1 00:00:02,800 --> 00:00:07,120 Speaker 1: Now your host Ken Brew on news radio seven hundred 2 00:00:07,360 --> 00:00:08,160 Speaker 1: wl WU. 3 00:00:08,400 --> 00:00:11,160 Speaker 2: Well, good Saturday to you. It is a gorgeous saturday 4 00:00:11,240 --> 00:00:14,080 Speaker 2: here in the Tri State. Stand by because apparently tomorrow 5 00:00:14,120 --> 00:00:16,919 Speaker 2: it all goes south. But yes, a gorgeous day here 6 00:00:17,040 --> 00:00:19,320 Speaker 2: in the Tri State. You may not be aware of this, 7 00:00:20,079 --> 00:00:22,800 Speaker 2: so I'm just alerting you as a matter of public service. 8 00:00:22,840 --> 00:00:27,080 Speaker 2: But today is no King's Day, so deemed by the 9 00:00:27,160 --> 00:00:31,640 Speaker 2: Democrats and their cohorts, no King's Day. And of course 10 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:34,920 Speaker 2: they're massive protests all over the country, largely at Donald 11 00:00:34,960 --> 00:00:37,320 Speaker 2: Trump and Ice. And that's the reason why, of course 12 00:00:37,320 --> 00:00:41,919 Speaker 2: I find it fascinating. You might too, that we live 13 00:00:41,960 --> 00:00:47,120 Speaker 2: in a republic. If we did have monarchy ruling our country, 14 00:00:47,360 --> 00:00:50,360 Speaker 2: there would not be, under any set of circumstances a 15 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:54,480 Speaker 2: protest allowed against the king. Has anybody thought that one? Through? 16 00:00:55,040 --> 00:00:57,480 Speaker 2: My guess is a Keem Jefferies is not. But that's 17 00:00:57,560 --> 00:00:59,440 Speaker 2: just a wild guess on my part. But it's no 18 00:00:59,560 --> 00:01:03,240 Speaker 2: King's Day, and we continue to be separated as a country, 19 00:01:03,240 --> 00:01:07,000 Speaker 2: and we continue to fight a government shutdown. Really, I 20 00:01:07,040 --> 00:01:09,759 Speaker 2: haven't seen the effects of it yet on a personal basis, 21 00:01:09,800 --> 00:01:13,360 Speaker 2: Perhaps that's coming. But somebody that knows about these kinds 22 00:01:13,360 --> 00:01:16,000 Speaker 2: of things because he lived it and he tried to 23 00:01:16,080 --> 00:01:19,680 Speaker 2: prevent it and now is viewing it from the outside 24 00:01:19,840 --> 00:01:22,440 Speaker 2: of the US House of Representatives. It's a good guest 25 00:01:22,480 --> 00:01:27,040 Speaker 2: of our program. He is former Congressman Jim Baci. And Jim, 26 00:01:27,080 --> 00:01:29,479 Speaker 2: how are you on this glorious No King's Day? 27 00:01:31,040 --> 00:01:34,600 Speaker 3: Well, Ken, I'm doing great. It's a beautiful day in Ohio. 28 00:01:34,760 --> 00:01:37,360 Speaker 3: So that we should be happy about more than a 29 00:01:37,440 --> 00:01:38,280 Speaker 3: No King's Day? 30 00:01:38,920 --> 00:01:41,760 Speaker 2: It amazes me. And I want to ask you and 31 00:01:41,800 --> 00:01:45,200 Speaker 2: I have visited about the shutdown and how it's easily 32 00:01:45,200 --> 00:01:48,120 Speaker 2: avoidable and who ultimately gets blamed for it. But it 33 00:01:48,160 --> 00:01:51,440 Speaker 2: would seem to me that the reason why we don't 34 00:01:51,480 --> 00:01:54,320 Speaker 2: have the government up and running right now is because 35 00:01:54,440 --> 00:01:57,560 Speaker 2: it was focused, or there was focus by the Democrats 36 00:01:57,640 --> 00:02:00,760 Speaker 2: on this day. They wanted a day where they could 37 00:02:00,960 --> 00:02:05,080 Speaker 2: just massively protest against the president and what he's doing 38 00:02:05,120 --> 00:02:07,720 Speaker 2: with ice. That seems to be what this is all about, 39 00:02:07,760 --> 00:02:10,120 Speaker 2: and it seems to me why we don't have a 40 00:02:10,160 --> 00:02:12,839 Speaker 2: government up and running at this point. Am I too 41 00:02:12,880 --> 00:02:14,920 Speaker 2: simplistic here with this this analysis? 42 00:02:15,000 --> 00:02:20,040 Speaker 3: Jim, Well, look, my opinion might be a little bit different. 43 00:02:20,040 --> 00:02:21,880 Speaker 3: I think we don't have a government up and running 44 00:02:21,880 --> 00:02:28,160 Speaker 3: because we don't have Republicans and Democrats in Washington trying 45 00:02:28,160 --> 00:02:32,160 Speaker 3: to get it open. And who's the blame will be 46 00:02:32,440 --> 00:02:36,720 Speaker 3: really decided by the people. It's who has the best message. 47 00:02:37,919 --> 00:02:38,239 Speaker 4: You know. 48 00:02:39,200 --> 00:02:41,520 Speaker 3: This is what's so frustrated Ken. It's one of the 49 00:02:41,520 --> 00:02:44,560 Speaker 3: reasons why I left Washington is because I can tell 50 00:02:44,560 --> 00:02:47,680 Speaker 3: you when Bayner was Speaker and we were shut down, 51 00:02:48,040 --> 00:02:51,400 Speaker 3: we didn't leave Washington. There were no fundraisers, there was 52 00:02:51,480 --> 00:02:54,920 Speaker 3: nothing going on. We stayed there until we could get 53 00:02:54,960 --> 00:02:59,120 Speaker 3: an agreement done. And that's what frustrates me more than 54 00:02:59,160 --> 00:03:02,400 Speaker 3: anything that both sides, you know, the House and the 55 00:03:02,440 --> 00:03:04,120 Speaker 3: Senate seemed to be okay going home. 56 00:03:04,360 --> 00:03:07,560 Speaker 2: Yeah. Well, and Johnson just yesterday Mike Johnson, Speaker of 57 00:03:07,600 --> 00:03:12,480 Speaker 2: the House, told all of his oh well, everybody in Congress, 58 00:03:12,600 --> 00:03:15,000 Speaker 2: just stay home for another week and work in your districts. 59 00:03:15,680 --> 00:03:18,360 Speaker 2: But here's what I don't understand, so help me. We 60 00:03:18,440 --> 00:03:21,800 Speaker 2: have we had a clean resolution by and large that 61 00:03:22,040 --> 00:03:25,400 Speaker 2: was a continuing resolution, a clean continuing resolution that was 62 00:03:25,560 --> 00:03:30,440 Speaker 2: passed in I want to say, late spring, and the 63 00:03:30,480 --> 00:03:34,040 Speaker 2: Democrats have historically been okay with that. They just push 64 00:03:34,080 --> 00:03:35,960 Speaker 2: it through, push it through, and we just kicked the 65 00:03:36,000 --> 00:03:38,800 Speaker 2: ball down the road with our budget. That's a problem 66 00:03:38,840 --> 00:03:42,120 Speaker 2: in and of itself. I understand that, Jim, But we've 67 00:03:42,200 --> 00:03:44,600 Speaker 2: had that in the past. Well they don't. They didn't 68 00:03:44,600 --> 00:03:47,400 Speaker 2: do it this time because they felt shut out the 69 00:03:47,480 --> 00:03:51,800 Speaker 2: Democrats from the discussion about what happens to some of 70 00:03:51,800 --> 00:03:55,800 Speaker 2: the provisions of Obamacare, which will expire at the end 71 00:03:55,840 --> 00:03:59,320 Speaker 2: of this current year. So instead of agreeing to a 72 00:03:59,360 --> 00:04:03,880 Speaker 2: continuing people getting paid, they said, no, we're not going 73 00:04:03,960 --> 00:04:07,120 Speaker 2: to vote I'm talking about the Democrats in the Senate. No, 74 00:04:07,240 --> 00:04:09,880 Speaker 2: we're not going to vote for this. And then we 75 00:04:09,960 --> 00:04:12,520 Speaker 2: have this this cr that carries us through the end 76 00:04:12,560 --> 00:04:14,920 Speaker 2: of the year because we feel left out to put 77 00:04:14,960 --> 00:04:18,560 Speaker 2: the heat I suppose on Mike Johnson and John Thune 78 00:04:19,080 --> 00:04:22,320 Speaker 2: and bring them to a deadline to get this done. Well, 79 00:04:22,360 --> 00:04:26,159 Speaker 2: it didn't get done. And so my question is, yeah, 80 00:04:26,160 --> 00:04:29,480 Speaker 2: I understand what Johnson is doing. That's his way of saying, 81 00:04:29,520 --> 00:04:31,760 Speaker 2: we're not going to have a discussion in the House. 82 00:04:32,040 --> 00:04:35,719 Speaker 2: We've already had that discussion. It's already passed. I don't 83 00:04:35,760 --> 00:04:39,359 Speaker 2: really understand what Thune is doing in the Senate because 84 00:04:39,360 --> 00:04:41,880 Speaker 2: they keep bringing up these votes and they keep getting 85 00:04:41,920 --> 00:04:45,120 Speaker 2: shot down, and it seems to be more for optics 86 00:04:45,200 --> 00:04:48,520 Speaker 2: than anything else. On John Thune's part, I just don't 87 00:04:48,600 --> 00:04:50,440 Speaker 2: understand the process. 88 00:04:51,120 --> 00:04:53,479 Speaker 3: Well, there's a little more to it than that too. 89 00:04:54,080 --> 00:04:55,640 Speaker 3: You know, if you think about on the House, what 90 00:04:56,040 --> 00:04:58,520 Speaker 3: the Speaker Johnson has said was, look, we already passed 91 00:04:58,520 --> 00:05:01,799 Speaker 3: our bill, and as soon you guys pass it, we'll 92 00:05:01,800 --> 00:05:04,760 Speaker 3: come back and we'll start doing the appropriation bills, and 93 00:05:04,800 --> 00:05:08,360 Speaker 3: we'll start you know, getting the budget pass and all 94 00:05:08,400 --> 00:05:10,480 Speaker 3: the things that we need to done, and we'll start 95 00:05:10,520 --> 00:05:18,280 Speaker 3: negotiating these healthcare issues. The problem is Ken is that 96 00:05:19,480 --> 00:05:21,919 Speaker 3: the optics are not good for him either, because he 97 00:05:22,040 --> 00:05:24,480 Speaker 3: needs to get back and start doing all those other things. 98 00:05:24,920 --> 00:05:27,560 Speaker 3: I mean, he's holding out, but you still have appropriation 99 00:05:27,680 --> 00:05:29,960 Speaker 3: bills that need pass, You still have a budget needs pass. 100 00:05:30,440 --> 00:05:33,680 Speaker 3: All of these things need pass, and they need to negotiate. 101 00:05:33,760 --> 00:05:37,479 Speaker 3: So I keep looking at this really from the outside saying, wow, 102 00:05:37,920 --> 00:05:40,760 Speaker 3: if he was smart, he have everybody in there saying, look, 103 00:05:40,960 --> 00:05:44,359 Speaker 3: we passed the cr now let's just get let's just get. 104 00:05:44,200 --> 00:05:45,960 Speaker 2: Our our ducts in order. 105 00:05:46,000 --> 00:05:48,839 Speaker 3: With all this other stuff too. You see, it's not 106 00:05:49,000 --> 00:05:51,560 Speaker 3: going to be the Republicans or Democrats who make a 107 00:05:51,640 --> 00:05:55,279 Speaker 3: decision on who gets elected next November, it's going to 108 00:05:55,279 --> 00:05:58,480 Speaker 3: be the Independence and the Independents are looking at this 109 00:05:58,640 --> 00:06:00,840 Speaker 3: a lot different than you are. I might be looking 110 00:06:00,839 --> 00:06:03,760 Speaker 3: at it, they're looking at it as you know. I 111 00:06:03,760 --> 00:06:05,919 Speaker 3: don't like what the Republicans are doing. I like what 112 00:06:06,000 --> 00:06:09,479 Speaker 3: the Democrats are down and in the end, they're going 113 00:06:09,560 --> 00:06:11,880 Speaker 3: to make the decision, and I think the better message 114 00:06:11,920 --> 00:06:13,280 Speaker 3: wins and that's going to be the key. 115 00:06:14,279 --> 00:06:17,120 Speaker 2: Okay, so you just kind of outlined what you think 116 00:06:17,160 --> 00:06:20,240 Speaker 2: should be done. I'm guessing here, but correct me if 117 00:06:20,279 --> 00:06:23,080 Speaker 2: I'm wrong. If you were Mike Johnson, you would have 118 00:06:23,160 --> 00:06:27,360 Speaker 2: never sent the house out. They never dismissed the house. 119 00:06:27,360 --> 00:06:29,039 Speaker 2: You wouldn't have sent them home. You would have kept 120 00:06:29,080 --> 00:06:32,360 Speaker 2: them in Washington until this thing got done. Am I right? 121 00:06:32,800 --> 00:06:33,520 Speaker 4: We look right? 122 00:06:33,600 --> 00:06:35,560 Speaker 3: I mean I've been in business for thirty years. I've 123 00:06:35,560 --> 00:06:38,320 Speaker 3: negotiated a lot of deals. The minute you leave the 124 00:06:38,400 --> 00:06:41,599 Speaker 3: tables a minute that the negotiating and the dealing is over. 125 00:06:42,520 --> 00:06:43,320 Speaker 2: I just believe. 126 00:06:43,720 --> 00:06:46,440 Speaker 3: And that's why I had a lot of respect when 127 00:06:46,560 --> 00:06:51,200 Speaker 3: John Bayner said we're not leaving. In fact, don't go home. 128 00:06:51,320 --> 00:06:53,359 Speaker 3: Don't be seen in your districts, because people are going 129 00:06:53,440 --> 00:06:56,240 Speaker 3: to say, how come you're not back in Washington getting 130 00:06:56,240 --> 00:07:00,520 Speaker 3: this done. So I disagree with Speaker John since doing 131 00:07:00,600 --> 00:07:03,160 Speaker 3: but I mean, look, he's the Speaker, he can do 132 00:07:03,200 --> 00:07:05,760 Speaker 3: what he wants. We'll see what happens next November, because 133 00:07:05,760 --> 00:07:08,360 Speaker 3: people are going to remember this. Yes, they're going to say, well, 134 00:07:08,920 --> 00:07:12,239 Speaker 3: the Speaker wasn't in and you know, the House wasn't 135 00:07:12,240 --> 00:07:15,280 Speaker 3: doing their job, and then it just comes down to 136 00:07:16,440 --> 00:07:19,160 Speaker 3: I just want to throw everybody out. See, that's the fear, 137 00:07:19,920 --> 00:07:22,960 Speaker 3: you know. Can I always hear people say, well, nobody's 138 00:07:22,960 --> 00:07:25,640 Speaker 3: going to vote for a Democrat. Well, time out. What's 139 00:07:25,640 --> 00:07:27,400 Speaker 3: going to happen is people are going to say, and 140 00:07:27,720 --> 00:07:30,760 Speaker 3: this has happened. It's how the Republicans came rolling in 141 00:07:30,840 --> 00:07:32,200 Speaker 3: back in twenty ten. 142 00:07:32,640 --> 00:07:34,600 Speaker 4: Everybody was tired. 