All Episodes

August 21, 2025 • 157 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
Five o four fifty boy krc DE cop station, try.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
To eve.

Speaker 3 (00:25):
Well vacation.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
I'm the dude, man, but I'm not. Brian Thomas glad
to be here and a host of b above CARC
Morning Show. He always glad to see joe'streker wery belongs.
After a couple of days off and me having a
day off yesterday, Thank you Gary Jeff Walker for covering
for me. Uh, back to normal at least for a
moment in time. Joe, You're off tomorrow, aren't you? And
Monday and too? No, I got it wrong. Oh my god,

(00:54):
my personal calendar. Anyway, I'll figure it out. Figured out
what you want to talk about. Maybe you want to
talk about the guy who threw the slap getting charge
based on political pressure brought down on you by the
solicitor's office. Yeah, City solicitor Emily Smart forced a Smart Warner. Sorry,

(01:15):
didn't mean to leave your last name off there, bowing
to political pressure charging the well. The guy who was
the victim of the beatdown on the twenty was that
the twenty sixth of July. Man, the time has flown,
hasn't it. Anyway, He's been charged for slapping. Get to
the details on that. We'll talk about that with Ken
Kober coming up. FLP President Ken Cover at eight oh

(01:37):
five about the city solicitor ordering the police department charge
the victim to beat down. They actually identified the guy's
name in spite of the fact that Marci's Law might
apply to the victim. And the police museum, which is
a really cool thing. I wish they could say in
the space that they have leases coming up and they

(01:58):
were one to move to the Museum Center, which seems
like a wonderful fit the police museum being at the
museum Center. It's a museum. That's what the museum Center
is all about. Of course, I would think that they
would have enough room to put the museum center a
police museum in the museum Center, but no, the Museum
Center says, we're not going to allow that. We don't
want the police museum anywhere near whatever else we got

(02:19):
going on here. It just sounds like an anti police decision. Anyway.
Jay Rattlef's going to join the program at eight third.
It is Thursday. I heard media aviation expert Jay Ratliffe.
We have a passenger kicked off a Lufton's of Flight
TSA announcing three items that are now banned from check baggage.
Boeing seven thirty seven the number one used aircraft in

(02:43):
the world for decades that apparently is going to change.
Plus we'll get an update on hub delays from Jay.
But seven oh five skipped over one hour. Fast forwarding
two hours, we get the return to George Brenhaman and
Keith Tennefill. We're going to talk about health. Yes, it's
an hour of MAHA making America healthy again through Joe.
George and Keith will talk about some health things and

(03:03):
some latest RFK healthing human service actions, as well as
the need to stay hydrated in these hot and human times.
Pull in todaim my normal parking spot. I see Joe
Strecker's normal parking spot occupied by a vehicle that I
don't recommend. Joe, do you get a new card? No,
his air conditioning went belly up. Nice timing with the
humidity we've had, Joe, I hope you get that fixed up.

(03:24):
Cent five fifty on your AT and T phone. Yeah.
Marcy's law might apply to victims of crime. You don't
identify or reveal their name, even if they are adults.
Alec He is the purportally the white guy who issued
that slap after being the victim of a well a
couple of blows himself. He's been charged facing a misdemeanor charge.

(03:53):
Why didn't the police charge him, Well, because they didn't
have sufficient evidence. Nonetheless, since I Solicitor Emily smart Warner
ordered the police to charge him with a misdemeanor disorderly
conduct charge vowing the political pressure, I love Signal ninety nine.

(04:23):
Props to Signal ninet nine plus the FOP Queen City
Lodge Number sixty nine's Facebook page, and I apologies again
to Signal ninety nine. I accidentally identified her as a guy.
I said it was a guy remaining anonymous, either an
active duty or a retired police officer. That remains a
big question mark, although I now know that it's a woman.
On Signal ninety nine Facebook follow Signal ninety nine excellent commentary,

(04:49):
but also the Sinni FOP Queen City Lodge Number sixty
nine Facebook page which points out the city solicitor bow
to political pressure in order to the Sincinni Police Department
to file misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge against the guy who
was the victim of the fellony assault in the July
twenty sixth violence. Of course, others have been charged seven
others FOP and ken Kober is going to comment on

(05:11):
this blatantly political order came after both after both Cincinnati
law enforcement, the folks on the scene, and the Hamilton
County prosecutor determined it would be difficult to prove any
sort of crime against this person, ken Cober said, City
solicitor Warner and Purval's administrations. Blatant political meddling is the

(05:33):
most egregious I've witnessed in my career. Overruling law enforcement
and prosecutors for cheap political points is of disgraceful staying
in our city in those responsibles should be utterly shamed,
ashamed of themselves. Well that's assuming they have some sense
of self awareness anyway. Local Channel five WWT spoke with

(05:58):
the suspect, yes identified as Alex Trevinski, on the phone,
confirming yes, he is facing a misdemeanor charge. Now here's
revelation of a bit of bias, appointing to Chris Jacobs,
reporting for WLWT, quote one video of the brawl shows
a black man in a red shirt being hit in
the face by a white man sparking a chaotic scene

(06:22):
with others joining in, throwing punches, kicking and stomping. Well,
is that what really sparked it? It seems to me
it was a continuation of some harassment that mister Well
now identified as Alex Dravinsky had been receiving before the tap.

(06:42):
If you can call it a slap, go ahead anyway.
It was a continuation of an ongoing, unfolding chain of events.
Now you can draw your own conclusions as to whether
that little tiny slap actually sparked the entire beat down,
but we can all fully appreciated the b town was ridiculous, unnecessary, unwarranted,

(07:07):
violent brutal. Many have characterized it his animalistic behavior, which
quite often happens in a crowd of people that are
just getting a little bit out of hand. Can Cover said.
The city administration is eroding the very fabric of the
justice system with orders to prosecute those without probable cause.

(07:28):
Cops are being used as political pawns. It's disgusting. Yeah, yeah,
And as a Signal ninety nine pointed out, the person
who ordered the the citation to be issued, not one

(07:51):
of the police officers on the front line is a
superior sort of taking the heat for actually signing this. Well,
I guess order the order for the Captain Henny is
the one. The reason why citation for disorderly contact issued

(08:15):
to the victim Alex wasn't signed by detectives or officers
of the police department signal rights because Captain Henny threw
himself on the sword so that his detectives wouldn't be
put in a situation where they could be charged with
insubordination for refusing to sign this citation against the victim.
Mad respect to you, Captain Henny. Captain Henny issuing the citation,
I suppose now whether that matters to you or not,

(08:39):
whether it was an officer there or Captain Henny the
person obviously the Captain Henny ordered or the sinsin police
partment ordered to issue the citation. The police don't believe
there's probable cause. The prosecutor doesn't believe the probable cause.
How is it that the city solicitor can find something
where others in law enforcement can't. But I'm thinking someone's

(09:06):
gonna have to prove this rather than a jury trial,
because the judge can see through this and obviously follow
the law and realize that, well, there's no there there. Well,
I know it's Hamilton County, Joe, And I'm maybe I'm
viewing this my perception of choosing a trial before a

(09:28):
bench rather than a jury trial based upon you know,
logic and reason as opposed to the practical realities of
the left winging liberal judges we have in Hamilton County.
But nonetheless that will be my guess, that'll be what
I would go through. It's interesting because Fox nineteen talk

(09:50):
with Mike Allen described as a legal analysts, which I
suppose he is prosecutor was he said that for this charge, prosecutors,
will you have to show that Javinsky persisted in his
disorderly conduct after being warned by an officer or fire
personnel to stop, pause and reflect. And remember that the

(10:11):
police didn't show up till after pretty much everybody had
already cleared out and this violent beatdown was already over with,
So there wasn't an opportunity for any member of law
enforcement the fire department to tell Chavinsky to stop doing
what he was doing, which lasted a moment because after
that tap was issued, that's when the beatdown began, and
he didn't issue any more slabs or anything. From that

(10:31):
point forward, he just got the crap beat out of him.
Apparently got hit twenty eight times according to his lawyer.
The alternative to the continuing persisting in disorderly conduct after
being worn, I suppose those are elements of a crime,
or that he was within one thousand feet of a school. Alternatively,
according to Mike Allen, he'd have to prove, or they

(10:53):
prosecuted would have to prove. Chevinsky was convicted three times
in the password disorderly conduct, which I don't believe exists
in the records based on what I've been able to
read this morning. Alan concluded, they're going to have a
hard time proving to sorderly conduct a misdemeanor of the
fourth degree. And all this effort, all this effort, and

(11:15):
you consider that they don't prosecute folks, they do not end.
I mean, if you do prosecute someone, the judge lets
them off with the pat on the wrist or just
releases them. If they are sentenced after being proved a
reasonable doubt, they are giving a very light sentence, often
just straight to probation with no jail time. We go
through all this wheel spinning for serious crime, serious crimes

(11:39):
being committed, gun charges, you know, robbery, stuffs, etc. Et cetera,
only to see the justice system treat those perpetrators very lightly.
We're going after this guy for a slap, a slap
that really didn't amount to much. Well, you got to
have your political pound of flesh, don't you have to
have it? Just wondering what this is going to result in?

(12:08):
Was this trip worth it? Five sixteen fifty five KRSTE
Talk Station. Jay's on the line, Jay, hang on, I'll
be happy to take your college's gotta take a quick
break here, you're right back.

Speaker 4 (12:15):
This is fifty five KRC and iHeartRadio Station, our iHeartRadio
Music Festival.

Speaker 1 (12:23):
Here's your ten and nine first one and one A
forecast to day mostly clouded to partly cloudy, still humid,
but not as hot. Eighty one for the high today
partly Clyde every night, sixty four eighty five the hi tomorrow,
mostly sunny and a few clouds overnight, still humid. They're
saying sixty seven Saturday is going to be mostly sunny day.
It'll also be humid. Eighty five for the high. We're
right now seventy degrees here, fifty five KRSD talk station

(12:45):
five one three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three talk by fifty on eighteen T phones.
Real quick, Jay, before I grab your call. Going back
to Signal ninety nine's comment about the these citation for
this slap issuer, this is all political, all of it.
This is the mayor forcing the city prosecutor to cow
town of the demands of Cecil Thomas, Damon Lynch Iris,

(13:06):
Raleigh Scotti Johnson, and the rest of the black leaders
who demanded that Alex be charged with felony inciting a
riot or else or else what they'd riot, they'd pulled
the support from the mayor's reelection. Signal says, this is
so ridiculous. Alex did not ask to be a taxed
This was not a brawl or a street fight. He

(13:28):
was selected by two individuals an attack from behind. For
over a minute, he sucker punched in the back of
the head, slapped and punched and kicked repeatedly before This
is a comical comment from Signal ninety nine before he
delivered the softest slap in history. My freaking angry ginger
cat slaps harder than that. But the mayor had to

(13:50):
have his pound of victim flesh. Yeah, that seems to
me pretty much what it is. But it's not a
charge of felony inciting a riot. The elements of that
crime are nowhere in sight. It's all a misdemeanor, which
is what you would probably get sided with if you
walked up to someone and, without reason or cause, slapped

(14:11):
them in the face on the streets. Go to the phones, Jay,
thanks for indulging me there for a moment. Welcome back
to the Morning Show. Good to hear from you.

Speaker 5 (14:17):
Good morning, Brian, I hate to change CODs. A. That's
a good one you're on. At top of the hour news,
I heard that there was a school district down near
Cincinnati that had a shooting at a football game last year.
So now they're going to implement metal detectors. And you know,
I ran some numbers. I have a friend of mine
who's a groundskeeper at Northeast High School. Northeast Ohio High School,

(14:40):
a small high school. They just spent a million dollars
on getting their field redone the past couple of years,
which is not uncommon, and all of that is paid
for out of property tax, which everybody's property tax is.

Speaker 1 (14:52):
Going through the roof.

Speaker 5 (14:53):
I asked him how many people show up at a game?
He said about three hundred two to three hundred. I
said what I charge for a ticket? He said seven bucks.
So I ran the numbers, and that's one hundred year
payback on a million dollar field, which means they're going
to have that field redone about every ten years. So
you're never going to keep up, which means the property

(15:14):
owners are just going to keep shoveling money into the
football programs at these high schools. So then I ran
for America.

Speaker 1 (15:24):
This is a remarkably familiar ring to it. If you
want to look at professional sports.

Speaker 3 (15:29):
Exactly, I'm going to get to that.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
I'm sorry to go ahead continueus time.

Speaker 5 (15:34):
No, not at all, not at all. So I ran
some numbers, and I've got a lot of experience in
corporate America, and in corporate America, if you want to
buy a new piece of equipment or an asset, rule
of thumb is it has to have a two year payback.
So I think I've got a solution for how to
get property taxes. Inline is the million dollar field with
five home games and three hundred people showing up. All

(15:57):
we have to do is just raise ticket prices just
a little bit or seven bucks to sixteen hundred dollars
a ticket. Now, if if if you're going to put
metal detectors in because there's a shooting and I guess
what we can't do, we can't live without football, then
the price probably goes up more like eighteen nineteen hundred dollars.

(16:17):
So the consumer will then would have to choose do
they want to spend their sixteen hundred dollars for Friday
night football at you know high school?

Speaker 1 (16:24):
Afoor?

Speaker 3 (16:25):
Do it?

Speaker 5 (16:25):
Is it worth one through the metal detector at eighteen
hundred dollars a ticket for high school?

Speaker 1 (16:29):
B Well, then the property, if they're going to be
using metal detectors, doesn't require maybe members of law enforcement
to be there, because yeah, if it went off, is
some like mom or dad who's volunteering at the game,
are they going to be responsible for liberating the firearm
from the person who's being scammed through the metal detector?

Speaker 3 (16:49):
No, I don't think so, Brian.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
I think what we're going to do is put a
plastic ank will monitor on them. That monitors nothing, but
it'll give us an emotional high Now to your point
about professional football, there's another tax. So there's there's this
football tax that keeps piling on of what what the
folks down in Cincinnati are paying and what we as
all Ohio wan has just paid six hundred millions to

(17:12):
the Brown And then, don't forget at the college level,
there was a lawsuit for the n c A A
for the student athletes because they they took the NCAA
to court and won and it's a billions of dollars lawsuit.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
And a little college like.

Speaker 5 (17:29):
Youngstown State University, I learned, was handed their part of
the bill. They've got to come up with a half
million dollars a year to pay off this, uh this lawsuit.

Speaker 6 (17:39):
So what is what's Ohio State.

Speaker 5 (17:42):
And and Cincinnati and all the all the college all
the Division one, Division two schools taxpayers are paying that too.

Speaker 1 (17:50):
We got it at the at the at the pro level, the.

Speaker 5 (17:53):
College level, the high school level. What I would love
somebody to do is run the numbers and and say,
what is the football tax? If seventy percent of my
property tax goes to the schools and the schools are
spending millions on football programs, what's my overall football tax.
The guy that doesn't consume football.

Speaker 1 (18:10):
I love that.

Speaker 5 (18:10):
Yes, I don't like the welkeness of the NFL and
professional sports.

Speaker 1 (18:14):
Listen, I'm with you one hundred percent. And the other
thing I was thinking about is the six hundred million
dollars were given to the Cleveland Browns, putting breaths a
profitable money making entity. They actually generate a profitendike high
schools who obviously, based on your number crunching, do not
the operator to loss. They're not making money on the
football games. So let's see, if we have a profitable, independent,

(18:36):
privately owned football team that probably could pay for its
own stadium, the taxpayers are paying for that private stadium
or at least in a giant chunk. What if we
decided that, well, we're not going to give profitable, you know,
capitalistic entities like the Cleveland Browns taxpayer money. We could
do six hundred high school football fields talking that kind

(18:56):
of money with the money we otherwise would have given
to you know, the private of the Browns that money. Yes,
of course, are we or are we quit paying for football?

Speaker 5 (19:09):
This is also coming from a Penn State grad that
I was there doing the paternal in the sand dusty
years where there was that, you know, there were thirty
kids that were sexually molested, and they didn't pull the
card for Penn State. They should have burned Beaver Stadium
to the ground and said you're not doing any athletics
and send a message, strong message to the NCAA.

Speaker 1 (19:28):
But they didn't.

Speaker 5 (19:30):
And so you know, scandal after scandal after scandal happens
in these athletic programs where we take young people treat
them like racehorses. Uh, and they're not there, They're not
doing somebody. They're not It is not it's not a
football scholarship. It's not an academic scholarship. You're getting paid
to go play football. There's no time, hardly any time
to learn anything else.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
So let's call it what it is.

Speaker 5 (19:49):
I know, but boy, we can't stop paying for it,
can we.

Speaker 3 (19:53):
We're just addicted to it.

Speaker 5 (19:54):
And as like yesterday I said, conservatives will not turn
it off. It doesn't matter how woke it gets. Ratings
are through the roof. So I'm gonna end on saying
quit watching NFL and don't vote Democrat off.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
To talk appreciate it today. Man, maybe Tom will follow
up on that. Yeah, I mean, I keep going back
and I think what his point was, what's the purpose
of school? I mean it seems to have become, you know,
from high school on or even junior high on. But
the point is what to play sports? And how many
people who play sports during their academic life end up

(20:27):
earning a living payings playing sports? Yeah, like very few percentages,
like in the single digit five twenty eight fifty five
KR City Talk station Local stories. Maybe Tom or your
phone calls, feel free to call right back fifty five
KRC dot com. I have thirty on a Friday, even
a happy one to you. Oh look, speaking of Tom,

(20:48):
you also can feel free to call. He doesn't own
the segment. Used to hear it from and appreciate the call.
Five on three seven four nine fifty five hundred eight
hundred eight two three Talk Tom, Welcome back to the
morning show, my friend.

Speaker 7 (21:00):
Thankfully I'm not having to pay a tax for this segment.
It's like a flea market.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
Booth right Hey, listen, man, I appreciate the calls. I
enjoy talking with folks, and I don't mind the regular call.
You always have an important message at least you end
on one. So anyway, how do we get to how
we going to get there today? Let's start well, well,
first of.

Speaker 6 (21:16):
All, I appreciate Jay with it.

Speaker 7 (21:20):
He's talking very sensibly and logically, but he points out
the absurdity of what is really going on.

Speaker 6 (21:28):
The football tax is just it's perfect to call it
that because that's exactly what it is. Yeah, I love football.

Speaker 7 (21:36):
I'm like, I'm like Dennis Hopper and a Nike commercial
and I love football.

Speaker 6 (21:42):
I'm a big football fan. But yeah, it's the truth.
We are being forced to pay for this stuff. And
you know, I guess there's some there is some benefits
for it, for for for kids, and you know, my
mind personally are all grown up. But I've got grandkids
in school.

