
Transcript
Simply Frank and Building Bridges (Hour 3)
Nite Lite with Pete Schwaba and Greg Bach · Tue Jan 27, 2026
Broadcasting
live statewide from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.
This is Night Light with Pete Schwabba, your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.
And now, a guy who wears a bathing suit in the shower, Pete Schwabba.
Welcome to Night Light, ladies and gentlemen.
Here we go it is Tuesday night great show and the works here and It is good to be here tonight talking to all of you about the things in life We love hope everybody is having a great day wherever you're joining us from in our chilly frigid state Let's bring some warmth tonight and talk about movies and TV and quarterbacks We've got a big show tonight lots of fun stuff a couple great in studio guests two of our best chums on the show tonight
And a new friend who wrote a book about quarterbacks Conrad, how are you?
I'm doing good.
Yeah.
Yeah, and not I mean, it's cold, but it's not negative cold anymore
You are a very weather-related person and I find that hilarious because you've lived in Wisconsin your whole life and Most of the people you and I are a little bit different because most of the people that live here Really?
I shouldn't say most I would say more than 50% though.
So most embrace the cold
They're like, I love winter.
It's like a macho thing or something.
I don't embrace negative weather.
You don't really embrace winter though, either.
I would say you're not a
winter guy.
You know, but if it's like 30, I'm fine with that.
30
is nothing.
Yeah, but if it's in that wind, I'm just
I'm just wishing for it's crazy.
I'm hoping for 30 degree weather.
Yeah, I just think it's funny because like
Often times when I say how you doing you reference the weather like your mood it does if you're gonna live here You just gotta like I think you got to put it out of your head and you just got to be like yeah, whatever man.
I had a great day
You know what?
Just my favorite time of the year is when I can open my windows finally So I'm just looking forward to that
and yet you wear shorts in the winter Yeah, sometimes
not all the time.
I'd say I'm not when I was in high school I did that though like a lot not anymore really I'll wear short than side obviously, but like when I go to school
I'd wear shorts.
If you'd be like, what are you doing?
Well, I would work at my daughter's school when she was in middle school.
I worked with kids there.
And I think that's a macho thing.
Like for kids just to go, oh, first of all, kids are just going to be kids.
But when they show up in shorts, that's one thing.
But when they show up in shorts in a t-shirt and flip flops, when it's the middle of January, that is they're trying to make a statement.
They're, they're making a statement that they need to turn down the heat in the school.
Yeah, exactly.
We can, we can freeze them out.
Uh, I had a weird drive here tonight.
I had a little game of chicken going with another driver and I do not ever instigate any of this stuff, but I drive an hour to get here and I drive an hour at home at night.
And when I, on the way down today, someone passed me.
I was in the right lane.
Someone passed me and then slowed down right away.
And
I don't understand what that's about.
Obviously, they're trying to rattle you, maybe.
But here's what drove me crazy.
I eventually passed them again.
I was like, all right, this guy's going to go 60.
I'm going to pass him.
So I passed him.
And then he tried to pass me again.
So obviously, I'm in this really weird game with this dude.
But here's what's funny.
Here's what a numbskull this guy is.
He's got his business on the side of his pickup truck.
And I'm like you know easy would be for me to report you or just say this guy's being a horse's ass and Endangering other people because he was it wasn't just he and I it was like there were other people that he would weave in and out of and I'm just like this guy either just lost it Maybe he lost a huge contract and he's taking it out on me and my Honda But it's just the weirdest thing like You're a jerk either way But you've got your business like the phone numbers right there
I could call him with the number on his door and say, this is the guy next to you.
Quit being a D-bag.
Learn how to
drive.
You know, it'd be awesome if you did call that number and then he picked up.
Yeah, that's what I'm saying.
That would be... Yeah, this guy's driving like a jerk and he's just like, I think that's me.
Would say to him I go hey, I need some work done on my and then I would say the name on his truck And you go I can do that for you and I go I would but you're driving like such an idiot.
I'm not gonna hire you Now I pass him again that is show Big news was constitute today Madison is getting an Ikea you hear about this.
Oh,
that is big stuff.
However Those of you who are Ikea enthusiasts, they are not getting the Swedish meatballs which Ikea is known
for
I think people go there just to eat, even if they don't need furniture.
Do they?
They just go there for the meatballs.
Yeah, I know.
People love those Swedish meatballs.
Where is an IKEA that's like in Wisconsin?
Is
there one in
Milwaukee?
I think there might be.
I think there might be too.
I feel like I've seen that.
Maybe it used to be like an old American store or something.
American sold
electronics.
It's the only one in the state and it's an Oak Creek.
Do they have the Swedish meatballs?
If anyone has been to the Ikea in Oak Creek, please let us know.
Let us know.
Because then we can make a road trip out of it.
Correct.
Get some sweet savings on a couch and some Swedish meatballs.
An awkwardly designed couch that only Ikea tools can put together.
Yes.
We'll get some Swedish meatballs and we'll road trip it.
We're a little closer to Milwaukee than we are to Madison right now, but either way.
But congrats, Madison.
Ikea's a good store.
I've gotten a lot of stuff
there.
I don't think I've ever been to an Ikea, so
dude you got to go and just like just eat the meatballs Well, here's the thing.
I don't know.
I can't remember how they they did this I haven't been to one in quite a while But usually they would make you walk through the whole store Where they have everything set up and people are sitting down trying the beds the chairs whatever and you loop It's like a little it's like those bank lines with where they're roped off and you have to walk but it's furniture and home furnishings
And I think, I want to say the restaurant was at the end of all that.
So you got to, you're going to get like 2,000 steps in before you eat your Swedish meatballs.
Well, see this what you knew.
You can take that walk, find a, just scope out for a bed, go get your meatballs.
Yeah.
Then take a nap on that bed.
But then you got to go all the way back to the start.
Yeah, but that, that's where you're napping though.
So it's like, you get there and then you can
have to eat
your meatballs.
All right, that works.
But either way, it's great to have Ikea in Madison.
Congrats, Madisonians.
You just kind of bring your own snacks, apparently.
You can't get the meatballs.
Hey, the phone lines are always open here at Nightlight, folks.
855-752-4842-8555, 75 Civic.
Be part of the show.
We're going to tell you the question of the night in just a moment and would love it if you guys participated and just share your thoughts throughout the show, regardless of what we're talking about.
American Idol, there was a Wisconsin native made her debut on American Idol last night.
Now, I don't watch American Idol, but I did watch a clip and her name is Genevieve Hayward.
She's from Lake Geneva and she's really good.
It was just like a minute long clip, but she has a lot of talent.
So I wish her luck.
That's kind of cool.
What do you want?
You watch reality TV, you know, yeah.
Reality meaning football.
Well, that's I guess that's not really a reality show.
That's more of a
Contest show.
No, I don't watch reality TV at all.
I you know the last one I watch was Milt Manor.
That's a competition show.
It's
too it's too good.
That's a disturbing competition show between father and son to see who can bed a woman.
It is so awful.
It is terrible.
It's the best show I have ever watched.
Is it coming back?
That's what I want to know
I'm hoping they have a season three.
Yeah, we'll talk I Did notice this this is this drives me crazy.
I have said this before I love the internet before ads took it over like You could lose yourself in a YouTube rabbit hole and not play any ads get like six hours of straight music Starting at nine o'clock and you say well just listen to music for a half hour six hours later You've watched concerts and everything, but there were no ads and now and it's the same with streaming
Like when streaming TV shows started, you just watched them.
There were no ads whatsoever.
Now, I almost am ready.
When you reintroduce ads, it makes it so much harder to sit through them because we know that life without those ads.
But now, when an ad comes up and it does that countdown, so I know I have to listen to five more seconds of this ad, I literally, I could pull a muscle trying to click off of that ad because I'm just so annoyed.
Now part of that's me.
I admit that But I cannot stand these ads it's terrible and when you when you're looking for content for your show when you go to all these entertainment websites like IMDB and Variety and you know New York Post or whatever all the local news was constantly the ads drive you crazy I just can't do it anymore, and I don't know.
There's no way around it You'll be great is if I could afford to hire someone just to sit through all the ads
So you'd be like all right.
I'm done with this article well find my next one
Yeah, never gonna have that kind of money.
That's the problem.
You know you Have you considered getting an ad blocker?
I've tried those.
I
don't think they work Okay, they work for me if I use I use one of my Mac book for YouTube Yeah, and sometimes it works sometimes it says you need to unblock this ad so we can play it So it's like a mixture of times that works and sometimes it doesn't
All right, I think without further ado, folks, we need to get to the night like question of the night.
Let's talk about the question.
Okay, question.
Question.
Question.
Pregunta.
Question.
Question.
Okay, I have a question.
Questions.
This question.
Domanda.
Question.
Questions.
Paul Newman's birthday was yesterday.
Our question of the night, what is your favorite Paul Newman movie?
You could argue that Paul Newman is the greatest male actor
most iconic, most handsome, I don't know, he's got, you can make an argument for all of those things with Paul Newman.
I love the guy, I love his work, love his movies, love him in a movie.
He's one of those guys that can take a mediocre movie and make it more interesting just by his presence.
So our question of the night is, what is your favorite Paul Newman movie?
855-752-4842-855-75 Civic.
You can also text us on the app.
Civic Media app is very easy to use, or if you're watching the radio on YouTube, Facebook, or X, drop us a stream comment and I will read it on the radio.
Be part of the show, folks.
Always more fun when you guys participate.
I had a great story about Paul Newman, our grade school in California.
One of the other parents was an actor.
And his career kind of sputtered, but he was mentored by Paul Newman.
And I think he played the Paul Newman character or something.
There's something to the story.
I don't remember all of it, but on Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, and he got to move in with Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward for like a month while they were working on this show together.
And he tells the story that Paul Newman taught him how to make dirty eggs.
And I think that's about the coolest thing I can think of.
Paul Newman.
Teaching how to make anything.
The dirty eggs.
I didn't even know dirty eggs were before that story, but you just cook them in bacon grease.
Did you know that, Khan?
No.
That's dirty eggs.
I made some eggs this morning.
Yeah.
Were they dirty just because you were too lazy to clean the pan after you made the bacon or did you intentionally?
I
don't typically have bacon anymore, but
no.
That actually sounds dynamite.
Yeah, I don't even know if
I trust people that don't eat bacon.
Well, I just don't eat it as much anymore.
Yeah.
I don't want to eat it.
Tastes so good though.
But my god, you wake up in the morning and you smell bacon and coffee, game over.
I guess so if I am like, they have a shot after that.
At a hotel or something, and then I go down for breakfast.
I'm wolf, I'm wolfened down, so like eight pieces.
So you'll eat
hotel bacon?
Yeah, because it's already made there, you know?
You don't have to do much.
That's interesting.
All right, but let us know what your favorite Paul Newman movie is.
Mine is Slap Shot and the Sting.
You got one, Con?
Cars.
Oh, nice poll.
He played Doc Hudson.
Doc Hudson.
He was great in that.
Hey, we have a great show tonight, folks.
Let us know what your favorite Paul Newman movie is.
We are talking to Seth Wickershum after the news, which happens in just about 10 minutes.
Seth is the ESPN senior writer.
and the author of a new best-selling book called, American Kings, a Biography of the Quarterback.
Seth will be here in a few minutes.
Frank Hermans is here tonight.
Heather Heil, two of our Nightlight Besties, dropping by the studio.
It's a really fun night when we come back.
I'm gonna read some of your texts and tell you about a really, I'm gonna tell you about a movie I saw.
Why do you like that kind?
All right, we're coming right back.
It's Nightlight with Pete Schwabba.
I'm the Civic Media Radio
Network.
Welcome
back.
I'm Pete Schwab.
This is Nightlight.
You've got the Civic Media Radio Network.
Hope everybody's having a great Tuesday.
We are live on the air from beautiful downtown Green Bay broadcasting statewide, and I love this Conrad when we get a text from someone and then they text something I don't think they meant for us.
Yes, I did see that.
Teresa in the 608 says, yes, Oak Creek has the cafeteria.
Oh, we're going.
The Milwaukee IKEA has the Swedish meatballs.
She texted just a couple minutes later, ETA 530.
So I don't know if Teresa wants us to meet her at the Ikea or if that was an accident
Well, it wouldn't you know, it's gonna take us a little bit longer to
get a little yeah, you got a show to do trees But thank you anyway.
We would love to meet you at 530 if we could sometimes you do get texted people just accidentally text us, you know There's always someone asking Conrad what he's wearing that's weird
and it's always just a two two-piece top, you
know
All right, great fun, folks.
New sports and weather coming up in just about six minutes.
After that, Seth Wickersham will be here, ESPN senior writer and the author of the book, American Kings.
a biography of the quarterback.
Seth does outstanding work at ESPN.
He did a lot of investigative work on the Colin Kaepernick situation, Deflate Gate, and he wrote a book about that as well.
He's an incredibly accomplished sports journalist, and he will be here to talk about his new book and lots of other fun stuff too.
That's at 535.
Frank Hermans joins us at 635.
It'll be great to have Frank in the studio.
Always fun.
And he's bringing a banjo con.
I mean that's
that's pretty
fantastic break out the jug.
We're gonna have a little hootenanny in here It's gonna be a lot of fun and then our pal Heather Hile Helps us close things down.