143 00:07:34,360 --> 00:07:37,440 Speaker 3: Of Obama and the Democrats, and they were voting for 144 00:07:37,520 --> 00:07:40,560 Speaker 3: Republicans just because they didn't want Democrats there anymore. We 145 00:07:40,640 --> 00:07:43,320 Speaker 3: have to be really careful as Republicans. That's the fear 146 00:07:43,360 --> 00:07:43,600 Speaker 3: I have. 147 00:07:44,000 --> 00:07:47,800 Speaker 2: Okay, so somebody's got a blink here, right, I mean, 148 00:07:47,800 --> 00:07:50,960 Speaker 2: somebody's got a blink. And I don't think either side 149 00:07:51,000 --> 00:07:54,640 Speaker 2: wants to lose face on this thing. Schumer has his 150 00:07:54,640 --> 00:07:57,880 Speaker 2: own set of problems in New York, with perhaps a 151 00:07:57,920 --> 00:08:02,480 Speaker 2: political play there on his seat. And the Republicans have 152 00:08:02,560 --> 00:08:04,520 Speaker 2: the House and they have the Senate. They certainly don't 153 00:08:04,560 --> 00:08:06,600 Speaker 2: want to lose the House because the first thing the 154 00:08:06,600 --> 00:08:09,920 Speaker 2: Democrats will do if they gain control of the House 155 00:08:10,000 --> 00:08:13,120 Speaker 2: is impeach Trump yet again. I mean, there's all kinds 156 00:08:13,160 --> 00:08:16,520 Speaker 2: of you know, sub stories going on with all of this. 157 00:08:16,760 --> 00:08:19,840 Speaker 2: So who blinks? How do you get this from where 158 00:08:19,840 --> 00:08:22,280 Speaker 2: it is to where it's got to be? What would 159 00:08:22,320 --> 00:08:22,680 Speaker 2: you do? 160 00:08:24,240 --> 00:08:24,440 Speaker 4: Well? 161 00:08:24,520 --> 00:08:27,600 Speaker 3: Right now, I think the Democrats can't. They can't blink. 162 00:08:27,720 --> 00:08:30,880 Speaker 3: They're in this, They're locked in. They have to hang 163 00:08:30,960 --> 00:08:35,120 Speaker 3: out long enough until these subsidies become a problem. These 164 00:08:35,160 --> 00:08:38,800 Speaker 3: subsidies affect twenty five million people. Now, the argument that 165 00:08:38,840 --> 00:08:42,640 Speaker 3: well a lot of these subsidies are illegal immigrants just 166 00:08:42,760 --> 00:08:45,480 Speaker 3: isn't true. There are a lot of people out of 167 00:08:45,480 --> 00:08:49,040 Speaker 3: those twenty five million who need the subsidies to have 168 00:08:49,160 --> 00:08:53,040 Speaker 3: their health insurance. And I think that's going to be 169 00:08:53,080 --> 00:08:55,880 Speaker 3: their argument. They're going to continue to push and push 170 00:08:56,000 --> 00:09:00,400 Speaker 3: and say, look, we want this healthcare deal. Now we 171 00:09:00,480 --> 00:09:03,679 Speaker 3: don't think you're going to negotiate fairly. You wouldn't negotiate 172 00:09:03,760 --> 00:09:06,760 Speaker 3: with us on this cr and now you think we 173 00:09:06,800 --> 00:09:08,680 Speaker 3: should just sign it and you're going to negotiate. So 174 00:09:08,760 --> 00:09:13,320 Speaker 3: that's going to be their argument. I think in the end. Whoever, 175 00:09:14,920 --> 00:09:17,520 Speaker 3: So if they're asking me what I think happens, I 176 00:09:17,600 --> 00:09:20,560 Speaker 3: do think at some point in time Republicans go back 177 00:09:20,600 --> 00:09:27,440 Speaker 3: in and they support the subsidies, and whether they support 178 00:09:27,480 --> 00:09:30,120 Speaker 3: it and sign the clean CR with something in writing, 179 00:09:30,520 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 3: whether they do it all at once. But like I'm 180 00:09:33,040 --> 00:09:35,160 Speaker 3: hearing from some of my colleagues that. 181 00:09:35,160 --> 00:09:36,760 Speaker 2: Are still there, they hit. 182 00:09:36,920 --> 00:09:38,680 Speaker 3: In fact, I got a call from one of them 183 00:09:38,960 --> 00:09:41,160 Speaker 3: about a week or so ago, says, Jim, do you 184 00:09:41,240 --> 00:09:45,840 Speaker 3: believe how much we fought to make sure Obamacare never survived? 185 00:09:45,960 --> 00:09:47,239 Speaker 4: And you're now. 186 00:09:47,080 --> 00:09:53,160 Speaker 3: You're going to see Republicans supporting Obamacare subsidies before the 187 00:09:53,360 --> 00:09:55,679 Speaker 3: end of this year's up, and that's going to be 188 00:09:55,720 --> 00:09:58,080 Speaker 3: a real change. Marjorie Taylor Green has already come out 189 00:09:58,120 --> 00:09:59,440 Speaker 3: and said she supports them. 190 00:10:00,240 --> 00:10:02,480 Speaker 2: Yeah, And I think the I think the heat'll get 191 00:10:02,480 --> 00:10:05,080 Speaker 2: turned up in the districts the folly. Maybe what Johnson 192 00:10:05,120 --> 00:10:07,319 Speaker 2: has done is he sent everybody home, But when they 193 00:10:07,320 --> 00:10:09,760 Speaker 2: get home, they see the people they represent on the street, 194 00:10:09,800 --> 00:10:12,760 Speaker 2: and there's going to be some arm twisting there. But truthfully, 195 00:10:12,840 --> 00:10:14,920 Speaker 2: Jim and I think for the average person walking around 196 00:10:14,960 --> 00:10:16,560 Speaker 2: on the street, the guy that works, the guy that 197 00:10:16,600 --> 00:10:22,400 Speaker 2: pays taxes. I haven't seen the effects of the shutdown yet. 198 00:10:22,440 --> 00:10:24,720 Speaker 2: People say, well, the government's shut down and there's so 199 00:10:24,760 --> 00:10:28,520 Speaker 2: many percent I haven't felt it. Am I an anomaly? 200 00:10:28,920 --> 00:10:31,880 Speaker 2: Have you felt it? I'm just wondering who's felt this. 201 00:10:33,720 --> 00:10:36,439 Speaker 3: Well, yeah, unless you're dealing with the government. So I'm 202 00:10:36,480 --> 00:10:40,000 Speaker 3: dealing with the i r S on a couple issues personally, 203 00:10:40,120 --> 00:10:42,680 Speaker 3: and for some good luck for some clients, well yeah, 204 00:10:42,720 --> 00:10:44,880 Speaker 3: they're all out of they're all out of town right now. 205 00:10:44,920 --> 00:10:48,120 Speaker 3: So nothing's getting done when it comes to the I 206 00:10:48,240 --> 00:10:52,559 Speaker 3: r S, which is a problem. But the real issue 207 00:10:53,200 --> 00:10:55,120 Speaker 3: is these people aren't getting paid. And you've got to 208 00:10:55,160 --> 00:10:58,040 Speaker 3: feel sorry for our military. You got to feel sorry 209 00:10:58,080 --> 00:11:01,360 Speaker 3: for the air traffic controllers be enforced to go in 210 00:11:01,880 --> 00:11:02,760 Speaker 3: and not be paid. 211 00:11:02,840 --> 00:11:05,600 Speaker 4: That is just not right. That is not right. 212 00:11:05,760 --> 00:11:09,720 Speaker 3: And remember there are people already in the House that 213 00:11:09,800 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 3: have said, we have a bill. There were Republicans and 214 00:11:13,040 --> 00:11:15,640 Speaker 3: Democrats in the House that have said we need to 215 00:11:15,679 --> 00:11:18,160 Speaker 3: come back, we should at least pass a bill making 216 00:11:18,200 --> 00:11:21,400 Speaker 3: sure our military gets paid and some of these essential 217 00:11:21,400 --> 00:11:25,800 Speaker 3: services get paid. So that's another issue going on. That 218 00:11:26,040 --> 00:11:28,480 Speaker 3: these independents are going to say, well, wait a minute, 219 00:11:28,720 --> 00:11:31,600 Speaker 3: I think the Democrats were pretty reasonable. They want to 220 00:11:31,640 --> 00:11:33,680 Speaker 3: go back in and at least get these people paid. 221 00:11:34,600 --> 00:11:37,360 Speaker 3: And it's going to be the messaging who wins the messaging, 222 00:11:37,760 --> 00:11:41,400 Speaker 3: because ultimately a shutdown, the only people that really lose 223 00:11:41,440 --> 00:11:45,640 Speaker 3: with the American people. And as you said, you're not 224 00:11:45,679 --> 00:11:48,480 Speaker 3: feeling the effects, but I can tell you the cost 225 00:11:48,760 --> 00:11:53,200 Speaker 3: of a shutdown are dramatic. The economy, all the things. 226 00:11:53,440 --> 00:11:57,200 Speaker 3: It's a ripple effect that will hurt our economy. It'll 227 00:11:57,240 --> 00:12:01,880 Speaker 3: cost our you know, GDP. It hurts, and you just 228 00:12:01,880 --> 00:12:04,760 Speaker 3: don't fill it immediately, but it will hurt over the 229 00:12:04,760 --> 00:12:06,400 Speaker 3: next few months and weeks. 230 00:12:06,720 --> 00:12:09,400 Speaker 2: Former US Congressman from the Great State of Ohio, Jim 231 00:12:09,480 --> 00:12:12,160 Speaker 2: and Acy our guest here in seven hundred at WLWO. 232 00:12:12,280 --> 00:12:16,319 Speaker 2: Donald Trump's had a great month month and a half internationally. 233 00:12:16,480 --> 00:12:19,400 Speaker 2: He's going to try his hand again with Ukraine and Russia. 234 00:12:20,320 --> 00:12:22,400 Speaker 2: But to fold that back into what we've been just 235 00:12:22,800 --> 00:12:26,680 Speaker 2: talking about, I think he's getting high marks there. Again, 236 00:12:26,760 --> 00:12:30,080 Speaker 2: I'm looking at this as just an average citizen. You've 237 00:12:30,120 --> 00:12:33,640 Speaker 2: been there where the sausage is made. I don't sense 238 00:12:33,800 --> 00:12:37,000 Speaker 2: that any of this really comes to a head until 239 00:12:37,080 --> 00:12:40,720 Speaker 2: Trump is affected. If Trump feels like he's being affected 240 00:12:41,080 --> 00:12:43,440 Speaker 2: and that it's folding back on him, then I think 241 00:12:43,480 --> 00:12:47,400 Speaker 2: he gets involved and you start seeing pressure from him 242 00:12:47,480 --> 00:12:50,520 Speaker 2: on Thune and on Johnson. It's all fun in games 243 00:12:50,600 --> 00:12:52,880 Speaker 2: right now. But I think the minute it starts folding 244 00:12:52,920 --> 00:12:56,040 Speaker 2: on him and his numbers start to create, then I 245 00:12:56,080 --> 00:12:59,280 Speaker 2: think this thing starts to come to a head. You know, again, 246 00:13:00,040 --> 00:13:02,480 Speaker 2: MI a little too simplistic with my analysis here. 247 00:13:04,000 --> 00:13:06,640 Speaker 3: No, I think you're exactly right. If this was affecting 248 00:13:06,679 --> 00:13:09,720 Speaker 3: President Trump, he would have had it settled already. You know, 249 00:13:09,760 --> 00:13:13,360 Speaker 3: I've heard this too. Donald Trump traveled to Egypt to 250 00:13:13,520 --> 00:13:17,160 Speaker 3: settle dispute between people who did not get along. Why 251 00:13:17,240 --> 00:13:19,440 Speaker 3: isn't he in Washington, d C. Bringing the House and 252 00:13:19,480 --> 00:13:23,160 Speaker 3: the Senate in. So that's another issue that independents are 253 00:13:23,160 --> 00:13:25,480 Speaker 3: of looking at. So I keep, you know, bringing up 254 00:13:25,520 --> 00:13:28,040 Speaker 3: this stuff. But you're right, it's not affecting him right now. 255 00:13:29,120 --> 00:13:31,320 Speaker 3: He and he can blame the House and the Senate 256 00:13:31,679 --> 00:13:33,280 Speaker 3: at this stage. He could sit back to the White 257 00:13:33,280 --> 00:13:35,320 Speaker 3: House say it's not my problem, it's not my fault, 258 00:13:35,720 --> 00:13:39,760 Speaker 3: it's those guys over there. And I think, right now, 259 00:13:40,280 --> 00:13:43,160 Speaker 3: that's his easy way out. But you know, as the 260 00:13:43,200 --> 00:13:47,120 Speaker 3: economy starts to have problems, as it becomes issues, I 261 00:13:47,160 --> 00:13:50,640 Speaker 3: think he will be the guy who brings everybody together. 262 00:13:51,240 --> 00:13:53,320 Speaker 3: I would bet you that within the next thirty days 263 00:13:53,360 --> 00:13:55,920 Speaker 3: you're going to see President Trump is going to be 264 00:13:55,960 --> 00:13:58,720 Speaker 3: the person who brings the House and Senate together and says, 265 00:13:58,800 --> 00:14:01,200 Speaker 3: let's get this done. And he's already said he would 266 00:14:01,200 --> 00:14:02,720 Speaker 3: support subsidies. 267 00:14:02,800 --> 00:14:05,040 Speaker 2: Right and get it. Gives him a chance to be 268 00:14:05,120 --> 00:14:08,640 Speaker 2: the hero, and lord knows, that's probably number one in 269 00:14:08,679 --> 00:14:11,120 Speaker 2: his book. He loves. He loves the ability to settle 270 00:14:11,160 --> 00:14:13,680 Speaker 2: things and then sit back and see what people say 271 00:14:13,720 --> 00:14:17,240 Speaker 2: about it. But it's an interesting dynamic. I think it's criminal. 272 00:14:17,280 --> 00:14:19,480 Speaker 2: We're not paying the troops. Criminal, we're not playing the 273 00:14:19,920 --> 00:14:23,520 Speaker 2: air traffic controllers. Same with ICE. I mean, I know 274 00:14:23,600 --> 00:14:26,080 Speaker 2: there are things that are out there and mechanisms out 275 00:14:26,080 --> 00:14:30,040 Speaker 2: there where they're trying to get money to those people, 276 00:14:30,120 --> 00:14:33,640 Speaker 2: but you know, we depend on those people just to 277 00:14:33,760 --> 00:14:36,320 Speaker 2: function on a daily basis. And in the case of ICE, 278 00:14:37,200 --> 00:14:39,320 Speaker 2: you can say what you want about whether or not 279 00:14:39,480 --> 00:14:42,240 Speaker 2: what they're doing is right or wrong. That's what America 280 00:14:42,360 --> 00:14:44,800 Speaker 2: voted for. And they're trying to clean up the act 281 00:14:44,840 --> 00:14:48,600 Speaker 2: of the last four years that has just been absolutely atrocious. 