Episode Transcript
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0:00
Here we are fine Friday night, the weekend is here, a little earlier
0:03
than expecting. A red Dodgers game that didn't go the distance technically doesn't count.
0:11
And news about Novelvie Marte kicked to the curb Brady Days testing positive for
0:18
the pets that is the performance enhancing drugs. So there is that, And
0:26
well, here we are, the weekend is here, Kevin Cargan and joining
0:29
us. We'll talk on movies, what is new, And of course it's
0:31
a big Oscar movie weekend, so I'm sure I want some picks for the
0:34
Oscars and stuff coming up after the ten o'clock report about ten oh seven or
0:37
so. If you're keeping score at home. Never good, by the way,
0:41
where they were tonight at the Dodgers place, and you get lightning going
0:48
on there at Camelback Ranch in Phoenix. They don't get a lot of rain
0:51
last year. If I'm not mistaken for spring training in Cactus League action,
0:56
I caught two or three of these games that ended up being ain out or
1:00
called or just not happened in some fashion. And you normally think, well,
1:06
the desert, how often could that possibly happened? Well, apparently odds
1:08
are pretty good. If I'm supposed to be here after, it could happen
1:12
during. So there is that. Tomorrow though, they'll be back at it,
1:17
and I think they have they'll be at the Diamond's Back Diamondbacks Place at
1:22
three ten. So there is that. And that's a Salt Riverfield's a talking
1:26
stick in Scottsdale. A lot of people, good number of people that I
1:30
know have either already spent a week or two in the desert catching some baseball
1:34
and seeing the Reds go to work, and about what is it just about
1:37
halfway through or so the spring if I'm not mistaken, but gett An Echine
1:42
closer to opening day in the Finley Market Parade, or Jim Scott the Honor
1:46
Mary Grand Marshal if you will be in that convertible as I understand it,
1:49
which will be nice to see him. You got Pokey Reese and Dmitri Young
1:53
also going to be in doing their things. So that's kind of cool.
1:57
And getting closer to more consistent warm weather this whole spring. It's jacked with
2:02
my head when it comes to like figuring out where we are. I mean
2:07
here it is the eighth of March, and it's feeling closer to like April.
2:12
I don't know what that means for the weeks ahead. We'll just have
2:14
to wait and see how it goes. But whatever you're doing, hopefully you're
2:16
doing all right. And if you were expecting Reds and Dodgers, you're not
2:20
alone. So were they, but they're done because of lightning. A little
2:23
bit of rain, but lightning and that scary stuff. If you're in a
2:27
ballpark in a you know, clustered seating and a whole lot of people,
2:31
but no place to really go when it comes to cover. There a lot
2:35
of those spring training ballparks, whether it's in the desert in Arizona or a
2:39
cactus league there or grapefruit stuff in Florida. It's pretty much the same way.
2:45
A number of things I want to get into. I mentioned Kevin Carr coming up after ten, and I don't know how much people want to get
2:53
into this. It's Friday night. I don't. I don't. I don't know that it's fun. I know Stone Shields is like, dude, you
2:59
know, I don't know. Dan Carol covered it last night. You know that there was the whole state of the Union. We can get into it
3:07
if you'd like to for a few minutes. We can do that for a couple We'll open up the phones. Five point three seven four nine, seven,
3:13
eight hundred, the big one. I'll just ask you flat out,
3:17
And it doesn't matter where you fall as far as your persuasion of political ideology
3:23
or affiliation or whatever, because it doesn't matter. But if you spend time
3:27
watching that State of the Union address, it was unlike anyone that I had
3:31
seen. And President Biden seemed feisty, seemed fired up, seemed to be
3:37
talking loudly in a serious way. Because I think a lot of times people
3:42
talk about how he sort of mumbles or gets real quiet at times, or
3:46
gets lost. He seemed focused. I've seen people posting things saying they think
3:50
he was hopped up on some type of medication or whatever. I think that's
3:53
probably common for a lot of people, whether it's a drinking a whole bunch
3:57
of caffeine or maybe something else. I can either confirmed and I I don't
4:00
have any knowledge of that being the case. But he certainly went at his
4:04
predecessor. He did not mention Trump at all, but certainly alluded to the
4:09
predecessor, which would be now looking for a second term. President Trump,
4:14
formerly the guy who occupied that White House on Pennsylvania Avenue. If I went
4:18
three seven, four, nine, eight hundred, the Big One talk back
4:21
the iHeartRadio app. You can click on that microphone. If you watched,
4:26
Were you surprised, were you impressed? Were you dissatisfied? I think the
4:31
way it plays out really for a lot of people. And I've talked to
4:34
some friends and some family about this as well, even the neighbor in the
4:38
rain talking while walking the dog earlier. It seems that if you were on
4:43
one side of the aisle the way many stood up and clapped and applauded in
4:46
an ovation sort of form, or were on the other side of the aisle
4:49
sitting for the majority of that speech such that it was that address, if
4:56
you will, that seemed like a campaign rally. They were a sitting on
5:00
their hands, sometimes heckling and whatever else. And you know, we're in
5:04
a weird place when it comes to decorum or lack of decorum, lack of
5:09
respect for anyone who stands at that podium and speaks. Apparently, I don't
5:14
know when we'll get around that. But all in all, I think it was a pretty well crafted speech for a guy in his eighties delivering it the
5:21
way he did. I don't know many people in their forties, to be
5:26
honest, who could stand up there. I didn't see him take any drinks
5:29
of water or anything, which I thought it was weird. I would have had to stop take a drink, survey the room before continuing. And he
5:35
just went at it, just you know, sort of screaming and doing whatever.
5:40
It was certainly a lot of cuts and clips in that. And what
5:46
I mean by that it seemed very clear that a lot of those lines planned
5:49
in the way that he set them up and delivered them is so that whether
5:54
it's social media, be it, you know, any of the meta properties,
5:57
the instagrams, the tiktoks, you know, the ex Twitter, whatever
6:01
it is to be able to put in ads for television, maybe even some
6:04
radio. I guess probably a good number of those comments, clips, statements,
6:10
or whatever else with the cloud cheering and yelling four more years. I
6:15
don't know how that translates over time. But we'll have to wait and see.
6:18
But there you go. We'll see if it is President Biden's last or
6:25
if it is just the last of this term before he gets re hired.
6:30
If you will or renewed. Come November, I would imagine it's going to
6:33
get nasty, colorful, heated and over the top, and the weeks and
6:39
months ahead we'll have to wait and see exactly how it plays out. Love
6:42
your take on it, though either way, I think it's one of those
6:46
things where we're in a place it's strange, and it has been for a
6:49
while, I guess, so I shouldn't really be surprised. And I don't
6:55
care who occupies the office. I support the present and you want the president
7:01
to do well because if the president does well, the country does well.
7:03
Whether it was Trump when he was there, whether it was Bush before,
7:08
whether it was Clinton, whether or now it's Biden. Whoever's gotten next between
7:12
Trump and Biden will have to wait and see. But that's my take.
7:15
In my view, it seems to be I think a minority view because I've
7:18
talked to people on one side or the other, and it seems a lot
7:21
of times it's one side hopes that the other side fails, face plants,
7:26
takes a dive, takes it in the chin, or what have you.
7:31
And I don't know that that's good for the country, but it seems to
7:33
be where we are right now, which is somewhat problematic and disheartening to a
7:39
point, but it's where we are, so we'll have to wait and see
7:43
how it goes. Even though you may have different views and different opinions,
7:47
and I may have different views and opinions of this president, the last president,
7:50
or whoever's next and down the line. The bottom line is you want
7:54
America to do well right, You want the United States to succeed. You
7:58
want growth and jobs. You want growth in the happiness, in quality of
8:01
life, in peace in the world. And I think that's a pretty basic
8:07
common sense goal for the country and for the world. And we lead the
8:11
world. So we'll see exactly how it goes. You sound off if you
8:15
want to. I got other stuff to get to. If I went three
8:16
some eight hundred, the Big One, talk Back, the iHeartRadio app,
8:20
you can speak your mind. We'll take a break, we'll come back handle
8:24
some business. If you're looking for Reds and Dodgers, so am I.
8:28
But it's not happening. Rain, which came with lightning, put the kaibash
8:33
on the action tonight at the Dodgers place in Arizona, the camel Back Ranch
8:39
in Phoenix, Red's on the road was a good start for them. They
8:45
were leading for nothing. They called it due to lightning. Effectively, as
8:50
the Dodgers were looking to come up in the bottom of the fifth, it
8:52
didn't go five. It doesn't count as a game in the spring let alone.
8:56
Obviously, it's an exhibition in the first place. It's just a lot
8:58
of people getting a tune up, getting worked out and ready to go for
9:03
their opening day, whether it's here at the Great American Ballpark for our Reds
9:05
or LA and the Dodgers doing what they do. Quick break, come back.
9:09
I want to know what you think about last night's Address of the Nation
9:13
the State of the Union by current President of Biden on a Friday night sterlingk
9:18
Kevin Carr coming up after ten o'clock. We'll got some fun to do as
9:22
well as it is a full on Friday night weekend experience on the Nation station
9:26
home of the Reds. Yeah, game cancel tonight. Back at it tomorrow
9:31
in the desert taking on the Diamondbacks and Cactus League stuff here on seven hundred
9:35
WLW. I'm a firefighter nine first winning forecast on the Big One on a
9:41
Friday night, Red's Dodgers reigned out, primarily due to lightning in Arizona at
9:46
the Dodgers place. In case you were expecting Dodgers, I was too Reds
9:50
and Dodgers getting at at Ridge. We're leading for nothing and going into the
9:54
bottom of the fifth. Nick Martinez pitched four solid innings, I mean struck
10:00
out six and that was with Freddie Freeman and show hey Otani, I mean
10:05
the list of that. I mean they're like month sye. I mean,
10:09
hey, we're big sticks for sure in the Dodgers, big dollar lineup.
10:15
And Nick Martinez looked and at least it sounded fantastic with the call with Tommy
10:20
Thraw and Jim Day. A little bit earlier, we got rained here in
10:22
the Tri State as well, down to fifty two to night warm up a
10:26
week bit beyond that Tomorrow, fifty four clear into Saturday afternoon into the evening,
10:33
forty six on Sunday, clear skies warmer back into the mid fifties come
10:35
Monday. It's fifty six right now. It's your severe Weather station seven hundred
10:39
WLW. Glad you're along. Kevin Carr going to join us. We'll talk
10:43
on movies, what's new? And I think he's got some picks for the
10:46
Oscars Big Oscar weekend, and we spring ahead. I don't know about you.
10:50
I'm working tomorrow night unexpectedly, and then I got to be back in
10:54
here relatively early. I mean, for what it's worth, noing, not
10:56
super early, but really it's like eleven whatever the hell the real time is.
11:00
I don't know. We spring ahead tomorrow night, we fall back in
11:03
the fall daylight saving time issues, and we'll talk on that a little bit
11:07
later because there's a whole lot of people looking to push to make that a
11:11
regular thing again, which they tried years ago and apparently it was not good,
11:16
but we're gonna still try to do it. I just hate the darkness
11:18
early, you know what I mean. I like the long sunshiny light days,
11:22
and warm weather which you can't control the weather, but you can certainly
11:26
control the time a little bit. I mean a little bit. Anyway.
11:30
Anyway, if I went three, seven, four, nine, eight hundred,
11:33
the big one to open up the phone, give you a chance to sound off. If you caught last night stated the union address, it was
11:37
unlike anyone that I had ever seen, and I've seen a few over the
11:41
years. President Biden going right at his predecessor, didn't mention Trump by name,
11:46
but clearly was calling him out as well as a lot of conservatives on
11:50
that side of the aisle, sitting on their hands for most of it and
11:54
bringing up issues of border and that deal that was negotiated and effectively done that.
11:58
Apparently then they put the brakes on because President Trump was a former president.
12:03
Trump was like no, no, Noah, and Biden sort of laid out there, rightly or wrongly, and the idea that if in fact they
12:09
signed that deal would be a win for Biden looked not so great for Trump.
12:11
Trump was like hell no, and Republicans followed his lead. And that's
12:16
whether no matter where you fall politically, that's the reality of the way it
12:20
apparently played out. I just want to know what you think of that speech
12:22
last night. Do you feel better about Biden and his capabilities and his function.