Speaker 7 (21:58):
So yeah, but I'm not too bent out of shape
about it. But it's exactly what it is. We have
to pay for this and the athletics departments. And I
just spent in the last year and a half that
you see in an athletic facility, I learned how much money.
If I didn't already know how much money is being
thrown in athletics for whatever, when that, if the players

(22:20):
or coaches have they did tell you you go, here's
some Oh yeah.

Speaker 6 (22:24):
We'll we'll make that happen. Yeah, no problem. Is that
what you want? Sure, we'll give it to you. Yeah,
it's and it's never paying for it. And you know what,
none of them are paying for it.

Speaker 1 (22:33):
No, and that is true, and it's just mentality. I mean,
it goes from professional sports all the way through into
the high schools that it's like to keep up with
the Joneses. I mean, remember what it was like when
you were in high school. What did you had? You
had a grass field, you had some rickety stands, and
people showed up and watched an actual football game getting played.
They didn't need assholes or if they didn't need special stuff.

(22:54):
They didn't need a disco ball in the locker room.
Alah blah blah blah blah blah blah. Give them a
space to change, take a shower, give a place to play.
That's it. That's all you need. The game will be played.

Speaker 6 (23:04):
Now you need a bubble over another feat?

Speaker 1 (23:06):
Yes, practice exactly, exactly.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
Yeah, that's what.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
Yeah.

Speaker 7 (23:12):
I think we ought to get pee wee football involved
in this too. They they deserve their cut, don't they.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Amen?

Speaker 7 (23:18):
Brother, I don't know if you caught any of Gary
Jeff yesterday. But one of the topics in the morning
was the slogans that all NFL team has to pick
a slogan that goes.

Speaker 6 (23:32):
In the back of the end zone. And know how
they've had these slogans on the back line. Yeah, mine
is don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
Have a great day, right, Amen to that, Tom, I
appreciate it. Yeah, keep up with the Joneses. I mean,
what are they? What was the most recent thing that
they remodeled? The uh it will FKA Paul Brown Stadium,
which is my favorite paycrep the locker rooms? Yeah, how
many millions of dollars to renovate the locker rooms? What
do you do in the locker room? Which hour you change?

(24:01):
And that's about it? How many amenities do you need?
I'm not gonna play. I don't have a disco ball
in my locker room. I'm sorry. One of the local
stories a big, big time traction on this, and I'm
really upset with the Cincinni Museum Center. They will not
allow the Cincinni Police Museum to operate there. Operators the

(24:23):
Greater Sinsinni Metropolitan Police looking for a new space. They've
been in their current facility since two thousand and six,
the lease is up. They do not own the building
and they've got to find a new location for their
one hundred displays and one hundred and sixty years of
police history, which is a cool thing to see. So
they've outgrown their space on Ready Road and Penalty again.
Lease expires next year. A spokesperson for the museum center quote,

(24:46):
after a careful consideration, we've determined that our museum spaces
and missions are not aligned in a way that would
make a full relocation feeble at this time. Comment from
Jill Barkottmeyer, chief financial officer and of since A Museum
Center and National Railroad Freedom Center quote. Our facilities with
Union terminal housing, the Cincinnati Children's Museum, and the Holocaust

(25:09):
and Humanity Center and Freedom Center focused on the stories
of the underground Railroad and Oh Look, social justice serve
audiences that include young children and sensitive exhibits, and the
presence of firearms or certain artifacts associated with law enforcement

(25:30):
would not align with the environment and experiences we are
committed to providing whatever. Thank you, Liam, oh here, I'm
a human being with a subjective view of something. Here,
let me offer my opinion and say no, we don't
want the police around here. Yeah, maybe they don't want

(25:54):
security either, Joe, that's a good point. Denying the history
and interest of politics is not a good look and
will likely have a negative impact on the Cincinna Museum Center. Yeah,
thank you Ken Kober for that comment. What do you
think about that? Joe said he is not going back

(26:15):
to the museum center. You know others may come to
that same conclusion. Joe, very well, May five thirty six,
and your tax payer dollars keep that place open as well.
But if I have KRC detalk station, you got pain,
you want to get rid of it. You want QC
Kinetics to just talk to them and find out if
it's an option for you. See, I can't answer that question, thankfully,

(26:37):
thank God, I don't have a problem from the moment
I get up until the moment I go to sleep,
and maybe even through your out your sleep. The pain
from arthrit is he knee pain, hit pain, back pain,
hit the ground, it hurts, walk down the steps, it hurts.
You've been to the doctor, you've gotten steroid injections. Those
don't cure the problem. You're going to be back again.
Maybe you're talking about surgery let's try to avoid surgery

(26:58):
anyway we talk. Take QC cann except on the free consultation.
Consultation with the medical pros a QC Kinetics here in Cincinnati.
They've had thousands of patients who will tell you that
they wish they'd have done it sooner. Turn their lives
around with QC Kinetics. Regenerative treatments that work with your
biddy to help operative word restore and operative word repair
the damage, joint tissue, natural natural cellular treatments with no scalpels,

(27:21):
no pills, and long term relief. If you're a good candidate,
how do you find out? Take them up on the
free offer, free consultation five one three eight four seven
zero zero one nine five one three eight four seven
zero zero one nine one more time five one three
eight four seven zero zero one nine fifty five krc
the talk station. Hey, if you're sending your child off

(27:41):
to college this week? Five forty one fifty five KRCD
talk station, Friday Eve, before I get to the phones,
relaying a comment from my friend Curbage Mike aka Submarine
or Mike, So photos of the incineration of six million
Jews is not disturbing to children. But a CPD uniform
is nice. Trime museum center, maybe District one. We'll have

(28:02):
to relocate through to the proximity of the woke museum Center.
Excellent observations. Mike, Bobby, Welcome to the Morning Show. A
Happy Friday, Eve to you.

Speaker 8 (28:10):
Happy Friday, my brother, faith, flag, family, and firearms. When
you have those, you always have freedom. Yes, sir, Hey,
I've taken my grandchildren and everybody else down to the museum.
You know, what is this about police not welcome. Don't
they need a flag? They need to need to sign
out front. It just indicates that people that want to

(28:32):
go in the place, that's you know, that's it's between
that and pandering three weeks after an event to give
an individual a forced degree misdemeanor. Yeah, that's exactly what
they think about people.

Speaker 1 (28:46):
Yeah, well, and you think the idea law enforcement. Law
enforcement also includes, like for example, arresting people who are
not lawfully entitled to carry a firearm. The mere fact
that the police carry firearms is the reason to keep
them out of the museum center. Firearms, which are the
subject of the Second Amendment in the United States Constitution,
which guarantees are right to keep the bare arms. We
can't have that this but no, no, no, no, man.

(29:08):
You could teach a constitutional lesson with the police museum there. Firearms.
They are lawful and legal, and you have a constitutional
right to own one. But you know, under certain circumstances
you lose that right or otherwise can That's what law
enforcement officers are all about, to keep them out of
the hands of bad, dangerous people who might do you
harm good people law enforcement.

Speaker 8 (29:28):
One thing to Wayne Allen Roots says things, you know,
peace will protest that. I believe in that one hundred percent. Sure,
Just hurt them where it hurts the most. Take the
money away. Oh well, I just don't.

Speaker 1 (29:42):
Yeah, just take the money away, and I guarantee him
about eighteen months.

Speaker 8 (29:46):
These city officials and all these other left wing Marxists
they'll cry like a little girl after about eighteen months
because they can't stand it. They can't survive. So all
the people that are surrounding these left wing democratic Marxist
cities and.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
Everybody around them is red. Just don't spend your money there,
right right, that's it. And even if you get redistricted
to for politicians to say that you're now going to
be voting Democrat and you are guaranteed to have a
Democrat in office. No you're not. Just don't vote Democrat
right if they're not serving your interest. I don't care

(30:23):
how they rezone you or Jerryman, do you otherwise redistrict
you into a blue zone. Just because you're in a
blue zone doesn't mean you're forced to vote for a Democrat.
What's in your best interest? Appreciate to call Bobby real
quick and get a stack of stupid story in here
a transgender comedian strip completely naked mid song before playing
the keyboard with her. Well, we'll say genital Why are

(30:46):
you doing that on live television? Jordan Gray signed mail
at birth and still apparently has his junk. Has been
open about undergoing transition, showing up I guess last Friday
nine or Channel four wherever that happens to be, England.
Thank you Joe. In quote unquote her sketch, she sang

(31:08):
an excellent a Field song about her experience as a
trans woman, meaning a guy who pretends to be a woman.
Show included comedians which appeared in the original version of
the show, kind of characterized as a Saturday Night Live
type of show. Before the performance, Gray, who was the
first transgender singer on the talent show The Voice back
in twenty sixteen, told her Twitter followers tonight we make history.

(31:30):
Opened the song with a lyric I look out in
the faces of this room and I wish I could
crawl back in the womb, adding I wish the world
could finally understand I'm more than just a female Russell
Brandt ha haaa. Then launch into a comedic song referencing
the Chuckle brothers don't know who that is to me,

(31:52):
to you skid, before saying, now back to me, this
song's about me. Moving to her quote unquote version of
the do re me and increasingly intense keyboard, playing the
Salt Drugs to a close, She turns to the audience.
You know the best thing about live TV. I can
do stupid stuff like this, jumping from the piano before
coming down one, two three, ripping off her suit, her

(32:16):
and exposing yourself completely naked, and after dancing around the
stage naked, turning the keyboard, shouting see you Friday at
the one, then Palladium b words, and then playing a
few keys with her penis. Okay, five forty six, that's

(32:41):
an example you want to set now, Can I ask
the folks in the audience who happen to be members
of the transgender community, does this benefit your cause in
any way, shape or form, right? You know, I didn't
think so. Five point three seven four nine fifty five
eight hundred two three taco with pound five fifty on
eighth and t phones and take a stroll and appreciate
your life, life while you have it, and appreciate the

(33:02):
value of life, and appreciate every moment in life. And
that's what the goal of Gate of Heaven Cemetery is
serving the Cincinnti Christian community more than seventy seven years
an honoring life on sacred ground. More than a cemetery.
It's a place where the dignity of each person is
respected and life is honored from beginning to end, every
phase birth life, milestones passing into eternal life. Gate of

(33:22):
Heaven recognize and revers the sacredness of every phase and
the human jurity. So enjoy the beautiful surroundings. Gorgeous, gorgeous
park like landscaping, tranquil landscape surroundings ideal for prayer reflection,
to remember us. Gate of Heaven Cemetery right there off
Montgomery Road. Fotom online Gate of Heaven dot org. That's
Gate of Heaven.

Speaker 9 (33:42):
Dot org fifty five krc.

Speaker 1 (33:47):
Uh. Here's your TENA nine first one and lebolcast. Most
of the cloudy day to day, it's going to be
human and going up to st eighty one degree sixty
four overnight, the partly cloudy skies, mostly sunny skies tomorrow
with the high A five humid and a few clouds
overnight sixty seven for the low eighty five hour high
on Saturday, again mostly sunny, hot, human seventy degrees right
now traffic.

Speaker 10 (34:07):
Time from the UCF Traffic Center near these sixty percent
of Americans waiting on an organ transplanter from multicultural communities,
give the gift of life, become an organ donor, or
explore a living donation at you see health dot com
slash transplant.

Speaker 1 (34:22):
Highways are doing just fine.

Speaker 10 (34:23):
This morning had an openight grew blocking the ramp from
southbound seventy five to the lateral East Pound.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
Not anymore. That has been taken care of. Barrels are
out of the way.

Speaker 10 (34:33):
Northbound seventy five and inbound seventy four both look good.
Chuck ingram on fifty five KRS the talk station.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
By fifty one at fifty five r S talk station
five karsee dot com. And you can't listen live. Check
out the podcast right over there fivecarsee dot com. Yeah,
I appreciate Gary Jeff covering for me yesterday. So uh
let's get over the back. Back to this deck is stupid.
I want to continue with theme here. Park Ranger HM

(35:04):
teamed up with several LGBTQ activists, including RuPaul Dragway, drag
Race Star never seen the show personally person named Patty
Giona for the purposes of hanging a transgender flag and
the famous L Captain rock formation at Usemite National Park.
Post on Instagram from August eighteen, Channon Joslyn revealed that

(35:27):
she'd been fired from her job of the National Park
Service after she hung a trans flag on El Captain.
She claims there's no flag, and this parure case there is.
She said she'd done under free time off duty as
a private citizen. Jos Une identifies being non binary whatever
the hell that's posted to mean, holds a PhD in
genomics and studies bats. That's a quote from the Daily Mail.

(35:53):
Do you dabble in bat? Studies quote. Last week, I
was fired from my dream job as a permanent park
range with the MPs for practicing my first amendment right.
Oh really? In May, I hung a trans flag and
El Capitanna to celebrated my acceptance of my identity, ignoring
the fact that it's a public park and it's not
if you're not supposed to be displaying your own personal

(36:14):
identity things. I hung the flag in my free time
off duty as a private citizen, pointing out the transgender
flag flew for a couple of hours before it was
finally taken down. Well, congratulations, you lost your situation. Lodi,

(36:35):
California authority say a woman died earlier in the month
after getting her head stuck in a donation box meant
for shoes and clothings on private property in Elm Street
and Pacific Lordi. Police said that the unexpected call came
into the department a woman was possibly stuck in a
donation box, according to the Lodi Police Department. Released police
said the woman's head was stuck inside with her legs

(36:58):
dangling out. Firefighters aim to help pull her out corner
of the city. She was in cardiac arrest. First responders
attempted to save her life, but they didn't. Please said
anytime there's a death in the city, the city assumes
the investigations. Right now, it's still an active investigation. There's
still a detectives assigned to it, working it and just
kind of taking in all the details. As far as

(37:20):
what led to her death, they're not sure. Neighbors across
the streets said they'd seen people climb in and out
of the donation box and contacted police to try to
stop it. Nothing's changed. Police just trying to figure out
what happened, asking if anybody had seen anything or have
a video, they would really love to hear from them.

(37:44):
Twenty three year old man arrested. This is in UK
because you don't have freedom of speech there. It was
during a protest to the site of a proposed mosque.
Arrested after shouting we love bacon in a sing song voice.
What police took away? The single father from the demonstration

(38:04):
now facing court action on charges of public disorder or
racially aggressive conduct. According to the article, the incident not
the UK's first that puts Islam's intolerance of bacon in
the spotlight. Guy named Kevin Creahan back in twenty sixteen,
jailed for placing bacon on the door handles of the

(38:26):
Jemia Mosque in Totterdham, a sentence to twelve months in
prison for doing that. Well, here you would assert your
First Amendment right to freedom of speech, at least in
so far as the we love bacon comment.

Speaker 9 (38:43):
You'll make the rules, ma'am, I just think them up
and write them down.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
Well, in the UK they actually make the rules up
in fact as they go along. What a terrible place
to live, you know. This is one of the things
that makes America great, you know, in spite of the
fact that, yes, you might be subjected to what you
perceive to be offensive comments, others may not perceive them
to be offensive. That's for something. You can talk about,

(39:06):
the idea of freedom of speech. Those ideas get put
out there and we get to debate them. Period. It's
a beautiful thing. Five fifty five fifty five kr CD
talk stations stick around. Want to talk about the six
o'clock I I want to get your thoughts and opinions
maybe about the museum center that will will not allow
the Police Museum to install their museum in the museum center.

(39:27):
Why well, guns or something whatever that A whole lot
more coming up. I hope you can stick around today's
top stories at the top of the hour.

Speaker 9 (39:38):
It's information that matters to me.

Speaker 1 (39:40):
Fifty five krs. The talk station summer was six six
about PRCD talk station. Very Happy Friday, Eve T you
feel free to call you got something you want to
talk about five one, three, seven, four, nine fifty two
to three Talk Pound five fifty on AT and T phones.
Coming up for the next hour, George Brennan and Keith
Tenefeld return instudio Restore Wellness. You can find them online

(40:03):
Restore Wellness dot org.

Speaker 11 (40:05):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (40:06):
It is a good conversation with US two about health
and fitness, kind of on the make America Healthy Again
kind of level. Always find something interested and informative with
George and Keith, and hoping to do so again today.
I know we're gonna be talking a little bit about
hydration as well as some of the recent pronouncements by
r FK Junior and the Health and Human Services, most
notably regarding mr NA vaccines. So stick around for that

(40:28):
coming up after that eight oh five f O he
President Ken Kober, who's making it the news this morning.
We'll talk about the city solicitor solicitor ordering over the
decisions of the Cincinni Police Department and Hamilton County prosecutor,
ordering the police department to charge the white guy, the
slap guy with the uh with the victim of the beatdown,

(40:49):
to charge him with misdemeanor with a misdemeanor now in
spite of the fact that black community wanted him charged
with felony inciting a riot. The elements of that crime
simply do not exist. And of course the police department
and the Hamilton County Prosecutor also said, there's nothing there
in terms of what you can charge him with. So
in spite of the fact that he's been charged with
a misdemeanor, they don't even believe they can prove that

(41:10):
charge in a court of law. Screw you, says basically
the city solicitor ordering them to charge. So they issued
the charge. No, are you happy now? Is that the
pound of flesh you want? Do you think there's going
to be a conviction in that? Yes, I appreciate fully.
The Hamilton County courts are not the best place to

(41:31):
be at list if you're looking for justice and the
application of the law, as you would hope it will
be applied, but we'll hear from Ken on that. Eighth. Five.
Let us see here finally the Police Museum, which really
has got me irked this morning. Not the police Museum.
They're not rking me. The Since A Museum Center, rejecting

(41:53):
the efforts of the Since A Police Museum to well
locate at the Museum Center, which makes a perfect sense
from my standpoint. It's inconsistent with their social justice move
over the Museum Center, apparently, according to the statement from
the Museum Center Jill Berkermeyer, chief financial officer and vice
president of the UH, Well, I guess that center and

(42:16):
the Cincinnia Museum Center, National Railroad Freedom Center, our facilities
with Union terminal housing the children since a children's museum
in the Holocaust and Humanity Center and Freedom Center focused
on the stories of the underground railroad and social justice.
You know, as I think about that, is that even accurate?