282 00:14:48,640 --> 00:14:51,440 Speaker 2: So yeah, those people need to get paid, and you 283 00:14:51,560 --> 00:14:53,600 Speaker 2: need to get back to your weekend. Jim. We've tied 284 00:14:53,640 --> 00:14:56,320 Speaker 2: you up far too long. There's probably a fair way 285 00:14:56,320 --> 00:14:58,640 Speaker 2: out there screaming for a great tea shot or a 286 00:14:58,680 --> 00:15:02,320 Speaker 2: grandchild screaming for ice cream. So we'll let you go, 287 00:15:02,520 --> 00:15:05,040 Speaker 2: only to talk again down the road. Thank you, Jim. 288 00:15:05,080 --> 00:15:09,120 Speaker 2: We appreciate you all right. Well, by now there you go, 289 00:15:09,200 --> 00:15:15,960 Speaker 2: Jim Ornacy. We love Jim because he is so he's 290 00:15:16,040 --> 00:15:20,040 Speaker 2: not a zealot. He's not somebody that is on TV 291 00:15:20,200 --> 00:15:23,400 Speaker 2: even he's off, is on TV screaming about what's we're 292 00:15:23,520 --> 00:15:25,320 Speaker 2: right there wrong and all that. I mean, it's just 293 00:15:25,360 --> 00:15:28,440 Speaker 2: good common sense and that's why I like having him 294 00:15:28,480 --> 00:15:32,440 Speaker 2: on the show. It is twelve twenty two on this Saturday, 295 00:15:32,960 --> 00:15:35,480 Speaker 2: believe it or not. At two o'clock today, we have 296 00:15:35,760 --> 00:15:42,320 Speaker 2: a Xavier exhibition basketball game. Yes, we're going to have 297 00:15:43,640 --> 00:15:47,200 Speaker 2: Joe and Byron today at noon at two o'clock. Now, 298 00:15:47,240 --> 00:15:49,360 Speaker 2: I'm telling you what if that doesn't get you ready 299 00:15:49,400 --> 00:15:51,600 Speaker 2: for the fall, I don't know what will. But they'll 300 00:15:51,600 --> 00:15:54,760 Speaker 2: have the exhibition game live from the Sintas Center today. 301 00:15:55,200 --> 00:15:59,440 Speaker 2: I believe it's Murray State that we'll be taking on Xavier, 302 00:15:59,480 --> 00:16:03,640 Speaker 2: and Richard Fatino makes his debut as Xavier coach today. 303 00:16:04,160 --> 00:16:07,000 Speaker 2: So stay two for that fun and Ferrality for vrolity, 304 00:16:07,080 --> 00:16:09,320 Speaker 2: and of course down the road, we got uc football 305 00:16:10,040 --> 00:16:13,280 Speaker 2: right here on the home of everything that moves, sweats 306 00:16:13,360 --> 00:16:21,000 Speaker 2: and wears a uniform. Seven hundred WLW twelve twenty nine 307 00:16:21,040 --> 00:16:25,640 Speaker 2: News Radio seven hundred WLW. I am ken Brew coming 308 00:16:25,720 --> 00:16:28,760 Speaker 2: up on the show today. We are a divided society 309 00:16:28,880 --> 00:16:31,920 Speaker 2: and we are divided not just along party lines, but 310 00:16:31,960 --> 00:16:35,280 Speaker 2: we are divided in terms of gender, we are divided 311 00:16:35,360 --> 00:16:39,280 Speaker 2: in terms of demographic, We are in divided nation in 312 00:16:39,360 --> 00:16:42,560 Speaker 2: terms of generation. And how do you bring it together? 313 00:16:43,320 --> 00:16:47,240 Speaker 2: How do you make it work. Doctor Peter Lumage, who 314 00:16:47,280 --> 00:16:50,600 Speaker 2: I've had on the show before, is back and doctor 315 00:16:50,680 --> 00:16:54,320 Speaker 2: Lumage came to this country legally from Albania to escape 316 00:16:54,400 --> 00:16:58,840 Speaker 2: socialism and now he's watching it try to embed itself 317 00:16:58,920 --> 00:17:02,520 Speaker 2: into our country. And he seems to think that one 318 00:17:02,520 --> 00:17:04,879 Speaker 2: of the reasons why democracy is on the run is 319 00:17:04,920 --> 00:17:08,760 Speaker 2: because it's not really serving Americans at this point the 320 00:17:08,800 --> 00:17:10,359 Speaker 2: way it should. So we're going to talk to him 321 00:17:10,359 --> 00:17:13,919 Speaker 2: about how you bring everybody together, not the Kumbaya, but 322 00:17:14,040 --> 00:17:17,760 Speaker 2: just to make this damn thing work. And then one six. 323 00:17:17,840 --> 00:17:21,080 Speaker 2: This is I think a very interesting story. There's a 324 00:17:21,119 --> 00:17:24,720 Speaker 2: band called the Atlanta Rhythm Section. They were big back 325 00:17:24,760 --> 00:17:29,840 Speaker 2: in the seventies. Their lead singer is Rodney Justo. He 326 00:17:30,200 --> 00:17:34,000 Speaker 2: jumped and left the band in the middle of its popularity, 327 00:17:34,359 --> 00:17:36,760 Speaker 2: went off and tried to do his own thing, wound 328 00:17:36,840 --> 00:17:40,560 Speaker 2: up stacking wine bottles in a grocery store in Florida. 329 00:17:40,920 --> 00:17:44,200 Speaker 2: But now he's back with the Atlanta Rhythm Section and 330 00:17:44,480 --> 00:17:47,040 Speaker 2: they are coming to the Ludlow Garage later this month. 331 00:17:47,119 --> 00:17:50,360 Speaker 2: We're going to spend some time with Rodney Rodney Justo, 332 00:17:50,600 --> 00:17:53,080 Speaker 2: all of that and more as we cruise till two 333 00:17:53,320 --> 00:18:02,960 Speaker 2: on seven hundred WLW OH but thirty seven News Radio 334 00:18:03,000 --> 00:18:05,920 Speaker 2: seven hundred at w WELW, I can brew good. Saturday 335 00:18:05,920 --> 00:18:11,479 Speaker 2: afternoon two o'clock, it'll be an exhibission game between Xavier 336 00:18:11,560 --> 00:18:16,480 Speaker 2: University and Murray State. Joe Sunderman and Byron Larkin back 337 00:18:17,680 --> 00:18:21,600 Speaker 2: tickling the airwaves with their dulcet tones as the Richard 338 00:18:21,640 --> 00:18:25,119 Speaker 2: Patino era begins. Of course, later on tonight we have 339 00:18:25,320 --> 00:18:31,119 Speaker 2: uc Oklahoma State. They go out to Stillwater Oklahoma. I 340 00:18:31,160 --> 00:18:34,960 Speaker 2: worked in Oklahoma many years ago, many years ago, and 341 00:18:35,320 --> 00:18:39,159 Speaker 2: used to cover games in Stillwater. As I recall, that 342 00:18:39,240 --> 00:18:43,840 Speaker 2: football stadium is laid out. Most football stadiums are laid 343 00:18:43,840 --> 00:18:46,680 Speaker 2: out in north south. This one is laid out east west. 344 00:18:47,880 --> 00:18:50,959 Speaker 2: And they would get out in Oklahoma these storms, they 345 00:18:51,000 --> 00:18:55,560 Speaker 2: were called northeasters, where you might be, you know, walking 346 00:18:55,600 --> 00:18:58,639 Speaker 2: around in short sleeves and the temperature is seventy eight 347 00:18:58,720 --> 00:19:02,680 Speaker 2: eighty degrees and three hours later it's thirty eight degrees 348 00:19:02,720 --> 00:19:05,639 Speaker 2: and there's hail falling from the sky. But that was 349 00:19:05,680 --> 00:19:09,680 Speaker 2: like a wind tunnel. That stadium out there at Oklahoma State. 350 00:19:10,600 --> 00:19:14,360 Speaker 2: They made great improvements over the years. T Boone Pickens, 351 00:19:14,440 --> 00:19:18,280 Speaker 2: I'm sure you know that name, the oil guy, big time, 352 00:19:18,280 --> 00:19:21,960 Speaker 2: big city, big deal oil guy. T. Boone Pickens is 353 00:19:22,000 --> 00:19:24,720 Speaker 2: an alumnus of that school and has put a lot 354 00:19:24,720 --> 00:19:28,280 Speaker 2: of money into its athletic programs, and one of which 355 00:19:28,359 --> 00:19:30,240 Speaker 2: was an upgrade of the stadium. But man, I'll tell 356 00:19:30,240 --> 00:19:33,280 Speaker 2: you what. When I was out there, the head coach 357 00:19:33,440 --> 00:19:38,439 Speaker 2: was Jimmy Johnson. Yes, that's Jimmy Johnson. And you'd go 358 00:19:38,480 --> 00:19:41,320 Speaker 2: to games there and it would just the win would 359 00:19:41,320 --> 00:19:44,119 Speaker 2: as the song Oklahoma says the wind would come woving 360 00:19:44,200 --> 00:19:48,160 Speaker 2: down the plane. Eight o'clock the kickoff time. The night 361 00:19:48,160 --> 00:19:53,760 Speaker 2: weather looks good the UC the Oklahoma State game is 362 00:19:53,880 --> 00:19:56,160 Speaker 2: just one of many on the schedule today. We want 363 00:19:56,160 --> 00:19:58,679 Speaker 2: to talk about. Well, by the way, I said it 364 00:19:58,880 --> 00:20:02,760 Speaker 2: was twelve thirty, as you and I both know, it's 365 00:20:02,880 --> 00:20:08,760 Speaker 2: five o'clock somewhere. There's one for you. There's one for me. Well, 366 00:20:08,760 --> 00:20:12,840 Speaker 2: there's one for the ages. I did light up ajpup 367 00:20:12,920 --> 00:20:16,440 Speaker 2: top again. Alan Jackson, Baby, here's one for you. 368 00:20:16,600 --> 00:20:20,199 Speaker 4: I've just got time for one more round. 369 00:20:20,520 --> 00:20:24,840 Speaker 2: Sit them up, my praying, then what happens. 370 00:20:24,680 --> 00:20:29,560 Speaker 4: And now be gone and you can live. Some of the. 371 00:20:29,800 --> 00:20:36,080 Speaker 2: Fools sit down now. Unfortunately, Sterling is not into daddy. Nevertheless, 372 00:20:36,560 --> 00:20:39,560 Speaker 2: we press on, Yeah, you see Oklahoma State tonight number 373 00:20:39,600 --> 00:20:42,240 Speaker 2: twenty four in the country. Cincinnati is five and one, 374 00:20:42,359 --> 00:20:45,320 Speaker 2: three and oh in the Big twelve, Oklahoma State one 375 00:20:45,400 --> 00:20:49,199 Speaker 2: and five oh and three in the Big twelve, and 376 00:20:49,440 --> 00:20:53,920 Speaker 2: the University of Cincinnati is a twenty four point favorite. 377 00:20:54,040 --> 00:20:58,200 Speaker 2: Why Oklahoma State and its last five games, has scored 378 00:20:58,200 --> 00:21:01,560 Speaker 2: a grand total of seventy two points. It's about fourteen 379 00:21:01,720 --> 00:21:07,439 Speaker 2: points per game. Nevertheless, Scott Saderfield here now Scott talking 380 00:21:07,480 --> 00:21:11,040 Speaker 2: about Oklahoma State and their offense and the fact they 381 00:21:11,080 --> 00:21:15,159 Speaker 2: have a wide receiver now playing quarterback. Yeah, you have 382 00:21:15,200 --> 00:21:16,119 Speaker 2: to be ready for everything. 383 00:21:16,160 --> 00:21:18,359 Speaker 4: I mean, this is a team that you know. 384 00:21:18,400 --> 00:21:20,919 Speaker 5: Obviously they haven't had the best of the year, but 385 00:21:20,960 --> 00:21:23,280 Speaker 5: they already is homecoming. They do have a lot of pride. 386 00:21:23,520 --> 00:21:25,320 Speaker 5: All the alumni will be coming back. They want to 387 00:21:25,320 --> 00:21:28,760 Speaker 5: play on a great show for their fans. You know, 388 00:21:28,880 --> 00:21:31,080 Speaker 5: they got proud about themselves as well. So they're gonna 389 00:21:31,080 --> 00:21:32,280 Speaker 5: We're gonna get their best shot. 390 00:21:32,320 --> 00:21:35,280 Speaker 2: Oklahoma State. I believe UC was out there a couple 391 00:21:35,320 --> 00:21:39,320 Speaker 2: of years ago. It did not go well and it 392 00:21:40,520 --> 00:21:45,320 Speaker 2: you know, with the portal with nil, every single football 393 00:21:45,320 --> 00:21:49,639 Speaker 2: team changes its personnel and its look and its ability 394 00:21:49,680 --> 00:21:53,600 Speaker 2: to win almost on a yearly basis. So here's Brendan 395 00:21:53,680 --> 00:21:57,040 Speaker 2: Soresby on the just the difference from one year to 396 00:21:57,160 --> 00:22:00,760 Speaker 2: the next, one time against Oklahoma State to Glahoma State. 397 00:22:00,840 --> 00:22:03,960 Speaker 6: Right now, just to culture, you know that we've established 398 00:22:04,000 --> 00:22:07,320 Speaker 6: everybody understands our goal is to you know, being Dallas 399 00:22:07,320 --> 00:22:08,879 Speaker 6: at the end of the year. Our goal isn't just 400 00:22:08,880 --> 00:22:11,760 Speaker 6: to make it to a bowl game. So you know, 401 00:22:11,840 --> 00:22:13,359 Speaker 6: the message is still the same. Go wan to know 402 00:22:13,480 --> 00:22:16,160 Speaker 6: this week and just find a way to get better. 403 00:22:16,240 --> 00:22:17,720 Speaker 2: Now, if they win, they go to six and one. 404 00:22:17,800 --> 00:22:20,960 Speaker 2: You remember last year they're five and two and then 405 00:22:21,000 --> 00:22:24,760 Speaker 2: the bottom falls out. They're five and one right now. 406 00:22:25,680 --> 00:22:28,240 Speaker 2: And it's not just a bowl game and being Bowl eligible, 407 00:22:28,280 --> 00:22:31,960 Speaker 2: as he said there will win tonight and their Bowl eligible. 408 00:22:31,960 --> 00:22:33,560 Speaker 2: It's it's much more than that. I mean, if you 409 00:22:33,600 --> 00:22:38,080 Speaker 2: look at the big twelve right now, it's you know, 410 00:22:38,160 --> 00:22:42,159 Speaker 2: it's BYU is a player, Utah is a player, Cincinnati 411 00:22:42,280 --> 00:22:44,680 Speaker 2: is a player. Now. I'm not saying that there are 412 00:22:44,680 --> 00:22:47,040 Speaker 2: other teams that can't come in and on a given 413 00:22:47,080 --> 00:22:50,359 Speaker 2: Saturday beat any one of those three teams, but you know, 414 00:22:50,720 --> 00:22:53,240 Speaker 2: the cream is kind of rising to the top right now, 415 00:22:53,320 --> 00:22:56,200 Speaker 2: and part of that cream is the University of Cincinnati. 416 00:22:56,560 --> 00:22:59,560 Speaker 2: So that's an eight o'clock kick. We'll be on the 417 00:22:59,600 --> 00:23:03,120 Speaker 2: air with the pregame show at seven o'clock and you'll 418 00:23:03,119 --> 00:23:05,439 Speaker 2: get all the play by play action with Dan Horde, 419 00:23:05,640 --> 00:23:08,160 Speaker 2: Tony Pike, and Moe Egger. And by the way, while 420 00:23:08,160 --> 00:23:10,800 Speaker 2: we're talking about U, see I said this on Twitter, 421 00:23:10,800 --> 00:23:15,359 Speaker 2: I want to say it publicly on these airwaves right now. 422 00:23:16,040 --> 00:23:20,280 Speaker 2: I am completely saddened, like most of the UC community, 423 00:23:20,320 --> 00:23:25,000 Speaker 2: on the passing of Jim Kelly, who was no greater 424 00:23:25,119 --> 00:23:30,880 Speaker 2: ambassador lived that was a bigger ambassador for the University 425 00:23:30,920 --> 00:23:34,320 Speaker 2: of Cincinnati than Jim Kelly. He obviously was from a 426 00:23:34,359 --> 00:23:39,439 Speaker 2: family that is well steeped in University of Cincinnati lore. 427 00:23:39,520 --> 00:23:42,800 Speaker 2: But above that, he was just a nice guy, really 428 00:23:42,840 --> 00:23:45,760 Speaker 2: really nice guy. And men could he play the guitar. 