12:26
Do you buy the idea that he was hopped up on goofballs the way
12:30
it had been reported or allusion to that or otherwise. So I went three
12:33
seven, four, nine, eight hundred, the big one. See here,
12:37
it's been holding alongst Tommy, It's get to uh Monroe. Tommy first,
12:43
Jobe after that, and we'll try to fit as many as we can
12:45
and before ten o'clock in the news, right here on the big one,
12:48
Tommy, how are you with Sterling? Appreciate you holding. What's up this
12:50
fine Friday night. I'm doing good. How you doing, Sterling? No
12:54
complaints? Brother, Hey man, I listened to you all the time.
12:58
I don't always agree with what you have to say, but you hit the
13:03
nail on the head when you said that whoever's president of the United States should
13:09
have the support of the people. Yeah, and that that's profound. And
13:18
I just wanted to call you and tell you that I don't always agree with
13:22
you. I always listen to you, but that is one thing that you
13:26
hit it one. Man. I appreciate the kind words. And it be
13:30
boring if we all agreed with each other all the time. I mean,
13:33
I'm right most of the time, but that's always the case. We all
13:35
think we're right until we're proven wrong, so the way it goes, Tommy,
13:39
I appreciate you, man, Thank you for listening, being a part of the show. All. I have a good night you too, take
13:43
care of yourself to college. Hell joby, it's been a while you were
13:46
sterling on the big One. What did you think of that speech last night?
13:50
Well, it's an interesting one, intriguing. I don't know if it's
13:52
going to be par course for what our president will be able to do.
13:58
As far as that high level octane that made me tired, I don't think.
14:03
I mean, this is gonna sound weird, but I don't think I could have gone an hour like that, and I'm in my early fifties.
14:09
Well, here's the thing. I'm sure you know this, but politics is
14:15
really directed by emotion. I mean, ever since you have Kennedy against Nixon.
14:20
Obviously Kennedy won because of emotion and appearance. So we have that with
14:28
Joe Biden. He's trying to stir up his constituency, which makes sense.
14:33
Sure, I just don't know if he's going to have a long lasting ability
14:37
to do that over the next few months. Yeah, he's got to do
14:41
that through November, or at least to the first week in November. Right,
14:45
that's a long haul every single day. It kind of reminds me of
14:48
a candidate with you know that movie with Robert Redford. I haven't seen it
14:54
in a long time, as I remember when it first came out. I
14:56
had to revisit that naturally see maybe some real truth to that, like a
15:01
comparison or whatever else too. It's tough. Well, there's a sequence when
15:05
they're on the road and they're just busting, but to be able to get
15:07
to all these different cities and he's trying to remember which one he's in it
15:11
it's hard. You ever been to a concert, I mean Trump has done
15:16
this numerous times where he's been caught on film addressing people and mentioned the wrong
15:20
town and the crowd gets really weird. And it has to be difficult from
15:22
city to city, town to town when you're barnstorming. I guess this is
15:26
the right term to use for that. But have you ever been to a concert and had a you know, an artist on stage address the wrong city
15:33
in the midst of doing a show. I've had that happen too, maybe
15:35
three times in seeing shows in and around the tri State and so forth.
15:39
And you will never shut up a crowd faster than going how do you not know what's Cincinnati? Just you know, they weren't fort Wayne the night before
15:46
Indianapolis or Dating the night before that. That's it doesn't go over well well.
15:50
It's really cool when it's opposing cities. Oh yeah, that's true too.
15:56
That's a whole other thing. Joeby I appreciate the call man, Thank
15:58
you, So I get one more here? So maybe both did maybe get
16:02
two more in here before Larry, it's your turn with Sterling. What'd you think of that address last night? Good or bad for Biden? I liked
16:10
it. I liked it. I thought it was good. I'm still not a huge fan of you know how he thinks about immigration. But what what
16:21
the reason I call it is? And my whole issue with politics now,
16:26
especially if the one of your callers said that that the president should have the
16:32
support of the people. Correct, And anyone that has sat in the first
16:38
chair knows you're never gonna make everyone happy. Oh, it's impossible, correct,
16:47
impossible the way I think of it, And again I consider myself in
16:52
the middle. I don't think I'm left or right. The way I look
16:56
at it is the president should be the president. That's how it works.
17:03
Yeah, we all collectively hire him. Right. And my fear is my
17:10
fear is if Trump gets in and if you're just a regular Joe Schmo and
17:15
you disagree with a policy or something that he doesn't. He don't. You
17:25
don't have anything to do with you. Right, you're either with him or
17:30
you're against him. Yeah, that's how I did. It's certainly laid out
17:33
that way for other lawmakers, and it's been laid out that way when he's
17:38
talked about one city or another in the politics in the maybe reigning in one
17:44
community or another. And yeah, that I agree with you. That's that's
17:47
a problem. Uh. And you would hope that that doesn't, you know,
17:49
carry itself over to actually doing the job if he's rehired as president come
17:55
November. Uh. Yeah, I want to go ahead, finish your thought.
17:57
I'm sorry, you mind if I throw one more thing? I am
18:00
you got thirty seconds go the easiest thing in the world. And they've they've
18:07
lost their way with politics the word compromise. Yeah right, that's right.
18:15
Everybody hurts a little bit and we get ahead. Yeah, take abortionhit.
18:18
I'll set give me ten seconds. You got one end and the other end
18:22
you disagree, Okay. You guys worked towards the middle to find a place
18:26
where you can both see it absolutely makes great sense. That's all. Thanks
18:33
for Thanks for getting me on. Hey, I appreciate the call and the
18:36
perspective. Thank you, Lary, take care of yourself. Ten o'clock reports
18:40
straight away. Kevin Carr on the other side, we'll revisit list daylight savings
18:42
time we spring ahead comes Sunday. So much to do, so little time,
18:47
even with extra show because Reds and Dodgers rained out in the desert a
18:52
game that didn't actually happen. You may have heard four innings and a half,
18:55
but it didn't really happen. It didn't exist. It's weird but true.
19:00
Time for new dot com. Here we are Friday night, Sterling seven
19:06
hundred WLW. How you doing. You're expecting Rochin Dodgers. They played four
19:12
and a half, Reds led for nothing and then well and then at Rains
19:22
and then at the lightning and Nick Martinez. This incredible four inning, six
19:29
strikeout start for the Reds. Poof went away because it just didn't account.
19:33
It didn't exist. It's just the way it goes. It didn't go a
19:37
full five, and it's an exhibition game anyway. But it was a good
19:40
outing just the same. And Jonathan India played first, made a strong defensive
19:45
play out there and still working on bad stuff as well, so we'll have
19:49
to figure out how that goes. A good number of other things to get
19:52
to between now and midnight on a Friday, sterling back again tomorrow night.
19:56
I will be in Sunday afternoon and it's a big weekend. Uh. You
20:00
got the the Oscars come Sunday and a guy who knows from Oscars and Panda.
20:04
I don't know if he used to work at the Columbus Zoo or the
20:07
Cincinnati Zoo or what all, but he knows from the Kung Fu Panda.
20:10
Anyway, he's my buddy from the Black Guys at the movies dot Com and
20:14
of course the Chubby and Stick podcast. Kevin Carr, how are you house everything? I'm going to the Oscars this weekend. Yeah, that's news to
20:19
me. I know better than that. You were all geeked up. You're
20:22
like, no, dude, I have predection from the Oscar starlet. I
20:26
was like, okay, all right, all right, I am fleshed with
20:29
Oscars right now. That's that's pretty good. Brain is just like spitting out
20:33
Oscar trivia. That's pretty good. That's pretty good. Will Kung Fu Pan
20:37
to be nominated for next year? No? No, no, no,
20:40
no way, too early to be nominated the animated stuff. Generally, this
20:44
stuff doesn't come until later. Yeah, you know, like this year,
20:47
the big one that's probably gonna win Animated Feature is Across the Spider Verse,
20:52
which is a really good movie. If you've not seen that, check it
20:55
out because and here's the thing with with animation. Animation honestly gives a much
21:00
more authentic, like classic, I guess, comic book centric view of animation.
21:11
And if you want to see really good, solid Spider Man animation,
21:15
go to those Spider Verse movies. I mean, yeah, you know,
21:18
Spider Man Far from Home and what was the last one, No Way Home
21:22
where he was going through all the different universes. That was cool. But
21:26
the really great stuff, the innovative stuff, is done in animation, and
21:30
they did some great animation in the Spider Verse movie, which is, like
21:33
I said, that's probably gonna win the OSCAR for Best Animated Film. Nice.
21:37
I always like seeing like the animation and the short stuff, the short
21:41
films or what have you. And I guess there's live action as well,
21:44
which is sort of how they play the shorts and sort of split those up,
21:47
right yeah, well yeah, and in the shorts actually right now, you might still be able to find them out in the theaters. If not,
21:52
you can go to shorts dot tv and you can rent them. And
21:56
here's the thing when it comes to short stuff. You look, everybody knows
22:00
about Oppenheimer. No nobody needs to beat the drum for Oppenheimer. We all
22:03
know that that happened. It made like a billion dollars in the theaters.
22:07
Same with Barbie, made a little bit more. But ween't about nuclear weapons.
22:12
But the short films, the short films are actually those are labors of
22:17
love from people. And I love the short films. Every time they have
22:22
Oscar blocks, you can go to the theaters and watch them in blocks of
22:26
animation or live action or documentary. I think now it's gotten to the point
22:30
that they're on shorts dot TV. You can rent them and they're good to
22:33
watch. The only the only thing I have to say is they're they're heavy
22:40
if they deal with some really heavy subjects, So they are kind of risk
22:45
cutter type stories. You're not gonna come out just like, you know,
22:48
singing a song and dancing a jig or anything like that. But but they're
22:52
great movies. And you know, if you think documentaries don't make much money.
22:56
The short film documentaries make even less than that, so they they're worth
23:02
being seen. So I suggest anyone who likes short film, the short film
23:07
format go check those out. There. Got TV. He's Kevin Carr,
23:11
Fat Guy's the movies talking Oscars this weekend, Big show with Sterling on seven
23:15
hundred WLW. I guess if we can't handicap or you can't handicap all of
23:22
this Oscar stuff, I mean they give away a ton of different awards,
23:25
right, I mean the show is known to last forever, and they do
23:29
a bunch of stuff off the air too, which is also this year they're
23:33
even doing longer. They're like starting it at seven, which which is dumb
23:37
because this is Hollywood's like sort of you know, egocentric view of things that
23:45
say, well we want more, no, no, no, no,
23:48
make it, make it. You make your ceremony like an hour and a half and get in and get out. But they do make it longer.
23:53
So yeah, you're gonna have a long ceremony this year in any like slaps
23:57
or smacks expected any you know, fist to cost any possibility of some more
24:02
weirdness or anything else along those lines. Honestly, I don't think so.
24:06
I think it's gonna be a relatively smooth Oscars. I would say the most
24:11
boring Oscars that we've seen in a while, because I don't think we're gonna
24:15
have people reading the wrong names for Best Picture. I don't think we're gonna
24:19
have streakers. I don't think we're gonna have somebody coming up on the stage
24:22
and punching somebody in the face or anything like that. Part of that is
24:26
because you know, if you went back to when Schindler's List, like thirty
24:30
years ago, when Schindler's List was sweeping the Oscars, no one wanted to
24:34
make fun of shintless you can that's not something to make fun of. And
24:38
Oppenheimer's kind of the same thing. You know, it's about the nuclear bomb,
24:42
and you know all the weight and pretension of that. So and I
24:48
really think Oppenheimer's gonna sweep most of its categories. But that's gonna kind of
24:55
make it kind of a boring year. You know, there's not gonna be anything explosive, no pun intended with Oppenheimer, but there's nothing that's going to
25:03
be like out of the ordinary that we've we've had in recent years. So
25:08
I mean, where do you want to start here? You want to start
25:11
with Best Movie? I mean, I don't know how. There's the actor,
25:14
there's actorists they're leading and then supporting, right, and then there's Best
25:18
Picture, which is like the best movie of the year, supposedly. I
25:22
And we've discussed this before, and my take on all of this has always
25:25
been, it's nice to give me a collection of what is considered to be
25:29
the best of the best, so at least it narrows down what I have
25:32
to watch. Unlike you, I don't have not made my life spending hours
25:36
upon hours watching things in time that I'll never get back. Even if it's
25:40
horrible. You can't walk out necessarily, so it saves me time. And
25:44
I know what is like a tip top out there? Do you have any
25:48
doubts of like who got screwed in this deal when it comes to nominations?