She'll be along at 720 in the studio Always fun to have Heather here.
She's gonna tell us what's going on at the Green Bay Children's Museum And there is a lot going on I just looked at their website earlier today great stuff So really fun show our question of the night in honor of Paul Newman's birthday.
What is your favorite Paul Newman movie?
That is tonight's question so
Tony, the trucker sent us a text last night.
And last night's question was, who would you want to be your mentor?
And he picked Bob Uker.
But then right at the end of the show, or at the end of the show, we just missed it, he sent us, he said, Pete, if Bob was too busy, I'd pick Morgan Freeman.
I think, you know, Morgan, he's pretty busy too.
Really, he's like every movie ever.
He's always giving his voice out to movies, not just his acting talents, but-
Correct.
But, be that as it may, he's still gonna be easier to reach now than Bob Uker.
Yeah, that's true, very unfortunately.
But anyway, keep those texts coming folks, let us know what your favorite Paul Newman movie is.
I was in a hurry today, coming into the studio, and I do this so infrequently.
When's the last time you had McDonald's?
Probably about like three months ago, somewhere around
there.
Alright, it's been really probably
Well over a year for me Maybe and I was starving and it was like I had three fast food places on the way here and I just picked the one with the shortest line Yeah, it was McDonald's because I was in a hurry not a huge hurry, but I wanted it I just don't want to sit in a line and I ate two McDonald's hamburgers and I Thought I wanted to die afterwards.
I know what it is like I grew up eating those burgers and I used to love them
Well, I mean if you actually have had
Good burgers, those are at the bottom of the list.
Correct.
You
know, just, I mean, honestly, they're not even that cheap anymore compared
to what they were.
No, they're not at all.
Yeah, but they're not.
It's ridiculous.
They
still
have a dollar menu.
I would say maybe it's worth it, but it's not.
Oh, that's a great point.
Have you ever had a White Castle burger?
No, I've never tried White Castle.
The best thing about White Castle is when you drive up to the drive-through and you say, I'll have, you call them White Castles.
You don't say burgers.
See how three white castles, they'll go three white castles.
They're calling it the name of the store.
And I just find that hilarious.
Yeah, that's, I've never, I haven't, I haven't heard great reviews of white castle, but
it's great when you've been drunk, when you've been drinking.
It's so amazing because you can just inhale them.
They're small and they have mustard and onions.
I don't think they ever came with ketchup on them, but.
They're delicious, Conrad.
It's a delicacy.
I would try it.
I don't even
know where White Castle is in Wisconsin.
Listen, you got Google Maps?
If it's not in Green Bay, I'm not
going.
That's the spirit.
Dave on the stream says, Slap Shot.
I'm with you, Dave.
You and me, buddy.
Yeah, Slap Shot.
Paul Newman.
It's a really funny movie.
And even if you're not a hockey fan, like, I think hockey's fine.
But when I was a kid, I knew nothing about hockey.
But I loved that movie.
And I couldn't believe the guy that was in the sting was in this movie, too.
It was kind of had some dirty moments and some rated R humor.
I don't want to say it seemed beneath Paul Newman, but he owned it.
He was great in it.
Playing an aging hockey player.
So I'm with Dave there.
Slapshot is one of my favorites, as well as the sting.
The sting is one of my all-time favorite movies.
Conrad's mom chiming in, agreeing.
Conrad, your parents, either one or the other, typically agree with me.
Sometimes both on the same night.
Sometimes they divide it up, but Paul says the sting so great choice.
I just I just looked it up the closest white castles in Kenosha
Here's what we do we can stop at Ikea for some Swedish meatballs as an appetizer and then we go to white castles
We'll need one of those beds for a nap after them
But when you go to Ikea in the cafeteria and you want Swedish meatballs, they're not gonna go, you know two orders of Ikea like they do a white castle that's like
Six White Castles.
Two IKEA's, please.
It's just so, I don't know why I think that's so funny.
They just call their burgers the name of the store that's like three Burger Kings.
Three Taco Bells, please.
Yeah, exactly.
It's because they only have, I think, burgers.
Maybe you can get doubles.
Then they would just call them double White Castles.
So who knows?
Teresa confirms it.
Did I read this already?
She says yes, Oakree.
Yeah, I did read that.
Teresa, and then of course, I hope Teresa made her appointment.
She's got less than a minute to get there.
ETA 530, that I don't think was meant for us.
Brett in the 920 says, oh, I loved The Sting, one of my favorite movies ever.
The Sting is by far and away, our leader already.
It is early folks, but let us know your favorite Paul Newman movie.
Chris from Sun Prairie says, cool hand Luke, love that movie.
That's gonna get a lot of votes tonight too, I know.
We got social media responses we'll get to.
Lots going on here.
After New Sports and Weather folks, Seth Wickersham, senior ESPN writer and author of the book, American Kings,
A documentary of the quarterback is going to be here.
He's great.
And don't miss it.
Frank Hermans, Heather Heil, so much going on.
Glad you're here.
This is Pete Schwab at Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio
Network.
What is your favorite Paul Newman movie that is tonight's question of the night folks let us know and be part of the show and
We will have fun and reading your text on the radio.
It'll be great.
So my next guest is an incredibly accomplished writer and does great work at ESPN as a senior writer.
He is a New York Times bestselling author with his most recent book, American Kings, a biography of the quarterback, reaching the top of the charts ridiculously fast.
It is my pleasure to welcome to Nightlight for the first time, Mr. Seth Wickersham.
Hey, Seth.
How's it going, man?
Doing very well.
Thank you.
It's good to talk to you.
Where are you joining us from tonight?
I'm in snowy Connecticut.
Listen, it can't be colder than here.
This has been ridiculous in the Midwest.
So I don't
know.
No, it's just snowy.
It's not too cold, but it's very snowy.
OK.
Well, it's great to have you.
Before we start, I have to ask you, do you have a favorite Paul Newman movie?
Oh my gosh, do I have time to Google Paul Newman movies?
You listen, take as much time as you want, we can come back to that.
Yeah, I might have to come back to that one.
All right,
and I'll give you, you know, since you're a sports guy, a slap shot is always an option too.
Well, I was gonna say that, but I figured that that was like the cliche that I would be like walking into here, so.
Well, there's no right or wrong answer, take your time and ruminate all you like.
Listen, this is American Kings, just is a bestseller.
It's your second huge book that's a bestseller that, if my research shows, but you've also done a lot of great investigative reports and all that kind of stuff.
But for those of us who are not, haven't read American Kings yet, but love football, love the NFL, what can you tell us about it?
Well, yeah, thank you.
You know, look,
I think that like that job, it's such a unique job.
It's such a uniquely American job.
And it comes with all of these very interesting kind of responsibilities and hopes and dreams that are very specific to it.
And so, we expect something different from quarterbacks than we do from point guards or center fielders.
And so I wanted to try to understand why
And I wanted to try to understand what kind of people are drawn to doing it.
What type of person do they have to become to kind of survive the winnowing that you go from being one of 16,000 starting quarterbacks in high school every year in America to 858 in college to 32 in the NFL to being one of the five great ones.
Wow.
And what does it mean to live with that for the rest of your life?
And I wanted to look at guys who, you know, our current quarterbacks like, like Kayla Williams and Arch Manning and Drake May.
And I wanted to look at, you know, quarterbacks throughout history from John L. Way to Steve Young to Joe Montana to Warren Moon and even people who are no longer with us, like Johnny Unitas, Bob Waterfield, people like that.
So that was, that was my goal with it.
So you're obviously a sports fan.
I know you played sports growing up.
You're probably have a wealth of knowledge.
You could probably write a book off the top of your head.
But having said that, you're known for this comprehensive deep dives you do, which are so great.
Given how much you know, how much research still had to go into making this book what it is?
Well, you're humbled by what you don't know.
And I think that like, you know, when you become
you know, professional at something, you know, and I'm sure that you can relate to this, you know, you become good enough at it to know how bad you are.
And so I think that like knowledge is kind of one of those things that like, you know, it's a tool and it helps you, it helps inform the questions that you don't have the answers to yet.
And so, you know, when I was doing this book, even though I had spent, you know,
most of my career at ESPN writing about quarterbacks, I still felt like that there was not only a bigger story that hadn't been told really ever about the quarterbacks in the position, but also questions that I just hadn't answered.
And so that's what led me on it.
And I traveled a ton for the book.
doing the research for it.
It was not just, you know, reading through history books and autobiographies and biographies.
I did a ton of traveling and, um, you know, thank God because, uh, you know, I think the book would have been much worse without that.
I think that like, you know, you're, like I said, you're always humbled by what you don't know.
You may like traveling in terms of obviously maybe setting up interviews, you had some great interviews, but like going to hometowns, that kind of thing, seeing.
All of it.
Yeah.
I
mean, you know, I visited, I saw Joe Namath in two different states.
You know, Bob Waterfield was a watershed quarterback for the Los Angeles Rams in the 40s.
He was married to Jane Russell.
They were really one of the country's first true power couples and kind of set up the idea that the quarterback can get the, you know, the prettiest girl, the hottest girl,
right?
You
know, and, you know,
He's no longer living, but you know, I went to Van Nys High School where he went and I visited, you know, his youngest son in Montana where he lives now.
I mean, all that stuff, you know, was incredibly important.
And, you know, Colin Hurley, who's a young quarterback that I followed around to try to give readers a glimpse of what it's like to be a high school quarterback now.
I mean, I visited him, I think in six, seven states, if I remember right.
So it was it was quite a bit and, you know, but it was all worth it.
So what did you find out about?
the psyche of the quarterback or what was there a common thread other than like leadership skills, crazy athleticism?
Was there a common thread?
Well, that's the interesting thing, right?
Because like I sat with Steve Young and I asked him, you know, look, he's a first ballot hall of fame.
I asked him, you know, what does, you know, what are all the hats that a starting quarterback for a pro team has to wear?
And he starts rattling them off and it's everything from
you know, spokesperson for a multi-billion-dollar organization, field general, matinee, idol, community leader, you know, breathtaking jerk.
You know, all of these things, and then, oh, by the way, you also have to be able to throw the ball through windows that people can't see much less exploit.
And I think that, like, one of the most interesting things that I've found is that, you know, quarterback has gotten so big in America, and there's so much...
pressure and scrutiny and hype around them at a young age, that at this point I think that people who become quarterbacks are not only gifted throwers and intense competitors, but I think that they have like a hole in their personality.
that's very similar to like a politician or maybe a pop star that needs constant love and admiration and acceptance and really kind of has to live in a bubble, I think.
And I think that that to me is one of the most kind of fascinating things.
And again, you know, you don't you don't see that with pitchers or, you know, centers and basketball, you know, there's complications with those things also.
But there's, you know, we've
We've placed quarterback on a certain pedestal as a culture.
And I think that that's what makes it just so unique.
And that's what makes the people who do it different than other athletes.
You know, it's interesting because I think Brady is considered the goat.
I would say I would argue Joe Montana too, because he was like Jordan.
He was undefeated when he got to the big game.
You could certainly make an argument for him.
But you mentioned Steve Young.
This guy, if he didn't go to the USFL or ride the pine behind Montana.
His skill set, he was a joy to watch, whether it was his arm or his legs.
I think at one point he was the fastest runner on the 49ers.
Where would he have been in your opinion if he hadn't, if he had come out, you know, and gone right to the NFL and
started?
I don't know.
Yeah, I think that like he was one of those guys and I think Joe Montana was like this also that benefited from the place that he ended up being at, even though it was difficult.
I think that, you know, we talk about system quarterbacks and it's kind of said is a little bit of shade.
There's a little bit of a backhanded compliment, right?
It basically credits the coaches, X's and O's and schemes.
and says that the quarterback is productive because of that.
But really, every quarterback in NFL history is a system quarterback.
And
you
need to have a good system.
Look at John Elway's statistics under Dan Reeves and look at them under Mike Shanahan.
It's the system.
It's not to say that John Elway wasn't a good quarterback.
I'm just saying that they're all system quarterbacks in some way.
And I think that when you look at Young, what fascinated me about him was not only
You know, he was a great athlete who had to learn how to be a great quarterback.
And he's proof that it can be learned.
You know, there's a lot of that.
Is it nature or nurture?
And he's proof that you can go from being kind of raw to being, you know, one of the most accurate throwers in NFL history.
And he can articulate it in a way that's really fascinating.
And that's what drew me to him.
He's just a great quarterback philosopher.
That's a great answer.
Um, how do those guys
I don't understand how they can play that position unless they're like six, five.
The linemen are huge.
The linemen are wide and tall.
How does Caleb, well, I'm a bear fan.
How does Caleb Williams at six, one, even see where he's throwing the ball?
Yeah, you know, a lot of quarterbacks, some of them are super tall.
Like I think one of the reasons why, you know, I wrote about it a lot in my book on the New England Patriots, but one of the reasons why
Fame hit Tom Brady so hard at a young age was because he's so tall and like people don't quite realize that about him.
But like, you know, he is really um He's listed as six four and I'd say that like when you're standing next to him You think he's like six six and so there was really nowhere for him to hide a lot of quarterbacks aren't as tall as you as you think like even young and Montana and Caleb Williams and even Brett farf to an extent, you know, they're they're they're six one six two six foot
And so, you know, how do they do it?
And I think that like that's part of what makes quarterbacking, you know, there's different stages, right?
Where you can be, you know, first as a rookie, you're just trying to survive.
I
think that's the most important.
There's really not a whole lot you can draw from it other than mental and physical toughness.
And then, you know, can you learn and build on what you, the base of knowledge that you have and become proficient.
And then it's, can you become great?
And then it's, can you become an artist?
And I think that when you become a true artist, guys like Drew Brees, Aaron Rodgers, who aren't the most, you know, physically gifted athletes, can be mesmerizing and quarterbacks and first ballot hall of famers because they know how to manipulate motion and activity, you know, using their eyes and using their shoulders.
And I think that like, that's what helps those guys.
do it.
And so I think that like, you know, Caleb Williams has obviously shown, you know, an incredible ability to make the hardest throws at the most difficult moments.
You know, consistency is a little difficult for him, but he's shown that during the highest pressure moments, he has something special.
And I think that like, as he gets more experience, you'll see, you know, maybe some of the Superman throws fade a little bit at the artistry of just raw quarterbacking.
increase
that would make bear fans Cardiovascular systems much healthier if he could do that
Well, it's interesting.
It's interesting because you know, I interviewed Kevin O'Connell who's the coach of the
Vikings.
Oh, yeah
If he was a quarterback at college and you know, he got drafted in the NFL by the Patriots and he figured he would sit behind Tom Brady and then go take his skills elsewhere and be a star and he really never had an NFL career He just kept getting cut from teams and so
You know, when he became a coach, coaches often, you know, they teach through auto, you know, autobiographical experiences.
And, you know, I asked him like what he had learned about himself and about quarterbacking.
He said, you know, when I was trying out for teams and I was just hoping to make the roster, I would, I would focus on making these amazing John L. Way, Caleb Williams like throws.
that have the wow factor to them when really great quarterbacking is about embracing the mundane and doing it at the highest level possible.
And he went and looked at all of Joe Montana's game winning drives and a lot of Brady's and John Elway's even.
And what stood out was not that they make these crazy throws all the time, although they would at moments.
It was that they would check down to the running back and they would be moving the chains.
It doesn't sound as sexy as some of these brilliant moments that we've come to want from quarterbacks.
But really, great quarterbacking is about doing the mundane at the highest level possible.
My guest is Seth Wickershimm.
He is the author of American Kings, a biography of the quarterback and an ESPN senior writer.
We'll have a couple more minutes with Seth.
We're talking football, quarterbacks, and I've got some great stuff.
I'm going to ask him about Colin Kaepernick when we come back.
This is Pete Schwabba and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Hey, this is Lauren Holly, and you're listening to Night Light with Pete Schwabba.
Welcome back.
My guest is Seth Wickershum.
He does great work at ESPN.
He's a senior writer there, and he is the author of books like American Kings, A Biography of the Quarterback.
And it's better to be feared than New England Patriots' dynasty in the pursuit of greatness.
Seth.
Writing a book like that, like your previous book, it's better to be feared.
You did great investigative work with Colin Kaepernick.
Are you ever worried about retribution from, or having, being cut off a little bit, or is having ESPN help with that?
Are people scared to see
who
sometimes?
Well, I think that like, you know, so this is my 25th year doing this.
And so I think that like you kind of learned, you know,
Bob Woodward the great investigator border has this line where you know, you have to learn to live with awkwardness and proceed And so I think that like as you as you get into journalism you kind of know that these are like these aren't very You know natural
relationships that you have with people, right?
I mean, you know, as a journalist, you're constantly budding your nose into things that aren't your business and trying to learn as much about them to the point where you feel like, you know, you have a command of it.
And that's, you know, that's can be difficult and it can be contentious at times.
And so I think that like, you know, your goal is to always be accurate and fair and conflict happens.
And, you know, I've had NFL, I've had at least one NFL owner.
you know, take action against ESPN on behalf of like some of the work that I've done.
But, um, you know, ESPN stood behind me the entire time.
And, um, you know, honestly, I think that that's just kind of, you know, it's, it's just kind of how things go.
It's a very, being an investigative reporter is a very odd job.
Um, I, it's interesting.
Like I mentioned Colin Kaepernick, to me,
from a
casual fan sample, I was a casual fan.
I was a pretty good.
back up intramural quarterback at flight football when I was at DePaul University.
Other than that, no, but like, like, we all have a little uncle Rico in this.
Yes.
Oh, we should have played that tag con.
We've had him on the show.
He's great.
But, you know, when it comes to Colin Kaepernick, the NFL seemed to cave when it came to bad bunny and sticking by their Super Bowl halftime selection this year.
They stood by it.
Who calls those shots?
Is it the owners that they take a vote?
Is it Roger Goodell?
Where do they get their backbone from, so to speak?
Yeah, I mean, all of those decisions are different.
I would say that when it comes to Super Bowl halftime entertainment, it's pretty much done.
It's kind of outsourced by this outfit named Rock Nation, which is kind of JZ's company and agency.
And they, they pick who the halftime entertainment will be.
And so now Roger Goodell could say, you know, we're not doing that.
You know, he obviously has the authority to be able to do that, but he doesn't.
He defers to them.
And then, you know, when it comes to personnel decisions like Colin Kaepernick, I mean, I think that like, you know, the evidence is pretty strong to suggest that he was blackballed because of who he had become.
And, you know, not necessarily because he he refused to stand for the national anthem because there was other players who refused to stand.
Right.
Also, I think that, like, you know, it just became like a momentum that even he couldn't, you know, quite combat.
And, you know, he had that that I think I think Adele wanted him back in the league.
And, you know, he kind of the league helps set up like a
like a tryout, you know, like a scouting session for him.
I believe it was outside of Atlanta a couple years ago to try to like, you know, show teams what he still had left.
But at the end of the day, you know, teams, I think when they looked at the entire package of what you're getting with Kaepernick, you know, elected to not, you know, take on that, you know,
force and you know, and it's too bad because Colin Kaepernick was He was a terrific quarterback.
He was one throw away from being a Super Bowl champion and You know, he's someone who joined, you know a long list of athletes who use their platform You know to stand up for causes that were bigger than sports
Absolutely
What is your next book, Seth?
Do you have something picked out?
Do you see a potential book about the quarterback class?
You mentioned Caleb Williams.
You got Bonix,
Caleb
Williams, Drake May, you know, Jayden Daniels.
Yeah, fortunately, I got a little lucky in that when I was reporting the book, I reported on a lot of those 2024 quarterbacks.
So I had, you know, the secret analytics study that led Sean Payton to want to draft Bonix.
And I spent time with Drake May.
I wrote a lot about Caleb Williams and, you know, his
his concerns about going to a place like the Bears, which, you know, it had a horrible history of drafting and developing and coaching quarterbacks.
And so I kind of lucked out with those guys.
I mean, you know, in terms of books for me, what's next is there's going to be a collection of my ESPN work, kind of like a journalist version of their greatest hits that comes out in September.
And then, you know, the next book of pure
you know, original work, I'm not quite sure yet.
You know, I think that like to write a book, it's it's an interesting, it's an interesting and torturous process.
But you really, as an author, you have to believe that, you know, a book has to be out there, and that you're the only one who can do it.
Like you have to believe that to be able to do a book because they're so hard that like, you know, you really have to have that kind of emotional tailwind behind you.
And so, you know, I don't take that lightly.
And I, and I
When I do do books, I feel like it's something that I just simply have to do.
We are coming right back for Act 2.
This is Night Light with Pete Schwabba on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.
This is Night Light with Pete Chwaba.
Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.
And now a guy who still likes to build a fort.
Pete Chwaba.
Welcome back.
This is Nightlight with Pete Schwabba.
We have a few more minutes with our current guest, Mr. Seth Wickershum, a senior writer at ESPN and author of American Kings, a biography of the quarterback.
I mentioned earlier, I'm a bear fan living in Packer country here.
And
I've taken a lot of abuse over the course of my life.
But what do you say about Packer fans?
They are great fans.
This is such a great story, having a professional sports team in a town of 100,000 people.
Have you been here?
I
have.
Many times.
Yeah.
And, you know, I think that, like, you know what?
I was at the Broncos Packers game this year when really, you know, it was kind of the beginning of their season kind of slipping away because, you know, Parsons got hurt in the third quarter of that game.
And, you know, they had a lead and Denver was able to come back and win it.
And, you know, I think that, like, this was a weird season as evidenced by the two teams in the Super Bowl.
But, like, you know, the.
Players that we were used to seeing contending at the end and the teams that we were used to seeing contending at the end really weren't and so It was a chance for in the AFC, you know teams like Denver and you know Buffalo to an extent and obviously the Patriots to Make a Super Bowl run When you don't have my homes and the Marjaxon and all these great, you know Joe Burrell all these great quarterbacks that you have to get through and in the NFC, you know the Packers
clearly thought this was their window.
You know what I mean?
And this was their time.
And, you know, I think, I think the NFL generally, you know, has a better story to tell when the Packers are, you know, among the very best teams.
And so I feel for Packers fans that
You know that this really this season was really set up to be terrific and it just kind of slipped away due to a couple things that were unfortunate a couple decisions and some bad luck and You know in the other sense, I don't feel bad for Packers fans for having you know a 25 year run 30 year run of just you know elite phenomenal quarterback play
Yeah, you're you're speaking to the choir there So all right, I want to ask you Seth this has been bothering me.
I'm not a marketing genius, but I
have a
brother-in-law and my sister lives in Cleveland I've never wanted to take over a franchise and just say rebrand page one rewrite
What is going on?
Those uniforms are horrible.
The name of the team is awful.
I mean, I know they're named after a legend, but why would you want to go there if you're a player?
It drives me crazy.
They just need a complete reboot.
Go where?
Cleveland to the Browns.
Oh, sorry.
Sorry.
You broke up for a second.
Oh, that's OK.
Well, yes.
And so, you know, and I've had some history with the Browns in writing about their dysfunction from ownership down.
So.
I have particular insight into that, but I think that there are teams that are just consistent underachievers.
And until recently, I would put the bears in that category.
And I think that if I were a marketing executive at the NFL, at 345 Park Avenue in New York City, I would be severely worried that these markets,
that didn't matter to football fans like New York, two bad teams, two really irrelevant teams, like Chicago until this past year, major market that just has no real oomph and buzz around it.
And Cleveland is one of, look, they're an iconic team and iconic franchise.
And they can't, for a lot of reasons,
kind of get out of their own way.
And, you know, we thought that everything that had happened with the Browns under the Hazel Mara, you know, was like the worst at almost every decision.
And then, you know, to give to Sean Watson the contract that they gave him and to trade the capital that they traded away for him and to get the output that they've gotten from him is really just astounding.
I mean, you know, they own the worst trade in NFL history.
Oh, that's
a great answer.
Seth Wickersham, it has been great getting to know you really appreciate your time.
Have you given any thought to your Paul Newman movie?
God, you know, that was like the one question I wasn't quite ready for let's do this favorite sports movie
I mean, you know, we made, we made the Uncle Rico reference, you know, Napoleon Dynamite's not exactly a sports movie, but it is very heavy sports themes.
I mean, you know, Moneyball is a great sports movie.
Man, we'll try to go through.
Yeah, you know, I think Moneyball appeals to be a little bit more, but.
I know that there's a better answer that I should be giving that I haven't quite thought of.
No, that's great.
And don't rule out the fish that save Pittsburgh either.
Seth
Wickershaw,
keep up the incredible work you do at ESPN.
It's been great having you on the show, and we look forward to your next book.
Thanks, man.
Yeah, I would say my favorite sports movie is definitely not draft day, which I happen to, you know, be in for, you know, a split second.
And that's what your cousin, Nick Schwartz, had helped you prepare you for and sadly.
He helped me prepare for my big half second on screen.
He did.
Oh, man.
Well, listen, that's just the start.
I said, you know, I started in intramural sports.
That's like your intramurals.
You'll keep going
and take some acting
classes
and you'll be right there, buddy.
Exactly.
Life is long.
All right.
Nick Schwartz, or Nick Schwartz.
Seth Wickersham.
Thank you so much, buddy.
Great talking.
Thanks, man.
I'll talk to you.
You got it.
All right.
That's Seth Wickersham.
Check out his book, American Kings, a biography of the NFL quarterback.
You can also check out his other outstanding book, also a New York Times bestseller.
It's better to be feared than New England Patriots dynasty in the pursuit of greatness.
Pete, we're
back.
All right.
That was
fun.
That was great, man.
That was so much fun, you know, just getting to learn about some of these these quarterbacks.
You never you never know really what goes into it.
I like learning about the quarterbacks, but I also like talking to Seth and reading about him and how
diligent he is and meticulous he is when it comes to researching a story he's just investigating or for a book he's writing.
It's fascinating stuff.
And yeah, that was great.
Thank you to Tucker Lagerosky, who I think set that up.
That
was great.
This is Nightlight, folks.
If you missed the first hour of the show, you can always download or listen to the podcast at civicmedia.us.
where the rest of our interview is with Seth Wickersham, and we talked about, well, we introduced our question of the night, which is, what is your favorite Paul Newman movie?
It is Paul Newman's birthday, I think it was yesterday, actually, and we've got a long list of texts we need to get to.
Paul Newman is a beloved actor in a fine...
Uh, just a good person.
Let's not forget about Paul Newman, like, in addition to his on-screen talents, he created an entire line of salad dressing and all kinds of food items where the proceeds go to charity, and that is pretty cool.
Most of us would love to be in a position where we could do something like that, but we're not.
We have to go give blood or work in a soup kitchen.
This guy created an entire line.
Have you ever tasted any of Paul Newman's salad dressing?
His range.
Yeah, Newman's Ranch.
It's not bad.
It's good stuff.
Yeah.
Kind of risky there going with a ranch though.
It's like the most... Do you dip pizza in a ranch?
Yeah, I do.
Do
you tell me you did that?
I do.
Let's gutsy.
So let us know your favorite Paul Newman movie will read your text on the radio Coming up in just a few minutes after news sports and weather in about 15 minutes Frank Hermans will be here ladies and gentlemen the legendary Green Bay institution Frank Hermans We always love when Frank comes into the studio and this time he is bringing a banjo So we'll have a few laughs with Frank hear about his new show
And he's going to play us a country tune on the banjo, which I think is going to be an absolute blast.
Heather Heil will join me in hour number three or act three, as we like to call it here at Nightlight.
She will be here.
And Heather is the director of business development at the Green Bay Children's Museum.
Does an outstanding job there.
And we'll talk to Heather in studio at 720.
She is always an absolute blast.
I'm going to talk a little bit about a movie I saw.
I watched it this weekend.
I actually
I actually watched this film instead of watching the Rams Seahawks game I hadn't seen my wife like all weekend and she likes football enough, but I thought you know what let's Let's watch something and I realized watching a movie together is not like totally quality time because we're both sitting there in silence staring at the TV But it is still a shared experience and I know Conrad saw this film to the rip.
I did yes You liked it a lot.
You liked it more than I did.
I liked it
I liked it and I did you know when I did the beats Whatever day that was last week.
I I did say I recommended it, you know, and I thought it was a fun like Not fun.
It wasn't really funny fun cop kind of film between you know, obviously these two guys have been a flag and Matt Damon They've been in so many movies to get a
history
and I thought it was interesting because I didn't know what to expect when I heard you know when I heard about it and I saw the trailer and I thought it was like
Good Netflix movie
That there is a caveat when you say a good Netflix movie.
It's true Because I know what you mean.
They all I will say this the rip Netflix movies all have kind of a similar aesthetic The rip did not have that the rip had a pretty good like movie theater Look, maybe initially or originally it was going to go to theaters.
I don't know but It reviewed well got an 80% and rotten tomatoes
But it's interesting, I'm always fascinated by films with A-list movie stars.
Like, they're a popular duo, and they're popular individually.
Ben Affleck, Matt Damon.
64% of audiences liked it.
16% less than critics.
I found that interesting.
Like, what was it about that movie that you think audiences didn't find appealing?
I think we see these two guys in, you know, unusual roles where it's more comedy-based.
And I feel like it's a different kind of...
Movie for them, but I don't know Critics maybe cuz Netflix is gonna buy everything so they want to give them good reviews
maybe
Yeah,
yeah,
you know the reason I did like this film though is cuz There's not a lot of movies that keep me guessing the whole film
right
and it did keep me guessing a lot
Yeah, same here.
I have no problem with that I did find it a little convoluted at times, but I did I did like it Here's what drove me crazy.
I think Matt Damon's a really good actor.
Okay, I find of the two
I find him to be a more talented, natural, on-screen presence.
Great charisma that's natural.
He doesn't have to be doing a lot to get us to follow what he's doing.
Ben Affleck, I find him always to be acting.
And I notice it and it bothers me and with him and that cigarette in this movie.
Oh my god I wanted to slap it Okay, we know you smoke.
We know you're trying to look cool smoking You're this Boston suburban kid who wants to be a street kid.
I get it.
You're smoking and looking gritty.
I Just don't buy him
Yeah, I get that You know, there's some other films where they're together and I don't buy him as that person either like
right
that one What is that one movie they did for Apple TV again?
There was something about the instigators.
Yeah, I didn't buy him either in that movie
I just don't buy like here's the thing though.
I give him a tip of my hat for what it's worth I'm a guy hosting a radio show.
I'm not one of his peers However, he's a great director.
He's a really good director.
I like the town a lot Argo is excellent air was fantastic air was great Yeah, and he was okay in that you you know he wasn't as I don't know
I don't I'd say him
Wasn't the main themes, you know, he wasn't the main person.
He was playing film night, but
yeah Anyway, check out the rip.
I agree with Conrad.
It's a good Netflix movie and I just realized we both made it a pick in the beats You told me you did and I totally forgot about that.
All right when we come back We are gonna read your texts and I'm gonna tell you a story about a weather person that Got very lewd texts and it's her own fault.
This is Beach Wabba and Nightlight Frank Herman's coming up in 10 minutes on the Civic Media radio network
Music playing
Welcome back It does not feel like a Tuesday.
I will say that it feels like This feels like a Thursday Which is kind of a false sense of security because we got a long way to go till Thursday But we will do it in the way we do it here at nightlight
by talking about the things we love to talk about.
It was great to talk some sports earlier in the show with Seth Wickersham, a senior ESPN writer and author of American Kings.
And Frank Hermans will be along momentarily.
Love his outfit.
He's got the banjo.
We are going to have it.
I mean, it's just a blast anytime Frank comes by.
But I got a feeling this one's going to be even more special.
And Heather Heil in act three will be here too.
So.
Some fun in-studio guests.
Our question of the night is, what is your favorite Paul Newman movie?
Lots to choose from.
And we will read your text in just a moment.
Conn, I saw this.
What is it with?
I mean, do you know a guy like that in your group?
Anytime something comes up, if he can tie it to sex, he will.
Or make it a sexual innuendo somehow.
Yep,
definitely.
I know people like that too.
And sometimes I only...
Laugh at them if they think they're really funny because that to me is the comedy if someone actually thinks they're clever and says stuff like this like come on next but it's the person who really owns it and commits and This is great because there's a weather person in Oklahoma City News 9 Lacey Swope.
I saw this on my new favorite site is whiskey riff She was too vague with a request for viewers.
She wanted them to send in snow measurements
But she posted on Facebook and asked people to send us your measurements and locations so people immediately flooded her page with measurements of, as you can imagine, guys, mostly, although some women shined into, about their anatomy.
So most of the replies from men range from three to seven inches.
And one guy joked, it was too cold to get an accurate measurement.
I'm a good three inches in this weather.
Women even got in on a tube with posts like 36, 24, 36.
And even the serious replies seemed funny.
One woman said two inches, she got two inches.
It was a far cry from the four to eight she was promised.
And then this weather person, Lacey Swope, went with it.
She leaned in and shared a photo of herself holding a Vienna sausage and she joked.
They're the go-to snack that fuels her when winter weather hits.
Think she knew what she was doing?
Yeah.
I think so, too.
Very under... We should try to get Lacey on the show.
Bring some
of the measurements with her?
Yeah, would that be like, hi, Lacey.
We saw your recent post.
We saw your post and we know you're all into measurements, so... We didn't... We haven't gotten much snow this winter, but I will say this.
For whatever reason, every...
Time I either get up in the morning or go leave the studio to drive.
There is snow coming down and it's just enough to make the road crappy That's why I hate this winter.
So yeah, it's really brutal Our question the night as I mentioned is what is your favorite Paul Newman movie in honor of his birthday yesterday Mike?
All right.
I need help again with this town name muscata Every time like Mike will text like once every three months and I have to
learn how to say this town again.
And I know people are going to chime in and tell me, and that's fine.
Mike from Moscata says, The Hustler.
Great film.
Minnesota Fats, Jackie Gleason.
The Color of Money was the sequel with Tom Cruise that came out like 20 years after.
414 says, Cool Hand Luke.
Another vote for Cool Hand Luke.
Paul Newman says, I bet I can eat 50 eggs.
Great movie.
Excellent choice.
That's Ellen.
I'm sorry, that is not Ellen.
That was Ellen from Milwaukee.
And Ellen says, HUD, a movie I have not seen, a Paul Newman film I have not seen.
Thank you, Ellen, for the text.
Steve, that's Conrad's dad, checking in from Florida, says my favorite Paul Newman movies.
Movie is Cool Hand Lo- You think your dad was using voice text there?
He said my favorite Paul Newman movies is Cool Man Luck.
That sounds like a Saturday Night Live parody of the movie.
But Steve means Coolhand Luke, of course.
And he says where he set the record for eating 50 eggs.
Also the sting with Robert Redford.
That's mine, Steve.
But Coolhand Luke is right there in my top three or five, for sure.
John in Madison in the 608 says Coolhand Luke.
And Pamela from Lodi says, cat on a hot tin roof.
Nice, Pamela.
It's the first, second vote actually for Kat and Hot Tin Roof.
Bill from Walkinshaw says, best Paul Newman movie, HUD.
I have to see HUD.
I'm embarrassed I haven't seen HUD.
Brian from Green Bay says, I'm just glad a long, this isn't referenced to when Seth Wickershaw was here.
I'm just glad a long suffering team like the Patriots made it back to the Super Bowl.
Yeah, how about that?
It only took them about, you know.
How annoying
is that?
Five years.
Not even, right?
It's four, maybe four years.
I hope this is like a false sense of security for them.
I hope they
know Mike, Mike, Gabriel, V, V, V, V, V,
V, V, V, V, V, V,
V, V, V, V, V, V, V,
V, V, V, V,
V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V,
V, V, V,
V, V, V, V,
V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V, V
Awesome.
Bridget from the 818 says, cool hand Luke.
My first Paul Newman movie and my favorite, such a good actor, can't take your eyes off him.
Sounds like Bridget has a little crush on Paul Newman and she's not alone.
Tyler in the 608 says, shaking the bush boss, shaking the bush.
I can eat 50 hard boiled eggs.
What we have here is a failure to communicate.
There you go.
Some Paul Newman lines from Tyler.
Thank you Tyler Brian from Green Bay says the sting had a Marinette Middle School teacher in it.
He got hit with a guitar mr. Maurer Yes, oh my god, that's great.
I Forgot Brian.
That's so interesting.
My parents are friends with the Mowers and Mitch Maurer who you're referring to was a teacher at the Marinette Middle School or high school He was an extra in that film because he went to a theater school.
I believe for college.
That's a great pull
Awesome stuff.
Thank you, Brian.
Jim from Appleton says definitely the hustler.
All right, we are almost caught up on tax.
When we come back after the news, Frank Hermans will be here, folks, and he has a banjo, and it's going to be spectacular.
This is Pete Schwab and Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio
Network.
Welcome
back!
You got a great lead-in song for a great guest.
One of our absolute favorites joins me here in the studio.
I've turned the lights on because he doesn't trust me.
You
got heaters going on in here, dude.
There's heaters everywhere.
We
accidentally had two heaters going,
Frank.
They're identical.
They're right
here.
Conrad's like, I can hear them.
Turn down, man.
Do you
want
more heat?
No, I'm hot, dude.
I'm
hot-blooded.
I'm hot-blooded!
If you're watching
on the stream, you
have to check out Frank's outfit.
It
is just fantastic.
Glenn Campbell probably...
Kind
of redstone cowboy kind of looking there.
I had this made for me years ago.
I did a Hank Williams impersonation.
And this was 20 years ago.
And this is what I wore.
So I brought it out for this next show.
And you have a whole, like you have an entire
factory or...
warehouse
I do costumes I have so many costumes I have institution you know it's funny people on Halloween they always want to buy our costumes they come over I never see him again so really yeah yeah I got but hey got something from the 70s yeah I got like 20 leisure suits bring it back yeah that's so you lend it to them sure I let them do it but then I forget about it man
I think we got
something in the back.
Frank Hermans is here, folks, of Let Me Be Frank Productions.
He
is an absolute institution here in the state of Wisconsin.
And more specifically, in Green Bay at the Meyer Theater, where he does outstanding shows, I have to tell you, I was so sorry.
I talked about this all year on the air about how I kicked off the holiday season in 2024 with your show
at
the Meyer, took the kids and my wife.
Absolute blast and it just set our Christmas season in motion So our plan was to do that again my daughter got the flu and had to stay at Steven's point for like two extra days Wow in her dorm room alone.
Everybody had left.
Oh what a bummer So I went and got her and she was starting to feel better and I almost I would have felt like such a bad dad Frank because my wife said we just can't everybody was sick Yeah, so my daughter I go if you're feeling better
You and I can just go way back there.
She's like, I'll do that, Dad, if you want.
But my daughter is musical theater and loved your show that I could tell by her enthusiasm.
She just wasn't.
No, not feeling as hateful.
Stay away.
if you're sick yeah you know but we all got it we got you know we do 70 dates a year at the Meyer theater you can catch one of them
I know but Christmas
that
Christmas show is so great it was in another you said it was great
well it was all about whoville you know I played the male the male man I had a prosthetic the whole show I look like a who prosthetic what yeah prosthetic what yeah yeah yeah I had a makeup guy make a nose for me so I look like oh okay and it was great it was the who's versus the what's it was fantastic hilarious and then a great mess
at the end, you know?
Tom Grinch, you know, he spreads his scent everywhere and then he cleans up after.
Tommy G. I love that Grinch.
Now it hurts even more that we missed
it.
That was such a fun...
We'll be back next year.
We'll definitely
come next year.
You can't get sick every year.
I don't know.
It's good to see you.
How
are
you?
What is new?
What
is going on?
Well, we're right in the midst of a rehearsal for a brand new show called Manoa.
It's a spoof on the rodeo and manual, which started back in 1959.
70 years Midwest rodeo association.
Biggest thing happened in manual, which is, you know, 394 people or whatever.
It's a big fundraiser for their Lions club.
So I thought I'd write a spoof on it about the manual rodeo queen.
That's kind of.
Kind of what we do, and I play a character called Snotta Quackman, and I am the main sponsor, the man of a rodeo, and I sell concoctions.
If you have an ailment of congenital, I can kill you.
Anything, I'm a snake oil salesman, and I'll bring some THC-Laysider to the rodeo.
Yeah, everybody has a good time, let's just say.
Where is this show?
It's at the Meyer Theater.
It opens, of course, February 5th.
Thursday night runs for three weeks.
We're also going to be the Capitol Civic Center.
There's all the shows.
You've got to watch on the
stream,
folks.
Tune in to the stream.
You can see what Frank is wearing.
You
can see this poster.
It's the way to go.
So Manowar Rodeo.
Yeah, it's all cut.
This is we haven't done a country and Western show in a long time.
So there's a lot of new stuff in the show.
I mean, we do everything from Garth Brooks to Shania Twain, Keith Urban.
But there's some newer stuff in the show, too, that you'll love.
And my girls, man, they can sign.
Everybody can sing and you know, it's a funny I got the the villain in the show kind of villain is He's a cowboys bull riders named Slim Shady But he always quotes Slim Shady lines the moment you never want to own it So let me
just ask you
this
Frank your Christmas show
Goes after Christmas like
a week or something
like that.
This is three weeks later
How'd you do this?
I had the show written the second week of December.
I had it written already.
We had the music like I'm already working on our next show, which is called Shopko.
Say hello to a goodbye.
I just picked all the music.
It's all 70s.
I got the I got the storyline in my head.
I just got to sit down and write, you know, the script, which I love writing conversation.
Comedy conversation is what I love to write.
And each character is in my brain already.
I know where I'm going to go.
I don't know how it's going to end yet.
Oh, I do know how it's going to end because Shopko closes right now.
I'm going to give it out right now.
So depressed.
Okay, so the manager of Shopco wants to save the store.
So the big banner of Shopco is behind and he says, welcome to our new store.
And then the banner comes down, Dollar General.
Because so many of those Shopco's like little, no, in Chilton and New Holstein, they became Dollar Generals.
Is that true?
Yeah.
Go look at them
up.
Wait a minute.
So Shopco, like do you have to...
get permission from them.
They're out of
business, dude.
I don't know
if they're like still in LLC or not,
but there's no Shopco's left.
Shopco Optical is still a company.
Shopco Baby.
Yeah, you know, and I know one of the lawyers from Shopco.
I didn't ask her yet, but you know, I've only gotten three cease and assists in my life.
And one was from He-Ha, one was from Paul McCartney, and one was from Greece, the musical Greece.
How did they find you?
You put it on the web.
They got lawyer searching for that
crap.
Copy right infringement.
Last night I talked about this thing that this is a revelation.
Paul McCartney admitted that he and John Lennon used to pleasure themselves together with
a
group of other dudes.
Really?
Yeah, and he said it was like
in the
circle jerk.
Conrad, can we say
that?
Can I say that?
I think we can.
I don't know.
That's just, it's two words.
It's the bunch of jerks that never came up before.
It's just two words.
Yeah.
So they said they would do that and he said, you know, we're hanging around like drinking and just one guy just started and I'm like, that's a brave guy.
The
first
one in, come
on.
Sorry
guys, I'm Addy
here.
I've been to my share but I'm never gonna
be the first guy that's
on.
So I thought that
was
funny.
So
Paul McCartney found you.
Yeah.
Well, his management company, because I was doing a show and they wanted to see the script so I sent it to him and they wanted me to take one line out because it was called beer and wings.
Get it wings, I'll do the music for wings.
They didn't want me to say that he ate chicken wings because he's a vegetarian.
That's all I had to take out of the script.
Oh, that's nothing.
That was nothing.
I said, no problem.
I still said it.
I am not sacrificing my artistic
integrity.
That's pretty cool.
So, all right.
So, Shopco, say hello to a goodbye, B-U-Y-B-Y.
That's awesome.
And you don't have to get, like, even Shopco Optical, they're not going to give you a hard time about that.
We'll find out.
Haven't heard anything yet.
Looking down the barrel of your fourth season, this is like, well, they don't use the same logo.
Okay, so.
That's an old one.
Oh, that's an old that's an old and that's really 70s.
Okay.
Yeah
and 70s music
love
that But let's talk more about Manowar rodeo.
So
you're at the Meyer you got a couple week run there What do you do if they all sell out?
Can you add a week or is not?
No, because
the Meyer book stuff around us and so we're the main tenant We use 70 dates a year there, but they book stuff around us
But there's ample room.
I mean, the theater sits a thousand people, and we got 12 shows.
I mean, there's always room.
We do have some buses coming in.
In fact, Manawa, the Chamber of Commerce, Manawa, sent in two bus loads.
Oh, sweet.
Sweet!
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So, but there's lots of room.
And tickets are available at TicketsStarOnline.com, or myyourtheater.org, or my cell phone number, 9203714070.
That's so great.
Give me a
call.
My guest is Frank Hermanns folks.
He's
here in the studio.
We're in this awesome get up.
He's got a banjo with him We're gonna have some fun tonight.
We're talking about his new show Manawa rodeo and you're nice enough.
I know you're kind of the
I think cock of the walk, can I say that?
Can you say that?
Down there at the Meyer Theater.
But
you're nice enough to lend it out to Sean Cassidy, who's coming into town
on February 17th.
Sean gave me a call, and I asked him if I could sing one of his songs today.
So I country-fied a Sean Cassidy song for you, just a little bit.
I want to play a little bit.
Tonight?
Yeah, tonight.
Oh, no way.
Yeah, because you had him on a guest last night.
I mean, come on.
He was great.
He was so much fun.
He is so beautiful.
And he wants?
He's a beautiful human.
He is, because he's got that winery
that he
founded, just to feed kids.
That's pretty cool.
But he said,
his tour, he wanted old, beautiful theaters, and he's got the Meyer and he's got the Barrymore in Madison.
So, absolutely.
So that's pretty cool.
Okay, so Manawa Rodeo, February 5th
through the 22nd.
Yeah, we end on a Sunday on a matinee at one o'clock.
And 12 shows to come to, and hey, you gotta ask me my favorite Paul Newman movie, though.
You haven't asked me yet.
Is it on your list there?
Oh, you got cars.
That's what Conrad said.
His voice in there as the Edsel was fantastic.
Hudson Hawk, right?
Doc Hudson.
See, I thought it'd be a new one.
I wasn't gonna say ombre, but that's a whole different 1967.
Have
you seen
HUD?
Yeah, I've never seen HUD.
That's a great one, though.
Thank
you, Frank.
Tell us to let's let's talk about another very important day you have because Frank plays all the big rooms.
He's got the Meyer We know that's a big beautiful theater.
You're also going to the Bayshore Arts Center and Marinette, Wisconsin this
weekend piece in Marinette Christmas City, USA.
And there's tickets still available.
It's my tribute show.
We, we call it our mini Las Vegas tour because normally we bring the show to the Plaza Casino in Vegas the last couple of years.
We're not going this year.
So we just played the Eschewa, but I'm PAC this last Saturday.
And then this Saturday, of course, up in Marinette at the Bayshore Performing Arts Center, beautiful venue, great sound, but you're going to see Elvis, Reba, Neil Diamond, George Jones, Barbara Streisand.
We have the best Adele impersonator you will ever.
and of course, Cher might make an appearance.
We're hoping that she's gonna be out.
Did I say Barbara Streisand?
I don't know if I said that yet.
And you gotta see my wife as Reba.
My wife looks and sounds just like Reba.
She's fantastic and lots of comedy in this show.
I would argue that Amy has a better voice than Reba.
What do you say about that?
I think she does because she's so versatile.
She also does impersonations of Connie Francis, Dusty Springfield and Brenda Lee.
So she can change her voice.
She's got one of those manipulative voices.
where she could do impersonations and stuff.
And yeah, she's just fantastic.
So great.
And I'll say if you're in the Marinette area or don't mind, that's worth a ride from Green Bay or...
parts beyond Escanaba to come down because the show is so great.
We got my parents tickets to that show last year and
we
were going to do it again, but they wanted to come to the Christmas show.
So, and, but then I know, but then they're like, they're in their early eighties.
We've got the flu.
They're like, yeah, maybe
we shouldn't go.
But they had a blast at this Marinette show
last
year.
So it's going to be the
same deal.
They shore arts center and uh, Reba Elvis share.
Neil Diamond, Barbara Streisand, Karen Carpenter.
Did I say that?
I don't know if I said that.
And Adele, I got to tell you a funny story when we were in Vegas two years ago.
Adele canceled at MGM.
So we were the only Adele.
in Las Vegas.
Oh, no way.
And she looks and sounds just like her, man.
Oh, that's so
great.
All right, we're going to do a quick break, folks.
Frank Herman's is here.
When we come back, he's got the banjo.
If you're watching on the stream, you can see the banjo in the background
there.
We're going to play some banjo, and Conrad's got the jug.
We're
going to turn this
into
an
official hoot, nanny.
So we'll do all that.
We'll
read your texts.
Casey on the stream says cool hand Luke the bet he was he could eat 50 hard-boiled eggs during filming Paul ate only eight eggs
He
just went down a
peg in my hook.
I thought
he felt
the full 50.
Spitting them out in between filming.
Of course he did.
They're hard boiled eggs.
Give me a break.
Yummy.
All right.
Frank Hermans is here from Let Me Be Frank Productions.
The show is Manowar Rodeo, February 5th through the 22nd at the beautiful Meyer Theater.
When we come back, he's going to play something on the banjo for us.
This is Pete Schwabba in Nightlight.
We're coming right back on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Nice, just on.
Okay, good.
Welcome back, folks.
This is Nightlight with Pete Schwabba.
We are jamming through a Tuesday night here, Heather Heil coming up in Act 3 at 7.20.
Right now we've got our pal Frank Hermans in here who is, he's got a new show, Manowar Rodeo, February 5th through the 22nd at the beautiful Meyer Theater, right down the street here in downtown Green Bay, just an absolutely gorgeous venue.
If you've never been...
you have to go.
Well, it was built on, it was opened up on Valentine's Day in 1930, and it was the last Fox Theater built, and they built it with that Mediterranean style, that old fashioned look, and tell you what, when they redid it in the 80s, they put $10 million into it, ripped all the walls off, put all the gold, gilded
gold
back on.
The pipes were busting back in the 80s, because it was a three, it was a picture.
It was called the Bay Theater.
They had three theaters, and I remember going there as a kid.
In fact,
I broke a bottle
of Jack Daniels one time.
Of
course you did.
The
whole, the poor people in that
movie, it smelled
like liquor.
But yeah, it's a beautiful, we're so lucky.
It's my, this is our 19th year.
It's
our 27th season, but our 19th year at the
Monterey Theater.
It's got all these ornate, like the attention to detail when they built it.
I love when you're on the upper deck, upper deck, upper level.
Mezzanine.
The balcony, mezzanine.
And you go in these little like,
um, foyers or places, these little nooks and- I just want to go sit there.
Even though I have no reason to do that, because you can because that's what it was like back in the day.
Beautiful, beautiful space.
Yeah, they kept it nice.
You're gonna play
something for this.
I'm gonna- you know, since she had Sean Cassidy here,
who's a
personal friend of mine.
Okay.
Just kidding.
Uh, I thought I'd country-fine one of his songs.
What do you think?
I love it.
Made him on a Monday and my heart stood still.
Da dee run, run, run, da dee run, run.
Somebody told me that his name was Bill.
Come on!
Da dee run, run, run, da dee run, run.
Yeah, my heart stood still.
Yes, his name was George.
And when he walked me home.
Da dee run, run, run, da dee run, run.
My personal favorite, Sean Cassidy's song was probably That's Rock and Roll, do you remember that?
Oh yeah, that was a great song.
I
forgot about it.
Did he have like three top-
10 hits,
sir.
He had three, yeah.
He had, he had that rock and roll to do run, run.
And then, uh, hey, Deanie, won't you come out tonight?
Hey,
Deanie, won't you come out tonight?
Yeah.
Great song.
He said he walked off the stage in Houston in front of 50,000 people in 1980, not thinking it would be his last show, but he, he didn't go back for like 40 years until 2020.
He put a little tour together, but, uh, yeah, big time pop star, you know, and, and really grounded because his mom was cool, Shirley Jones.
I mean, my God.
Yeah.
That's like the nepo baby of nepo babies.
And then
he just started producing and writing.
Yeah.
That's what he did for years.
Yeah, TV.
And he preferred that.
Yeah, yeah.
So whatever.
Not the limelight.
Tell us about this instrument.
It's not a
banjo.
It's not a banjo.
or a banjo-tar.
A banjo-tar, I'm sorry.
It sounds like a banjo, but it's fretted,
and
it has six strings.
Now, when you play a banjo, it's tuned like a violin, or ukulele, so you gotta play it differently, okay?
Now, I'm a guitar player, so I know all the notes on a guitar, so it's easier to play this, and it sounds the same.
Plus, you
got an extra string!
Two extra strings.
Two extra,
well, the four string, but they have
some five string banjos, yeah.
I have a three string guitar and a one string banjo.
You do.
It sounds great.
Oh, yeah.
I don't you know, I'm just I'm not that kind of guy.
You can do that.
Um, God, I had so many.
Less notes.
Less notes.
I never even look at my questions when you're here, Frank.
Because we have
so much to talk
about.
I know.
All
right.
Season ticket packages.
Yes.
For Let Me Be Frank.
That's what I want to go over because they're really worth it and they're a great deal.
Yeah, it's a
great, great idea for a date night.
I mean, five great nights of entertainment.
They're called Flex Tickets.
185 bucks a piece.
It's five bucks off a ticket plus.
One thing that people don't know, you get an extra bonus show.
I do a show just for the season ticket holders at the end of the year.
Oh, nice.
To thank them.
I feed them cookies, and I try and sell them season tickets next year.
So
that's kind of
the push.
And you get to pick your seats.
They're called Flex Tickets.
So let's say, well, I really liked Man-O-Roti.
I want to go again.
You can use one of your tickets
for
that.
Oh, wow.
Or you can use all of them if you want
to bring
your family and friends.
So some people buy a pack of these Flex Tickets, and they can use them for parties, bringing friends, or bringing their people they work
with.
So you also do private events.
That's kind of cool.
What is that?
Is that like when Spicoli hired Van Halen to play his birthday party with the reward money?
The corporate events of the cash, baby,
because you could just ask a certain amount and they pay it.
For instance, Procter & Gamble bought two shows out.
of this last two shows called, we called, Don't Squeeze the Charmin.
Well, they make
Charmin.
So, and we do it other corporate events throughout the state.
I also have my tribute show, which we're doing up in,
of
course, Marinette and Satter.
We do that everywhere.
Plus, I got little side shows that are not with a band.
They're track shows, my Al Capone show.
And there's a couple other ones that I do that are just the Brent, the musical show I wrote about Brett Farr.
So we do those all over all the time.
Do you have rehearsal right after this?
I do.
Okay.
So you
keep me as long as you want.
I don't care.
Are you sure?
They can start without me.
Start without me!
Because you wrote a book I want to talk about after the news, but I was going to try to squeeze it in now.
Please do.
What is your favorite music to perform?
My favorite is 70s.
I grew up in the 70s.
I really liked 70s music.
That's when I started playing guitar.
Before you know when I started playing guitar like in middle school and high school I learned every John Denver song and every Eagle song so
that's kind of
was my forte and I just love disco I know that's hard
to
say.
I'm like I love disco.
I love the Bee Gees Then I go back to Elvis.
I mean I was I'm a hell of a person person.
Yeah, the old Elvis man.
Thank you very much But yeah, that's kind of my gig.
That's my music
so great.
I remember um
You know, when I, where I grew up in Chicago, everybody, all the neighborhood guys hated disco.
I never understood it, because I secretly liked it.
That's because everybody liked it.
That's when it's popular.
Yeah, probably.
Like Taylor Swift.
People hate Taylor Swift.
She's phenomenal.
She's excellent.
What a writer.
But I learned I watched a documentary about 10 years ago.
about disco demolition night at comiskey park and it totally made sense because there was this guy from the south side of chicago when he goes we didn't like the fact that if you wanted to meet girls you had to put on a suit now like these are corner bar guys that's a good chicago accent by the way
Alright, Frank Hermans is here.
He's going to stick around a little bit after the news.
Maybe play something on the tangelo again?
I'm going to do it.
I'm going to do it.
I'm going to do something.
And I'm going to ask him about his book.
I didn't know he had a book.
He's got a book and I'll tell you about it too.
That's coming up after the news.
It's Pete Schwab at Nightlight on the Civic Media Radio Network.
Broadcasting live from the Civic Media Studios in Green Bay.
This is Night Light with Pete Chwaba.
Your inside source on everything entertainment from Wisconsin to Hollywood.
And now, a guy who does his own stunts, Pete Chwaba.
Welcome back, ladies and gentlemen.
Nice song.
I love that
song.
Not bad, huh?
Whatever gets you tonight.
Is that Elton John
or Paul McCartney?
That's John Lennon and Elton John.
And Elton John, okay.
I should know that.
You should know that.
I
picked it out two years ago.
I thought it was the big one.
That is the voice of Frank Herman's folks.
If you missed the first two hours of the show, Seth Wakershum from ESPN was here.
Check it out at civicmedia.us.
Last hour, we had the wonderfully talented of Frank Herman's here, and he's agreed to stick around for a few more minutes, even though his troops are down the street
starting rehearsal
without him.
They said
we're up and running.
That's what I just got from them.
So I'm not on till like midway
through the first half.
I don't
want to keep
you.
I don't want to keep you.
No, no, no.
If I
know my stuff,
if something happens, I have everything memorized.
But there could be something.
I've been in theater shows at times, theater shows.
That sounds like
you've
done theater
shows.
Let's
go see a sports contest and we'll slap by.
But they're gonna blame me
for
it.
I don't
need
this is this is free press Pete.
You got the
whole family.
We got
thousands and thousands of people listening right now.
That's true
Yeah,
the show is growing and it is great to have you here buddy wide
baby
Heather hyal will be here at 720 foe She is the business director.
She is the director of business development at the Green Bay Children's Museum She's gonna tell us about everything going on there, but let's savor our time with Frank by the way Our question of the night is what is your favorite Paul Newman movie Frank said?
Cars.
Cars.
Conrad said cars.
I said slap shot and
the
sting, but I could have easily said Cole and Luke.
Cars are all great.
He is fantastic.
Most
beautiful eyes in show business.
Thank you.
Oh, Paul Newton.
Paul Newton.
Paul Newton, yeah, that's fine.
I thought you meant Conrad.
Oh, yeah, Conrad's gazing.
Beautiful eyebrows.
You know what it's like sitting here gazing into his fiery eyes every night when I'm trying to stay focused on the show?
It's hard.
I can close my eyes, that's fine.
We got a text from Anna from Madison saying, I love Frank.
Oh, thank you.
Thank you.
I love you, too, man.
Thank you, Anna.
Anna, it's worth the road trip.
Do you ever get down to Madison?
You know, I've done a few shows in Madison over the years, but we don't get down down there a lot.
And I'd love to get down there more.
You know, there's a beautiful theater there, right downtown.
What is it called?
Caution?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I love that.
I love
to do that joint.
But it's got to be also, I'm sure you want to go to Madison or Milwaukee or Wausau or wherever, but like you got such a
I
do have
a great gig here.
You know, I pinched myself.
27 years we've been doing this.
I started it out as a whim.
Didn't think that I'd be doing this as a living.
I don't really work, Pete.
No, I know.
I
tell jokes.
I play guitar.
And I get
to see my kids
do fun voice.
Like Snotty Quackman.
Yeah,
but yeah, I have fun.
And it's a good time.
And it's professional theater.
Everybody that works for me is top-notch performer in the state.
You got a whole troupe
that you
employ.
That's impressive.
Yeah, 13 people we employ.
That's insane.
That's so great.
You also have this outstanding family that's very, you know, are they in the show?
I know your wife Amy is, but are any of your kids in the show?
Very musical.
In
fact, my son, I can't give out any information, but he may be in LA on a show.
Oh,
wow, nice.
If you've ever
heard
of it,
we can't announce anything yet.
Well, when you do.
I will let you know.
You can have him as a guest, too.
All right.
And then my son, Harrison, 14-year-old Phenom, plays guitar, piano, drums.
He's just proficient at everything.
And he's had the lead in the musical at the Brilliant High School.
And he's the lead, one of the leads in the play.
And he does my shows every summer.
In fact, in the Dingaling Brothers Circus, he's the world's largest baby.
That's what he that's
yeah Harrison Harrison was on this show gone right off your memory about a year ago played Dear Prudence.
Yeah when your kids They're all musical.
That's great.
Yeah Did you have to like force them?
No, not at all in the jeans
in the jeans Harrison was playing drums in time when he was 12 months old in time with beat That's nuts and then he got him his first kit when he was two the kids amazing and then my son Jack can hear music go to the piano and play it
And Vivian, my 10-year-old, can sing like her mother.
You know, if you haven't heard Amy sing, she's just phenomenal.
We
have a very loud house.
There's
stuff going on all the time.
So, all right, I wanted to ask you, because this is interesting.
I didn't know this.
This flew under my radar.
This is probably your 10th time on the show.
You're one of the regulars here.
We
love
having you as much as we possibly can.
You have a book out, Frank.
10 years old I didn't know about this tell us about simply Frank the story behind the man the brand Yeah, and it got cut off of my it's
called simply Frank in fact We were number 42 on the Amazon list at one time.
Yeah,
so
we sold 10,000 copies already.
Isn't that crazy?
Wow
the printing a Friend of mine who was my editor of frankly Green Bay Andrew Cruz who passed away five years ago of an aneurysm Very sad, but he came up to me said hey Frank
I want to write a book about you.
You want to be a co-author?
Yeah.
I said,
yeah, so for eight months he interviewed me and we just talked about my
my whole life.
And it goes all the way to 2006 when we moved to the Meyer.
So it's everything I've done, Ben.
We talk about Doc's Comedy Club.
You're
not in the book
though.
I'm so sorry.
Come
on.
If we knew each other better back then.
But it talks about all the trials and tribulations when we got to here and the progression of Let Me Be Franks to becoming...
State-wide place that people come from all over the state to
see our
shows now and at that point when when the book was done I think I'd written like 70 shows now what we've written over 158 since then so but the book is available five dollars Not
bad at
every show paperback.
It's a great two-hour bathroom read.
That's what I say
at prices like that
You can't afford not to read this
whether you're on the toilet or not.
It's a funny book.
It's
written humorous if you read the
the epilogue and all that stuff.
We actually do it like a book.
There's all these cool things that we write and responses like, is this what a book is supposed to be like?
Best
book I've read since
the last one.
You are fantastic at branding yourself.
You're this fun, loving guy.
You got a big personality.
But what
I love is when I go to your website and I discover this on accident two, there's the thing, if you move the mouse, there's a frank head
up in the upper.
Yeah,
and that laugh I go,
that scares
you.
but I'm like, that's just Frank.
That laugh encapsulates your entire personality in a one second laugh.
That's impressive.
So
the Herman side of my family, they all laugh like that.
It is annoying at Christmas or whatever.
Everybody laughs like that.
I got that
gene.
God, I love that.
That's great.
All right, so check out the book, The Story Behind the Man, Simply Frank, Amazon.
Well, I
took it off Amazon
because
I just hate mail and stuff out.
What they would do is sell it for me and then I'd have to mail it out.
Yeah, that's not
cool.
Why
don't you just take a thousand books and do it there?
So I stopped doing it.
I just could sell it at my shows now.
What other shows?
All right, so you got Manowar Rodeo, February 5th at the Meyer, you're in Marinette this weekend, you got Shopko, Say Hello to a Goodbye coming up in April, the Dingling Circus, Hocus Pocus, and then we're already back at a Frank's Christmas.
So what shows of these?
If you had to tell people to check out one show, and they only had that kind of money, because times are tough, Frank.
Where would you tell them?
The one that's going on right now, Manawa
Rodeo.
What are the odds?
Because if they come and see that show, they'll want to come to another one.
Is there
a 50-50 raffle?
I guarantee it.
There's
not a 50-50 raffle.
What, can
you play
something else?
Yeah, we're going to do something from Keith Urban.
This is in the show.
Oh, love it.
All right.
Frank Herman's.
deeper than I've ever done and it sure feels good to finally feel the way I do I won't love somebody love somebody like you I'm letting go of all my lonely yesterdays I've forgiven myself of the mistakes I've made now there's just one thing the only
to do
Is that in Manowar Rodeo?
That's in Manowar Rodeo.
But we got a whole band playing, you know,
that
whole song that plays way better than I do.
I find that hard to believe.
Frank, when you go to places like Marinette or when you take your show on the road, do you have a preference?
I mean, obviously the travel adds something to it, but where do you prefer?
Are there different crowds
when you travel?
You know what, every crowd is different.
And I always got to check if it's a dirty crowd or a clean crowd.
You know how when you're a comic, you just slide one, see how it goes.
You start off
with a bear hunting
joke and then see what the response
is.
You just start a little bit if they wanted a bluer show or not.
And I got to tell you, it's pretty consistent everywhere we go.
Of course, our shows are usually skewed a little bit more adult.
And I guess our demographic is 40 plus women.
You know, that's who
comes
and sees our show.
Because we're playing 70s, we're
playing
80s, and some 50s and 60s.
So, you know, it's an adult crowd.
Now, Christmas, what I do at Christmas, squeaky clean, squeaky clean.
But there's always innuendos in my show, never swearing or anything.
But you will, it's Saturday Night Live is what it is.
But it's Saturday Night Live from the 70s is what it is.
You know, kind of how I explain it every time.
When do you have to have that hat back to Kid Rock?
Don't!
Say that
you know, it's funny my
brother my
brother got me this hat like ten years ago.
I never wear it I Got
it out
of the costume closet just for
is
it Mike?
Yeah, all right Mike.
He's the one that tried to get me fired from
Doc's
Last thing for you, Frank.
Will the Packers be back next year?
Oh, for sure.
I tell
you what, it was a crazy year this year.
I think what's going on with the new defensive coordinator.
I think we need a new guy at Special Teams.
I'm sorry, he's got to go.
But what I like is that this new defensive coordinator was a head coach.
He can cover some of those duties at LaFleur.
maybe was overlooking and the floor can be more of an overseer.
That's what I want to see.
We got the best quarterback in the league.
We got the top defensive end.
And Jacobs, I mean, is one of the best running
backs.
And we got the receivers.
Right.
You know, what else we need offensive linemen?
So that's what's going to happen in the draft.
Right now I'm telling you, number one draft pick is going to be an offensive lineman.
Guaranteed.
OK.
Or a cornerback.
This is Herman's
prediction.
And it would be funny if the special teams coordinator was on the phone about to order tickets.
Rick Basashi, give me a call right now.
I got to tell you.
I got to tell you.
He hears you say that.
He's like, you know what?
Yeah.
Here's what I think.
No tickets.
No tickets.
Binge watching.
Anything good?
We got about 30 seconds.
Yeah.
Right now I'm watching Blackwater.
And I just am into the night manager.
Second season.
Oh, yeah.
Fantastic.
Headleston is one of my favorite actors.
I got to watch the 2016 version of Night Manager.
Fantastic!
I watched that too.
I haven't started the second season yet.
I stumbled onto it.
Oh, it's so good.
It is good.
And Roper, should I tell you a little bit?
I won't tell you.
The guy who plays the bad guy?
Yeah, but I thought he'd,
okay.
Oh, he comes back.
Alright, no spoilers.
That's awesome.
Frank Herman's ladies and gentlemen, check out Manawa Rodeo, February 5th at the Meyer Theater.
We are coming right back with our pal, Heather Heil.
Knock him dead, Frank.
Break a leg.
Thanks buddy.
Peach Wabba Nightlight, Civic Media Radio Network.
I'm Peach Wabbit.
This is Nightlight.
It was great to have you here, folks.
Always fun to have Frank Herman's here.
And now we are well into hour three.
And if Frank wasn't enough, I've got another one of my Green Bay Northeast Wisconsin besties here in the studio with me.
She is a regular here, one of our best chums.
And she is also the director of business development at the Green Bay Children's Museum and Outstanding Facility, Miss Heather Hile.
Hi, I was going to say, like, let's light it up.
But Frank has already, like, lit it up.
We are burning embers now.
Energy.
I know.
It's
like.
Frank.
He is a tornado man.
I love it.
He's so much fun.
Do you have a favorite Paul Newman movie?
Okay.
So I actually did cheat a little bit because
I
saw the question come up today on the socials.
Yeah.
And I thought, come on, ask a question from like this century.
Like, who's Paul Newman?
Isn't he like a salad dressing person?
Like, I don't think I've ever seen a movie with him in it.
And then I had to Google him.
Wow.
Full
disclosure.
I am, I appreciate your honesty, but I am shocked at Wilson.
And then I was like, oh, that's the guy from Slap Shot,
which I just happened
to watch with my significant other, who it's one of his favorites.
Dan.
So,
yes,
Dan the main.
I remember Dan.
Dan was here once.
He was once, and then
he said
he didn't want to talk on the microphone, and then you talked to him on the microphone.
I
did?
You did, and now
he's like.
I broke that trust.
Yeah,
he was like, nope, not
going in.
Oh, come on, Dan, give me a second chance.
No.
He's really that unforgiving
boy.
You're like a big fan of yours
like real
like we listen to you a lot
at night
like before dinner and whatever and actually the night that you had Boris here talking about the dawn of Tiki.
Yeah.
We were like on fire.
We were so excited
because
we're big Tiki people
and wrong
people and actually Boris and I connected after that.
Did you really?
Yep.
So I've been following his fun little journey.
Thank
you.
Conrad
Conrad brought me some low water.
So
I
appreciate that.
Smells like eggs, but you know what?
It'll it'll cure
your throat.
Yeah,
I had their highlights here folks.
Speaking of social media.
I'm looking for your response here, and I don't see it Did you did you put one on here?
I didn't put it on
because I
knew I was coming in to talk to you about
that's fair So
and I also didn't realize that he was doc from
cars from cars hudson.
I said the
hornet something
the
hornet.
No, what is it the hornet?
Yeah,
it's the hornet
Come on
Conrad.
It's Doc Hudson, right
and the car was like a hornet
something was it?
I think
I know but like it had
a name like it was
like it wasn't the green Hornet because it was a blue car, but it was like
right
Yeah, what was the fabulous Hudson Hornet the Hudson
Hudson Hornet
I said Hudson Hawk, which is a Bruce Willis movie so I got confused.
I'm not perfect Heather I do make mistakes as your significant other will attest to
Well, he's actually he's fascinating to talk to I don't blame you for wanting to
tell I like I like the strong silent type of person with doesn't need to talk
I always feel like those people have more to say.
He really does.
He is the strong silent type, but when you get him going, especially on the rum or the tiki or something, it's fascinating to listen to him.
So, where are you guys, where are the, you actually texted in that night.
You told me some great Tiki bars.
One in Milwaukee, is there one around here that you
like?
There is nothing around here.
The most authentic Tiki bar we have in Wisconsin is Foundation Bar in Milwaukee.
In Milwaukee.
So
we will travel down there quite frequently to do that.
There's a couple little pop-up ones down there.
We also like to do speakeasies in Milwaukee.
Yeah.
Really, like there's a fun place in Madison that does pop-up bars.
It's on the corner, not Cleo's, that's Appleton.
I can't think of the name of that one, but
yeah,
so.
just kind of the craft cocktail people that appreciate a drink and you know, we appreciate $30 drinks, so.
$30 drinks, my God.
What
constitutes a
tiki bar?
What makes it a tiki bar?
Is it the tiki?
Well,
tiki is technically escapism.
So when you think of like the raffa da and like frozen drinks, that's really not a tiki bar.
It's a form of tiki.
So an
authentic tiki bar is typically really
not well lit, very dark, has a lot of...
Candles and stuff.
Not necessarily
candles, but lighting, very big into lighting.
And again, just that craft cocktail with the tiki drinks and how they're prepared.
And you're gonna wait,
you know, 20
minutes for your drink.
They have great food, and yeah, so I would
love to- They're all known for craft cocktails?
Even the ones that started decades ago?
No kidding.
Yep, so like when you think of a traditional Mai Tai, if you put any type of orange juice or pineapple juice in it, that is basically a Hawaiianized Mai Tai, and that's really not a Tiki Mai Tai.
There should be absolutely no juice in there other than some lime.
I have to watch that documentary.
I still haven't seen the documentary.
It's so good.
The Dona
Tiki is so, so good.
Oh my God.
I should have watched it that night because I had it right fresh in my head.
I had it pulled up on my computer.
Now I gotta track it down, but I will.
We watched it in
Milwaukee.
We went to the Oriental Theater in Milwaukee and watched it, and those two of the film producers were there and talked
about the
making of it.
It was, yeah, it was totally up your alley.
You know hang out more
embarrassing.
I know well I ask you to come on the show every week and you're always like doing this and doing that I know I've got stuff to do like a socialite in green that is that a Is that a derogatory term a socialite?
No, I don't
think
so at all.
I like I
love this community and I love to participate in this community and enjoy the people and learn what we're doing and
how we can be better together.
You said you met Frank Herman's 31 years ago.
31 years ago.
I did the
math in my car on the way here because
I thought I
was 19 years old when I met
him
and he was an advertiser at the radio station that I worked for.
He owned a little sports pub across from the railroad tracks.
That was his line.
How do you,
that's a pretty good frank by the way.
How do you, where did you come from?
Because you love this community but you're not.
Originally from here.
No,
I went to I have been in broadcasting since I was 16 years
old
and went to school I went on a state and a job opened up here in Green Bay full-time So it moved me to Green Bay and I just met the most amazing humans in that first job who I am friends with all of that core group of people
to this
day and Yeah, here I am and now I'm you know helping with
kids and education and all of
the fun stuff with that.
You're doing an outstanding job.
Thank you.
We're going to talk about a really cool engineering contest coming up next.
We're going to break for the news.
Matt Cassane says, so many.
Slapshot, the verdict.
The verdict is another great poll name and one.
Richard Vargas says, cool hand.
Luke, always.
Vince Moranto, wow, so many.
Luke, the hustler, slapshot just off the top of my head.
We are coming right back after the news.
Heather Heil is here, ladies and gentlemen.
And we've got a quiz, a quick one.
We'll see if we have time for it.
Peach Wauva Nightlight coming right back.
Yes, you're jumping on a fast train Jumping on a fast train
Welcome
back.
I'm Pete Chihuahua.
This is Nightlight.
Great to have you here, folks.
I will say this, Conn.
Steve from Bellevue.
I know how to say that.
I said, I think, Moskada.
Maybe Heather High on
this.
Moskado?
Moskado.
Not the wine.
Oh, that's not I don't think that's how it's pronounced.
So because Steve says he thinks it's pronounced musk a day, but he's not positive either So you're kind of a I like wine Usually I order was that I wasn't the question.
Okay, I Don't know but it's somebody Somebody did tell us last time how to say this and I don't remember what it was.
I think it is musk a day that sounds familiar like someone like someone said it before
I would change that.
I would too.
I don't have that kind of power.
Let's just call it Moscato.
Either way, it's great to get texts.
So thank you very much.
And thanks for the clarification.
Heather Heil is here, folks.
She is the director of business development at the fabulous Green Bay Children's Museum.
And she comes by here every so often just to hang out with us because we need friends.
And we like to talk about all the great things she's doing.
Oh, you have lots of friends.
I have
to text you now and say,
hey,
let me in.
Well, I always get right back to you.
You do.
Don't I?
And you do.
And you do to me.
So we have that going for us.
I know your boyfriend doesn't like me, but...
He loves you.
He's a huge fan.
He's just got rules.
I didn't know that.
You should have said he, under no circumstances, are you to even say anything.
So, okay.
When
he retires,
he's all yours.
Lesson learned.
Okay.
What did this turn into around a speed dating?
I don't know what I don't know what's happening.
Let's talk about this fabulous engineering contest
that
we are having at the Children's
Museum and
I'm most excited about this contest the prizes for this thing so basically We have sponsors who have underwritten the prizes that include camps at MIT
whoa
3d printers
Museum memberships, and I'm talking multiple things for
the winners
of these contests.
So how do you get your child involved?
How do you get your grandchild involved?
How do you get your niece?
How
do you get your
nephew involved?
And I brought visuals for radio because I'm just so awesome
like that.
No more on the stream.
We get
lots
of
viewers.
So through our sponsors, they helped us create these kits.
They are 100% free.
You come to the Children's Museum, you pick one up.
Okay.
You build
a bridge with the materials inside of this bag.
So I
have some examples here.
So we have one that actually like someone with brains did and then we have like mine.
You
can like
fly it or it's more like a teeter totter.
I don't even
know
what he is even
happening.
But the goal for the bridge is, and you can work with a partner if you want to, but you can only have one kit between the.
the two of you.
We are
looking for children who are in second to fifth grade or sixth to eighth.
So those
are the two categories to put them in different levels.
And then we will take weights and measure them on how strong your bridge actually can stand up.
I'm not even going to put them on mine because I know that it will crush
it and I need to do it for
some TV later.
Just crush
it.
You're
doing TV later.
on Friday.
Yeah.
So I need to take my poorly built bridge for that.
However, we want to foster that creativity and then engineering with your kids and give them the credit that they have.
Where again, you know, a smaller child made this gorgeous bridge like
nothing.
And then I did this.
It's a bridge.
Like a goat could go over it and a troll could
live
under there.
Are you going to bring this onto your show you have to go to later?
Yeah, I am.
But it's fine.
I thought you're like leaving here and doing Fallon or something.
Well,
maybe I will.
You just never know.
Fallon with my popsicle sticks.
So all right.
Totally on brand for him.
So tell us what else.
So this is a spectacular.
Am I too old for this?
You are too old for this.
But if you're interested in maybe judging, you could come to the museum and help us judge for that so that you can still pick up again free.
The kid
is free,
you put it together, you come to the museum, now parents, if you're helping your kids with this, you're not gonna be with your child when they're explaining to the judges what they did, so just know.
The helicopter parents.
The
judges will know
how much
work the child really did on the bridge.
Right.
And then you come to the museum for that judging on the first weekend in February.
And you get to play in the museum.
You can bring your entire family.
So you get to play in the museum.
You get to compete in this competition.
And again, there will be people from MIT there.
So this is legit.
And that's the prize.
You get to go to.
You could go to MIT and go to one of their engineering camps this summer.
Wow.
That's how incredible is that?
What an opportunity.
This is you.
This is business
development.
It is business
development.
One of our newly appointed board of directors is an alumni of
MIT
and part of when they are on boarded onto the museum, I take them out for coffee and I understand what makes them tick.
And she is very passionate about
women, especially engineering, and giving opportunities to all children and said, let's do a contest.
This is so great, Heather.
And here we
are.
So you can pick these kits up through this weekend.
So we'll have them.
The museum will be open till five o'clock on Sunday.
