Episode Transcript
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0:00
Andrew Valley, and I don't know about the South. I wasn't that way.
0:02
I think Lance says that way. So hopefully save for him and everybody
0:05
else out there, extra room, slow down, changing lanes where there's an
0:09
accumulation of slush and stuff, just watch yourself. Took me about twice as
0:14
long, a little more than twice as long as normal to get here.
0:17
I could have done it from home, but I like to show up.
0:20
It gives me an excuse to leave the house a sterling. And I mean,
0:24
I mean, why not show up? You know what I mean? For so long we couldn't go damn anywhere. I want to get out.
0:28
I got stuff to do, like this, hang out with you, Sean
0:33
McMahon producing and Karen Johnson in the newsroom. Got you going on a Friday
0:38
night, lots of ground to cover. Kevin Carr, Fat Guys at the
0:41
movies a little bit later, conversation with him. Also Mike dy Wall from
0:45
space dot Comm gonna join us in a few minutes conversation about, in some
0:50
insight and perspective, what has made the news in the last what twenty four
0:54
thirty six hours, give or take. Mike Turner congressman from the Dayton area
1:00
and came out and said, look that there's a national security risk and it
1:03
deals with Russia, and he wanted an information release. They've come out since
1:07
and said Russia apparently planning to try to blow satellites out of the sky or
1:14
out of space, I guess, which could be a pretty detrimental to our
1:17
everyday lives. Some stuff when it comes to military issues and dangers. I've
1:22
mentioned before with the expert after expert. So we'll talk to Mikey Wall about
1:26
how likely and how soon that type of thing could be a real danger,
1:30
and basically for people to calm down. I mean I talked to a number
1:34
of people about this in the last day or so, and people really geeked
1:37
up and worried, and I just kind of go, well, I can't
1:41
do anything about it. I'm not a space man. I'm not you know,
1:45
working on satellites and that type of thing. So I trust that the
1:48
Space Force, I trust that our military handles their end, and everything's else,
1:53
you know, it's out of my hands. So I do what it is that I'm able to do is best that as I am able to possibly
1:59
do it. Hopefully you as well, a number of other things to get
2:02
to as well. We try to have a little bit of fun. I
2:06
love the trio thing. And I was driving white knuckling and I was going
2:08
to do hands free and then I thought somebody had mentioned the skyline of the
2:12
three Way, and this is a call back to Lance and it's off the
2:15
beaten path. And I mentioned to him as he was bailing out of here,
2:17
I was like, what about the three Way and a couple of Coney's
2:21
And then you know, like a Greek salad, that's my three Way,
2:23
that's my tripleheader, and looks at me, which is the same look I
2:29
get from a lot of people when I talk about like the way I eat, and they go, there's no way you eat that way. You're not
2:35
big enough. Well, I'm trying to get bigger, working out a little
2:37
bit bit of eating, and yeah, I can pull off that food stuff. Reds are in the desert getting ready for spring and opening day. We're
2:46
just what I think, a week from tomorrow's the first spring training battle,
2:51
and then the actual opening day is somewhere in the neighborhood of what six weeks
2:54
out, give or take something like that. It's not even eight weeks,
2:58
which is as crazy as we sit here and talk about snow and slush and
3:01
being careful and just this is I know it's I'm like the master of obvious
3:06
here, but I just want to say this because I think it's relevant and
3:09
it's important overall. If you see a plow truck out there, whether it's
3:14
somebody pushing snow in a neighborhood out of driveways or a strip shopping centers or
3:19
the mall lot, or it's O DOT or city crews around Cincinnati or Westchester,
3:23
wherever you are, I mean Fort Mitchell, whatever, wherever they got to be out there work and give them a little extra room. One they're
3:29
throwing salt and ice melt. You don't want that digging up your vehicle. And you also don't want to catch a plow in the side of your vehicle
3:36
or worse, you don't want to be a cautionary tale. You don't want
3:38
to be talked about on the news, and you don't want to be someone on the side of the road where people drive by and grip a little tighter
3:44
on that steering We go and hope that God it doesn't turn into me. So I'm just trying to help you out. That's all that's I'm trying to
3:49
do. So let's do this. We'll take a break and let me see
3:54
how we work on time. Man, We'll do that. I think nine
3:57
thirty five is when we got mighty wall we have I've carr talking on movie
4:00
stuff and who knows. I had a very strange Valentine's had a couple of
4:06
meetings on Valentine's Day and they were not with the significant other or females of
4:11
my life, which added to weirdness and hilarity as we were out getting some
4:16
grub. We will talk about that a little bit later as well as we
4:20
start to get some stuff done here on a Friday night, sterling, number
4:24
of other things and a lot of fun to have as well. Appreciate you
4:27
being here. I'm wondering this is what I'm wondering. How bad And this
4:30
is sort of a go to evergreen topic, but I think it makes sense
4:33
right here, right now with the way stuff is. If you're out there
4:36
driving, you can do it hands free. I want to know, or
4:39
if you've been on the road, how bad has it been where you are?
4:43
Because like I told you, it took me a better part of twice
4:46
as long to get here driving down seventy five. In navigating I didn't have
4:51
any problems. Slipping around secondary streets in the neighborhood basically was the worst.
4:58
Otherwise just changing lanes were off accumulates, and it seemed like this is what
5:01
happens a lot of times. There are people, I think, because they
5:04
have a truck or people because they have an SUV, that they think they
5:09
are invincible on the road, that they're made to motor through absolutely anything,
5:14
no matter what, and it just sadly ain't so. So I saw some
5:17
people up off the road and slipping and slide and sort of getting that quick
5:23
education I guess of maybe it is good to slow down. So just wondering
5:27
how it is where you are, and if you're out there working trying to
5:29
keep it safe out there, we appreciate you doing what you do. I
5:32
know it can be hard, it can be long, it can be tedious,
5:35
and then you got to worry about everybody else who's on the road.
5:38
So we appreciate you. Five point three seven four nine seven eight hundred,
5:43
the Big One. You can also talk back the iHeartRadio app if you're streaming
5:46
Appreciate you being here. It's Friday night, the weekend is here. It's
5:49
sterling trying to make sense of it and have a little fun. Appreciate you
5:53
listening the Nation station. What you got seven hundred WLW. Maybe you missed
5:58
one of our shows because you were stylist, had you under the hair dryer
6:01
a little too long. It's the don't worry. You can get the podcast
6:10
of our shows and here what you missed. Check him out on the iHeartRadio.
6:14
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6:32
Fans. Now is the time to get your twenty twenty four season tickets
6:35
so you don't miss a moment. With a season, so your voice familiar.
6:40
Reading as always from space dot com, the guy behind out there the
6:43
book. He covers issues like exoplanets and spaceflight. He's a senior space editor.
6:48
It's surprising you'd say he's from space dot com. It's Mike d Wall
6:51
back on seven hundred W wellw with sterling, Mike, how are you doing
6:56
good? How are you? I have no complaints. It seems to me
7:00
you'll have to tell me from your perspective about twenty four thirty six hours ago
7:03
something like that. I don't know my basic math so much. I get
7:08
a push message to my phone and it tells me that there's going to be
7:11
an impending announcement about Russia and satellite and military I guess development of weaponry.
7:18
And I think, have I not had this conversation with Mike d wall on
7:21
more than one occasion over the years? Is it me? Or is there
7:25
nothing new about the supposed bombshell bit of information? Yeah, there is.
7:30
It's sort of old hat, but there's a new wrinkle. I think the old hat is that is that Russia is working on a weapon to take out
7:38
satellites. And that's that's not news. You know, that's something we've known
7:42
about for like a few decades or kind of more than a few decades,
7:45
going back to like I mean almost to the dawn of the space age.
7:47
But I mean all of the space powers, once they reach a certain level
7:51
of sophistication, start trying to work on ways to like disable their adversary satellites,
7:59
you know, I mean, it's not that we've seen that like put
8:01
into action yet. We're we don't have full blown space warfare yet, but
8:05
we we have developed anti satellite technology. Russia certainly has, China certainly has,
8:11
and they've they have tested it before. You know, we've we've seen a couple of these incidents where both China and and also Russia have have like
8:18
destroyed some of their own dead satellites in a test of some of this technology,
8:24
and they've they've like created big new clouds of space junk and caused a
8:28
big hullabaloo about it from a lot of people who who want to keep space
8:31
kind of safe and sustainable. So that that's not new that like Russia is
8:35
trying to develop like new anti satellite tech. The kind of new wrinkle though,
8:39
is that apparently it's come out that there's like a nuclear component to this,
8:43
to the new the new anti satellite tech they're working on. And that's
8:48
about all we know. We we haven't been told if it's like a nuclear
8:50
weapon or if it's just like a nuclear powered spacecraft. I would think it's
8:56
probably nuclear powered, because a nuclear weapon in space doesn't make a lot of
9:01
sense. It seems like it would be pretty indiscriminate if you just like blow up a nuclear bomb and lower th orb. But it's gonna do a lot
9:07
more than just take out one satellite, it would seem. But yeah,
9:09
we don't have a lot of details, So that's why there are so many
9:13
rumors kind of flying around, so much speculation going around to fill that void
9:16
of information. Here's a mighty wall from space dot com talking to Sterling on
9:20
seven hundred WLW about this news of the Russian military efforts in space developing some
9:26
type of weapon, perhaps nucrrelated or powered, if not utilized up there,
9:31
to kill satellites. And we've talked about that before. So much of our
9:33
everyday life from grabbing your phone or your wristwatch or pick a device, whether
9:39
it's a GPS and how you travel, or weather information, which you've got
9:43
the stuff coming in the West Coast with more rain, we've got snow in
9:45
the Tri State. I mean, all these things, or what's happening in
9:48
space with satellite let alone, what all kinds of other communication, How much
9:54
of our everyday lives would be disrupted if in fact, satellites would go dark
9:58
in some fashion. Yeah, it's it's I mean it is a really big
10:03
deal. A lot of stuff that wouldn't even think about. I mean a lot of telecom stuff is now satellite based. There just simple stuff like I'm
10:09
watching TV and getting a signal from like from your phone to do internet on
10:13
me if you're yeah, if you do satellite internet with like yeah, yeah.
10:16
Like for example, SpaceX's giant Starlink Mere constellation is getting more and more
10:20
users. That's obviously space based. But like, I think what has gotten
10:26
the whole kind of us like kind of political and and like military class so
10:31
worked up too, is that there's a lot of military capabilities that could be
10:35
affected by this, you know. I mean part of the reason we like,
10:39
yeah, like we've talked of this before. I think about part of
10:41
the reason why our military is so good. There are a lot of reasons,
10:43
but like a big one is our space assets are so good. We
10:48
have really really good spy satellites, we have really really good military communications satellites.