25:52
Do you think of anybody? Well? I generally don't like to go into
25:56
pubs because if you say snubs, you're basically taking five people in the category
26:02
and you're saying this person isn't worth it, right, maybe, and that
26:07
betting for Naiad. Let's get kick her out at some point I'm not a
26:11
big fan of hers, but everyone else I think totally deserves to be in
26:15
that field. You know, you even see that when they have the Best
26:18
Picture and there's ten Best pictures and there's five Best Director nominees, you're gonna
26:22
have five people left out just this. The numbers game works out that way,
26:26
and I think every movie is you can make an argument for having them
26:33
being there. And Oppenheimer's kind of the one that's gonna win. I think
26:36
that's gonna sweep. It's gonna get a lot of the like technical awards like
26:40
Best Sound, Best Editing, and that kind of stuff. I think it's
26:44
gonna win Best Picture. I think Christopher Nolan's gonna win Best Director, and
26:48
then we're never gonna get the Nolan fanboys to shut up at that point.
26:53
I do think it's gonna for most of the down races, it's gonna win.
26:56
I mean, Killy Murphy's I think gonna win for Best Actor, especially
27:00
over Paul Giamatti. As the great as Paul Giamoni was, there's kind of
27:04
a bias towards drama in Best Actor category. And Jamidiy for those who don't
27:10
know, is in the Holdovers, which is it. Is it a Peacock film or Netflix? I forget where I've seen it. It's focused features,
27:17
so you're gonna probably fight. I think you'll find it on Netflix. Not Netflix, but Peacock. Right now, I'm not one hundred percent sure on
27:22
that one. I think that's it. But Robert Downey Junior is gonna win
27:26
for Best Supporting Actor. When it comes to the Best Actress category and the
27:33
Best Supporting Actress category, that's one I don't think Oppenheimer's gonna win. Oppenheimer's
27:36
not going to get Emily Blunt. I think a lot of people forget who was nominated. That's going to be Divine Joy Randolph for The Holdovers and for
27:44
Best Actress. If you would asked me a month ago, I would have
27:47
said Emma Stone for Poor Things. But really the momentum seems to be really
27:55
leaning towards Lily Gladstone for Killers of the Flower Moon. Yeah, so I
28:00
really think she's gonna pick that up, which is probably gonna be one of
28:02
the few that that film actually wins. You know, and the down races
28:07
are though those can be argued are Barbie's not gonna get much, Billy Eilish
28:14
will win for Best Song, which is a Barbie film for it's a song
28:19
named BARBIEO What Was I Made For? And I think it has a chance
28:23
to win Best Production Design and Best Costume Design, But it's going up against
28:27
Poor Things, which is also some brilliant work in terms of the artistry of
28:33
design in those films. But that's where I think Barbie's gonna win. But
28:37
so just just sort of girder loins for Monday seeing all these the patriarchy is
28:44
still alive with Barbie not winning a bunch of stuff. But Barbie, Barbie's
28:49
a fun Barbie's a great movie. Barbie's a lot of fun. But it's
28:53
not the you know, it doesn't have that gravitas that people expect for an
28:57
Oscar film. What do you think of Meistro? I mean, obviously there's
29:02
been some nominations with it. I mean, like Poor Things was it was
29:04
a whole world upon it. It was visually it's incredible, Yeah, And
29:11
Maestro is a different kind of circumstance obviously, And Kerry Mulligan is I just
29:15
love her and just about anything. But what do you think of that?
29:18
Well, Well, the thing with Poor Things, I think Poor Things is
29:22
a bit of a challenge because generally, historically Oscar voters haven't been going for
29:26
the sex, and there's a lot of like brazen sex in poor things,
29:32
and I have some issues with some of the stuff that happens to poor things.
29:36
And there's a lot of online discourse about whether it's empowering or whether it's
29:41
exploitative, and we can get into that at a different time. But but
29:45
I think that that's that tends to turn off some academy of voters. But
29:49
I like when it comes to Maestro, I love Meestro. I think Meistro
29:52
is a brilliant movie. I think it's an incredibly impeccably put together the film,
30:00
I mean from a from a like just a cinematic standpoint, but it
30:04
just doesn't have the momentum that I think that Oppenheimer has. But I think
30:08
Kerry Mulligan's great. I mean it's her movie. Really. If you watch
30:12
Maestro as much as Bradley Cooper's all over the film, it's it's Kerry Mulligan's
30:18
film. Yeah, And I can't remember because I'm always thinking ahead as we're
30:21
speaking. It's not that I'm not listening. It really isn't. Thank you
30:26
and and I appreciate that Emily Blunt from Oppenheimer for a supporting actress. Then
30:32
Danielle Brooks is great in the color purple. In Malta Fera, you mentioned
30:37
Barbie, then there's Nyet and Jodie Foster. How many awards does she won?
30:40
She's incredible as always, And then from the Holdovers you mentioned Divine Joy
30:45
Randolph of those who I mean, it is so hard. See, that's
30:48
the thing is like, how do you say you know the rest of your
30:51
losers? But that's not right either, No, no, no, it's
30:53
it's just whoever rises to the top. And it's it's very hard when you're
31:00
like Piggy one out of five, because then you're right, you did get
31:03
to that point where you're kind of saying, well, the four of you are losers and they're not. I mean, as much as you can sit
31:07
there and say, well, you know, it's an honor to be nominated
31:10
and everything like that. You didn't win the Oscar, But I mean I
31:14
loved I was not a fan of Niant, but I love Jodie Foster's performance
31:18
in it. And when it comes to like Danielle Brooks in the color Purple,
31:22
I thought she was fantastic in that, but divine Joy Randolph, there
31:26
was there was nuance there and there was a lot of just just elements to
31:33
it that that that that that was more than just your standard performance, you
31:38
know. And she got a little bit of play earlier this year because she
31:42
was an only murders in the building as the police officer, and so you
31:48
got to see a little bit of range from her. And I think people really want to give some stuff to the holdovers, and that's really the only
31:55
category that that that opens up, because you know, as much as Emily
31:57
Blunt was Emily Blunt, it's a great actor. But let's face it,
32:02
Christopher Nolan can't write female characters worth garbage. I mean, his female characters
32:08
are terrible. And as much as I'd love seeing Florence Pugh's breast in Oppenheimer,
32:15
yes, thank you. I appreciate it. I have it on skills
32:19
store at home, I've got you are a sick, disgusting I can't.
32:23
Oh. I appreciate the female form, don't get me wrong, but I
32:27
have to vilify you for being so beautiful cherist. I mean, you know
32:30
what I mean, I had to beautiful. It's true. Every part of her even or breast. It's true. But as much as I appreciated that
32:36
Christopher Nolan can't write women out of a paper bag, that's what happens.
32:40
What are you gonna do? What are you gonna do? What if I
32:43
not asked you about this before? We quickly get to the Kung Fu Panda,
32:45
because people want to know if they get they're going to be able to drag their kids and sit through it or whatever else anything but else about the
32:50
oscars? How long will it last? Oh like forty eight hours? I
32:53
mean it's still gonna be going on Tuesday morning. Well, I'll just wait
32:58
for the results to be pushed to my phone. What about Kung Fu Panda?
33:01
For Yeah, you know, here's the thing, you know, here's
33:06
here's a crazy piece of of trivia about kung Fu Panda. The first Kung
33:12
Flu Panda came out. My son was born very close to the release date.
33:15
Are you kidding? He is able? He is like going to be
33:20
able to get his driver's license this year. Yeah, that is how old
33:23
the Kung Fu Panda franchise is. And and the Kung Fu pan When the
33:28
first one came out, I thought it was gonna be the worst movie of
33:30
the year. It looks so dumb, but it ended up being one of
33:34
my favorites of the year. It is one of these one note things where
33:37
this fat panda becomes a kung fu master, and you know, I have
33:42
I feel like a kinship to that. I bounce and roll down a hill
33:47
just as easily as po does. You are agile if nothing else, that's
33:51
true as well. You know, give me a couple of advillain in the
33:54
morning. I might need that. But you know, that's that's how it
33:58
works. But by the time me into the fourth film, you're really sort
34:01
of indiminishing returns at that point. Yeah, I mean, let me just
34:06
say this for those who don't know. I mean, there's Jack Black, who's been around seemingly now forever. Aquafina's great Viola Davis and everything. I
34:13
haven't seen anything, and she's so versatile. She's incredible. Uh I would
34:17
love would Yeah, viol with Davies. I want to see her do like
34:23
a screwball comedy. I want to see her do just a completely uproarious,
34:30
raucous like Adam McKay or Fairly Brothers comedy where she is over the top and
34:37
ridiculous because she's always so reserved and I think she's a good enough factor that
34:42
she can do that broad comedy, but no one gives her that. Yeah,
34:45
I'm for that. I paid to see that. I mean, she's
34:47
fantastic. Dustin Hoff and a Brian Cranston of course, Heisenberg and Ian McShane,
34:52
who most people probably know go from Deadwood. But I saw Ian McShane
34:57
the other night in a rerun of Colombo. Oh yeah, no, he
35:01
has like a huge filmography before. Was it Deadwood you mentioned? Now everyone
35:07
knows him from the Western that's true, but no, he he's great and
35:12
they have a great cast in that one. And also I got to put
35:15
out James Hong, who's like ninety five years old, by the way, that's true. James Hong and Brian Cranston played Poe's fathers, because Brian Cranston
35:25
plays a panda who is his biological father, James Hong plays the goose who
35:31
makes noodles, who's his adoptive father, and they kind of have their side
35:36
story and yeah, it's it's kind of unnecessary, but it's a lot of
35:39
fun to listen to the two of them together. I mean, what's amazing.
35:43
By the way, I mean, James Hong has been in like a
35:46
bazillion TV shows, and I mean forever. He's been working since like the
35:51
fifties, right, he's ninety five years old. Man, he's been around
35:55
since Gene Kelly was in Diapers from and still work good for him. Yeah,
36:00
yeah, all right, So Kung Fu Panda four is worth time.
36:04
That's that's surprising. Usually you start going down, like you know, the
36:07
version three, episode five, you're like, really enough, are ready?
36:12
It's not as good as the first one. I mean, it's not as
36:14
good as the first one. Don't get me. It's it's good enough. But the last movie we had for like families and kids as an entertaining sort
36:22
of animation film was a Migration, which was like before Christmas. So yeah,
36:27
it's gonna kill this weekend. It's gonna be huge this weekend. And
36:30
that's I don't know how many more they have left in the franchise, you
36:35
know. I mean, it was a one note joke about a fat panda doing Kung Fu, and they've managed to milk four films out of it.
36:43
So it's just a great visual when you think about it. I mean,
36:45
I would love to go to the National Zoo if they still had their pandas and see him, like just throw it out, that'd be great. Well,
36:50
you've seen have you remember? Watched videos just like search videos of panda.
36:53
That's one of the greatest things. Honestly, you know, as as
36:58
toxic and awful as the Internet is, there are some wonderful things. Go
37:01
to like YouTube and search funny panda videos of panda getting in fights and like
37:07
rolling because pandas don't fight, they like push each other and then roll down
37:12
a hill. That's right, which I think I can handle. Yeah,
37:15
I'm qualified to pull that off too. You would get stuck between twigs and
37:20
stuff because you you're a little lankier than I am. I have this natural
37:24
ability to just find the surface area and hand down to the hill. He's
37:29
the Chubby and Stick podcast. We know who played which part, but it's
37:34
all make believe. It's all entertainment. Devin Carr always sup pleasure, Fat
37:38
guysthmovies dot Com. Thank you hy handicapping the oscars telling us we should go
37:43
see the Kung Fu Pana four. Holy crap. Enjoy the rest of your
37:45
weekend. We appreciate you making time all right, we'll talk for later.
