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Cut Sheet continues Parent of Aiden Clark killed by an illegal

Broadcast on:
12 Sep 2024
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I'm Sally Holm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events, major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs. But we also bring you into the smaller, behind-the-scenes stories, the unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey Podcast in partnership with the History Channel, available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. - Caitlin Company, weekday morning, six till 10. - Let's continue with the cut sheet here on 908. This is part four, park watch row. - Sorry. - That's fine. - Sorry, we didn't have other things planned, right? - Oh, I tweeted it out last night. I wanted to get into it. There's more Tyree kills time, you know, all kinds of stuff out there. - So I want to give a shout out to Amy, the Princess of Profanity on Twitter. - She's a big wrestling fan, by the way. - She's a huge wrestling fan. - Well, actually, I think her kids are much-- - Sure, that's what happens. - Yeah, I think her kids are. - I think her kids are. - I think her kids are. - I think her kids are. - It's a big fight this Saturday night. - Yeah. - A whole bunch of teenagers. - I'll be there as well. (laughing) - She's a teenager, it's a Nick. - By the way, so I'm not sure she's a wrestling fan, but I think her kids are here. She sent me this, a clip, and I always, I always like it when we take, you know, we don't take requests, but when people, you know, send us stuff, stuff. (laughing) So, all right, I wanna be careful with this because these are the parents of the boy, Aidan, who was killed by that Haitian illegal immigrant - And it's in jail. - in Springfield, Ohio. So these parents are obviously grieving, but I'm taking a little exception with what they're saying. And again, I can't imagine this tragedy. It's the worst tragedy I think I could ever imagine. I don't wanna ever be in their position and God only knows what I would say if I was. However, they spoke yesterday and they, the father actually said that he wished a white person would have killed his son because Republicans are criticizing illegals. - Okay. - So let's play this. He calls out Chipperoy, Trump, Vance, all by name. You can tell where he is on the political spectrum. Again, grieving parents, I'm not casting aspersions, but I just, you know, let's listen to this and analyze it. Cut seven, Phil, if you will, go. - Our best interest to be here after recent comments. You know, I wish that my son, Aidan Clark, was killed by a 60 year old white man. I'm not a boy. - But I bet you never thought anyone would ever say something so blunt. But if that guy had killed my 11 year old son, the incessant group of hate spewing people would leave us alone. The last thing that we need is to have the worst day of our lives violently and constantly shoved in our faces. But even that's not good enough for them. They take it one step further. To make it seem as though our wonderful Aidan appreciates your hate, that we should follow their hate. And look what you've done to us. We have to get up here and beg them to stop. Using Aidan as a political tool is, to say the least, reprehensible for any political purpose. And speaking of morally bankrupt, politicians, Bernie Moreno, Chipperoy, J.D. Vance, and Donald Trump. They have spoken my son's name and used his death for political gain. This needs to stop now. They can vomit all the hate they want about illegal immigrants, the border crisis. And even untrue claims about fluffy pets being radish and eaten by community members. However, they are not allowed, nor have they never been allowed to mention Aidan Clark from Springfield, Ohio. I will listen to them one more time to hear their apologies. To clear the air, my son, Aidan Clark, was not murdered. He was accidentally killed by an immigrant from Haiti. This tragedy is felt all over this community, the state, and even the nation. But don't spend this towards hate. In order to live like Aidan, you need to accept everyone. Choose to shine, make the difference, lead the way, and be the inspiration. What many people in this community and state and nation are doing is the opposite of what you should be doing. Sure, we have our problems here in Springfield and in the U.S. But does Aidan Clark have anything to do with that? Did you know that an 11-year-old boy could be passionate about gardening, that he could haggle for a better price at a yard sale? Okay, so I don't know the specifics of that tragedy. Whatever that father said, I'm assuming is true. I would say this. I have never been one of these people to tell other parents how to parent. So it doesn't matter to me how anybody views what I'm about to say. I