10:52
And there's a worry, like among top brass that if there is a
10:56
really effective anti satellite kind of tech that comes out by Russia or by China,
11:01
and they use it, they could seriously degrade our advantage on the battlefield
11:05
by taking out some of our really good space assets. So that's another aspect
11:09
that I think explains why people are taking it so seriously. And I think
11:13
just kind of how it came about is why it's made such a splash too,
11:16
because there was I mean, we like, we haven't seen this before
11:20
where a congressman just kind of stands up and calls attention to this to try
11:24
to get action on it. I mean, people in the space community,
11:28
we've reported on this stuff before, but it has never been kind of dropped
11:31
like this by a congressman saying, we need to declassify this information. This
11:35
is a big problem. And so that's kind of why you've seen a big
11:37
kind of flurry of news about it. He's Mike dy Waller, senior space
11:41
Writerspace dot Com with Stirling on the Big One. When we talked in the
11:45
past and you mentioned this about the SpaceX and you mentioned Starlink, which leads
11:50
me to them killing some of those satellites or the talk of it over the
11:54
next few months that have either not been working correctly or somehow degraded. It's
11:58
the same type of con in the worry you mentioned battlefield because SpaceX has helped
12:03
in some fashion with Ukraine. We have utilized our technology from space helping Ukraine
12:09
against Russia. All of this is somehow interrelated, aside from US being perhaps
12:13
a target of one of our most notable enemies. Yes, yeah, yeah,
12:18
and that that actually came up there. Yeah, Like there was a
12:20
press conference during during like the daily White House press reefon yesterday afternoon, they
12:26
had the National Security Communications Advisor come on and field questions and he got about
12:31
half an hour's worth of like of questions about this this like Russian asat technology,
12:35
and I mean one of them was, yeah, could this be in
12:39
retaliation for the sort of US or or you know, like the Ukraine's use
12:45
of Starlit communication satellites in the ongoing war. And yeah, he basically said,
12:50
you know, I can't comment on that. That's that was a common
12:54
refrain during the press conference. We can't comment on that right now. We're looking into it and all that. But so people are trying to see what
13:00
the what those links are, if if an anti satellite tech in development could
13:05
take out starlinks. But there that's it's there's about fifty five hundred of them
13:11
up now, would have to be a pretty big effort to kind of knock
13:13
out the entire constellation. And that's sort of that's an interesting kind of wrinkle
13:16
too about and this is something that that the US military is starting to increasingly
13:22
go toward, is like using constellations of smaller kind kind of less capable of
13:28
satellite so they can launch more quickly and more cheaply than just the olden days
13:33
where they had like a five billion dollar satellite that was like the size of
13:35
a school bus and it's did a lot of stuff, but pick it out.
13:39
You know, that's a big deal because we only had like five of
13:41
them, so they actually that that's one big kind of like response to the
13:45
anti satellite tech is sort of redundancies, right, I mean that's what that
13:50
is. Redundancy. Yeah, and don't so yeah, don't don't put all
13:54
your eggs in one basket with the spy SATs or with with the communications sets.
13:58
You know, launch a bunch moment and so it becomes less important for
14:01
your adversary to take one out, you know, it doesn't. It's just
14:03
not like not that big a deal. Mikey, Well, I have to
14:07
ask you this because we've discussed it in the past. I've done it and lightheartedly, but this is the stuff that always goes around in my skull,
14:13
for good or bad. It's you think it's a hell out talking to me.
14:18
In my head, it's worse. But you talked about nukes and when
14:22
we've discussed how viable they would be in space, whether it was powering something
14:26
to get there and move around, or actually detonation of some type of nuclear
14:30
weapon there, but also the effect of it on terra Firma, on our
14:35
little rock here we call home and Earth. Is the electromagnetic pulse which could
14:39
effectively take out communications, could take out electrical grids and all sorts of other
14:45
stuff. What do we know at this point? That's not I guess that's
14:48
been shared with the general public or wherever circles you roll in doing what you
14:52
do for space dot Com. As far as how likely that type of scenario
14:58
could present itself, because that's always one of those things that because you could
15:01
wake up today, uh, and it'd be like going back to the dark
15:03
ages if everything went dark up there. Yeah, that's that certainly is a
15:09
is some of the speculation has been that it would there is some sort of
15:13
e m P like electromagtic pulse component to this. But and people asked that
15:16
during during that that like news conference yesterday, and he actually said, like
15:22
the National Security Advisor Communications Advisor said that it doesn't it it has to it
15:28
would be an in space technology and it wouldn't really affect kind of us us
15:33
on the ground directly or or caused destruction on the ground directly. So I
15:39
don't know, I mean, he probably chose those words very carefully, and
15:41
maybe like an electromatic pulse could still fit in the description because it doesn't like
15:45
literally cause damage or destruction. But that's it sort of seems like we're talking
15:50
about just like a technology that's designed to to disable satellites or to blind them
15:54
or something like that. That it's it's like satillite, it's it's it's meant
15:58
to do a satell's in space. That's that's my own speculation, but you
16:03
know, that's kind of what I would would draw from those sorts of comments.
16:07
And I mean, like I said before, you know, like we don't know. There's still a lot of conversations going on, and they have
16:12
yet to kind of release the information that they have because they're like worried at
16:18
the moment that like to release it would be to expose their sources and their
16:22
methods and cause panic, right people, I mean, I don't know,
16:25
how are people really that fragile at this point, Because it seems like so
16:29
much that has gone on and then continues to go on. People are like,
16:32
yeah, well, you know, I've still got Netflix. Oh, I got the iHeartRadio app. Oh I still can go pick up a pizza.
16:37
But there's a big difference. I mean, if you've left through a
16:40
power outage for any extended period of time without a generator, you can see
16:45
how quickly when you talk about infrastructure destruction or or you know, somehow separation
16:51
of access to such, how quickly we can devolve into a very dangerous place
16:56
on the ground, even though there is no real destruction of that infrastructure here
17:00
at our level. Yeah, and that would be that would be a very
17:03
big deal from a political that kind of standpoint too, because if I if
17:08
this weapon is designed to kind of take out our infrastructure on the ground,
17:12
and they use it to that, I mean, to that end, that's
17:15
an active war, right, So sure, if Russia did that, then
17:19
that would be an active war against the United States. And now we're off
17:22
in this kind of nightmare scenario of two giant, nuclear powered kind of powers
17:26
going at it, and so hopefully it's nothing. There's there's nothing along those
17:30
lines that's going to happen. And they are also careful to stress. They've
17:33
been careful to stress all of these White House spokes people have said, you
17:37
know, this is not a capability that the Russians currently have. It's not
17:41
like there is this spacecraft up there doing this stuff now. It's just that
17:45
they're working on it and that they might be able to field it at some
17:49
point in the in the nebulous future. That's what we know. That's what
17:52
we think we know. So it's not like people need to be living on
17:56
pins and needles, like we're going to get kind of vapor from above in
18:00
a minute. Like, Yeah, that sort of panic is not is not
18:03
warranted at all. Yeah. I mean I remember being a little kid and
18:07
coming up in the you know, the eighties and what have you. In
18:10
the late seventies in school, were still looking at those old movies, you
18:12
know, like the tuck your head between your legs find the fallout shelter,
18:17
hide under your desk if hell happens, kind of scenarios. And all that
18:21
did was scare me to death. And the danger hasn't changed. It was
18:25
just I guess a way they thought to calm people, or maybe I guess you'd protect you with. In fact, the worst happened. But as I
18:30
ask you this, and we sit here talking about this mighty wall from space
18:33
dot com by the way, with Sterling on the big one, your brain,
18:37
in your experience and knowledge base in what you do over in what you've
18:41
done over the years, is different than most. So what have I not
18:45
asked? And when you think about danger or warfare or what's relevant to this?
18:51
Because immediately think of you know, the Syops everybody was freaking out. Oh it's Taylor Swift's a Syops thing, it's whatever, or it's electronic warfare
18:57
you got to worry about. I mean, is an entity, is a
19:00
military entity. We've talked about the military spacecraft that was up there for what
19:06
better part of the year, maybe more. We work on tons of stuff
19:08
too, But I know there are things I haven't even conceived of that are
19:12
relevant to this. What if I, mister, have you thought of anything,
19:15
or do you think we're safe and we can just let everybody kick back
19:18
for the weekend. I mean, I'm not trying to make you like a prophet of doom, but I'm a prophet of dooms. No. I mean,
19:23
I like, it's tough, right because we don't know all that much
19:27
about this this new threat that we just learned about. But I would just
19:33
I mean, people would would be useful for them to have a little perspective
19:37
and people who don't follow this stuff on a daily basis and aren't super into
19:41
space. This is probably like the very first that they're hearing of, like
19:44
an anti satellite weapon, and it sounds so futuristic in advance and all that,
19:47
but it's just like, this is technology that we have worked on for
19:49
decades, the Russians have, so of the Chinese that's been demonstrated in space
19:53
by blowing up some of their own satellites. Like I said earlier, this
19:57
is not like sci fi super weapon and stuff. This is technology that the
20:00
major space powers have been working on for years and years and have demonstrated.
20:04
So I think people need that perspective of this is part of the space power
20:10
game that all of us are playing all the major kind of players in this
20:14
field have been playing for a long time, and just the fact that the
20:17
Russians are working on something that might be better or more advanced or more efficient,
20:22
it is something to worry about, but it's not something to panic about,
20:26
because you can bet that we're working on stuff that we don't know about,
20:29
and that probably makes the Russians nervous and the Chinese nervous too, So
20:33
it's just part of this. It is a scary game that everybody's playing,
20:37
but it's been going on for a long time, so it's nothing to panic
20:41
about, I think. And also I would just urge people, you know, Russia is kind of like a master of misinformation, as we've learned over
20:48
the years, you know, as they try to interfere with our elections and
20:52
you just don't know, you don't know why they're doing what they're doing.