37:49
He's a good man, more sterling coming back, and a whole lot of
37:52
ground to cover between now and midnights. On seven hundred WLW, Hey,
37:55
thanks for taking a look at my car so quickly, WLW. So shields
38:00
producing always better when the white stripes from the radio, don't you think I
38:04
do? Uh? Five hundred the big one and you can talk back,
38:07
you clolling that microphone, the iHeartRadio app maybe streaming there and so fourth give
38:12
you a chance to sound off. Reds in action earlier and Cactus League match
38:15
up against the Dodgers at their place, Camback Mountain, Lightning and rain caused
38:21
to premature end. It was not a complete game. Was not a full
38:24
game? What was not? It didn't even count. Uh. Nick Martinez
38:29
went four solid innings, struck out six against the meat of the Dodgers lineup,
38:35
effectively hitless. They were uh while he was on the hill, which
38:38
is pretty strong, but uh, it doesn't matter. Lightning came, rains
38:44
were not all that much of a thrip that the lightnings a series concern. So they shut that thing down fast and hence here I am a little bit
38:51
earlier getting through stuff appreciate you being here as well. They'll be back out
38:53
of tomorrow taking on those Diamondbacks in the afternoon. I think it's here,
39:00
big one, So there you go. Yeah, let's see. Also,
39:02
Red's infielder Marte, you may have seen this, heard it in the news,
39:07
suspended eight games because he'd been caught and violated the PED policy, that's
39:15
performance enhancing drugs policy. The Reds release earlier said this or their statements said
39:21
below the organization's response to the eighty game suspension infielder and Novelli Marte for testing
39:25
positive for performance hancing substance and violation of Major League Baseball's Joint Drug Prevention and
39:30
Treatment Program. The Reds fully support Major League Baseball's drug policy and its penalties,
39:38
and we have no further comment. So that's sort of how that played
39:42
out. So eighty games away, we'll see what the Reds do and along
39:45
the lines with that, and we can certainly sound off on it. We
39:47
got a number of other things I want to get to, one of which
39:51
is tomorrow night will spring ahead. The last several years and I remember a
39:54
lot of talk about it as much as the last couple, but there's been
39:59
a push a move, a lot of lawmakers, a lot of general population
40:02
reaching out to our representatives in Ohio and the Bluegrass Indiana and the DC about
40:10
trying to move ahead with the idea of a permanent daylight savings time. And
40:15
I like more daylight when I'm awake, obviously, and when I'm asleep,
40:20
I couldn't care less. However, there are issues with it, and there's
40:23
talk of security issues and traffic issues and kids in school and darkness and everything
40:29
else. It's not just an emotional thing, though there is a part of
40:31
that with more daylight and mental issues and people just having a better state of
40:37
mind. One I want to know how much does the time change bother you?
40:40
Is it a concern? I mean, it's just an hour for some
40:45
reason, and this is really never made any sense. And tomorrow will be
40:47
a conversation with a sleep expert, which I'll have here on the big One.
40:52
I'll be back on nine to midnight tomorrow night. In the spring,
40:55
when we spring ahead for some reason, and this goes back to when I
40:59
was a kid in school, we lose the hour, and you would think
41:02
on paper that that would be more problematic than to falling back and getting an
41:07
extra hour right I wake up, And maybe it's just the fact that we're
41:12
getting into warmer weather and longer days naturally, just because of the way the
41:15
earth moves around and so forth, I wake up earlier. I don't have
41:22
as much of a problem in the spring as I do in the fall. But I think that's a darkness issue, in the cold weather issue here in
41:27
the tri s Data, which has been home more of my life than not
41:30
here in the Miami Valley. But I'm just curious, how does that affect
41:35
you? Should it be permanent? We spring ahead and just keep it ahead,
41:38
like right now where the Reds played tonight, a game that didn't happen
41:43
technically, all four and a half or five and a half innings of it
41:45
here or four and a half innings of it here on the Big One went
41:49
for not but they are two hours behind us right now. When we spring
41:52
ahead, it goes back to three. They don't move. They're always the
41:57
springing ahead kind of daylight savings times. Indiana for a period of time was
42:01
like that. I don't know how and when that changed necessarily, But wherever
42:07
you are and whatever you do, do you have a problem with the springing ahead and losing the hour you got to get up earlier technically, or I
42:15
guess you're getting up the same time, but you're up earlier. But it
42:17
could be challenging with less sleep to get to work, to get to school,
42:21
to get to church tomorrow, whatever else you've got going on. Five point three, seven four nine, seven, eight hundred The Big One.
42:27
Do you want daylight savings time to stay? Do you have health problems with
42:31
it? There are people who have more issues with stress, in heart attack
42:36
and rushing, in the missing of sleep. I don't know. I could
42:40
use an extra couple hours. Hell, we just had our free day with
42:44
It's a leap beer day, right, just a couple of days ago.
42:47
We had the twenty ninth of February, which is the bonus Day. It's
42:50
a free day which you may or may not have technically been paid for,
42:54
but that's to make up for natural change in time as we move through anyway,
42:59
So you know, was it really a free day? It's tough to say. Sue's first with Sterling on the Big One, your chance to get
43:05
interactive as well. Seven hundred The Big One. Sue, how are you
43:07
tonight? I'm doing fine, but I'll tell you what I don't like about
43:15
it. It seems like it's too dark in the mornings, and it does
43:21
make you crabier. And well, I'm in charge of doing our dog because
43:28
my sister has upstairs and it's it's hard to get the dog out. And
43:35
I think people are more crabier. And I'll tell you my time. Look
43:39
the other night and when it's going to be six o'clock. Now it's at
43:46
night, it's still going to be kind of shadowy in everything. And also
43:53
one, well, the only thing I would like about it, you can
43:57
take a walk later. Yeah, it keeps it. The clock changes,
44:00
but the sun's doing whatever the sun does. Right. We just think that
44:04
you can't change time. They tell you you can, but I mean,
44:07
you know it's going to do what it does right, right, right.
44:10
And also that still confuses me with the baseball how that goes, because since
44:17
they have the pitsclock, it should be done earlier. But you still want
44:22
to finish all you guys by midnight. Well I don't know, Like tonight
44:28
the rain out, it came earlier. I'm like rolling out, like yeah,
44:30
I'm like I got to hit the gas. I gotta get there otherwise
44:32
I'm doing the show on the phone on the road, which in the rain
44:36
is not good. So yeah, oh well, anyway, I'm glad I
44:42
got to call you in on that. And if you hear from Chick,
44:45
you can telling Sue called you and complained about daylight saying savings time. I
44:51
say, stick on Eastern Standard all year long. Gotcha say? So you
44:55
want to ride out the early darkness and figure that it will work itself naturally.
45:00
I got you, Sue. Thank you. Well, I'll mention that to Chick. Most people are for the daylight savings time, where you spring
45:06
ahead and leave it there and just keep it that way. What do you think? Scott to Mangel, we go with Sterling on seven hundred WLW.
45:12
What's up, hey, Sterling? So I've spent most of my life here
45:17
in the Tri State also, but I did spend ten years in South Florida.
45:23
And one of the things down that South Florida does is they don't start
45:30
school and they don't start work before eight thirty nine o'clock in the morning,
45:37
So it doesn't have as much effect on you as say around here in Ohio,
45:43
where jobs typically start between six thirty to seven thirty, school start six
45:49
thirty to seven thirty. It's always daylight because they start a little later in
45:53
the morning down there, so it's not as big a effect. That makes
45:59
sense, Brananda, No, that you know. I tell you what, Really, it messed with me in a different way. I went to I
46:04
was lucky enough to get to Europe over the years a couple of times,
46:07
and I was in England, in London proper and late at night, like
46:13
ten eleven o'clock at night, this is summer, and it was it was
46:16
still light it which completely wrecked my mind. I mean, my sleep was
46:21
all jacked up. And then when I left here and went to Nevada and
46:24
it was a fall into the winter. It's like four point thirty and it's
46:29
getting dark. That's the thing about the cold weather months and falling back that
46:32
just absolutely kills me. So, I mean, I'm all for moving ahead,
46:37
but if yeah, if you make everything start a little bit later in the morning, then you're going to have the daylight. I like the way
46:43
that works. Scott. Yeah, it's actually pretty genius. It doesn't have
46:46
this huge effect on your sleep pattern, now, that's for sure. I
46:52
appreciate it. Thank you, man, I appreciate you. Being a part of the show and listening. Thank you. Depression and weight gain in cluster
46:59
headaches is there's one list of things that they show are attributed to the springing
47:04
ahead in the daylight savings time. They say that there are other problems mental
47:08
health issues, digestive issues, heart disease issues, all these days say because
47:14
we spring ahead and lose the hour. I mean, and I haven't done
47:16
any research. It's anecdotal. That's just my experience. People I've talked to
47:21
maybe like you right five, one, three, seven, four, nine, seven, eight hundred, the big one. You can get interactive on
47:27
X two. I'm att Sterling Radio. You can still find it at Twitter
47:30
dot com if you're searching that way. It's one of those things. But
47:35
again, the falling back in the winter, in the fall, once we
47:38
fall back, that's when it really just grates on me because of just the
47:44
early darkness. If you spring ahead and keep it that way, I don't
47:47
I I don't recall ever living through that, or I was too young to
47:52
know if it was actually going on. But it's one of those things that
47:55
you know is fairly common. John hop School of Public Health, the Bloomberg
48:02
School of Public Health, has a pretty big study in surveys they've done talking
48:07
about this particular issue, and they say somewhere in the neighborhood of fifty five
48:12
to sixty percent of people say that they experienced tiredness. Sixty three percent of
48:21
people say they want to do away with the daylight savings time. Other people
48:24
want it to be permanent. So I don't know. I mean, it's
48:29
like everything else. I mean, do you let people vote for this? I don't know who is going to I don't feel like I have all the
48:34
information to make a decision. I hate to change things without having all the
48:37
data. But they say that the actual switch causes major health problems heart attack,
48:45
stroke, a lot of mental health issues, disturbances of mood. Hospital
48:53
admissions, they say go up for all these things, including inflammatory markers,
49:00
with stress and happening on the weekend. I don't it's just an hour,
49:04
you know. How many hours do you waste in a day or in a
49:07
week is the thing that I'm curious about. I often will find that in
49:12
the day I've lost an hour anyway I've been focused on working. I look
49:15
down instead of it being one o'clock, all of a sudden, it's like
49:17
three thirty, and I'm like, oh, Ed Rocker or whatever else is
49:22
happening in that type of situation. So on one hand, if I don't
49:25
have to be anywhere early once we like, you know, do the spring
49:29
ahead, which we'll do tomorrow night, it doesn't not matter. But if
49:34
you've got to be someplace in the morning or somehow start your day earlier,
49:39
then you know, that's another issue. I don't think little kids care.
49:42
I don't think it affects them necessarily. I don't think my dog is going
49:45
to care one way or the other. He's gonna get up and want to go to the door or you know, and let me know that he needs
49:51
to go do his business because he's got no thumbs. He has a do
49:53
claw he can't do anything with and he and he has no thumb, but
49:58
he still runs the house, which is somewhat bewildering. Daylight Savings time,
50:04
they say was enacted, is an effort to help save energy and Ben Franklin
50:09
might have heard him invented this going back to seventeen eighty four, and they
50:16
say that it would help with the use of candles. Apparently there'd be less
50:20
wax being used and burnt, which would save people money. They say moving
50:24
the clocks ahead also makes greater use of the daylight, which we've talked about
50:30
in the warmer months, because it's just the way the earth sort of tilts
50:34
and moves through its normal process. And this goes back to World War One
50:37
as a part of an attempt to conserve energy. That's sort of the scenario.
50:44
But there's a whole lot of people pushing for it. I'm just curious, do you care? I mean, it's just an hour, and arguably
50:50
it's just an insignificant difference. Right, you spring ahead, you fall back,
50:53
you get an extra hour in the fall, you sleep later, and
50:57
then all of a sudden it's time for football, right, and Bengal will
51:00
be getting at it or the Bearcats or whatever. And here we are,
51:02
in the summer or in the warm weather months, coming into it, and
51:07
I don't know, I mean, I guess we embrace it and have a
51:09
little bit more. We're not trying to No one's conserving a whole lot of
51:14
candle wax at this point. But the less sleep issue does bring a myriad
51:19
of health problems that sort of go along with it. Tomorrow night, a
51:21
sleep expert about that very issue and maybe how to sort of improve some of
51:25
the ways because they all go to bed earlier, you know, maybe sleep
51:30
later and just take that hour or whatever else goes into it. But I
51:32
don't know of church or temple or whatever you've got going on Sunday morning,
51:37
if there's an accommodation for that or otherwise. But there are some other ways
51:42
to sort of acclimate and deal with it, maybe even set the clocks earlier
51:45
and just sort of assume that that's the case and go to bed appropriately.
51:50
So I'm told I'll check some x messages coming up at Stirling Radio five three
51:55
seven, eight hundred, the big one, and you can get an interactive
52:00
as well. It's a Friday night, Sterling. Glad you're along. Reds were in action earlier in case you missed it, and wondering exactly what happened.