have no problem with what he said there because I can't imagine what he's dealing with knowing that his child was killed. Like that's every parent to worst nightmare, right? Like you never want to be the one as the parent that buries your child. You've always heard people say it's my child that is supposed to bury me. And I don't know the backstory of the death, nor have I heard Trump or Vance say whatever and I'm not defending Trump or Vance for whatever. But the sad reality is that that is politics. And I don't know how Lake and Riley's parents feel with their daughter who was murdered by an illegal immigrant and raped and beaten and all the specific details of that Athens, Georgia case. So again, I don't know the backstory to that. Was Aiden Clark accidentally killed? If so, how? I don't know. Was it a car accident? I mean, I don't know. - Well, it was a car accident. - But he didn't have a valid license. - He didn't have a valid license. He's in jail. The illegal immigrant is in prison. And it was a huge story. It was it last summer. And it was that he struck a school bus full of kids, injuring dozens of children and 11 year old Aiden was killed. So it's to say, look, to say that it was an act. Look, first of all, my condolences to this grieving dad. - Yes. - But I just think that the truth is that it wasn't even Trump. It just became a flashpoint last summer when this school bus was struck. And there were a lot of parents who were speaking out about it at the time who were very angry and saying, here we go again. This is another issue of, you know, somebody who shouldn't be here, you know, if they, so those other parents of their kids survived but suffered great injury, they had a right too as well. - And to my, my push back to that father there though, would be with, I mean, I don't know how many times he said the word hate. It's not hating on people that are here illegally. It's hating on the system that allows them to be here illegally. And the Democrats that who have allowed 15, 18, 21 million, whatever the number is, we have no idea the true number, but all I know is it is exponentially worse than it was under Trump and oh, by the way, under Obama. So that's what I hate. If they had better systems in place, then their child may still be alive. And look, I'm, you know, I would probably react in a completely different way. I would want people's heads. I would want to kill the individual who did that. I, you know, I'm not a rational human. But I just, I, you're, to me, to say, to say that he would have rather had a 60 year old white man kill his son. Yeah, so is he trying to say that Trump wouldn't talk about that? If it was a 60 year old white man, as opposed to an illegal immigrant? It's just a grieving dad. I get it. He's not even a rational. I get it, but I just... 'Cause I wouldn't want a 60 year old white man to kill my kid either. I don't know Gom, yeah, Gom. Don, you said, you said he's a grieving dad. I 100% agree with that. But he was very, like, it's not like he was hysterical and that he was very calm. He was very calm in that speech. Very calm. More calm than I would have been. It was a 36 year old man named Hermanio Joseph and he crashed into the school bus a year ago in August and he was sentenced to nine to 13 and a half years. Okay, the man, the illegal individual who did more than driving without a license. I mean, he obviously was driving erratically and so on and so forth. But this was not a intentional, like, ambush, right? He could drive it, like, specific, like, okay, okay. Just one of the clarification. But again, he was driving without a license and we chastise people and again, he's doing time. So I guess, you know, justice has been served. But like, we chastise people who drive drunk or drive without a license and ramming to people, like, yeah, I just, I don't know. I just feel like this is a tough one for me. It's a tough one. But I think this is where the context and all the little nuanced elements matter. Trump's, you know, a quote, our side of the aisle, not technically wrong, because look, if we had a better system in place, there is mathematically better odds that this guy would not have been here and that kid would be mathematically, the better mathematical chance that he's alive today. - To play devil's advocate then, if one of your, if one of our kids, I don't want to personalize it to you or dawn, I'll put myself in this too. If one of our kids was killed like this, would we want his death or her death to be used as a political football? Probably not, right? - Yeah, I would say probably not as well. I think, again, you know, politics, you know, matter, it's a big thing, but I do think like, you know, there is the line, like I said with, you know, 9/11. I'm totally fine with Trump and Kamala shaking hands on 9/11. I'm not okay with Joe