429 00:23:46,840 --> 00:23:50,119 Speaker 2: We'd see him at some of the farmers' markets around 430 00:23:50,119 --> 00:23:52,040 Speaker 2: town in the summertime, or you go to a bar 431 00:23:52,280 --> 00:23:55,520 Speaker 2: like street side or someplace where he would perform. He 432 00:23:56,320 --> 00:24:00,000 Speaker 2: knew how to pick and he left this earth farm 433 00:24:00,119 --> 00:24:03,959 Speaker 2: too soon. He did make it. Last Friday night there 434 00:24:04,040 --> 00:24:06,920 Speaker 2: was a big reunion of the nineteen seventy five team 435 00:24:07,680 --> 00:24:12,080 Speaker 2: team coached by Tony Mason, of which he was a part. 436 00:24:12,200 --> 00:24:15,520 Speaker 2: He did make it for a while there. He had 437 00:24:15,560 --> 00:24:18,520 Speaker 2: helped organize that particular reunion. I know it was a 438 00:24:18,560 --> 00:24:23,359 Speaker 2: big deal for him, and made it as part of 439 00:24:23,359 --> 00:24:25,840 Speaker 2: it for about an hour on Friday night of last 440 00:24:25,880 --> 00:24:30,160 Speaker 2: week and then passed away on Sunday morning. But that's 441 00:24:30,160 --> 00:24:33,480 Speaker 2: a giant hole for the UC community. And I hope, 442 00:24:34,440 --> 00:24:36,440 Speaker 2: not sure, but I hope a lot of the players 443 00:24:36,440 --> 00:24:39,760 Speaker 2: that are on the field tonight know exactly what he 444 00:24:39,920 --> 00:24:46,560 Speaker 2: meant to that school. Just a really really good guy. Anyway, 445 00:24:46,600 --> 00:24:49,280 Speaker 2: that's at eight o'clock tonight, coming up at three point thirty. 446 00:24:49,400 --> 00:24:52,000 Speaker 2: You have Ohio State number one in the country at 447 00:24:52,040 --> 00:24:54,679 Speaker 2: Wisconsin OSU six and OH three and oh in the 448 00:24:54,680 --> 00:25:00,040 Speaker 2: Big Ten, Wisconsin two and four under Luke Fickel the 449 00:25:00,080 --> 00:25:03,919 Speaker 2: Fickle's seat. There is tenuous two and four, zero to 450 00:25:03,960 --> 00:25:07,840 Speaker 2: three inside the conference, and Ohio State is a twenty 451 00:25:08,320 --> 00:25:14,800 Speaker 2: five point favorite in this game. Ryan Day on Wisconsin 452 00:25:14,960 --> 00:25:18,080 Speaker 2: as he this must have been at his news conference 453 00:25:18,119 --> 00:25:20,800 Speaker 2: this week Tuesday, Wednesday. 454 00:25:20,920 --> 00:25:23,000 Speaker 7: Now, I know the season hasn't gone the way that 455 00:25:23,040 --> 00:25:26,680 Speaker 7: they've expected it to go, but at the same time. 456 00:25:26,480 --> 00:25:27,119 Speaker 2: Put the film on. 457 00:25:27,480 --> 00:25:30,679 Speaker 7: You know, they're one of the better defenses in the country, 458 00:25:30,880 --> 00:25:32,520 Speaker 7: and you know it takes is, you know, a few 459 00:25:32,520 --> 00:25:34,320 Speaker 7: big plays and getting the offense and rhythm and they're 460 00:25:34,320 --> 00:25:35,160 Speaker 7: going to be in these games. 461 00:25:35,160 --> 00:25:37,520 Speaker 2: And so we know that. I don't think they're going 462 00:25:37,520 --> 00:25:41,439 Speaker 2: to be in today's game. We'll see twenty five points 463 00:25:41,520 --> 00:25:44,520 Speaker 2: is a hefty number for a home team. You got 464 00:25:44,520 --> 00:25:46,199 Speaker 2: to be tickled by that a little bit, but I 465 00:25:46,240 --> 00:25:51,040 Speaker 2: don't I would stray from that. Ohio State Wisconsin three 466 00:25:51,040 --> 00:25:54,280 Speaker 2: point thirty. We have a NOOM game that has just 467 00:25:54,440 --> 00:25:58,400 Speaker 2: kicked off Eastern Michigan at Miami up in Oxford, e 468 00:25:58,520 --> 00:26:00,800 Speaker 2: m You two and five one two in the MAC. 469 00:26:01,680 --> 00:26:03,880 Speaker 2: Miami three and three two and oh in the MAC. 470 00:26:03,960 --> 00:26:08,119 Speaker 2: Miami is a thirteen point favorite. Another noon game that 471 00:26:08,280 --> 00:26:12,520 Speaker 2: kicked off out in Athens. It's homecoming for Ohio University 472 00:26:12,640 --> 00:26:18,120 Speaker 2: Northern Illinois at Ohio, Ohio favorite in that game despite 473 00:26:18,200 --> 00:26:20,840 Speaker 2: laying an egg at Ball State couple of saturdays ago, 474 00:26:21,520 --> 00:26:25,480 Speaker 2: but homecoming for the Bobcats. I got excited. I bought 475 00:26:25,480 --> 00:26:27,920 Speaker 2: tickets for that game. I thought I wasn't on the air. 476 00:26:28,040 --> 00:26:29,960 Speaker 2: I didn't have a game, you see what was playing. 477 00:26:30,000 --> 00:26:32,240 Speaker 2: I got a chance to go to Athens for homecoming. 478 00:26:32,280 --> 00:26:35,159 Speaker 2: Then I realized that the game wasn't last Saturday, it 479 00:26:35,359 --> 00:26:41,119 Speaker 2: was this Saturday. So I'm dining on those homecoming in Athens. 480 00:26:41,160 --> 00:26:44,320 Speaker 2: They've just kicked off. Now we've got a seven o'clock 481 00:26:44,400 --> 00:26:48,400 Speaker 2: game tonight. Number twenty one Texas at four and two, 482 00:26:48,480 --> 00:26:52,600 Speaker 2: one and one inside the SEC is at Kentucky down 483 00:26:52,600 --> 00:26:56,679 Speaker 2: in Liewill, down in Lexington, Kentucky two and three oh 484 00:26:56,760 --> 00:27:01,399 Speaker 2: and three in the SEC, and Kentucky is getting twelve 485 00:27:01,440 --> 00:27:04,760 Speaker 2: and a half in this game tonight. This will be 486 00:27:04,800 --> 00:27:08,560 Speaker 2: a rather large win if Mark Stoops team can pull 487 00:27:08,680 --> 00:27:12,600 Speaker 2: it off. To pull it off, they will have to 488 00:27:12,600 --> 00:27:17,320 Speaker 2: corral Arch Manning, the quarterback of Texas. Here's Stoops on 489 00:27:17,480 --> 00:27:18,760 Speaker 2: Manning earlier this week. 490 00:27:19,040 --> 00:27:21,560 Speaker 8: Do you see a very very good football player that's 491 00:27:21,600 --> 00:27:25,360 Speaker 8: getting better, you know, each and every game, more comfortable, 492 00:27:25,920 --> 00:27:30,639 Speaker 8: but a guy that just really will wow you. You 493 00:27:30,680 --> 00:27:33,240 Speaker 8: know a certain place, you know, I think it, you know, 494 00:27:33,400 --> 00:27:36,600 Speaker 8: just you know, simple things. I mean, watched this last 495 00:27:36,640 --> 00:27:38,200 Speaker 8: game and I want to say it was a four 496 00:27:38,240 --> 00:27:42,640 Speaker 8: point game. Backed up Oklahoma, got great pressure on him, 497 00:27:42,800 --> 00:27:44,960 Speaker 8: evades the pressure and throws the strike. 498 00:27:45,359 --> 00:27:47,800 Speaker 2: He did that time and time again. Twelve and a 499 00:27:47,880 --> 00:27:50,480 Speaker 2: half is what Kentucky is getting at home in this game. 500 00:27:51,400 --> 00:27:53,879 Speaker 2: They were off last weekend. Hopefully they've fixed some of 501 00:27:53,960 --> 00:27:56,800 Speaker 2: the problems that they've had. They've had a myriad of problems. 502 00:27:57,480 --> 00:27:59,879 Speaker 2: But two and three Kentucky against four and two Texas 503 00:28:00,000 --> 00:28:04,560 Speaker 2: tonight at seven three point thirty. Today, you have Michigan 504 00:28:04,600 --> 00:28:07,720 Speaker 2: State at number three Indiana, Michigan State three and three, 505 00:28:07,840 --> 00:28:10,679 Speaker 2: zero and three in the Big Ten, Indiana six and 506 00:28:10,720 --> 00:28:14,240 Speaker 2: oh three and oh inside the Big Ten and Kurt 507 00:28:14,280 --> 00:28:21,240 Speaker 2: Signetti just got that big contract this week. Indiana is good. Uh, Indiana. 508 00:28:21,280 --> 00:28:23,920 Speaker 2: I would not be surprised if Indiana's a Final four 509 00:28:23,960 --> 00:28:27,360 Speaker 2: team this year. They're number three in the country. And 510 00:28:27,440 --> 00:28:33,880 Speaker 2: Indiana is giving twenty seven and a half points twenty 511 00:28:34,040 --> 00:28:36,840 Speaker 2: seven and a half points in this game today to 512 00:28:36,960 --> 00:28:41,760 Speaker 2: Michigan State and Signetti here he is speaking earlier this week. 513 00:28:42,880 --> 00:28:46,080 Speaker 3: But we got good players to prepare and like to 514 00:28:46,080 --> 00:28:48,800 Speaker 3: play football, and they're smart, and they make good choices 515 00:28:48,840 --> 00:28:50,240 Speaker 3: and decisions on the field. 516 00:28:51,120 --> 00:28:53,760 Speaker 2: And no small reason why they're in the position they 517 00:28:53,800 --> 00:28:56,440 Speaker 2: are and why he is man he is cashing in 518 00:28:57,400 --> 00:29:01,440 Speaker 2: at the bank. One other thing of note that we 519 00:29:01,600 --> 00:29:03,960 Speaker 2: have to mention. We don't have to mention, we want 520 00:29:03,960 --> 00:29:07,400 Speaker 2: to mention it. We have soccer tonight. We have FC 521 00:29:07,440 --> 00:29:13,520 Speaker 2: Cincinnati in their regular season finale. They're calling this what 522 00:29:13,560 --> 00:29:16,280 Speaker 2: are they calling a showdown day, deadline day something or 523 00:29:16,320 --> 00:29:20,640 Speaker 2: other decision decision day as teams are vying to get 524 00:29:20,680 --> 00:29:24,440 Speaker 2: into the MLS playoffs or jockey for position. Here is 525 00:29:24,520 --> 00:29:29,920 Speaker 2: the gambit for FC Cincinnati in this game tonight against 526 00:29:30,400 --> 00:29:36,840 Speaker 2: the team from Montreal, FC Montreal. If FC Cincinnati wins tonight, 527 00:29:38,080 --> 00:29:42,240 Speaker 2: it is the second seed in the Eastern Conference in 528 00:29:42,280 --> 00:29:47,200 Speaker 2: the upcoming playoffs second seed. Right now, FC Cincinnati is 529 00:29:47,360 --> 00:29:51,440 Speaker 2: tied for second place with Inter Miami CF that would 530 00:29:51,480 --> 00:29:55,920 Speaker 2: be Messi's team. Inter Miami is also playing tonight, as 531 00:29:55,960 --> 00:30:02,240 Speaker 2: are all other MLS teams. But Cincinnati wins, they're in 532 00:30:02,840 --> 00:30:08,000 Speaker 2: second place. Or if Miami loses and it ends the 533 00:30:08,000 --> 00:30:12,360 Speaker 2: way it is sixty two points as it ends because 534 00:30:12,400 --> 00:30:18,320 Speaker 2: of tie breakers, FC Cincinnati finishes second. So you win, 535 00:30:18,400 --> 00:30:23,120 Speaker 2: you're in. You lose, you're probably second. Somebody asks the 536 00:30:23,200 --> 00:30:26,360 Speaker 2: coach Pat Noonan, look, you're gonna be doing a little 537 00:30:26,360 --> 00:30:30,120 Speaker 2: scoreboard watching tonight, maybe to see what that team in 538 00:30:30,160 --> 00:30:31,080 Speaker 2: Miami is doing. 539 00:30:31,320 --> 00:30:33,760 Speaker 9: There's no reason to score watch if we go and 540 00:30:34,080 --> 00:30:39,120 Speaker 9: control our what we control. If we win a game, 541 00:30:39,160 --> 00:30:41,680 Speaker 9: we know we hold onto the two spots, so there's 542 00:30:41,680 --> 00:30:43,440 Speaker 9: no reason to be paying attention to anything else. 543 00:30:43,640 --> 00:30:48,320 Speaker 2: There. You go, focus, focus, Focus is what Noonan has 544 00:30:48,360 --> 00:30:51,680 Speaker 2: been preaching this week, and we'll see if the focus 545 00:30:52,000 --> 00:30:55,840 Speaker 2: narrative will hold up. We know right now, we know 546 00:30:56,000 --> 00:31:00,200 Speaker 2: right now that FC Cincinnati has been playing better. They 547 00:31:00,200 --> 00:31:03,120 Speaker 2: put a lot of money into their front line, and 548 00:31:03,360 --> 00:31:06,000 Speaker 2: because of that, they've been putting the ball in the 549 00:31:06,000 --> 00:31:08,240 Speaker 2: back of the net just a little bit better than 550 00:31:08,240 --> 00:31:11,640 Speaker 2: what they have. But we shall see one of a note. 551 00:31:11,760 --> 00:31:15,280 Speaker 2: We've been talking about it all day show. Hey Otani, 552 00:31:17,120 --> 00:31:20,560 Speaker 2: third home run off his bat streaked towards those left 553 00:31:20,560 --> 00:31:23,840 Speaker 2: field bleachers last night, and what do you know? Otani 554 00:31:24,040 --> 00:31:28,560 Speaker 2: was simply electrifying one of the greatest single game performances 555 00:31:28,560 --> 00:31:33,160 Speaker 2: in baseball history. Two way guy right, his thirteenth three 556 00:31:33,280 --> 00:31:38,400 Speaker 2: run homer game in postseason. And not only that, the 557 00:31:38,600 --> 00:31:43,120 Speaker 2: five to one victory over the Milwaukee Brewers has the Dodgers, 558 00:31:43,320 --> 00:31:49,240 Speaker 2: the defending champion Dodgers, back in the World Series. Congratulations 559 00:31:49,280 --> 00:31:52,280 Speaker 2: to that team. That's a good team. It's a team 560 00:31:53,040 --> 00:31:55,600 Speaker 2: that proves you buy a lot of wins with a 561 00:31:55,640 --> 00:31:58,920 Speaker 2: lot of money. Twelve to fifty one already, News Radio 562 00:31:59,040 --> 00:32:05,320 Speaker 2: seven hundred ww One. Other thing I failed to mention, 563 00:32:05,440 --> 00:32:10,160 Speaker 2: that's the American League Championship Series. Game six is tomorrow 564 00:32:10,280 --> 00:32:13,480 Speaker 2: night and Seattle can wrap it up. They're up three 565 00:32:13,480 --> 00:32:17,040 Speaker 2: to two. The game is in Toronto, but Seattle up 566 00:32:17,040 --> 00:32:20,560 Speaker 2: three to two with Game six coming tomorrow night. So 567 00:32:22,120 --> 00:32:27,360 Speaker 2: in April, the network Contagion Research Institute, I know, I 568 00:32:27,440 --> 00:32:31,800 Speaker 2: never heard of it myself. Apparently there's a research institute 569 00:32:31,920 --> 00:32:34,720 Speaker 2: netbook called the network contagion. If you have a network, 570 00:32:34,760 --> 00:32:38,720 Speaker 2: please check to see if it's contagious anyway. This group, 571 00:32:38,880 --> 00:32:43,480 Speaker 2: along with Rutgers University, largely viewed as the University of 572 00:32:43,480 --> 00:32:49,360 Speaker 2: New Jersey, found that fifty five percent of self identified 573 00:32:49,480 --> 00:32:53,800 Speaker 2: left of center respondents said that it was at least 574 00:32:53,880 --> 00:32:59,920 Speaker 2: somewhat justified to murder President Trump. Let's think about that 575 00:33:01,320 --> 00:33:05,720 Speaker 2: fifty five percent of the people this Network Contagion Research 576 00:33:05,760 --> 00:33:11,000 Speaker 2: group talked to over half said that it was at 577 00:33:11,120 --> 00:33:19,560 Speaker 2: least somewhat justified to murder President Trump. Is that where 578 00:33:19,560 --> 00:33:21,440 Speaker 2: we are in this country? The bullets seemed to be 579 00:33:21,480 --> 00:33:25,200 Speaker 2: flying one way. Let's be honest, they seem to be 580 00:33:25,240 --> 00:33:29,240 Speaker 2: flying left to right. I guess we could go back 581 00:33:29,280 --> 00:33:34,840 Speaker 2: to the jfk assassination. But the fact of the matter is, 582 00:33:35,120 --> 00:33:38,160 Speaker 2: right now, there seems to be a problem with those 583 00:33:38,200 --> 00:33:41,640 Speaker 2: who identify left of center. If you are to believe 584 00:33:41,800 --> 00:33:47,280 Speaker 2: what is in this Rutgers University poll. You gov took 585 00:33:47,320 --> 00:33:52,400 Speaker 2: a poll after Charlie Kirk was murdered. Eleven percent in 586 00:33:52,520 --> 00:33:58,200 Speaker 2: that poll said violence can sometime be justified to achieve 587 00:33:58,280 --> 00:34:04,160 Speaker 2: political goals. So what's going on here? We are divided? 588 00:34:04,240 --> 00:34:07,640 Speaker 2: But now it appears that those that may identify on 589 00:34:07,680 --> 00:34:11,080 Speaker 2: the left think it's ok to whip out a firearm 590 00:34:11,200 --> 00:34:15,080 Speaker 2: and just blow away anybody you don't agree with politically. 591 00:34:15,360 --> 00:34:18,839 Speaker 2: Do you believe this piece of research? You think it's 592 00:34:18,880 --> 00:34:23,640 Speaker 2: a load of horse hockey. Coming up next is somebody 593 00:34:23,680 --> 00:34:27,279 Speaker 2: who thinks all of this is off the rails, and 594 00:34:27,360 --> 00:34:29,080 Speaker 2: it's going to take a lot of work to get 595 00:34:29,080 --> 00:34:33,000 Speaker 2: it on the rails, because there's another poll that's out 596 00:34:33,360 --> 00:34:35,080 Speaker 2: by the New York Times, and I know it, don't 597 00:34:35,160 --> 00:34:37,759 Speaker 2: roll your eyes, but the New York Times shows that 598 00:34:38,440 --> 00:34:43,120 Speaker 2: sixty four percent of us believe America is two divided 599 00:34:44,080 --> 00:34:48,680 Speaker 2: to solve its problems. We'll get into that next. It's 600 00:34:48,680 --> 00:34:51,880 Speaker 2: one o'clock News Radio seven hundred WLW. 601 00:34:54,880 --> 00:35:01,040 Speaker 1: Now your host can Brew on NewsRadio seven hundred WL seven. 602 00:35:01,200 --> 00:35:05,680 Speaker 2: Welcome back to the festivities. I am the aforementioned Coming 603 00:35:05,760 --> 00:35:10,640 Speaker 2: up one thirty seven today, a guy who fronted one 604 00:35:10,640 --> 00:35:14,560 Speaker 2: of the best bands that the seventies ever produced and 605 00:35:14,880 --> 00:35:17,480 Speaker 2: then took a hiatus, left them at the peak of 606 00:35:17,600 --> 00:35:20,640 Speaker 2: their popularity. But he's back. We're going to talk with 607 00:35:20,840 --> 00:35:26,280 Speaker 2: Rodney Justo, lead singer Atlanta Rhythm Section. You know their hits. 608 00:35:27,160 --> 00:35:30,799 Speaker 2: I'm so into you. Well, I am into you. And 609 00:35:31,320 --> 00:35:33,520 Speaker 2: a lot of their guys have come and gone. Some 610 00:35:33,600 --> 00:35:36,640 Speaker 2: have passed away, but they're coming back those that are left, 611 00:35:36,840 --> 00:35:39,799 Speaker 2: including Rodney to the Ludlow Garage. We're going to visit 612 00:35:39,840 --> 00:35:42,200 Speaker 2: about their music and where it all went off the 613 00:35:42,280 --> 00:35:45,160 Speaker 2: rails for him? Where did it go off the rails 614 00:35:45,200 --> 00:35:49,920 Speaker 2: for us as a country? Why is there such hatred 615 00:35:50,000 --> 00:35:54,400 Speaker 2: by some people for Donald Trump? Before Donald Trump decided 616 00:35:54,440 --> 00:35:57,000 Speaker 2: he wanted to run for president, he was the darling 617 00:35:57,560 --> 00:36:02,000 Speaker 2: of the media. Letterman loved him, the view loved him, 618 00:36:02,160 --> 00:36:05,040 Speaker 2: everybody loved Donald And all of a sudden, when Donald 619 00:36:05,080 --> 00:36:08,879 Speaker 2: Trump said I'd like to be president trump Man, all 620 00:36:08,920 --> 00:36:12,960 Speaker 2: hell broke loose and this country has been divided ever since. 621 00:36:13,239 --> 00:36:16,040 Speaker 2: Does one man really have the power to do that? 622 00:36:17,239 --> 00:36:20,200 Speaker 2: A New York Times Sieno Poul says, sixty four percent 623 00:36:20,239 --> 00:36:24,920 Speaker 2: of us are two divided to solve our problems, a 624 00:36:25,000 --> 00:36:28,719 Speaker 2: stunning drop and optimism compared to just a few years ago. 625 00:36:28,880 --> 00:36:31,920 Speaker 2: Why is that standing by the way in on This 626 00:36:32,000 --> 00:36:34,080 Speaker 2: is someone who I've had on the show before. He 627 00:36:34,200 --> 00:36:38,400 Speaker 2: is doctor Peter Lumige. He is someone who emigrated to 628 00:36:38,480 --> 00:36:42,600 Speaker 2: this country legally from his home in Albania. He has 629 00:36:42,680 --> 00:36:47,640 Speaker 2: been here for thirty six years, achieved doctor status educationally. 630 00:36:48,719 --> 00:36:51,360 Speaker 2: Now he's trying to become the Secretary of State in 631 00:36:51,960 --> 00:36:57,480 Speaker 2: the Estate of connect Ticket and he's just wondering, like 632 00:36:57,520 --> 00:37:01,399 Speaker 2: you and me, where all this went wrong and why 633 00:37:01,440 --> 00:37:06,879 Speaker 2: the Democrats, it seemed to be, are so absolutely set 634 00:37:06,920 --> 00:37:12,080 Speaker 2: against anything that Donald Trump wants to do. Let's bring 635 00:37:12,120 --> 00:37:15,359 Speaker 2: them on in the aforementioned doctor, Peter Mimage, how are 636 00:37:15,400 --> 00:37:17,040 Speaker 2: you on this glorious Saturday. 637 00:37:17,960 --> 00:37:19,520 Speaker 4: I'm doing well. Thank you for having me. 638 00:37:19,560 --> 00:37:21,960 Speaker 2: How you doing I'm doing well too. I'm glad that 639 00:37:22,040 --> 00:37:24,520 Speaker 2: you're here, because, as you well know, we are a 640 00:37:24,560 --> 00:37:27,120 Speaker 2: country that is at each other's throats. And it's all 641 00:37:27,160 --> 00:37:30,120 Speaker 2: because it seems like politics here. Now a New New 642 00:37:30,200 --> 00:37:34,000 Speaker 2: York Times siena pol that shows sixty four percent of 643 00:37:34,080 --> 00:37:38,759 Speaker 2: us of voters now believe America is too divided to 644 00:37:38,840 --> 00:37:42,040 Speaker 2: solve its problems. And this is a stunning drop in 645 00:37:42,080 --> 00:37:45,720 Speaker 2: optimism compared to just a couple of years ago. Sixty 646 00:37:45,760 --> 00:37:48,399 Speaker 2: four percent, Doctor, that's two and every three of us 647 00:37:48,440 --> 00:37:51,560 Speaker 2: think this thing is hopeless here in this country. Please 648 00:37:51,600 --> 00:37:54,239 Speaker 2: give us some hope and tell us why. Yet again, 649 00:37:54,280 --> 00:37:55,680 Speaker 2: the New York Times may be wrong. 650 00:37:57,280 --> 00:37:59,279 Speaker 10: Look, I was reading the poll by the pool. But 651 00:38:00,080 --> 00:38:02,400 Speaker 10: stand one thing, New York Times has not been. 652 00:38:02,200 --> 00:38:04,960 Speaker 4: Doing justice to conducting these polls. 653 00:38:05,040 --> 00:38:07,399 Speaker 10: And I would take that with a grain of salt 654 00:38:08,160 --> 00:38:11,160 Speaker 10: when it comes to the American population. But for the 655 00:38:11,239 --> 00:38:13,719 Speaker 10: fact that the American people, but for the fact that 656 00:38:13,760 --> 00:38:17,120 Speaker 10: the media keeps from driving this divide between them, the academia, 657 00:38:17,480 --> 00:38:21,160 Speaker 10: the politicians. Otherwise, American people ordinary posts like you and I. 658 00:38:21,320 --> 00:38:23,080 Speaker 10: We wake up in the morning, we go to work, 659 00:38:23,120 --> 00:38:27,480 Speaker 10: support our families. We don't think of a disliking each other. Somehow, 660 00:38:27,560 --> 00:38:30,360 Speaker 10: New York Times finding that people to come up with 661 00:38:30,400 --> 00:38:32,719 Speaker 10: a fall that sixty four percent or sixty three to 662 00:38:32,800 --> 00:38:36,279 Speaker 10: sixty four percent of the American people believe that America 663 00:38:36,680 --> 00:38:40,680 Speaker 10: cannot resolve its own challenges. They forget the fact that 664 00:38:40,680 --> 00:38:42,960 Speaker 10: we have faced greater challenges in the past. You can 665 00:38:43,000 --> 00:38:45,960 Speaker 10: go back to eighteen sixty one, eighteen sixty five, will 666 00:38:46,040 --> 00:38:48,880 Speaker 10: report a civil war, We have the civil rights movements, 667 00:38:48,920 --> 00:38:52,400 Speaker 10: we have the nine eleven attack. Somehow Americans find a 668 00:38:52,440 --> 00:38:56,359 Speaker 10: way of uniting when it comes to Americanism. But New 669 00:38:56,400 --> 00:38:59,480 Speaker 10: York Times, for whatever reason, you know, it's able to 670 00:38:59,520 --> 00:39:00,960 Speaker 10: come up with these numbers. 671 00:39:01,200 --> 00:39:04,759 Speaker 4: We still see people from all over the world. 672 00:39:05,000 --> 00:39:08,719 Speaker 10: Wanting to come to the United States, both legally and illegally, 673 00:39:08,719 --> 00:39:13,600 Speaker 10: because they see America as the exceptional nation that we 674 00:39:13,800 --> 00:39:17,200 Speaker 10: are where people have the opportunity to live the American dream, 675 00:39:17,280 --> 00:39:20,160 Speaker 10: to pursue the American dream, and every count that you 676 00:39:20,239 --> 00:39:25,000 Speaker 10: have American born citizens trying to promote something that is 677 00:39:25,080 --> 00:39:29,480 Speaker 10: not quite American. People like me who give United States 678 00:39:29,480 --> 00:39:33,080 Speaker 10: thirty six years ago so refugee, we really are battled 679 00:39:33,080 --> 00:39:36,520 Speaker 10: by it that they think that we are just another 680 00:39:36,680 --> 00:39:40,200 Speaker 10: country in the world. America is that exceptional country that 681 00:39:40,440 --> 00:39:44,040 Speaker 10: was founded by the founding fathers of this country, and 682 00:39:44,120 --> 00:39:47,080 Speaker 10: it remains the strongest and the most prosperous and the 683 00:39:47,080 --> 00:39:48,239 Speaker 10: greatest nation in the world. 684 00:39:48,440 --> 00:39:50,520 Speaker 4: And I don't say that, you know, just because I 685 00:39:50,520 --> 00:39:51,600 Speaker 4: live in the United States. 686 00:39:51,760 --> 00:39:53,920 Speaker 10: It is the fact that when I compare it to 687 00:39:54,040 --> 00:39:56,279 Speaker 10: the countries that I've visited, that I've seen, that I've 688 00:39:56,320 --> 00:40:01,200 Speaker 10: lived in, it is just completely different from the rest 689 00:40:01,280 --> 00:40:04,040 Speaker 10: of the war. And I think that we're maintaining that position, 690 00:40:04,080 --> 00:40:06,799 Speaker 10: were maintaining out of those standards, regardless of what the 691 00:40:06,800 --> 00:40:08,600 Speaker 10: New York Johnson Is reported on that bolt. 692 00:40:08,760 --> 00:40:11,680 Speaker 2: But you know, Peter, it is not just the Times. 693 00:40:11,800 --> 00:40:14,799 Speaker 2: In April, there was a group called the Network, Contagion 694 00:40:15,000 --> 00:40:19,040 Speaker 2: Research Institute and Rutgers University sponsored this that had found 695 00:40:19,120 --> 00:40:23,719 Speaker 2: that fifty five percent, fifty five percent of self identified 696 00:40:23,800 --> 00:40:26,760 Speaker 2: left of center respondents said that it was at least 697 00:40:26,800 --> 00:40:32,160 Speaker 2: somewhat justified to murder President Trump. In twenty seventeen, Yugov 698 00:40:32,239 --> 00:40:36,160 Speaker 2: you know, the YouGov group, they were asked people, was 699 00:40:36,200 --> 00:40:40,960 Speaker 2: it justified to advance political goals with violence? Eight percent 700 00:40:41,080 --> 00:40:43,839 Speaker 2: said just a little bit justified. Well, they come back 701 00:40:43,880 --> 00:40:46,520 Speaker 2: and they do that same poll again after Charlie Kirk 702 00:40:46,640 --> 00:40:51,080 Speaker 2: was assassinated, eleven percent said violence can sometimes be justified 703 00:40:51,400 --> 00:40:55,640 Speaker 2: to achieve political goals. Let's let's let's be honest here. 704 00:40:56,840 --> 00:40:59,880 Speaker 2: The left of center group is a dangerous group right 705 00:40:59,880 --> 00:41:02,279 Speaker 2: now now. And I think if you're getting something like 706 00:41:02,320 --> 00:41:06,280 Speaker 2: what Rutger's got, and it could quite possibly be an outlier. 707 00:41:06,360 --> 00:41:09,480 Speaker 2: And I don't trust any kind of uppolling. I think 708 00:41:09,520 --> 00:41:13,319 Speaker 2: it is an outdated metric. But nevertheless, I don't see 709 00:41:13,360 --> 00:41:16,120 Speaker 2: how you come back from something like that. That's that's 710 00:41:16,200 --> 00:41:19,080 Speaker 2: that's radicalism right there, your thoughts. 711 00:41:20,000 --> 00:41:21,920 Speaker 10: No one can deny the fact that we have been, 712 00:41:22,320 --> 00:41:24,799 Speaker 10: you know, the United States has been radicalized in a 713 00:41:24,880 --> 00:41:27,759 Speaker 10: certain group of or a certain part of the population 714 00:41:27,800 --> 00:41:28,680 Speaker 10: in the United States. 715 00:41:28,880 --> 00:41:30,279 Speaker 4: One of the greatest mistakes that. 716 00:41:30,239 --> 00:41:32,480 Speaker 10: We have been making in the last I would say 717 00:41:32,520 --> 00:41:35,480 Speaker 10: forty fifty years is that we have been importing certain 718 00:41:35,560 --> 00:41:38,160 Speaker 10: cultures in the United States that they are not compatible 719 00:41:38,239 --> 00:41:41,520 Speaker 10: with our values and what we stand for. Violence should 720 00:41:41,560 --> 00:41:45,680 Speaker 10: never be justified to settle political differences, you know, in 721 00:41:45,680 --> 00:41:47,280 Speaker 10: the United States or anyone else. 722 00:41:47,120 --> 00:41:48,200 Speaker 4: In the work for that matter. 723 00:41:48,640 --> 00:41:50,560 Speaker 10: But when you look at that goal, you see that 724 00:41:50,680 --> 00:41:54,200 Speaker 10: the majority, that the largest majority of the Republicans disagree 725 00:41:54,239 --> 00:41:56,560 Speaker 10: with that. I think it was ninety percent department mistake, 726 00:41:56,680 --> 00:42:00,480 Speaker 10: or even greater. It was the fingers in the States 727 00:42:00,480 --> 00:42:03,120 Speaker 10: that they believe that if you disagree with someone when 728 00:42:03,120 --> 00:42:08,200 Speaker 10: it comes to certain political principles or values, violence may 729 00:42:08,200 --> 00:42:11,520 Speaker 10: be justified, and that is something that we should never 730 00:42:11,600 --> 00:42:14,759 Speaker 10: tolerate in the United States. But that number sometimes surprises me. 731 00:42:14,880 --> 00:42:17,560 Speaker 10: That is not even higher when you see that we 732 00:42:17,640 --> 00:42:22,040 Speaker 10: have professors in our institution that are promoted anti Americanism, 733 00:42:22,080 --> 00:42:25,120 Speaker 10: and that they think that Republicans are evil, that President 734 00:42:25,880 --> 00:42:28,040 Speaker 10: Trump is evil, that he's a notopted, that he's this 735 00:42:28,200 --> 00:42:31,280 Speaker 10: passion that I mean, the way they describe the Republicans 736 00:42:31,280 --> 00:42:33,040 Speaker 10: sometimes is like I'm surprised that. 737 00:42:33,040 --> 00:42:34,400 Speaker 4: The number is not even higher. 738 00:42:34,800 --> 00:42:39,319 Speaker 10: You barely hear Republicans or Conservatives or common sensical Democrats, 739 00:42:39,640 --> 00:42:45,520 Speaker 10: including the Senator from Pennsylvania, which surprises me sometimes the 740 00:42:45,600 --> 00:42:46,399 Speaker 10: left that way. 741 00:42:46,680 --> 00:42:48,920 Speaker 4: The interview that he gave last night on Fox. 742 00:42:48,800 --> 00:42:50,880 Speaker 10: Or he was speaking somewhere and I was following that, 743 00:42:51,239 --> 00:42:54,160 Speaker 10: he said, I cannot dislike or hate Republicans. I'm the 744 00:42:54,200 --> 00:42:56,520 Speaker 10: only Democrat in my family. Is that these people are 745 00:42:56,560 --> 00:42:59,120 Speaker 10: not anti Americans. They are not passions, they are not 746 00:42:59,200 --> 00:43:01,680 Speaker 10: these crazy give people that you think that they are. 747 00:43:02,080 --> 00:43:04,759 Speaker 10: But then on the other hand, the Democrats, they stand it. 748 00:43:04,840 --> 00:43:09,160 Speaker 10: But ninety percent of the media in the United States 749 00:43:09,160 --> 00:43:12,080 Speaker 10: they keep them speaking or promoting negative things. 750 00:43:12,200 --> 00:43:14,239 Speaker 4: But Republicans and so do. 751 00:43:14,560 --> 00:43:18,640 Speaker 10: So do the educational institutions, although the newspapers sometimes and 752 00:43:18,680 --> 00:43:21,520 Speaker 10: these numbers come from the left, and it's unfortunate, but 753 00:43:21,920 --> 00:43:24,720 Speaker 10: you know that that number is quite you know correct 754 00:43:24,719 --> 00:43:28,960 Speaker 10: when it comes especially center left, with Americans that they 755 00:43:29,000 --> 00:43:34,280 Speaker 10: would believe in, you know, using violence to settle political differences. 756 00:43:34,360 --> 00:43:36,520 Speaker 10: I thought that I would never see this in the 757 00:43:36,640 --> 00:43:39,520 Speaker 10: United States, but unfortunately we've seen that, and we saw 758 00:43:39,560 --> 00:43:42,279 Speaker 10: that with President Trump at twice there were you know, 759 00:43:42,280 --> 00:43:43,200 Speaker 10: attempts on his life. 760 00:43:43,239 --> 00:43:45,399 Speaker 4: We saw that with the assassination of Charlie Kirk. 761 00:43:45,680 --> 00:43:47,920 Speaker 10: And when you look at all these assassinations in the 762 00:43:48,000 --> 00:43:52,080 Speaker 10: United States or attempted assassinations in the United States, the 763 00:43:52,160 --> 00:43:56,640 Speaker 10: targets have always, with the exception of JFK, been Conservatives 764 00:43:56,719 --> 00:44:00,319 Speaker 10: or Republicans, and the assassins or potential assassins, they have 765 00:44:00,440 --> 00:44:01,840 Speaker 10: always been on the left. 766 00:44:02,120 --> 00:44:03,359 Speaker 4: And this is this is. 767 00:44:03,320 --> 00:44:05,920 Speaker 10: Something that the Democrat body is going to have to 768 00:44:05,960 --> 00:44:09,919 Speaker 10: come to ex terms to understand that their membership has 769 00:44:09,960 --> 00:44:14,520 Speaker 10: to be somehow, Uh, the more understanding of the differences 770 00:44:14,640 --> 00:44:18,160 Speaker 10: that the Republicans or the political differences that the Republicans 771 00:44:18,200 --> 00:44:19,359 Speaker 10: are you know. 772 00:44:19,320 --> 00:44:20,279 Speaker 4: Presenting to them. 773 00:44:20,360 --> 00:44:23,960 Speaker 10: And unfortunately I don't see that happening soon enough. Actually, 774 00:44:23,960 --> 00:44:27,360 Speaker 10: we need that as soon as possible, that that body 775 00:44:27,400 --> 00:44:28,560 Speaker 10: is going to have to understand that. 776 00:44:28,760 --> 00:44:32,200 Speaker 2: Doctor Peter Image our guest. He is a conservative strategist. 777 00:44:32,239 --> 00:44:35,480 Speaker 2: He is also a candidate for elective office in Connecticut. 778 00:44:36,120 --> 00:44:39,279 Speaker 2: You know, I think about things about where all of 779 00:44:39,320 --> 00:44:42,880 Speaker 2: this went off the rails. I remember the debates between 780 00:44:42,960 --> 00:44:47,560 Speaker 2: Nixon and Kennedy, between Carter and Ford, between Reagan and Carter, 781 00:44:47,719 --> 00:44:51,960 Speaker 2: and so on, and they were all very respectful debates. 782 00:44:52,320 --> 00:44:55,640 Speaker 2: We all knew that the media, even back the mainstream media, 783 00:44:55,719 --> 00:45:00,239 Speaker 2: even back in the sixties, was a leaning left operation. 784 00:45:00,800 --> 00:45:04,560 Speaker 2: It is hard leaning left right now, ABC, CBS, NBC. 785 00:45:05,040 --> 00:45:08,400 Speaker 2: It's just the way they are. They're populated by reporters 786 00:45:08,480 --> 00:45:12,920 Speaker 2: and strategists and editors that have come out of liberal institutions, 787 00:45:12,960 --> 00:45:16,239 Speaker 2: and so it translates into what we see and here 788 00:45:16,320 --> 00:45:18,839 Speaker 2: on a daily basis. But I think this all went 789 00:45:18,880 --> 00:45:21,360 Speaker 2: off the rails more I think about it, in the 790 00:45:21,400 --> 00:45:26,680 Speaker 2: twenty sixteen election. The Democrats fully believed that Hillary Clinton 791 00:45:26,960 --> 00:45:29,960 Speaker 2: not only was going to be elected president, but deserved 792 00:45:29,960 --> 00:45:32,960 Speaker 2: to be elected president and should have been elected president. 793 00:45:33,320 --> 00:45:35,799 Speaker 2: And when it didn't happen, I think that's when all 794 00:45:35,840 --> 00:45:40,160 Speaker 2: of this stuff, this Nazis and this Hitler and all that, 795 00:45:40,320 --> 00:45:43,359 Speaker 2: all that diatribe that had been thrown against the right. 796 00:45:43,520 --> 00:45:45,919 Speaker 2: I think it all began in the wake of that. 797 00:45:46,560 --> 00:45:49,520 Speaker 2: I don't think Democrats could handle the fact that Donald Trump, 798 00:45:49,640 --> 00:45:53,840 Speaker 2: whom they loved, doctor they loved before he ran for president. 799 00:45:53,920 --> 00:45:56,520 Speaker 2: I don't think they could handle the fact that Donald 800 00:45:56,520 --> 00:45:59,440 Speaker 2: Trump was now president of the United States and the 801 00:45:59,480 --> 00:46:01,120 Speaker 2: Golden Hillary was not. 802 00:46:01,719 --> 00:46:04,759 Speaker 4: Am I wrong, No, you're not wrong. 803 00:46:04,840 --> 00:46:08,319 Speaker 10: Actually, the keyword that you used to her here is 804 00:46:08,360 --> 00:46:11,680 Speaker 10: that they believed that she deserved it to be the 805 00:46:11,719 --> 00:46:13,960 Speaker 10: president of the United States. And I think that is 806 00:46:14,160 --> 00:46:18,000 Speaker 10: what we should underline, that nobody deserves anything. You walk 807 00:46:18,040 --> 00:46:20,319 Speaker 10: out there, you earn it, you work for it, you 808 00:46:20,360 --> 00:46:22,640 Speaker 10: fight for it, and you get you convince people to 809 00:46:22,760 --> 00:46:26,080 Speaker 10: vote for you. And I think that Clinton miserable failed 810 00:46:26,080 --> 00:46:29,040 Speaker 10: to do that. So this Harris and Donald Trump was 811 00:46:29,080 --> 00:46:33,280 Speaker 10: able to convince the larger part of the American population 812 00:46:33,400 --> 00:46:35,720 Speaker 10: to vote for him, and they just to the American. 813 00:46:35,320 --> 00:46:36,759 Speaker 4: People continue to over him. 814 00:46:36,800 --> 00:46:40,080 Speaker 10: I mean, still the basis about ninety percent supportive of 815 00:46:40,200 --> 00:46:42,439 Speaker 10: what Trump stands for and what he's doing to put 816 00:46:42,440 --> 00:46:46,000 Speaker 10: America first. But when you look at the Socialist Democrats 817 00:46:46,000 --> 00:46:48,800 Speaker 10: of America of America, for example, you look at the 818 00:46:48,880 --> 00:46:51,719 Speaker 10: leadership that that movement had, and you look at the 819 00:46:51,840 --> 00:46:54,319 Speaker 10: names over there, whether it's a Racid at the Leap 820 00:46:54,440 --> 00:46:58,560 Speaker 10: or whether it's Omar or Ernie Sanders of Zorah Mondani. Now, 821 00:46:58,840 --> 00:47:01,840 Speaker 10: I mean, you look at these people and it makes 822 00:47:01,880 --> 00:47:04,960 Speaker 10: you wonder that most of them, or all of them, 823 00:47:05,440 --> 00:47:07,640 Speaker 10: the exception of Bernie Sanders, they were. 824 00:47:07,560 --> 00:47:09,239 Speaker 4: Not even born in the United States. 825 00:47:09,440 --> 00:47:12,920 Speaker 10: They've come from countries that they were supposed to escape 826 00:47:13,000 --> 00:47:16,320 Speaker 10: or at least we believe they were escaping, these liberal, 827 00:47:16,520 --> 00:47:19,560 Speaker 10: socialistic policies, and yet they come to the United States 828 00:47:19,600 --> 00:47:22,719 Speaker 10: and the moment they become an American citizens, they promote the 829 00:47:22,800 --> 00:47:25,960 Speaker 10: exact same policies that they left behind in their countries 830 00:47:26,000 --> 00:47:28,759 Speaker 10: which drove them out of their countries. And this is 831 00:47:28,800 --> 00:47:33,200 Speaker 10: something that the Democrat Party has allowed this left wing 832 00:47:33,680 --> 00:47:37,120 Speaker 10: part of the party to take control of the party. 833 00:47:37,200 --> 00:47:40,960 Speaker 10: And now the more common sensical people, including the Senator 834 00:47:41,000 --> 00:47:43,400 Speaker 10: from New York, they are afraid of these people, including 835 00:47:43,400 --> 00:47:45,920 Speaker 10: Ocoegia Quarts, that they are going to primary them and 836 00:47:46,040 --> 00:47:49,560 Speaker 10: remove them from power because they have guarnished so much support, 837 00:47:49,960 --> 00:47:52,840 Speaker 10: whether it's the use, whether it's the minorities in these cities, 838 00:47:53,400 --> 00:47:56,560 Speaker 10: where is the ones that they consider to be disenfranchised. 839 00:47:56,680 --> 00:47:58,600 Speaker 10: I mean, they have garnished so much support in these 840 00:47:58,600 --> 00:48:01,879 Speaker 10: cities that the common sensical Democrats are scared of them, 841 00:48:02,520 --> 00:48:04,320 Speaker 10: and they're going to have to stand up to these, 842 00:48:04,680 --> 00:48:10,879 Speaker 10: you know, so forth leaders of the socialist Americans and 843 00:48:10,920 --> 00:48:14,160 Speaker 10: then just dismantle their policies. They have to have to 844 00:48:14,200 --> 00:48:16,640 Speaker 10: bagbone the character and the fortitude to stand up with 845 00:48:16,719 --> 00:48:19,640 Speaker 10: these people and tell them this is not American at all, 846 00:48:19,920 --> 00:48:21,960 Speaker 10: and we're not going to tolerate this, and I hope 847 00:48:21,960 --> 00:48:23,160 Speaker 10: they do that in this election. 