52:07
They were taking on the Dodgers at their place, Candleback Ranch, and
52:13
well, Nick Martinez was great on the hill. Four strong innings, you
52:17
struck out the six Dodgers and Otay Shoheo Tani was a part of that.
52:24
Twice Freeman was there. Hernandez Monsei. I mean that was like the Los
52:31
Angeles Dodgers. They've got all the money in the world to spends offensive.
52:37
Big bat lineup and Martinez had a hell of an outing. That doesn't count,
52:42
although we did it, we saw it, we heard it, and
52:45
at least you know. And that's good for the mental state as well as
52:47
function physically, I suppose, and seeing stuff working right, even though those
52:52
numbers don't count towards anything. It's spring anyway, but lightning was an issue
52:55
earlier, so that game was called after four and a half. They'll play
52:59
the Diamond acts tomorrow and they'll get it here. Let me see exactly what
53:05
time that is tomorrow, three ten, first pitch in Scottsdale a talking stick,
53:09
Salt River Fields on seven hundred WLW. Ovarian cancer is devastating and difficult
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At Saint Jude, researchers are working around the clock to find new ways
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So I'm lucky enough to be married to Lindsay, who is also another former
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was in the middle of her treatment. I had finished mine just a couple
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of years before. I just told her I loved her. Luckily, she reciprocated it, told me the same thing back, and we were fortunate enough
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to get married on the Saint Jude campus Saint Jude Children's Research Hospital Finding Cures
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Saving Children. Learn more at Sintjude dot org. Pudi. I'm Aaron Tippin.
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I've been blessed to be able to make a living at what I love,
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making music for more than twenty five years. But it didn't get there
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overnight. There were a lot of long days and nights of work and just
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to make ends meet. Good things in life don't always come easy, but
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when you sweat for what you want, it makes it even sweeter when you
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get so remember to work hard and when the opportunities present themselves, you got
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to be ready to grab. This message is brought to you by the United
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States Air Force. We'll challenge your authority because that's what kids do. But
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this car is your territory, and then here your word is law. So
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when you say you won't move until everyone's buckled up, you won't budging each
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until that quick never give up until they buckle up. A message from the
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National Highway Traffic Safety Administration and the ad Council. For more information, visit
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safercar dot gov. Slash kids, buckle up, sterling, hanging out.
56:15
That's what I'm doing. It's true, Stone Shields producing Whyney Harris has news
56:21
in about five and a half minutes. If you keeping score at home, they'll be keeping score, some sort of score. I don't know how this
56:25
is gonna work. Jake Paul, you know, Jake Paul is right as
56:30
a professional boxer. He's got nine wins. He's nine and one, six
56:35
knockouts going back to January twenty twenty. Last let's see, most recently,
56:39
you beat Ryan Burland with a technical knockout, going back to March second.
56:45
Mike Tyson Iron, Mike the Champ. He's got a cartoon, he's got
56:50
his own weed brand, he's got his hot boxing show. He's all over the place. It has been for a long long time. Took a bite
56:55
out of somebody's ear back in the day too. If you're you're not aware
56:59
of this, but he's come full circle, you know, and been in
57:02
the darkest places into ostracized and left out and locked up and out and free
57:08
and loved by many. Fifty wins, six losses as a pro forty four
57:13
wins by knockout, and they will get at it together live on Netflix and
57:21
a I get. I mean, it's an exhibition. I don't know what
57:24
you want to call it. July twentieth at and T Stadium, Texas.
57:30
I would imagine that might bring some people to Netflix who wouldn't normally have a
57:35
subscription. I suppose there will be another main event, plus undercards that have
57:39
yet to be shared with the general public, including myself. Stone Shields may
57:45
know, but he's not telling. It's very disheartening. It's just one of those things. This is a big deal, I suppose, or it could
57:53
be really really horribly ugly and hard to watch in like a car crash and
57:59
gauking. If you see something like a mishap on the road on seventy five
58:01
or seventy one, where everybody sort of slows down and you give it that
58:05
one side high like what happened over there? Why am I being delayed?
58:08
You don't want it to be that way? Here's my question. You're gonna
58:14
watch this? Do you want to watch this? Is this something you'd be
58:16
into? Wild? When you think about it? This is weird. This
58:25
is what Paul has to say, says, it's crazy to think that.
58:29
In my second pro fight, he went viral for knocking out Nate Robinson on
58:34
a Tyson undercart. Now four years later, less than that, he's stepping
58:37
up to face This is a quote Tyson himself to see if he has what
58:44
it takes to be one of boxing's most notorious fighters and biggest icons. Within
58:47
two and a half years of founding MVP, they're producing is his company the
58:53
biggest fight, he says, in history? I don't know is it going
58:55
to be the biggest fight in history? I mean Netflix has got a hand
58:59
in it. I mean, you know there's gonna be some serious interest. I suppose it's a spectacle. There's no question boxing has been known for spectacle.
59:07
Tyson's in it. Why not for the money? I don't know what
59:10
you do? I mean he's got so much else going on. You know,
59:16
you hear in the past, over the decades, stories of other boxers,
59:22
you know, beyond their years in the ring, stepping back in because
59:24
they're bored, or because they're broke, or because the combination of both,
59:30
or what have you. You just don't want it to be one of those
59:32
ugly things. I can't imagine that Tyson would take a chance on stepping in
59:37
there to look bad, to look weak, to look beaten, to look
59:39
bad, or to look like he's over the hill and not able to handle
59:43
himself against Jake Paul. I think Tyson's probably forgotten more about the fight game
59:51
and function and handling his business in the so called squared circle than Jake Paul
59:55
has ever thought about red been told, directed, or imagined in his head
1:00:00
to this point. But the physical nature of what it is, which is
1:00:05
two guys getting it all in the ring, facing off against each other,
1:00:08
it'll be interesting to see, you know, Are they gonna just sort of
1:00:13
you know, soft shoet and play around in there, Because like, if
1:00:16
I'm in the ring, I'm not trying to get hit. I don't want
1:00:20
to get hurt, you know what I mean. But I'm not Tyson,
1:00:22
you know, and Jake Paul obviously is gonna want to try to look you
1:00:25
know, credible and legit as he possibly can. But money is a part
1:00:30
of it. I just what does Tyson have to lose the image of being
1:00:34
the greatest of all time, which is arguable in some cases, or what
1:00:37
I mean, you know, it's something to watch. I mean, this
1:00:40
is going to take away from his history. I mean, there's a whole
1:00:44
he He's not been regularly fighting longer than he was actually regularly fighting in the
1:00:51
ring at the top of the world. And I'll tell you how much of an insane spectacle it used to be, whether it was on HBO or pay
1:00:57
per view. And I can tell you this in real short order. I
1:01:00
was playing a competitive putt butt as an amateur, I know, which sounds
1:01:04
weird, and a whole bunch of us were on the road in it was
1:01:07
like like a national tournament or something. In one of the fights, I
1:01:09
forget which one it was, and it was on in the room and I
1:01:13
had to go to the bathroom and it hadn't started yet, I kid you
1:01:15
not. And it was one of those fights that Tyson was known for,
1:01:19
where they rang the Bell and he went out there and before the end of
1:01:22
round one dropped this dude. I went in to go to the bathroom,
1:01:25
had to do what I had to do. I wasn't even leaving the kids
1:01:28
at the pool, if you know what I'm saying. It was a quick
1:01:30
in and out, and by the time I got back out, everybody in
1:01:32
the hotel room who was circled around this TV at the time. It may
1:01:37
have been a pay per view that we all did and chipped in or whatever, and it was over. I mean, I finally I got to see
1:01:44
the replay. They talked about it and build it up. It lasted longer
1:01:49
than the fight itself. Would it be that one sided this time around?
1:01:52
On Netflix? Come July twentieth at at and T Stadium. I'd love to
1:01:58
be actually at the fight in person to be able to watch it. I
1:02:01
don't want it to be one of those ugly things where you go, oh,
1:02:05
Mike, why'd you take a beating? And I just get the impression.
1:02:08
And maybe I'm just thinking days of old in the past, but I
1:02:13
kind of get the feeling that Mike Tyson could roll out of bed, probably after he's hot boxed it a little bit if you know what I'm saying on
1:02:17
some of his own product and could probably lay down Jake Paul my observation,
1:02:22
hallucination or dream I suppose anyway, that's coming up in July another hour straight
1:02:28
away. Good bit of ground to cover on a Friday night, Sterling Whitney
1:02:31
Harris has news and update of what's going on around planet Earth and right here
1:02:35
in the tri State that matters to you, yours and me right here on
1:02:37
the home of the Red seven hundred WLW Cincinnati mus traffic a half before the
1:02:43
rain and the lightning. More importantly, put an end to Nick Martinez is
1:02:47
great outing against the Dodgers a little earlier than I and I went by bye
1:02:54
and brought me in a little bit earlier. And the way back hat have
1:02:59
taken on the Diamond back tomorrow. And you heard about de Valle Marte and
1:03:01
the eighty game suspension. So there is that Joey Vado, former Red as
1:03:06
soon to be probably a Hall of Famer. I would think that I think he want debated, but I think he belongs. I got a non roster
1:03:12
invite about halfway through spring camp now for his hometown Toronto Blue Jays, so
1:03:17
a chance for him to wear that uniform that he pretty much grew up washing
1:03:21
and seeing on a regular basis after spending his entire professional career with the Cincinnati
1:03:25
Reds and the organizations started with the dating Dragons back in the day many years
1:03:30
ago now but are part of what twenty years I guess. So that's sort
1:03:35
of how that goes. It's a bummer, but we'll see how it goes,
1:03:37
and if not, he's got apparently multiple opportunities to go do some work
1:03:42
calling games, doing a color commentary, and maybe even some other stuff with
1:03:46
the Reds maybe over time, I would imagine. So hopefully it goes well
1:03:50
for him. He wants to play. Hopefully he's able to find his way onto the lou J's starting opening day roster and see exactly how that goes.
1:03:58
I mentioned Tyson fighting and looking to go at it aget Jake, Paul,
1:04:01
you can certainly sound off on that last night's big State of the Union address,
1:04:08
and it's funny hearing. First of all, I've never seen anything quite
1:04:12
like that address last night, and I said that after a couple of trumps
1:04:15
for that matter, in a different way, and it's very interesting. It
1:04:20
was more like a campaign rally kind of scenario. Clearly they were looking and
1:04:25
it was written for those punchy one liners kind of you know, going at
1:04:30
the Republicans and the GOP and policy issues and his predecessor. So I'm sure
1:04:34
that those ads will be coming to social media near you and on the airways
1:04:39
via television or radio in the days, weeks and months ahead. It's both
1:04:44
the former president and the current president looking to both the re up with a
1:04:46
new deal come January, after an election in November that we'll all have a
1:04:51
hand in making a choice on as to who we want to hire a re
1:04:56
up for that job as president of the United States. It's going to be
1:04:59
weird over the next several months, I would imagine, which is hard to
1:05:02
say. Hopefully it doesn't get as nasty as a lot of people have suggested
1:05:06
that it could or might. Already, a number of people reached out on
1:05:11
social to me at X at Stirling Radio talking about the springing ahead issue.
1:05:19
Right now, Let's see, what about seventy percent of people responding and this
1:05:25
I didn't do a poll, just quick responses and direct messages. Seventy percent
1:05:29
or so say they don't care one way or the other. They just wish you'd stay one or the other, either springing ahead, falling back, and
1:05:34
leaving it that way. There is a push to take it back to full
1:05:38
time forever and always daylight savings time, which is what Arizona has. Is
1:05:44
they just stay there two hours behind us now three hours once we spring ahead,
1:05:48
and that's how it goes. And we'll see over time if that's something.
1:05:54
You know, lawmakers can't handle the everyday business of getting stuff done.