Biden laughing and having a good old time. Now, oh, yeah, now I'll put the Trump hat on. And those are, that's where kind of where I can separate the difference. This here is where, again, I can separate and say, you know, politics aside, probably would not be, I mean, look, behind closed doors, am I saying that to my wife, you know, if we had a better border, our daughter would be alive today, I don't have a major issue with what he said, in part because I truly don't know how I would respond. We all think we know until we get to be in that person's use. You know, I dock on wood that I never have to be in that chair. - This was a situation where the bottom line is, this man was convicted by a jury and sentenced to up to 13 and a half years behind bars and among the charges, involuntary manslaughter, vehicular homicide. And so for anybody to say that the person was charged with murder, well, it's involuntary manslaughter. So let's parse words. This caused an uproar because the parents of, you know, dozens of kids who were, this school bus, this guy in a minivan, crossed the center lane and smashed into the school bus at such force that the school bus flipped over. Okay, this was a horrific accident and it was not a six year old, whatever. It was this dude who was driving and his excuse was, well, he has a Mexican driver's license. And so people were outraged at the time and happened one year ago. And so, you know, my heart goes out to this family. This is horrific, but I would suggest people not say, I guess that the parents don't want their child's name said. Contrarily, I will say, in my experience, covering murder victims or people, you know, killed like in these involuntary manslaughter type crashes, most people do want their loved one remembered. They want you to remember their child. And as a medical football though, like do you want it to, like, do you-- But when it comes to shootings, we always say, let's say the names of the victims, not the shooter itself, right? I think in the context of, to your point, I think in the context of just a heightened political season, I think these grieving parents want their son's name remembered. But I think that they don't want it in this context because it's an ugly divisive, you know, debate going on, but the fact of the case is that this illegal person was driving at such force, crossed over, I don't know if there was intoxicate, I don't know what the, why he crossed the line, but he did, and he has been convicted, he has convicted of this, of manslaughter charges. And it's a horrific case. - I will say one last thing, dad won't like this, but on the debate stage, on Tuesday night, it would have served Trump better to bring up this case as opposed to dogs or birds or geese, yeah. I mean, 'cause this is 100% verified, so. - Well, or just, or just talk about, you know, not just, you know, the conviction, but talk about the fact that you have, you know, many, many thousands apparently of individuals within those migrants who are hardworking. And Mike DeWine, the Republican and Ohio Governor, released a statement, and he said, the vast majority of the people we've welcomed here from Haiti are hardworking family people, we welcome them here. The problem is that with the Biden-Harris situation, it was super-sized, okay, so they have 20,000 people descending out of town of 60,000, they just can't handle it. - Of course not. - You know, the resources on top of it, unfortunately, within the good folks, there's a tiny group of very bad and crime, you know, predators, let's just say. - Absolutely, 855-839-1210. Phil is in Telford, Phil is up next. Phil, go right ahead, sir. - Yeah, great show as always. - Thank you, sir. - Hey, listen, now, in case I didn't hear it right, but with the father actually talking about immigrants eating cats, did he time on that too? - He did, he did bring something up to that. - He did, yes, yes. - Yeah, so that's where he lost me, so that's fine. I know he's grieving and all that kind of stuff, but he made it from the death of his child to politics, like that had nothing to do with the death of his child. So he showed his true colors and why he was in front of that microphone. - Yeah, I think that's a fair point, although I could see a scenario where perhaps even a Republican that agrees with Trump on immigration and the border might say, don't bring up my child because now it hits differently because it is so personalized. You might not be wrong, sir, in using it politically from a factual standpoint, but I would prefer you don't because now it really impacts me because it was my child. But yeah, I think in this case specifically, which is ultimately what matters, not hypotheticals, this person was not on the right side of the political spectrum. - By the way, Amy, wait in. She says, thanks for the chat