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Kayal and Company

A Big Loss in The South Jersey Hockey Community

Hr 4Mystery MovieCallersUpdate on Johnny Gaudreau deathMusic History
Broadcast on:
30 Aug 2024
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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, 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. - Gail and Company Week, day morning, six 'til 10. - I work with DJs at WFIL and when they would play that Elvis song, and a lot of these guys were southern boys. - It is really too bad that this is not on video because you see my face looking at time right now. - I know you would do that because I didn't know that song was coming up. So, once again, my great Elvis knowledge and my musical knowledge, I did what DJs used to do when that song was, you know, a current hit back in the day. - I looked at you and then you looked at me like what? - And then you did it again and I'm like-- - And I'm like, gosh, if I could dream. And if you say it fast, it sounds like you're saying something bad, but it's not. It's southern. Let's get to southern grammar. Let's get the country grammar going here. - Yes. - You know what I'm saying? Kamala did last night in Savannah. She sounded more, she sounded more ghetto than our governor here in Pennsylvania. Well, we're in Florida, we have the best governor. You know, what's his name in Pennsylvania? Josh Shapiro, he goes all, he goes all ghetto when he tries to talk like Obama. And I'm gonna say no, Obama's ghetto, he's not. But it's this thing about when you talk to certain crowds, you gotta put an accent on it. - Oh, it's so condescending. - To make it look like you couldn't relate to them. Am I right? - Am I right? - Oh, absolutely. I can't believe, you know, when I'm talking to my friends, when I'm talking to my friends in Birmingham, Alabama, where I work for a couple of years, you always put that accent on. I don't know why. - Can we just reiterate the importance of pronunciation? - Yes. - That's what this segment should be about. (both laughing) - So Henry, you... - I knew, see, I didn't know that song was coming, but I had my quick thinking brain and my ADHD. - And your five-year-old mom. - L-A-M-N-O-P. Am I what? - And your five-year-old mind? - And my, no, it's an old DJ trick that you could do on the air back in the day when you couldn't use any words. - Well, you gave Henry a heart attack. - I know, 'cause Henry's on his feet. - You were a quick thinker. I was a quick reactor here. I was in the dumpling like that. - I know, that's the whole part of that song, and I didn't know you were playing it, and of course, the great. - Once again. - Then the Kearns law. - It is gift. I can dream. - I can dream. - But if you say it fast enough, and with a little country twang in it, like Kamala Harris had last night down in Savannah, Georgia, you know, it goes down a little bit different. You know what I'm saying? I'm going to look Cajun now, like the old Cajun Shep, but you know, there's a big difference between the Cajun accent and the Southern accent. You know what I'm saying? - Oh, that coach, oh. - Let me tell you a bit. - Luigi just kicked in. Stop singing like Elvis. I'm going to throw myself off your roof. Stop it. Just stay the hell off the roof, 'cause the roof is not on fire, and we don't need no water, and you know what we do. - So coming up this hour, we still have time to take any phone calls if anybody calls in. - Yeah, we also have to do the mystery movie clip and give away a prize. That's coming up at about 10 minutes from now. - Yes. - And Jane Ribino, by the way, has been picking the morning mystery movie clips all week after winning the privilege during the Travis Mannion radio thought. So she picks out the movie clip, and then you will call in when we play it, and we'll tell you when, and then you'll win a pair of tickets to politics and pints with Donald Trump Jr. at the Scottish Rite Auditorium in Collingswood, New Jersey, September 12th. Each ticket also includes a copy of Letters to Trump. Tickets are on sale at 1210WPHT.com. How about that? - And both the Collin and trying to win the mystery movie tickets, phone number is 855-839-12. - And one of your favorite places to travel to order up there and back in Pennsylvania, we go up Route 30, and where do we go when we take Route 30? Or just take the city line avenue all the way up and turn there with the Lancaster Avenue. That's Route 30. Where do we go, Robert? - We go to Lancaster and the news weather sponsored by Discover Lancaster. What a coinky dink. Discover more of Lancaster, head to Lancaster County this weekend with the family to enjoy the ride at Dutch