1:05:58
Although although I will say this this is probably some good news. The Senate
1:06:03
passed six different funding bills which avoided you know, this partial government shut down
1:06:11
that we were facing before the deadline tonight at midnight, which you'll go to
1:06:15
the President's askin Biden's expected obviously to sign that into law so the government could
1:06:19
keep doing its business, the people's business, which is kind of important,
1:06:24
and then hopefully they can get along and do whatever is. It'd be nice
1:06:28
if they just handled their business regardless of a party affiliation and just did the
1:06:31
work of the people. But that's asking a lot. That's hoping for too
1:06:36
much, I suppose, and I'm an internal optimist, but at least there
1:06:41
was no shutdown which costs a huge amount of money. It's a huge inconvenience,
1:06:45
and it just it's a hassle and looks weak as hell internationally if you
1:06:50
care about how things look. I don't necessarily care so much about what the
1:06:55
look is, but certainly for the functioning a bit of the government one hundred
1:07:00
and sixty seven and a half billion dollar appropriations package providing funding for the Department
1:07:04
of Agriculture, Commerce, Energy, Justice, Veterans affairs, most important interior
1:07:11
transportation, urban development, housing, as well as the FDA that's the Food
1:07:15
and Drug Administration, and military construction and other programs are a part of this,
1:07:19
which was a House and centive bipartisan deal. As far as negotiation,
1:07:25
here's the term that you don't often hear, although there's been more of that
1:07:28
in this current situation than maybe in some years past. Compromise. So there
1:07:34
is that, and they've worked through it and we'll see exactly what that means
1:07:39
for the future. So there's that. You can feel good about law government
1:07:42
doing their business and we zoo spring ahead tomorrow. Don't forget that. Don't
1:07:45
be one of those people doesn't remember Now your phones do it automatically. Most
1:07:48
of our technology these days, from refrigerators to microwaves to your handheld devices,
1:07:55
technology of all sorts. But if you have any clocks hanging on the wall
1:07:58
that don't automatically somehow sync up, I think I have three in the house,
1:08:03
if I'm not mistaken. I think the one too. I have five,
1:08:11
and one of which I know the battery just recently died anyhow, so
1:08:15
that it's right twice a day. So I could just leave it that way
1:08:18
and we'll see exactly how it goes. Otherwise, you know, you just
1:08:21
have your alarm set on those devices that move ahead or fall back on their
1:08:25
own, and don't worry about it. When it tells you to get up,
1:08:27
you get up and go about your business, which is how I tried
1:08:30
to live my life. When we come back, I want to get into
1:08:32
something a little bit different. I saw a pretty weird story. Kelly and
1:08:39
who else here? Kelly and Kelly Melissa sent me a list of lies that
1:08:47
they have been told and that other people have been told. So I thought
1:08:53
we could turn this into a little bit of fun and drive some conversation about
1:08:59
lie that you couldn't believe people told you. Oftentimes, what is amazing to
1:09:05
me and some It's always great. Whether it's a YouTube or some other social
1:09:10
media, you will see these videos. Parents love to do this, especially
1:09:14
when you know their kids have been caught in a situation. Whereas my grandmother
1:09:17
would say when I was a little sterling, that someone might be fibbing,
1:09:21
and you know, the kid has chocolate all over their face, and you
1:09:25
ask if they got into the chocolate chip cookies, the brownies that were on
1:09:28
the counter that were supposed to be saved for filling the name of the blank holiday get together whatever it is, Easter or whatever, and you know,
1:09:33
and then then they're like, no, I didn't get into it. And
1:09:36
then the kids got like chocolate dripping all over their face like they they'd had
1:09:40
it like crammed into their head, and like no, no, what't me?
1:09:44
And there's no denying it. And they don't realize it because they're little and don't grasp it. But there's all kinds of lies of one type or
1:09:51
another. So what I'm curious about is maybe some shocking or surprising or just
1:09:57
blatant lies that you were told and you were like, really, is it
1:10:00
possible? How could you? I mean, you expect me to buy that
1:10:03
line of filling the name of the blank. In these days and these times,
1:10:08
with the rampant lies and the people in positions of power and authority,
1:10:13
and people buying into them and taking them for just whatever they are, this
1:10:17
list could get deep and get deep fast. And one of those things I
1:10:23
think probably ties into this. I don't know if I'm going too deep or
1:10:26
otherwise, but it is if I'm not mistaken. It's like Global Women's Day,
1:10:30
right, I mean, this is like International Women's Day of all the
1:10:33
lies that women have been told about being treated fairly and equally over the years.
1:10:38
It's maybe a little closer than it used to be, but it's not
1:10:42
necessarily the case. So hopefully this Women's Day has been good to you and
1:10:45
yours, moms and grandmas and wives and daughters and girlfriends and whatnot. Sort
1:10:51
of going through it. I want to know the most ridiculous lie that you
1:10:57
have been told on the job by somebody you've been with for work or play,
1:11:01
whatever it is, family, kids or otherwise. Five one, three,
1:11:04
seven, four, nine, seven, eight hundred. The big one,
1:11:08
the iHeartRadio app. If you're streaming there or just going to grab that
1:11:11
click on that microphone, you can leave a message, we can dip into
1:11:14
it and im on X at Stirling Radio. It's at Twitter dot com if
1:11:17
you're searching for that. If you're not already there, you can follow along,
1:11:20
get interactive that way, and we'll get into the issue of lies and
1:11:24
whatnot. This sort of plays along with it. There's more to do before
1:11:28
at Eye Radio rolls after midnight. Another update on news also in just about
1:11:31
fourteen minutes, so we'll find out exactly what else is going on. Oh
1:11:35
and this is big Sunday I believe it starts is that each side of the
1:11:42
Norwood Lateral for a period of time, one direction or the other will be
1:11:45
shut down in full as they start getting the work. That is O Dot
1:11:49
and all those contractors and those people out there working hard to make our travels
1:11:54
easier and safer and faster and more comfortable. It's certainly well overdue for some
1:12:00
improvements in at least temporary maintenance. They'll be hitting the lateral hard in the
1:12:03
weeks. In a couple of months to come, I'll have O Dots Kathleen
1:12:06
Fuller on Sunday show to sort of talk about specifics and you'll hear more news
1:12:12
on that too in the days to come, So hopefully you can avoid the
1:12:15
hassle on, the headache off trying to get to work or wherever you got to go in a hurry, and then realize that there is no way to
1:12:21
hurriedly get wherever it is that you're planning, because you might be in a
1:12:25
world a hurt. It's a Friday, Sterling. I appreciate you being here.
1:12:28
Seven hundred WLW. Which players will come? Love it? Which players
1:12:33
will go? All? Right? Here? This is a look at the
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free agent frenzy, brought to you by Plumb Tight plumbing, heating, cooling
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and Dreams and Centinati Asphalt. No, here's Moegger. Joe Dixon took a
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pay cut last offseason, and he has one more year remaining on his contract,
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but a key decision looms as free agency approaches. Mixon is do a
1:12:57
three million dollars roster bonus on March seventeen. The Bengals could pay him the
1:13:00
bonus and bring him back in twenty twenty four, possibly even in a reduced
1:13:04
role, or they could move on and maybe use free agency to find a
1:13:10
running back whose game is more explosive and whose salary won't be as happy for
1:13:14
more on a free agent frenzy. Keep it here on seven hundred w l
1:13:18
JABAU, the home of the best Bengals cover These anti Trump Washington elites hate
1:13:25
people in southern Ohio. They just went on MSNBC and said this about us.
1:13:30
They're the most recent in storms and temperatures fall to around mid forties by
1:13:35
five Tomorrow night, chance of rain. And I hate to say this,
1:13:39
but it is still the first part of March. Snow showers possible, mostly
1:13:44
cloudy, breezy, down to thirty forty three. Sunday snow showers and rain
1:13:47
showers likely, otherwise sunshine, clouds again overnight than Monday, back into the
1:13:55
mid fifties and sunshine. So I mean kind of a weird, wet,
1:13:57
irregular weekend, but to probably closer to what's reasonable for March, and then
1:14:01
back to warmer and sunshine, which is nice. I've turned tons of birds
1:14:04
making noise in the neighborhood, and I've seen a bunch of worms coming up
1:14:10
out of the ground with all the saturation of the rain. Right now it's
1:14:13
fifty six. You're severe weather Station seven hundred WLW. I don't really have
1:14:16
a whole lot of complaints about the nicer weather early. I don't I know
1:14:20
that. You know, there's problems with people living on the edges and the
1:14:24
irregular weather and the extreme weather and the storms. I know they've been pounded
1:14:28
by snow and rain out west in different spots. But I like the warm.
1:14:33
I don't really have any use for the cold or winter or snow or
1:14:38
anything. And I know there are fans like snowboarding and skiing and all that
1:14:41
other stuff, and that's fine, you can go to it. This is
1:14:45
not that place. This is not called There are spots to go where they
1:14:48
make the snow and so forth, and they've had to do a lot of
1:14:50
that this year here. But I like the warm and I don't have any
1:14:56
use for the cold, except like Christmas time to New Year's and after that,
1:14:59
I'm ready for for warm weather, shorts and sunshine. In Red's Baseball,
1:15:03
which tonight, if you hadn't heard, ended a little bit prematurely due
1:15:08
to rain, mostly as a result of lightning out in Arizona and the Greater
1:15:14
Phoenix area, Reds and Dodgers called off after four and a half if you
1:15:17
in case you missed it, Nick Martinez with a solid outing struck out six
1:15:21
of the Dodgers in his four innings of work, basically leaving them hitless,
1:15:26
which was pretty nice. But nothing show for it other than just a strong
1:15:30
outing and getting tuned up, which is really what it's all about. So
1:15:33
that there is that. If I went three eight hundred the Big One iHeartRadio
1:15:39
app, you can click on that microphone and talk back. I'm also at
1:15:42
Sterling Radio on X if you want to get INTERACTI if it's talking about the
1:15:44
lies and things to go along with that, and somebody sent me this,
1:15:47
and then this is Alex always reaching out and not our Alexy again, it's
1:15:51
another Alex. I've asked because I think it's weird. I have like two
1:15:54
different people who message regularly, follow along on social media, and am Alex.
1:16:00
This is worse than a lie, and I suppose it's true. It
1:16:03
is and maybe this there's there could be something here. It's a story about
1:16:09
stolen Lamborghini that was stolen during a test drive in Ontario and apparently and they
1:16:19
were listing it at six hundred thousand dollars. I don't know. I mean
1:16:23
I've worked at a car store. Usually you take driver's license and proof of
1:16:27
insurance. Sometimes you'll have somebody go with you when you take a test drive.
1:16:30
If you ever a test drive a car, buy a car or whatever
1:16:32
from individuals, it's clearly different and maybe you'd be more likely to do it.
1:16:38
It's a little unnerving maybe to have that interaction in that situation if you're
1:16:42
trying to sell your car by yourself, but a six hundred thousand dollars vehicle
1:16:45
as it was listed in audit traders pretty wild. So they agreed to meet
1:16:51
apparently, and this is where exactly is in Waterloom, So this is Canada,
1:17:00
and guy pulls up in a white Mercedes with another passenger. They take
1:17:06
apparently then asked to take the Lamberdhiny for a test drive. They let him
1:17:11
sit in the car with the keys still inside, and then away they went
1:17:14
and rolled, which is pretty weird. This is the question that I go
1:17:18
along with that that is worse than a lie. They take your six hundred
1:17:20
thousand dollars vehicle and like roll away, and then you're stuck with what nothing
1:17:27
missing your car and you gave it away effectively, which is not a good
1:17:30
deal. If you are someone who buys and sells stuff online and share you
1:17:35
know between people. I'm curious do you do that like in a public place?
1:17:40
I mean the smart things to do. I mean law enforcement around the
1:17:42
tri State, around the country for that matter, have locations, whether it's
1:17:45
one of their district you know, outposts if you want to say, like
1:17:48
District five, whatever it is. I think they just get rid of that
1:17:50
one. But you get the general idea police stations, maybe at the mall,
1:17:55
public place people visibility. You can go inside some places they let you
1:18:00
you know, sort of share and have it where there's cameras so that you
1:18:03
avoid beat down, avoid the the interaction that could go south and somebody trying
1:18:09
to hist your stuff. I'm wondering, have you had a problem dealing with
1:18:12
that. That's I'm very leery of those type of interactions. I've done them
1:18:16
a couple of times, but it's a little unnerving. And at this point,
1:18:21
when there's so many people that you know, you hear these stories of
1:18:25
people you know getting ripped off here or there, people but being very bold
1:18:29
and aggressive doing it even just in retail locations, not when you're selling person
1:18:32
to person, you know, in in a site scenario where you're doing that
1:18:38
where you've listed something and you're trying to, you know, to sell one
1:18:42
thing or another. That's a tough spot. Have you had a problem with
1:18:45
that? Are you leery of doing that? I mean I've talked to some
1:18:49
people and they've told me that they've never had a problem. I've had others
1:18:53
say that that, you know, it was fine until something happened. Nothing
1:18:57
like this story that goes to a stolen Lamborghini. I mean, that's a
1:19:00
serious issue, and then you know, what are you gonna do with That's
1:19:03
not like stealing a nondescript, super high volume car sold or truck that's out
1:19:12
there in mass quantities that's just going to blend in. A Lamborghini is a
1:19:18
vehicle that stands out right. I mean, that's why you buy them.