out. And yes, I and my whole family are wrestling. - I knew she was. I knew she was. - Are you a Roman Reigns fan? Are you a John Cena? Oh, John Cena retired, didn't he? - Yeah, he's washed. He's like Biden, he's done, get out. He's doing Honda commercial. - They saw Bret Hart came back, Calgary. - Nobody knows what you're talking about. - By the way that the 36-year-old Haitian immigrant who was convicted, just in July tried, he, you know, his court appointed attorneys, they've tried to appeal and overturn the conviction saying he has protected status. So part of the outrage in the community there is, I know Greg was trying to make it like Hardin's. - No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. - Yeah, go. - The part of the outrage in that community, if you're the parents of, you know, the other kids who had to be hospitalized in this, and the first responders, you know, coming to an upside down bus full of 52 little kids who are bloody and screaming, okay? There was outrage after this. And then the trial just happened in May, the guy is convicted, and now within the last like eight weeks, the guy tries to get it overturned with court appointed attorneys. A lot of people in that community are outraged with this kind of situation. - 855-839-1210, voicemails in 20 minutes, but up next, a great opportunity for an even better cause right here on Kaling Company, stay right there. - This is the Kaling Company podcast from Talk Radio 1210WPHD and on the Free Odyssey app. - I'm Sally Helm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events and the lesser told stories, ones you might not even know happened. Find History This Week on the Free Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. - Some of us have been impacted directly or indirectly by the terrible six letter word that is cancer. And here to talk about that and a great opportunity for an even better cause. The legendary basketball coach of the St. Joseph's Hawks, a guy who I watched for many, many years and actually as a temple grad even was rooting for Jamir Nelson in Delante West on that great squad. Coach Phil Martelli is with us. Coach, good to have you on the show this morning. - Great to be with you, may I really appreciate it? - Yes, let's start first of all. I could go through the routine of your coaching career. You had such an amazing career. But I know that you are still a very active guy both in your passions but also professionally. Before we get to the big announcement, what have you been up to recently in your personal life that I know is a new endeavor or venture, so to speak? - Well, I've reestablished myself in Philadelphia. I was never far away. My wife had, Judy had stayed in media and we were going back and forth for the five years I was in Michigan. When I came home, I made one. I set out to create an idea. And I did that with give back to the community that has given me and my family so much. So for lack of a better term, I've created a business called Make a Difference. In May and June, I was saying this is what I hope to do. Now I am straight off saying this is what I'm going to do. I'm going to go into schools, Nick. I'm going to go into corporate Delaware Valley. And I want to talk to them about leadership, about coaching because I believe everybody out there. You're not just a radio host. You're the coach of this segment. So what do we share in common? And I have stories, not yuff it up, backwards stories, but these are stories with themes. And my intention is starting with schools is to go into 140 school districts this year. I'm just waiting for the invites. I've had an opportunity in the last couple of weeks to go into three different schools and it's just been terrific. And I want to start with the staff and the bus drivers and the maintenance people, the administrative staff, the principals, the teachers, because they're heroes. And they take a lot of body blows, but they are heroes. And then I expand that into corporate. So whether it's a CEO, the head of a Salesforce, an intern, my stories will resonate. And they're going to resonate with the least one person that had an audience. So I've started this quote unquote business of make a difference. And I'm looking to build and I sit here every day. And I'm a novice with the computer, but I sit here and think, okay, how can I touch one person who then can touch one other person to say, you know what? I didn't come home to retire. And I know we're going to talk about golf. I didn't come home to just play golf. And I didn't come home to say, well, you know what? You got a quick tongue and a quick lid and just go do TV that no, I have to make a difference because so many people in this area have made a difference with me. So I have a management group. I have a website, all kinds of stuff. But I'm just sitting here waiting