Wonderland. - Yeah. - Yes, Tony, our grandkids love Dutch Wonderland. - They have seasoned passes. They drive from Maryland to Dutch Wonderland, and it's not that far. You can drive from Maryland up to Lancaster. - And it's an outrage that I still have not been. I need to be able to go to Dutch Wonderland. - You've been to Lancaster many times. - Yes, but I've been to Dutch Wonderland. - We drove by it, Robert. - Dutch Wonderland, it's a kingdom for kids just a 90-minute drive from Philadelphia. Visit discover Lancaster.com to plan your getaway. - Beautiful. Love Dutch Wonderland. - I am a Dutch Wonderland. - Not Dutch Oven, or not the Dutch guy who beat Carlos Alpatraz, as Robin called him earlier today, at the U.S. Open yesterday. - Alpatraz. - Alvarez. - All right, Robin, who's the guy once again? Who was the guy who was the 74th? - Bo-Tik. - Bo-Tik. - Von de Jean-Chope. - What? - Von de Jean-Chope. - You got that now? Sounds like a disease. Do they have a vaccine for that? Is that something we should be worrying about? - Von de Jean-Chope. - You got that? - Chope. - That's the hard one. - That's the hard one. - Chope. - Chope. - Sounds like strapper to me. That's how we say it, it's how strapper. - Now here's a-- - Here's a loud and a strapper. There you go, yeah. - Tony always asked me when there's a VD, van der Vonder. - Not VD, no, that's a difference in the conversation. - Of either a von der or a von der. It's either German or Dutch. - Right. - So if it's V-A-N-D-E, V-B-N-D, - Dan der. - Then it's Dutch. If it's von der V-O-N-D-E-R, that's German. - I Von de Y. (laughing) - This is the silly season, or the silly hour. As we wrap up a week and hope everybody has a great Labor Day weekend, you know, go out there, be safe when you're traveling. Don't do anything stupid. Let me do the stupid stuff. You just try to keep it continue the same thing and then watch the Phillies with another three games of the series, huge series, big win come from behind last night. And so, you know, that's what it's all about this time of the year. Labor Day, kids are going back to school. Some already have been back next week. A lot of kids will go back. Kamala Harris will work on trying to figure out what the Constitution and the Supreme Court are as she goes out and continues the campaigning. Trump's out there, everybody's out campaigning. I'm gonna be out there barbecuing and chilling and grilling. Popping a couple of cold ones. You know what I'm saying? - What do you, what are you putting on the grill here? Burgers, dogs, steaks. - Well, whatever I can afford. I'm gonna get some dog meat that I'm not kidding. - We're certainly not gonna be putting those $125 tomahawk's on it. - I know. Did you see that they have a fake tomahawk now? Somebody made it. Somebody made a fake tomahawk out of like fake meat. So it looks like it's red, right? And then they slice it up and they put the lines in it. - What do they use instead of a bone? - You have to look it up. And when they cook it on a grill, it looks just like a real tomahawk, fake tomahawk. And you would think, wow, that looks good. But then when you watch the video, which we can't, we'll play it, but you can't see it. It's a ribeye steak off the grill. And it's about meat glue. And they're using meat glue to put the bone on. So it's fake steak. And you know, who is it? We don't fake steak. Is that, who's the slogan is that? - Obviously, this is not going to work well without video. Oh, it doesn't even look right though. - No, when they put it together and then they grill it, they put the grill marks in it. You would not, it's a 100% fake steak. - Oh, well, this isn't even to eat. This is like with food coloring. And it looks like, yeah, no, it's like chocolate or something. Yeah, that's it. That's like chocolate. - Oh, is it one of those things? - No, they show you how they put it together. Where the bone, the ribeye bone and the tomahawk is fake and they glue it on there. And then they grill it and it's meat glue. They use meat glue. - That's it. - It's 50% less calories and it tastes great, but less filling. - Have you seen, there's a lot of these fake meat and the genetically modified fruits and stuff? - That's why R.F.C. Jr. needs to gain more. - If you set them outside, flies and ants don't even touch them. How fast do flies and ants come out? If you have real food, I mean, they find it like crazy. You set it out and you forget that you had like some kind of food out there. Immediately they find them within 10 minutes. - So we should be eating fake fruit? - No, my point is that even flies and ants know that this stuff is crap. They won't even go after it. - Exactly. - That's how you know. If a fly or an ant won't