1:19:24
That's why people look at them, they ogle at them. They you go,
1:19:27
man, the power under the hood. What would that be like?
1:19:30
It's not really a vehicle that you'd steal. I don't think unless you were
1:19:34
a complete idiot moron in stay in the area so that you do that,
1:19:39
and I'm guessing you sell it out of the area and wash your hands of
1:19:43
it and just get your money. Now, I'm not a criminal, but I'm trying to think like one in this circumstance, right. I mean,
1:19:48
it's not like one of those where I had a body of mine had a
1:19:51
car stolen from outside of his house. His grass was full and an extra
1:19:57
car was there. Somebody stole it and it was gone for like a week
1:20:00
ten days, and he's like, well, you know, and they were about ready to like issue the check and give him the whole like you know,
1:20:05
pay off for the car that was taken. And then it turns out
1:20:10
that kids joy rided the car and then they found it abandoned and beaten up
1:20:14
and battered, but not enough to total it out, like you know,
1:20:18
in some alley way or whatever else across town. So he gets that phone
1:20:23
call and then I get this tex. He's like, dude, they found my car's trashed. And I'm like, you still get paid, and he's
1:20:28
like, no, I think they gave him a little bit of dough,
1:20:30
but it would have been better if they'd never found the car. Again. I don't think the Lamborghini's gonna end up trashed in the end of an alley
1:20:36
forgotten someplace. I mean, that's a vehicle where somebody goes. I mean,
1:20:42
it's not an impulse thing, right, I mean, I wouldn't think
1:20:44
so that's not like kids trying to get across town. That's not kids that
1:20:46
are bored. That's somebody who's gone, Look, here's somebody stupid enough to
1:20:50
try to, like, you know, sell this vehicle on their own,
1:20:53
which I don't even know why you do. It's very weird. Five win
1:20:57
three seven four nine, seven, eight hundred. The big one has to
1:21:00
get interactive. Let me know what you think about that deal. It just
1:21:04
ohed And this is somewhat troubling news too. This just in not long ago,
1:21:09
and there'll be in updates on this throughout the evening. Three killed,
1:21:12
one injured. A National Guard helicopters crashed near the US Mexican border, according
1:21:15
official statement. At this point, Joint Task Force North has released that info.
1:21:21
The copter was a National Guard Lakota UH seventy two. That from a
1:21:27
defense official dis from ABC ABC News. Helicopter was assigned to the Federal Southwest
1:21:32
Border Support Mission CRASS approxim. Approximately ten of three mountain time this afternoon,
1:21:40
conducting aviation operations near the Rio Grande City of Texas. Rio grand City,
1:21:45
Texas. There you go, they say, they don't know the cause at
1:21:49
this point. It's under investigation. Texas's Department of Public Safety also involved in
1:21:55
assisting with the operation, so that's difficult. In bad news, service members
1:22:00
killed. Hearts go out to those families who've lost their loved ones, proudly
1:22:04
putting on those uniforms, putting their lives at risk for US. Here going
1:22:09
down in a helicrafter crash the US Mexican border near there, the National Guard
1:22:15
a helicopter Lakota UH seventy two. Bad news and up beat on that coming
1:22:20
up sooner or later. Stop for news now eleven third reports straight away.
1:22:25
More Sterling Red Eye Radio after midnight on the Home of the Reds. It's
1:22:29
the Nation station seven hundred wlw oh's Charlie Hustle former. Well, he's a
1:22:36
Hall of famers, got a couple of World Series ranks, you know,
1:22:42
air fill, etcetera. And should be in the Hall of Fame. But
1:22:45
you know that is going to go. It'll be'll be gone before he's in
1:22:48
there, just cause and you know he did I remember doing like a shaving
1:22:54
cream commercial and he did a bunch of ads and endorsement deals. But this
1:22:59
is different. And I remember like when I was a wee sterling, little teeny sterling. There was a lot of that action, even at the national
1:23:03
level for some of those reds of the Big Red Machine. And then after
1:23:08
that, certainly and we certainly had our share here of the tri state of
1:23:12
some superstar athletes getting that type of love. Joe Burrow comes to mind currently,
1:23:15
Joey Vodo's gotten some decent love when it comes to endorsements and everything.
1:23:19
Here's a guy who who knows from Cincinnati and recently retired. I don't know
1:23:24
if you saw this. This is kind of wild. Jason Kelcey just officially
1:23:27
retiring. What have you? Apparently yesterday I had a number of people send
1:23:31
me this and I saw it. At first, I thought it wasn't legit.
1:23:34
I didn't know they did this, but this might be something, And
1:23:38
then I'm thinking, well, who else should be there? Campbell's Chunky Soups
1:23:42
announced that they are giving away six hundred and twenty, just six hundred and
1:23:45
twenty limited edition cans as a nod to his sixty two Jersey, and Jason
1:23:51
Kelsey is saying Fon Farewell is a legend edition. If it want of a
1:23:57
I guess to call it with his face on their sort of a likeness in
1:24:00
his autographed it's the first effort, what they say, legend edition can and
1:24:04
then maybe they'll probably look to do something more in relation to this that goes
1:24:10
along with it. And they're going to give away some money to Philly charity.
1:24:14
Of course he was an eagle and all that that goes into it, and they're gonna donate sixty two thousand dollars, which I mean, it's a
1:24:19
lot of money, but it's not a lot of money depending but they'll get
1:24:23
some attention and probably some love after this. But then it got me wondering
1:24:28
who if you were going to put somebody on the face of a can of
1:24:30
soup or a can of chili or what have you when it comes to Cincinnati
1:24:36
Sport, I mean, Joey Vada would go there, right, certainly,
1:24:43
I mean, pick a face, pick a legend from the big Red machine,
1:24:47
you could argue, certainly hard to argue Joe Burrow as fragile as he's
1:24:53
been on the mend and healthy, hopefully to get back at it with those
1:24:56
who Dai Bengals and maybe a chase and hopefully get into a trip to New
1:25:00
Orleans for the Super Bowl next year. About the well, what ten months
1:25:05
eleven months from now, Let's hope that could very well be the situation.
1:25:10
I think there's no shortage of I mean, if this is something that's going
1:25:13
to happen regularly, this might be something. When I was a little kid,
1:25:16
I think it was seven up, used to have these bottles that would
1:25:19
commemorate, and I think they did it regionally because I remember they had him
1:25:25
I think for the Reds, and my uncle had them in the basement.
1:25:29
He had like a man cave before I'd ever heard anybody use the term man
1:25:32
cave. It's where my cousins and I would go down into the basement.
1:25:36
And he had a record player turntable deal, and I was listening to like
1:25:41
a Red Fox Records, stuff that I wasn't allowed to be listening to,
1:25:44
but I did, and like Richard Pryor Records and some others and stuff like
1:25:47
that. And he had all these old like they had Ohio State Buckeye National
1:25:53
Championship, a Rose Bowl Championship, like bottles in all the championship information.
1:25:59
He had all the beer cans and everything else, no soup cans. But
1:26:02
I'm thinking now, I mean you'd think, no brainer, that'd be something
1:26:06
for like Joe Burrow, maybe Joe Mixon maybe not, so you may not
1:26:11
be a Bengal for long as you just hear maybe a mo talking about that.
1:26:15
We'll see if they were at that big check that they were going to owe him in about it a ten days time, give or take, or
1:26:18
if they set him off to find a gig somewhere else and save some dough
1:26:25
and maybe just a stock up with some people elsewhere that might be able to
1:26:29
come in and do the job on the ground carrying the football for the Bengals.
1:26:32
We'll have to wait and see. But who would you put there?
1:26:35
I mean, you know, Chunky, Jason Kelcey for the Eagles. Certainly
1:26:41
Joe Burrow would be a no brainer. I would think who else Jamar Chase,
1:26:47
Yeah, certainly if they get to the super Bowl again, that would
1:26:50
be something that you would put there. If the Reds get there, and
1:26:54
they certainly seem to be built to win and not just now maybe a premature
1:27:00
early maturing and certainly built for later as well, so that I think they're
1:27:03
built to last, that could be something that if they continued this, we
1:27:06
could see in Cincinnati, which wouldn't necessarily be that big of a sad thing.
1:27:12
I think it'd be a good I mean maybe all right, I think
1:27:15
generally, I don't know how many people. I mean, there is a Cincinnati Conn connection obviously with the Kelsey's both and so on, but I think
1:27:23
I mentioned that, so thank you for sharing that with me. Number of
1:27:26
people sending that, which is kind of odd everybody thinking the same type of
1:27:30
thing and so on, But well, why not. Here's something else I
1:27:33
got to ask, because it's if you haven't already gotten your glasses for the
1:27:42
eclipse that's coming in about a month, right, and I think we're a
1:27:45
month out right April eighth or something like that, if I'm not mistaken,
1:27:49
and we're going to see some darkness, and it's going to be right across
1:27:53
our part of the world effectively from where we are right here Cincinnati, a
1:27:58
past Dayton and that that may walth that sort of makes its way across diagonally
1:28:02
from the northeast all the way to the southwest or part of that of the
1:28:05
US. We'll see some darkness. I'll get Kathleen Fuller from ODOT on Sunday.
1:28:12
Odot has a plan in place that she will share some details on as
1:28:17
far as issues of concern in dealing with the eclipse. So we will figure
1:28:26
out exactly what the plan is. But one of those things you got to
1:28:28
remember, and I learned this early. Mamas like don't look, don't don't
1:28:32
stare directly at the sun Stirling, and I'm like, okay, that's probably
1:28:35
a good idea, but some sunglasses. But sunglasses aren't going to be good
1:28:40
enough, even though it's going to get dark staring around it and that sort
1:28:43
of sun leading into it and then around the the you know, the darkness,
1:28:46
and then moving through a lot of people probably going to be seeing the
1:28:49
eye doctor with some headaches and some eye jacked up and messed out. You
1:28:54
don't want to burn like your retina is out of your skull or whatever.
1:28:58
So there's some glasses that you need to get that go along with that.
1:29:00
There are some places, and I'll on social on ex at Sterling Radio and
1:29:05
elsewhere share some information. You can also go to seven hundred WLW dot com
1:29:11
and obviously also the Conservatory give you some information about that observatory I should say
1:29:15
not conservatory observatory and be able to protect yourself that way. And then there
1:29:19
was the thing when I was a little kid they did in school that the
1:29:23
pinhole camera. It's not a camera, but like the pinhole way to look
1:29:26
at it, so you're looking, but you're not looking directly at it.
1:29:30
But everyone is driven to look. I mean, when the sky goes dark.
1:29:35
That's one of those things. So just be prepared. And it's always
1:29:40
one of those weird things that go along with this. I'm gonna say this
1:29:45
again because I know it's weird. I'm getting like all these hits on social
1:29:48
now at Sterling Radio asking me what happened to the Reds game got ringed down?
1:29:56
Four and a half innings played didn't count because it's a spring game anyway.