for the phone to ring and go out there to help one organization be a little bit better tomorrow. - Well, I know you're going to be working with companies and nonprofits from basketball to the business world. But you have, Phil, you've always been a big philanthropy guy, co-founder of the Philly chapter of the American Cancer Society, Coaches versus Cancer Program. You guys have raised $20 plus million in over 25 years for cancer research. It's such a inspirational and heartwarming endeavor that you and other coaches, because I think, you know, no matter what walk of life you come from in sports and politics, whatever it might be, you know, cancer is one of these galvanizing things that unites Americans. And a lot of times when you have those conversations and you have those great moments, there's not a dry eye in the house. So we are very honored to have you and to be a part of a big golf outing that is going to be happening. And we are talking about a day of golfing, eating and fighting cancer as we will be doing a kale and company, big five coaches golf spectacular in partnership with the Coaches versus Cancer and the 28th annual Jim Maloney Golf Classic, which is coming up in just about 10 days, September 23rd at Huntington Valley Country Club. Of course, that I can't even get on. So I'm ecstatic to be a part of it and I know you will be a part of the golf festivities for sure. Let me ask you. I know this is a great endeavor for a great cause. Where's the golf game at right now? Phil, be honest, you're on the radio. - Nick, I have to read this. If you were going to write a check, if I said Nick, write a check, go on, write a check for a thousand dollars. If I could find my golf clubs, I have no idea. (laughing) - That's how I went. - No swing, I can't find that. - I will, I will, I'm sitting in my home office here. I'm looking out the window and for five years of Michigan, I was looking out my office window and way across the street was the University of Michigan golf course. And we were given nine free rounds a year. And so I guess by my math, I'm a 45 rounds of golf at (laughing) I never took my clubs. And if you said to me today, where do you think your clubs are? I don't know. What I can do out there is I can run my math. I can, and I love it. And I love because on the course, Nick, you're not a radio host. You're not one of the leading guys that caught up. You're not a basketball coach. You're just a guy out there with three of your friends and telling stories and some of them are true and some of them are falsehoods. But it's just a remarkable way and for this, for this, anything that anybody can do. You know, and people talk about the $21 million that's been raised and showed off yet. It's not enough because somebody in your listening audience is going to hear that a family member has cancer or they may have cancer or a business colleague or somebody from your church or somebody from a charitable endeavor that you're involved with. And cancer is straight up as a bully. It does not discriminate. So we cannot fight it like it's a straight, fair one. You know, like the old people. The older people in Philadelphia would say, "Oh, and I got offered a fair one, man." You and me are going to just go and then best of me is going to win. Now, cancer is a bully. We must crush it. And your efforts are a step along the way to crushing cancer. So thank you, thank you, thank you, Nick. And everybody involved at your station for attacking coaches versus cancer. - No, Phil, it's my honor. For those who don't know, this golf classic will honor the memory of former Temple men's basketball coach Jim Maloney in his 14 years behind the bench with former coach John Cheney, who by the way, his last year was my senior year at Temple. So this definitely hits home. Maloney, mentored future NBA guys. If you remember, Aaron McKee on that '01 Sixers team. He was a Temple guy and he Jones, great player for the Lakers. In attendance with Phil Martelli and myself will include Fran Dunphy, who's coached at multiple big five schools. Kyle Neptune, who if I recall, he's now up at Lehigh coaching that squad. So there's going to be Amy Fadoul from NBC, Philadelphia for NBC Sports, formerly Comcast Sports. So it's going to be a great day. And you can now place, and I'll tweet out the link during the break. It's up on the YouTube chat, too. It's up, well. OK, beautiful. It's September 23rd. Yep, yep. And you can place your bid for the threesome to join myself. Fran's going to be there. Phil, you're going to be there. We're going to have golf. There's going to be a cocktail hour, which is my favorite part of the day. There's going to be a dinner, the whole bit. So I'm looking forward to it, Phil. And I know I've interviewed two years ago in sports, but I've actually never been in person with you. So this