try to eat it, you know it's bad for humans. - The thing, the amazing thing about the member with this whole fake meat stuff came out. Oh yeah, they're buying the stocks and oh yeah, this is gonna be the rate. Now they can't give it away. - I know. - You go into stores, it's like in the discount freezer department. - Well, so many people think thought that if you-- - It's healthier for you. - It's healthier for you. It's actually worse for you. People are gaining weight. - If that were the prize for the mystery movie, I don't think anyone would call in. What about the prize for the mystery movie? - Well, you said it earlier, I mean. - Yeah, it's a great prize. - It's a great prize. I'm just saying if it was, you know, those fake steaks, I don't think anyone would call-- - No, we don't sell fake steaks. - No fake steaks. I want them-- - I used to buy steaks out of the truck. - I want the real meat. - Remember when the guys with the little pickup trucks would come and they'd have a freezer in the back and then they drive to your house and knock on the door and they'd have frozen lobster tails and steaks? No, no, these were private people. These weren't the big trucks. These were guys like in white pickup trucks and they'd have a freezer in the back. When I lived up in Montgomery County in Gwyneth and they would come out, you know, to where people were making money and I wasn't making a lot of money up there. - So in other words, they fell off the back of the truck kind of thing? - No, no, these guys would get supplies and then they would sell them to you. So they'd take out a nice big box of steaks and they'd sell, and they were real. They weren't fake. They weren't, they weren't Bobo. - I think Henry and I are both thinking to ourselves, this was back in the olden days. - No, this is still happening. - I want people out there confirm what I'm saying. Confirm what I'm saying. People still have those guys that come around and then they order, what's the one where you order it online? - Omaha Steaks. People order food delivered. - No, I know. - Hello, you remember the pandemic? People still don't cook and they still have people delivered clothes to their homes. - My ex has been, it's from Montana and a lot of states on the West Coast, I don't know how far East it goes. Swans, swans frozen food. - Yeah, but that's a commercial place. - Yeah, but they came by, you ordered it and they came by in the truck. - But this was a guy knocking on doors and then they, when you knew, and it was like the Mr. Softy guy, when you hear the bells coming around your neighborhoods in the ice cream truck, you know, before we knew that we realized that the ice cream truck guys were creeps and clowns, they would come around and they would call the houses and people would wait for this guy to come once a week and they'd say, "Hey, you need anything?" And you got the lobster tails, you got the fillets, you got the porter house, you got all that stuff. - I'm picturing Guido going, "Ayo." - It's not a Guido guy. I want people to confirm this because I'm not making this stuff up. - Ayo Johnny. - It wasn't one of those guys. It wasn't one of those, that's not South Philly. This was up in the suburbs where the rich elitists live. You know what I'm saying? - I got a good deal for you. - No, they didn't do that. - No? - It was almost like, it was special. He'd open up that freezer and then all the smoke, we could have dry ice in there 'cause you know, he didn't have electric on the thing. - It's a killing company on demand from talk radio 1210WPhD and 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. - Dennis who has a question here in Philadelphia about local knowledge and local legends that I know and loved who are now no longer with us. Dennis, what's going on, man? - Hi, how you doing? - Beautiful, man. - I just wanted to ask Tony Bruno if he was friends with Jim O'Brien. - Let me see if I can get him on the line to answer the question. No, it's me, Dennis. You're speaking to Tony Bruno. The one, the only, the original. - Absolutely, Dennis. Yes, I work with Jim O'Brien at WFIL. Well, back in that era, I was at WFIL from 1970, all the way to '76 and then moved to Birmingham 'cause I was working overnight as a news guy and Jim was obviously one of the great DJs there. He did the mid days with Jake Cook and Dr. Don Rose and all of these other great people that I had an honor to work with, Long John Wade, Banana Joe. I mean, you name the legends. But Jim O'Brien and I work together. You know, we talked about motorcycles all the time and then unfortunately, you know, and then he became a great weather man and a character on Channel 6 news for a long long time. - He was a character, all right. - No, he was a character, all right. And a great, a great Texan man. I mean, you can tell, Jim O'Brien was a Texan all the way through War of the Cowboy boots. And unfortunately, you know, was in the skydiving and that's how he lost his life, sadly. - Really? - Yes, he jumped out of an airplane and the parachute didn't open. - Well, he cut his parachute and it was two parachutes that got stuck together and he cut himself loose so that the other guy lived and he had to ground every boater's body was broke, so. - Yeah, tragedy, tragedy. - Yeah, that was one of the great guys. - One of the legendary broadcasters radio. And you know, he also did sports. I mean, you know, these guys, like George Michael, you know, he was doing, he was a DJ, but he was also doing like New York Islanders games. Did you know that? He was doing play-by-play. - No, I didn't know that. - And George was another great friend and a great guy who I would see everywhere. And he had the George Michael sports machine, the national show on Sunday nights, you know, back when Sports Center was just starting up. He was saying, let's go to the videotape and he'd have the big reel there and he'd hit the, he'd hit the big button and start the video to show the highlights of the weekend's action. - No, I was blessed, I was blessed to grow up in an era. When they, and again, I'm not saying the one in your legendary people around, but those guys were my idols. Those are the people who I grew up listening to and helped me out and helped me become a broadcaster that I later became. - He was the funniest weatherman you ever want to say so. - Oh yeah. - He was the best, seriously. - Yeah, yes. - And I live in, I live in Chester County and this is all Trump country out here. And I listen to the show every day on the radio. - You know, Dick for Meals out there in Chester County and you know, Kennett Square, the Mushrooms. And who doesn't love the Mushrooms? I'm gonna tell you, these are the greatest Mushrooms I've ever seen. - Mushrooms are awesome. - They love the Mushroom Festival, not those kinds of magic Mushrooms. The real Mushrooms. - No, no, no, no. - Not one for the smell. - Exactly. - No, no, no. - I think Henry knows where to get the magic Mushrooms though. Hey, Dennis, appreciate the call. Thank you so much, man. - I love and appreciate. I know you'll love it. - I love it, Northern. - Northern Chester County? - He's gone. - Oh. - Okay, I apologize. - We have another call of Joanne and Ardmore. - Joanne, she wants to clarify something I said. I have butter, can you clarify the butter for me? That's one of the hardest things I try to do when I make a Bure Black. You know, when you make the Bure Black. - Bure Blonde. - Bure Blonde. - Bure Blonde. When you get that, you try to get that right. - Yes, go ahead, I'm sorry. - Mine was about the commission people that came to your home in their trucks. My father-in-law did that. He was from Satterton and he used to go to all the wealthy areas in Philadelphia, along with some in Montgomery County, that he actually had keys to their home. They would place an order the week before, then they would go up and deliver the food and then go next door and see if somebody else wanted something. - Exactly, everybody's saying that I'm making that up. I got signs of all autumn signs, autumn signs on my Twitter accounts. X said, "I know who the meat guys are." I lived in Croydon when they came about every other Friday, about five to seven miles outside of Philly. They always brought a few pounds of meat for wholesale prices. That was back in the '80s. When I lived up in Montgomery County in the '80s, they would come around. - Were they-- - Right. - Were they butchers? - They were eggs. - They just did this? - No, they went to the local butcher and they would order whatever they think that people would want. Mostly eggs, fresh eggs, and egg and butter. They were called egg and buttermen. And then they would come to your home and they had chicken, they had steaks, they had all kinds of meats. And then right before the holidays, either Thanksgiving or Christmas, they bought fresh turkeys. And all the meat guys-- - These guys, these guys always had little white pickup trucks and then they would have-- - Oh, yeah, you're right. - Right in the middle of the bed, they would have this freezer, you know, like a chest freezer. - Yeah, right. - And then they would-- - Yeah, right. - They'd come by and they knew the people that would buy from them, you know? - Exactly. - And I had three kids. We had little kids. - Exactly. - And it was easy because they come and bring the lobster tails. We didn't buy eggs from them though. But we bought, you know, we bought steaks, we bought chicken, lobster tails, you know, that kind of stuff. - That's food I ever had in my life. - Yeah, it was great and it was convenient. Now everything is delivered. You know, now everybody gets their stuff delivered. Now you can't even go to a pizza. People get like shiny food set to the house. This is an outrage. - Well, most of these men were farmers and the farmers kind of dried up up in that area and that's what they did for their second job to support their homes. - That's great knowledge. So why wasn't technically wrong? I mean, you were-- - No, you were very right. No, you're right. - Thank you. - Some people-- - No, I'm wrong. I'd like to be corrected. - Yeah, one more. - No, no, no, I'm not. I'm not correcting you, I'm saying you're absolutely right and it was a great way to make living. - Exactly right, well I never did that for a living. Thank you so much, appreciate the call and the support, Joanne. Have a great week. - All right, thank you. - Thank you so much for listening in. So you know, I don't make stuff up, Robin. Just because I'm older, but we're talking about the age. We're not talking about back in the 30s when the guys came with the carts up the street being pulled by a horse. - Henry and I, we're not saying that we didn't believe you. We just said it was like back in the olden days. The '80s, we love the '80s. - It sounds like you're like going like, "Oh, you know, milk used to cost a nickel." You know, something like that. - No, it wasn't even that much cheaper. I mean, you could have gone to a meat packing place or a big, you know, there's like my son in Maryland, he goes to this place where they sell meat, they sell chickens, they sell, he gets his chicken next in there for crabbing right from the farmer. So when you live in a rural area, and back then, you know, Montgomery County, when it was just growing, there were all potato farms and stuff. So when they started building all those homes up in Gwynedd Valley, you know, that's where all the rich people lived. And I bought when it was, you know, inexpensive. My house was only $180,000. And I had it built out there. So, you know, $180,000 back in the '80s was a lot of money. - A lot. - So that's the story on that. So just because I'm older, does it mean I'm ancient? - Huh, another question. There's a debate on that. Well, here's the deal about Tony Bruno. - We have to break one more time? - No, no, no, no, keep going. - Okay, here's the deal. You are your age, but your mind is like that of a 12-year-old. - No, it's, how's my mind like a 12-year-old if I can remember things from 50 years ago? - Oh, Henry, do you need to explain him? - I mean, the whole Elvis thing earlier? - Yeah, what about that? - The gettin' out of that pronunciation. - That is a 12-year-old-- - Oh, no, that's talking about the Jim O'Brien days. Mr. Jim had this big Texas accent, and he would do it too when he would play that Elvis song 'cause he knew he could get away with it. Because back then, in the '70s, when the '60s and '70s, when those guys ruled AM radio, everybody listened to top 40 music during the British explosion, right? The British invasion, '64 of the Beatles, there were music stations, but that's when the whole music world changed in the '60s. The British invasion, you had Motown, you had so many different genres of great artists all coming into the music scene. - The music's now protesting. - I'm not protesting, I'm just spitting now, I'm spitting games, Robin. - Speaking of music, don't we have a special fill segment? - Yes, that'll be coming up at 9.53 this morning. - Robin, have you been listening to the show the last couple of days? Do you not listen when I'm filling in, or I'm on for Nick and we always do the big fill finale? Phil's like the closing act. Phil is what we wait for. - I just wanted to make sure that he had enough time. - It's '57, and he works on this for the first few hours of the show, and then he submits it. - Are you questioning Phil's work ethic and the fact that even though it's a holiday Friday, you think he's mailing in today in music history? - No, but he still hasn't played if I were king for just one day, which we have been talking about since the beginning of the show. - By the way, and I want to thank Traffic Guy, Brian. Tony, great to hear you the last two days with Robin, we miss you here. One note though, the song "War" was not by Eric Burdenen, 'cause Eric Burdenen "War" was part of the animals, and then he was Eric Burdenen "War", but the song "War" was by Edwin Starr "War". What is it good for? Absolutely nothing. - Here it is. Here it is. Can you hear it? - Yeah, this is the song that I want. ♪ When you walk past one