848 00:48:23,840 --> 00:48:26,480 Speaker 2: It's about about five or six years ago, but uh, 849 00:48:26,920 --> 00:48:29,799 Speaker 2: doctor Peter Lmage wrote a terrific book. It's called My 850 00:48:29,880 --> 00:48:34,719 Speaker 2: Father's Prayers, and it details coming to America, escaping socialism, 851 00:48:34,800 --> 00:48:37,440 Speaker 2: and his hope for America. If you can find it, 852 00:48:37,440 --> 00:48:39,400 Speaker 2: it's a tough fine, but if it's out there, it 853 00:48:39,520 --> 00:48:42,560 Speaker 2: is a great read. And doctor Lemage, it's always great 854 00:48:42,560 --> 00:48:44,600 Speaker 2: having you on. You stay well. We need to hear 855 00:48:44,680 --> 00:48:46,919 Speaker 2: your voice and thank you for your time here. 856 00:48:47,840 --> 00:48:49,640 Speaker 4: Thank you very much. God bless you guys. I have 857 00:48:49,640 --> 00:48:50,240 Speaker 4: a great weekend. 858 00:48:50,320 --> 00:48:53,799 Speaker 2: Thank you too, you too. I mean the polling would 859 00:48:53,800 --> 00:48:58,120 Speaker 2: indicat I mean, the Rutgers poll is an I think 860 00:48:58,239 --> 00:49:01,320 Speaker 2: is an outlier. I can't believe at fifty five percent 861 00:49:02,440 --> 00:49:04,759 Speaker 2: of those who say they are left or left of 862 00:49:04,880 --> 00:49:09,480 Speaker 2: center would say that it is somewhat justified to murder 863 00:49:09,600 --> 00:49:15,520 Speaker 2: President Trump. But it is increasingly clear that violence is 864 00:49:15,560 --> 00:49:20,920 Speaker 2: becoming more and more not just violence, but violence involving 865 00:49:21,280 --> 00:49:26,000 Speaker 2: firearms and injury to people is becoming more and more 866 00:49:26,040 --> 00:49:31,360 Speaker 2: prevalent in our society. Three sets of polls, it's a 867 00:49:31,440 --> 00:49:37,520 Speaker 2: minority of Americans. That minority, though, is significant. And unfortunately, 868 00:49:37,600 --> 00:49:39,960 Speaker 2: if you add up the polls that you GOV polls, 869 00:49:40,040 --> 00:49:43,239 Speaker 2: both of those plus the one that was done by Rutgers, 870 00:49:45,719 --> 00:49:48,239 Speaker 2: ten to forty percent of people think violence can be 871 00:49:48,440 --> 00:49:53,600 Speaker 2: justified to I obtain political goaling. And if that's not 872 00:49:53,680 --> 00:49:58,680 Speaker 2: a concern, I don't know what to tell you. But 873 00:49:59,800 --> 00:50:02,760 Speaker 2: if one man drives you to that amount of rage, 874 00:50:04,480 --> 00:50:06,560 Speaker 2: you have to probably stop and look in the mirror 875 00:50:06,600 --> 00:50:11,040 Speaker 2: and say, wait a minute, that's it. That's that that 876 00:50:11,040 --> 00:50:17,560 Speaker 2: that's controlling my life. One would think it is one 877 00:50:17,640 --> 00:50:23,279 Speaker 2: twenty two. On this Saturday afternoon, Xavier exhibition basketball coming 878 00:50:23,360 --> 00:50:28,480 Speaker 2: up at two o'clock the Musketeers against Murray State. Little 879 00:50:28,520 --> 00:50:31,080 Speaker 2: funny games at the Sintas Center that you will hear 880 00:50:31,120 --> 00:50:36,359 Speaker 2: here on seven hundred wl W one thirty seven News 881 00:50:36,440 --> 00:50:40,680 Speaker 2: Radio seven hundred WLW. Welcome back, I am ken Brew. 882 00:50:41,719 --> 00:50:44,040 Speaker 2: Top of the hour, straight up two o'clock, we go 883 00:50:44,080 --> 00:50:48,560 Speaker 2: to the Cintas Center, Joe Sunderman Byron Larkin and all 884 00:50:48,600 --> 00:50:52,520 Speaker 2: the play by play of an exhibition game between Richard 885 00:50:52,600 --> 00:50:58,560 Speaker 2: Patino's Xavier Musketeers, first ever appearance publicly with that team, 886 00:50:58,920 --> 00:51:03,000 Speaker 2: and they go against Murray State in a little free game, 887 00:51:03,080 --> 00:51:06,040 Speaker 2: little exhibition game, but a chance for you to not 888 00:51:06,080 --> 00:51:07,799 Speaker 2: only see what the team looks like, but if you 889 00:51:07,800 --> 00:51:10,720 Speaker 2: can't go, you can hear what it sounds like, because 890 00:51:10,760 --> 00:51:13,759 Speaker 2: we'll have the play by play from the Cintas Center, 891 00:51:13,800 --> 00:51:16,000 Speaker 2: and of course later on tonight we have you see 892 00:51:16,040 --> 00:51:19,600 Speaker 2: Oklahoma State direct from Stillwater, Oklahoma's the Bearcats try to 893 00:51:19,640 --> 00:51:23,080 Speaker 2: go six and one on this season at the half 894 00:51:23,200 --> 00:51:28,120 Speaker 2: in Oxford, Miami twenty one Eastern Michigan fourteen. That one 895 00:51:28,280 --> 00:51:31,200 Speaker 2: was first up for local teams out of the shoot 896 00:51:31,239 --> 00:51:35,720 Speaker 2: today on this Saturday, right smack dab in the middle 897 00:51:35,719 --> 00:51:39,920 Speaker 2: of October and in the middle of college football season. 898 00:51:40,080 --> 00:51:44,960 Speaker 2: So all of that and a little of this formed 899 00:51:45,040 --> 00:51:50,000 Speaker 2: in nineteen seventy. This was one of the top studio 900 00:51:50,200 --> 00:51:53,319 Speaker 2: bands in the world, and then they figured out, you 901 00:51:53,320 --> 00:51:56,680 Speaker 2: know what, we can make some songs ourselves. You probably 902 00:51:56,719 --> 00:52:08,600 Speaker 2: remember the Atlanta rhythm section, Rodney Justo lead singer, Barry 903 00:52:08,640 --> 00:52:12,480 Speaker 2: Bailey on guitar, Paul Goddard on Vastean Daughtry on keyboards, 904 00:52:12,680 --> 00:52:18,080 Speaker 2: Robert Nixon drums, and J. R. Cobb on guitar. They 905 00:52:18,120 --> 00:52:21,320 Speaker 2: call it soft rock. They called it in some cases 906 00:52:21,400 --> 00:52:26,680 Speaker 2: country rock. But it was rock, and those boys could rock. 907 00:52:27,840 --> 00:52:32,080 Speaker 2: But along the way, some members died and some members 908 00:52:32,160 --> 00:52:36,359 Speaker 2: just flat out left. Like my next guest, Rodney Justo, 909 00:52:36,920 --> 00:52:40,440 Speaker 2: was the lead singer of Atlanta Rhythm Section, and then 910 00:52:40,480 --> 00:52:42,480 Speaker 2: he decided, you know what, I gotta go make some 911 00:52:42,560 --> 00:52:44,720 Speaker 2: money because I got a family I got to support. 912 00:52:44,800 --> 00:52:46,640 Speaker 2: And he left the band and left it for a 913 00:52:46,680 --> 00:52:49,600 Speaker 2: long time, right at the height of its popularity. But 914 00:52:49,719 --> 00:52:52,520 Speaker 2: they begged him to come back, and now he's back, 915 00:52:53,000 --> 00:52:55,960 Speaker 2: and now they're back. The Atlanta Rhythm Section plays at 916 00:52:55,960 --> 00:53:00,640 Speaker 2: the Ludlow Garage this coming Friday night, right here, right 917 00:53:00,680 --> 00:53:04,759 Speaker 2: now from his home in Florida. Let's welcome on in 918 00:53:04,920 --> 00:53:08,840 Speaker 2: lead singer, Rodney Justo. How are you on this glorious Saturday. 919 00:53:09,640 --> 00:53:12,840 Speaker 4: I'm doing good, Ken, You know, I live in Tampa. 920 00:53:13,120 --> 00:53:16,359 Speaker 4: It's a little bit warm, but I'll be sitting out 921 00:53:16,400 --> 00:53:19,160 Speaker 4: of my underwear by the pool smoking a Cuban cigar 922 00:53:19,400 --> 00:53:19,879 Speaker 4: very soon. 923 00:53:20,560 --> 00:53:22,280 Speaker 2: You know, Rodney, I don't think a lot of people 924 00:53:22,320 --> 00:53:24,680 Speaker 2: want that vision of you sitting in your underwear anywhere. 925 00:53:25,880 --> 00:53:29,720 Speaker 4: You know. It's funny you say that because I'm thinking 926 00:53:30,280 --> 00:53:33,160 Speaker 4: I have through a zoom interview, Like in the next couple, 927 00:53:33,880 --> 00:53:38,759 Speaker 4: I gotta wash my hair. And I remember I used 928 00:53:38,760 --> 00:53:42,200 Speaker 4: to look at the newscasters on TV, you know, yeah, 929 00:53:42,239 --> 00:53:44,200 Speaker 4: and I wonder if they're wearing pants. 930 00:53:45,680 --> 00:53:48,640 Speaker 2: Can I tell you something? Not always. 931 00:53:51,040 --> 00:53:51,680 Speaker 11: I hear you. 932 00:53:51,760 --> 00:53:54,200 Speaker 4: That was OK, there's gotta be a rebel out there someone. 933 00:53:54,440 --> 00:53:56,000 Speaker 2: Yeah, no, there's there's a few of us that are 934 00:53:56,040 --> 00:53:58,960 Speaker 2: out there. So you're rolling through town again, and this 935 00:53:59,080 --> 00:54:01,560 Speaker 2: is this is so good. Let's talk a little bit 936 00:54:01,600 --> 00:54:04,120 Speaker 2: about this. How often? How often are you on the road? 937 00:54:04,120 --> 00:54:05,680 Speaker 2: How many gigs a year do you play? 938 00:54:08,040 --> 00:54:15,040 Speaker 4: The goal was to do fifty. Now fifty, as Ken 939 00:54:15,120 --> 00:54:16,759 Speaker 4: is at least one hundred. You got to get there 940 00:54:16,760 --> 00:54:22,799 Speaker 4: and back. Now this year we'll probably do sixty. I 941 00:54:22,960 --> 00:54:26,120 Speaker 4: wasn't too crazy about doing all these dates, but whatever, 942 00:54:26,280 --> 00:54:29,759 Speaker 4: you know, I don't nothing at home. Yeah, you know, yeah, 943 00:54:29,840 --> 00:54:33,120 Speaker 4: you know, level of we played, level of the verage. 944 00:54:33,239 --> 00:54:34,120 Speaker 4: It might have been. 945 00:54:35,120 --> 00:54:37,799 Speaker 11: I think it was a second or third date we 946 00:54:38,040 --> 00:54:44,040 Speaker 11: played after COVID and the reception was so good that 947 00:54:44,440 --> 00:54:47,200 Speaker 11: when the gig was over, we told guys, these are 948 00:54:47,239 --> 00:54:49,480 Speaker 11: the days that make you glad you're a musician. 949 00:54:49,800 --> 00:54:52,279 Speaker 2: Absolutely absolutely yeah. 950 00:54:52,320 --> 00:54:56,440 Speaker 4: And I must say you, Ken, it's really about the 951 00:54:56,480 --> 00:54:59,239 Speaker 4: people you meet. I mean, a song is a song. 952 00:54:59,280 --> 00:55:01,560 Speaker 4: On the song we said, interesting thing, do you get 953 00:55:01,640 --> 00:55:04,480 Speaker 4: tired of singing the same song lo time? No, you don't, 954 00:55:04,520 --> 00:55:07,359 Speaker 4: because they're different. The audience is different. You know, it's 955 00:55:07,480 --> 00:55:10,680 Speaker 4: a difficult to explain, but the same but different. 956 00:55:10,960 --> 00:55:12,680 Speaker 2: Yeah, I'm going to tell I want to take you 957 00:55:12,719 --> 00:55:14,640 Speaker 2: back just for a second. I'm going to dig up 958 00:55:14,640 --> 00:55:18,399 Speaker 2: some bones here. Rodney, Rodney and the Mystics, Rodney and 959 00:55:18,440 --> 00:55:23,879 Speaker 2: the Mystics. Yeah, you guys, your band, which I think 960 00:55:23,960 --> 00:55:25,640 Speaker 2: was a you had a band called the Candy Man 961 00:55:25,840 --> 00:55:28,480 Speaker 2: a men. And then there's some guys that played in 962 00:55:28,520 --> 00:55:31,960 Speaker 2: classics for and they were anyway, Rodney and the Mystics. 963 00:55:32,280 --> 00:55:36,920 Speaker 2: If an act came to to South central Florida, it 964 00:55:36,960 --> 00:55:39,759 Speaker 2: did not necessarily have its own musicians. It might be 965 00:55:39,800 --> 00:55:42,160 Speaker 2: a singer, or it might be somebody that used studio 966 00:55:42,280 --> 00:55:44,600 Speaker 2: musicians to record his or her song, where yeah, the 967 00:55:44,640 --> 00:55:46,920 Speaker 2: band might not even exist. It just might have been 968 00:55:46,920 --> 00:55:49,480 Speaker 2: made up by the studio. But you guys would would 969 00:55:49,600 --> 00:55:53,040 Speaker 2: would do the music in these concerts where everybody be 970 00:55:53,120 --> 00:55:56,600 Speaker 2: going crazy over the solo artists, and really what they're 971 00:55:56,640 --> 00:55:59,440 Speaker 2: going crazy over is the music that you guys were making. 972 00:55:59,480 --> 00:56:01,400 Speaker 2: You were I don't want to say a house band, 973 00:56:01,520 --> 00:56:03,560 Speaker 2: but you were in much demand in that area of 974 00:56:03,560 --> 00:56:06,719 Speaker 2: the country. When did you get that traction to go 975 00:56:06,880 --> 00:56:10,080 Speaker 2: from what you were doing to becoming the band the 976 00:56:10,120 --> 00:56:14,040 Speaker 2: Atlanta Rhythm Section. Somebody had to look at you and say, 977 00:56:14,320 --> 00:56:17,279 Speaker 2: you know what, Uh, these guys are pretty aren't good 978 00:56:17,920 --> 00:56:21,040 Speaker 2: and they probably could do their own stuff. So who 979 00:56:21,120 --> 00:56:23,560 Speaker 2: was Who was it that got you from what you 980 00:56:23,640 --> 00:56:26,440 Speaker 2: were doing with all of those those great singers that 981 00:56:26,600 --> 00:56:29,960 Speaker 2: needed musicians to play live gigs. Who was it they 982 00:56:29,960 --> 00:56:31,800 Speaker 2: caught you to get to Atlanta? 983 00:56:32,280 --> 00:56:36,759 Speaker 4: It was Orbison because in his backup band it was 984 00:56:36,800 --> 00:56:40,839 Speaker 4: Bobby Goldsborough. Oh and when Bobby Goldsborough got a hit, 985 00:56:41,440 --> 00:56:43,680 Speaker 4: he left the band and they asked me to take 986 00:56:43,719 --> 00:56:46,560 Speaker 4: his plate because they wanted to work when Roy didn't work, 987 00:56:46,640 --> 00:56:51,839 Speaker 4: so you know, they had to make money, so they 988 00:56:51,840 --> 00:56:55,359 Speaker 4: asked him, they asked me, and that's how that whole 989 00:56:55,400 --> 00:57:00,279 Speaker 4: thing started. Okay, okay, yeah, okay, Orbison? And where are 990 00:57:00,280 --> 00:57:07,600 Speaker 4: I get. 991 00:57:07,320 --> 00:57:07,360 Speaker 2: It? 992 00:57:07,640 --> 00:57:07,839 Speaker 6: Was? 993 00:57:10,280 --> 00:57:13,520 Speaker 2: You did that first album and then you left, right 994 00:57:13,560 --> 00:57:15,640 Speaker 2: you went to New York and if I'm not mistaken 995 00:57:15,800 --> 00:57:19,960 Speaker 2: you you started just doing studio work. You were doing 996 00:57:20,040 --> 00:57:22,360 Speaker 2: singing and commercials and things like that, right. 997 00:57:22,320 --> 00:57:26,400 Speaker 4: Yeah, yeah, yeah, Well you know, it reched the point 998 00:57:26,480 --> 00:57:31,560 Speaker 4: with the rhythm section that they were more intent on 999 00:57:31,680 --> 00:57:36,440 Speaker 4: that point of making other people's records and doing jingles 1000 00:57:36,520 --> 00:57:40,360 Speaker 4: and you know and what have you. And I didn't 1001 00:57:40,360 --> 00:57:42,800 Speaker 4: want to do that. I mean I already invested two 1002 00:57:42,880 --> 00:57:46,880 Speaker 4: years in the band, and it was financial. I wasn't 1003 00:57:46,920 --> 00:57:49,600 Speaker 4: making any money. I had a daughter. It was sick. 1004 00:57:50,160 --> 00:57:52,560 Speaker 4: You know, you have to pay those doctors because like 1005 00:57:52,640 --> 00:57:56,280 Speaker 4: every stupid musician, I didn't have insurance. You do what 1006 00:57:56,360 --> 00:57:59,600 Speaker 4: you got to do to your your finily first, and 1007 00:57:59,640 --> 00:58:03,080 Speaker 4: you I moved to New York City. Yeah, and I 1008 00:58:03,080 --> 00:58:05,000 Speaker 4: had a good life. I love New York City. 1009 00:58:05,280 --> 00:58:07,360 Speaker 2: Yeah, you did well. You were on a lot of 1010 00:58:07,360 --> 00:58:09,240 Speaker 2: different commercials up there, right, I mean. 1011 00:58:09,480 --> 00:58:13,960 Speaker 4: Yeah, yeah, I see, you know, and the second background 1012 00:58:13,960 --> 00:58:17,120 Speaker 4: all records I enjoyed. I enjoyed that to some extent, 1013 00:58:17,200 --> 00:58:19,200 Speaker 4: but I always liked working life. 1014 00:58:19,640 --> 00:58:22,560 Speaker 2: Everybody thinks you disappeared, but you didn't. You just got 1015 00:58:22,640 --> 00:58:24,040 Speaker 2: you got on with your life. You did a little 1016 00:58:24,120 --> 00:58:27,280 Speaker 2: jingle work. And then somebody told me that you got 1017 00:58:27,320 --> 00:58:31,919 Speaker 2: into the wine business, the wine distribution business. Is that right? 1018 00:58:32,280 --> 00:58:32,720 Speaker 2: Is that true? 1019 00:58:32,840 --> 00:58:33,080 Speaker 10: Yeah? 1020 00:58:33,120 --> 00:58:36,920 Speaker 4: I never had a job before Ken and I decided, 1021 00:58:37,560 --> 00:58:40,520 Speaker 4: you know, I wanted to raise my family. I wanted 1022 00:58:40,560 --> 00:58:43,320 Speaker 4: to be with my children. I had an overwhelming walk 1023 00:58:43,360 --> 00:58:45,720 Speaker 4: for my wife. That's what I wanted to do. I 1024 00:58:45,760 --> 00:58:48,240 Speaker 4: wanted to come home. Yeah, I got a job for 1025 00:58:49,080 --> 00:58:51,040 Speaker 4: nobody wanted to hire me. Why would they hire me? 1026 00:58:51,120 --> 00:58:53,240 Speaker 4: I thought? I thought people would be happy to see 1027 00:58:54,360 --> 00:58:57,000 Speaker 4: I want to shown up, be like who were you? 1028 00:58:57,000 --> 00:59:09,040 Speaker 4: You know? But I could could now stand help to sleep? Yeah, 1029 00:59:10,360 --> 00:59:18,040 Speaker 4: well you get into so int you I can't get. 1030 00:59:20,520 --> 00:59:22,440 Speaker 4: I'd take a job for one hundred and fifty dollars 1031 00:59:22,480 --> 00:59:26,040 Speaker 4: a week dusting bottles in the grocery stores, oh my god, 1032 00:59:26,120 --> 00:59:30,000 Speaker 4: you know, and and worried by the way can of 1033 00:59:30,120 --> 00:59:32,400 Speaker 4: being a failure for one hundred and fifty dollars a week. 1034 00:59:32,440 --> 00:59:35,600 Speaker 4: I was scared of getting nervous. I mean, you can't 1035 00:59:35,640 --> 00:59:38,120 Speaker 4: hardly mess up a job for one hundred and fifty 1036 00:59:38,120 --> 00:59:40,480 Speaker 4: dollars a week. It's like fail in the first grade, 1037 00:59:40,520 --> 00:59:43,040 Speaker 4: you know what I mean? Well, well you're away. 1038 00:59:43,840 --> 00:59:47,040 Speaker 2: The Atlanta rhythm section is cranking out all those hits right, 1039 00:59:47,200 --> 00:59:49,880 Speaker 2: So into you, imaginary lover, I mean, so you're you. 1040 00:59:50,040 --> 00:59:53,000 Speaker 2: You made the decision. You you wanted to go. You 1041 00:59:53,120 --> 00:59:55,640 Speaker 2: want to go away and then raise your family and 1042 00:59:56,120 --> 00:59:58,840 Speaker 2: get a job. But was there any resentment? Did you 1043 00:59:58,920 --> 01:00:00,600 Speaker 2: ever second guess yoursel for doing that? 1044 01:00:01,520 --> 01:00:04,040 Speaker 4: That is such a good question, Ken, I understand why 1045 01:00:04,120 --> 01:00:07,400 Speaker 4: people would ask it, and I don't know if they 1046 01:00:07,560 --> 01:00:11,120 Speaker 4: believe me when I say I was ecstatic to them. 1047 01:00:11,240 --> 01:00:13,480 Speaker 4: It wasn't like I hated the guys on that. It 1048 01:00:13,600 --> 01:00:15,880 Speaker 4: wasn't one of those kinds of deals. First of all, 1049 01:00:16,000 --> 01:00:20,440 Speaker 4: if they were anywhere near Tampa, I was there with them, Okay, 1050 01:00:21,120 --> 01:00:25,320 Speaker 4: But no, I was never ever enough for one second, Yeah, 1051 01:00:25,800 --> 01:00:28,680 Speaker 4: envious or I was happy for the guys with my friends, 1052 01:00:28,680 --> 01:00:31,840 Speaker 4: will I would not be happy? Yeah, yeah, I understand 1053 01:00:31,840 --> 01:00:32,640 Speaker 4: that it's hard to believe. 1054 01:00:32,720 --> 01:00:35,280 Speaker 2: Well, oh no, it's not hard for me to believe 1055 01:00:35,320 --> 01:00:41,200 Speaker 2: because certain things about certain professions don't fit a person perfectly. 1056 01:00:41,480 --> 01:00:43,560 Speaker 2: And so they got to get out of it. And 1057 01:00:43,760 --> 01:00:46,400 Speaker 2: you know what you mentioned, Ronnie. Ronnie Hammond was was 1058 01:00:46,440 --> 01:00:49,320 Speaker 2: who you were talking about who was still in the group. 1059 01:00:49,600 --> 01:00:55,040 Speaker 2: But I found I find this absolutely amazing. You're you're 1060 01:00:55,080 --> 01:00:57,960 Speaker 2: on with your life, You're in the wine distribution business, 1061 01:00:58,000 --> 01:01:01,600 Speaker 2: I mean, and they're begging you to come Atlanta Rhythm Section. 1062 01:01:01,800 --> 01:01:04,680 Speaker 2: Maybe forty years after you left, they're begging you to 1063 01:01:04,800 --> 01:01:07,120 Speaker 2: come back and you're saying no, no, no no. But 1064 01:01:07,560 --> 01:01:10,640 Speaker 2: eventually you said, yeah, okay, you know I'll come back. Yeah, 1065 01:01:11,400 --> 01:01:13,640 Speaker 2: but what made you come back? Because it sounds like 1066 01:01:13,720 --> 01:01:15,800 Speaker 2: you had this whole other thing going on in your 1067 01:01:15,920 --> 01:01:16,720 Speaker 2: in your life. 1068 01:01:17,080 --> 01:01:22,280 Speaker 4: I retired, I said, Okay, I decided I'm going to retire. 1069 01:01:22,400 --> 01:01:25,000 Speaker 4: Sixty two. Well, I set out for a couple of years, 1070 01:01:25,040 --> 01:01:28,840 Speaker 4: starting to get my game back in shape when the 1071 01:01:28,960 --> 01:01:33,160 Speaker 4: band had dwindled down to just a keyboard player, being 1072 01:01:33,600 --> 01:01:36,919 Speaker 4: the only last original guy left. Now that many people 1073 01:01:37,040 --> 01:01:40,000 Speaker 4: want to show up to see him on nothing personal. Sure, 1074 01:01:40,280 --> 01:01:44,200 Speaker 4: but that's the case. So I got a call from him. 1075 01:01:45,240 --> 01:01:46,960 Speaker 4: The guy who was singing with the band at the 1076 01:01:47,040 --> 01:01:50,800 Speaker 4: time had a heart attack, and they called and asked 1077 01:01:50,880 --> 01:01:55,200 Speaker 4: me to fill in. Are you crazy? I've studied twenty 1078 01:01:55,280 --> 01:01:57,880 Speaker 4: five years now, please, man, you got to help us. 1079 01:01:57,920 --> 01:02:04,720 Speaker 4: We'll play in so Mohes. Oh okay, so I'll figure, okay, 1080 01:02:04,720 --> 01:02:07,440 Speaker 4: I'll do it. I'm what the hell did I agree 1081 01:02:07,480 --> 01:02:11,200 Speaker 4: to do? I don't remember these songs. I gotta remember 1082 01:02:11,280 --> 01:02:14,320 Speaker 4: all these songs, you know, in like three or four 1083 01:02:14,480 --> 01:02:18,120 Speaker 4: days plus a song that he used to do called 1084 01:02:19,000 --> 01:02:22,720 Speaker 4: Molly Malone. Oh I never sung Molly Molone. I had. 1085 01:02:22,960 --> 01:02:25,080 Speaker 4: I had to learn Molly Malone good. So now the 1086 01:02:25,200 --> 01:02:28,720 Speaker 4: funny part was two things. First of all, I could 1087 01:02:28,840 --> 01:02:32,600 Speaker 4: not say Molly. I kept singing Moses Malone, the basketball 1088 01:02:32,680 --> 01:02:41,160 Speaker 4: players Malone and then the other throw because genius was well, 1089 01:02:41,360 --> 01:02:43,520 Speaker 4: how am I to remember the song? I'll just print 1090 01:02:43,600 --> 01:02:45,479 Speaker 4: off the worddrobe put him down here on the floor, 1091 01:02:45,520 --> 01:02:47,560 Speaker 4: and I looked down and I'll say him, well, I 1092 01:02:47,640 --> 01:02:49,480 Speaker 4: forgot it. I couldn't see him, and they have my 1093 01:02:49,560 --> 01:02:58,320 Speaker 4: glasses never. 1094 01:03:00,120 --> 01:03:09,280 Speaker 2: Yeah, well, we can't wait to see you up here 1095 01:03:09,400 --> 01:03:12,680 Speaker 2: on Friday night at the Ludlow Garage. It's it's a 1096 01:03:12,840 --> 01:03:14,800 Speaker 2: good turf for you and it'll be a great show, 1097 01:03:14,880 --> 01:03:17,680 Speaker 2: I know. And uh, between now and then, you stay 1098 01:03:17,760 --> 01:03:20,000 Speaker 2: healthy because we need to hear your voice, and we 1099 01:03:20,080 --> 01:03:20,680 Speaker 2: need to hear you. 1100 01:03:22,200 --> 01:03:27,480 Speaker 4: And I used to watch you on television and you 1101 01:03:27,600 --> 01:03:31,520 Speaker 4: feel like I always felt like, how can I put it? 1102 01:03:32,640 --> 01:03:36,040 Speaker 4: You always looking to say something funny and everybody else 1103 01:03:36,240 --> 01:03:40,280 Speaker 4: wasn't gonna do you know? Yeah, and it's something that 1104 01:03:43,080 --> 01:03:44,240 Speaker 4: something yeah. 1105 01:03:44,960 --> 01:03:47,240 Speaker 2: Oh man, those were those were the days, my friend 1106 01:03:47,520 --> 01:03:47,960 Speaker 2: stay well. 1107 01:03:48,120 --> 01:03:50,919 Speaker 4: Yeah, well, unfortunately we had them. I don't worry about 1108 01:03:50,960 --> 01:03:53,880 Speaker 4: losing them. I'm thinking about what I have You know, Amen, 1109 01:03:54,600 --> 01:03:57,920 Speaker 4: stay well, Rodney, all right, Ken, be good to yourself. 1110 01:03:58,000 --> 01:04:03,080 Speaker 4: Thank you very much, good questions, good imagination. 1111 01:04:04,720 --> 01:04:10,400 Speaker 2: One Little Garage is coming Friday Night. Ars you remember 1112 01:04:10,440 --> 01:04:15,400 Speaker 2: the album they had out, Champagne Jam. They had some 1113 01:04:17,520 --> 01:04:20,400 Speaker 2: they had some songs off that album sold over a 1114 01:04:20,480 --> 01:04:24,360 Speaker 2: million certified platinum. That's what this song was on. Imaginary 1115 01:04:24,440 --> 01:04:27,760 Speaker 2: Lover was on Champagne Jam. I'm not gonna I'm not 1116 01:04:27,840 --> 01:04:32,040 Speaker 2: gonna let it bother me Tonight was on that And 1117 01:04:32,120 --> 01:04:34,760 Speaker 2: I think the last one that they really produced and 1118 01:04:34,920 --> 01:04:37,920 Speaker 2: released was in seventy nine Underdog It Had to Do 1119 01:04:38,040 --> 01:04:41,000 Speaker 2: It or Die and Spooky. Some of the guys in 1120 01:04:41,080 --> 01:04:45,320 Speaker 2: the band originally were members of the Classics four and 1121 01:04:45,480 --> 01:04:49,560 Speaker 2: so there was a little inbreeding there. They redid Spooky anyway. 1122 01:04:50,400 --> 01:04:53,160 Speaker 2: As you know, I am passionate about a lot of things. 1123 01:04:53,200 --> 01:04:56,720 Speaker 2: I'm passionate about sports, I'm passionate about music, and I 1124 01:04:56,880 --> 01:05:01,320 Speaker 2: am passionate about what I drive. And I only drive 1125 01:05:01,480 --> 01:05:06,880 Speaker 2: BMW's from the BMW store. Did you know there are 1126 01:05:06,960 --> 01:05:11,160 Speaker 2: over three hundred and fifty BMW centers in the United States, 1127 01:05:11,240 --> 01:05:15,280 Speaker 2: but there's only one Uno, only one BMW store. It 1128 01:05:15,440 --> 01:05:19,400 Speaker 2: is ten minutes north of downtown Cincinnati, right off I 1129 01:05:19,640 --> 01:05:23,360 Speaker 2: seventy one. It's the Stuart Road exit. I've often said this, 1130 01:05:24,360 --> 01:05:27,640 Speaker 2: I will say it one more time. If you're riding 1131 01:05:27,800 --> 01:05:31,280 Speaker 2: through life, you might as well ride through life and luxury, 1132 01:05:31,720 --> 01:05:37,200 Speaker 2: which you'll always find at the BMW store. It's one 1133 01:05:37,360 --> 01:05:41,680 Speaker 2: fifty two Saturday afternoons. You and me seven hundred WLW