20:56
If you can trust what you're seeing or what you're reading about them, it
21:00
might be part of a syg op because they're big on sy ops, I
21:03
mean, all conspiracy theories. Not yet, like notwithstanding, Russia does like
21:10
actively try to advance its own aims by misinformation and propaganda. Of course,
21:14
so take stuff like this with a grain of salt. It could be a
21:18
way to try to destabilize us and our military establishment or get us worried,
21:22
especially since it's an election year. There's just all these possibilities, so there's
21:26
no reason to panic about any like one of them when we don't really have
21:30
all the information, can't do anything about it, so why worry. But
21:33
it's good to be informed, a reasonable voice in unreasonable times. It's always
21:37
good to talk to you. Thank you for helping break it down, Mike
21:41
d Wallspace dot com. Anything else before I let you go enjoy a weekend
21:45
without stress, hopefully. And I'm not going to mention your forty nine ers
21:48
in the super Bowl. It's I mean, you know, yeah, no,
21:52
it's like I was expecting it. I was expecting to for it to
21:56
be a close game and for our hearts to be broken. That Attachrick Mahomes,
22:00
you know, that's just yeah, that's what it does. Like,
22:06
Yeah, that's how I went into Super Bowl Sunday. I was fully expecting it to be a kind of crushing close loss. So I was I was
22:11
disappointed, but I was not surprised. That's it. It's time to move
22:15
on. To the next one, I suppose, and maybe we'll see you
22:18
come next year in New Orleans for the Super Bowl with the Bengals and forty
22:21
nine Ers Part three. Perhaps, Yeah, I would love to not see
22:25
Patrick Mahomes. Not that Joe Burrow is that much less scary, but he
22:30
is a little less scary. He's healthy. I'd be careful, but party's
22:36
all right too. Mike dy Wall, thanks for making time. Enjoy your weekend, and thank you for seriously breaking it down so it's not so I
22:41
guess terrifying. You know, there's no reason to panic. Yep, that's
22:45
the take home. It's it's interesting, it's not terribly surprising, and you
22:49
shouldn't panic. We need It's just like most of these things, we need
22:52
more information, and when we get more information, then we'll be able to
22:56
make a more proper assessment. I guess there you go. We'll talk about
23:00
like eclipses and I don't know, getting to the moon or Mars next time
23:03
again, Mike y Wall, thanks man, take care of yourself. Sure
23:07
thing you too. The books called out there and you can find him at
23:10
space dot com. He's mikedy Wall, a Sterling coming back seven hundred WLW
23:15
bounced to the crowd game way too loud into the second decad lab way too
23:21
lab in Cornassio. Strand is mobbed at home. White can't wait too laugh
23:26
hid right by twenty twenty four Cincinnati rat. He's very free, do it
23:33
all way too lud All starts with screen train and he has just hit for
23:37
the cycle. Seven hundred w wel job way too loud. That's why do
23:42
you buy a ticket the Home of the Rings, Cincinnati Basketball one hundred WLW
23:48
gladerlong So talk to mikey Wall from space dot com talking about the danger of
23:53
attack on our satellites in space, because that's where satellites tend to be unless
23:59
it's like a Dave Matthew Song's satellite there on the radio or on your Iheard
24:03
media app or whatever. But if they blew up satellites that would control weather
24:08
and technology. If there was an electric magnetic pulse is what the thought would
24:14
happen, there'd be a whole lot of stuff lost. So here, I
24:19
think we can do something here. I want to This is what I want
24:22
to know, because if you've been through a power outage for any extended period
24:26
of time, you can realize that we're very dependent on that power, right,
24:32
whether it's your rechargeable devices, all of our technology and stuff that goes
24:37
along with that. Let alone the basics. If you don't have like a
24:41
generator at the house, which they could be could you know, messed up
24:44
too, But if you've got a lot of electronics in it or whatever else.
24:47
There are some things that would in fact be destroyed, they say, by this type of event. And the question is, let's just start with
24:56
one thing that would likely go away, which would say, like the internet.
25:00
So if tomorrow you woke up and the Internet was gone missing, maybe
25:04
it comes back, maybe it doesn't. What I want to know is what
25:08
would you do? How would you handle it? Could you handle it?
25:11
Would your kids be able to handle it? I think people that are older
25:15
than you know, probably thirty or so, would probably be able to navigate
25:18
that a little easier than people in their teens or younger, where they've lived
25:22
and had no real concept of anything without that technology in their hand on their
25:27
wrist and pick a device of choice. Let alone our cars and stuff that
25:32
goes along with that. There are a number of things, they said,
25:34
that would literally just go away, that would disappear anything. They say that
25:40
it would be like connected to a charger, perhaps your laptop, maybe that
25:45
phone. If that were to happen, they would get fried. Perhaps maybe
25:52
your television, which of course on any device, it's basically TV in hand
25:56
also at this point, but if you got like, you know, a big everybody got a lot of deals on some big TVs in time for the
26:02
Super Bowl now clearance time, they might be gone, just choked out,
26:07
goodbye forever. If not just burn up, right, you got a lot
26:11
of different think in the winter time as we're thinking now, if you've got
26:15
electric heat baseboard heat pumps that are controlled by electricity or igniters for like your
26:23
furnace or your water heat or whatever else, that kind of stuff would go
26:26
away. This is sort of like doomsday sort of scenario. A lot of
26:30
vehicles after nineteen ninety and I don't know how many cars preceding nineteen ninety or
26:37
actually on the road or road worthy at this point, but if there were
26:41
a real EMP electric magnetic pulse kind of scenario, it's quite likely that most
26:48
of the modern cars would be lost. I'm not even talking battery cars.
26:52
I'm talking just microprocessors that are so involved with every other aspect of transportation,
26:59
our vehicles. That would probably include buses too. I don't know about the streetcar, probably that goes along with it. So I mean, what would
27:04
you do? How would you react if we could start it just on the
27:08
basic level, Because I'm not trying to like stoke the fire of fear and
27:14
so forth. I'm not a fear mongerer. Even the way may act and joke around about being the profit of doom. That sort of goes along with
27:19
that. But if the Internet was gone tomorrow, what would you do?
27:23
Could you survive? Because there's a whole lot of people right now dependent upon
27:27
directions, dependent upon their email communication, a lot of people working from home
27:32
that would have to end like meat, that would be over. As much
27:34
as they've been trying to get people back in the office, that would could
27:38
it could very well be the thing to get people back into the office if
27:42
everything else electronic at the office. It wasn't already toast For that matter too,
27:47
a lot of people have everything with the smart and internet connected home,
27:52
from the refrigerator to sometimes I mean picking appliance at this point, many of
27:57
which just voice activated voice control that sort of goes into it God forbids something
28:03
like this happen. It could also be an issue with the pacemaker, and
28:07
that some people friends of mine and family dealing with those that would that would
28:11
be unnerving and problematic. The EMP also, they say, could in fact
28:15
put the kibosh on running water, depending not just the water heater and that
28:22
mechanism to ignite it to warm it up, whether it's a tankless water heater
28:26
or otherwise, depending, But that could be an issue too, or the
28:30
entire power grid. But let's just start simply and say, the Internet,
28:33
what would you do? Would you be able to survive? How much of
28:37
it? I guess how much of a challenge would it be for you?
28:40
Five point three seven four nine, seven thousand, eight hundred the big one
28:45
on the iHeartRadio you can talk back clicking on that microphone. I'm also on
28:49
x at Sterling Radio if you care to get interactive that way. I think
28:53
that would be a challenge. I was trying to process how much time I
28:57
spend with the vice in hand, and you know there was a time aside
29:03
from the delivery the newspaper at the house rather than the electronic subscription. And
29:10
I still like to go buy actual physical copies of The Inquirer or the Dayton
29:15
Daily News. You know, when I was living in East Wannut Hills,
29:18
I'd ride my bike down when it was warm weather season and on a Sunday,
29:22
and I'd grab multiple newspapers from Fountain News and then ride myself back up
29:27
the hill and around the way through Mount Adams and on the other side of
29:30
the hill the house, sort of to check out the reading of all these
29:34
fine newspapers from other places. So, as I think about this, the
29:41
loss of the Internet would be devastating, might be good for publishers because they'd
29:45
be able to come back in a big way for people to be informed other
29:48
than like us here on the big one. But we'd likely still be around,
29:52
hopefully if the stuff didn't get fried. And they've got a lot of
29:55
old tech and redundancy and backup stuff at our tower side. As I understand
29:59
it, a lot of young people right now, apparently in a renaissance of
30:03
sorts, which is kind of strange or unusual. I think in a lot
30:07
of ways people are embracing, apparently younger kids, the idea of a landline,
30:11
which I don't know if I actually buy that, but there are research
30:15
studies that are saying that even though it's getting closer and closer to being like
30:18
a dinosaur in other words, gone like the phone booth, but it is
30:22
one of those things that are out there. I think if there was no
30:26
Internet, that would be a lot of TV loss. You'd have to be
30:29
watching over the air, flipping channels. Like when I was just a little
30:32
sterling, where I only thought I had a handful of purposes in life.
30:36
It was turning channels, adjusting the antenna. I would take the trash out,
30:41
and doing the dishes. And sometimes I just have to stand in the
30:44
right place in the house, in the family room or whatever to be able
30:48
to make sure reception was good. Now, of course, pick your device,
30:51
whether it's your smart TV or you're plugged in with the internet some other
30:55
fashion, to be able to get what you want when you want, and that includes even listening to the iHeartRadio anywhere you happen to be effectively on planet
31:02
Earth. So it could be a very serious thing if we had the EMP
31:07
or an assault on satellite, which is the technology and effort in war time.
31:11
That's infrastructure. You don't get any more basic than that. I mean,
31:15
if you look at what's happened with Ukraine and what's happened to even in
31:18
Gaza for that matter, is the war continues in those places. Infrastructure the
31:25
very basics of water and food and access to power, travel, bridges,
31:32
roads, all these other things. But the communication of tons of information by
31:37
way of Internet, now your heart pressed to be able to find it,
31:40
even if that's instantly as you scan out of a self checkout someplace, those
31:45
likely would go away, and the inventory control and the sharing of that information
31:51
instantaneously would also be altered. When I worked at the grocery barn as a
31:56
kid growing up, the inventory was old school. You handsticker price stuff that
32:01
you needed to have price as well as the shelf tag, and you keyed
32:07
it in when I was just a teenager, right, that's how it worked. I know. Selan mcmanon's like, really, what the when were you?
32:12
Stone Ages? Are you one hundred and twenty six? No, no,
32:14
I'm not like in the early fifties, But a lot of changes happened.
32:17
But the Internet going away and that sharing of information automatically inventory happens in
32:23
reordering of product as they can see stuff that moves that would all be altered
32:28
as well, so logistics, communications, everything would be different. If you
32:32
woke up tomorrow and overnight the internet had gone missing, What would you do?
32:42
How challenging would it be? Would your kids be able to function?