day ♪ ♪ I will win ♪ - What era was this, what year was this from, Robin? What era was this? - Um, are you saying that this is the '80s as well? - Yeah, the '80s, you know, when I was the povers, out of a guy in a truck in this park in the thing? - I know their hair, their hair was just magnificent. - Thompson twins, were they twins, by the way? ♪ I'll be well ♪ - They're better than the Krasenstein brothers. Those guys are creeps. - Let me see, I'm gonna see it. I, because it wasn't just two people. - No, it was a group. - This was actually 1992? - No, really? - That's what it says here in front of me. - Yeah. - They were formed in 1977, man. - Yeah, but this song, wasn't really in '92, I thought. - No, it was '80s for future days. - That's what I'm playing on. - Um, that's the correct album. - The band became prominent during the second British Invasion in 1985, they performed at Live Aid in Philadelphia. - Yep. - And they were joined on stage by Madonna. Let's see. - You know who else was in there, Alana Curry? I mean, a lot of people played with the Thompson twins, but I don't think there are twins. - I don't think so either. - But they were king for just one day. - I'm trying to figure out how they became the name. To me, they're '80s to me. They started in the '70s, they blew up in the '80s, and they continued, they broke up though, they're not together, right? - No. - Well, they can join twins though, but maybe they were separated. - I don't think so. - And I was at Live Aid in 1985 in Philly. - They actually are not showing me how they became the twins, the Thompson twins. - They don't want you to know. - It's just like men without hats or men at work. You know, there was an era where everybody had to have men in their group, men and without hats, men at work. - Men behaving bad. - Men without pants, men behaving bad. (both laughing) But Bruno the Tank Engine, forget about meat, Tony. Tony also remembers when the lamp lighter would like the street lamp. No, I'm not that old. We had electric lamps. Like we're up in the '60s and '70s, man. - So Phil says, I have no control on what is being played. - That is on "Henry" and the song came out in 1985. - And what era is that, Robin? - Oh, I would like to say. - What decade is that? - It was ancient times. - When I was buying meat out of the back of a truck in Montgomery County. And you were ridiculing me as old? - It was in the way, way back here. - Which era has the most music on all VH1? Is that still on the air? What's the most popular? When they do, I love the what? I love the '80s. - Yes. - Probably the most popular era of all the different types of music. Now I grew up in the '50s, '60s, '70s, '80s, and '90s. So I know all those jobs. - I love the '80s and pop, pop video. - Oh, I love pop up. No, pop up video, Robin. Not pop, pop video. That's where old men sit around and watch old reruns of the "Real McCoy." He's at two o'clock in the afternoon. (laughing) - Pop up video. - Love pop up video. (laughing) - I learned a lot about songs. - Aren't you learning a lot when you listen to her as part of the show, Robin? - I learned so much from you. Let's go to break. - We have to break one more time? - Yes. - One more time. - One more time. We're coming right back. Talk Radio 1210, W-P-H-D. - This is the Kaling Company podcast from Talk Radio 1210, W-P-H-D, and on the free Odyssey app. - The man who hit the Goudreau brothers as they were on their bicycles last night down in Woodstown, New Jersey. They grew up in Gloucester Township and then you had all those county lines, but they grew up down in Salem County. And they were riding their bikes last night. Johnny Goudreau, legendary guy from South Jersey, legendary NHL player, Boston College. They were riding, he and his brother were riding a bike and the guy hit them and they're both dead. And now they have arrested, arrested the man who stopped and didn't run away, but he was taken in and now has been charged. There's a picture of him, he's been identified, and now he's facing charges of vehicular homicide. At 803, they were reportedly on the street, on the road, the rural road at 830. And sons, can you put that picture up there? His name is Sean Higgins of Woodstown, New Jersey, also in that same area down there, you know. - And we don't know whether he'd been drinking or anything like we have no idea. - This is the fact. The facts are Sean Higgins, 43 of Woodstown, New Jersey, has been charged with two counts of death by auto of Johnny and his brother Matthew Goudreau last night down there in Salem County, New Jersey. Obviously, he's got an orange prison to garb on. So he said, you know, the reports were, he stayed there. He didn't escape the