So you can stop by the museum, just say, could I get one of the engineering kits?
Boom.
They'll hand you one.
So they give it to you.
You take it home.
You build the bridge.
You build the bridge.
And then you bring it back.
And then you present to the judges.
And you do need to just register so we know that you're coming in that time slot in
there
on that weekend day.
But you just go online.
And I'm Pete Schwabba.
I'm building a bridge.
I'd like to come on there.
So we've pushed this back because of all of the media I'm doing with this.
So
we're going
to do it in those two days.
Wait, which two?
So we're going to do it on Saturday, February 7th
and
Sunday, February
8th.
Super Bowl Sunday.
Okay.
That's excellent.
Wow.
How fun.
Right?
Good scores.
This is kind of the stuff you do.
It is the
stuff we do.
So not only do I get to help you find out how you want to.
Invest your money into the community, but I actually get to like do the stuff.
It's great.
I love this Green Bay Children's Museum Tell us what else is going on there and what where can people?
Is it free to get in
it is not free
to get in however typically
okay play is the right of every child so
if you
come to our museum doors and say hey I Need some help
We do have some funding that we can help you with that.
I love what you just said.
You said, and this is your motto on the website, where kids play to learn and parents learn to play.
Correct.
So it's interactive with kids and parents.
It is.
But parents do not build the bridges.
Parents,
yep, let them build the bridges.
Was that your motto, where kids learn to play and
play?
I didn't come up
with that note.
That
was pre-existing before me.
But it's
pretty great, right?
I love it.
I love everything about the Children's Museum.
So you also have something.
This is kind of funny.
You have an exhibit called under construction.
We do.
And I was looking through all the exhibits and I saw under construction.
I said, oh, this one's not ready yet.
I won't ask her about that.
But that's what it is.
The under
construction exhibit.
That's under construction.
Yes.
So tell me about that.
That sounds fun.
So a part of our capital campaign, which we are in the last million and a half of raising for that.
So
no
donation is too big or too small.
We don't want to get ourselves into a position where We're not able to build it so we need to raise the money before we start building
the
building But we've purchased all of our supplies for everything all of our exhibits are at the exhibit builders and one of them is about construction so when we
We work very closely with NWTC, St.
Norbert College, also with UWGB.
The trades are being desecrated right now, Pete.
When you and I went to college, or graduated high school, we were told, go to college, get a four-year degree.
No one said, go learn how to wells, go learn how to be an electrician.
Man, if I could go back, honestly, I would be a plumber, and I'm not even joking.
The money, think about
if
you're...
I know they make a ton of money.
I get that.
Because they're
specialized and they're amazing
and they should.
Could there be a halfway point between college and trades where you, you know, I mean, you can learn critical thinking on your own, but you get so much more out of college.
just a little skeptical of the anti-college movement.
And I'm not saying you're anti-college, but I like both.
Obviously, we need people with trades, and they make good money.
Well, and the trades will need to do that as well.
So what we're finding, especially with NWTC, who is a technical college, that they're doing both, and a lot of
companies
are bringing
You know students right out of high school.
You're my apprentice.
I'm gonna come I'm gonna give you on the job experience, but I want you to have a brain I
want
you to know that critical thinking so that they can set themselves up for further leadership and moving all of that forward
That's great.
NWTC does really amazing.
They really do and we
want to we know We know that children are learning when they're in their mother's womb.
We know that we know you should be reading to them that all of those
Always, always,
always be
reading.
But as soon as learning that you don't think about when you were a child and when we see children going, charge it and they know with the
swipe cards and
they mimic the world around them.
So we're trying to give them the tools to succeed and working through the trades with doing that.
So they'll be able to do some virtual welding in this
new
exhibit.
They'll be able to, through Snap Circuits, learn how to configure electricity.
That's so great.
Is that unbelievable?
Heather Heil is the director of business development at the Green Bay Children's Museum, just absolutely phenomenal facility.
One of their exhibits is under construction, but we won't go back over there.
But it's under construction.
What about the farmers market?
That looks cool.
Yeah, farmers market.
So what we try to do with our farmers market is we try to mirror not only our community and things that are happening at our farmers market, but we also try to globally look at farmers market.
So, you know, for a couple months, it might be if you were in Japan, what might you find at a Japanese farmers market?
Or if you were in Jamaica, what, you know, just different areas of the world.
world of things that you would find.
And again, just talking pieces of exploring our world, a
little
world around us.
And kids are just sponges and want that.
So
yeah, it's a fun way to do it.
You've got so many.
You've got the imagination system, Splash, the diner.
Do you have an exhibit where kids go in and they just fart, pardon me, flock to it?
Honestly, so most exhibits think about your kids growing up in their toys and they just destroy their toys because they play with them so hard.
So exhibits lifespan is usually five years.
We
have one exhibit that is our digestive system, which
they call the mouth.
We've had that thing for 15 years
now and
just keep refurbishing it because it is such a favorite of the kids.
with health and wellness and they climb in a mouth and they go down the esophagus in a slide and they climb through the intestines and what goes in must come out
so
they come out the back end and learn about all the fun finaculars
that goes along with digestion.
Kids love gross stuff though
let's be honest.
Let's keep some coming back probably.
So what about you have this other great exhibit
snow much fun given how cold it is this winter which snow we've got maybe something more tropical for next year line that up if you could
we well here's the thing
though with
snow much fun which is going on all of this month at the museum which is almost over I can't
believe
it's been like 7000 days this January but
We haven't been able to be outside a whole heck of a lot because
it's been
so cold.
So we
bring all of those activities inside.
So like this past weekend, we had Bay Nordic ski team at the museum
and they brought
skis so kids could try on skis and what they felt like and move around in them.
We had indoor snowball fights.
We had an indoor skating rink that they could slide around on their socks.
So still be a part of the fun and burn the energy.
Yeah, absolutely.
So we have a...
We have
a quiz for you.
We have a quiz, but is there anything else we got to do a break in about a minute?
And I just want to say you've totally redeemed yourself.
This bridge that Heather built.
She is a bridge builder.
I'm a bridge
builder.
Metaphorically and literally, but you know, I think... Love can build a bridge, my friends.
You've totally validated yourself after this.
We're going to give you our quiz.
This is a Green Bay Children's Museum quiz.
Oh,
man, now I'm really nervous.
We're coming back.
This is Nightlight with Pete Schwab.
But Heather Heil is here, folks, on the Civic Media Radio
Network.
Grushing hope that we cherry
Welcome back.
We're on the home stretch here at Night Light on a Tuesday night.
Great to have you with me, folks.
Thank you for all your calls and texts tonight.
I'd like to thank Seth Wickersham, senior ESPN writer and author of American Kings, a quarterback biography of the quarterback.
It was great to talk with Seth.
Frank Hermans was here in the studio.
a whirlwind of entertainment.
Great to connect with Frank, as usual, and Heather Heil, one of our nightlight best chums this year.
Always fun to have Heather.
Thank you so much.
It is weird.
You have to follow Frank.
And you're pretty mellow.
You're fun.
You had a construction outfit on last time you were here.
Yeah, it's actually in my bag.
I was like, oh, I still have it here.
Yeah.
I thought you were actually going to jack camera the studio.
Oh, it was so great.
Oh, it was.
So great.
He had the fringy jacket, which had I known.
I got
fridgy boobs.
Like, you know, I would
have like.
All right.
So check out the Green Bay Children's Museum folks.
Outstanding stuff.
Heather is the director of business development there.
They have a great engineering contest coming up.
Give us the details one more time.
Yep.
So students second to fifth grade and sixth to eighth grade, absolutely free.
Stop by the museum now through Sunday at five o'clock.
We have free kits.
You pick them up.
You register them online.
You have your child build the.
The bridge, they come in, they get assessed, and they could win some unbelievable prizes.
Including a summer camp for MIT.
Go look online at a summer camp for MIT, for engineering for your child.
So, and I know that you, there are some children out there who just really, really belong at this camp.
And this is just a really perfect way to get them there.
I kind of feel like, I don't know if you're like me, but I was.
They didn't really have children's museums when I was growing up.
And I kind of blame that for me being a solid C student.
I agree.
It was like go outside, eat dirt,
figure it
out.
All right.
I don't know.
Heather is always fun, folks.
She is here.
We are going to give her our, we are going to, here's what we're going to do.
We're going to
Check Heather's knowledge of her own place of employment.
Oh boy.
This is a Green Bay Children's Museum quiz.
She is the director of business development there.
This could be horribly embarrassing if she doesn't do well.
And I have, I crush almost every
quiz
you give me about nonsense.
So I have to like bring it
here.
Well, since the Friends quiz, because you thought, you gave us the impression that you knew I said, how well do you know the show Friends?
Cause we wanted to give you a quiz on it.
You said, you texted back at all caps.
We were on a break.
I thought she's going to crush
it.
No, you asked me questions.
I had no
idea.
All right.
All right.
This is our green.
Are you ready, Con?
Oh, you're not going to need that Conrad.
Yeah.
This is where she works, dude.
There you go.
Green Bay Children's Museum Quiz.
Compliments of Nightlight.
Conrad put this together moments ago.
It's hot off the presses.
I believe in you.
All right.
Here we go.
Number one, in the digestive system exhibit.
where you are the food, what can you climb into?
A, a giant ear, B, a giant mouth, C, a giant nose, or D, the large intestine.
You climb into the giant mouth that takes you to the large intestine.
It's almost like a trick question.
Which actually you would fit in
there.
So when you come to see me, you could climb in there
and do it as well.
Would that be weird?
No.
Creepy middle-aged guy.
I know it's like, welcome
to my world, friends who play.
Do you get a lot of...
single men showing up at the Children's Museum.
Sometimes we do,
and we do have a rule.
Every adult needs a child and every child needs an adult.
I think that's smart.
It's a pretty
solid
rule.
Back row checks at the door.
All right, number two, the dinner exhibit is based on which time period?
The 1920s, that's A, B, the 1990s.
C, Pete Schwab's Kitchen in the 2000s.
I don't know how Conrad knows about that.
Or D, the
1950s.
It's the 1950s.
The 50s diner.
Two for two, baby.
Three more questions to go.
I think we can squeeze these
in.
Heather Heil is two for two.
Number three, which stop in the town
Which stop in the town allows families to design, assemble, and take apart parts of a car?
Is it A, the auto shop, B, the F1 garage, C, NASCAR pit stop, D, Pete's Marinette stop.
The auto shop, and actually it's Ganderd's auto shop,
so we
have a sponsor for that.
So
we like to work
with our community and do programming with them.
I love it.
This is a three for three Conrad.
Yay!
I think you could challenge her a little more next time.
You should make an easy five-question quiz.
I would never say that.
Don't get us embroiled in a quiz show type.
Remember
that, Friends Piasco.
Four, the splash exhibit revolves around which body of water?
Is it A, the Fox River, B, the Great Lakes?
I've heard of them.
C, the pond behind Conrad's apartment form.
Formed from ice that melted this winter.
That's not wordy enough.
D, the Monomony River.
It is the Fox River.
Oh my gosh.
Four for four.
And we actually
have a Leo Frigo bridge that goes over said water gallery.
D, really?
For real.
Okay.
Number five.
Which exhibit in the town?
That's all I've got.
That's what Conrad wrote.
I forgot one part of it.
I think one part.
What's the rest of the question?
Is your favorite?
Which exhibit?
which
exhibit is my favorite.
I do really like them all, but my favorite would have to be our veterinarian clinic.
And that
is because
I love working with Dr. Pat with my whole entire heart.
He is a veterinarian here.
He just retired, but he would come in and actually do like a stuffed animal hospital and really took an invested interest in our museum.
And that is the goal of the museum is to have community partners and to give that learning to all children and families.
Keep up.
the great work.
Thank you.
What you're doing.
Good luck on the capital campaign.
Thank you.
And good luck with all these exhibits.
It's just a great space.
So we're lucky to have it.
We're lucky to have you.
Well, thank you.
I'm lucky to
be there.
And thank you so much for having
me.
Hey, are you watching the Super Bowl halftime show?
I was
going
to ask you for a prediction, actually.
Yeah, I'm going to.
I don't know much about bad money.
I always watch the Super Bowl.
I've been
listening to his music a lot lately, like getting amped up for this because
I didn't
know really anything about him.
I'm excited for
this show.
You know, there's a lot of great concerts happening around this.
Super Bowl area, too.
It's gonna be a spectacle.
It should be fun.
Green Day?
Um...
Yeah, Green Day.
Sting?
How great is Sting?
I mean, come on, you guys!
He's coming into his own as a performer.
Will you come back and do this again soon?
Absolutely.
Well, we're gonna have to do our annual Oscar show, because we gotta watch all of our Oscar movies.
I haven't seen one yet.
I've only seen four, so I got six to go.
I have time, but...
Watch Marty Supreme.
Yeah, I know.
Oh, okay.
That's a sleeper.
It should be good.
I'm excited.
Heather Heil, folks.
Thank you so much.
Continue success.
Keep up the great work.
Thank you.
And let us take your picture through the window before you leave.
Oh, what am I gonna do?
All right.
This is Beachwaba.
Thanks for everything you guys contributed to the show tonight.
Always fun when you guys participate.
On behalf of the lovable producer Conrad, I'm Beachwaba saying good night, Wisconsin.