32:46
Would they adapt easier than you? Because they make fun of people that are
32:51
older, like we don't know what's up? And you know they were born with the phone on their hand or in their ear or automatically connected. And
32:57
at this point, even now we're talking about implants in our skulls. I
33:00
don't know what would happen if we had any MPN you had one of those
33:02
data links in your head and how that would play? Break, come back,
33:07
give you a chance to sound off. There's more to do on a Friday night, Sterling. Appreciate you being here. Seven hundred WLW. Meanwhile,
33:14
in the enchanted forest, there's a fairy godmother. I bet you're gonna
33:17
see Cinderella. I suppose are you going to make her a beautiful dress for
33:22
the ball? I don't know what's in it for me, put you're a
33:25
fairy godmother and all I do is kids? How about little something for me?
33:30
Like what I'd like to listen to? Eddie and Rocky they're funny.
33:34
What if you put a radio in her pumpkin carry we could all listen to
33:37
Eddie and Rocky. Excellent idea. Eddie and Rocky give your day a fairy
33:43
tale ending Eddie and rock Monday afternoon at three on seven hundred WW. No
33:47
appointment has ever needed at ORTHO since the Orthopedic Urgent Care plus Ortho since the
33:52
Orthopedic Urgent Care has extended evening and Saturday hours in Edgewood and Anderson Sterling hanging
33:58
out find Friday night seven hundred WLW. Glad you're here as well. My
34:01
first running forecast on the Big One. Snow giving away to just clear skies
34:05
down to twenty do to night thirty for your Saturday, forty five on Sunday
34:09
and back to the warm, especially for this time of year. I have
34:13
fifty expected on Monday. It's twenty eight right now. Your severe Weather station
34:16
seven hundred WLW guessing the so still some slick spots, so handling their business
34:21
on the interstates, Cincinnati, municipalities all over the Tri State, in the
34:24
Miami Valley, and beyond handling their business getting that slush and ice and whatever
34:30
else slop that's out there so just to be careful wherever you're going and so
34:34
forth. It was already looking better as I was coming in, as it
34:37
seemed like the wet stuff was no longer coming down so much, and just
34:40
allow a little extra space and everything should be hopefully okay. I did see
34:45
a good number of accidents, but not too bad and twenty eight right now
34:49
you're severe. Weather Station seven hundred WLW was asking about what do you do
34:52
if the Internet was gone? You can certainly sound off on that. I
34:54
think we'd adapted to take some time. I mean, I'd think about,
34:58
like all the food that I order for pickup and how often I actually make a phone call to do it, and five or six places I regularly get
35:06
food from i'd have to, like if the phone didn't work, whatever,
35:08
he'd have to like show up. Most of the time, it's an app
35:14
and I just you know this this and this click click click boom. It's
35:16
that do I get my points or whatever? And that's the way it goes.
35:20
It's kind of an odd thanks. Speaking of this, I would want to ask you this because Lenten season is here, right. I had a
35:27
fat Tuesday a couple days ago. Sloaney in the big you know, a
35:30
whole Maddy Graw thing in northern Kentucky went down as usual, which a great
35:34
cause, helping a lot of people in need in the Tri State, which
35:37
is fantastic. Sheila Gray, of course, the Queen and are Sloaney the
35:40
King has been that way for quite some time. A lot of beads thrown,
35:44
a lot of happy people, and a lot of kingcakes consumed, and
35:47
so forth. And then now Lenten season is here, so a lot of
35:52
Friday fish fries going on for some time now. And I had a number
35:55
of people asking me about my favorite fish sandwiches around out and there are no
36:00
shortage. So I'm going to carry that over and ask you, especially when
36:07
it comes to like fast food chain restaurant kind of scenarios. And the word
36:10
is that the McDonald's filet of fish, which is an everyday item on there
36:15
and always still good, it actually originated here, and I guess there was
36:17
some serious selling and negotiating when they were seeing what was happening in the Tri
36:22
State in Cincinnati that location. All of a sudden it was embraced and brought
36:25
into the fold or all over wherever McDonald's are and there's no shortage of other
36:31
places that actually have them. I like the spicy one from pop Eyes.
36:36
I love frish as fish, There's no question about that. I've had I
36:39
don't know somebody told me there was a new one at Wendy's, But the
36:45
last year or two I've had Wendy's, and I thought that was pretty good,
36:51
to be honest with you, And you know, a lot of times they only bring that back seasonally, Lenten season being the one, so of
36:58
all the places that are out there, I know I forgot. Even if
37:00
you're not like worried about giving stuff up and having fish on a Friday or
37:05
Lendon season, I'm just wondering, like, do you have the favorite fish
37:08
that sort of goes from someplace in the chain restaurant area. Arby's has a
37:13
pretty good one too, And I remember that it was really weird for a
37:15
minute the last time I got one of those, I thought it was a
37:20
pygmy bun with a normal sized thing. It was a normal sized bun,
37:22
and I don't know where the fish came. It was a mutant size filet
37:27
is all I know that was on there, and it was still crispy and
37:30
still good. And I liked it a lot. I know there's some others
37:34
five one, three, seven, eight hundred the big one. You can
37:37
certainly sound off at Stirling Radio on x if you'd like to too. I
37:42
think that probably answers. That was a question from Alex as far as the
37:46
fish is concerned, So thank you for asking. Uh. Yeah, I
37:50
like my fish Friday's or any other day for that matter. I'm a fan.
37:54
That was some fries. I'm living large as far as giving stuff up,
38:00
No, I mean, I don't know. I try. I try
38:02
to just you know, be not as gluttonous, just in general, trying
38:07
to be better across the board. Something else that has been brought up,
38:12
and I think this might be something too that's kind of weird. And I
38:15
have for buddy of mine, travels like crazy amounts of time on the road
38:21
handling account business and stuff in the media and what have you. And I'm
38:24
telling you, I think he's probably gone on average three days a week.
38:30
And I don't know how much of the year that's the case, but it seems like most of the year that's what his deal is. And he was
38:36
telling me the links that he goes to try to secure his hotel room beyond
38:45
the latch that's in the hotel room, that's already there. And I asked
38:50
him as like, have you had problems if people tried to bum rush the
38:53
rooms that you have been in where you travel? And he's from big towns,
38:57
the small town super nice hotels, whatever else, motel, hotel,
39:00
holiday inn, new name it, you know the song and I and he
39:05
said no, he'd never had a problem, but he doesn't want a problem.
39:07
And he's telling me like weird ways. I don't know if it's like booby traps or whatever he's got. You'll put like tape on the door.
39:13
He'll set a glass on top of the doorknob, which seems to me naturally
39:15
going to fall, and I'd end up breaking the glass on my own forgetting
39:19
about it, and then that would wake me up and I'd never be able
39:22
to sleep again in the room, which is also a problem. Which is
39:25
kind of an odd scenario. So I don't know if my buddy isn't an
39:29
anomaly or if this is something that I should be doing. He told me,
39:32
also he has you know those little teeny like kick under the door doorstops,
39:37
those rubber rised ones. He said, he travels with one of those,
39:39
and kicks that also under the edge of the door, so that if
39:44
they somehow are able to navigate everything else he had done, they wouldn't be
39:47
able to push the door open. My nightmare scenario, I have a health
39:51
emergency, I need help, and then they've got to figure a way to
39:54
open the door. After I barricaded myself in the room, I'm like,
39:58
what kind of places are you hanging out in? And they set him up
40:00
in nice spots while traveling doing his business, So I I don't Maybe I'm
40:05
the weirdo by not going over and above, but I think I'm gonna get
40:08
one of those doorstops, just because it seems like it might be a good
40:12
idea. Five point three seven eight hundred the big one. You can talk
40:15
back the iHeartRadio app to Georgia and Jay uh talking. I'm going back to
40:19
the power out or the internet going away after an EMP or whatever, and
40:22
we got Dave and Dick and others coming up after you. Jay, what's
40:24
up? How are you this Friday night? Starling? Yeah? Pretty good?
40:29
You is? You? Guy? Snow up there a little bit, just enough to slow people down, But I don't think there's going to be
40:34
enough to really make snow people or whatever snowmen. So I don't you know,
40:37
I don't know. And we're down here in Marietta, Georgia. Nice
40:40
day out today, sunny out. Well not right now, but it was
40:44
earlier he was. Or that's correct. Yeah, there you goes say,
40:47
Yeah, here's right. Here's what I do about the Internet going down.
40:52
I'm eighty years old. I work in risk management all my life, as
40:55
far as lost revention, and I always don't trust the Internet. If it
41:01
goes down, I can't do anything. I can't even write a check or
41:06
do anything or democrat or anything. Yeah. So what I do is once
41:09
a month, I download all of my accounts, my checking account, and
41:15
it's documented because it's their information, not just you and your ledger. Yeah.
41:20
Right at the top of each spreadsheet, I put on there, memble
41:23
to the file. Take the legal that way, so I can always go
41:28
back to the bank to hear do it to my account as of a certain day at a certain time. Jay, that's tremendous. That that is a
41:34
that really is a great idea. I've never thought about that, and that's
41:37
that's I should probably do better about backing stuff up in the first place.
41:40
Now that I think about it, I appreciate the call man and you being
41:43
a part of the show. Quickly, Dave, before we get to the
41:45
news at ten thirty, what do you have, hey, Sterling, good
41:50
evening, How you doing. I think I'm all right? Good, good good. Hey, Hey, I got a great place for you. I
41:55
know you're a Mima Valley dating guy and s Jacks on Bigger Road. Okay,
42:02
they got great Mimi and fish flads. I mean, certainly, you
42:07
know you can't get kangle wrong one with with McDonald's, you know, two
42:12
for six right now. But there you go. That's not too bad,
42:15
Dave. I appreciate the call. Thank you. Somebody else messaged me and they asked me if I had done JJ's chicken and fish and the answer is
42:22
yes. And it is good time for news now more Sterling coming back on
42:25
the other side. Seven hundred WLW News Traffic and Weather News Radio, seven
42:31
hundred w l W, Cincinnati. The former president hit hard by civil case
42:39
ruling with the ten thirty reports. I'm Ley mallin breaking Now. This is
42:46
a special report from ABC News Trump civil fraud judgment. I'm Daria Aldinger.
42:52
New York's Attorney General, Letitia James, says Donald Trump learned today no one
42:55
is above the lawyer. Day. Americans cannot lie to a bank about how
43:00
much money they have in order to get a mortgage, to buy a home or alone, to keep their business afloat, or to send their child to
43:07
college. And if they did, our government would throw the book at them.
43:10
A judge today ordering the former president to pay three hundred and fifty five
43:15
million dollars in fines. Mister Trump is also banned from doing business in the
43:19
state of New York for three years. He says the case is politically motivated.