scene, and then when police arrived, they charged him with two counts of death by auto. So the sad story, a man driving and again, the Goudreau brothers were probably close to darkness, but he just destroyed an entire community, an entire family of NFL, NBA, anybody who's been in sports. And these two guys, the Goudreau brothers, legendary, they're fathers, a legendary coach. And now this guy hits them. And I'm sure they had to have some sort of, something on their bikes where they could be seen at night. - I'm sure more news will come out, but if this was truly just an accident and it was the dusk and the light in his eyes or whatever. - They were charging with two counts of death by auto, right? - Well, I don't know. - Well, why would they charge him with two counts of death by auto if they thought it was just an innocent mistake? - They have more information than we know right now. - And it'll all come out, I'm sure. - Exactly. Meanwhile, let's wrap this up with the legend himself. Not Elvis, he was a legend, but the legend here on this program, the great Phil Almequist. Phil? - What happened on this day in music history? Music history is created in a gaming company. - Today, August 30th. We celebrate the heavenly birthday of John Phillips for the mamas and the papas. Singles cued heart shaped box by Nirvana in '93, heart and soul by Huey Lewis in the news in '83. Listen to our heart by Tom Petty in '78. No, I can't make that up all those heart songs and loud love by Soundgarden in '89. Albums cued Danzig's debut in '88, Highway 61, revisited by Bob Dylan in '65, Master of the Moon by Dio, actually his last album in 2004, and Fear Inoculum by Tool in 2019. Also in '93, Billy Joel is the very first musical guest on David Letterman's first show after moving to CBS. In 2016, the Go-Go's complete their final tour. In '86, Steve Winwood is atop the singles chart with higher love. In '69, Elvis was atop the album chart in the UK. And in '73, the doors officially disband two years after Jim Morrison's death. But also, and lastly, on this day in '69, the band Earth changes name when lead singer Aussie Oddsboard, yes, that guy. And now it's his on stage. The band's new name is Black Sabbath. Have a great weekend. I'll see you on Monday. For Kale and Company, I'm Phil Offquist. - Thank you, Phil, and we, the Columbus Dispatch, has more information now. Robin was talking about what happened now. The Sean Higgins guy we just talked about was taken into custody, and he was taken on the custody on suspicion of being under the influence of alcohol. So the stats have now been released. They charge him with two counts of vehicular homicide, and he's currently in the Salem County Correctional Facility. So two guys on a bicycle, guys drunk driving, and then he takes two lives, and now is going to pay for it. - I believe it will. - And the hockey world and families all over New Jersey, all over the National Hockey League and all over sports, wondering why this guy is out there drinking and driving on a country road, on a Thursday night. In the meantime, we want to thank everybody. First of all, we got to thank Henry Meshette. Henry's done a great job, Phil Offquist, always getting it done, Dan Barrowski, all the people who helped us put this show together, all the great callers and listeners, and yesterday, they have the last couple of days. I mean, I'm on once a week, most of the time, on Wednesdays, but it's been an honor to do this. I've been doing radio a long time, but this is a lot of fun, and the more you do it, the more you, it's like riding a bicycle, but I think the respect and the love of all the fans out there and all the people who have been following me through various incarnations, we want to thank you. But I just want to tell everybody, just be careful out there. You see what happens. Don't drink and drive, and I've said this every single end of my shows for decades. Don't drink and drive. Don't text and drive, no matter where you are. There's a lot of distracted drivers out there, but if you add alcohol or any kind of drugs to your parties this weekend, you're a moron. Give the keys to somebody else, right? Just be careful out there. In the meantime, have a great Labor Day weekend. I don't know who's going to be back on Monday, but I'm going to go to bed right now. I don't know about you. It's Joe Biden once said, I don't know about you, but I'm going to go to bed. Good job, guys. Thank you and God bless America. - Good night, everybody. - Start your day with Kailin' Company. - Week day morning, six till 10, on talk radio, 1210, WPHT, and 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.
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