will be a first time pleasure. Nick, if you have a second, I have a great John Chaney, this golf classic, and Huntington Valley story. John Chaney had never played golf, decided to take up golf. And he took up golf at Huntington Valley, which is Phil's and tough shots, the first round of golf that he ever played. When John won a club, he called Mikey. He was working with Mikey on basketball. And they sent him clubs. He requested the clubs that Tiger Woods uses. They sent him those clubs. He was out on the course. And Fran Duncan and I were riding around. We rode up to see his swing. And when we went into his bag to pull out the club, the clubs were still in the wrapping. So like the cellophane, whatever they call that, wrapping. And we said, John, you have to take the rack off the club. And he looked at us like we had seven heads. And he said, this is the way Nike sent them to me. This is the way Tiger uses that. He's playing 18 rounds of golf. 18 holes of golf with the wrap on his club. Oh, my God. Yeah, that's John Chaney. And he got it two over. I'll be two over after the first hole. Phil, thank you so much, looking forward to it. To add to your fact, it's crushed cancer. Yes, it's crushed cancer. And we will put out that link right now. Thank you very much, Coach. We'll see you in a couple of days. Pride of San Antonio. Yep. There he is. Phil Martel. Go ahead, Don. You were saying? No, Pride of St. Phil Aminas. He's a Hall of Fame or local. But I love you. So it's all-- it all goes to charity. The bidding is now live. It's up on-- if you're watching right now on YouTube, the link is up there on YouTube. Nick will tweet it out as well. All the money goes to the American Cancer Society. And it's a great cause. You can do a threesome, a golf threesome. Say that again. Golf threesome with Nick Hale and raise money for a great cause. Gotta work with infants at some point. No, I just said it's-- Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, Phil Martel-ly is just the assault of the earth. I know him from-- he's through personal stuff, too. St. Phil Aminas Church, where I was married and Hall of Famer and just seen his wife Judy. But he's to play golf with him and spend time with him. What a wonderful experience. And the story is like he just told. But you'd never know he's actually a legacy, locally. And that's just it. When you-- to be with him, what an honor. So that's amazing. Monday, September 23, link is up there on the YouTube chat. YouTube.com/that1210WPhD. I'm sure Nick's going to tweet it out. All right, well, it's also on 1210WPhD.com. So if you want to put your bid in there to play golf with Nick Hale, meet Phil Martel-ly and Fran Dunphy, and all those good people, the link is up there now. Yes, and you can come, and we can talk about the debate and disagree, and then I'll shout at you on the golf course when I put a ball into the trees. And Nick might buy you a drink. Seven of them. All right, we'll come back. Yeah, but Dawn's got some-- Let's just do. Oh, get to it right now. All right, let's do it. Maybe he didn't do quite as well in the debate, which is fine. It was a 90-minute debate. You might have one more. I don't care about those two debates. I care about his four years of service that he produced, and what kind of four years of service did she produce. That's why my vote has got to go with Trump. I agree, and I hope that the small sliver of maybe the undecideds and/or the independents will look at the results from 2017 through 2019. You can omit COVID 2020, the final year of Trump. You can even, if you'd like, omit the first year of Biden dealing with COVID in 2021, but then look at '22, '23 and '24. Common Sense says Advantage Trump, but we don't live in Common Sense times. Hey, guys, I just want to go back to the Tariq Hill it seems. Now, this guy plays a violent sport, played with a bunch of-- let's call them-- attempted murderers, because that's what they're trying to do every time he gets the ball. They are trying to kill him. End of story. This man gets pulled over by a police officer. This is not trying to hurt him. He's just doing his job. He wants you to comply. And when you don't do that, they get frustrated. Sorry you got taken to the ground, and your knee almost got hurt. But what happens in a football game is if they break your leg, they're going to laugh at you, possibly get a 15-yard penalty. And then at the end of the day, go back to their mansion. They're not going to ruin their lives, like get fired for killing you, OK? That's the difference from being in law enforcement and being a coddled millionaire. Hey, Rhett, stop it with this book. Ooh, you know, this little pause for a fact. I like it, because it sounds like me for a few days ago. You know, I agree with that. Charles Barkley coming out, calling Tyree kill a race bader and