43:23
If I weren't running, none of this stuff would have ever happened.
43:27
None of these lawsuits would have ever happened. Nothing. I would have had
43:30
a nice life. But I enjoy this life for a different reasons. We're
43:34
going to make America great again, and mister Trump says he will appeal.
43:37
This is ABC News and now the latest traffic and weather together. In the
43:45
forecast. For tonight, it's snow for US and two to three inches for
43:49
most a low of twenty two. Then for Saturday, cloud's early, some
43:53
sun later in a high twenty nine. Feeling like the teens at night,
43:59
mostly clear, We're down to nineteen is a temp and then Sunday mostly sunny
44:04
in my high of forty two. From your severe weather station, I'm nine
44:07
First Warning Chief Meteorologist Steve Rawley, News Radio seven hundred WLW. Now the
44:16
latest forecast from a train heating and cooling weather center on news radio seven hundred
44:22
WLW. It's mostly cloudy at the moment and the temperature in Cincinnati is around
44:29
twenty eight degrees as we look at traffic conditions, smooth sailing around Cincinnati.
44:36
Take your time. Roads are wet, but things looking good around the Queen
44:40
City. President Joe Biden visited East Palestine over a year after the Norfolk Southern
44:46
Trained to railment. Don't be clear, Well, there are acts of God.
44:53
This was an act of greed that was one for venerable, the President
45:00
saying last year's Norfolk sovereign training drama that spewed toxic chemicals that were eventually set
45:06
on fire to avoid a larger explosion was an act of greed. President Biden
45:10
also promising help for the area as long as it's needed. Today, I'm
45:15
announcing the award of six national institutes at health grants. It's to some of
45:21
America's best research universities to study the short and long term impacts what happened to
45:27
you, so you'll have a top researcher with you as long as you need.
45:31
Our next update is at eleven. I'm Lee Mawen News Radio, seven
45:36
hundred WLW. Body Armors Zero sugar is made with real sweeteners and real flavor
45:42
with zero sugar and zero grams of carbs. Body arm I tend not to
45:45
get into these waters because everything's so contentious, and I don't like arguing,
45:50
especially when I'm right, and it's just impossible to convince people sometimes that they're
45:54
wrong. The poor Donald Trump man, he's in trouble. Former President Lisa
46:00
out on the campaign trail. He's got a lot of cases, a lot of situations he's trying to deal with, and of course he says that he
46:07
wouldn't be in this trouble if he weren't running for office. The talk of
46:10
fraud that you just heard in that civil judgment of three hunt what is it,
46:15
three hundred and thirty five million dollars losing three years of business opportunities in
46:21
New York State as a result of those actions that he was so found guilty
46:24
of in a civil fashion. The damages decision doled out today. And this
46:31
is what I want to ask you, because I know times are tough,
46:35
and people love Donald Trump as much as he's hated. People love him and
46:39
they love him big time. So I'm gonna ask you, are you going
46:43
to send money to the Donald? Are you gonna help him out? Three hundred and thirty five million dollars? He's a billionaire. He probably doesn't need
46:50
it. I'm sure that he's really in us, and he was wrongfully found
46:52
to be responsible for these things, all of these cases, all which hunt.
46:58
There's no smoke without a fire, they say, But where's the fire?
47:00
Only smoke? Of course, So you care about the Donald. You
47:05
love the Donald, you want him to be president again. You may think
47:07
that he never lost the election that he lost to the current president Biden.
47:10
For that matter, I know people are thinking why didn't he go to East
47:14
Palestine sooner? Because he didn't want to be in the way. I guess he had other stuff to do. I don't know. But he sent him
47:19
money. The governments sent him money. They've done their job. But would
47:22
you send money to Donald Trump right here, right now. He needs your
47:25
help. He may have billions, he may not. The allegation is that
47:31
he was found legitimately in a civil case to be liable for was inflated values,
47:37
inflated moneies, and everything else associated with his holdings and so forth.
47:42
That's how he got here. I'm not here to say it was legit or
47:45
not legit. But the fact is he owes three. He's on the hook
47:47
for three hundred and thirty five million dollars. That is an inconceivable sum of
47:52
money for me. I don't know about you. I don't know what type
47:55
of life you're living. I don't know what kind of job you have,
47:58
and maybe you don't even have a job. I look at life like this. I am a business, and my business ain't so good as to give
48:05
three hundred thirty five million dollars to anyone. I'd I'd be happy with an
48:08
extra million right now? Well a million, right an extra Yeah, an
48:12
extra would be good. Five one, three, seven, four, nine,
48:15
seven thousand. Will you donate to the Donald the poor? Donald Trump
48:21
three hundred and thirty five million dollars former president of the United States. He's
48:25
in a world of trouble and he's just out there trying to make America great
48:30
again. He says, how about you. Are you gonna help the Donald,
48:32
whether it's to give to his campaign. I'm not soliciting for that.
48:36
You do whatever you want to do, But for three hundred thirty five million
48:39
dollars on the hook, that's a lot of dough. Will you support him?
48:45
Will you give him dollars? Will you give him cash money? Will
48:49
you donate what you can to help him out? You want to help?
48:53
You know, we have a lot of people in need, a lot of
48:55
people that are hungry, but he needs you. Will you help the Donald
49:00
right here, right now? Will you cough up some cash and say,
49:04
hey Donald, hello, former president, please take some money. You know
49:08
that it's hard times five one, three, seven, four, nine,
49:12
seven, eight hundred, The Big One, Talk Back, the iHeartRadio app.
49:15
I know in my email I get regular solicitations from him and others asking
49:22
to donate money for the trials and tribulations and his efforts to try to make
49:25
the America great again. I haven't checked to see if I've gotten a new
49:30
one asking for money now. I'm sure he'll try to appeal this. If there's a possibility of it. He'll throw paper at it, he'll try to
49:35
delay it, but there is no chance of him pardoning himself from a civil
49:40
judgment. As I understand it. He can't do anything at that level.
49:45
And that's where he's at. Three hundred and thirty five million. I know,
49:49
I can't even process that amount of I would live comfortably off of this
49:53
simple interest of three hundred million. That's a dollar for every American. By
49:59
the way, we're about three hundred and thirty or so, three hundred and twenty million people in the United States. If everyone would just give a dollar
50:06
to the Donald, he'd could get out of this hot water and move on
50:09
to the next case. I think he's got like ninety of them or something
50:13
like that. West Chester, Nancy, it's your turn with Sterling on the
50:16
big one. Will you help the Donald and his three hundred and thirty five
50:20
million dollar bill to the State of New York. I'll want to say this,
50:23
pardon my frenchman. Oh hell no, oh hell no. Why not?
50:27
Why would you help the Donald? Because number one, he doesn't deserve
50:31
it. Number Two, if he's got the money, let him pay it
50:35
himself. Number Three, I have bills the family to take care of I'm
50:38
sure he's not going to take care of me. Isn't he a victim?
50:43
Though he's a victim, it's a witch, it's not it's it's. What
50:46
I've loved in the comments is that if he wasn't running for president, this
50:52
would have never happened. He's been running for president for years. He never
50:55
gave up. It's in his head. The man needs to go to jail.
51:00
Curio. Thanks Gerlin. I really do appreciate listening to you, though,
51:04
and the evening's a weekends. Thank you, Nancy. I appreciate it.
51:07
You know, I don't know about jail. I mean he's he's old, right, I mean Biden's old. Trump's old. Three years time he
51:15
could it's three years. He can't do business in the state of New York.
51:19
Now, maybe some subsidiary, maybe, I don't know how that works
51:22
for respond you know, the other Trump's Trump kids or what have you,
51:25
that are grown. And I know this is challenging, This is heartbreaking for
51:29
a lot of people. And I don't care if you're a Republican or Democrat
51:31
or anything else. I'm just an American and I see a man who's hurt.
51:37
I see a man who's injured. I see a man who's a victim,
51:40
who's clearly in need. And because I care, because I try to
51:45
help people. I'm telling you right now, I just do what I can
51:49
to help my fellow human being. Would you do the same for Donald Trump?
51:57
Just a dollar? Maybe five? With five dollars? Can you spare
52:00
five dollars for Donald Trump and his three hundred and thirty five million dollar bill
52:06
to New York. Now that doesn't include law legal fees in the lawyers,
52:09
and he's got a lot of lawyers. He's got to pay a lot of
52:12
lawyers a lot of cases. I'm not worried about the other cases. They'll
52:15
work themselves out. But I mean, he's got Trump Tower, he's got
52:21
a lot of play. I mean, New York is home, even though he talks so hatefully about New York. Will you be there to support him?
52:29
Do you care enough to give to cough up some cold, hard earned
52:35
cash money to help the former president? Because you know, as he said,
52:39
it's a witch hunt. You know that, as he said, he's
52:43
a victim. You know that he needs help. He's a billionaire, But
52:47
three hundred thirty five million dollars. That's that's a lot of money. And
52:53
even if you're a billionaire, just a billion, you take three hundred and
52:58
thirty five million dollars away away from that, you are not a billionaire anymore.
53:01
You're looking at six hundred and sixty five million dollars. I mean,
53:07
he should be able to afford it. But don't you want to help him
53:13
out? I mean, he he needs you. He needs everyone to cough
53:19
up some cash. Money. Do you want to help the president the former
53:22
president who wants to be president again, trying to pardon himself running for office
53:28
to avoid liability and responsibility, like this judgment right here, I'm just I'm
53:35
just trying to ask questions I think that are relevant right here and right now
53:38
for the people of this country. He needs you. Five point three seven
53:43
four nine seven eight hundred The Big One talk Back the iHeartRadio app. Click
53:45
on the microphone you can leave a message. We'll get to it. I'm
53:49
also on X, not the drug. You're of certain age in the nineties
53:52
here acts you're like, what what I need? AX? No X the
53:55
social media site formerly known as Twitter. At Sterling Radio, let's get the
54:01
Monford Heights Charlie than Brad. Where is everyone supporting Donald Trump? Right here,
54:07
right now? Would you cough up some money to help the Donald? Charlie, Well, I did to see how much, see I left it,
54:15
or I pay the growing property tax and the Giess electric bill and the
54:20
water bill and all the bills. But I think he should start a go
54:22
funding page for Donald Now that might work. I mean, I don't he
54:27
could sell some more steaks or some Donald ties. I don't know, something,
54:30
maybe some more ball caps. But I don't know all the ins and
54:32
outs of the legality of the campaign and the hard earned money that you and
54:37
I make that we might want to give to help somebody in need. I mean, there's the free Store, food Bank, there's mayorson Foundason, There's
54:43
a lot of different charities and people in need. Charlie, and I understand,
54:46
I got a water bill to pay. I know my property taxes just
54:50
went up. I don't even know how much yet. I'm waiting. I
54:52
feel like I'm already bleeding from my eyes and ears from that. So you're
54:55
saying you wouldn't help, but you know you're you're broadcasting. You just talk
55:02
to somebody with them in Georgia. So you're broadcasting around the world, and
55:07
and I'm sure you know globally based on your contacts and listeners. You have
55:16
a note that's collected in a week. Could should I? And could I?
55:22
Would it be wrong for me to take a small percentage as a processing
55:27
fee to help facilitate this, whether it would be you in need, Charlie
55:30
or the former president? Just maybe a small amount if I took if we
55:34
could raise three hundred and thirty five million dollars, if I took just one
55:37
percent as a processing fee, I could, probably, I could. Probably
55:42
it would cover my cost. Is that reasonable? Probably? Not? No?
55:47
No, just one percent. Oh, Charlie, you're hurting me so
55:52
bad. I appreciate you listening to being a part of the show. Seriously,
55:55
Thank you man. Take care of yourself. Brad at your turner.
55:58
We're sterling on the big one. Would you help the Donald three hundred and
56:00
thirty five million? It just needs a dollar, maybe two dollars, two
56:05
dollars? Could you? Would you give him some money to the former president?
56:08
Yeah? H sterlingk uh no, I donate my my next paycheck to
56:13
him. You you'd help you? So you give up a paycheck. Would he give a paycheck up for you? Do you think he already has?
56:21
Did he? Yeah? Okay? Yeah? All right? Yeah, I
56:25
mean, I I my my reasons are are are more personal. But it's
56:31
because of you know, the the late night, the fact that he did
56:37
on Christmas Eve, his first night where he signed a bill for children with
56:40
ASD. I got two kids with autism, gotcha? So so you're there
56:46
for that? He helped you? I support Yeah, I got you.
56:51
That makes sense? I mean it certainly does. I appreciate you being there?
56:55
Uh? Should I if I if I can help? Can I get
56:59
a small percentage in the processing fee? Is it wrong? Because you know,
57:01
I mean there's there's cost associated with with this. If I if I
57:06
were able to take this, I don't want ten percent. That would be
57:09
three three thirty three and a half million dollars. That would be excessive.
57:14
I would probably go to jail. But uh, I appreciate you having me
57:19
on just so I could say that I'm here to help brother take care of
57:21
Brad. Thank you. Mike. Will get one more in here before the break. What's going on? How are you? I'm doing all right?
57:29
Would you help the Donald? The former president three hundred and thirty five million
57:31
dollars. He's on the hook for this civil case. That's a lot of
57:35
money. Man, even for a billionaire. Would you help him out?
57:38
Well, you know it kind of makes failings, but no, I mean
57:45
more reports. Maybe helping the actual people that hate it, like a homeless
57:50
beat. Yeah, yeah, that's true, they don't have it, you
57:54
know. And the other area i'd help out more in his dogs. I
58:00
think a dog person and me too. You know, a dog will be a whole lot more loyal than death. I'd say the population, Well,
58:07
that's true, they have no thumb. They have they have a du claw,
58:09
but they can't do much with it. I love the animals too.
58:13
I appreciate the helping of the animal and I certainly want to help the homeless
58:15
and the hungry. But I mean, not even a dollar for the former
58:19
president. I mean, he's going to be in a bad way here.
58:21
I mean, what the hell is he going to do? Well? Yeah,
58:24
good point, good point. But you know, if you know,
58:28
a dollar could get could get a bowl of a bull of kibble for for
58:31
a you know, for a dog, a hunger dogs, yeah, or
58:37
or you know, maybe you know if one day still had had a dollar,
58:42
menue, I could get a sandwich for homeless beat you know that's true.
58:45
That's a good idea, Mike. I appreciate the call and the willing to get well, take a break, we'll come back. Would you help
58:51
the former president? Is it wrong for me to solicit for the former president?
58:54
We could maybe try to get him on the show. I'm sure he'd
58:57
be willing to take some extra cash. Money if you've got it, if
59:00
you can spare it. I know these have been tough times for a lot
59:02
of people, but just just five dollars, five dollars to the former president
59:08
to start ekeing away in whittling down that debt, that obligation of three hundred
59:13
and thirty five million dollars and that civil fraud trial. Just a witch hunt.
59:17
He's a victim, don't you know. They're all after him. He's
59:21
a victim his whole life. He is a rich white guy, former president
59:25
with his own building, Trump Tower, New York, and he's persecuted.
59:30
It's unbelievable anything in this country in these days. It's shocking. So I
59:36
have to take a rest and rehydrate and reevaluate. Five point three seven four
59:39
nine, seven thousand, eight hundred, the Big One talk Back, the
59:43
iHeartRadio app. Will you would you help the Donald? You could get your
59:47
kids out there selling candy bars, like raising money for their athletic team,
59:51
but instead for the Donald. Would you send the kids door to door to
59:54
help the Donald and eke out a little of that three hundred thirty five million
1:00:00
dollars, Just a little bit helping? No, maybe a little bit yes?
1:00:05
No. Friday Sterling Quick Break, comeback, your chance to get interactive
1:00:08
later Kevin Carr Fat Guys at the Movies. Conversation also about the serious nature
1:00:15
of the warning and notification that we as a nation in the world, got
1:00:19
a little bit of insight into the danger in the threat of Russia trying to
1:00:22
attack satellites in space, because well that's where satellites go. We'll see exactly
1:00:28
how much of a concern that is. And a whole lot more ground to cover between now and midnight when Red Eye Radio takes to the air. I'm
1:00:35
sterling in This is the Nation station seven hundred WLW. A good day starts
1:00:39
with a good morning. Here's Catherine. She's the CEO of an up and
1:00:45
coming AI technology company, and she starts her busy day listening to Mike mccon
1:00:52
Good Morning. She feeds her hungry head with the latest news, weathered,
1:00:54
traffic, investment, and international news and more. Plus she loves Mike's sense
1:01:00
of humor. She may make money with artificial intelligence, but she knows what
1:01:05
she wants in the morning, my connely intelligence. Monday morning, Get five
1:01:09
on seven hundred WLW on with news coming up in about twenty two minutes.
1:01:15
If you're keeping score at home and up, they know what's going on with
1:01:19
the weather outside. Sooner than that. There's been snow and you know so
1:01:23
you'll have to push it out of the way. You had a little bit of extra time. It's a little bit slick spots here there. Look out
1:01:28
for the black ice. Let the plows do their job throwing the ice melt
1:01:30
down, whether it's cleaning out the parking lots or driveways or O DOT or
1:01:36
Cincinnati or any other pick of municipality. With some trucks out there moving the
1:01:42
stuff and keeping things safe, give them some room. You don't want to
1:01:45
be one of those people that end up being talked about in an ad about hitting a plow truck. We haven't had a bunch of snow. I mean,
1:01:51
this is like the most snow. I think we had one burst I think the end of January, right, and we haven't had any in February
1:01:58
to this point. This is it. And as far as I'm concerned, I'm done with it. I'm through. I've had enough. I don't want
1:02:02
to see it again. I don't want to hear about it. And again,
1:02:05
I understand people love it. I know Jim Scott wants to go skiing
1:02:08
and hang out, maybe wakeboard whatever it is. Kids want to make snow
1:02:12
angels good, good good. And I know my dog did not want to
1:02:15
come in this afternoon, early evening when the snow started to really come down.
1:02:19
Before I came in here, he just was in the backyard love and
1:02:22
life and he was just covered in like ice chunks and whatever was in that
1:02:29
mixture of frozen rain snow stuff. And then I towed him off and was
1:02:32
like here, gave him a bone and left. And I'm sure he's happy
1:02:36
listening right now, perhaps on the iHeartRadio app. But I mean, he has no thumb, but I'm sure he could possibly find it. Speaking of
1:02:42
which, earlier, a couple of responses I had Sterling Radio on x now
1:02:46
formerly Twitter, one of which I was talking about if you woke up and
1:02:50
there was no Internet, like the Russians apparently working on technology, whether it
1:02:54
nuke powered or otherwise to take out satellites. Not all that surprising, but
1:03:00
certainly unnerving and maybe disconcerting in some fashion. But if there were an attack
1:03:06
on our satellite communications, if there were a nouke that was going to be
1:03:09
detonated up there in some fashion, it could very well cause an electronic electric
1:03:15
electronic pull, magnetic pulse, yeah, which would shut down a whole lot
1:03:20
of our communications in life as we know it, most likely the Internet too.
1:03:23
And I was asking, what would you do if the Internet were gone?
1:03:25
If you woke up tomorrow and it was just history gone, how would
1:03:29
you handle it? And Mike C on Twitter or x now says he go
1:03:34
to work because he couldn't connect from the internet, you know, connect anymore
1:03:37
from the house. Otherwise nothing much would change. He said, he couldn't
1:03:39
respond to a tweet or a message for me or anyone else. He says,
1:03:43
does it matter? Not really no offense, but not really know And
1:03:45
I totally get that, no offense taken. I mean think. I think
1:03:49
about if there was no Internet, as much great growth and development and good
1:03:52
things have come from it, If in fact it went away tomorrow, it'd
1:03:58
just be a whole lot more time on I'd have on my hands so as
1:04:01
to not like fall down a rabbit hole of some unimaginable one that I might
1:04:06
find. Now, if I just start paging down on pick a feed that
1:04:11
I might have, it gets weird. I mean it does, but I
1:04:15
think we we'd probably survive. It probably wouldn't be that big of a deal, would it. If I went three seven, four, nine, seven,
1:04:20
eight hundred, the big one, your chance to get interactive? What
1:04:24
else? Oh? I also asked this, and I realized I was notified
1:04:28
that I was incorrect. I said that the former president known as Donald Trump,
1:04:31
who wants to be born with the history of family that had been enslaved,
1:04:35
and you know, a couple of strikes against him, already a billionaire,
1:04:39
he says, but he says everyone and everything has been plotting against him,
1:04:43
that he is purely a victim. And I was wrong about the money
1:04:45
in that judgment in the news that came out today about that very thing in
1:04:50
his culpability or liability for wrongdoing and inflating of values of properties and dealing with
1:04:57
banks and everything else. I was. I misspoke earlier, repeatedly, and
1:05:01
I will own it because I don't want to be wrong. Today, a
1:05:08
juju in New York ordered the former president to pay more than three hundred and
1:05:13
fifty million dollars in penalties plus interest after the civil fraud trial that had gone
1:05:18
on. They say over a year's time in a scheme to blatantly falsify financial
1:05:23
data that may have affected your bank or my bank over time technically, So
1:05:29
I ask this question too, and I'm sincere about it because I know a
1:05:33
lot of people are very passionate about the Donald. A lot of people have
1:05:40
not been able to objectively look at well much of anything in this arena,
1:05:47
which puts me in jeopardy for even talking about it. But I don't mind,
1:05:50
because I'm a servant of the people and I want to help. I
1:05:54
hate to see people suffering. I hate to see people in need. Why
1:05:58
do I give as much time as can to the free store of food bank? Why do I try to donate and try to raise awareness here for that?
1:06:03
Or the mayorson foundation and at risk kids and so many other things,
1:06:08
because I care, damn it, I care, and I don't want the
1:06:13
Donald to suffer. Even if he's just a single billionaire, not multiple billions,
1:06:16
but a billion, three hundred and fifty million dollars leaves him six hundred
1:06:24
and fifty million. Who can live on that? Would you cough up some
1:06:28
cash to help Donald Trump in his time of meat? Five one, three,
1:06:31
seven, four, nine seventy eight hundred, the big one. Forget
1:06:35
about your kids embraces, forget about shoes for Jimmy, Johnny, Joaquin,
1:06:40
whatever your kids are named. Forget about paying your increased property taxes because the
1:06:44
value your home is gone up. For that matter me, would you come
1:06:48
off some cash, money, some jack to help the former president? Five
1:06:57
dollars, ten dollars, tell me right now? Five point three hundred,
1:07:02
the big one. It's quickly gets Scott and Mainville, Scott, what's happening?
1:07:06
Would you help the former president with some money? He's in need,
1:07:09
don't you know? Yeah? Yeah, actually, Sterling, I do.
1:07:12
Every month I give him twenty five dollars, and I've done it ever since.
1:07:15
Uh. He was wrongfully voted out of Busice. He's back in twenty
1:07:19
twenty, but twenty five dollars a month. Seriously, you give what to
1:07:24
his campaign? I'm guessing. Really Okay, yeah I do, and I'm
1:07:27
disabled, but I give him twenty five dollars a month, and I have
1:07:30
every every month. It's the reoccurring charge on my heart every month. And
1:07:34
I do. That's cause your care, cause your care well and and and
1:07:39
I think that, uh, you know, it's my part of what I
1:07:42
can do. The guy has been victimized on every level. I mean,
1:07:46
look at he's been raped. He's a victim of rape, isn't he did
1:07:54
you say he's a victim of rape. I mean he's been raped by the
1:07:57
he is he has? He's been raped by the system. Huh he has?
1:08:01
Yes, I mean the whole Scott. Look at the whole thing with
1:08:04
Russia, the whole Russia collusion. Everyone, Well, what about what that
1:08:10
was that was proven to be nothing but a hope? And yet and yet,
1:08:15
Scott, let me just say this, so you would give would you give another twenty five extra dollars this month to help him out? Because you
1:08:19
know, and I'll say this before I go because I'm running late, Scott,
1:08:23
but I'm just curious. So when he says that, you know,
1:08:25
he doesn't care what Russia does, and if the Natal countries don't pay,
1:08:29
screw them in the Alliance and what we've had to save Europe. He'll allow
1:08:32
everything to be carved up like they wanted to do in the midst of World
1:08:35
War One to World War Two subsequently with all those powers that were our enemies.
1:08:41
You're okay with that, You think that makes sense, You think that's
1:08:43
an American way to handle things as a president of the United States. Actually,
1:08:46
the way the world's going now, yeah, I think it's kind of
1:08:49
just everyone out for themselves at this point, and we need to get back
1:08:54
to where we take care of America first. Yeah, I do think that
1:08:57
are we not taking care of that? If you think I take it?
1:09:00
Listen, country, how do you figure how was he? How? Scott?
1:09:08
Stop for a second and listen to me. Scott, I'm trying to
1:09:12
have a conversation. You're not going to talk over me, all right,
1:09:15
You're just not. I'm going to ask you real quick here because I'm already
1:09:17
late. I got Kevin Carr, we got other stuff going on, so
1:09:20
in short order. So you're telling me that you think Trump ran the country,
1:09:25
but Biden isn't. Why do you think that they're somehow you think you
1:09:29
have information that would lead you to believe that the current president is somehow not
1:09:32
running it. But the former president Trump did okay, simply because of this
1:09:38
this president that we have now, Joe Biden. He's saluting people that aren't
1:09:43
there. He's talking that he shook the hand of a French chancellor that that
1:09:47
died deem. They're both old and don't remember. He misspeaks all the time.
1:09:51
Watch Trump in some of his rallies. It's disturbing. They're both old,
1:09:55
they're both scary. They both may not survive the next term. Vice
1:10:00
residents are most important, and I'm glad that you're helping him out, and
1:10:03
I hope more people do, because I hate to see a guy go broke,
1:10:08
especially when he's been a victim. Scott, I appreciate the call,
1:10:10
and you're listening, my man. I'm late Kevin Carr. On the other
1:10:13
side, Fat guys at the movie Sterling seven hundred WLW Bill Cunningham for Joseph
1:10:17
Chevrolet asked your neighbor, friends and family they all bought from Joseph take up
1:10:21
the twelve Thouans. How was Valentine's Was it good? Was it? Everything
1:10:26
is as wonderful as it's supposed to be and Mormon fuzzy and loving stuff.
1:10:30
Yes, it was. It was wonderful. I had dinner with my sweetheart. Oh yeah, it was a strange. We want to say, we
1:10:40
should save that before. We should talk movies first, and then the weird
1:10:42
Valentines that we had. How about that? Yeah, well then we'll tell
1:10:45
our strange, little bizarre Valentine story. Well, let's talk about the movies
1:10:49
this week. Let me let's begin here this this weird Wait. So a
1:10:53
week ago it was Lisa Frankenstein, right, which effectively you said was really
1:10:59
not good? Right? Not great? No? Yeah, okay, So
1:11:02
now this week we go to the Marvel universe. This is like the big
1:11:05
push everything I'm looking at. It's being promoted, but it is isn't Marvel?
1:11:10
Is it not Madam Webb? Which I don't I don't know anything about
1:11:12
this. I remember reading about Madam Webb? Is this completely new made up?
1:11:15
What? Okay? Now Here, This is just a little bit of
1:11:18
background because most people see a superhero movie and they think they're all the same,
1:11:23
and they all come from the same company and they don't. Warner Brothers
1:11:28
owns all the DC stuff, so you can kind of throw that into its own basket. But when it came to the Marvel stuff, when they know,
1:11:33
before Disney purchased Marvel Entertainment, the Marvel Entertainment was just a comic book
1:11:41
company and it did TV shows and stuff like that, but it would license
1:11:44
it stuff out to different companies. And you know, like Fox did the
1:11:46
Fantastic Four in the X Men movies and paramounted Iron Man, and the Sony
1:11:55
got Spider Man. And since Disney has purchased the Marvel Entertainment Company, they've
1:12:03
tried to consolidate as many of the Marvel elements back under its own ball.
1:12:09
Then they did that by buying Fox because now they've got Fantastic Four, and
1:12:13
because you're gonna have Deadpool, which is now under the Disney umbrella. So
1:12:16
that's the Marvel Cinematic universe. Now, Sony still owns the license to Spider
1:12:26
Man, and Spider Man is very, very lucrative. It makes billions of
1:12:30
dollars. They don't want to get rid of that. And then some really good Spider Man movies too, by the way, Well, yeah, like
1:12:35
the live action ones are pretty good, you know, I did. The
1:12:39
last one made a billion dollars or more. And then of course you have
1:12:42
the into the Spider Verse and across the Spider Verse movies, the animated films,
1:12:45
and then Academy Award nominations, all that kind of stuff. But then
1:12:49
they then they say, well, let's they All they have is the Spider
1:12:53
Man content. So they're trying to make her kind of this little universe of
1:12:57
Spider Man characters. And they did it a little bit with them. You
1:13:00
know, they have the Venom movies, which are not that great, but they do tend to do well. They did it with Morbius. If you
1:13:05
remember that where everybody goes it's it's Morbon time, and that's from a couple
1:13:12
of years ago. So Madam Webb falls in that range. And what's funny
1:13:16
is I've seen promotions when they're talking about Marvel this and Marvel that. It's
1:13:19
like, no, no, no, no no, this is not part of the Avengers. And this is not a Spider girl. This is not
1:13:25
a Spider woman. This is a madam. Where where does she fit in?
1:13:29
How does she play? Is she a Spider Man? The character? She's a character in the Spider Man universe. Yeah, she's she's part of
1:13:38
his interaction with other people. Venom is a character in Spider Man comics.
1:13:43
Yeah, just like Doctor Doom's a character in the Fantastic Four stuff. And
1:13:49
so Madam Web is a somewhat minor character in the comic books and they're making
1:13:54
a movie out of it. And the characters played by Dakota Johnson. Who's
1:13:58
this woman? And just go with me on this. I'm going, I'm listening. I just have questions? Should I not ask questions when I have?
1:14:03
I'm not the only one. Kevin, Wait a minute, hold on,
1:14:06
let me get through that. I gotta tell you what the movie is
1:14:09
about. That's a mountain to climb. Okay, She's this paramedic in an
1:14:15
ambulance driver in two thousand and three who discovers she has spider powers because her
1:14:23
mother gave birth to her and the Amazon and was bitten by a special spider.
1:14:27
Spider people that I mean, it's it's out there and bizarre, and
1:14:30
so she has this precognition because because because spiders of course can tell the future,
1:14:35
because the very common, but they do when they're on a wall and
1:14:40
you stand up and they realize you've got an eye on them. They know
1:14:43
it's flea and sometimes they think they can fight. They they understand the danger.
1:14:47
I mean, inherently, they're not pre they're not out there. There
1:14:51
were no spiders during World War Two trying to stop Hitler because they knew he
1:14:56
was gonna Well, I'm not I'm not going so far as to say they
1:15:00
were trying to get rid of the Nazis. I'm simply saying that the spiders
1:15:02
do have a spider sense. Like if you see one on the wall,
1:15:06
on the door, on the floor, and it realizes that you are making
1:15:11
a move towards them, they know that you're not just walking by, that
1:15:14
you're going to try to smash them into predicting the future. There's a lot
1:15:17
of spiders that get caught in burning buildings too, So that's true. That's
1:15:21
true. All right, all right, all right. Anyways, so that's
1:15:26
the whole story, said, she she has this visions of these three girls,
1:15:30
teenage girls, getting killed, and so she has to try and save them. And that's the story. And it's got a really terribly stupid villain
1:15:36
who dresses up like Spider Man, but nobody calls him spider Man because I
1:15:41
guess Spider Man doesn't exist. It just doesn't make any sense. The movie
1:15:44
is insanely dumb and silly. I mean, it's somewhat entertaining for a movie,
1:15:51
but you know, because it takes place in two thousand and three,
1:15:55
it feels like it would have been made in two thousand and three. We're
1:15:57
talking about the time when Ben Affleck was playing Devil and Nicholas Cage was playing
1:16:02
ghost Rider and they hadn't had the Batman Begins movie yet, but they're still
1:16:06
riding off of Batman and Robin with the day glow sets in it. That's
1:16:10
even before Dark Knight. Well yeah, Dark Knight was two thousand and eight.
1:16:15
Batman Begins with two thousand and five, so wow, you know, it's from a different era of that stuff, and it's not very good.
1:16:21
It's I mean, I love Dakota Johnson. I actually really like her because
1:16:25
she can do a movie like this and she knows she's slumming it, but
1:16:30
she's just getting the paycheck. And so every line she delivers she looks like
1:16:32
she's ready to just bust out laughing but doesn't. And I love the fact
1:16:38
that she can pull that off for an entire movie. It's just sort of
1:16:41
like, this is what I'm doing. I'm collecting the paid I got paid
1:16:44
more than you do, you know, so I like her, but it's
1:16:47
it's not a good movie. Well, we worked really hard here getting questions
1:16:51
and answers, and I didn't mean to badger you, but you build it
1:16:55
up. You're like, let me just lay it out here to all get to the end of No, it's it's really bad laying off the story because
1:17:01
there's an Amazon Spider and mother was pregnant and the Spider people do it and
1:17:04
it bites and somehow she gets somehow she can tell the future, not just
1:17:08
knowing somebody's in the room, but like future stuff. It's just silly.
1:17:13
This is the one up on the Monster Marathon channel or whatever that's out there
1:17:16
someplace streaming as we speak right now. Probably maybe I don't know, Yeah,
1:17:20
maybe not who knows? Who knows? Who owns? What? This
1:17:23
is? Like doctor who isn't it because all the Marvel stuff it's card well
1:17:28
wait a minute, not not content quality. I'm just talking about where you
1:17:31
can see it. Some stuff is here, some stuff is there they've you
1:17:34
know, some is Disney some is not Disney. It's very confusing. Yeah,
1:17:40
well, I mean it's it's just a sentence in the theaters now,
1:17:43
and so that's where you go. Yeah, but it sucks, you say,
1:17:46
so why go well, yeah, exactly, he's Kevin Carfat gots the
1:17:54
movies Sterling on the big one. All right. Now, we we did
1:17:57
something. It was very weird, and I didn't know how weird it was
1:17:59
going to be. For Valentines. I had some business in Columbus where you
1:18:02
live. So I'm up there and you were like, we should get together
1:18:05
and we've been talking about it forever. So we grabbed food. But it
1:18:09
was Valentine's on Wednesday. So we go to Skyline. I think we can
1:18:13
say that. I mean that, you know, and how because I didn't
1:18:15
want to Yeah, I didn't want to go to like you didn't even want
1:18:18
to go to like the Olive Garden get you know, because you're like,
1:18:20
god knows who's going to be there. No one's taking their Valentine to bounce.
1:18:25
It's nothing. I love Skyline, but it's not a Valentine's. There
1:18:28
were couples there, Confirmer Deny. There were couples at the Skyline and I
1:18:32
don't mean us. There were a couples of but they did not look like
1:18:35
they were dressed up to the nines ready to because it's Skyline. You don't
1:18:39
have to. When you want a three way or whatever way you wanted and
1:18:42
a couple of chili cheese coneys with onions and mustard or whatever suits you.
1:18:45
It makes you happy, you don't have to dress up. You can go
1:18:48
to the drive through. You can, you know what I mean. I mean we didn't. We we were. You brought flowers and chocolate, which
1:18:54
really was everybody. It's true. It was a beat up rows from a
1:18:59
gas station, I think, which was awesome. But just here's the thing,
1:19:03
because I was like, I was like, well, you know Valentine's
1:19:08
Day. I said I'll bring it. I'll bring your chocolates or something.
1:19:11
But I didn't want to be weird about it. Oh it was. It
1:19:13
was inherently weird. Everybody was watching trying to figure out what the hell was
1:19:17
happening between us and the table. I mean, it wasn't just me hallucinating
1:19:20
that they were all looking trying to figure out what was what That was straight
1:19:26
well, because I ate some of the chocolates, I didn't want and then
1:19:29
you duct taped the box, which by the way, was a sterling move. Well it doesn't taint because it has that celliphone around it. I wanted
1:19:36
some present there, and here's where I strewed up. Figured I think it'd
1:19:42
be just every day. You know, we hadn't we hadn't seen each other,
1:19:45
said for we were friends, you know, we are nothing wrong with
1:19:48
that. I figured that was a nice chest. Did you eat the chocolate
1:19:51
yet? No, I didn't. It's in the back of the car.
1:19:53
Here's the best though, as I realized as we're leaving our server, she's
1:19:57
leaving and I was gonna give her the flower and rose I didn't leave it,
1:20:00
and then we were talking and didn't and I'm thinking, well, why
1:20:02
did I take it? What am I gonna do with this? So it's
1:20:05
in the car if I if I unless it melted today or yesterday, I
1:20:10
don't know, but I should have given it to her how And that was
1:20:14
the weird thing. I'm leaving there with a freaking flower with some weird stuff
1:20:17
thing attached to it and duct taped chocolate. I mean, it's very weird.
1:20:21
Nothing normal about any of this. Eat the chocolate it's good chocolate.
1:20:25
It's like it's Russell Stover's. It's good stuff. That is, it's this
1:20:31
tremendous anything else before we go, I mean, just to lay out there
1:20:35
the weirdness of whatever this is, and so forth. So we know,
1:20:41
Madam Webb's no Brain Day in October, there's another made up holiday. I
1:20:45
mean, you know that that makes just as much sense. By the way,
1:20:48
I wish we had been the card people. We could come up with
1:20:50
another holiday. That's what we should do. You got nothing for it,
1:20:56
no response. That was just a heavy sigh. It was just well,
1:20:59
because well now I'm gonna let's just let's just stop. Now. I think
1:21:03
we've done all we can do. We should just end now for the authority
1:21:08
show, it's through. He's Kevin Carr. Fat guys at the movie.
1:21:12
Sterling coming back. Thanks for making time man. Always good to talk to
1:21:14
you, and I hope that chocolate hasn't melted. Sterling seven hundred WLW News
1:21:21
Traffic and Weather News Radio, seven hundred wl W, Cincinnati. Former President
1:21:30
Donald Trump ordered to pay a jaw dropping sum of money with the eleven thirty
1:21:33
report. I'm Whitney Harris breaking. Now here's the latest from ABC News.
1:21:41
This is a special report from ABC News Trump civil fraud judgment. I'm Daria
1:21:45
Aldinger. New York's Attorney General, Letitia James says Donald Trump learned today no
1:21:50
one is above the lawn day. Americans cannot lie to a bank about how
1:21:55
much money they have in order to get a mortgage to buy a home,
1:21:58
or a loan to keep their business afloat, or to send their child to
1:22:00
college. And if they did, our government would throw the book at them.
1:22:04
A judge today ordering the former president to pay three hundred and fifty five
1:22:09
million dollars in fines. Mister Trump is also banned from doing business in the
1:22:14
state of New York for three years. He says the case is politically motivated.
1:22:18
If I weren't running, none of this stuff would have ever happened.
1:22:20
None of these lawsuits would have ever happened. Nothing. I would have had
1:22:25
a nice life. But I enjoy this life for a different reason. We're
1:22:28
going to make America great again, and mister Trump says he will appeal.
1:22:31
This is ABC News and now the latest traffic and weather together. No major
1:22:39
delays or accidents on tri state highways at this hour. Now the latest forecast
1:22:45
from a train heating and cooling weather center on news radio seven hundred WLW.
1:22:51
In the forecast for tonight, it's snow for us and two to three inches
1:22:56
for most a low of twenty two. Then for Saturday, cloud's early,
1:23:00
some sun later in a high twenty nine, feeling like the teens at night,
1:23:05
mostly clear where down to nineteen is a temp. And then Sunday mostly
1:23:11
sunny in my high of forty two. From your severe weather station, I'm
1:23:15
nine First Warning Chief Meteorologist Steve Rawley, news Radio seven hundred WLW. It
1:23:23
is currently thirty degrees. Snow moving through Ohio has tapered off across the tri
1:23:28
state. Multiple counties have declared snow emergencies or travel advisories due to the road
1:23:33
conditions. Butler County and Brown County in Ohio have issued Level one snow emergencies,
1:23:40
with drivers in these counties act to travel only when needed. In Indiana,
1:23:45
Dearborn County is under a Level two Orange snow emergency, which means drivers
1:23:50
should blowing and drifting snow. Police in Kansas City say two juvenile suspects are
1:23:58
being questioned in connection with the Chief's parade shooting. In which nearly two dozen
1:24:02
people were shot and one person died. ABC's Morgan Norwood reporting. Authorities aren't
1:24:09
naming the two suspects due to their age, but they say they faced gun
1:24:12
related and resisting arrest charges. Twenty three people shot, at least half of
1:24:15
them children. One victim tragically was killed forty three year old Lisa Lopez Galvaugh.
1:24:20
The community coming together Thursday evening to remember the mother of two and local
1:24:26
radio host Jacob Gooch Senior. His wife and thirteen year old son caught in
1:24:30
the crossfire. They're now recovering from gunshot wounds to their feet and legs.
1:24:34
Thinking fireworks in my head. So I looked down, I see smoke coming
1:24:38
out of my ankle. We just don't expect it to happen to you,
1:24:40
but it's happening so much. Uce falls to Jacksonville in a doubleheader eight six,
1:24:46
and Xavier failed to start the season off in the baseball. As they
1:24:51
win, they drop their opening game to number ten Clemson fourteen to three.
1:24:57
Our next update is at twelve o'clock. I'm Whitney Harris News Radio seven hundred
1:25:00
WLW at Genesis Diamonds. We have the exclusivity with brands that you can't get
1:25:06
anywhere else. You never have to settle at Genesis Diamonds Genesis Diamonds
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