1:29:59
There was lightning and that's how that went. And then the news maybe
1:30:03
that is bigger than the game itself. And seeing a strong outing that we
1:30:08
did with force innings worth of work by Nick Martinez and six strikeouts. Is
1:30:14
the top prospect in the Reds organization suspended and then going to be away from
1:30:19
the game. I don't think you can have anything to do with it. Maybe train on your own, but you can't do anything with like Major League
1:30:25
Baseball minor league baseball or anything else. Noel Marte suspended for eighty games for
1:30:30
violating a policy of PEDS performance enhancing drugs, for using or at least testing
1:30:38
positive for bolden known, which is a performance hamancing substance. So the suspension
1:30:44
is going to begin opening Day. The earliest he can play would be late
1:30:46
June, so we'll see exactly how that goes. The Reds came out they
1:30:51
said they fully support Major League Baseball's drug policy and its penalties. I mean,
1:30:55
they got to say that. Twenty two year old Marte got his first
1:31:00
taste of the big league action bet at two eighty four slash three fifty one
1:31:04
four forty nine, eight homers in thirty five games in thirteen doubles, a
1:31:10
lot of promise. Thought to be the number one prospect in the Reds organization,
1:31:14
lost for eighty days. So hopefully that goes fast. Hopefully they'll be
1:31:16
winning at that point, bring him back and get to the next level with
1:31:19
him if he's needed. So we'll see how that goes. But I had
1:31:25
to mention that a lot of people asking more about it, so I try
1:31:30
to share and give as much information and as I can to go along with
1:31:33
it. We also spring ahead tomorrow night, which we'll have sleep expert on
1:31:38
to talk about those very issues and conversation about health problems and things associated with
1:31:42
it. Springing ahead is where more people have problems, apparently with heart attack
1:31:47
and stress and stroke and all kinds of other issues, and apparently some people
1:31:51
see I don't know why this is more as much of a problem in twenty
1:31:56
twenty four as it would have been even just twenty five years ago. Twenty
1:32:00
years ago for that matter, I mean, how many devices do you have
1:32:03
when it comes to alarm clocks? Your vehicle maybe doesn't change automatically, but
1:32:09
that's usually like two buttons to have to do it. Not a lot of
1:32:12
people have to change their technology and alter it to be able to change the
1:32:17
time. So if you have your alarm set appropriately, it should work and
1:32:20
do exactly what it's supposed to. But that lost hour apparently is hell for
1:32:25
some of us. I'm dreading it already. I'll get off the air and
1:32:30
then we'll spring ahead, and then I'll get up and be here following ken
1:32:33
Brew on Sunday, so we'll see exactly how groggy and inarticulate I am on
1:32:39
a Sunday morning in daylight savings time after doing tomorrow night show quick break,
1:32:44
come back. I'm not done yet. It's a Friday night Sterling seven hundred
1:32:47
WLW. Open up our live stream on the iHeartRadio app and take a look
1:32:55
at the screen. You see that little red circle with a microphone on it.
1:32:58
That's our talkbackfeat. Push it and send us your thoughts on the current
1:33:01
topic. Something you think we should discuss, or read us that poem you
1:33:06
wrote about our trafficking weather and now they go great together the talkback feature.
1:33:13
Check it out on seven hundred wlw's live stream on the iHeartRadio ad these anti
1:33:19
Trump watch glad you're a long crazy Friday night, Let's talk gun. I
1:33:26
don't know, this changes everything somehow, my whole vibe change. I don't
1:33:30
know, don't shield. It's freaking me out. It's almost like this headline
1:33:32
man drunkenly rides horse up to fifth floor apartment to make up with this wife
1:33:40
because that's really what she was probably looking for, to make everything right with
1:33:45
her idiot husband. Is yeah, ride that horse up to the fifth floor,
1:33:48
because I'm guessing the horse on the way down from the fifth floor is
1:33:53
gonna like that too. This happened in Russia, where they like to drink.
1:33:57
I mean, I don't know, we like our adult beverages. We
1:33:59
like our beer here in the Tri State. I mean we've been known for some breweries here there and everywhere else. I mean, let's be serious.
1:34:05
There was the whole uh you know, uh, the bockfest last weekend.
1:34:11
You had the monks, you had that. It was like it was like
1:34:13
the goat right pulling the big keg and all that other stuff. Uh.
1:34:16
Police in Russia's kemerova keemer rova. I'm gonna say that. I'm sure that's
1:34:21
not how it's pronounced, but I'm sorry. Really, Uh, they're they're
1:34:26
questioning a guy apparently, yeah, because he wouldn't do it soberly, but
1:34:29
they had to make this point. The man drunken. A drunk man rode
1:34:32
his horse into an apartment building at three am presented it to his wife to
1:34:35
make amends after a fight. I mean, I have done some dumb ass
1:34:39
things in relationship situations, but I have not once ever thought, you know
1:34:44
what, this would really make everything right if I could just ride a horse
1:34:46
upstairs to take it to the girl that she the woman would feel much better
1:34:51
about me and my idiotic self and not really think that I'm doubling down on
1:34:56
stupid. That's that's way up there in the list of stuff. And there's
1:35:00
a video of it as well. I got to see if I have the
1:35:03
rights and I can share this, and I've had a couple people share it,
1:35:08
and I also found that on my own. It's very odd. I
1:35:11
don't know how you do this. The horse looks very I mean, it
1:35:15
doesn't look like it really wants to do it, but it's doing it because
1:35:17
it's, you know, trusting its owner. And it looks like it needs
1:35:20
to eat. It looks like it could eat more. Like maybe you should
1:35:24
drink less and feed his equine a little bit better rather than mistreating it and
1:35:29
having it try to go up some flights of steps. I mean really,
1:35:32
I mean, seriously, the fifth floor. I don't know here. I
1:35:38
don't know what you get for that. Would you get prison for that? Would you call that cruelty? The animals? It doesn't say anything about removing
1:35:44
the animal. It doesn't say anything about that at all. His name is
1:35:49
a Sergei Anapov, and it reports that he took the horse from a farm
1:35:54
where he used to work, and he was trying to act like a prince
1:35:58
charming, which I'm sure really warm the concles of her heart. She actually
1:36:02
recorded part of this. The horse was obviously confused and figuring out what the
1:36:06
hell is going on? And for International Women's Day she said, that's it
1:36:13
a tiny ass apartment too. So I'm everybody wins there, the horse,
1:36:16
the wife, and the idiot husband, and I'm thinking that maybe they should
1:36:21
work harder at you know, like maybe securing their their horses before, you
1:36:28
know, allowing somebody to hist it. And because you wouldn't expect that,
1:36:31
where did they take the horse? I mean, you know, it's it's
1:36:34
just not one of those things you look for on a regular basis. Here's
1:36:38
something else going on. It's full on spring break season. Now. It's
1:36:42
been a few years since I've done spring break in college. I went once
1:36:46
with friends to Clearwater Beach. It was a little crazy, but we were
1:36:51
all wholesome and innocent, relatively speaking. But we did meet some girls from
1:36:55
Canada and they weren't That's all I'm gonna say. They were very friendly though,
1:36:59
is Canadians or you're told, and that's that's not very crazy. Apparently
1:37:08
at the time Daytona was happening, and then it went to Fort Lauderdale after
1:37:11
it had been in Fort Lauderalale and modern migrated to Daytona big time, and
1:37:15
then others to Florida. I have other people I know, maybe they were
1:37:18
just making different money. Mom and dad had different dough for them. I
1:37:21
know some went to like the Bahamas. I know some in parts of the
1:37:26
country they'll go to like Galveston Beach or whatever else and do that. On
1:37:30
the West Coast, I know some depending people like to go skiing and do
1:37:33
different things I suppose, aside from South Florida basically Miami Beach saying that they
1:37:40
they're not wanting people to come down there this weekend, especially apparently they've gone
1:37:44
full on trying to put the kai bosh on a lot of the debauchery that
1:37:47
got so much attention last year. There were shootings, It ruined business in
1:37:51
many cases. There were people that got hurt, a lot of ugliness.
1:37:56
It's not like I guess spring Break before it didn't seem as over the top
1:37:59
ten as it was made out to be from generations past. When I went,
1:38:02
I don't know, you know, Stone shields back in the day,
1:38:06
you know, lots of debauchery, hanging out doing whatever. Did you do
1:38:12
spring break? I mean, did you take it a couple of times?
1:38:15
Did it get real crazy? Nothing too irresponsible? Yeah? Is it?
1:38:19
No headlines? That was the thing Mom always told me, don't be the
1:38:23
news, talk about the news, don't be the news. It's one of
1:38:26
those things. And here's something else to look forward to, even if it's
1:38:29
not like spring break from college or whatever. But maybe you're taking the kids
1:38:32
headline avoid seaweed blobs red tides on Florida beaches, and they have quality water
1:38:40
maps, so you can apparently figure out exactly where to go. But if
1:38:42
you've already booked a hotel, you already have plans, and then you're thinking,
1:38:45
well, now is the time, this is what we're doing, this
1:38:48
is where we're going, and then you see that all of a sudden,
1:38:51
the blob of sargassum seaweed is making it to the Florida beach of your choice.
1:39:00
It's not going to be an ideal scenario, and they don't know exactly
1:39:03
how to time them. It's about currents, it's about tides and things that
1:39:09
go along with that. Leaving tons and tons of like dead fish because it
1:39:13
sucks the oxygen out of the air and in the harmful algae bloom or whatever
1:39:16
else. They've talked about it the last several years. They say that it's
1:39:19
about warmer weather and so forth. They have questions. I mean, I
1:39:27
don't know. They show pictures here of people actually swimming in it in Palm
1:39:30
Beach. I don't know. If I'd be wanting to dip my toe into
1:39:34
all of that, I'd be a little unnerved. But as they show with
1:39:40
the map of all the beaches, it is like all over floored. I
1:39:45
mean from you know, the Redneck Riviera where we took winters from Kiss one
1:39:47
oh seven years ago down to Panama City, which was a blast. I
1:39:53
nearly killed myself on a jet ski. That was work, by the way.
1:39:56
That was not college spring break, but there were some college kids around.
1:40:00
I mean from there all, I mean all around both sides of the
1:40:03
coast and even down into the Keys where apparently there are issues with the red
1:40:06
tides. So there's that to look forward to, and then you think,
1:40:09
well, maybe we should have gone to Vegas. That's what I noticed when
1:40:12
I lived there, that there were a whole lot of college kids that were
1:40:15
coming to Vegas for spring break as well, which never would have occurred to
1:40:18
me when I was in college. One I had no money and two I
1:40:24
had no money. And the Vegas is all about I mean, you know,
1:40:28
if you ever fly in there, of course, it's welcome to lost
1:40:30
wages because you're those big hotels and casinos aren't built because people win. You
1:40:34
know, you get drunk, you hang out, you give away some money,
1:40:36
you have a good time. Then you go home and say, yeah,
1:40:40
you wouldn't believe what happened. I can't tell you because it's stayed there,
1:40:43
which is what they They wouldn't even This is how amazing things and far
1:40:46
they have come. And we've talked about this before. It wasn't that many
1:40:50
years ago, about fifteen to twenty years Las Vegas tried to run the ads
1:40:57
about if it's you know, what happens in Vegas stays in Vegas, and
1:41:00
the NFL wouldn't allow them to run the ad during like the Super Bowl.
1:41:04
Right then, all of a sudden things changed and gambling and sports betting became
1:41:11
widespread. I mean, you can do it here anywhere you are. Basically
1:41:14
if you can hear me. Most states at this point have it, Ohio, Kentucky, elsewhere. I mean, it's a pretty common scenario. It's
1:41:19
acceptable, it's okay if you're responsible, handle your business and so forth.
1:41:24
So the NFL embraced it. Now. The Raiders of course called Vegas home.
1:41:29
The super Bowl was just there. They had Formula one, so you
1:41:32
know, everything is everything when it comes to Vegas in that situation. But
1:41:36
I I mean, they don't build those big places for free. It's because
1:41:41
people drop off that dough. And as a college kid, I don't know
1:41:44
how many kids have a whole lot of money. But I was not one of those. Vegas was not on my radar. But we were leaving here,
1:41:49
so we were like, let's get to the warm, let's get to the sunshine, let's get to the adult beverages. And it was a wonderful
1:41:57
time. It was good. So there you go back at it tomorrow night,
1:42:01
another nine to midnight show. A lot of action here. You get
1:42:05
Reds and Diamondbacks. That's going to be on Fox Sports thirteen sixty West Virginia,
1:42:13
and U see basketball Bearcats here on the Big One. I think that's
1:42:15
a three o'clock tip if I'm not Mistaken, and then Marquette As visiting Xavier
1:42:23
and some big East action that's going to be on fifty five KRC, so
1:42:26
a whole lot of other action, and the Norse play on in the Horizon
1:42:30
League Tournament the first of the week. They beat My Right State Raiders in
1:42:32
overtime last night at the Nutter Center in Dayton, a heartbreaker for the Raiders,
1:42:38
huge comeback win after being down like seventeen to two if I'm not Mistaken
1:42:43
at the start of that game. Handled their business in the Norse. Very
1:42:45
happy, Segan Company quite happy as they play on in the Horizon League Tournament.
1:42:50
Red Eye Radio coming up after the midnight news and Whitney Harris has that
1:42:56
I'll talk to you tomorrow night here on the Home of the Red seven hundred
1:42:58
WLW Cincinnati,
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