(42:37):
Maybe the Freedom Center focuses on social justice and of
course the underground railroad. But if you go to the
Museum Center, does do you feel like you're in a
social justice focused environment? Is that the direction that they
have gone. It's been a little while since I've been there.
Maybe it is it serves audiences that include young children

(42:59):
and sensitive exhibits and the presence of firearms. Are certain
artifacts associated with law enforcement would not align with the
environment and experience as we are committed to providing. Wow
Becker to Signal ninety nine, Thank you Signal ninety nine
for your thoughts and comments. Member of law enforcement maybe retired,
She had this to say, We've always supported the museum center,

(43:21):
reviewed memberships every year, and contributed financial of the organization.
Those days are now over. You reference the Holocaust and
Freedom exhibits, very graphic, very humbling pieces that leave you
in tears after viewing them. The ruthless and savage treatments
of Jews and black people, along with horrific tools and
methods which were used to punish and torture human beings
on full display again. The emotions that I and many

(43:43):
others felt were those of heartbreak and disbelief that monsters
really do exist. It made me want to be a
better human, a better Christian, a better mom. Then I
received several copies of your response to the Police Museum. Essentially,
you're saying that the museum Center is now a social
justice platform and that your visitors might become triggered by

(44:03):
all things pro law enforcement, so allow me to recap
imagery of torture and death. Ju Jews and black people
are totally acceptable, but honoring police officers is not as
you wish. Please enjoy the mass exodus of members who
do not wish to patronize a woke, non inclusive environment

(44:24):
that has obviously been influenced by a political ideology. Love
Signal ninety nine props signal, Appreciate your thoughts. It's funded
by your taxpayer dollars in large part. Funding sources include,
of course, contributions and donations, but the Hamilton County property

(44:50):
taxes and grants from the state and federal governments also
keep that place around. County voters approved a five year
ero point twenty five percent sales tax way back in
twenty fourteen to fund the restoration of Union Terminal, which
of course houses the Cincinni Museum Center. That tax ended
in March twenty twenty ready, but county commissioners kept the

(45:15):
tax in place, and now it's used for the county's
general fund. Feel like another bait and switch, like the
stadium tax that was supposed to be rolled back. Yeah,
you're still waiting for that one. Keep your popcorn out.
Over to the phone to see what Steve's got this morning. Steve,
thanks for calling. Welcome to the Morning Show.

Speaker 12 (45:35):
Good morning sor does sound like Cincinnati's full of fast
I don't know, yeah, captain, racial tension that's created by
certain people. But anyway, I was going to talk about
the Paleteer yesterday. The company's got a lot of contacts
with the government. Did you see where the I think
it was a CEO. A lot of the top members

(45:56):
of the Palenteers sold their stocks hundreds of millions of dollars.
But here they are getting enlisted by what They didn't
get a list that they volunteered for military, and it's
kind of interesting what they're doing. They're making sure they
don't have any conflict to be insert with money, but
they're going to push our military into the twenty first
century of thrones and technology. But their stock dropped like

(46:16):
forty dollars apiece a share, which is a great still
down about thirty dollars which people could buy in. But yeah,
I'll listen to the news. What's going on, and it's
crazy and I don't know. Hopefully sanity or somebody with
morals stands in and correct the situation.

Speaker 1 (46:35):
One can only help Steve, and there's a little glimmer
of hope on that. There was a New York Times
article the other day They looked at a non part
of some numbers from this non partisan firm that compiles voter,
consumer and constituent data. It's called L two A and
the New York Times is not a right wing paper.
They found it for the first time since twenty eighteen,
Republicans gained more voters and voters and Democrats in last

(46:57):
year between twenty twenty and twenty twenty four, Democrats lost
two point one million registered voters in the thirty states
that allow people to register under a political party. I
have one more thing.

Speaker 12 (47:09):
If people already hate Elon want if you started taken
about one hundred and fifty billion dollars and put a
bounty on corrupt politicians, no matter who and and on
how dirty they are. If you're worried about your job
in the future, you get enough to retire. So what
if you long must started doing that, paying people for

(47:30):
crimes against politicians, that.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
Will be an interesting reality. The politicians politicians get away
with a lot because they are immune from prosecution for
their work that they do as politicians, so they can
engage in corruption, unlike you or I, who might be
held accountable for it in the judicials or the legal system.
They seem to get away scott free. Although I like
the idea of the bounty, appreciate that. Let's see what

(47:54):
Bill's got Bill, Welcome to the Morning Show, Happy Friday, Eve. Thanks.

Speaker 13 (48:00):
I've been to the Cincinnati Police Museum. I don't know
if that woman from the you know a museum has
been there or not.

Speaker 12 (48:08):
That is not just.

Speaker 13 (48:11):
About Cincinnati Police. It has got displays for all the
local surrounding police departments all the way up to the FBI.
Atf I saw that it's and it's not just about guns.
It shows dating back to early light detector machines, all kinds.

Speaker 1 (48:34):
It's very informative. It is Uh, it also of those
who died in the line of duty serving their community.

Speaker 6 (48:43):
Correct.

Speaker 13 (48:44):
My grandfather was a Cincinnati cop and the reason I
went back this last spring was because my grandson now
has been sworn into a Cincinnati police department. And Uh,
the only thing that I would miss, I would think,

(49:04):
and I don't know if if they would ever get
into the museum center. Is they actually have retired policemen
and guys that actually walking to the museum and talk
to things.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
It's nice, really, the docents that are there actually have
been there and done that is what you're saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
I reckon, that's all. I appreciate it. I've been there too, Bill,
I thought it was really a cool thing. I've been
to the fire department museum as well. But yeah, it's
a really cool thing, and we should, you know, honor
those who serve the community. Are there bad eggs among

(49:38):
those who serve the community. Of course, there are there
are bad eggs among every segment of society, from religion,
over the police, the fire to politicians. Yeah, that's your
point on the bounty. If we treated politicians the way
the police departments have been treated over the past five
years or so, label them all inherently. Why because we

(50:02):
have so many illustrations of corrupt politicians, I mean, surrounding
my local stories, I've got illustrations of corrupt politicians. You
read about them all the time. Why don't we start
paying politicians with that broad a brush. All police are races,
defund them let's defund the politicians. There's an idea. Actually,

(50:24):
I even own a T shirt that says defund politicians.
Maybe we should take that ball and run with it.
Six sixteen fifty five kre se detalk station five one
three seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred eighty
two to three talk found five fifty on AT and
T funds. You deserve better and plumb Type Plumbing knows
that they deliver on better, better customer service, better prices.

(50:44):
They handle all facets of residential plumbing needs with no
service fees, free estimates. They enjoy an A plus with
the better business bureer. I said, enough about why they're
great plumbers. How about my experience? Always wonderful it has been.
They will hand out over to your place in an
emergency as well, like they did from mine when my
chandelier was raining. But if you knew a water heater,
go tankless. They're the number one installer in the Tri

(51:05):
State for tankless water heaters, save space, save energy, and
have unlimited hot water. They are really cool. Modern technology
right there. Also modern technology employed when they do your
sewer line repair or replacement because they don't have to
dig your lawn up. That's right, trenchless sewer line repair.
Just a couple of the plumbing projects that plump tight
can do for you. Find them online plump tight t

(51:26):
I t E plump tight dot com five one three
seven two seven tight It's five one three seven two
seven eighty four eighty.

Speaker 9 (51:32):
Three fifty five KRC duke energy.

Speaker 1 (51:36):
We're making Ohio and Kentucky's energy. Here's your ten and
nine first one one to four cask and mostly cloud
eight day today, humid eighty one for the high, sixty
four overnight tomorrow, mostly sunny eighty five, a few clouds
overnight tomorrow with a humid humid night sixty seven for
low and on Friday Saturday where the we're going to
see a high eighty five and again mostly sunny and humid.

(52:00):
Right now. If you about karset talk station traffic time,
probably you see got transit center mere.

Speaker 10 (52:05):
Least sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities get the gift of vife, become an
organ donor, or explore living donation at uc.

Speaker 1 (52:14):
Health dot com. Slash transplant. Highway traffic's doing just fine.

Speaker 10 (52:18):
I'm not seeing any major problems to deal with as
them yet that includes delays on northbound seventy five at Buttermilk.
There is a wreck on Warsaw at Wilder Sehn Abram
on fifty five kr CEV Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (52:33):
Six twenty one if you about Karsed talk station. Happy
Friday Eve, looking forward to the next hour talking health
with George Berenaman, Keith Tennanfield, Ken Cober FOP President. Perfect
time to have can on Gee. I wonder how that happened.
Thank you Joe Strecker for getting Can back on the
program eight oh five for Canadan. It is Thursday, so
we're gonna hear from my heart media aviation expert Jay
Ratliffe when hear from you too. If you feel like calling,

(52:54):
like Bob did Bob, Welcome to the morning show. Thanks
for calling.

Speaker 14 (52:58):
Hey, Brian gil Coo boy one is you know, be
careful what you say Democrats get back empire. You know
you say defund politicians. All of a sudden, you're a
radical insurrectionists that's me. Yeah, they're going to shut you down.

Speaker 1 (53:10):
Man, good lives.

Speaker 14 (53:12):
Let's think about this all right, there's another line to
draw here. You know, you see what Ice is doing
they're trying to make our community safer. They're trying to
get the bad people out of our country.

Speaker 12 (53:21):
Thank god for that.

Speaker 14 (53:22):
But what are they saying, We're just enfranchising voters. Okay, well,
let's look at the last election. But did it DNC
due to the entire Democrat voting base that rhetorical question
they said, you don't get a vote. I know, well
you're a Kamala so you know people need to wake up. Well,
they just need to wake up exactly exactly.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
And maybe they are going back to that statistic from
the of all places in New York Times, they've lost
two point one million of their own party since twenty twenty.
I mean, their advantage is disappearing. The reason, well, they're
obviously moving over the left as far as they have.
Maybe they've lost members of the party for the reasons.
You stated, we didn't want Kamala Harris, We didn't vote

(54:04):
for her to be our nominee. You shoved her down
our throats, and look what happened. We didn't hear from
you that Joe Biden had lost his mind. You didn't
telegraph that or speak the truth to us. We could
have gotten rid of him a long time ago and
had someone better suited to run against the Republican candidate
Donald Trump, and maybe would have won. No, you decided

(54:24):
Kamala Harris, maybe because she checked the right racial and
gender boxes, was going to be our candidate in spite
of the fact that she was a cackling idiot or
is Yeah, and a lot of the point out of
this article. The Democrats once lean on a network of
nonprofits to register black, Latino and younger voters that used

(54:46):
to vote for their left wing candidates. But since Trump
got elected last year, the assumption no longer holds. You
can't just register a young Latina or a young black
voter boom that they're going to well, vote.

Speaker 6 (55:02):
Democrat, don't vote Democrat.

Speaker 15 (55:07):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (55:09):
And one of the statistics that came out of this
number crunching, it's young people who have moved over to
the Republican Party. Oh my god. They said the trajectory
is troublesome for Democrats and that there are growing tensions
over what to do about it. So what are they doing?

(55:30):
Increasingly moving over toward the progressive wing, the socialist slash
comedy wing of the Democrat Party, hoping that this leftward
ling is going to generate populist surge among all the
people who viewed Donald Trump as the populist, the working class,
the folks that originally used to appeal to the Democrat politicians.

Speaker 3 (55:50):
No, no more.

Speaker 1 (55:52):
They like a guy who cut their taxes. You middle
class folks, thank Donald Trump for three well, and the
elected officials who voted for the big beautiful bill in
spite of the fact that it might put us further
in debt. At least you get to keep more of
the money that you earned roughly three thousand dollars worth.
Divide that by your hourly rate. I'd rather keep my money.

(56:13):
See that's me libertarian. I trust you with your zipper
and your sexual decisions, but also trust you with your
wallet and where you want to spend money. I think
you were in a better position to make decisions with
regard to where your money get spent, knowing full well
that the left wing of the political spectrum wants to
take all of what you earn and then redistributed as
it sees fit, propping up Otherwise, business and industry and

(56:38):
concepts that do not have well a dominant acceptance from
the American people in this democratic process will reject those
ideas out of hand. That's why subsidies come in and
pivoting over to the Green New Deal in those projects.
Those things would not exist in a capitalist We get
to decide environment, Where do you want your energy coming from? Well,

(57:00):
I prefer to come from a reliable, always on source
that provides me with electricity that doesn't cost me an
arm and a leg that isn't being propped up by
taxpayer dollars. And therein lies the challenge propped up by
taxpayer dollars because it's an idea that would not work
if you and I had a choice. So I always

(57:20):
point out the party that wants to tell you what
to do, how to live your life, what you can
and cannot have, what business and industries will survive in
spite of the fact then in a free market they wouldn't.
That's the left the power of control. Six twenty sixty five,
care City Talks Station A couple of dollars online. I'll
get those after I mentioned Susette Loe's camp with Cross

(57:43):
Country Mortgage. She is just a terrific lady for all
things related to mortgages. You want to get a second mortgage,
get one if it's right for you. Uh, reverse mortgages.
Don't know if it's right for you, not my idea,
but she could take care of that for you. And
if you want to buy a house an initial mortgage,
she can get one for you without a junk fee,
without an application fee. It'll be great at a lower cost.
Susette's working for you, and regardless of which state you're in,

(58:04):
she can help you because she's with cross country mortgage
license in all fifty states plus Puerto Rico. So give
her a call like my daughter and fiance did. It
was two days financing secured, locked in. Very happy young people.
They are loved working with Susette and they had a
basic comparison. The bank that they were working with was
kind of give them the run around. One quick phone
called a Suzette Low's Camp. She got right back with

(58:24):
him like she will with you. Problem solved five one
three three one three fifty one seventy six five one
three three one three fifty one seventy six. Email Susette
dot Low's Camp, l O s E KA MP sus
at dot Low's Camp at CCM dot com.

Speaker 9 (58:39):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (58:41):
We all remember that one channeline Soon's got mostly cloudy
to partly cloudy day, humid and high of eighty one.
Cloudie every night, partly sixty four for the low. Eighty
five will be our high Tomorrow with mostly sunny sky
sixty seven over nine, few clouds and humid Saturday, and
mostly sunny, hot and yes again humid day with a
high of eighty five seventy degrees. Right now it's going
to travel. Update from the UCL Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (59:02):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities get the Gift of life, become an
organ donor, or explore living donation at you see health
dot com slaves transplant. Highway traffic continues to look good
Stop found two seventy five.

Speaker 1 (59:18):
Just beginning to load up a bit at the Carrol
Cropper Bridge.

Speaker 10 (59:21):
Crews are working with an accident on Warsaw at Wilder
chuck Ingramont fifty five KR.

Speaker 1 (59:26):
See the talk station Tick thirty one and fifty five
cars de talk station at Friday Eve five one, three, seven, four, nine,
fifty two to three Talk on five fifty on AT
and T phones number fifty five cars dot com Get
your I Heard media appor stream the audio directly from
the website and also listen to my conversations earlier in
the week. And thank you again to Garret Jeff Walker

(59:47):
for filling in for me yesterday. Let's go to the phone.
See what Mississippi James has got today. James, welcome back
to the Morning show.

Speaker 3 (59:53):
Hey, good morning, doctor Brown, and come in peace, love everybody,
and there's nothing you can.

Speaker 1 (59:58):
Do about it. Good attitude.

Speaker 3 (01:00:01):
Hey, another one of them cases. I believe we'll uh
our spiritual beings going through human experience and remember the
most soap operas as the world turned one.

Speaker 1 (01:00:15):
Life to live, you know, general hospital. Don't don't don't
let me don't don't put a litany of soap operas
out there, James, without mentioning general hospital.

Speaker 3 (01:00:26):
There you go, there, you go to general hospital.

Speaker 1 (01:00:30):
Yep.

Speaker 3 (01:00:30):
So stuff just twist and turn, you know, we twist
it to the way we want our gender to be.
Whoever was in control at the time, you know, manipulated
to they got ideology of it. When the pendulum swing
the other side get hurt and they got to go
back the other way. So we just you know, it's

(01:00:54):
a bigger picture here, it's a bigger pitchure here. Just
listening at all the different energy that's going towards something
just for certain control.

Speaker 1 (01:01:07):
Yeah, there you go, and see that control word. That's
usually where we always end up. Somebody wants to be
in power. Somebody wants to have the control. Somebody wants
to have the authority. You know, and I don't understand
individuals who crave power and control. Why in the hell
do you crave it? Is there something inherently wrong with
your persona, your psychology that you need to control people,

(01:01:29):
and by virtue of the political system you can achieve
that desire. This is why I'm a little a libertarian.
I don't want to control anybody. I want you to
make your own decisions and move forward in your life
the way you see fit, of course, subject to the
rules of decency and ethics and morals, meaning you can't
hurt me and I can't harm you, but we can
live together peacefully. I come in peace. I don't wish

(01:01:49):
harm on anybody, James, just like you can't. You and
I live side by side without interfering with each other's direction.
Let us make the choices ourselves. Do not be swayed
or influenced by these politicians and their desires which boil
down to their opportunity and desire to control us. When
you're being controlled, your freedoms and liberties are necessarily eroded

(01:02:11):
and removed. Governments can only take from you. They do
not give rights and freedoms and liberties. You're born with them.
This is the fundamental nature of our situation here in
the United States. Our founding fathers knew that they understood
that liberty and freedom and rights come from humanity, not politicians.

(01:02:33):
Once you interject politicians into the equation, you are setting
yourself up, regardless of political strife, to have your freedoms
and liberties eroded. And part of erosion of freedom and
liberty is taking money from you your earnings. What's more
liberating than a fat bank account?

Speaker 15 (01:02:55):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:02:58):
Six point thirty five fifty five krs de talks five
one three, seven four nine fifty five hundred, eight hundred
eight two three talk. You want to make five thousand
dollars help the city figure out a better way to
fix potholes. Think you mentioned that when we come back,
since it is on the stop off the top of
my local stories. First though, USA Insulation outstanding product. Yeah,

(01:03:18):
put your money to work for you A guaranteed return
on investment. That's what USA Insulation genuinely is because they
guarantee you energy savings if you're using your HVAC system,
which most of us do. Energy savings and comfort, and
you're going to have improved comfort whether or not you
use your HVAC system because USA is premium foam injected
into the exterior walls of your home keep your house

(01:03:39):
very comfortable with even distribution of temperature, fighting off the
heat in the summer, of course, and the freezing cold
in the wintertime. So that translates to energy savings. And
again you may you may save enough on a monthly
basis with your energy savings to cover the cost of
the phone, which is only ninety nine dollars a month
interest free. And if you hurry up, you've got a
little more time left. The end of the month is

(01:03:59):
not here. Act before the end of the month call
them up to schedule the free inspection and appointment. You'll
get a free attic insulation when you pay for the
foam in the walls. Highest star value on the market. Again,
guaranteed savings and comfort improvement. Five one three, three eight
one three six two six five one three three eight
one foam online final at USA Insallation dot net fifty

(01:04:20):
five KRC.