all of those that are calling for the cops job as race baters. Tyree kill at a press conference yesterday. I believe said that he now owns some of it and said he could have handled it better. But it's still calling for the officer to lose his job. Yeah, that was a clip we didn't get to today. We'll get to tomorrow. By the way, voicemails today were sponsored by natural lands every 70 days. Mature oak tree produces enough oxygen to support a human. For one year, natural lands has preserved more than 125,000 acres of open space in our region, including millions of oak trees. Learn more at natlands.org, natural lands, land for life and nature for all. Yeah, there you go. I can attest to that. It gives me the oxygen to blow V8 for four hours. I'm so pissed at it. Oh boy, sorry. Ooh, sorry. Sorry. One more time, he's so pissed about something. That's all I heard. He was so pissed at, I don't know. We'll play that one tomorrow. But first we have to get to this. Oh my god. ♪ What happened on the same music history? ♪ ♪ Music history ♪ ♪ On a scale of company ♪ Hey, September 11th and I am-- Nope, that was yesterday. Oh my goodness. Oh my boy. Somebody's pissed the wrong today. I will be, I need to have a meeting with myself. ♪ What happened on the same music history? ♪ ♪ Music history ♪ ♪ On a scale of company ♪ Today, September 12th. Yes. We celebrate the birthdays of Jennifer Hudson, who's now 43. Ben Folds of Ben Folds 5, who's now 58. And Jerry Beckley from America, who's now 72. Heavenly birthday, shout out to Neil Pert of Rush and Barry White. We also lost Johnny Cash on this day in 2003. Singles of Koon, welcome to the Black Parade by My Chemical Romance in 2006. Children of the Revolution by T. Rex in '72. And Modern Love by Bowie in '83. Albums that could pump by Aerosmith in '89. Wish you were here by Pink Floyd in '75. Death Magnetic by Metallica in 2008. And free your soul and save my mind by suicidal tendencies in 2000. Also in '70, CCR topped the UK album chart. In '87, MJ kicks off the bad tour. In 2012, Matchbox 20 hits number one on the album chart. And in '93, garbage finds their lead singer Shirley Manson in a video by her current band, Angelfish. But lastly, on this day in 2007, the surviving members of Led Zeppelin announced their reunion concert. Over one million people registered for just 18,000 tickets. 4K on company. I feel awkward. All right, Phillip, thank you very much. Two straight days of My Chemical Romance, making today a music industry. Didn't have that on my bingo card. Don is coming up in nine minutes. We find out what she has at the top of the hour. Oh, there's so much job breaking, so much developing. So we'll have some new news on the economy. And look at where Philadelphia inflation, where does our inflation rate rank in the nations? We'll have those fresh numbers for you. I believe Kathy Barnett is on the docket. We have Trump campaign people on the docket. There's so much happening locally. And we'll have a jam-packed with guest jam-packed with developing stories this morning. Got it all for you. All right, Doug Bergum event in Chester County, by the way, Trump Force 47. Bergum. Are you doing that tonight as well as politics? So I'm trying to do that, but it's 2.30. OK. And it's out in Chester County and West Chester. Don't be late tonight, Matt. I know, so I can't like I have to deal. And then I got to drop off the birthday cake for the football, because it's David's birthday and Eddie's birthday. So like, you know-- Do you have a long day today? I have a long day every day. You do. I don't-- That's all right. I don't envy you, but I do respect you. Larry calls me a vampire. You are. I'm energized. We have to be energized. You're right. We'll be like that all the way through Thanksgiving. And then I'm done. All right, that'll do it for us, everybody. Hopefully we'll see you tonight, politics pints. Collings with New Jersey, Scottish Rite Auditorium, Donald Trump Jr., Dom Giordano, Don, Don, myself, Greg. We'll all be out there. We'll chop it up. We'll have some fun. We'll have a few drinks. You can tell me you hate the show. You can tell me you love the show. And we'll have a good time, because it's all fun and games. All right, everybody have a great rest of your day. And I believe Stalker has-- I'm going to need to have a meeting with myself. Yeah. Start your day with Kaitlyn Company, week day morning 6 till 10. I'm Tark Radio 1210, W-P-H-T in the free Odyssey app. I'm Sally Holm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events-- major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs. But we also bring you into the smaller, behind-the-scenes stories-- the unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey Podcast in partnership with the History Channel, available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts.