Welcome back, Dave for Tech Friday. Always great to have
you on the show.

Speaker 3 (52:44):
Oh, it's my pleasure to be here. Brian.

Speaker 2 (52:47):
Well, this out of the gate article is scary, absolutely frightening, Dave.

Speaker 3 (52:57):
Yeah, I got you.

Speaker 2 (52:58):
I'm more than two utilities in the United States. The
FBI has determined we're hacked into by Chinese Communist Party hackers. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (53:07):
Sorry, Brian, I haven't had enough coffee yet, and I
was kind of waiting for you to hit that headline there. Sorry. Week.
You know, we've talked about this before, and you know,
it just keeps turning up. And I try to point
out to people all the time. The technology that makes
the Internet work was developed in the late sixties and

(53:29):
early seventies. TCPIP kind of the foundation of it all
has been around for a long time, long before anyone
could envision how all of this technology you would be
used to basically power our entire lives. Everything is digital now, right.
You do everything online. You entertain yourself online, you shop online,
you educate yourself online. I bet there's only a very

(53:50):
small number of your listeners that don't have a smartphone.
And you know, I do a lot of presentations. Usually
I start out with who here spends less time online
today than they did five years ago. Right, everything is interconnected,
everything has software in it. And when you think about
the sixteen critical infrastructure sectors, the fbis define telecom being
a critical one. I would argue, right, if not the

(54:13):
most critical is certainly up there with electricity, because without
electricity none of this stuff works. But the telecom network
is what powers all of this stuff. Right. You know,
the AT and t's of the world, their networks, ulti fibers.
They make all of this stuff possible. Right. All the
software that has to talk to another system has to
do it over their networks. And when you read these
stories about nation state actors like China that's usually the

(54:37):
Chinese Communist Party. When you read these stories infiltrating these networks, yeah,
it's pretty scary because it's not just that they can
potentially eavesdrop. Now, theoretically encryption solves that problem. But that's
where you know, when you hear people talk about quantum
encryption and quantum computing and the quantum apocalypse, it's this
idea that as we get closer and closer to quantum

(54:58):
computing and the argument for one of the reasons why
the adversarial nation states like the Chinese Communist Party in
Russia want to suck up everything they can is they'll
eventually be able to break that encryption. All that data
is going through the telecom network, all the data that
makes it possible for you to shop online. And take
about the recent Amazon Web Services outage and the disruption

(55:19):
that caused. So I'm in if I'm in your If
I'm a nation state actor and a bad actor and
I'm in the telecom network again, I could not only
potentially eavesdrop, I could plant backdoors in there that would
let me maintain persistence even once I'm found out and
get ejected. But the real threat, of course, is the
ability to either a corrupt the data that's going through,

(55:41):
so systems either don't work at all or don't behave correctly.
Think Stuck's Net. I think we've talked about Stuck's net before,
and the way that the Iranian Enrichment centrifugees uranium and
sorry I can't talk this one. In Richmond centerfuses reported
to their operators they were operating correctly while they just
destroyed themselves. So you've got the corruption aspect, or the

(56:03):
possibility that you just shut it down. So even if
you have electricity, you still can't do anything because none
of this stuff works. Again, I go back to the
recent Amazon Web Services outage. For roughly fifteen hours, a
significant portion of the Internet was non operational because Amazon
Web Services, which power as much of it, was down. So, yeah,
I agree with you, it's really scary. You know, Folks

(56:26):
like the FBI DHS says that the Cybersecurity Infrastructure and
Security Agency have been warning about this literally now for years.
They have programs in place like Secure by Design. You know,
the state of Ohio has passed House Built ninety six
to try to take some of this stuff on. But
we've got to get critical or criticous, sorry, Brian, So
what's wrong with me?

Speaker 5 (56:46):
This way?

Speaker 3 (56:47):
We got to get yes, get serious, treated urgently, spend
the money it takes to root out the bad actors,
harden these environments, solve these problems before catastrophe and evity happens,
even if it's not a nation state actor attack, if
it's just a mistake. But we just have got to
get serious about this stuff.

Speaker 2 (57:07):
Absolutely Again, Littleton Master, what is it, Massachusetts? It's a
tiny town, their lone, little tiny utility network was hacked into,
and they hacked into the system that controls the chemicals
and the drinking water. I mean, that's not the first
time that's happened. I know that we've talked about others.

(57:28):
I mean, just the idea that you can flip a
switch from four thousand miles away and shut off the grid.
That's a genuine reality that we need to face and
deal with urgently. Yes, Dave Hatter, what is Rockapedia. We're
gonna find out about that coming up next. Don't go away,
Odor exit od o R the talk station six little

(57:55):
Why Wise get you going there? I'm sorry? Why why
that deck Ruddy Dave had or Rush aficionado? And why
wouldn't you be What the hell is Grockipedia? I know Wikipedia,
and I know that Wikipedia is extraordinarily biased. It has
an overwhelmingly left wing bat and many people call it
out for perpetuating lies and myths about various topics, although

(58:15):
some people still rely on it exclusively. I find that frightening.
But Grockipedia, Yeah, so this is interesting.

Speaker 3 (58:22):
According to Elon Musk, who launched it, this is something
he said on X himself. His mission is sharing the
quote truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth unquote. Now,
if you want to see something even more interesting, Brian,
go to Wikipedia and read its entry on Rockipedia. Let's
it say, because you know, if you go out and

(58:43):
you do a search on Rockipedia, probably the first thing
that's going to show up is Wikipedia's entry, so they say.
Rockipedia is an AI generated online encyclopedia developed by Xai.
The site was launched October twenty seventh under the version
point oh one. Entries in Grokipedia edited by the GROC
language model, though the exact process behind its content generation

(59:04):
is not known. Many articles are derived from Wikipedia, some
copied verbatim at launch. Articles cannot be directly edited. YadA, YadA, YadA.
And yeah, let's just say that Wikipedia is not a
fan of Rockipedia. It's gotten a lot of a lot
of attention if you follow, if you're on X a lot.

(59:24):
I think X is a great source of news myself,
X slash Twitter for people who still haven't quite made
the jump from the old Twitter days. You know, there
have been a lot of people on X touting the
benefits of Grockipedia. Again, it's it's AI generated. There it's
not some secretive star chambers set of editors who you

(59:46):
can't know on Wikipedia, which has always been one of
my knox on it. So it's getting a lot of interest.
We'll see how it does. I encourage people go out
and check it out for yourself. It's it can be
very seem to compare and contrast. If you do a
search for something on Wikipedia, do the same search for
the same thing on Rockipedia, and then kind of compare

(01:00:09):
the answers, you know, based on your real world experience
with a topic, and see what you think.

Speaker 2 (01:00:15):
Well, I suppose it's a reasonable starting point, but it
shouldn't be the sole source upon which you rely.

Speaker 3 (01:00:23):
Dave.

Speaker 2 (01:00:23):
I mean that's always my case with Wikipedia.

Speaker 3 (01:00:26):
Yeah, I totally agree with you on that, Brian. I mean,
you know, even if you take out any perceived bias,
people get things wrong. People have implicit bias, even if
they're not explicit about it. So you know, that's always
one of my concerns with these large language models, is
the data itself that you've been used to train one

(01:00:46):
of these things may have implicit bias in it. The
people that built it, even though they may not be
explicitly attempting to put their thumb on the scale have
implicit bias. So yeah, it's always good if you have
a question about something to use multiple sources to try
to confirm, you know, in Musk's words, the truth, the
whole truth, and nothing but the truth. You know, and

(01:01:08):
relying on any one given source for any topic I
think can be questionable. And you know, how many times
have we seen something? You know, I always liken it too,
the old eggs are good, eggs are bad eggs, or
good eggs are bad. Coffee's good, coffee's bad. You know,
new study comes out, all the old information you get
told about something is suddenly no longer good anymore. So yeah,

(01:01:30):
I think it's always good to use multiple sources. But
I encourage folks to check out Rockipedia. I have enjoyed
using it so far.

Speaker 2 (01:01:37):
Well, I am revealing my ignorance about the whole process,
the idea of this artificial intelligence in creating and coming
up with answers to questions or looking at you know,
Wikipedia entry about Dave Hatter or something. It goes out
into the world of the Internet, everything that exists out
there in terms of content and sort of scrapes that
and then compiles it and reduces it to some readable

(01:02:00):
How does it know what's truth and what isn't. I
could write a paper whole cloth filled with lies, citing
statistics that I pulled from my sphincter and posted. Presumably
artificial intelligence could use that if it deals with a
particular subject matter and we look at it, maybe incorporated
into some answer, even though it isn't grounded any truth whatsoever.
How does that artificial intelligence know what's true and what isn't.

Speaker 3 (01:02:23):
Well, that's a good question, Brian. And it's funny you
mention that because I know this is not something I
have researched extensively, so encouraged people to do their own research.
But you may have seen and maybe you've had guests
on and I just don't remember. But this I keep
seeing this topic reported in the news that as many
as somewhere like fifty percent of all peered reviews scientific

(01:02:43):
studies can't be reproduced. So assuming that something like that
is actually true. Again, I'm not alleging it is, That's
just what I've seen people talk about. Assuming that's true,
then your point is well taken. That okay, No matter
what content I'm training my large language model on or
even if it's human editors, if they're reading content that

(01:03:06):
is false or can't be reproduced at the very least. Yeah.
I mean, you know, just because you see a quote
from Benjamin Franklin on the Internet and Abraham Lincoln has
confirmed it does not make it true, if you get
my gist.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
I get that. Yeah. It was Abraham Lincoln who said,
you know every you can believe everything you read on
the internet.

Speaker 3 (01:03:26):
Yeah, yeah, I think you.

Speaker 2 (01:03:30):
Just keep your John just die a skepticism, yes, always
and never ever ever walk away from it. Six forty six, right,
and how we're going to find out? Oh, here we go. Yeah,
deep fakes, more more political speech, deep fakes of being fakes.
You can't even believe your eyes or your ears anymore
more with tech deep talk station. It's six fifty fifty
five cars de talk station. Well that was quick. We

(01:03:53):
went from theory to reality. Dave Hatter, it wasn't a
moment a time ago when you and I were talking
here on the fifty five cars morranings about the idea
of artificial intelligen and some deep fakes and how they
were getting to be indistinguishable from the authentic thing. But
now we are at a point where now the AI
video deep fakes as well as audio deep fakes are
apparently indistinguishable from authentic video. So I see the media

(01:04:17):
mit dot Edu article on this one political speech deep
fakes across transcripts, audio and video. It's best to have
video and audio together. And I saw this line from
the article, Dave, and I got to emphasize this before
we hear you. Human discernment relies more on how something
is said. That's why I hate text, Dave. It lacks
that human element of maybe sarcasm or truth that you

(01:04:41):
convey through your voice, not through text. People lose the
entire narrative when they read a text.

Speaker 3 (01:04:47):
Well, I completely agree with you on your last point, Brian.
I think, yeah, it's so easy to misunderstand a text
because you don't have the voice inflection, you don't have
the body language, you don't have all the subtle cues
you pick up when you're talking to someone. Certainly you
know it's even it's best when you're in person and
you can see someone. Even over the phone, I would

(01:05:08):
argue was better than text because I would bet you
every one of your listeners has sent a text or
an email that was misconstrued by the recipient either you know,
they intended it to be humorous and it was taken offensively,
or you know, maybe they intended it to be offensively
but it wasn't read that way because of the way
it was worded. I agree with you wholeheartedly. This article

(01:05:31):
is really interesting. Obviously MIT does some good research, and
you know they It starts out and the abstract recent
advances in technology for hyper realistic visual and audio effects
provoke the concern the deep fake videos and political speeches
will soon be indistinguishable from authentic video. And then they
touched on some of the things you mentioned there. You

(01:05:52):
and I have been talking about this literally for years now,
pretty much since deep the word deep fake was coined
and kind of hit the vernacular. I don't think the
average person probably realizes just how good this technology is.
I can remember several years ago you and I watching
a video created by MIT of President Nixon quote unquote

(01:06:13):
giving the speech he was going to give if the
moon landing failed. So this was years ago in MIT
created this, and I thought it was very realistic at
the time, you know, the technolo and now that's obviously
in my tea and a lab with you know, heavy
duty equipment and a lot of expertise. It's trivially easy
right now for anyone to go on a site like
Sora or Google vo three and create very very realistic video.

(01:06:37):
I've seen people I and this is really useful. There
are folks who have created, you know, two three minute
videos that are entirely generated by AI as a way
to sort of warn how good this stuff is. I
watched the video and it's like a newsperson telling you
some news and they say, but that's not true because
I may. I. Hey, I made one hundred million dollars

(01:06:58):
in crypto blah blah blah. But I didn't because I may. I.
And if you watch these videos, you'll see how realistic
they are. Now, you might see some tells in there,
like the one I have in mind the newsperson if
you look carefully at their shirt where like the logo
of their television station would be, it's just some mumbo jumbo.
But in passing, if this went viral on social media

(01:07:20):
and you were or you were just walking by a TV,
would you be paying enough attention to notice that the
logo on the shirt is not actually real? Probably not
and again this is stuff. It's just being created by
casual people to try to warn Imagine a determined, savvy
and skilled actor who wanted to disrupt society, wanted to

(01:07:43):
throw an election. Now, you and I have talked about
this off and on for years, but I think the
technology is now out of place where it can create
incredibly convincing things. As Mit points out, it's only going
to improve. And as we get closer to yet another election,
I see concerns. And then there's all the other things
you and I have talked about before. Right, it's not

(01:08:04):
just two days before an election a video goes viral
on social media that's completely deep faked, but it could be. Hey,
I want to frame Dave Hatter for a crime. Here's
Dave in a video doing some heinous thing or vice versa. Right,
I've committed some crime, but here's some video that shows
I wasn't there at that time. Now, you know, there
are ways to potentially eventually determine that it's fake, but

(01:08:28):
it'll take a lot of this. Yeah, yeah, it's like
act of this on society. It's going to be interesting.

Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
Well, I do real quick, you know. Refresher Right after
the twenty twenty election, people were claiming it got stolen,
and I'm like, how can we know? That takes investigation,
It takes you know, a lawsuit with discovery. You need
to look at voting records and ballots. All of that
couldn't have taken place in a moment's time. How do
you know it's been stolen? You couldn't possibly know it.
Like the deep fake, it comes out and you can

(01:08:54):
scream out loud and saying, well that's a deep fake,
that's a defake. Well maybe it's not. And then you
got to go through the I guess forensic process of
looking at the video itself to determine whether it's fake
or not. And the improve you provide your evidence, which
now in modern society that new evidence, which is supposed
to show the truth, might be looked at with a
Jondatye suspicion that, well, no, that's artificial intelligence created. This
is a death spiral, Dave.

Speaker 3 (01:09:15):
It's it's not good because it does cut both ways.
Like you just said, you know, whether it's I want
to create a deep fake video of someone saying something
heinous that they didn't say or do, or vice versa.
You have done it, and now you claim, well that's
a deep fake and you know with compressed time cycles
around an election or something like that. Yeah, it's it's

(01:09:39):
going to get real interesting. Well, the best advice to everyone,
and I started to say it and last segment right
out of time anything that involves anything digital. At this point,
your Jundas eye skepticism comment is right on. I mean,
you really can't just trust anything. You need to verify everything,
whether it's some email, it's asking you to transfer your

(01:10:01):
bitcoin because your account's been attacked or whatever.

Speaker 2 (01:10:04):
That's an easy one should be.

Speaker 3 (01:10:05):
Yeah, extremely skeptical of everything. You should verify everything before
you act, because we are increasingly in a place where,
thanks to this technology and frankly con artists who use
the Internet to scam you. Right, They're not just hackers,
there are con artists who are using this technology to
reach you and fool you. You've got to be incredibly skeptical.

Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
Unfortunately, that's why we have you, Dave to remind us repeatedly,
over and over and over every Friday at six thirty
some valuable advice we need to heed. Dave hat or
intrust it is your company interest it dot com is
where you find it if you have a business. I
know you have computers. Rely on Dave and his team
because they're the best in the business. I appreciate your
willingness to come on the show every week and thanks
for interest it sponsorship with the segment so valuable and

(01:10:50):
so important. Dave, how ter, have a wonderful weekend, my friend.

Speaker 3 (01:10:53):
Always my pleasure, Brian. I'll look forward to chat with
you next week. And it is Halloween. Stay safe out there, folks.

Speaker 2 (01:10:59):
Thanks that appreciate it. Dave, coming up, Joy Beth Ackerson
from the Cincinniva. What is the Federal Electronic Health Record?
We'll find out about that and so much more right
after the news. How you can stick around.

Speaker 1 (01:11:09):
Today's top headlines coming Blackstation. It's seven six, Happy Friday.

Speaker 2 (01:11:33):
And a happy Halloween to everyone. And thank you to
all the men and women currently in uniform serving our
nation and those who served our nation who are now
considered veterans. Veteran community. You know I got your back.
I do everything I possibly can for the American veteran
because well I didn't sign up, and I appreciate those
who did and served our country, and I appreciate what
the VA does for our veteran community. And I encourage

(01:11:55):
every retire every veteran out there to sign up for
their betters and get the VA benefits. They're outstanding and
somebody knows that all day long. Welcome to the Morning
Show from the Cincinnava Joy Beth Akerson. It's a pleasure
to have you on today.

Speaker 7 (01:12:10):
Thank you, thank you very much for having me.

Speaker 2 (01:12:12):
Please to do so, and we are going to find
out together because I don't know the answer to the
question what is the Federal Electronic Health Record and when
is it scheduled to go live and what does it
mean for my veteran friends.

Speaker 7 (01:12:25):
Oh, well, the Federal Electronic Health Record is a national
initiative and we will be going live in Cincinnati on
June sixth, twenty twenty six, and we're very excited to
offer this to our veterans. It's a new electronic health record.
It contains the complete health record and tracks all medical

(01:12:46):
care from the time the veteran leads the military all
the way through their VA experience. And it also gives
us much better access to community records, so really provides
a seamless continuum for the veteran.

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
You mentioned community records, so I'm thinking along the lines
of my patient portal that I have through my providers,
and you can log in and get your test information
real time, that kind of thing. The community records. So
does it gather the Federal Electronic Health Record? Does it
gather information or records from other providers that the veteran
might be seeing outside of the VA.

Speaker 7 (01:13:23):
Yes it does, Wow, Yes it does. It provides seamless
longitudinal care. No matter where the veteran goes across the country,
they will we will have access to their medical records.
For us new birds, this will be really advantageous for
them as well. So we really need that real time

(01:13:44):
at the point of service information to provide seamless care
and this will enable us to do that.

Speaker 3 (01:13:50):
Well.

Speaker 2 (01:13:50):
That's great because of course, if you're seeing a physician
or someone providing services at the VA, they're better guided
knowing full well what else you have going on in
your world, your prescriptions, the other care you've received, so
they can integrate the care and make sure you have
the appropriate care of the VA.

Speaker 3 (01:14:07):
Correct.

Speaker 7 (01:14:08):
That's exactly what the Federal Electronic Health Record is meant
to be. And just to take it a step further,
Brian by twenty and thirty one, the federal Electronic Health
record will be implemented across the whole nation for veterans.
So this is really one of the most It is
the most transformational project ever to be encountered within the VA,

(01:14:30):
and what it will do to provide the seamless care
for veterans is transformational.

Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Oh, it's wonderful. I got to ask this question on
the Heels of Tech Friday with Dave Hatter. I know
everyone always is concerned about security and breaches and all
that is it going to be very secure, so veterans
don't have to worry about their records being leaked out
to the general public.

Speaker 7 (01:14:52):
It will be more secure than anything that you can see.
The cybersecurity measures that will be put in place will
really helped to elevate not only the quality, but the
privacy and security of each veterans record. So we are
moving to the cloud, we are moving to cybersecurity, many
more measures. We've always had great measures within the VA,

(01:15:16):
so I don't want to lead people to think that
we have not. We have always been very cognizant privacy
and security of electronic health records, but this will take
it to a whole new level for veterans. To make
sure that everything is secure in private within their information
in the record.

Speaker 2 (01:15:34):
So is and with that in mind, and if I
was a veteran, I would take advantage of this type
of option for my healthcare, knowing full well the advantages
it's going to bring about. But is there an opt
in or opt out ability obligation? Does the Americans don't
have to do anything or the records already going to
be automatically electronically put on this federal electronic health record.

(01:15:56):
Do they have an option in other words, to not
have the records except online?

Speaker 7 (01:16:02):
They can opt out, really, but if we do not,
if we do not hear from veterans, then we know
that they are opting in. And I would strongly recommend
that everyone opt in because at the bedside, the seamless
information that will be available will be phenomenal. So I

(01:16:24):
would highly recommend. I know, as a as a patient myself,
I always opt in because I want my provider at
the point of care to have all the information that's available.

Speaker 2 (01:16:34):
Absolutely. You know, it's kind of funny, and I got
a physical coming up, but every time I go to
the doctor, they're always asking you, well, have you changed
your medications? You know, I take some vitamin supplements, and
you know, at that moment in time, like know, everything's
the same, everything's the same. And in fact, well no
it isn't, because I talked to the last provider I
went to, and I reminded them that, yeah, well I've
taken magnesium now or something along those lines. At that

(01:16:54):
moment in time, you probably won't remember your entire health records.
So it's good to have it all accessive by your physician.

Speaker 7 (01:17:03):
Exactly. It certainly is, and it is really important, like
you said, when you see a provider to make sure
that all the information is up to date, because that
will follow you, follow you seamlessly across the nation wherever
you are, both inside and in community care.

Speaker 2 (01:17:20):
Now, if there is a veteran in the listening audience
right now who has not yet accessed his or her
VA benefits, an is a DD two to fourteen discharge
to get the benefits? Where do they go? Where do
they turn? Where do they get information on the great
benefits that they will get as a consequence of their
service to our country.

Speaker 7 (01:17:37):
Bath our joy, I would have them call the Cincinnati
DA and ask for the Benefits department, and they will
be able to help them. They can also go through
their service organization DAV and that's et cetera, and they
can help them as well. And all of those departments,

(01:17:57):
the service organizations are right here convenient are located in
at the Cincinnati VA.

Speaker 2 (01:18:03):
On Vine Street, ZAVA on Vine Street. Yeah, the Klamert
County Veteran Services, Hamilin County Veteran Services, Butler County, Warren County.
We could all go through every county's got it since
a Veteran Services Commission, and they will help you get
your benefits, will help you navigate the problems you might face.
So I always want to salute those veteran service organizations
because they are doing a lot of work and sometimes
I think, as you know, Joyet's it can be a

(01:18:25):
little confusing when you go directly to the website for benefits.

Speaker 7 (01:18:31):
Yes, yes, it can be. And so please come, you know,
to get through these service organizations because I can take
from personal experience. My dad works for the AMBUTS for
a very long time and he really was kind of
a lynch pin between the VA and the veteran to
really help them navigate their benefits.

Speaker 2 (01:18:52):
Fantastic, Joy Akerson, It's a pleasure having you. I don't
want to thank you on behalf of all the veterans
in the listening audience for what you do each and
every day. And a salute to all theolks that so
tirelessly work at the VA to help our American veterans
get the healthcare they certainly deserve. And I appreciate all
the improvements you have made on behalf of the veterans
over the years. I know we had a shaky start
back when Bob McDonald was running things and people couldn't

(01:19:14):
get appointments, but holy cow, what a great turnaround you've
made for the veterans.

Speaker 7 (01:19:20):
I want to tell you that I have firsthand. I've
been here sixteen years. It has been thus a privilege
and an honor to serve our American heroes and I
cannot thank thank them enough for their service. And it
is our dedication and our obligation to really improve care
every day for the veterans we serve.

Speaker 2 (01:19:39):
Amen. Get you out of bed in the morning doesn't
enjoy No, It sure does.

Speaker 7 (01:19:43):
It keeps me motivated.

Speaker 2 (01:19:45):
Yeah, very rewarding career you've got there. Thank you for
coming on and talking about the federal election. Health wreak.
It's going to take place next year. It's going to
make things better for you, the American veteran. So I'm
happy to hear about this wonderful development. Joy and thank
you for sharing the information to my listening audience. Have
a wonderful weekend, Happy Halloween to you. It's just shy
as seven point fifteen right now. Don't go away, We've
got a few minutes to talk about before we get

(01:20:05):
to the Bok. Corey Bowman in the studio for the
balance of the hour, last opportunity for Corey Bowman. You
should vote for Corey from mayor and your vote really,
really really will matter in the upcoming election. A little
bit more on that after which or after I talked
to Tom. Tom, thanks for calling this morning, Welcome to
the show, and a happy Friday and happy Halloween to you.

Speaker 3 (01:20:22):
Sir.

Speaker 8 (01:20:22):
Well, I want to give you a shout out the
say thanks from all the veterans out of here who
you support, and I especially want to give a shout out.
Tuesday night, we just got back from an honest flight
to Orsington, d C. Oh great and I want to
thank all the people who put that together. That was
an amazing day.

Speaker 6 (01:20:41):
And a lot of work went into it.

Speaker 2 (01:20:43):
Oh yes, sir, and thank you for acknowledging that that's
not an easy thing to pull off. There's a lot
of coordination that has to go on here at CVG
and in d C and the airport and all the
crew members and the support staff all coming out to
support you. Were you did you serve in Vietnam? Tom?

Speaker 8 (01:21:00):
From nineteen sixty seven to nineteen eighty four, I was
in the Marine Corps and I started in Vietnam.

Speaker 5 (01:21:05):
Goined it twice.

Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
Oh wow, well on behalf of every listener in my audience.
Thank you for your service to our country, Tom, and
Badass three. I guarantee you I am talking to someone
who is demonstrably a badass. Tom. God bless you, and
thanks for acknowledging everybody that worked on Honor Flight. And
I'm glad you were able to make it. It was
certainly a moving, inspirational thing then that I got to

(01:21:28):
experience on a couple of occasions. Wow, what a great deal.
We'll do the Honor Flight thing again coming up in
the spring when they start the new one. I'll certainly
give you all the details here on the Morning show.
Thank you, Tom, Let us see and again props of
Signal ninety nine. I'm gonna give a Tricia Mackie over
at Fox nineteen, the only local news that are showing
the truth and her headline. Never before seen video shared

(01:21:49):
by Signal ninety nine facebook page shows minutes leading up
to the viral brawl. She Signal ninety nine got ahold
of the video that we have been denied. Yes, why
do we were denied the information? The truth that is
reflected in the video, In other words, that the Russian
guy had nothing to do with it, was just simply
a victim of a brutal beat down by a reckless,
angry mob of folks who decided they were just gonna

(01:22:10):
target him and beat the crap out of him. Poor Holly,
who was rendering aid to one of the victims of
that brutal beat down, punch square in the face for
no reason whatsoever. Why weren't we given this information? Well,
that's why I said, follow Signal ninety nine. I'd either
current or former police officer apparently has the goods and
got the video from certain sources inside the I don't

(01:22:31):
know where the poscutor's office or whatnot. Someone will put
it out there. That's why we have the Internet. And
as much as I hate the big brother and the
idea that there are literally cameras everywhere, I did acknowledge
in the last hours. Sometimes it works out really well
that we do have video evidence of crimes being committed,
and that, in spite of the fact that the Mayor,
iris Roli, Damon Lynch, Cecil Thomas, members of council didn't

(01:22:52):
want you to see this reality until after the election,
we do and we can factor it in our decision making.
Do you appreciate being lied to? I mean, it was
at the behest to either the city manager or the
mayor that this Russian guy even got a citation in
the first place. They were forced to issue a citation.

(01:23:14):
The current acting police chief interim police chief is the
one that issued the citation. Is that a qualifying event
for police chief? You can decide for yourself on that.
What do I know? I don't know the man, but

(01:23:35):
what I do know is that they tried to convince
you that the Russian guy actually started it. And thanks
to the moment by moment breakdown of signal ninety nine
and your opportunity to check it out for yourself. Fox
nineteen dot com. I'm looking at the front page of
the website right now, and there it is, upper left
hand corner front page. Trisha mac is reporting on it

(01:24:00):
and going back to the comment the WCPO interviewed at
Zever University of Political Science professor mac Mariani, thank you
Max for making this quote, noting that we're probably going
to get a twenty five percent turnout in the City
of Cincinnati. Quote. I think very very low turnout creates volatility.

(01:24:21):
It makes it easier for a relatively small group of
angry people to make a difference. Now, if I was
in Hyde Park, I'd be angry about the way AFTAB
parvol treated my community, not giving us a say and
rejecting outright and out of hand all of our screams
and cries and wailing and nashing otief that we don't
want that well connected developers project to happen in Hyde
Park Square, Bonn Hill. Same thing. And literally every community

(01:24:44):
in the City of Cincinnati who's had connected communities forced
down upon them subject to the whim of AFTAB profile
and the administration. Maybe given a pastor a well connected developer,
You've all been run over your streets aren't repaired, Your
city's not safe. The contingent of police officers hasn't gone up,
or at least, I mean, it's been pretty much status

(01:25:04):
quo since he was sworn in his mayor. What happened
to the additional two hundred plus officers that we used
to have on the streets. Was there an opportunity for
lateral hiring before all of this beatdown in crime? Reality
finally registered with the mayor, and he finally acknowledged that
we got a problem in the city and finally decided
to take at least a couple four days of Ohio
State Highway Patrol or high State patrol from the governor.

(01:25:28):
Four days, not thirty. Crime is his number one priority
now now, at least that's what he says. But then again,
they were telling you this is a whole act of
some Russian guy calling using the N word, which resulted
in him being beaten down. Who you're going to believe?
I suggest believing your eyes because you can see it

(01:25:50):
right there Fox nineteen dot com. And then go to
the polls. You can vote today, you can vote Sunday,
the last day the polls were up for early voting,
or you can go into the polls on Tuesday and
has to vote, and every single vote will make a
huge difference. Please dear God, seven twenty six coming up
in seven twenty seventy five krc DE Talk station. God

(01:26:13):
Bless Patty Scott, God Bless the Heart for Seniors. We're
gonna hear from Marshaby and studio in a moment. I
hope you can stick around for that. It's seven thirty
one on a Friday. I am just beaming with delight
right now because off Arab been talking with Patty from
Heart for Seniors and Kathy Russell's in from Soleiro. We'll

(01:26:35):
learn about Solearra here in a moment, along with physical
therapist Tim King. This Heart for Seniors. This is the
most amazing organization helping out folks that are dealing and
struggling with medical issues. You know we started out with this, Patty,
it was assisted living facilities was your focus? Yes? And
I told you a moment ago, I say it again

(01:26:56):
out loud. I remember my how could you forget? My
dad was an assisted living facility dealing Alzheimer's dimension. Thankfully,
my mom sat at his side and basically did the
fulfilled the role of what you at Hartford Seniors have automated. Yes,
with modern technology. Yes, and we'll start as we always
do before we move over to Solearra and these awesome
silicon composite dressings that people are just gobbling up thanks

(01:27:18):
to you. At cost. No, I mean there's no up
charge on this now. The garment monitor. Obviously, we have
problems with incontinence, urinary tract infections, and hospital visits as
a consequence of people laying there hour after hour because

(01:27:38):
the assistant, the person outside the room that's supposed to
check on undergarments hasn't checked for a while. Maybe they
checked it five minutes ago. Then there's a soiling issue,
and then it won't be for two, three, four more
hours before they get back on that rotation. Welcome to
modern technology. You've got a monitor that anyone can buy,
even for home use now that sends you an.

Speaker 4 (01:27:57):
Alert alert response techno.

Speaker 2 (01:28:00):
It's awesome, it's affordable, it's easy. I told my wife yesterday,
she works with the largest hospital system in the country.
I said, you've got to get your cause they have
nursing facilities and care facilities. I said, you've got to
get in touch with hard for seniors. Can you imagine
for that lolo price, how much additional expense you would
be saving by avoiding the medical issues that go along

(01:28:22):
with this, the bed sores that, oh my god, and
you also have the oxygen monitoring hook up to this
tell my listeners. Yeah, yeah, let's move over to get
it all out.

Speaker 4 (01:28:31):
I'm going to get it all out.

Speaker 2 (01:28:32):
I love this.

Speaker 10 (01:28:33):
So the one thing that we've learned December is our
one year anniversary with you, that you've been supporting us
and been online. And the one thing we've learned in
that entire process is after every time we're on your
listeners call and the biggest issue we had is I'm
at home. I'm at home. I'm not on long term care,
I'm not in a facility. Can I have it at home?

(01:28:53):
Can I have it at home?

Speaker 2 (01:28:55):
Yes?

Speaker 10 (01:28:55):
So we've transitioned and yes, they can have it at home.
And let's keep in mind there's one point two billion
seniors according to the World Aging and Health fact Sheets,
that are at home, not in long term care facilities.
Even in Ohio there's only sixty six thousand in nursing
homes over two million at home.

Speaker 2 (01:29:17):
Well, that knows why, I imagine Patty's because most people
can't afford the dating things.

Speaker 10 (01:29:21):
I understand. I understand, So let me just tell you ironically.
I always talked about my mom and dad eighty eight
years old by the way, they're upright, which is great.
But last time we talked about skin tears and it
lit up like Christmas trees. So many issues with skin tears.
So I wanted to make sure that you saw. So

(01:29:41):
we immediately same day, everybody that called, we got them
boxes of our technology.

Speaker 4 (01:29:48):
This technology, as you can feel in time.

Speaker 2 (01:29:50):
I have one on right now.

Speaker 10 (01:29:51):
It is the most unbelievable. There's not anything else in
the world that has it. This particular company locally out
of Monroe, Ohio only so Celarire only sells to like
the mckessons, the Cardinals that I mean, big large, you know,
professional medical. But the owner and this woman right here
are like, no, we we want to support heart for

(01:30:13):
seniors and this technology. Though the film, it's unbelievable. And
let me tell you before I turn it over to
Kathy and you ask questions, we have to take.

Speaker 2 (01:30:22):
A break before we hear from Cassy. That's okay. I
mean I I kind of had an awareness that you know,
elder skin is very thin, but I did not realize
until you mentioned it last time you're on you introduced
this technology. It tears very easily. A simple band aid
will peel all of the skin off. This is the answer.

(01:30:43):
You put one on my very hairy fore arm and
I just just a little. It sticks wonderfully, but just
a little bit of lifting pulls right off, no pain,
no tearing. Not even a single hair was pulled from
my arm. I'm gonna we're gonna get more on this
and we'll hear from Kathy from Celera and God bless
Celearra for offering this technical for everyone that you can
hear my voice right now. It's available for you for

(01:31:03):
use at home, making life much much better for the
seniors out there. Seven thirty six right now fifty five
KRCD talk station mentioned before I mentioned seven forty Here
fifty five KRCD talk station. Putting a huge smile on
my face, just acknowledging the work and spreading the information.
I am blessed to be in the position I am
helping out seniors in home or in the nursing facilities.

(01:31:23):
Heart for Seniors, It's Heart the number four Seniors dot org.
You're gonna have an opportunity for a freebie today, so
stick around. We'll learn more about that with Patty Scott,
who we've had in the studio many times and always
just a delight here from knowing what she and the
Heart for Seniors folks are doing and learning about more
and more of the organizations who are reaching out to
work with Heart for Seniors to share more love and

(01:31:46):
more technology. We started with the diaper monitor thing, and
we talked about that. We've got the risk the new
risk wearable, Risk wearable which will alert you if you're
the caregiver of heart.

Speaker 4 (01:31:58):
Rate pull socks, temperature sure.

Speaker 2 (01:32:01):
And the warning from the undergarment yes, all on your arm. Yes,
so if you're driving to the grocery store and Dad's
back still at home and you know, and like we
got to get back home now. Pivoting back over to
the silicone composite dressings, seniors have thin skin any normal
dressing and Patty just showed me a picture. This poor
man had a small wound on his arm and the

(01:32:23):
bandage that was over it was much larger. You can
see the damage done to his skin when they tore that.
When they took tour, took the bandage off of it.
That never happens with Solari's product, the silicone composite dressings.
And we have Kathy from Soelera, thank you so much
for working with Hearts for Seniors. Kathy, You've made these
available at no charge of Heart for Seniors so they
can share the love with all the folks that are

(01:32:44):
relying on them.

Speaker 4 (01:32:45):
Yes, we have.

Speaker 11 (01:32:46):
We're just so excited to be partnering with them. We're
a company that we always mainly sell out to sell
to large institutions, institutions and medical professionals, and Hard for
Seniors helps to fill that gap that's needed to get
the product out to the community. So we're so excited
because we've always had a heart for seniors and we

(01:33:06):
hear firsthand from customers and patients that their biggest struggles
are that skin breakdown that causes major wounds and skin tears.

Speaker 2 (01:33:16):
And then if the healing time takes much longer, it's
opened a larger wound by taking the bandage off. I mean,
it's just it's a vicious circle. So you've solved the problem.

Speaker 11 (01:33:24):
We have and that's what makes it so unique. So
our silicon composites, that silicone is so frag gental that
it's for the most fragile skin. So when you apply it,
a patient and a senior can have peace of mind
knowing that when they remove it there's not going to
be any damage.

Speaker 2 (01:33:39):
I drew a parallel. It comes off like peeling a
posted note off of a full wall circa. It's that easy.
But unlike a posted note, it actually will stay on
your skin until you peel it off.

Speaker 11 (01:33:51):
But it hears very well and protects that skin because
they need protection also to keep it to help it
to heal properly.

Speaker 2 (01:33:58):
Well, clearly there's a massive demand there because you know
my Lowly radio show, I talked to Patty last time
she mentioned this for the first time. The phones blew
up because people need help.

Speaker 11 (01:34:07):
Obviously, they need help and they don't know who to
turn to. And heart for seniors is getting out in
the communities firsthand. I mean, Patty talks to people, they
come and see her. I mean, I love the heart
that she has for this and the heart that this
company has because they just really, really truly care for
people and they want to make a difference as our company.

Speaker 4 (01:34:27):
So we're really excited.

Speaker 2 (01:34:29):
I imagine you are. And you've teamed up with the best,
the best, the best Heart for Seniors. And if you're
an organization out there that has something that might benefit seniors, facilities, services,
whatever you're offering, get in touch with Patty at Heart
for Seniors. They'll be more than happy to bring you
into the team and keep spreading the love and bettering
the lives of those that are struggling in the homes.
I'm so pleased to know that this is now in

(01:34:49):
home use. So the diaper monitor, the arm wrist wearable,
the bandage products, all of these are available through your website,
Pattiheartforseniors dot org.

Speaker 10 (01:34:59):
Yes, and I I have to give a shout out
to Steve Wilson. He's the one who had the issue
on his leg that I shared with you him. Yes,
and he's with the American Legion in Loveland and go
American Legion and Loveland. They came in and donated three
thousand dollars, bought all these boxes that they want to
give out to the community and their veterans.

Speaker 2 (01:35:17):
So they're handing them out.

Speaker 10 (01:35:18):
They're handing them out to free to their veterans, their community.

Speaker 4 (01:35:21):
Things like that.

Speaker 10 (01:35:22):
Also, we could not do this without care source Ohio.
They've stepped up as well. They're a lot behind the
technology and we're just where we can't. We love our partners,
Selearra Care Source can't ask for enough. So if anybody
would like a free sample, just reach out to us
five one three four four four twenty thirteen. We do
answer the phone and we do talk to you and

(01:35:43):
or email us. Go to the website Heart the number
four Seniors dot org.

Speaker 4 (01:35:47):
But call us. Don't be afraid to call us. We'll
pick up the phone and we'll call and we'll talk
to you. Free sample, free sample.

Speaker 2 (01:35:54):
You'll be blown away by this. So anybody that's got
this kind of issue going on you have, You're done.
Your problem is heartfor Seniors dot org four four four thirteen.
To get your free sample. We'll do a little bit
more with Kathy and Patty and we'll hear from Tim
a little bit physical therapist. He's working seven nine fifty
bouve kc Detalk station and Happy Friday Extra Special Happy

(01:36:14):
Friday with folks from Heart Force Seniors and studio, including
Kathy from the bandage manufacturer Solara, which has been kind
enough to partner up with Hart for Seniors. I keep
learning more and more as like a flood of information.
First off, crash test jummy Joe Strecker has been putting
your bandages through a workout. He had it on one arm,
he moved it to another arm, he took it off
that one, he put it someplace else. It keeps sticking

(01:36:36):
and it does not hurt, it does not tear. It's
just so simple to apply. You can self apply these
so a senior does not need assistance putting this on
the other cool thing. You can peel back the bandage
itself again. It comes off like a post it note
would come off of a surface, look at the wound,
and then reapply it. You can't do that with a
band aid. And of course the bandaid would pull the

(01:36:58):
skin off, creating a larger room. I also, and it
takes longer for seniors to heal, so this vicious cycle
goes over and over and over and over again. These
bandages solve these problems. Free sample four four four, twenty thirteen.
That's hard for seniors. Number to get the free sample,
Call them, reach out to them and do so. Tell
them you're a physical therapist. You've seen this kind of

(01:37:19):
damage at work here with seniors. Oh, yes, I have.
Over the years, I've seen some wounds and some skin
terrors that are just horrendous. Yeah, that happened, and it
happens so easily.

Speaker 12 (01:37:28):
Yeah, it doesn't take much.

Speaker 2 (01:37:30):
The other thing that you see regularly, and I know
I've talked with Patty about this is like the bed
sore problem. If you lay and obviously moving, you don't
move in a certain position. This. They have a special
bandage that's shaped to apply to I guess your hip,
your cycle, your tailbone. It's perfect size for the tailbone.

(01:37:50):
It's the right size of the tailbone. So if you're
sitting all the time and you were subject to maybe
getting a bed sore kind of thing, you put this on.
You avoid the problem. Absolutely. Great technology. Is it all available.

Speaker 4 (01:38:02):
It's all available.

Speaker 2 (01:38:03):
Because some of the things you would run out of,
and I.

Speaker 10 (01:38:05):
Will know we have we have a we have warehouse full,
more than enough available.

Speaker 2 (01:38:11):
Okay, now how about the watches and how about the
the undergarment monitor.

Speaker 10 (01:38:16):
Yeah, so we're great with incontinence. If anybody's at home
needs the incontinence anything like that, we're great with that.
The watches were out of but we've got more coming in.
So but still call.

Speaker 2 (01:38:26):
But the product can work with a smartphone, right, yeah,
it'll at.

Speaker 10 (01:38:30):
It'll it'll alert anybody I've got. Actually, it's right here
on the app. Let me show you. You can put
on your neighbor, you could put on your I have
my kids listed on here for my dad, my mom.
You can list as many people as you want that
need to monitor.

Speaker 2 (01:38:45):
Okay, and once you acquire that monitor, it's reusable, right,
that is correct.

Speaker 10 (01:38:50):
You just use the smart brief that is That is correct.
It's not one and done. You just use the smart
brief that we currently have.

Speaker 4 (01:38:59):
You attach it.

Speaker 10 (01:39:01):
They it alerts for moisture, it alerts for BM IT
alerts if there's turning the wrong way, positioning, anything like that.
So if you have someone who's disabled or who's had
surgery and can't be on one side or the other,
it's just it's amazing, and it's all done right here
from the smartphone, the smart.

Speaker 2 (01:39:18):
App, smart app. And I keep going back to how
unbelievably affordable this is. This is not some like thousand
dollars cash outlay you've got to make. And that's why
I go back to the whole idea of hospital systems.
It should embrace this. Yes, I mean you invest one
hundred bucks for one of these gizmos and that applies
that and then you've maybe you could even do staffing
reductions because it's going to streamline the process. Who needs help?

(01:39:41):
The ones that the alarm is going off need help?

Speaker 4 (01:39:44):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:39:44):
Correct, what an amazing concept.

Speaker 4 (01:39:47):
Staffing in long term care facilities is just a nightmare.

Speaker 2 (01:39:49):
It is, It's terrible.

Speaker 10 (01:39:50):
Yeah, Alert response technology is definitely the future, but not
just the future for there, but at home. We are
finding out there's more people at home than there are
in the long term care facilities, Sandwich generation, people like
me who are taking care of my kids, but also
my parents don't have the resources we want to be

(01:40:10):
the resource to.

Speaker 4 (01:40:11):
There's just more people at home.

Speaker 2 (01:40:13):
Yeah, and you confirmed, like if I had asked that question,
because I had never heard that specific fact, like more,
far more people are at home being taken care of
than a nursing homes. If you'd ask me whether or
not to believe it to be job, I said, of course.
Who can afford? Like I said last segment, who the
hell can afford a nursing home?

Speaker 4 (01:40:27):
It's crazy, it's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:40:29):
And this is the app.

Speaker 10 (01:40:30):
The app was made so nice. So it's large, it's big,
it's simple. You can see it if you're a senior.
Oxygen temperature yeah, I mean it's just really right there.
And you can actually change the thresholds. So if your
dad has a heart issue or you know, his pulse
socks or his temperature, I mean you can adjust these.

Speaker 4 (01:40:50):
However, are customizable.

Speaker 2 (01:40:52):
To have the alarm go off at some given point
they select correct. Wow, I did not.

Speaker 4 (01:40:59):
Even know that that was very customized.

Speaker 2 (01:41:01):
Well, well, I'll tell you what. We're gonna take a break.
It's heart for hard number four seniors dot or get
in touch with them, Kathy. It's a pleasure meeting to
thank God for your company, that technology. You've helped out
so many people and it's just a beautiful thing you're doing. Tim,
Thanks for the work that you're doing on behalf of
those that are well disabled. And thank you for Patty.

Speaker 3 (01:41:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:41:22):
What more can I say? You're the best heart for
seniors Dot.

Speaker 10 (01:41:25):
No, your listeners are the best. Your listeners are the best.

Speaker 2 (01:41:29):
Let's throw it over to Tiffany Green officer Green potato
Stick here at Pittybob KARASD talk station. I'm very happy
Friday everybody happy Halloween, looking forward to the one single
doorbell that he run at our home this evening for Halloween,
and I'm looking forward to the election. It's Tuesday. You
have an opportunity to change the direction of the City
of Cincinnati unless you're very happy with the way things

(01:41:49):
currently are. I personally, if I lived in the city,
would not be the city that I love so much.
I live outside of it, but I see it, and
it impacts everything in the region, and I don't understand
the current administration, most notably given that we now have
the video of the late July beatdown, bursting the bubble
of the narrative that I have to have provol and
the city manager and the rest of the council was

(01:42:10):
trying to tell you about, which was that this Russian guys,
the one that was responsible for the whole thing started. No,
we've got moment to moment video start to finish and
as it turns out, and thank you and props the
signal ninety nine a Tricia mackeow at Fox nineteen for
showing everyone good to Fox nineteen dot com. Check it
out right there on the front page. What does it say, huh?
Never before seen videos shared by Signal ninety nine. Facebook

(01:42:32):
page shows minutes leading up to viral brawl and what
does it show. It shows you that the mayor and
the city manager and a whole bunch of other people
on council were lying to you, trying to change the
narrative to get past the election until we then can
find out that no, in fact, these folks were innocent
victims of a brutal beatdown in studio. Vote Corey Bowman,
Corey Bowman, good to see you.

Speaker 13 (01:42:51):
Hey, good to be here, Brian. Thank you you and
your listeners for always having me.

Speaker 2 (01:42:55):
Your reaction, I mean you saw it, I mean your reaction,
I'll just let it.

Speaker 3 (01:43:00):
Go with that.

Speaker 13 (01:43:00):
Yeah, Well, I think you got to just have some
simple takeaways from this. You know, the video is shown
from start to finish, and we see the entirety of it,
which is something that we've tried to get a hold
of ever since the start. All we want is transparency,
knowing the fullness of all the details. And so when
you're seeing it from start to finish, you see clearly
who started the fight. And then on top of that,

(01:43:21):
you see that based on the narrative that has come
from the mayor, the city manager and city council members
that they were willing to let riots happen in our streets.
They were willing to let this narrative play out for
an election, and just like they were releasing the police
chief in the state for an election in the same
way that they're doing so many things right now just

(01:43:43):
because it's an election year. These are the type of
leadership that we have at city Hall that are willing
to let our city suffer and willing to let other
people suffer. Now, I want to say this too. You're
seeing litigation happening between the chief and city hall right now.
You saw a lawsuit that happened from my Washington, a
wrongly released fire chief that happened at the beginning of

(01:44:05):
the administration as well. Now, what do you think is
going to happen with people who are wrongly accused by
the city. What do you think is going to happen?
More lawsuits are coming to the city because of this
failed administration, and this is why people got to get
out and vote for new leadership.

Speaker 2 (01:44:20):
I'm glad you mentioned that ladder component, because yeah, I
think you're right. And most notably, the idea that the
police on the scene and the prosecutor's office did not
want to issue a citation to the Russian guy for
that little patent he gave the guy after he'd been
brutally beaten, as reflected by the video evidence. I mean
he had been beaten and beaten and beaten a whole
bunch of times before that even happened. They didn't want

(01:44:40):
to issue a citation. The city pressured the current police chief,
the one that's in the current capacity while the police
Chief Thiji's on administrative leave, but that he went ahead
and issued a citation over the determination of the office
in the Prosecutor's department. He bent to their will. Maybe

(01:45:02):
that's how he landed the job. I don't know.

Speaker 13 (01:45:04):
This is like for Captain Henny and for Interim Chief
Hendy right now, and even with Police Chief Thiji. You
know a lot of people have called for resignations of
certain individuals throughout the year and we have stayed true
to This is trickle down incompetence from the top down.
This is from the mayor, the city manager's office, and
even in city council. And this is why new leadership

(01:45:27):
is needed, because when you look at the cops, with
the cops that we've spoken to on the streets and
even in the higher ups, their hands have been tied.
And we talk about regimes, we talk about authoritative we thought,
we talk about dictatorships. That is what's happening from city
Hall right now, is that everybody has to get their
story straight. Everybody has to say the same things. Comply

(01:45:48):
with the city manager's office. Don't talk to the media,
don't talk to political candidates, don't talk to this or that,
And that is what dictatorships do. And that's what we're
seeing from the regime of what's happening in city in Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (01:46:01):
Well, and don't listen to your own constituents. I mean,
we saw that on full display with how they treated
Hyde Park and Bond Hill with the development projects. They
didn't care what about their own constituents in those neighborhoods
having a say in the direction of their communities. Now,
I found that to be hard. Look at the reaction
from Hyde Park, how they got a balance initiative. It's
gonna be until they pulled the plug on the whole idea.
They've insulted every resident within those various neighborhoods. And I

(01:46:24):
would say literally every neighborhood in the city of Cincinnati.
But this one size fits all, so called Connected Communities
development program, No, you do not have a say.

Speaker 13 (01:46:34):
Yeah, it's all based. I've said that since the beginning
that the Connected Communities was a trojan horse for Hey,
we as a city can just do whatever we want
and we don't have to listen to the communities. We're
just gonna build housing however we see fit, and the
communities have to have a say in this no matter what.
The fifty two neighborhoods of Cincinnati are unique in every way,

(01:46:54):
and we have to have a city hall that represents
all fifty two neighborhoods, not just our urban core.

Speaker 2 (01:47:00):
And how important is the vote? I love this quote
and I mentioned it several times this morning, and maybe
and I mentioned earlier in the week, WCPO interviewed University
as Avery University political science professor about the election. Who
was commenting on the low voter turnout that is anticipated.
I think Sherry Poland had a week or two ago
predicted I think to who was it to, Jim Keefer,

(01:47:21):
Board of Election Sherry Poland. Props to Sherry for all
the hard work you've done over the jow. She really
does props all day long, and everybody who's working the
polls on Tuesday, God bless you for doing that. It's
wonderful community service. But she expects about twenty five twenty
six percent voter turnout. So the professor Mac Marianni, who
was interviewed, quote, I think very very low turnout creates volatility.

(01:47:43):
And here's the sailing point. It makes it easier for
a relatively small group of angry people to make a difference.
I would suggest that there's more than a relatively small
group of angry people in the City of Cincinnati, given
the current administration. In the path it's gone down. But nonetheless,
we still expect a low voter turnout, meaning literally every
human being with an earshot of me who has contact
with a Cincinnati resident, someone who's registered to vote in

(01:48:07):
the City of Cincinnati, or if you are that person.

Speaker 12 (01:48:09):
Vote no.

Speaker 13 (01:48:10):
Absolutely, we have to get out and vote. We have
to make our voices heard. And it's not just about
a mayoral election. There are some strong city council candidates.

Speaker 3 (01:48:19):
You know.

Speaker 13 (01:48:20):
The last the last election, we had ten candidates for
nine positions. This year we have twenty seven positions. We
have twenty seven candidates open, and so I would do
your research. We have some strong candidates, like talking about
Lynda Matthews, Liz Keating, Christopher Smithman, you have Steve Gooden
and other individuals that they're going to have Cincinnati at

(01:48:42):
the forefront of their administration or how they would run government.

Speaker 2 (01:48:45):
Yeah, Gary Favors was mentioned by that as well, Seth
Walsh again as you Smithaman, Matthews, Gooden, Favors, Walsh. And
then of course the all important let us not overlook
the judicial racis. I mean, of course I would strongly
encourage you to vote for Josh. Betsy Sunman is just
a delight and an excellent, excellent judge. Gwen Bender and

(01:49:06):
Michael Peck all running for municipal court judges. Those are
some solid folks and of course strong on criminal justice
kind of folks.

Speaker 13 (01:49:13):
I want to actually talk about this too, in those
judicial races, you know. So I've talked personally with Betsy Sunderman,
Judge Betsy and Judge Burkwitz. These are incredible individuals. These
are people that have high integrity. They don't look on
either side of the aisle when it comes.

Speaker 12 (01:49:29):
To their judges. They look at.

Speaker 13 (01:49:32):
Common sense, they look at the law and they hold
criminals accountable, and even in the last week because I'm
monster all the social media and everything, and these are
two individuals that are incredible, and there have been people
on social media that have tried to smear them and
tried to do say things that I mean, it's one
thing for me, all right, it's one thing for other
individuals that are a little bit easier to go against.

(01:49:53):
But these are people that have had amazing careers and
there are people that tried to smear them on the
most stupid stuff I've ever seen, made up stuff that
I've ever seen.

Speaker 2 (01:50:02):
Well, when you don't have actual evidence to go on
spare somebody, you make crap up exactly.

Speaker 13 (01:50:06):
So I want to encourage everybody. If you're in like
the Hyde Park area, if you're in Anderson area where
you're Judge Burkwitz, or if you're in the Blue Ash
area with Betsy Sunderman, get out and vote and make
sure that these judges are in as well. And then
if you're in the Cincinnati districts, you gotta get out
and vote for city council. You got to get out
and vote for mayor, and you got to get out
in record numbers.

Speaker 2 (01:50:27):
A fifteen fifty five KRCIT Talk Station, Corey Bowman in studio.
The full hour will be right back after these brief words.
It's talk station A nineteen. If fIF you' about KRCIT
talk station. Happy Friday, Hey, guess what early voting is
going on? You can even vote on Sunday. They have
one kind of bard of elections. I encourage my listeners
to do so, and most notably in the city of Cincinnati.

(01:50:48):
You have a choice go back to the definition of stupidity,
repeatedly doing the same thing over and over again, expecting
a different result. If thing's better for you right now?
Do you feel better about the city of Cincinna and
the current a ministry? I don't, And I know Corey
Bowman has the best interest of the entire city that
he loves at hard, not just one neighborhood. Everybody. Everyone

(01:51:09):
should have a benefit from the administration. And clearly this
one has demonstrated its unwillingness to listen to its own voters.
Just an absolute smack of ase insult, I understand. Corey
Bowman in studio. Here Corey Bowman dot Com. Feeling some
love in Hyde Park feeling some love in Oakley. You
mentioned some of the other neighborhoods, Mount Washington getting a

(01:51:29):
lot of support from the residents of Mount Washington. I
understand you'd be doing a big blitz over on the
West side from my West Side friends. Yeah.

Speaker 13 (01:51:34):
So, I mean, over the course of the year, you know,
we just basically go with not only our gut feelings,
but kind of research what's the biggest areas to hit.
And we had our final door knocking in Hyde Park
last weekend and it was I mean, from our first
door knocking in High Park to this one was completely different.
I mean, we saw our signs everywhere, and then as

(01:51:56):
we were knocking on doors, we had so many people
just say that they're vote for And then the thing
that got me was that in the middle of it,
I'm sitting there walking and you hear this, and this
guy that's in a convertible I think it was probably
his last day he could be in a convertible for
the year, and he's got his top down and he
stops in the middle of the road and says Cory Bowman,

(01:52:18):
and he just says, I'm getting an army in Hyde
Park to come out and vote for you.

Speaker 2 (01:52:22):
We need this right now.

Speaker 13 (01:52:24):
And it was just like that was just a completely
different aspect of what we experienced early on, and.

Speaker 2 (01:52:29):
Well, people got to learn about you over the year. Naturally,
in a blue city like Cincinnati, you would expect some
resistance like yeah, yeah, yeah, whatever, Republican, you got no chance.
But I mean you do. I mean, there is no
reason that you know, even the most about Democrat needs
to be happy or claim to be happy over the administration.
I mean you listen, I've been critical of Republicans over
my lifetime. I don't always get what I want, but

(01:52:52):
I mean, this is a demonstrably terrible administration. Well.

Speaker 13 (01:52:56):
No, So I was doing an interview last night with
Fox nineteen. They asked me, you know, what are your
thoughts about being a Republican in a blue city. And
I just tell people that when I go out on
the streets and I talk about these city issues, these
aren't red or blueish. Oh They're not clean streets, safe streets,
prosperus streets. These are not partisan issues. And as we've

(01:53:17):
run this race at the beginning, because all the headlines
only said one thing and Republican, which I'm not ashamed
of that, but we have to emphasize that this race
is for city issues. I've told people that we are
not copying pasting national politics in the city hall. We're
not using this as a stepping me. This is something
that we have to do for our city.

Speaker 3 (01:53:38):
Now.

Speaker 13 (01:53:38):
I will say this because we talk about all fifty
two neighborhoods. I'm in the urban core, I'm in the
downtown area. I'm in the West End with our business,
with our coffee shop, and with our church. We see
the failed policies of what's happened in the downtown area,
and that is what's creeping out to every neighborhood in Cincinnati.
And so you're seeing in Hyde Park, You're seeing in

(01:53:59):
Bond Hill, seeing it on the West Side, You're seeing
it everywhere. And that's why we're running this race as well,
because not just about all we gotta offend for the
guys on the outside of the city. No, it's because
we've seen these failed policies from the inside out. So
it's all fifty two neighborhoods.

Speaker 2 (01:54:15):
And on the record, I just want to make sure
I'm solid with you on this, Corey Bowman. I know
aftab per Wall up until about five seconds ago when
he now says safety and safe communities are his number
one priority. Previously, he previously stated something the effect of
he views everything that lands on his desk first and
foremost from a green perspective, in other words, carbon free,

(01:54:36):
neutral city. You know that kind of crap. I mean,
I read the op ed piece.

Speaker 13 (01:54:40):
Now I would say that, I would say it's true
that he sees it from a green perspective, but green
as far as money goes, because all it has to
do with is kickbacks. All has to do with making
sure that the friends and partners of aftab Purval are
richer and richer, and that is what has crippled our city.

Speaker 12 (01:54:58):
I'm tired of it. I'm tired of.

Speaker 13 (01:54:59):
The contra actors, the nonprofits, the NGOs, and the people
that are connected with city hall being the only people
that are benefiting from the government of Cincinnati. All fifty
two neighborhoods need to be represented, not just the connected
developers and the connected friends of those that are in office.

Speaker 2 (01:55:16):
Amen.

Speaker 13 (01:55:17):
So the thing is is that whenever we see this,
people are seeing this in the election year that oh
now we're gonna now listen if I hear double down
one more time from this administration, we're gonna double down,
double down. You need, they're doubling down on incompetence right now.
Because the thing is is that they say right now
they're focusing on crime. They say they're focusing on I mean,

(01:55:38):
you saw the press conference. Oh, we're gonna have the
snowplower movell fixed because just.

Speaker 12 (01:55:43):
Because we have an app.

Speaker 13 (01:55:45):
Now, oh, obviously those that drive trucks, they're gonna actually
operate on an app right now. And that's what's gonna
fix everything right now is an app. No, it's common sense.
These are things that we've been doing, snowplower moveal since
snow was invented. Okay, we've been doing I mean, I'm
telling you crime intervention has been around since canaan Abel.

Speaker 12 (01:56:06):
Okay.

Speaker 13 (01:56:07):
So it's not rocket science when it comes to fixing
these problems. But you have to have a clear head,
an unbiased head, and an unbiased opinion when it comes
to we're not going to put politics in public safety.
We're not going to bring politics into just fixing our streets.
And that is what City Hall has lost sight of
over the years, is that we have to push all

(01:56:29):
these agendas, we have to push all these social issues.
We have to push all these community inities instead of
just being who we are, which is glorified custodians. That's
what city hall is is your glorified custodians. You have
the keys to the city. You keep the streets clean,
you keep the streets safe, you make sure the money
is spent properly, and you make sure to listen to

(01:56:49):
the voices of the community.

Speaker 2 (01:56:52):
Again, Amen, Corey Bowman, you're on fire this morning. It's
making great sense and of course providing listeners with a
wonderful opportunity to realize, yes, there is a better path
from what we've currently got, Corey Bowman. And don't forget
about the council members are gonna talk about that a
little bit because along with the role of mayor goes
responsibility of choosing a vice mayor and an administration and
of course the city manager will have more with Corey Bowman,

(01:57:13):
Corey Boman dot com. Just don't go away be the
talk station. Hey twenty nine on a Friday, the friday
preceding election day next Tuesday, in case you hadn't got
the memo, Corey Bowman in studio. Of course, he preferred
mayoral candidate, and your vote really does matter and you
can change the direction of the city. Corey was telling

(01:57:33):
me off on the break. There you get these big
blocks of Democrats that show up at the primaries.

Speaker 12 (01:57:39):
Right yep, yeah, well in early voting, in early voting.

Speaker 13 (01:57:43):
Yeah, So this is what we're seeing from the numbers,
because I know Cincinnati when it comes to the sports teams,
when it comes to everything involved in since today, we
hate getting our hopes up. But hey, we get our
hopes up and then we get let down because somebody
gets turf toe or something like that. So the thing
is is that I get it. A lot of people
are trying to figure out is this really possible. We're
looking at the numbers of early voting, and we're seeing

(01:58:04):
Republicans trending up in every area, and we're seeing Democrats
trending down in every area. And then this is what
we're seeing as well, is there is a ton of
unaffiliated and independence that are showing up. And so those
are the only statistics that we're able to look at
right now because a lot of people won't pay for
polls for such a small election, yes, right, And also

(01:58:25):
a lot of Democrats won't pay for polls, because then
it'll let more conservatives know about the election, right, They
just want to keep it kind of close to the
chest when it comes to that. But I will say
this that what we see trending is going in our direction.
But then also the Republicans standpoint, always shows up the
day of more than they do in early voting.

Speaker 2 (01:58:44):
Yeah, Republicans, for some reason, that's the day they vote.

Speaker 13 (01:58:47):
Yeah, So I would encourage people, Hey, if that's your plan,
that's fine, but you do have tonight, you know which,
the Board of Elections is actually open during evening hours
as well, and so you do have the rest of
this weekend to be able to get out to the
Hamilton County Board of Elections and cast your vote early.
The reason why we say this is because you never
know what's gonna happen on November fourth. You know, there

(01:59:09):
might be a car wreck, there might be traffic, there
might be an unexpected thing happen with your family or whatever.
The power out it example, the world's in a perfect place,
so i stuff like that happens. We tell people just
to make sure that your vote counts. Get in early
if you can't Friday, Saturday, Sunday, you know, it's not
open on Monday, but Friday, Saturday, Sunday over this weekend,
you can go out to the Board of Elections and

(01:59:29):
you can make your voice heard there.

Speaker 2 (01:59:32):
And it's so I am so pleased they move the
Board of Elections to that location off the Northwood Lateral.
It's easy to get in, get out marketing, and I
don't care what the line looks like when you pull up,
and hopefully it's a long one because a lot of
people want to participate. They are awesome at turning it around.
I mean, getting in, getting your process, getting your vote,
getting out, it's easy. It doesn't take but a couple

(01:59:53):
of minutes. So that line is not long, even if
it appears to be long.

Speaker 12 (01:59:58):
No, what's really cool about this too.

Speaker 13 (01:59:59):
I'll say this for the parents because I have four kids,
And what's really cool about is they have their own
like kids area that you can actually cast your vote
for like pizza or cheeseburgers or whatever, and they give
you like a voting sticker and everything. So if you
have young kids and you're trying to figure out how
is this going to work with me taking my kids,
they are extremely accommodating for that like, my kids actually

(02:00:22):
like voting more than me. When it comes to it.
They go in, they're like, oh, yeah, we're gonna vote.
And then what was crazy was I think for one
of the issues, it was like tacos versus fries, and
my son wrote in Corey Bowman, you know, so there's
a write in candidate for that. So I was able
to beat out the fry. So I was really excited
about that. And introduction to civics too. It's great, it

(02:00:43):
really is cool. But yeah, so on November fourth, obviously
you look up where you're supposed to be voting on
the website, so you can go, I believe it's vote
Hamilton County dot org and you can go and get
your precinct. You can know what your registration status is,
all that stuff.

Speaker 2 (02:00:59):
Going on there, sample ballots so you can see what
you're gonna vote on and know which judges you need
to vote for.

Speaker 13 (02:01:05):
That is important too, because you know if you want
a pink slip for conservative judges, and to know who
to vote there because a lot of people go in
and they'll vote for like the mayor, they'll vote for
a couple of things they know for sure, and then
they kind of get burned out by like looking at
the twenty seven council candidates. But here's the thing though, too,
is that the way our city government operates, you know,

(02:01:25):
you have things like the vice mayor, you have things
that have to be worked out with with the new council,
and so you're only going to be as effective as
a mayor with the council that you're working with as well.

Speaker 2 (02:01:35):
Right now, if we get a miracle go on here,
and I want to say a miracle as if is
not achievable. It definitely is achievable. You get elected mayor.
But if people elect a whole slate of Democratic council
members to go along with you, it's gonna be a
little difficult to navigate. But you're gonna have to select
from among all the Democrats who's going to be the
vice mayor. So maybe a challenge there.

Speaker 13 (02:01:53):
No, I mean, for one, if we get in, you
know which, when we get in, I argue I'll be
very encouraged by that because I know for a fact
that that means we'll have some strong city council members
on board as well.

Speaker 12 (02:02:04):
That's exactly how all turn as well.

Speaker 2 (02:02:07):
Smithman Matthews Good and favors, Keating Walsh, outstanding choices all
and do not vote for all nine. Don't water down
your council votes. Choose the mayor that you want, Choose
the council people the top choices for you for city council.
Otherwise the vote does get water.

Speaker 13 (02:02:25):
Yeah, you have to be smart with the vote, because
what a lot of people don't understand is that with
the nine positions, you're not voting nine positions. It's the
nine top vote getters, right, And so if you're voting
for three, four or five anything past that, if you're
voting for a slate of nine, you're saying, hey, I've
got to fill in nine because there's nine candidates. Well,

(02:02:46):
then what happens is that the votes actually end up
competing against each other to do that. And so what
we have to tell people is that if you want
the conservative vote, and if you want all those strong
council members on that, only vote for three, four or five.

Speaker 2 (02:03:00):
Eight thirty five. Right now, more with Corey Bowman as
we close out the show, he's going to be here
the whole hour. We're going to hear a few more
things and got some more announcements to make. I hope
you can stick around to be right back.

Speaker 4 (02:03:09):
Fifty five KRC Peaceports.

Speaker 2 (02:03:11):
Fans arsed the talk station eight thirty nine. Here fifty
five KRC. He talks Dation and Bon Thomas, the Corey Bowman.
Last opportunity to speak with Corey before the vote on Tuesday,
or the vote today or tomorrow or Sunday. As he
pointed out, early voting was going on. Please get in
there and vote. Your vote obviously is going to be
a world of difference for the city of Cincinnati. We

(02:03:32):
choose a different path. And I just want to ask
you directly, and I didn't ask you this in advance.
I don't know the answer to the question, but I
think I can anticipate it. You've come on this program
since you launched your campaign for Mary. This is like
the fifth time I think you've been on the Morning Show,
maybe fourth. Willing to talk to me now, Joe and
I Joe Strecker, who lines up guests, don't ever get
any love from council, current council, current Mayor's office, None

(02:03:54):
of them ever come on the Morning Show. If you're
elected mayor, will you continue to speak directly to the
public and or pointed questions from me and listen to
my and my listening audience after being elected.

Speaker 13 (02:04:05):
Absolutely, this is something that what I've tried to push,
and this is a saying that I say is that
a vote for an elected official is not a blank
check to do whatever you want. A vote is a
trust that you're always going to be at the table.
And this is one of the tables that I sit
at to be able to hear from, you know, the
opinions of others. You know, usually every time that I

(02:04:25):
do this show, I'm getting messages of people saying their
opinion or saying, you know, what they thought about something
I said. And so we have to be able to
sit at any table and to be able to actually
take public comment, to be able to actually explain things
properly with transparency. And you know, I know that we
talked about at the beginning of the show, that's exactly
what we didn't see when it came to that crime

(02:04:47):
that was happening in July. And we're not here to
cover up things. We are here to make sure things
are transparent. We are making sure that the issues are
there out in the open for the public to decide
for themselves and that is not what's happening from the
current administration. That was, and that is going to be
the opposite. You know, somebody asked me, I'm a I'm

(02:05:08):
a big fan of a show called The Office, all right.

Speaker 2 (02:05:11):
Yeah, and a lot of people.

Speaker 12 (02:05:12):
Obviously, we have a.

Speaker 13 (02:05:13):
Plan for administration. We have a plan for policies when
it comes to crime, infrastructure, when it comes to spending
the budget properly. But somebody said told me, you know,
ask me, what's your plan for being mayor? I said, well,
you know, I think about an idiot, and I think
about what an idiot would do, and I don't do
that thing. And you know, for me, I think about

(02:05:35):
Mayor aftab provoll, I think about what he would do,
and then I don't do that thing. And that is
going to be my policy for mayor of Cincinnati.

Speaker 2 (02:05:43):
You know, it's easy to read into that. You just
call it aftab provole idiot. I did just saying, you know,
sub me interpreted that way. You might be quoted by
Fox nineteen j d of Answers half brother calls the
aftab Purvall an idiot. Does that drive you crazy? I've
been just stewing over that, like you are the embodiment
of JD. Vans like you're running national, world, global policies.

(02:06:04):
We make the stage.

Speaker 13 (02:06:06):
We make fun of my family because whenever I introduce
my mom to somebody, I say, hey, this is JD
Vance's stepmom right here. And I go up to my sister,
This is JD Vance's sister right here, This is Jady Vance's.
Now here's the thing I love, I mean, Vice President
JD Vance being my brother, I mean, dear God, what
an amazing thing to be able to say, yeah, what
an amazing thing to be able to say, To be

(02:06:27):
able to see my brother go from where he's come
from in the back in his background, to be able
in such a short amount of time to be at
the vice presidency of the United States carrying himself, being
able to make these decisions, being able to try to
work with people across the island one of the most
polarizing times of her political culture. To be able to

(02:06:48):
step up and be able to serve our country the
way he is. So I'm very proud of the fact
that he is my brother. But when it comes to
this city government, when it comes to this, that is
what people are tired of. They are tired of copying
pasting national politics. We see current city council members and
a current mayor that show up to national protests when

(02:07:10):
it comes to you know, all these national issues, but
they forget the people that they represent. They forget the
potholes in the roads, they forget the snowplow removal, they
forget the crime on our streets.

Speaker 2 (02:07:23):
Yeah, it's so true. I just kept thinking about that.
You know, the roads alone, what a disaster. And then
you say, okay, roads, fine, were behind, Like how many
years of lane miles are we behind? It's insane.

Speaker 12 (02:07:38):
Well, the thing is too.

Speaker 13 (02:07:39):
At the current pace that the city is going, it
would take forty years to pave all of our center
lane miles of road.

Speaker 2 (02:07:46):
Forty years. The current pace is the problem.

Speaker 13 (02:07:48):
Exactly exactly. And that's including with all of this, you know,
new influx of money coming in from the railroad, which
a lot of times we can see this as a
shell game or a substitution for what really should be
coming out of the budget. And those are things that
we've addressed throughout this year. The money is not being
spent properly, the infrastructure is not being a priority, and

(02:08:09):
the crime, Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:08:10):
The police is not a priority has never been for
this administration. Well here the numbers haven't improved since he
took office.

Speaker 13 (02:08:16):
Well, a lot of times their answer for things is
to throw money at it.

Speaker 2 (02:08:19):
Right.

Speaker 13 (02:08:20):
That's something I've seen on social media a lot is
whenever we say that City Hall doesn't back up the police,
immediately they show, oh, hey, no, we've funded the police.
There's a very big difference between on paper showing that
you're throwing money at something versus actually solving the issues.
And that is what we're saying. They through their stats

(02:08:42):
and through their budget, that's their weapon, I guess is
that they show that they're dumping money into a situation.
But just dumping money into something does not fix it.
You've got to be able to make sure that you
have the right contracts when it comes to infrastructure. You
got to make sure you have the right administrative policies
when it came to the policing, and a lot of
times that just means hands off approach. That means allowing

(02:09:04):
the police to do their job to enforce not only
high level but low level crimes. I will say this,
when it comes to the police, the number one thing
we will focus on is hiring and getting our compliment
levels up, because when the state government comes in and
the OSP comes in and brings those compliment levels up,
guess what happens. Crime goes down on our streets. And

(02:09:26):
so we've got to be able to say that, Hey,
anything that is twenty percent understaff is not going to
operate at its full potential. And lateral hiring initiatives that
have happened throughout this year have not seen the response
that they want because nobody wants to work for this leadership.
If you get strong leadership in and you have a
lateral hiring class that know that they're going to have

(02:09:48):
city Hall to back them up, you're going to get
those compliment levels up, and our crime is going to
go down.

Speaker 2 (02:09:54):
Hey Man, one more with Coreybowman find on line at
Coreybowman dot com. Please, Dear God, let's make it. Let's
let's let'schoose a different direction. Let's try it out. Let's
try it out. You know, was it Mark twenty? You
regret the things in life that you didn't do, not
the things that you did. How about trying a different path,
choose a different direction. Eight forty six right now fifty
five kr C.

Speaker 1 (02:10:13):
The talk station fifty five KRC Capital gains, the KRC
the talk station.

Speaker 2 (02:10:24):
Eighty nine. You reading my mind's treker, This trekker rolling
out my favorite bumper music in studio, Corey Bowman, my
favorite mayoral Canada for the City of Cincinnati, and obviously
encouraging people to get out and vote and try Corey
Bowman is an option because current option not real working

(02:10:45):
out real well for most people in the city Cincinnati.
Unless you're one of those non governmental organizations organizations, or
unless the community revolts against you a well connected developer,
you're not getting any love. At least you don't feel
like you're getting any love from haf to have Pearl
Ball and city Manager long and the balance of council members.
So is with great encouragement, I say, please get out
and vote Corey Bowman. I'm listener to lunches next Wednesday.

(02:11:10):
I am not putting you on the spot and asking
you to commit or not commit to go, but you
are invited. Of course, everybody's going to be invited a
high grain brewery next Wednesday, the Brentwood location, and I
hope we are in a celebratory mood. And even if
we are, it's high Grain Brewery. You'll be able to
have a beer and down your sorrows or something like that.

(02:11:31):
But I'm going to try to be very cautiously, if
not very optimistic for your Corey. I know the numbers
are rolling in and they're looking, they're looking. They provide
a great measure of optimism, which is something I never
thought I could even say.

Speaker 13 (02:11:44):
Well, yeah, I think that One of the biggest things is,
you know, I hate to say this because it's what
we've heard all throughout the year, but a person's perception
is their reality. Right now, when it comes to crime,
a reality is a reality. I kind of believe that.
But when it comes to these elections, a lot of
times people's perception of all it's just too far gone
or whatever.

Speaker 12 (02:12:05):
And then a lot of times you just don't want
to get your hope for it.

Speaker 13 (02:12:07):
I want to remind people that over about sixteen years ago,
brad Winstrupp ran for mayor and it was split almost
down the middle.

Speaker 2 (02:12:15):
Yeah, he got forty seven percent of the vote if
I recall correct, forty eight off.

Speaker 3 (02:12:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 13 (02:12:19):
So the thing is with this is that how can
you say that there's an overwhelming response on one side
if you haven't even really seen in these elections somebody
can test.

Speaker 2 (02:12:29):
It or or in the case of the Republican Party,
not even bothering to run anybody in a.

Speaker 3 (02:12:34):
Lot of these races.

Speaker 13 (02:12:35):
Well, I think it was like they pulled the flag
out the left, well one of the biggest things. And
so I was actually just looking through my text through
Joe here. But February fifth was our first interview. February
fifth was our first interview. And so I'm driving on
the road today and you can feel that cold weather,
you can feel like the winter coming in, and I
just think back of February fifth, how we were driving

(02:12:57):
in the middle of snow to get to this studio
to be able to have our first interviews together. And
so what an amazing year, you know, to be able
to show people what we're standing for, but also what
a year that has shown that we need new leadership.
And I think that if anything, when it comes to
this election, people have to vote outside their comfort zones.

(02:13:20):
And they have to not only vote outside their comfort
zones as if you're a regular voter, but if you
don't vote at all, get out, get out, take a
chance on this and to show people that our city's
not too far gone. Because I want to emphasize this.
You're seeing a lot of things in downtown cities all
across America right now. I believe Cincinnati is one of
these unique cities to where we are not too far gone.

(02:13:41):
When you talk to people on the street, they are optimistic.
They are common sense. Whether they are a Republican or
a Democrat, they have a sense about them to where
they know not to get involved in all the crazy
craziness of life and craziness of the world, but to
be realistic that we just have to have common sense
and meet each other where we are. And so I
think when it comes to this election, if anybody is

(02:14:02):
listening that was maybe on the fence, I just want
to tell people we are running this on city issues
for Cincinnati, and that's it. And when we get in office,
we're from day one, we're going to make sure that
we're ready for the winter months, for the snow, We're
ready for the spring potholes, We're ready for the summer
and fall crime, and we're ready to bring Cincinnati to

(02:14:22):
the fullest potential that it can be.

Speaker 2 (02:14:24):
Sounds great, Corey Bowman. If you're outside of the city limits,
you all know somebody who lives in the city, maybe
you have a business in the city. You know this
is important. And I mean I saw the hands raise
at that fundraiser that I was at at Wyoming where
I introduce you. Wyoming is not part of the city,
but they are right there against the city. You got
a huge turnout of people very interested in helping you
out and helping your election out because of the massive

(02:14:47):
spillover effect that whatever happens in the city of Cincinnati
impacts everybody in the region.

Speaker 12 (02:14:52):
Absolutely.

Speaker 2 (02:14:53):
That's why I'm so passionate about this. I mean, I
love Cincinnati. I do the reasons I move back here
from Chicago for God's sake.

Speaker 13 (02:15:02):
Well, this has been the problem throughout the year is
that a lot of people confuse being frustrated with how
the city is being run with not having a love
for the city. And the thing is is that I
love Cincinnati. That's why I'm running this race. I'm not
running this race to trash talk our city. I'm running
this race because I care about all these issues. I

(02:15:23):
care about all these neighborhoods. And a lot of people
ask me, well, how are you looking in polls or
how's the campaign running, and this is what I tell them.
You've probably heard me multiple times. I say it's going
in our direction. I hate the reasons why it's.

Speaker 12 (02:15:36):
Going in our direction.

Speaker 13 (02:15:38):
Because every time that you see more shootings, every time
that you see a mismanagement of funds, every time that
you see the potholes getting worse and worse, every time
that you see something being a failure from city Hall,
that means that we are running this race for the
right reasons and that people have to wake up to
know that new leadership is needed.

Speaker 2 (02:15:57):
Corey Bowman. I have enjoyed our conversation and you have
blossomed over the course of your candidacy. Your policies are sharper,
You're more focused, and that you know those final words
there obviously some up and say a whole lot about
who you are. You do care, you do want to
change things. You are aware of the problems, You understand priorities.

(02:16:18):
You know what makes a neighborhood better, a safer, cleaner community.
I wish you all the best and I hope we
are in a tremendously celebratory mood. Next week at High
Grain Brewery on Wednesday for the listener Logic at Brentwood location.
Corey Bowman dot Com is where you'll find Corey online.
It's not too late to help your friends. And again,
like to the people at Wyoming, all the hands that
were raised, Yes, I've got a brother or sister that

(02:16:38):
lives in the city. The point was reach out to them,
get them off the couch, encourage them to go ahead.
Just cast that vote, get it out of the way,
don't wait till Tuesday. Goe into the Board of Elections
over the weekend. Take care of it. You'd be glad
you did, and you may end up with a better
city as a consequence for it. Corey, I wish you
all the best. God bless you, sir.

Speaker 13 (02:16:56):
Thank you Brian so much. And this is in the
last best spit. So anytime that you're gonna have me,
I'm going to be here.

Speaker 2 (02:17:01):
Oh I'll insist and trust me. You asked Smitheman, you
screw up, I will be all over you.

Speaker 12 (02:17:07):
Come on. I expect it any other way. I get
the text from Smitherman.

Speaker 13 (02:17:11):
Anytime that I'm not staying on point, He's like, hey,
stay on the point.

Speaker 2 (02:17:15):
I know he he's listening right now. I guarantee you
folks hope you have a wonderful weekend, happy holiday, or
happy Holloway.

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies!

The Breakfast Club

The Breakfast Club

The World's Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club, With DJ Envy, Jess Hilarious, And Charlamagne Tha God!

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.