Speaker 15 (01:04:21):
Have you taken your family to dinner?

Speaker 9 (01:04:23):
Recally have been ship?

Speaker 1 (01:04:26):
Here is your channel nine first one and Lee forecast
got day mostly cloudy to partly cloudy day to day.
It's going to be humid, only eighty one for a high,
so I'll take that. Sixty four overnight with some clouds
mostly sunny Tomorrow eighty five, a few clouds overnight human
and sixty seven for the low and a sunny hot
human Saturday. Eighty five for the high seventy degrees. Right now,
it's time for traffic from the uc UP Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:04:47):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanter
for multicultural communities give the gift of vite, become an
organ donor or it's more living donation at usegout dot
com slash transplant. Highways continue to look good, just beginning
to slow down a bit on southbound two seventy five
between the Lawrence Perg Ramp and the ongoing work on
the Carrol Crawford Bridge. There's an accident on Warsaw at

(01:05:11):
Wilder chuck Ing, Vermont fifty five kre Sea Beat Talk Station.

Speaker 1 (01:05:16):
Six thirty nine fifty five kerro Ce Talk Station Fridday
talking Health after the top of the air news with
the return of George Blenham and Keith Tennant felt in
the studio restore Wellness. Uh I actually got a profound
kick out of this. Maybe we'll come up with an
innovative solution from the private sector, and that's what the
City of Cincinnati is hoping to do, asking you for
health to deal with the pothole problem. Put a team together.

(01:05:40):
You can win five thousand dollars if yours is selected
for the best innovative solution to improve the road repair
system in the city. Thank you WCPO Andrew Rowan, we
letting us know Cincinnati's facing a filled forty two nine
hundred potholes, four times more than last year's number, though
apparently we're still behind the eight ball. You'll love this

(01:06:07):
Mayor afteb Perval quote the conditions of the roads are
not meeting our expectations, highlighting that he inherited a four
hundred million dollar infrastructure maintenance gap four hundred million in
deferred capital maintenance as a very big hole. Per of

(01:06:28):
all said this was back in May when he had
that statement. So they're paying I know, I know, I know,
I know. So they're paying a company called Innovation Labs,
which is going to cost forty thousand dollars to run
this program where you actually do the work and come
up with the best solution. They're partnered with Tired Discounters,
who was kind enough to offer ten thousand dollars to
sponsor it. So it's a joint operation Innovation Labs with

(01:06:50):
Tired Discounters. Do you have a better way to fix
potholes and make our road problems go away? Offer your solutions?
The application deadlines August twenty fourth. That September eighth is
Innovation weekend, September twenty fourth Demo Day. So poor Mayor
aftab parl Ball inherited this problem. AWW whatever four hundred
million in the third capital maintenance is a very big hole.

(01:07:12):
I just read that. Said it again. It's a quote
from him. Huh. Let's look at the history of who
ran the city of Cincinnati. Have toab pearl Ball since
twenty twenty two. Prior to that, John Cranley twenty thirteen
to twenty thirty, twenty twenty two. Prior to that, He's
a Democrat. I think you know that Democrat Mark Mallory
twenty six to twenty thirteen, prior to that Charles Lucan
Democrat nineteen ninety nine to two thousand and five. Prior

(01:07:35):
to that Roxane Qualls Democrat ninety three to ninety nine,
Prior to that Dwight Tillery Democrat ninety one to ninety three,
prior to that David Mann Democrat. Noticing something here, prior
to that Charles Lucan Democrat eighty four to ninety one.
You got to go all the way back to nineteen
eighty three when Arned Boorts a charter Right was the

(01:07:55):
mayor of the City of Cincinnati short stint prior to that,
which to rate Tom boot Brush, and then you had
David Mann and the role between eighty and eighty two.
So i'll the way back to nineteen eighty Democrats been
in charge of the city m so mayor aftab per
of all Democrat you inherited a long standing problem neglect
of our roads. A core a core service, public infrastructure

(01:08:22):
and safety should be number one and two. Where the
hell is all of this money going? We did sell
a railroad, Joe, Yeah, I know, we did. Hmmm, I
don't know. I'm going back to Tom's comment, don't fuck Democrat.

(01:08:44):
So they have dug themselves into a massive pothole, four
hundred million dollars worth, and this problem's been developing over
the years and years and years and years of Democrat
administrations in downtown Cincinnati. Maybe choose a different path. I
know Corey Bowman prioritizes the infrastructure. I mean, We've talked
to him so many times. It's a priority for him

(01:09:06):
that in public safety. He at least lives in the
West Ends and he can hear and see it with
his own eyes and ears. The problem with crime well
connected with it, I'm not quite sure about. You have
to have provol though, So whatever they call him, this
a shark tank style competition, this Flywheel Innovation Labs. So

(01:09:31):
the City of Cincinnati seeks to reimagine the current processes
for addressing potholes in order to mitigate the compounding problems
of wasted effort, budget strain, and public frustration, reducing waste,
building trust, and creating an environment in which our residents
and businesses can thrive. Notice something interesting about this concept.

(01:09:55):
I'm not against the concept honestly, because I do believe
the private sector and the brilliance that is revealed every
single day by the private sector, as contrasted by government
and elected officials who don't know Jack's squad about anything,
in this particular case, about road repair and the best
way to go about doing it. Notice, know the city

(01:10:17):
of Cincinnati, the elected officials have chosen this path. Is
this not an acknowledgment of their incompetence? Are they not
demonstrably incompetent for having dug a four hundred million dollar
hole in the ground that they have to now catch up.
They're supposed to maintain a certain number of road models

(01:10:39):
every single year, and yet they haven't done that time
after time after time. Who's going to solve this problem
for us? We can't turn to ourselves, the elected officials,
since any council people, the city manager, the mayor. We
don't have an idea. We keep falling further and further behind.

(01:10:59):
Is there someone out in the world that can help us. Well,
here's a distress signal. We're offering you five thousand dollars. Please,
Dear God help us. There's a little cash incentive there
to help us get out of a problem that we
as elected officials are incapable of solving ourselves. Rhino Shield
great product. Rhino Shield, feel free to call if you

(01:11:20):
got a comment on that. Maybe you see it differently.
Rhino Shield. This is such a wonderful It's better than pain.
I hate to call it paint because it's not paint.
It's like a ceramic coating eight to ten times thicker
than pain. It reflects UV rays protects the surfaces on
which it's applied. Serving the entire Tri state region. Rhinos
Shield is the way to go and you get a

(01:11:41):
free quote. Just go to the website rhinoshield ky dot
com click on the up right hand corner to get
a free quote. We had my daughter in her fiance's
barn painted with this. The barn looked awful. I mean
they not only did I hate the color, it's flaking,
it's peeling. I hit It has obviously been decades since
it was painted, but young people on a budget with
their first home did not have the resources to take

(01:12:01):
care of that. It was a priority for my wife
and need to take care of it, so that we did,
and it looks truly amazing. Now, not only is the
color grade and you have more than fifteen hundred colors
to choose from. It's guaranteed for twenty five years. You
get long term protection, you get wonderful customer service, you
get that twenty five year warranty and the durable reality

(01:12:24):
of Rhiner's shield. It will not paint, it will a flake,
it will not chip, and it will not fade for
twenty five years. So get that free quote. Rhydoshield ky
dot com. If you have a phone near you want
to call them up. It's eight five to five seven
four four sixty six oh five. That's eight five five
seven four four sixty six oh file.

Speaker 9 (01:12:41):
Fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (01:12:43):
Here's your Channa nine first oney one to forecasts gonna
be a high of eighty one today, You're gonna be
humid and mostly to part lay quiety, part laclyde every
ninth sixty four, Tomorrow mostly sunny eighty five, few clouds
over nine sixty seven, and on Saturday mostly sunny hot.
And you ended with a high of eighty five right now,
seventy dress. Let's get an update on traffic from the
U see How Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:13:03):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
or from multicultural communities get the gift of life, become
an organ donor or explore leving donation at uce health
dot com. Slash transplant work crew westbound on seventy four
or just started some work on the right lane after Montana.
I'm not seeing a huge delay as of yet. Southbound
two seventy five getting heavier between the Lawrence purg ramp

(01:13:26):
and the work crew on the bridge. Chuck Ingram on
fifty five krs the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:13:33):
It is six point fifty here at fifty five kr
CD talk station and Jeorge Manamen Keith tennefill back in
the studio. We're going to restore wellness in the next hour,
followed by Ken cover or appropriate timing for Ken Cobra
FOP president on the city Solicitor ordering the CINCINNT Police
Department to charge the white guy that did the slapping
in the beatdown situation, which slap was in the aftermath

(01:13:57):
of him getting hit in the head and kicked a
few times, only to be well issue the light slap.
Black community leaders wanted it to be charged with a
fellowy incitement of riot. He's been charged with a misdemeanor,
which I do not believe in any way, shape or form.
They have the elements of the crime. So this looks
like something that they're just paying lip service to the
demands of the black community in the city, or at

(01:14:17):
least certain leaders. I don't paint with that brought of
a brush, and maybe there are certain people within the
black community of the city of since they they don't
think he deserves what he got and doesn't don't think
he should be charged. Well, Damon Lynch and others say otherwise.
So okay, let's order the police and order over the
Hamilton County prosecutors' objections, order this man to be charged.

(01:14:39):
So there's your misdemeanor charge. Feel good. Ken Kobra on
that there's quite a few statements on that one, followed
by I heard me the aviation expert Jay rt left.
That's coming up in the eight o'clock hour. All right,
so let's review. You know, I just went through the
city of Cincinnati's history, long, long, long, hisstory being run
by Democrats, and of course we have a national reality
going on. A citing the New York Times article recognizing

(01:14:59):
that the Democrat It's lost two point one million registered
voters while the Republicans gained two point four million talked
about here in the Morning Show, and I'm sure you've
read all the articles about how many people have fled
the dark blue states California, New York, New Jersey, and Illinois,

(01:15:20):
fleeing those states in large numbers, along with businesses fleeing
them to more favorable environments where they don't charge you
as much to live there, or your taxes are a
lot lower where Republicans are in charge, where there's less regulation. Right.
Notably Texas and Florida among the states had benefited from
the mass exodus of Democrats from the damage they did

(01:15:43):
to themselves by voting for Democrats. So there's that the
idea that young people, men and younger voters are the
biggest lead well, the folks most likely to have departed
the Democrats over the past couple of years. And then
pivoting over to the reality of businesses fleeing those states. Oh, look,

(01:16:03):
bed Bath and Yahn going through bankruptcy. Right, they have
reorganized and they are going to start opening stores, but
not in California. Bed Bath and Beyond executive chairman Marcus
Lamonis had this to say, we will not open or

(01:16:26):
operate retail stores in California. This decision isn't about politics, Well,
it really is. It's about reality. I'll interjeck reality brought
about by politics. Listen to the statement. California has created
one of the most overregulated, expensive and risky environments for
businesses in America. It's a system that makes it harder

(01:16:46):
to employ people, harder to keep doors open, and harder
to deliver value to customers. The result higher taxes, higher fees,
higher wages that many businesses simply cannot sustain, and endless
regulations that strangle growth even when the state announces a
budget surplus. It's built on the backs of ordinary citizens
who are paying too much and businesses who are squeezed

(01:17:08):
until they break. Californians will continue to get the products
they love through bed, Bathroom Beyond, dot Com, but without
the inflated costs created by an unsustainable model. Close quote. Well,
that about sums it up. You can say, Executive Chairman

(01:17:28):
Marcus Lamannis, that your decision not to go back to
California isn't about politics, but your statement sums it up.
It is everything everything to do with politics. A more
friendly business environment like Texas and Florida do not or
are not rather overregulated, they're not nearly as expensive, they

(01:17:53):
have lower crime. I mean, we can go on and on.
All these things are directly related to politics. Who is
the party of regulations? Who's the party of high taxes?
Who's the party of mandates over salary rates and levels? Yeah?
You know it, don't go down that road. And if

(01:18:18):
you can move out, isn't that what's going on? You
think the Democrats would wake up to that reality. Why
are we losing people? Why can't we maintain the numbers
that we've always enjoyed the majority? How difficult a question

(01:18:39):
is that to answer?

Speaker 6 (01:18:39):
Really?

Speaker 1 (01:18:40):
All these and I've read multiples. I mean, if you
pay attention like I do, you've seen it. The party
is reflecting. The party is in the dealing with the
aftermath of the twenty twenty four election, trying to figure
out what went wrong. Well, go ahead, please continue moving
socialist and communists, keep going leftward, keep electing or nominating people.
Is at your party like that Mum dammi guy in

(01:19:02):
New York? Yeah, Well that'll hasten the end of the
Democrat Party, at least from my perspective. That's my prayers. Anyway,
it's coming up to six fifty six, an hour of
Power and an hour of Health coming up with George
Reuteman Keith Tennefeld. Restore Wellness is what we're going to
be doing in the next hour, and then we'll hear
from Ken Kobra at eight oh five. I hope you
can stay Today's top stories at the top of the hour.

(01:19:27):
You just got to know what's happening in your world.
Fifty five krc the talk station.

Speaker 9 (01:19:33):
This report, it's something new, anything Trump does.

Speaker 3 (01:19:36):
I think he knows what we are doing every day.

Speaker 1 (01:19:39):
We have to, you know, fifty five krc D Talk Station.

Speaker 15 (01:20:00):
Seven six.

Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
Here at fifty five KRCD Talk Station, exhal, let's get
away from politics. Let's talk about health. Please to welcome
back to the fifty five krc Morning Show. In studio
George Renaman and Keith Tennenfeld our health resident health experts,
I'll call him that of Keith course a UH certified
what is it? There's a nurse practitioner. But also you

(01:20:21):
are a self appointed specialist in all things health. You
function on medicine, integrative health. Can you help people at
your job, at your living people come and consult with you.
They've got some problems in their world, and you address
it from a health standpoint, make dietary recommendations and today
recommendations on hydration and George Renneman, it's restore health, restore.

Speaker 4 (01:20:41):
Wellness dot org, wellness dot org. But as you point
it out, apparently the certificate expired. So I have the
website fixed earlier this morning.

Speaker 1 (01:20:48):
Yeah, if you if you cut or restore wellness dot
org right now, it's going to tell you there's no
secure setting right there. He just needs to re up
a certificate and it'll be up and runn You've got
resources there, recommendations and reading, uh suggestions and and and authorities,
and so it's a good place to bookmark and stop by.
I just don't do it right now until George has
an opportunity to fix the site. Well, today we're gonna

(01:21:10):
start out with hydration. And I was talking to Keith.
One of the things he does right out of the
gate if he got one of his patients, that's that's
dealing with what irritability. For example, So if right now
you're irritable, or later in the day if you're irritable,
your immediate solution to that is go chuck some water.
Drink water, yeah, that's ir simple, irritable and fatigue where

(01:21:31):
you're just feel like you want to put your head down.
You have no reason why you're doing that. We'll stop
watching MSNBC. Well there's that, yes, ms now, yeah, the
hell is that watching? That's it? No one's watching love it.
But I never and I'll be the first person tomit this.
I never associate, you know, hydration with anything by way

(01:21:54):
of health. Now, I know you need to drink water
in order to live. It's more important to have water
than it is food, get all that, But at least
in so far as how I'm feeling it in any
given moment, the idea that water might be responsible or
lack thereof, that's not something that crosses my mind. And
I imagine you have that issue with your patients as well, right,
And I think it parallels with hangry. Often people feel
angry when they don't eat, but often when people are

(01:22:17):
angry or hungry, they're actually low on fluid and their
body seeing go eat because I know that that there's
fluid in that food, So they're just the food sensors
go off and you're hungry, but you're actually thirsty. So
for someone who's trying to lose a few pounds rather
than trying to find something even nutritious or low in
calories for food to satisfy that hanger. First start with water.

Speaker 11 (01:22:39):
That's right, and it can be a Celtic sea salt
baste water where you're adding a couple of pinches of
a Celtic sea salt to it. So you're getting the sodium,
and sodium's a fantastic you know, neuromodulator and helps calm
down in irritability as well or even headaches. If you
give a headache, it's probably sodium related, Huh. Why Celtic salt.
Celtic sea salt has about ninety minerals that your body needs,

(01:23:01):
and the word salt is kind of a, I guess
a not a great definition of what Celtic sea salt is.
It's salt over the earth or the minerals of the earth,
not just sodium. And so you're getting about ninety elements boron, magnesium, potassium,
and others that help balance out your your basically your
complicated battery electrical system in your body.

Speaker 1 (01:23:19):
And those elements are not present in your standard you know,
table salt, table salt.

Speaker 11 (01:23:24):
Correct, that's just sodium chloride huh, and other harmfu heavy
metal chemical, yeah, and.

Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
Whatever was in the processing.

Speaker 4 (01:23:32):
What's interesting is that there are good and bad sea
salts as well, Celtic sea salts. The definition of Celtic
is they basically flood a concrete pool with seawater, let
it evaporate and shovel off the salt. I mean, it's
about the most natural process you can get to and
all you're getting are the natural minerals that are in
the water in the first place. But if I see

(01:23:53):
Morton sea salt on this probably getting processed sodium chloride, Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
So the Celtic is a very specific kind.

Speaker 4 (01:24:02):
It's kind of like if you go to Kroger's and
get the grass fed butter, right, it's very specific on
how they get that. So the Celtic sea salt and
I just get mine from Amazon, but you can find
it just about anywhere. It's pretty much I think the
ocean of which they use that water. And then you
got Hemalayan sea salt, which is a more of a
Himalayan aspect, and that's about seventy minerals.

Speaker 1 (01:24:23):
So you know you have Celtic at the top or Celtic.

Speaker 11 (01:24:26):
Depending on how you want to pronounce it, and then
you got your Hamalayan, you got bob bread mills or
redmon salt. Those are other good options for salt. And
then baking soda, believe it or not, especially in organic
baking soda is a fantastic solution for alkalining your water
at the same time getting that support drink like benefit.

Speaker 1 (01:24:42):
Okay, Now in terms of quantity, let's talk it in
terms of a quart, because based on the numbers that
you gave me earlier that I was crunching off air
before we started, I'm supposed to drink two point seventy
five quarts of water a day. What is the figure
on that. It's it's body weight. It's the simplest way
to do is half your body weight in out water,
all right. So if you're two hundred pounds, you're drinking
one hundred ounces of water. Could every cell, whether it

(01:25:04):
be a fat cell or a muscle sell or brain
cellar bone cell, need hydration. So it's a weight based calculation,
all right. So at one seventy I round it up
to one seventy six. Made it math easier. I'm supposed
to drink eighty eight ounces, which translate to two point
seventy five quarts. So going back to the salt, which
is the predicate for going through this exercise. Beyond letting
my listeners know how much we're supposed to be drinking

(01:25:25):
a day, how much of that let's say celtic salt,
am I supposed to add to a quart of water.

Speaker 11 (01:25:31):
Well, calculation is a little off from me for that one,
because I'm never sure what your sodium level is, what
your blood pressures are, or your medication tool, and so
there's a little bit. Everybody should have a little bit
of a titration or customization to their salt intake. But
an average person can take a pinch of salt and
add it to every lead of water.

Speaker 1 (01:25:48):
Okay, so leader's a quart, all right, So you're not
getting a massive infusion, like a multivitamins worth of all
these minerals. It's just an added benefit of using that
particular kind of salt versus just say processed table salt. Yeah,
we were discussing something new called structured water, which is
structured water. It sounds like to me, it sounds like
one of those you're making it up as you go away, right,

(01:26:10):
But the one thing that doesn't make sense about it
is so pure water actually doesn't conduct electricity.

Speaker 4 (01:26:15):
Water by itself doesn't conduct. But if you really don't
want to supercharge its ability to can donate on the
third rail of the subway.

Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
There you go.

Speaker 4 (01:26:23):
But so the Celtic salt is like creating this great
electro light for the water that's going in. So it
helps your body. It's electrical systems as well. Okay, well
you use the E word electrolyte. So if someone's out
there going well, I drink gatorade, which has got the
citric acid and uses.

Speaker 11 (01:26:43):
Corn syrup or worse, it has asproutine colors and flavors
and and plastics from the from.

Speaker 1 (01:26:49):
The bottle of oh yeah, yeah yeah. And you know,
since you brought up plastics, everybody's becoming more and more
aware of plastic containers and microplastics, and these things get
in our systems. I mean, you can't turn around without
seeing an article on that anymore. So you had mentioned
something my son wore me off of as I mentioned
how much of just plain unsweetened tea I'm drinking rather

(01:27:12):
than having the energy drinks that I used to drink
all the time. I would drink two of those damn
things a day, and I started reading the label after
talking to you guys, I'm looking at oh my god.
You know, sure it's got B twelve in it, but
it's also got all kinds of other chemicals and everything else.
So I quit drinking those and I just defaulted over
to plain old fresh brewed tea. But then microplastics came
to it. My son had warm me about this some

(01:27:33):
months ago, and I'd forgotten about. My wife brought it
back up the other day when I was getting to
buy a box of green tea. Microplastics. Those tea bags
are made of plastic.

Speaker 4 (01:27:44):
Some are so like if you get the more expensive teas,
then they use cellulas, which is wood, but you can
think of that as getting fiber in your diet. But yeah,
the really cheapy ones, and you can feel it. It'll
feel like a slippery tea bag. Yeah, yeah, yeah, lived
in tea bags. What I'm talking And Naven, the game
with Mike plastics is all drinking anything or touching your food.
Touching plastics always bad, and the amount of bad is

(01:28:08):
a function of heat. So you know, throwing your plastic
in the microwaves kind of like four types of.

Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Bad and my son got us on that kick. We
bought we have all these plastic containers with the snap
on lids, you know, tupperware type. His concern with microplastics
and he's been he's really into this kind of health
related stuff. We end up getting glass containers, which also
helps you're working out, because the sucker's.

Speaker 6 (01:28:34):
Way to do.

Speaker 1 (01:28:35):
But I mean, you know they're very small. You have
all different sizes, but we use the glass containers when
you're reheating something in the microwave. Simple, no need for
plastics and they don't melt, and of course they don't
leach into your food. So a couple of quick items there,
say hydrated, and stay the hell away from plastics, especially heat.
And I'll start buying regular bulk tea and using the
little mesh balls ball that we have and try to

(01:28:57):
keep myself out of trouble that way with George and Keith.
Got many things that go over by way of health
issues in this hour. And I hope you can stick around,
and I hope you would speaking of medical issues. Affordable
imaging services. Yes, I'd love speaking for affordable imaging services.
You know how much I love to save money and
I personally have saved more than more than ten thousand

(01:29:18):
dollars by having CT scans and my single MRI, I
done it affordable imaging services. I've had several CT scans
and I didn't have to pay five thousand dollars because
I did myself the right thing. I used my right
to free choice when it comes to medical care. Call
up affordable imaging services and have my CT scan done there.
With contrast, six hundred dollars versus five thousand at the hospital,

(01:29:41):
and it probably would have gotten a separate bill at
the hospital for the Board Certified Radiologist report that's included
in the price of affordable imaging services. So don't pay
two thousand dollars for an ultrasound, pay two hundred and fifty.
Don't pay thirty five hundred dollars for an MRI, pay
four hundred and ninety five dollars in an echo cardiogram.
Get you right in on any of these as well,
not thirty five one hundred dollars five hundred with no enhancement,

(01:30:02):
eight hundred with See the savings. It's amazing. Use your
right to choice, call affordable enging services like I did.
Five one three seven five three eight thousand, five one
three seven five three eight thousand. Check them out online
Affordable Medimaging dot com.

Speaker 9 (01:30:15):
This is fifty five KRC an iHeartRadio station.

Speaker 1 (01:30:19):
Our time. You're ten nine firstwenty one to forecast today
mostly cloud to partly cloudy, gonna be humid. We're gonna
go up to eighty one. It's nice sixty four overnight.
Tomorrow's high eighty five with mostly sunny skies. It'll be
sixty seven overnight with just a few clowns and at
mostly sunny Saturday with humidity and a high of eighty

(01:30:40):
five seventy Right now, time for a traffic update fortably
you see how Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:30:44):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
are from multicultural communities. Give the gift of vife, become
an organ donor or explore let me donation at you
see health dot com. Slafe transplant moting up on the
highways now, including inbound seventy four near month Tana, southbound
seventy five slowing in and out of Box Putton for
an extra five north found slows Buttermilk to Kyle's and

(01:31:06):
again between Mitchell and the water Chuck Ingram on fifty
five krs.

Speaker 1 (01:31:11):
The talk station coming up on seven to twenty one.
Here in fifty five krs talk station talk about health
issues today. Good hour of health power here with George
Bundaman and Keith Tennenfell restore wellness dot org. When George
gets the site running back up again, Sorry about that.
That's all right.

Speaker 4 (01:31:28):
It's a once a year thing, and when you're running
on a shoestring budget, you got to do it all yourself.

Speaker 1 (01:31:34):
All right, there you go. All right, So we're talking
about hydration. I guess one more note on hydration. I
just mentioned it off the air. I have found and
I know a lot. This is no big revelation for
most people, but for me, I wasn't good on maintaining
my hydration, certainly not at levels that you mentioned. Divide
your body weight in half and that's the number of
ounces per day, so I was nowhere near that. But

(01:31:56):
I've been carrying a water bottle around now for a
couple of years. That has transformed my intake of water.
Just having it there. Yep, you know, it's not that
big a deal. Carried arounscu. You know, I put it
in my bag here coming to work, or I have
it sitting there on the table next to my laptop
when I'm watching movies or doing research for the morning show.
I've got it on my nightstand every night. It doesn't spill.

(01:32:16):
It's an easy thing to do, so just you know,
you might want to consider that if you're trying to
destroy if you struggle with maintaining the appropriate amount of
intake of water, water bottles, great and the other kids out.
I'll make sure you get a filtered water source. I mean,
oh yeah, we got.

Speaker 4 (01:32:28):
The other thing that up my water was when we
put a decent filter that actually got the floor right
out of the water. It's like, all of a sudden,
it tastes crystal clean. And so you go to a
restaurant and it's like, okay, how's your water taste? And
sometimes it tastes like dishwater, and it's like, can you
do me a favor and get it from the coke machine?
Because the soda machines in the restaurants have really good
filters in them, so if they get the water from there,

(01:32:51):
that's a oh reta hint. If you go to a
restaurant and it tastes horrible, ask for them to get
it out of the coke machine.

Speaker 1 (01:32:55):
No kidding, not a not like a dispensed bottle of
water out of a coat machine. You just hit the
water the high c or the Hawaiian punch or whatever. Right,
So there's that, and I suppose we should avoid the
plastic water bottles. On that note, since we're drinking more
water here, don't go get a Fuji water because it

(01:33:15):
or a Fuji water because it's packed in plastic.

Speaker 3 (01:33:17):
Right.

Speaker 11 (01:33:18):
You know, the way I look at that is like,
if you're gonna go to, let's say, a wood shop
and you're gonna buy a cabine or something from a
wood shop, it's gonna have a lot of wood dust
on it. So when you go to a water bottle,
especially the ones that are packaged at the stores, you're
gonna have a lot of plastic dust probably in those
bottles to some degree. And so this fresh manufactured plastic
is gonna have all these microplastics in it, and we're

(01:33:39):
drinking it. And unfortunately, microplastics don't like to expel out
of our bodies quite easy, and so that to me
is a pretty big hazard. And the other thing, too,
is if you heat that water bottle up I'd say
if it's in the car and you just crack it
open after it's been in the car, or it's been
in the car for a while and you take it
out put it in a refrigerator, you're cooking that plastic
into your water. And so I'm like, it's the same
thing as when your microwave and write the plastic for

(01:34:01):
reheating your food.

Speaker 1 (01:34:02):
Please don't do that. I So, where do you get
your water when you go on vacation.

Speaker 4 (01:34:07):
So we just got back from a week out of
town and we go to the first thing we do
is go to the store by you know, cases of water.
I know, and that's plastic. I gotta believe there's a
ton of microplastics and the cheap stuff. What's a better
source for it? Well, you know, that's a really good
thing because you know, unless you're living on vacation. Uh,
you know, it's what you do on a daily basis,
number one. So if you're going on vacations there's rare events.

(01:34:29):
What my option would be a try to get a
spring water. If you can buy it in a more
of a EH free or the BNPH free, that's the
way to go.

Speaker 11 (01:34:38):
And keep that going and don't let it sit in
your car, keep it refrigerated, and then when you can
get it out of there. Now, sometimes people will run
that through a Brita filter. They'll bring their own Brita
filter with them and then run their plastic water, get
the plastic out. I hope so at least better than
nothing that's rue. He's not on record as saying yes definitively,
he hopes.

Speaker 12 (01:34:58):
So.

Speaker 11 (01:34:58):
I haven't done the scientific experien my dog yet, but
I suppose if you look at a brit of manufacturers site,
it'll tell you what it removes and what it does not.

Speaker 4 (01:35:07):
Now, I got homework in your own filter. That's florid
and removal. That's next level filter. You really got to
pay for that a lot. I paid a bit for that.
It wasn't terrible, but like I said, the taste was
so different that I'll never go back. I keep hoping
that Cincinnati wise up and get rid of it.

Speaker 1 (01:35:24):
Right. And if you don't have a water filtration system
in your home and you're trying to look at an
affordable solution, I got a triple filter system from off Amazon. Yeah,
I've got to link up on the website. Actually, stainless
steel is not made of plastic itself. It's got the
filters that go in it, which are obviously changeable, and

(01:35:44):
it was not very expensive and I installed it in
like fifteen minutes. And is it a reverse house Mesis system?
I can't remember. I could look it up.

Speaker 11 (01:35:51):
If it's a three stage it often is, and it's
a really really way to go. People will often depunk
ROS systems because it gets rid of all the electrolytes.

Speaker 1 (01:35:59):
But your body is full of electrolyte, so you re
so heltic salt exactly saw your electro light to keep
thinking of idiocracy when you hear that.

Speaker 11 (01:36:08):
And then there's another funny joke that I heard, and
I love that. If you're still spending six dollars for
smart water, it's not working.

Speaker 1 (01:36:15):
Yeah you know, Oh wonder you knocked that one out
of the bar. Key seven twenty six fifty fuck scation
More Health with Keith and George coming up first though,
Cover SINCEY you want he speaking of health, Yes, we're
on a health kick today. Cover SINCEY for medical insurance
you're paying too much period, you want to pay less

(01:36:36):
and get better cover SINCEY they're working for you. There
your insurance broker there's hundreds and hundred insurance companies they
work with. There's thousands of insurance policies that they have
access to, which allows them to create a package of
medical insurance that will provide you with dollar one coverage.
You got the catastrophic coverage built in there, you got
your hospitalization, you got everything covered. They fill the holes
in the bucket that your current medical insurance has, like

(01:36:59):
the group plan from your employer, Well, you don't quite
have it covered. So let cover Sincy look at what
you've got where you are in your life and come
up with a better path. And let's face it, you know,
probably maybe the best news you can get. You don't
even have to get out of this process after they
look at what you've got, and if they say you
can't get better, that's a peace of mind right there.
So you don't have to change things and you're as
best possible place you can be. But for most people

(01:37:20):
you are not. So let them analyze your current coverage
and come up with a better solution. Doesn't cost you
a dime, ever, and they're working for you throughout the process.
If you get insured through cover, since then they're going
to handle all your claims disputes as well, just a
little extra perk from the team there at covers Sincy online.
It's cover sinc dot com. There's a form on the
page that you can fill out to get the process
started and they will keep all your information confidential five

(01:37:42):
one three eight hundred call another way to reach them
five one three eight hundred two two five five or
again Coversinci dot com.

Speaker 16 (01:37:49):
Fifty five car the talk station. Here is your channel
nine first one to oneerful cast. Today is going to
be a mostly flied, partly cloudy day to be humid.
Is only going to go up to eighty one degrees though,
which is nice for me anyway. Sixty four every night
with partly cloudy skies, eighty five to the high tomorrow
with mostly sunny skys overnight, a few clouds sixty seven

(01:38:11):
and eighty five for the high on Saturday, and they're
gonna they describe it as sunny, hot and humid seventy
degrees Right now, Time for a traffic.

Speaker 1 (01:38:19):
Update from to see how Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:38:22):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
are from multicultural communities. Give the gift of life, become
an organ donor or explore living donation at you see
how dot com slams transplan East Pound seventy four are
getting heavier between North Bend and the seventy five ramp.
Now a report of an accident left lane near Montana.
Southbound seventy five continues to build in and out of

(01:38:44):
Machlin for an extra five minutes.

Speaker 1 (01:38:46):
There's a wreck outside of Middletown.

Speaker 10 (01:38:48):
He's one twenty two of town Boulevark chucking from one
fifty five k r See the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:38:56):
It's seven thirty one to fifty five KRSD talk station.
We are restoring wellness here in the five KRC morning
showing this hour. Just so everybody knows, Ken Kober is
coming up off the top of our news. FOP President
Ken Kober on the city solicitor ordering the police to
charge the victim of the beat down, and as well
as the police museum getting a no from the museum
center on relocating, which really just sucks. Anyhow, that's coming

(01:39:19):
up in the meantime, George Bena mckeeth, Tennefeld restore Wellness
dot org. Once George fixes the site, he'll start working again.
That'll happen later in this morning, let's pivot over. There's
been a lot of stories in the news about RFK junior,
of course, make America healthy again. Some people think he's
a coop job, a whack job, a nut job. He's
anti vax Oh my god, we're all gonna die. But

(01:39:39):
one of the vaccines he's been focusing on, of course
all the rage these days since COVID nineteen, are these
mRNA vaccines and he's against it. Sounded to me like
and correct me if I'm wrong. Guys, he's against all
mRNA vaccines. Well, and he just cut off the research.
But let's do the technical I'm the nerd of the situations.
So the idea is, what an mRNA vaccine does is,

(01:40:02):
instead of injecting you with a half dead virus, which
is the way we've been doing it forever and ever. Yep,
it instead injects you with mRNA. So what mRNA is
is it reprograms your own body to create the chemical
or in this case, the spike protein. So it's literally

(01:40:24):
hijacking your body to create a chemical that was never
intended to create. And the original intent of these they're
not vaccines because they have no virus in them. They're
reprogramming your body. And the original intent was it's only
going to happen where they put the shot into your arm,
and it's never going to spread, and it's only going
to do that for a month or so. Everything about

(01:40:46):
that is wrong. So what it does is it hijacks
your DNA. You start producing the spike protein. The mRNA
then reproduces as well, goes throughout your entire body and
doesn't go away. We're here, what five years down the line,
and people are still creating spike proteins that had the shots,
and researchers documented that, research has documented that, and everything abound.

(01:41:08):
An mRNA always sounded bad to be because hijacking your
body to make it produce something it wasn't meant to
produce just sounds like a really bad idea. Okay, And
for all those folks out there who are freaked out
about GMO foods genically modified for that, then why would
you accept and abide by taking an mRNA vaccine since
that's modifying your body And so all of the original

(01:41:30):
stuff they said that you won't get the disease, now
that wasn't true. You won't spread it, well, in fact,
you spread it more because now your body's creating the
thing that's causing the illness, and it'll only last a
little time. So everything about mRNA. When I first heard
of the technology, I was thinking, okay, in the cancer
case of maybe runaway cancer, maybe there's a way to

(01:41:51):
teach your DNA to attack the cancer cells. Well, it
turns out what happened with the COVID vaccines is that
it switched on the cancer, not off.

Speaker 11 (01:42:00):
And so from an actual life standpoint, I got people
coming to me with vaccine related injuries. I mean horrific
conditions that don't make sense and they're very, very difficult
to diagnose. Put them through MRIs for chest plain and stuff,
and nothing shows up. But we start treating this vaccine
related injury through detox press and they get better. And
I can't explain it necessarily, but I know that this

(01:42:20):
vaccine has caused In a recent article came out from Australia,
Australia to outed as a ninety nine percent vaccine you
know country that we gave ninety nine percent of our
people vaccines for the COVID. But what's interesting is that
they're also now seeing strange, strange cancers they've never seen
before in thirty year olds.

Speaker 1 (01:42:40):
Well, I mean, I guess I would need to have
some sort of blind tests we're non vaccinated folks and
study them in terms of percentage that contract these cancers
versus those that are vaccinated, because there's a million things
in the environment that could lead to cancer diagnosis. And
I mean, we want to maybe blame RNA vaccines, and
I'm not defending them right now, but how do we

(01:43:01):
know that these weird cancers that are popping up have
approximate relationship to the vaccines.

Speaker 11 (01:43:06):
Whiten, New Florida did their study and they're showing that
there's a higher incidents of cancer and death and just
the population of the vaccines. And that's why a desants
is making it a point to knock him out of
their state.

Speaker 1 (01:43:17):
All right, Well, you mentioned we're going to take a
break here at seven thirty five. Keith, you mentioned detox
as a treatment for the mr Anda vaccines. I'm going
to push you on that one because if, as George says,
it changes and modifies our body inherently, how can you
get rid of it? Seven thirty five Right now, more
on health coming up with Keith and George. First, take

(01:43:37):
care of your teeth. I love more of the dentists.
I know that may sound weird to people who hate
the dentists, but you know, I have a great experience
with doctor Fred Pack. I've been going to doctor Fred Pack,
and my kids and my wife, everybody going to doctor
Fred Pack. He's an outstanding dentist across the board. So
if you want the best state of the art clinic,
you want to be treated great, you want to be
in you know, comfortable hands doctor Fred Pack. But then

(01:43:59):
there's the cosmic medic dentistry component. He is one of three,
total of three in the entire state. You think of
how many dentists there are in the entire state of Ohio.
He's one of three that have made it to a
Fellow status with the American Academy of Cosmetic Dentistry. Why
because he's a genius. If you hate your smile, you
don't like your smile, you're bothered by your smile, you
want to cover it up because of something going on

(01:44:19):
with your teeth. Doctor Fred Pack in his hands, you
will have your life transformed. Exceptional cosmetic dentistry from yes,
Fred Pack, the Fellow with the American Academy of cosmetic dentistry.
Go ahead, schedule appointment. Check out the before and after pictures.
They'll blow your mind like they did mine. So for
all things dentistry pec Peckpexsmiles dot com, Pexsmiles dot Com

(01:44:40):
five one three six, two one seventy six sixty six
fifty five KRC dot Com. Steve Perrins coordinated time for
the Channel nine first one to one afule cast. Go
you mostly to partly thouty day to day with a
high of eighty one, sixty four of a night with
a few clowns. Tomorrow mostly sunny with a high of
eighty five, over night sixty seven and mostly sunny, hot

(01:45:02):
end underscore words humid Saturday with a high at eighty
five retired to maybe seventy degrees. Right now, time for
trafficking from what you see how Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:45:11):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
are from multicultural communities. Give the gift of life, become
an organ donor or explorer living donation.

Speaker 1 (01:45:21):
You see how dot com slams transplant.

Speaker 10 (01:45:23):
He's found seventy four are getting heavier between North Bend
and the seventy five ramp Now. A report of an
accident Leplan near Montana stop found seventy five continues to
build in and out of Lachland for an extra five minutes.
There's a wreck outside of Middletown. He's one twenty two
a town boulevard, chuck Ing Vermone fifty five.

Speaker 1 (01:45:42):
K R see the talk station seven forty IF at
five KARSD talk station of course. Later this morning, Restore
Wellness dot Org is going to be up and running
and it's George Brenovan and Keith Tennefeld's website. Lots of
important and useful information. They're including some reading suggestions. And
we're talking health in studio with George and Keith right now,
and I put you on the spot, Keith, how is

(01:46:03):
it if you have one of your patients and you've
had them before? That's dealing with vaccine related symptoms? mRNA
is what we're focusing on in this particular segment, like
the last one, how does that you know exhibit itself?
And then what do you do if this is you know,
body transforming type of vaccines as George described them, It
doesn't sound like I mean, if it's changed me on

(01:46:25):
the inside, how can I get rid of it? It's
probably a forever chemical.

Speaker 11 (01:46:28):
To be honest, I'm sorry to say that I didn't
get a vaccine, So I think some of them are
affected more than the others. And it's just like anything,
if you've got a problem, there might be maintenance that
you can do.

Speaker 1 (01:46:38):
Now.

Speaker 11 (01:46:38):
Pierre Corey and Paul Merrick are probably some one of
the most documented physicians in this particular field, and they
have a website that is different now. But if you
go to FLCCC dot net FLCCC dot net, it'll take
you to protocols, and those protocols contain a lot of
things post COVID, long haul COVID and also vaccine injury,
and so when you go there, some of the main

(01:46:59):
concepts for those drugs. Believe it or not, it's actually
intermint fasting, sauna treatments, detox such as bromulan, natokinase and
black Sea Komen and we're also using ivermectin. I've had
multiple patients coming to me. We do this detox and
their life gets changed and they come around. But I
also have noticed that some of these people, i'd probably
maybe say twenty five to thirty percent of these people

(01:47:21):
will have a mild relapse.

Speaker 1 (01:47:22):
They're fatigue will come back. Fatigued, by the way is
a big one.

Speaker 11 (01:47:26):
The fatigu will come back, or the brain fog will
come back, or microscopic clotting. I got a lot of
females that they have what we call PEBLC public floor congestion,
where their whole pelvic system, their mental periods get worse,
their legs get swollen, they get leg pain when they walk.
We detox these people and it begins to go away,
but then it can also come back too well.

Speaker 1 (01:47:46):
Interference with menstrual cycles. And you know, I interviewed the
doctor who's Obi Jen who's a lot of his patients
lost their babies when they after getting the COVID nineteen
shot outspoken critical on that head on the program several times.
But the menstrual cycle disruption has been widely documented since
they rolled out the COVID nineteen vaccine. Yep, yep.

Speaker 11 (01:48:09):
And so you know, we're not trying to peel the
band aid off, but we really need to start talking
and looking at our health and say, hey, since I've
been vaccinated, what has changed?

Speaker 1 (01:48:18):
You know?

Speaker 11 (01:48:19):
Am I no longer happier? Am I no longer going
to the gym because it's just too damn tired. Did
you come home and take a nap? All these little
sub subdities, because that's the way this is, that's the
way it's happening, is that it's really hard to pin down.
There are lab work that we can do that like
cide of cane inflammatory numbers that look at those things
to see if you're inflamed or if you're clotting easier
than you should be. All those kind of neat numbers
can help kind of point to the direction. But I

(01:48:41):
don't want to waste someone's time and money and energy
when I know this is a treatment that works universally
with minimal side effects.

Speaker 1 (01:48:46):
Well, this concept of detoxing the dilution of these pollutions,
you have a solution of the pollution is a solution, Okay,
but that transcends just dealing with whatever affects the mRNA
vaccine might have had on you. That's good for across
the board, right, Yes, that's correct.

Speaker 11 (01:49:03):
Sweating it out in essence, yeah, drinking, bringing it in
and sweating it out or peen it out or you
know the specific protocol of those three supplements and the
ivermectin to go with it.

Speaker 4 (01:49:14):
I'll post that on the website. But I did read
a detailed study of what they think the mechanisms are.
And it's interfering with the replication of the m RNA,
so it's specifically attacking this messenger m rna. There there
is that in your body, but this one, because it's
man made, is an unusual thing, and it's going after
the spike protein in particular.

Speaker 11 (01:49:35):
Well, it's also binding to this, to the receptor site,
so that spike protein can't get into the cells.

Speaker 1 (01:49:40):
Right.

Speaker 11 (01:49:40):
Nicotine, by the way, is another one, and so in
a good way, in a good way, doctor Brian artist Johnny,
not smogging it, but you know, doing doing the patch,
cutting a patch in quarters and putting that on you.
That's always a nice way to get nicotine in your
system without the extra chemicals.

Speaker 1 (01:49:54):
How about that? And people, yeah, that's a weird one,
but really, well, you know, I got to say when
he said ivermectin, my immediate reaction is, like so many
people like, oh geez, there we go with ivermectin again.
I guess I'm kind of curious to know how that
one under the equation. Since it's been around for decades,
what does it do well for what purpose?

Speaker 11 (01:50:12):
Ivermectin's originally an anti parasitic, Yeah right, yeah, it helps
out with scabies and such, but in all the in
vitro and vivo studies it's been shown to be an
anti viral and anti cancer. It's been an anti inflammatory
as well, so it's kind of a it's not the
pan Sea drug. But what's unique about it it's an
old drug that has minimal side effects. It literally has
minimal side effects. And I'll believe it or not, if

(01:50:34):
you have cats, you're at a very very high risk,
like maybe ninety nine point nine percent of having toxicoplasmosis gandhi,
which is a microscopic parasite.

Speaker 1 (01:50:42):
Which is what the drug was designed to deal with
those parasites.

Speaker 11 (01:50:44):
Right, and river blindness and that show there's a whole
can of worms no pun intended, well maybe pun intended
that needs to be addressed with ivermectin. That could be beneficial.
We give it to our kittens, we give it to
our puppies, but we don't give it to our kids.

Speaker 1 (01:50:59):
I mean, all hang out the same. There's no side effect.
It's like the the cumin seed.

Speaker 4 (01:51:05):
There's no side effect to this, whereas just about anything
you go to the pharmacy to get, you know, the
list of side effects, the commercials, they're illustrative of the
reality of pharmaceuticals.

Speaker 1 (01:51:16):
There's like lots and lots of things could go wrong.
So you're telling me there's no black box warnings on
the ivermectin.

Speaker 4 (01:51:23):
No, no, Well, I yet to find a side I
guess if then I'm gonna have to take that back,
because I'm sure if the you know, the pharmaceutical industry
really wanted to come after people, they're going to try
to do something like that and you.

Speaker 1 (01:51:36):
Know, oh no, it needs Well, that's because they would
come after you because ivermectin may be a solution to
a problem that will be solved by one of their
patented products that you'll pay through the nose for. Ivermectin
has been off a patent forever. Whatever you're eating is
a generic and it probably costs like the tiniest little
fraction of a dollar to buy it. Were one more
with Keith and George. It's seven forty six right now.

(01:51:58):
If you've have Kersey the talk station and meaning it
is time for me to find my list. I know
that it's Gate of Heaven yeah. Gate of Heaven Cemetery.
You can find them online at Gateohaven dot org. And
you know, Gate of Heaven's been around for seventy seven
years serving the Cincinnti Christian Community Catholic cemetery. It is,
but you know they're non denomination. And when it comes
to appreciating life, life through all milestones, so you know

(01:52:20):
from birth, the time of life that you're living right
now in eternal life, Gate of Heaven recognize and revers
the sacredness of every phase of the human journey. They
want you to just stop in to reflect, check out
the walking paths, the beautiful landscaping, the flowers. You know,
enjoy God's creation there in an environment that is celebratory
of life. So take them up on the offer. Learn more.

(01:52:41):
Maybe you want to be intern there. Gate of Heaven
dot org. Gate of Heaven dot org fifty five KRC
the talk station. A couple of years ago, I was
in weather time. Dona nine says we got mostly to
partly a day to day eighty one for the high
sixty four of a night with a few clouds. Marrol
mostly sunny skies at the eighty five for the high

(01:53:02):
over nineteen a few clouds sixty seven and a sunny,
hot and human Saturday with a high eighty five seventy.
Right now, let's get a traffic update from the UC
Traffic Center.

Speaker 10 (01:53:13):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
are problem multicultural communities. Give the gift of life, become
an organ donor or explore let mean donation at you
see health dot com slash transplant. He's bound seventy four
left lanes blocked off with an accident in Montana. Traffic's
backing up to North Bend southbound seventy one down break
lights fields, irdle into blue ash northbound four seventy one

(01:53:36):
slow from Grand Chuck ingram Mon fifty five kre and
see the talk station.

Speaker 1 (01:53:42):
Seven fifty one here fifty five kr City talk station.
Learn about health. It's in schooled here and schooling in
health with George Bennaman, Keith Tennefeld. Restore wellness dot organ again.
George will get that page fixed up late this morning.
Get that certificate renewed. George, we can all access the
benefits the information there. All right, let's boil this down,
you guys in here, a whole bunch of times and

(01:54:02):
you know we've we've gone over some of these topics before.
But if you had to boil it down, I'll just
pivot over to Keith and ask you this, since you
do this for a living, Keith, and address people's health
issues and concerns from what I would call a holistic
way as opposed to traditional medicine. You're talking about, you know,
natural therapeutic remedies. If you had to boil it down,

(01:54:22):
what would you recommend everybody sort of take stock in
the top number of top five I think you had
mentioned off air.

Speaker 11 (01:54:29):
Well, real quick, Brian, I want to thank you for
having us on because you know we're here to help
your listeners, and I think your listeners care about you. Well,
I've learned a lot from you, and I think you
got and I think you honestly care about your listeners.
So I do thanks for keeping us on here and
letting us care for your listeners.

Speaker 1 (01:54:43):
No, I really do.

Speaker 11 (01:54:45):
When it comes to the five things, I think the
five things we have to look at. Obviously today's hydration.
We have to look at hydration, and so many people
are getting the wrong They're not meeting that mark. Start
with just getting the amount in okay, half your body
weight in ounces. Prefer filtered, non bottled water. Number two,
your diet. Keep the sugar out of your body, brother, Yeah,

(01:55:06):
keep the sugar out of your body, Keep the artificials
out of your body, keep the preservers out of your body.
So a keto or protein based diet, Mediterranean based diet
is a game changer. And if it's if it's easy
to make, then it's probably you know, non necessarily, you know,
if it's convenient, I should say, then it's probably not
the best option. Sleep sleep hygiene is so important. That's
when your body rebuilds, that's when it restores itself. That's

(01:55:28):
when when life happens, and when you get cognitive regeneration.
So make sure your sleep becomes a priority. And if
that means that you have to take a sleeping aid
such as magnesium, melatonin, valerian root, do something like that,
but you please prioritize your sleep. And that means if
you also can no light in the room, do not
have any light in the room. Number four is exercise.
I cannot tell my patients more and more enough that

(01:55:50):
exercise is the key to longevity.

Speaker 1 (01:55:54):
It is the fountain of youth.

Speaker 11 (01:55:55):
It increases your telemer length, It increases your confidence, increases
your intelligence, increases your ability. The most importantly, and you
probably heard about this, is it opens up the sugar portals,
so you can break down sugar in your body. You
can get rid of that sugar, you can utilize that sugar.
The more muscle you have, the more sugar you can process,
and therefore you're going to get healthy right away. So exercise,

(01:56:15):
resistance training mixed with cardio, taking care of your body,
feeding it properly. And my last one is relationships. The
more importantly the relationship you have with yourself. How are
you treating yourself? Are you respectful for yourself? Are you
loving on yourself? Are you caring for yourself? Having that
decent relationship with yourself is primal. Relationship with your family
and your friends, maybe even your position, you know. And

(01:56:37):
most importantly I should probably act add this as God
and keeping God that relationship with them is fantastic. Keeping
all those five things diet, exercise, sleep, hydration, and relationships
in your life is going to be your game changer.

Speaker 1 (01:56:50):
Wellve me emotional health. That last one, yeah, and quite
often I imagine one's perception of oneselved if it's a
negative one that might relate back to some of the
other things that you mentioned why you don't care for
your drink right or exercise? Yeah, yeah, to self care.
All right, Well, Keith, you summed it up quite nicely there,
and I suppose you know, if you want to use
me as an illustration. I struggle with exercise, I admitted

(01:57:12):
out loud. Keith has constantly given me a hard time
about it. They'd constantly tried to turn me around on that,
and I keep saying someday, someday, someday. But in so
far as the sugar component and the key too, George,
that you mentioned, I mean that was a real life
changer for me. I mean it really was. I started
keto October last year, did it for a full month,
real full on keto. And no, it isn't easy. For

(01:57:33):
the first couple of weeks. You're going to have that
keyto flu I guarantee you, and it doesn't feel good.
But if you stick through that first couple of weeks,
it becomes really easy, right, it really does. And staying
away from sugar is complicated and as difficult as that sounds,
because everything's got sugar in it. Yeah, but if you
focus on getting rid of sugar, in my experience, you're
going to end up defaulting to things that are so

(01:57:54):
much better for you to eat right so well.

Speaker 4 (01:57:57):
And the key is, you know, the act can diet
is the same as Keto, but he always emphasized it
as a way to lose weight.

Speaker 1 (01:58:04):
Well, now.

Speaker 4 (01:58:06):
Is you will lose weight, but you're not doing it
for that. You're doing that to make you live longer,
look better, and feel better.

Speaker 1 (01:58:12):
And I cannot draw a wine directly from this, this
diet experience, and I have maintained I tried to put
zero sugar in my body and that's been the way
since last October, minimal carbs. When I have carbs, it's
usually homemade sour dough bread, which is better for you
than processed bread. But I feel better generally speaking. And
my ct scan, which is the only, you know, outside

(01:58:34):
objective thing to look at my LOMF nodes actually shrunk
since last fall when they thought it was going to
have to go back on treatments again. So if there's
a correlation between sugar and cancer, which there are many
studies to suggest there are, this actually worked for lymphoma.
Now I'll get another CT scan in a few months
and we'll find out if things went back the opposite direction.

(01:58:55):
I don't know if I found the silver bullet for it.
But aside on the weather I did, I feel better
and I can hang my hat on that. Seven to
fifty six guys, keep up the great work. I'll look
forward to have another hour of power with you, our
health power all with you. Down this say, let's back
up now, the site's back up now. Thank you God
for smartphones. Restore Wellness dot org, so stick around. FOP

(01:59:17):
President ken Kove returns to the program after the top
of the hour. News right back. You will be called
the twelve Day War. I suppose that's what we were
nicknaming it already. Another update at the top of the hour,
the use of military force fifty five kr see the
talk station.

Speaker 9 (01:59:32):
This report is sponsor. I love talk radio for every day.
Ask my husband.

Speaker 8 (01:59:37):
I love to talk.

Speaker 1 (01:59:38):
I don't watch much TV. I'm always driving for every one.
The radio is my news source. Fifty five krs. The
talk station A six here fifty five kerr CD talk station.
It's Thursday State in the obvious means. I heart media
aviation experts going to join us at bottom of the
hour that it will be of course, Jay Ratliffe. In
the meantime, please to welcome and thanks to Joe Streker

(02:00:01):
for reaching out to Ken Kober. He's the FOP president
Chapter sixty nine represented the Cincinnati Police Department and make
it in the news of late You're interviewed by everybody,
every news outlet in town yesterday. Ken Kober, Welcome back
to the fifty five KRC Morning Show. Big Morning, Brian,
Thanks for having, of course a couple of topics we've
got to talk about. We'll start with the man who
was seen throwing the slap, if you can call it

(02:00:23):
that that resulted in him getting completely beat down. He's
been charged with disorderly conduct. The police didn't charge him
with disorderly conduct around the time of the incident, and
my understanding is that Hamilton County prosecutor did not believe
it was worthy to charging because maybe you don't have
all the elements of the misdemeanor disorderly conduct charge there.
But given the circumstances, the fact that he was harassed

(02:00:45):
and punched and accosted verbally and physically in advance of
the slap being thrown, that maybe this was merely an
act of self defense. But it certainly wasn't necessarily that
violent act. But he's been charged now. The man's name
Alex Chervinsky. The city solicitor ordered the police to issue
a citation. Ken it's exactly right.

Speaker 2 (02:01:05):
There was a meeting that was had in a solicitor
said the police department will sign these charges. Captain Adam Henny,
who's the Central Business Section commander, knew exactly how the
investigators felt about this, and he said, no, I'm not
putting these cops in this position.

Speaker 1 (02:01:21):
I'll do it myself. He kind of fell on the sword,
didn't he. Yeah, Yeah, absolutely, he was.

Speaker 2 (02:01:25):
Doing it to protect his people, and that's certainly something
that I think it's an honorable thing to do.

Speaker 1 (02:01:31):
Yeah, but it never should have came to that. Well,
never should have come to that. And if you ask
the captain directly, is this charge worthy? I mean, if
you were out on the street yourself like you did
before you you re elevated your lofty status of administrative,
would you have issued this charge yourself? And I suppose
you would say no.

Speaker 2 (02:01:48):
Well, I could tell you, in twenty five years of
being on this police department, I have never seen where
we watch a video and based off of a video, sign.

Speaker 17 (02:01:58):
A misdemeanor of the fourth degree. Just it's just it's
it hasn't happened. It certainly hasn't seen a captain signing
a criminal charge. I mean, it's just the public season
for what it is. It's a bunch of nonsense.

Speaker 1 (02:02:10):
Yeah, And I suppose I don't know the the the
whys and wherefores are the internal workings of your relationship
between the Cincinni Police Apartment and the city solicitor and
the Hamilton County prosecutor. But I guess I'm kind of
curious to know by what authority the city Solicitor Emily
smart Werner in this case, can order a police department
to do anything. Isn't that more of a prosecutorial responsibility?

(02:02:32):
It is? But understand, I mean, she's an attorney, she
is she is the so am I but I can't
I can't make you. Yeah, I mean, it's like I said, and.

Speaker 2 (02:02:41):
That's something that's I've never I've never seen where you
have a solicitor's office that orders for a misdemeaning of
the fourt degree to be signed, or any charge of
that matter that's typically left to the prosecutor's office to decide, right,
But yeah, I guess.

Speaker 1 (02:02:54):
That these are these are strange times that we're living in.
It's never should have come to this. It never should
have happened.

Speaker 2 (02:03:00):
It's exactly what I predicted August eleventh when I said
it's time for politicians to stay out of law enforcement.

Speaker 1 (02:03:07):
And they they can't do it. They can't get out
of their own way. No, I guess practically speaking, Ken,
I understand the position of the police department, and when
I'm trying to stay out of conflict and chaos. What
if you said no, City Solicitor Emily smart Werner, I'm sorry,
I don't know by what authority you think you can
tell the police department what to do. But in our

(02:03:27):
authority as law enforcement, and.

Speaker 3 (02:03:29):
With the.

Speaker 1 (02:03:31):
Responsibility presumably lying either with us or with the prosecutor's department,
both of us have decided there isn't a crime here.
You have no authority to make us do anything, and no,
we're not going to do it. What do you think
would have happened with that, Ken?

Speaker 2 (02:03:44):
That's interesting, But that's why the captain stepped in, because
he knew exactly how these investigators felt. Because I've talked
to them, He's talked to them, and they both said,
we're not doing it.

Speaker 1 (02:03:54):
We are absolutely not doing this, and that's what the
Captain's like, Well, listen, I'll just do it myself.

Speaker 3 (02:04:00):
Geez.

Speaker 1 (02:04:01):
Well, let's move over to section twenty nine to seventeen
point one one of the High Revised Code Disorderly Conduct.
I'm just reading through the elements here, just wondering whether
even you have the elements to prove guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. And I already said this morning if it
was my case, if I had been charged with this,

(02:04:22):
I would definitely have a bench trial rather than a
jury trial, because you know, you might run the risk
of some bias jurors. But a judge's got the law
in front of him or her, and I realized there's
bias on the bench. But you know, arguably they're going
to have to make a finding of fact and apply
the elements of the law to determine someone's guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt. And I'm not sure you have it here.
And I suppose based upon your initial discuss or initial determination,

(02:04:44):
you being the police department, that a charge would not
be filed against this guy. You don't believe the elements
of the crime here at all.

Speaker 2 (02:04:51):
Well, now, I mean if you look at a the
misdemean or fourth degree disorderly conduct that says it talks
in there about being warned that the behavior persistent, persisted,
who who warned them to stop? Typically that charge is
is appropriate when you have a police officer that's on
the scene of something that sees, right, two people engage

(02:05:13):
in fighting, you know, and they go stop or I'm
going to arrest you, and they continue to fight. That's
when that charge is appropriate. Not by watching a video.
You know, it comes to question. You know, these these
Iris Rollie videos that we've seen on body camera where
she's obstructing these officers. Should I just now go back
and you know, sign charges on her for obstructing official

(02:05:33):
business because I watched a video?

Speaker 15 (02:05:34):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (02:05:36):
Yeah, why not?

Speaker 2 (02:05:39):
I mean, under the under the under the the theory
of the city solicitor, I guess I should. I guess
I could they think somehow you can make that case
by watching a video, And I just I think it's
a terrible, terrible look.

Speaker 1 (02:05:51):
It's certainly a terrible look, but the whole thing is
a terrible look. For the City of Cincinnati, and so
this brings the total number of people charged in this
eight of course fourth degree misdemeanor. I I I suppose
I can speculate on this one, but I have to.
I'm just compelled to say it out loud. Given the
current situation with crime in downtown Cincinnati and the problem

(02:06:11):
that we currently have with the bench, meaning the judicial
leg of the uh uh of the criminal justice system,
I doubt this would ever see the light of prosecution
except for this particular circumstance where it appears to have
some racial overtones. Oh, without a doubt.

Speaker 2 (02:06:27):
I mean this, this, this is something that would would
never be charged if if this wasn't a case of
this kind of magnitude. I mean we see it every day,
an assault charge. A victim doesn't show up, it'll prosecute, right.

Speaker 6 (02:06:40):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (02:06:40):
We we just had recently had a case.

Speaker 18 (02:06:44):
Very similar facts where you know, there were there were
people that were fighting there, they were fighting with the police.
You catch a resisting arrest charge and the city Prosecutor's
office amends the charge to a disorderly conduct minor misdemeanor.

Speaker 1 (02:07:01):
Yep, but we're going to charge the DCM for because
you watch the video, it just it defies all logic,
It really does. Well, what of the I'm gonna I'm
using the quote signs with my fingers here, ken, What
of the victim in this particular case, Yes, it's on video,
but is that person going to be called in to
testify or otherwise comment on you know the nature of
the attack, which look to me like a similar to

(02:07:23):
a pat on the cheek. There really wasn't a very
violent hit. I mean, does his testimony or his involvement
going to be necessary?

Speaker 2 (02:07:31):
I would suspect that he would invoke the Fifth Amendment
right considering he's been indicted for felonious assault, miggravator riot.

Speaker 1 (02:07:38):
Yeah, that guy, and he's the one that was involved
in beating up on a whole bunch of people in
that fight. Yeah. Well, I appreciate your willingness to comment
on this, and I'll strongly encourage my listeners to follow
your group on Facebook since O the FOP Queen City
Lodge number sixty times sixty nine, because you've had some
really wonderful comments and observations about this particular matter, which

(02:08:00):
it ain't over until it's over. But more on the
Cincinnati Police museum. We're gonna pause. We'll bring Ken Cover
back to comment on that, because apparently the Cincinni Museum
Center doesn't want to have anything to do whatsoever with
the Cincinni Police. Why well, because I guess it's not
woke or something more with Ken Cover, it's just sh
I have eight fifteen right now. If you biy KR
City Talk station, won't get rid of the stench of

(02:08:22):
that political nonsense. Odor exit, of course what I'm talking about.
It does get rid of all kinds of smells, smoke, mold, mildew.
You've got let's see here, body odor smells, yeah, tennis
shoes smell yep. Works on that, and of course fast
food in the car. I use the older Exit magic,
which I keep in the glove box of my car.
So I want to bring the pizza home in my car,
it no longer smells like pizza, which it really bothers

(02:08:44):
me when my car smells like food. Avoid that problem.
Get an ODO exit product, get rid of whatever odor.
You've got one hundred percent satisfaction guarantee. If it doesn't
eliminate the other, you get your money back. There's a
guarantee from folks that odor exit locally made, locally owned,
twenty five years in business and still going strong. To
find the products which you need and the information and
a place to order it, go online Odor exit, od O,

(02:09:08):
r XIT noeodor exit dot com or buy it locally.
There's a search engine on the website which you'll show
you where it's sold locally. But if you can wait
a day, just buy it online while you're right there.
Odor exit dot com fifty five KRC for more information
about contests on distick It's eight eighteen here fifty five
KRC eating talk station. Very Happy Friday eved here. By

(02:09:28):
the time, I was enjoying the conversation in spite of
the subject matter with FOP President Ken Kover represent the
SINCINNT Police Department real quick. Ken, going back to the
four to three misdemeanor charges that were filed against Arsi's
law issue that was floating around out there. They anyway,
local news revealed who he is and he acknowledged that
he has been charged. I asked you about the victim

(02:09:48):
and the victims statement. You said, he probably won't utter
a syllable because he's got all these very serious charges
penning against them for robbery and beating the crap out
of people, including mister Tchirvinsky. Isn't this then a victimless
crime if you have no victim willing to stand up
and testify that they were harmed or heard or had
you know, felt like they were being assaulted, eminent apprehension

(02:10:10):
of body harm, whatever it happens to be. Would I mean,
I mean, I know you said this never would have
been prosecuted, no citation will be an issue, But doesn't
that make it I mean, there's no justiciable controversy here.
If there's no victim, there's no crime. I'm just kind
of wondering about that. Your take on my observations, Ken.

Speaker 2 (02:10:29):
No, you're absolutely right, you know, a disorderly conduct to
believe on the orc it's uh considered a crime of
east I believe it is. Where it's it's there is
no actual victim. The victim would be the public. Oh,
in this scenario, it doesn't make any sense. No, it's
just like I said, it's silly.

Speaker 1 (02:10:51):
It's silliness. I'm sure there's a good criminal criminal lawyer
out there who will probably end up getting it dismissed.
We'll find out. Keep your popcorn out on that one.
This is clearly not going away. Also, I'm not going
away hopefully the CINCINNT Police Museum, Ken, I've been there
and I think it's an amazing exhibit or group of
exhibits you put together. The lease on the current space
is expiring. I guess next year. It's the running the

(02:11:11):
Police Museum at least as according to local reporting, it's
about seven thousand dollars a year. But you know, we
have a storied history with the CINCINNT Police Department, and
it would be nice to have a great location for it.
What a better location could there be than the Cincinnati
Museum Center. It seems consistent with museums. Hey, it's a museum.

(02:11:31):
We'll put it in with the other exhibits at the
museum center. But the museum center officials say, no, it's
not consistent with their message. What do you make of this, Ken,
I know you've got a few comments floating around online
about this. You're obviously not happy. No, I mean it's disappointing.

Speaker 2 (02:11:45):
You have the men and women that they're all volunteers,
that it may spend hundreds and hundreds of hours you're
putting together, you know, preserving the history of law enforce
not only in Cincinnati, but also for the tri state area,
and it's disappointing to see you something as iconic as

(02:12:06):
the Cincinnati Museum Center, like, man, this isn't gonna work because,
I mean, I guess it's kind of their woke ideology
is why they don't want a police museum to be
part of their business.

Speaker 1 (02:12:21):
And it's crazy to me. I mean, it's awesome. The
Police Museum's awesome. It really is. And you know, I
love the Museum Center building and I like quite a
few of the exhibits in there. Reminds me of being
a little kid and going to the Natural History Museum,
so fond memories of the exhibits they have. I think
they do a nice job over there, but this whole idea,
and I saw the statement that was issued by Jill Berkermeyer,

(02:12:44):
who's the chief financial officer and vice president of administration
of the Cincinnai Museum Center. Along with the Railroad Freedom Center,
our facilities with the Union Terminal housing, the Children's Museum,
and the Holocaust and Humanity Center at Freedom Center focused
on the stories of the underground railroad and social justice
serve audiences that include young children in sensitive exhibits, and

(02:13:04):
the presence of firearms or certain artifacts associated with law
enforcement would not align with the environment and experiences we
are committed to providing. Oh last, when I saw the museum,
can I first have to observe it was not primarily
focused on or even have a predominant message about gunplay.
But then there's a whole idea of the Holocaust itself.

(02:13:25):
Children can go through and see imagery of torture and death.
They can understand that millions of Jewish people were slaughtered
by the Nazis merely because of or their race, and
they can handle that. But they can't handle an exhibit
honoring the fallen police officers who died in the line
of duty protecting and serving the Cincinnati City. Yeah, it's nonsense.

Speaker 2 (02:13:48):
I mean, I can't believe that they had the audacity
to put something like that in writing. I know, I know,
that's what's really troubling. Couldn't believe what I was reading
this morning, could not believe it. And you gave this
museum spokesperson a tour of the uh or at least
Lieutenant Kramer gave a tour of the Sinsint Police Museum.

(02:14:08):
Got even got a letter of appreciation segue into sorry,
you guys can't come to our museum because of it
highlights aspects of police history and ways that don't complement
the missions that you've got going on there.

Speaker 1 (02:14:20):
Nonsense, and think about how twisted can is. And I'm
on a stream of consciousness here because I can't believe
I'm reading what I'm reading that their low ideology does
not even embrace the concept of law enforcement. I mean,
it's a law enforcement is one of the pillars of
our society staying together. You know, you're the ones the

(02:14:44):
arbiters of us playing nicely together. We don't play nicely together.
We violate somebody else's space. You're gonna get called into
account for it. Without police, we don't have that. You
get chaos and violence and crime. Run them up in
the streets. That's sound familiar, Ken, We can't honor the
police department because well it left wing or something. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (02:15:02):
Well, you know it's ironic though, that they have a
police detail every minute that they're open throughout the year.

Speaker 1 (02:15:13):
There are cops right there.

Speaker 2 (02:15:15):
Yeah, yeah, I mean, you can't make this stuff up there, Yeah,
they have a detail, cops with firearms.

Speaker 1 (02:15:20):
Yeah. Oh man, I can't stop that one. I can't
stop that one. Wow, Okay, any chance are gonna change
their mind? We have public opinion. If there's a huge
backlash from like my listening audience and the rest of
the people thinking no, no, no, the Police Museum will
be a wonderful addition to the museum Center.

Speaker 2 (02:15:43):
I mean, you would hope, so you'd hope that they
would they would reconsider. But I just I mean, at
this point, I just don't see it happening.

Speaker 1 (02:15:49):
Well I don't either, but we can all try light
them up. Tell them you're never gonna go to the
museum center again unless they change their attitude. Ken Kober,
thank you for spending time with my listeners to me
today and I appreciate it or your online comments and
stand on top of these and of course we hear
in the fifty five care so you see a morning show,
love the police and appreciate what they're doing. So keep
up the great work. You always have a form here, Ken,

(02:16:11):
and I look forward to having you on again. It's
my pleasure. Thanks, Brian. Take care keep speaking truth to
the idiots out there running our city. Eight twenty five
fifty five KR see de talk station. My words, not
his speaking of words. We're gonna hear words from Jay Rattle.
If I heard media aviation expert, he'll be on next
looking forward to that. I hope you are too.

Speaker 9 (02:16:28):
Fifty five krc.

Speaker 1 (02:16:34):
UH talker or Chennight first one to one forecast going
of mostly cloudy to partly cloudy, day to day humid
and I have eighty one overnight, some clouds, sixty four
Sunday for the most part. Tomorrow eighty five sixty seven
overnight it'll be humid with a few clowns and a
Saturday that's gonna be hot, humid temperature of eighty five degrees.
Right now, it's seventy time for traffic from the UCL
train Thing Center.

Speaker 10 (02:16:54):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplanterer
from multicultural communities, give the gift of life, become an
organ donor, or explor a living donation at u see
health dot com. Slash transplant suthbound seventy five better through
Westchester still heavy through block on southbound seventy one continues
over a fifteen minute delay from Field Zerbo down to

(02:17:15):
Red Bank. There's an accident in Clairemont County that's on
one thirty one near Betting Lane, backing traffic to Sugar
Camp Chuck ing Ram on.

Speaker 1 (02:17:22):
Fifty five KROS the talk station TGI Thursday and at
this hour, always look forward to this segment. iHeartMedia. Aviation
expert Jay Ratliff joins us every Thursday at well, it's
say twenty nine right now or eight thirty roughly this time.
Welcome back, Jay Ratliffe. I appreciate you being on the program,

(02:17:43):
if for no other reason one, I love the content
and I get a kick out of it. But we
don't have to talk about real politics in that nonsense
for a little while.

Speaker 3 (02:17:51):
Good.

Speaker 15 (02:17:51):
You know, it's the wild and wacky world of travel.
My friend many times gives us a kind of an
uplifting story. Yes, stories, especially at least fun ones sometimes
that we could just kind of say, you know, I'm
glad we don't act like that.

Speaker 1 (02:18:05):
That's like the stack is stupid in the morning. I
do at twenty minutes still six every morning. And let's
start there two stories involving passengers, one that couldn't get
a seat many times and another one got chucked off
a luftons of flight. So let's start with either one
of those. South Southwest Airlines or Lufthansa, you pick, Oh.

Speaker 15 (02:18:23):
The Lothonsa. We've got to go there, because my how
far we have come. We had a passenger that was
traveling on a Lothansa flight boards a plane and as
he did, the flight attendants grew a little bit uncomfortable.
They thought maybe there was something going on, and as
a result, they talked to him saying that they were

(02:18:46):
uncomfortable and expressed their concerns over whether or not this
individual should fly. And it was because he was wearing
a mask. Only because he was yep, one of the
old COVID masks, the ones you couldn't even go to
the bathroom without, and let alone imply certainly you had
to have. Now we have situations where a guy boards

(02:19:08):
with a mask and the flash is like a time
out here, are you sick? He's like, no, I'm going
to go see my mother. She's got an immune deficiency
and I'm just taking precautions. Yeah, blah blah, And the
flight attendants got concerned to the point the captain came out.
There starts to be a verbal altercation. The cab goes, look,
you're not flying. This guy gets kicked off of a

(02:19:29):
plane because he was wearing a mask. Now, if we've
not gone full circle, oh, I cannot find a better
story to illustrate that ban this one. And even though
the other story was good, Brian H's nowhere near as
good as this. Mirror this against the insanity that was
taking place all those years ago, and just yeah, so

(02:19:52):
now you can get get kicked off the plane for
wearing a mask.

Speaker 1 (02:19:56):
That's funny. Now, if I'd have seen that, my reaction
is seeing a guy get on an airplane with a
mask like that would have been the same as the
reaction I have when I see somebody walking around with
a mask and a Kroger. Still, it's that I want
to walk up to him and say, why in the
hell are you wearing that mask? Haven't you read the updates?
It doesn't do a damn thing. It's so far as
keeping you from contracting COVID or any other thing for

(02:20:18):
that matter.

Speaker 15 (02:20:19):
Well, before COVID, we would see people traveling with masks
a lot, and sometimes it was because they had an
upcoming surgery or they just had one and they were
told as a precaution to wear them. And there was
a time when everybody thought that those were a good
thing to wear, and then science catches up with everything
and is determined, no, it's not really effective, but it
does sure sure make you feel better, you know, like

(02:20:41):
you're doing something to protect yourself. But yeah, it's you know,
so when I see it, it's kind of like, well, yeah,
well it may be for a lot of different reasons,
but mainly it's because you know, people don't want to
catch something even though it's been proven that those things
really don't work right.

Speaker 1 (02:20:58):
Well, you know, now the public for is it's all
the left wing agitators and activists, the anti Semites, the
antifas and others who regularly show up at demonstrations. What
are they wearing the old mask? They're the only ones
that wear them anymore. With the exceptional Guyker walking around
in Kroger Brian.

Speaker 15 (02:21:16):
All they have to do to stop that insanity. To
Mark bump by noon today is have Trump come out
and endorsed masks. That's all we take, because those people
would be like, I'm not doing anything that Trump says,
and it's over. It's done, It'll never be seen again.

Speaker 1 (02:21:34):
Problem solved. All right, let's be get over to the
other story. We've got this morning three times.

Speaker 15 (02:21:42):
Oh yeah, there was a passenger. She's Orlando at a
gate for Southwest Airlines, trying to stand by. Now I
don't know if she had a previous flight she missed,
or I didn't know she had a later flight, but
she was trying to leave early. So of course the
summer travel season, I mean, flights are full, so you're
going to be on a standby. And they tried as
best they could to get this woman on a flight.
First one they couldn't, second one they couldn't, the third

(02:22:05):
one they couldn't. And I guess it was the third
one which was all this woman could take, because the
video that's gone viral shows her screaming at this oh,
this poor Southwest Airlines agent, and she gets around the
counter and kicks him. And then you know he's doing
exactly what he's trained to do. He's trying to, you know,
de escalate the situation where he's just backing up with

(02:22:27):
his hands up, just giving her room, letting her vent
those kinds of things. Well, when she's tired and trying
to kick him, well, then she goes after the computer
and she starts to smashing the computer on the gate counter.
So we don't know if she ends up getting arrested.
I'm certain she got detained and it'll be up to
Southwest Airlines if any charges are going to be filed,

(02:22:47):
because typically they're not. But the person would be prohibited
from ever flying Southwest Airlines again ever. But again, this
type of individual is able to fly on any other
carrier without any problem at all. And I have a
problem with that because if you've assaulted an airline agent
or a fellow passenger, no way in the world should
you be wating on any airplane for a year, two three,

(02:23:10):
just pick a number, but so that there's some consequences.
But you know, we have seen some of these situations
where passengers come after the agents and instead of the
agent's backing off of their hands up in a very
calm fashion, agents kind of step forward and put their
their their fists stuff. It's like, yeah, don't do that
unless you're ready to be fired, because you know that's

(02:23:31):
not what you're trained to do. Now, somebody comes after you,
you can restrain them, but you can never ever ever
strike a passenger. And you know, in this situation, it's
going to be a training video on exactly how to
handle somebody that has just gone absolutely postal.

Speaker 1 (02:23:46):
De escalate or continue with iHeart media aviation expert Jay
Rattle of quite a few different topics. We get to
go through with him. We'll do that in just a minute.

Speaker 9 (02:23:54):
Stick around fifty five KRC.

Speaker 1 (02:23:56):
Jay Ratz on a Thursday talking with iHeart me Adah
next berthday or outlet. All right, we got rid of
our unruly passengers and we're moving on over to the
TSA had an announcement about banned items and check luggage.
What aren't we allowed to bring on the plane are
in check in our check luggage? Now, Jay, I'm thinking.

Speaker 15 (02:24:17):
This probably is not going to impact you or me,
but the TSA, through the Federal AVA Administration, is saying
that they are not going to allow on the airplane
either in check luggage or carry on cordless curring curling
irons or the flat irons that contain gas cartridges. That's

(02:24:38):
number one. You cannot have buttane fueled curling irons or
the flat irons and the gas refills. The spare cartridges
I believe they are for these curling irons or the
flat irons are also not allowed to be on a
plane either in check luggage or on your person. So
if you're carrying them through the TSA checkpoint, and I
couldn't pick these things out of a lineup, so but

(02:25:00):
if the TSA can, so if they see it, they
would tell the individual that you are not allowed to
take it through. If it's discovered in a piece of
check luggage, what they'll do is end up confiscating it
and it'll never be seen again, at least until they
auction it off.

Speaker 1 (02:25:14):
Okay, can you can your baggage checked like a big lighter.

Speaker 15 (02:25:21):
Lighters? You're not supposed to because but again it depends
on the quantity those types of things. So we had
a passenger that was coming out of Las Vegas that
collect matches and he puts I can't remember how many
boxes of matches in his suitcase and it caught on fire.
Now caught on fire in the baggage staging area, so
it was just the bag that got destroyed. He was

(02:25:43):
fined by the FAA I think twenty thousand dollars for
the transportation of hazardous materials. So yeah, that's why you
just need to be very very careful because there's always
a concern of anything that could be combustible, that could
be a problem. And that's why these listium batteries continue
to be the issue they are because they represent right

(02:26:05):
now the single biggest threat to aviation that we have
as far as the transportation of a single item.

Speaker 1 (02:26:13):
Yeah, and you know every time you talk about there's
lithium eye on things and being in a check bag
down below the hole. I just you know that we're
just a moment in time away from that bringing down
an airplane. Yeah, that really has me bothered.

Speaker 15 (02:26:28):
Well, it's gonna it's gonna happen from somebody giving a
bag up at the gate for sitting. They have something
in there and of no fault of their own. And
because you know how many times do we forget things
all the time, and you tell people you don't have
your car keys, you don't your medicine, no, no, no, no,
in the bag. Off it goes and it's in jack luggage,
only for the person later to go, oops, my car keys,
my billfold, my all, my medication is in that bag,

(02:26:51):
which now gets lost somewhere and it is eventually found,
you know, days or weeks later. So those types of
things are very scary because if somebody does the agent,
it would be like screening somebody coming through the TSA saying,
we'll let you go through the screener, but if you
just tell us do you have anything now, then you
just bypass it, just go ahead and go. You're taking

(02:27:13):
somebody's word that there's nothing in there that would be
a potential threat. Right now, we've gone through the scarity checkpoint,
so it's obvious we don't have anything of a threatening
terroristic nature. But these lithium battery type things are so
serious that we're simply taking passengers you know, the words,
your word for it there, and they're not The bags

(02:27:35):
are not being rescreened. They're going from the gates and
you see them right onto the plane.

Speaker 1 (02:27:40):
Right well, Jay, let me. I mean, I'm certain that
you know when you hand over your bag for them
to check it down below because it's too big. You
know that you're the one that brought the damn thing on,
so it's kind of your fault. But I'm certain that
the flight attenant asks you if there's something in there,
and this is the point at which we have to
rely on the passenger. You no, there's no lithium ion
product in there, even if there might be.

Speaker 15 (02:28:02):
Does if it was it could be a battery for
a toothbrush. This would be less empowered certain certain things
that we just don't associate with it. And you know
a lot Look, there's people that I know that the
whole family brings their bags through the security checkpoint, hoping
because they were gonna have to pay for those check bags.
At the counter that the agent says, hey, we're filled.
If anybody wants to volunteer their their check luggage, you know,

(02:28:24):
we'll check it for free. And here comes the family.
You know, here's the six bags. We will reluctantly give
up so you can check them all for free. And
away they go. And they're like, yeah, you know, but
what if something's missed in there, and there's just you know,
there's a lot of moving parts at the gate. There's
people sometimes at the last minute that are being cleared
for standby that they have bags. Okay, now we need

(02:28:44):
to you know, we didn't check your bags because we
didn't know if we can get you on the plane.
But now we can take them, tag them and get
them down to the to the tarmac to be put
on the plane.

Speaker 1 (02:28:53):
Well, let me ask you this, because it's looming and
burning in the back of my mind when you do
check a bag and it does go in the hold
and you say there's nothing in there. Are they scanning
those X raying them or otherwise they they're just always
taking the passenger's word for it.

Speaker 15 (02:29:08):
Every yeah, and let's and let's, there's a reason for it.
But Brian, look at it. The bags are going from
the the gate area down to the end of the
jet bridge when you leave the bags by the door,
and some agents coming from the tarmac up the step.

Speaker 1 (02:29:24):
Yeah, that's yeah, that situation. I gets.

Speaker 15 (02:29:28):
It's putting it right onto the airplane and none of
that's being screened. Now obviously the check luggage is all
being screened.

Speaker 1 (02:29:33):
That's what I'm asking about. Yeah, No, I get. I
get what your scenario is because it's going from yeah,
right there at the airplane. It's going from that the
gate and into the plane, but up front. Because I
don't know what goes on behind the scenes with bags.
But you're telling me that they are good.

Speaker 15 (02:29:48):
God, But it took the attacks of nine to eleven for.

Speaker 1 (02:29:51):
Us to do that. I understand.

Speaker 15 (02:29:52):
After the bombing of PanAm one O three over lockerby Scotland,
the National Transportation Safety Board in the late eight said
we need to start screening bags, and they said I
can't do it. And when the attacks of nine to
eleven happened, that's when everything changed. Were thankfully started doing that. So, yeah,
those bags are being screened and a lot of things

(02:30:13):
are being detected that are threats that they're removing. TSC
does a very good job on that. Okay, they don't
really telegraph everything that they that they that they seize,
but right it's those bags that are at the gate
with the scarity checkpoint.

Speaker 1 (02:30:25):
Yeah, I'm with you, and I don't think anything involving
air travel scares me more than that phenomenon that we're
talking about now anymore. This is a new development for
me in terms of my disdain for air travel.

Speaker 15 (02:30:38):
Two incidents a week somewhere in the world, we've got
an aircraft incident with an overheating electronic.

Speaker 1 (02:30:44):
Device in the cabin.

Speaker 15 (02:30:45):
You can google, yeah, google air Boossan, I think bus
an and it shows you an aircraft what's left of it.
It was at the gate when a battery fire broke out,
caught the plane on fire. The whole top of the
airplane's gone.

Speaker 1 (02:30:58):
I saw that man talk about that's see right there.
That was in the cabin and it did all that damage.
You're in the thirty thousand, thirty five thousand square feet
and that they're one thousand feet in the air and
it starts in the hold where the bags are. Oh
my god. Anyway, let's pause, bring Jay Ratliff back. We
had a few more things to talk about before we
get the hub delays stick around fifty five KRC. There's

(02:31:21):
one more time for the Channel nine weather. We got
a most of the partly cloudy day to day human
in eighty one for the high, partly cloudy mile night
sixty four for the low. Eighty five or high Tomorrow
is sunny sky's overnight sixty seven with just a few
clouds and a humid, sunny and hot day on Saturday
eighty five for the high. It's uh seventy one right now.
If get our final traffic report from the UCLP Tramphic Center.

Speaker 10 (02:31:43):
Nearly sixty percent of Americans waiting on an organ transplant
from multicultural communities keep the gift of life, become an
organ donor or explored living donation at u see health
dot com. Slaves Transplant southbound seventy one continues over a
ten minute delay from above two seventy five down to
red Bank North Found heavy is from Smith Edwards starts
the Red Bank Brimm southbound seventy five break Bight Sen

(02:32:05):
and at of Ackland North Found seventy five out of
Borlliner into the cup shot king Ramont fifty five krs
the talk station.

Speaker 1 (02:32:15):
Say fifty fifty one to fifty five karsd talk station
And a happy Friday Eve to you. Teck Friday with
Dave Hatter tomorrow at six thirty, like it is every
Friday in the meantime. One more with I heard me
the aviation expert Jay Ratliffe. I understand that Air Canada
strike was over which impacted what one hundred thousand people
or something like that is is it dust settled?

Speaker 15 (02:32:36):
Well, it's a three day strike with the flight of
tennants resolved, but the actual number is closer to five
hundred thousand passengers. Now keep in mind when you have
that many people that are displaced and most of the
flights during the busy summer travel season are filled, it's
becoming next to a nightmare to try to get all

(02:32:57):
these people to where they want to go. And when
I hear from people around the country saying, hey, Jay,
you know this is what's happened to me. What options
do I have? You know, a lot of times, let's
say you're trying to get from here to your vacation
in Orlando and you can't get there because all the
flights into Orlando are filled a lot of times it
comes down to, as you and I've discussed, get me
to Tampa, get me to Daytona Beach, get me to

(02:33:19):
Saint Pete, get me to you know, some airport close
that I can get to and then I'll drive at
my expense to so I can begin my vacation as
soon as possible. Or you know, you're trying to get
back to Cincinnati, get me to you know, Louisville, Lexington,
Date and Columbus and anything close, even Indianapolis. And when
you give the agents that many options, there's a much

(02:33:40):
better chance they're going to be able accommodate you. But look,
you've got a family of four or six they're traveling,
and you've got they're trying to stand by on a flight.
Well there's only two seats. You're not going to break
the family up. So you're waiting for one flight to
have six seats altogether to get everybody accommodated, and the
agents are doing everything they can. The problem is, with
all the flights being filled, there's just not that much

(02:34:01):
of an opportunity for these displaced passengers to be accommodated.

Speaker 1 (02:34:06):
Right, that certainly makes sense. Ripple effect can be understated
on that, all. Right, Boeing seven thirty seven number one
aircraft used aircraft in the entire world. Apparently that's not
going to be the case anymore.

Speaker 15 (02:34:18):
Jay, Oh, no, no, no, it's not. Boeing came out
with that nineteen sixty seven or so, and they built
twelve thousand, two hundred and some of them have been delivered,
and it is. It's the workhorse every I think five
seconds one's taking off or landing somewhere in the world.
It is the workhorse of the industry. What was in
nineteen eighty eight Airbus came out with their A three

(02:34:39):
to twenty that was their competitive aircraft, narrowbody that was
supposed to compete with the Boeing seven thirty seven. Well,
Airbus has made twelve thousand whatever they're twenty three aircraft behind,
so they've almost produced as many aircraft as Boeing, as
far as that. So now it's going to be the
A three twenty is going to be the workhorse. But

(02:35:03):
the all time, all time is the DC three back
in the nineteen thirties, the first aircraft to navigate at night.
Sixteen thousand plus of those were made. In fact, at
one time, eighty percent of the people that flew in
the world flew onto DC three, So it was first
aircraft navigate at night, and blah, blah blah, all the
boring things that you know, most people don't care about.

(02:35:23):
But yeah, that's the mama of them all. As far
as the airplane, that was the biggest workhorse. But you know,
Airbus has really closed the gap. If you think Boeing
has been building the seven thirty seven since nineteen sixty
seven and Airbus didn't starts on nineteen eighty eight, and
they are going to be blown by Boeing here pretty quick,

(02:35:43):
and it's going to displace the seven thirty seven as
being the workhorse of the industry.

Speaker 1 (02:35:47):
How about that Times are changing for bowing aircraft. All right,
let's end on the hub delays, which we always do.

Speaker 3 (02:35:54):
Jay.

Speaker 1 (02:35:54):
What's looked like out there for air travel?

Speaker 15 (02:35:56):
Well, fortunately the erin is staying off the the coast
and that's going to help us quite a bit. As
far as hubs that are going to be impacted today,
most of the inclement weather that's really going to hammer
some places is nowhere near a hub. So as a result,
we're going to see those afternoon aggravating pop up thunderstorms

(02:36:16):
that might delay things thirty or forty minutes. So, just
as we had last week, it's going to be a
good day of flying. There's still going to be turbulence
out there, so when you're flying, please keep your seat
belts fast about you. But it's going to be the
day to fly, and if you pick the day, biggest
challenge just get to the airport on time. That means
two hours before departure.

Speaker 1 (02:36:33):
There you go, Jay rat L, I've always appreciate our
conversations and the time you spend with my listeners to
me every week. I'll look forward to next Thursday and
another edition of the air Traffic Report from you, my friend.
Have a wonderful week and weekend. Okay you two, Poul,
Thank you sir, always a pleasure. Eight fifty five ifty
five K City Talk Station in studio Our health experts
George Renaman and Keith Tennanfield great great conversation. Restore Wellness

(02:36:55):
dot org is where you find George and Keith some
good information on their health related pace h Ken cob
or fop President City Solicitor for reasons, Well, I know
it's political, but by what authority did the city solicitor
order the police to charge the man who got slapped
before being beaten down? Still looking for the authority on
that one, but anyway, she did and they did, so

(02:37:18):
he's been charged. Police museum not allowed to move to
the museum center. Say the museum center people who can't
reconcile the Holocaust or something with the wonderful message that
the Cincinnti Police Museum provides. Plus, of course my conversation
with Jay Ratliff, it's right there fifty five krs dot com.
Tune in tomorrow at least, I hope you can. Jay
are the return of Tech Friday's Dave Hatter, Joe Strecker.
Glad to have you back where you blong. Thank you
for what you do. Folks, have a great day. Don't

(02:37:40):
go away.

Speaker 15 (02:37:40):
Glenbeck's next President Trump made clear that a peaceful resolution
was possible if a.

Speaker 13 (02:37:45):
Ran agreed to give up its nuclear weapons ambitions.

Speaker 9 (02:37:48):
Another update at the top of the hour fifty five krz.

Speaker 1 (02:37:52):
The talk station

Brian Thomas News

Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Stuff You Should Know
My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder with Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark

My Favorite Murder is a true crime comedy podcast hosted by Karen Kilgariff and Georgia Hardstark. Each week, Karen and Georgia share compelling true crimes and hometown stories from friends and listeners. Since MFM launched in January of 2016, Karen and Georgia have shared their lifelong interest in true crime and have covered stories of infamous serial killers like the Night Stalker, mysterious cold cases, captivating cults, incredible survivor stories and important events from history like the Tulsa race massacre of 1921. My Favorite Murder is part of the Exactly Right podcast network that provides a platform for bold, creative voices to bring to life provocative, entertaining and relatable stories for audiences everywhere. The Exactly Right roster of podcasts covers a variety of topics including historic true crime, comedic interviews and news, science, pop culture and more. Podcasts on the network include Buried Bones with Kate Winkler Dawson and Paul Holes, That's Messed Up: An SVU Podcast, This Podcast Will Kill You, Bananas and more.

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.