Jim Santelle on Voting Rights (Hour 1)

Transcript

Jim Santelle on Voting Rights (Hour 1)

Nite Lite with Pete Schwaba and Greg Bach · Tue May 5, 2026

Announcer

From Washington to Hollywood and right back to Wisconsin.

It's Night Light with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach.

Connecting the dots on the stories shaping our world with smart takes, sharp humor, and plenty of personality.

You know, I really expected more professional behavior from you.

It's news and culture without the noise.

Yeah, come on!

Here's Pete Schwabba.

Dude.

And Greg Bach.

SPEAKER_??

Dude!

Pete Schwabba

That music just makes me wanna swing.

Like the Rat Pack did, not the other way.

Hey, welcome to Nightlight, ladies and gentlemen.

Happy Tuesday, everybody.

I am Pete Schwabba, coming to you live from Marinette, Wisconsin, and joining me, as always, just downstate, just down the coast, as it were, Mr. Greg Bach.

Hey, buddy, how are you?

Greg Bach

I'm well.

How are you doing this evening, afternoon, whatever, still daylight out, Pete?

I'm

Pete Schwabba

doing very well.

I woke up this morning and I walked out into my living room and the sun was pouring in and I could see the water through the trees.

It was sparkling.

It was a gorgeous day.

And then I opened the door 40 degrees, Greg.

Oh boy.

It was a big tease.

But I'm doing well.

It was a gorgeous day.

And we're on the air now.

So what more could you ask for?

Greg Bach

How many days does Christmas City, USA actually get a weather that you approve of?

About four.

Okay, that's what I thought.

Okay.

Pete Schwabba

Here's why you have to really love Wisconsin to live here because people say, oh, well, our summers are the greatest.

And summer in Wisconsin is great.

But the second I'm done with spring and mayflies, you're looking at mosquitoes, humidity, honest to God, my favorite season in Wisconsin is fall.

I love fall.

It's not too

Greg Bach

hot.

Pete Schwabba

It's beautiful.

It's probably the most beautiful area in the country.

Wisconsin and fall, in my opinion.

Greg Bach

Okay, well, all right

Pete Schwabba

noted Take a note of that guys

Greg Bach

Who was that agreeing with you?

Who's that was Dom?

Pete Schwabba

What's up, buddy?

You're sporting the short sleeves and rubbing it in my face and it's so warm there in Madison

Dom (contributor)

Yeah, I'm I agree with you fall is the best time of the year

In general, no matter where, most of the time, no matter where you're at, I love fall, love the colors.

Spring's nice, but there's a lot of rain, but fall is that perfect happy medium.

It's the first one.

Oh my God, seriously.

Oh,

Pete Schwabba

what's the matter?

Wait a minute, what?

Greg Bach

Just listening to two.

No, no, just like, I like, it's the rain and the, how do you know?

Are we wrong?

Well, spring is great.

I love spring.

Spring's actually my favorite season.

But here in Wisconsin, we get about 36 hours of spring, then it goes right to summer.

Pete Schwabba

Cause

Greg Bach

I'm with

Pete Schwabba

you.

I like spring historically and on paper,

Greg Bach

spring is great.

Check the

Pete Schwabba

records.

Exactly.

Greg Bach

No, I do, I do love fall.

I despise winter.

I, you know, I feel like it's, it's a, but you know, Pete and I, you can, we can attest to this.

Like the winter is now or nothing, what they used to be.

The winters used to be like,

early October through March.

And, but, but now I mean, like last year, the fact that we got snow in November and December last year was weird.

It

Pete Schwabba

was weird.

Yeah.

This winter has kind of sucked a little bit.

I think I don't, I didn't, but, but you're right.

The last few years, it's been like nothing,

Greg Bach

nothing we grew up with.

Certainly.

No, exactly.

Exactly.

But I'm happy for the weather we got.

It's 55 degrees here in radio park.

I'm happy about that.

I'll take, I'll take that over 60 below.

Thank you.

That's pretty good, I'll take that

Pete Schwabba

too.

We have a, I would say we have a great show tonight, Greg, would you agree with that statement?

I'm going on a limb here.

Greg Bach

What if I said no?

What if I was like, hmm, I think this is going to be a spectacular show.

No, it's gonna be a great show.

We got a great, we got a great couple hours ahead of us.

I mean, hanging out, having fun, having some good conversations too.

Pete Schwabba

Absolutely, it's gonna be great.

We've got a great question and

We're going to have some really fun.

We've got some big stories to talk about.

We've got a really good guest tonight on the show.

We've got Greg, your buddy, and mine, a Civic Media colleague, attorney Jim Santel, former U.S.

attorney and host of Amicus, a law review right here at Civic Media, which is fun.

And you've had Jim on a lot.

on your previous gig,

Greg Bach

Matt Nara Nair, right?

Yeah, we used to have him on once a week on Thursdays.

He was here for the, for half an hour talk every single week to brief us on everything coming up.

And he'll be doing the same thing tonight that he did with us on Matt Nara Nair.

We'll be talking about all the biggest stories coming out of the world of law.

And I think they'll be the one top story we'll be talking about that came out of the Supreme court last week.

That's really making my stomach hurt lately when I read about it, but he'll be here talking about that as well as some other things.

So that'll be a really good conversation.

Plus you can check out his show, amicus, a law review every Saturday from nine to a.

live, but you can always go to civicmedia.us slash shows and catch up.

All those episodes are right there on the website.

You can go listen to them as a podcast, take them anywhere you want, listen at your leisure, but it's a two hour crash course in law school every single week.

He is so good.

Pete Schwabba

It's going to be great to talk to Jim.

I've never met Jim or had him on the show, so I'm

Greg Bach

excited to meet

Pete Schwabba

him.

I've got tons of lawyers in my family, so I'm very comfortable around lawyers.

And it'll be good to have Jim here.

And then in hour number two, Greg, this is going to be fun.

We just mentioned we're from Wisconsin.

We love the seasons.

We're going to talk cheese with Samantha Bushman, the cheese queen of Wisconsin and a cheese influencer, if you will.

Very excited

Greg Bach

to have Sam on the show.

Wow, I like that.

I want to know what rigorous courses she had to go through to achieve the crown.

Like, was it, like, pugilist?

Was it, was it, was it mental?

Was it, like, you know, cheese knowledge?

Did she have to outsmart her opponents?

Did she just have to eat a lot of cheese?

I mean, if that's the case,

Pete Schwabba

no, she's queen.

Greg Bach

My goodness.

Pete Schwabba

We'll

Greg Bach

see.

Pete Schwabba

We'll ask her to weigh in on the cottage cheese thing, too.

I'm excited about

Greg Bach

that.

I just had

Pete Schwabba

some today.

I just had some today.

Tom if you wait in are you a cottage cheese guy?

Greg Bach

Have you waited lately?

How much do you wait?

I'm just kidding.

Just don't answer that.

I'm just kidding I'm just

Dom (contributor)

kidding.

I'm gonna be cottage cheese.

Yes.

I love cottage cheese I love because it's taco Tuesday So I'm gonna I'm gonna have a little mix of cheese as well, so I'm excited

Greg Bach

about

Dom (contributor)

the interview Hold on

Greg Bach

hold on

Announcer

hold on hold

Greg Bach

on hold on okay I'm just gonna hold my head for a second.

Did you just say it's I love cottage cheese, and it's taco Tuesday.

It's it's

Dom (contributor)

not you

Greg Bach

put cottage cheese

Do

Dom (contributor)

you

Greg Bach

put cottage cheese on your okay?

Well, okay, though.

You go back if well Yeah, you can do whatever you want do it live your life you live your life.

It's fine.

I'm just saying if you go back to the tape and You listen it sounded like you said I love cottage cheese and it's taco Tuesday like those two things are synonymous and I was like I don't know what you are talking

Dom (contributor)

about I would never I would never But I do like a lot of I like a lot of cheeses, so I'm excited to hear this interview.

I think it's gonna be really

Pete Schwabba

good.

Yeah, okay

Well, we'll find out what the cheese queen says about cottage cheese.

I have a feeling she's going to side with Greg, but that's okay.

We've got a great question tonight, too.

Did you guys have a good day?

Is everything going all right?

Do you feel prepared to do the show?

Are you stretched out?

What did you do?

Greg Bach

Yeah, I did some laps buddy a coach.

I really really Warmed up them hammies.

No actually really quick story of just basic human kind It isn't a big thing but today in my neighborhood's trash day and today is also a recycled trash day So we do it whatever other week and I was just getting ready to put the recycled bin out It was a little bit later than usual and as the garage doors opening up.

I hear the truck coming around the corner

And I'm holding the bucket in my hands to come out, and he starts going past.

He sees me and he hits the brakes.

And I'm like, oh, darn it.

I missed it.

Not him.

Me.

I missed it.

This should have went out last night.

And he stops and he goes, he's like, you need me to come back?

I'm like, yes.

I was so.

overwhelmed with the kindness, because he could have just easily gone to the next house, be like, too bad, buddy, I got a schedule to keep, not my problem that you're late.

He stopped his truck on a dime and he backed up and he

Announcer

just,

Greg Bach

and I just fed the, I fed the bucket into the truck and he, and, and I just walked up to his, to his window and I was like, thank you so much.

Cause to me, like it wasn't a massive thing.

He didn't like pull me out of a ditch.

He didn't pay for my dinner cause I ran out of cash.

He just did a kindness and it was cool.

And it just, that moment when you connect with people, I love that.

I love that.

Pete Schwabba

I love those.

I totally agree with you, Greg.

And I, for whatever reason, my guys don't like me, the waste management people.

Sometimes when I get out, I go, they get my cans and they're on the ground, like tipped over and everybody else's are still upright.

And I even posted once on social media, I'm like, way to go guys, another swish.

Like I got to pull these things up.

It's just annoying, but that's a great story.

And I love when you make those little.

connections with people you know you're never gonna see again.

Not like that, but I remember waiting in a grocery store line once and some person has taken forever because they've got 18 million coupons.

And I just shared a look with this woman who was behind and she just looked at me and we both shared the same look.

It was like, just beautiful connection in the universe.

I'm never gonna see her

Greg Bach

again.

Of how annoyed you were.

Pete Schwabba

Yeah, yeah.

Well, hey, you know.

They're just human emotions,

Greg Bach

right?

You heard it here, folks.

Pete Schwabba hates people who uses coupons.

All right.

Hey, listen,

Pete Schwabba

I'm fine with coupons, but, you know, you know, you ever get stuck behind the triumvirate, the person with the coupons who also wants lottery tickets and cigarettes?

And what else do they have?

They pay by check.

I mean, it's like, you got to pack a lunch, man.

Greg Bach

Feel like this conversation's a 1984.

Pete Schwabba

Well, listen, Christmas City, USA, we still have a lot of people.

We have a lot of elderly people.

They pay with checks and they drive very slow.

And sometimes you can't even see their head over the seat.

It looks like a car driving itself.

That's cute.

Speaking of a naked gun, yeah.

Well, let's get to our question of the night because we've got news stories to cover too.

Okay, be ready to be freaked out, folks.

Yesterday was National Paranormal Day, so tonight's question is what urban legend, ghost story, or paranormal phenomenon scares you the most?

I don't really believe in that stuff, but I'm open-minded enough, Greg, where I go, maybe, and I don't want to doubt it too much, because I feel like the universe will prove me wrong, and I don't want that to happen.

Announcer

So I

Pete Schwabba

tip my hat to the Paranormal Society.

8-5-5-7-5-2-4-8-4-2-8-5-5-7-5 Civic, let us know.

Send us a text, send us a comment on the app, or if you're watching the radio on YouTube, Facebook, or...

X Twitter, send us a stream comment.

And a reminder, folks, that this Thursday night for Nightlight Movie... I'm having trouble talking today, Craig.

Greg Bach

Take a moment.

Pete Schwabba

Take a moment.

There we go.

There we go.

Try again.

Take two.

This Thursday night.

And hour number two.

is the Nightlight Movie Club, folks.

And this week's movie is Ghostbusters.

And it was chosen by our senior producer, Tucker Logersky.

So check out Ghostbusters and text in, call in, whatever, tell us your favorite scene or character or line from the movie Thursday night.

And hour number two, Ghostbusters is this week's Nightlight Movie Club feature.

So there you go.

Awesome.

It'll be fun.

All right.

Dom, let's get to our big three.

The first big story.

Greg Bach

Oh, man.

Man well what was once supposed to be a big old ballroom paid with money from friends?

It's coming out of my pocket your pocket friends to the tune of a billion dollars

Announcer

and

Greg Bach

Actually 1.4 billion because they want to do 400 million for the ballroom But they want to but the Senate Republicans want to secure one billion dollars in funding for security related aspects of the White House ballroom project as part of a

broader, roughly 70 billion dollar funding package for immigration enforcement, which they aim to pass with little to no support from Democrats.

God, don't you love democracy, guys?

Don't just make you feel

Pete Schwabba

great.

This is heightened, too, after the supposed third assassination attempt that took place a couple weeks ago.

The push for public money accelerated.

Dom (contributor)

That's

Pete Schwabba

weird.

Third assassination attempt.

I don't know, Greg.

I felt like this was coming when the president said this is going to be out of my pocket and some friends.

I thought, OK, he's going to pitch in a dollar and everybody else is going to cover the rest.

But I knew we'd get here.

I'm just not surprised at all.

And I hope there is some pushback even from Republicans.

Come on.

Greg Bach

I mean, well, there's the only, the only one that is from this article in ABC news, the only pushback there seems to be from Rand Paul, who said they would, he said, Rand Paul push for his center, by the way, push, put forward a separate bill that would authorize the ballroom, but not fund it, which I don't know what that means at all

Announcer

because it's

Greg Bach

like, it's like saying, Hey guys, you can have a car if you want.

I'm not paying for it.

But this is just, I mean,

I don't believe any of this.

I don't believe a word they're saying.

I don't think, I don't think this is all going to be, I don't think we don't need this.

I think it's all lying.

I mean, he was talking about the ballroom within an hour after the incident.

So to me, this is all just part of the big plan to bulk us out of billions of dollars.

It will be billions.

And so we're all of his influencers

Pete Schwabba

too.

Greg Bach

So there you

Pete Schwabba

go.

But we'll see what happens.

We've got a couple more stories to cover, including all the weird outfits of the Met Gala.

So we'll get into all that after this very short break.

This is Nightlight with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach on the Civic Media Network.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Hi, this is David Zucker.

I guess this is Nightlight or whatever they call it with Pete, Greg and, uh, and Fremont.

Oh, that was gorgeous.

Oh my gosh.

That is a tag from last night, our interview with David Zucker.

And he came out guns a blazin.

Greg Bach (host)

Uh, he really did.

He really, really did.

Yeah, he had it out.

He had it out for your truly.

Let me tell you

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah, what's and I you know what Greg?

I meant to I kind of said look I didn't say it forcefully, but I was like Greg is a Milwaukee comedy staple And he knows dick Chet now and then all of a sudden he was your best

Greg Bach (host)

friend and then two minutes later He's going after you again, but to me I just always look at it from the point of view of like hey Don Rickles made fun of me.

I'd be in hog heaven So like one of the guys that I grew up idolizing was making fun of me.

I'll take that absolutely.

So totally I'm with you

Pete Schwabba (host)

Hey, our question of the night, folks, is yesterday was National Paranormal Day.

What urban legend, ghost story, or paranormal phenomenon scares you the most?

Let us know.

Drop us a text on the text line, 8557-524-842, or you can text us on the app, or if you're listening or watching on the stream, drop us a stream comment.

You said we had a couple of texts, Greg, from already

Greg Bach (host)

about this.

We do.

AJ from Madison, we talked about getting a comment earlier about our discussion regarding the weather.

He says,

Uh, or age, I don't know, is age a man woman?

I've been doing age.

Yeah.

Definitely agree at, and at sweater sweatshirt weather.

That must be where that he's right.

And it's at sweatshirt weather.

Lots of corrections here.

The weather has gotten crazier and crazier every year.

I'm getting a new roof and siding maybe over it.

My goodness.

Oh yeah.

I mean, that's, oh, I don't even want to think about.

Getting a new roof anytime soon.

I found out recently that we had a roof put on our house before we bought it like like 10 years ago.

So I'm like, all right, cool.

We got time.

Yes.

What?

Have you had to replace it yet?

No, no, no, no.

Oh, okay.

No, it's, it's less than, it's no, it's, it's less, it's, it got in 2019 actually.

So it's pretty new.

Okay.

I'm pretty new.

So

Pete Schwabba (host)

yeah, it's funny.

I used to, you know, I remember when I moved to the West coast and I was like, Oh, I can't.

I'm never going to be handled.

I love the seasons too much.

By year two, I was like, I'm never going back.

Like you become a wimp so fast.

Greg Bach (host)

Oh, I know.

Pete Schwabba (host)

And I live in cold weather again.

I never thought it would happen.

But yes, when you get

Greg Bach (host)

older, it just sucks.

I'm with you, AJ.

All my friends who moved to LA like a year or two, and they're like, oh, man, it's just so much night.

I'm like, shut up.

My god.

Ugh.

So boring.

Pete Schwabba (host)

I at least tried not to be that guy.

Greg Bach (host)

But I was like,

Pete Schwabba (host)

yeah.

Year three, we just spent Christmas there.

I was like, yeah, it's still Christmas.

It's just warm.

We can go to the park, you know.

Greg Bach (host)

I did Christmas in LA.

I did Christmas in LA one year, and I was like, I want to stay here every year for Christmas.

It's great.

I love this.

Oh, really?

Oh, yeah.

It's great.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yes.

Fantastic.

I see a question of the night coming out of this conversation.

Dom, let's get back to some news, please, buddy.

The second big story.

The second big story is Epstein.

Oh, wait.

No,

Greg Bach (host)

I just wanted to say that

Pete Schwabba (host)

so we don't forget.

Greg Bach (host)

This comes to us.

Not laughing at Epstein.

I'm laughing at that.

That's great

Pete Schwabba (host)

placement.

I'm not kidding, Greg.

We haven't heard much in the last few days.

There's so much chaos.

And I feel like that strategy is working.

But this, certainly, this next story reminds me a little bit of Epstein.

It's from CNN by way of Yahoo News.

Taxpayers have paid.

more than $300,000 in confidential sexual harassment settlements on behalf of six former members of the House of Representatives or their offices, according to GOP rep Nancy Mace.

How do you like that, Greg?

She named six former lawmakers or lawmakers' offices involved in settlements totaling more than $300,000 of taxpayer money.

Um, and it's part of a new bill.

I'm looking for the, uh, legislative, the, uh, OCWR, the office

Greg Bach (host)

of

Pete Schwabba (host)

congressional workplace rights record retention policy that was put into place in 2013.

Um, this is that in action and it covered a lot of these costs, but it was with, or I'm sorry, they went after this, but it was $300,000 of taxpayer money.

That is horrible.

Yep.

Greg Bach (host)

Yes.

I won't stand

Pete Schwabba (host)

for it.

Greg Bach (host)

Well, and here's the thing too, in this story, uh,

in this story, they talk about the fact that this reminds me a lot of anytime the United States settles with a business that they're not going to admit wrongdoing.

It says right here, the general language of the settlement contract reviewed by CNN, the accused office admitting to, they do not have to accuse, sorry here, I don't know how to read.

The accused office does not have to admit to any wrongdoing, but rather the states that the office is agreeing to the settlement to, quote, avoid the inconvenience of protracted litigation and the expense to the parties and the taxpayers of such litigation.

So instead, they just take money out of a coffer that we paid for and say, hey, shut up and go away.

That's it.

And they don't have to admit wrong.

There's no, there's no, any, sorry.

It's the same thing that happens to these billion-dollar corporations.

They pay a big fine.

They be like, well, we didn't do anything wrong.

We're just gonna, just have some money.

They're gonna just take some money that we'll get back in our taxes anyways, because we have to pay it.

There you go.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah, and

Greg Bach (host)

it's

Pete Schwabba (host)

it's really infuriating to there were two of the reps were John Conyers and Michigan Democrat and Blake Farron hold a Texas Republican This just has to stop and I you know what I plug Nancy Mace I think is kind of nuts sometimes But you know to break ranks with your party, especially the Republican Party Like I agree to like that takes guts and maybe they're positioning themselves to grift a different way or something I don't know but this stuff has to come to light Epstein

Greg Bach (host)

On that note, let's go to our third store of the evening.

The third big story.

So the Met Gala was last night.

If you don't know what that is, it's a big old party with a bunch of rich people dressing up very weirdly to raise money for a really good cause.

But there was more to it this year because apparently Jeff Bezos and his wife, who he married in Italy for $50 million were the co-chairs of the whole event and people were unhappy Pete.

They're very unhappy.

They were,

Pete Schwabba (host)

particularly Taraji P. Henson, who I love, and Meredith Lynch, two actresses that said, what are you doing, people?

All of you A-listers are here.

The Trump administration has gutted the arts funding.

Bezos is a big supporter of Trump, but he's wearing two hats here and supporting and putting himself front and center.

It's a weird event.

I've always thought it was a weird event to begin with, and I'm not

Greg Bach (host)

a fan of

Pete Schwabba (host)

it.

I love artists, I love actors, and a lot of great actors were there dressing like, and that's part of the gig.

I get it, but come on.

It's just

Greg Bach (host)

a strange event.

My favorite thing is that online commenters, they said we're speculating whether or not this whole hubbub was because was.

the reason why Zendaya and Meryl Streep weren't there.

And Streep's people were like, she's never been there.

So I don't know what you're talking about.

Ooh, controversy.

Pete Schwabba (host)

Yeah.

All right, folks, we are coming back after the news with our pal attorney, Jim Santel.

Jim is always fun to talk to.

He's going to keep us informed and it'll be good to catch up with him.

That is all coming up next.

This is Night Light with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach on the Civic Media Network.

Greg Bach

Welcome back to Nightlight here on the Civic Media Network.

I'm sorry, I'm trying to do the voice.

I'm just trying to be really cool right there with the music.

You're listening and or watching Nightlight on the Civic Media Network with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach here live here on the radio.

I don't know what I'm doing right now.

I'm sort of out of it today, but I'm so

Pete Schwabba

happy you're joining

Greg Bach

us.

I know we're happy you're joining today.

If you want to be part of the conversation, eight, five, five, seven, five, two, four, eight, four, two, eight, five, five, seven, five civic leave a comment on the live stream.

We're currently streaming on Facebook, YouTube and the platform.

We still call Twitter still ahead.

We got a great program for you a whole second hour with the cheese queen.

And our question of the night is yesterday was national paranormal day.

So we would love for you to let us know.

What urban legend, ghost stories, or just, you know, paranormal phenomenons is what gives you the creeps, gives you the scaries.

Let us know, drop a comment on the live stream, give us a call, send us a text.

We'd love to hear from you.

But we're going to move on right now with our first guest of the evening.

He is a colleague, a friend, former U.S.

attorney and host of Amicus Law Review here on Civic Media every Saturday from 9 a.m.

to 11 a.m.

Jim Santel is our guest.

Good afternoon, Jim.

Hello.

How are you doing?

Jim Santel

Greg, Pete, great to be with you.

It's been much too long.

And I'm told there are a few things that happened in America recently.

And I think you said you wanted to chat about them.

So good to be with you and all your listeners once again today.

Greg Bach

And yes, we did want to chat with you.

There is a huge story that came out of the US Supreme Court last week regarding the Voting Rights Act.

But before we get into that, I want to, because that story was last week.

And we can go back to 2013, but really the crux of this is all about our Chief Justice John Roberts, whom back in the 80s had this very dream in mind, which was to either gut or completely eliminate the Voting Rights Act.

Can you talk more a little about the history of it and what has led to what happened this past week, which you've talked about a lot in the past few months?

Jim Santel

Right, absolutely.

And so I think it's important for listeners, again, to see the headlines, but to recognize that the Chief Justice

Justice John Roberts, when he was in the administration in the White House, also Brett Kavanaugh, also in counsel's office in the White House, wrote memorandums decades ago talking about a very, very powerful chief executive.

The need to be powerful, the need to be swift, and much of that ended up in that horrific opinion of a couple of Fourth of Julys ago in which the Supreme Court said that presidents are immune from prosecution in many ways, but also talked about, again, this great power.

And that continues to animate what the Supreme Court has done.

It certainly sees its place into these recent decisions as well, in which they're giving the president huge amounts of authority principally on the shadow docket to do what he wants.

And that is the big story.

And I appreciate Greg, the identification of that because there's something much larger going on as dramatic as the Voting Rights Act case is.

And I would also identify it as the single most important decision of this term, arguably, and I know this may be hyperbolic, but arguably of our lifetime.

Why?

Because voting, as you often talk on this show, voting is the pathway to everything, right?

Where do we get Supreme Court justices?

We vote presidents in.

Where do we get them confirmed?

Senators, everything we do depends upon voting.

You get that one wrong.

and everything else falls apart.

And that's why this decision last week is so important.

That's why this focus, again, on the previous history in this is also important.

This is the third strike.

There was Shelby County a number of years ago, 2013, 2021.

We got Bernovich.

Basically, these are the Supreme Court chipping away at various aspects of the Voting Rights Act.

And now they did the third one, which is called Kelly.

That's the name of the case.

It really does, as Elena Kagan said, brings the Voting Rights Act virtually.

There's a little bit of an open door here, but virtually to its knees, it's basically a done deal now with respect to the capacity to use the Voting Rights Act to address discrimination in voting, including racial gerrymandering, all but raced from the ways in which we understand our nation.

Pete Schwabba

What is the opening, Jim?

You said a little opening.

To me, I read this is completely done.

But what is that opening?

Jim Santel

Yeah, the opening is very small, Pete.

And again, it's one that would not practically.

But again, people who support this decision identify it.

What Sam Alito said was,

what you need, the only way, the only way to show that there is racial gerrymandering that is unconstitutional, if you can prove in a court of law that it was intentional, that I sat down and I said, you know what?

I want those black people not to be able to vote.

It's got to be that extreme.

And the reason why your question is so good is we all know that that is barely, that's a tiny little aspect of this.

No one's going to stand up in any legislature these days and speak that way.

And so while the majority says, yes, you can still prove this by establishing intentional discrimination.

But if it's just discrimination that comes from your political gerrymandering and you didn't intend to do it, that's OK.

That's the very small piece that's out there.

As a practical matter, you're absolutely right, Pete, virtually impossible to show in a court of law.

the nature of discrimination at that standard.

And yet, when the majority says, oh, we're not doing anything, we're simply updating.

We're updating the previous standards.

And Elena Kagan, of course, goes nuts about that.

She says, no, you're not updating it.

You have brought this to its knees.

And I agree with her again, that the semantics of this are very, very small.

Greg Bach

And that's the thing too, you know, reading about this.

The whole

The roots of the Voting Rights Act was to combat racial prejudice in voting in the South, and what has happened is that people who want the VRA to go away...

And now it has, have spun it as a reverse racism aspect to say that this is prejudicial against non-black people, that once again, it's the burden of white people are being put up.

And let's just say what it is.

It's white people.

They don't care about brown people.

They don't care about Asian people.

They care about white people getting their votes.

I mean, it's not like they're the majority of the country anyways.

They spin it as, this is anti, this is discriminatory rhetoric that it's non-Blacks are just being put upon, so we must make this right, which is not the case at all.

Because we're seeing right now, state houses scrambling to redraw their maps.

Jim Santel

Right.

And that tells you all you need to know, right?

If this was some legitimate interest in democracy and simply redefining maps in a way that we all could agree with, you wouldn't be having these skirmishes.

Special sessions in at least two states yesterday and today, more of that coming up.

And to your point, that's exactly the basis upon which this Louisiana case against called Calais.

Every American should say that in the same breath that you say, Brnovich.

and Shelby County.

Those

Pete Schwabba

are

Jim Santel

the three that effectively brought the Voting Rights Act to basically its end.

The case itself was brought by people who identified themselves as non-African American voting citizens.

What an interesting way to describe yourself, right?

And they basically said that, yes, under the 14th Amendment, under the 15th Amendment, 14th Equal Protection, 15th Amendment, right to vote.

My rights are being discriminated against by virtue of creating a second majority black district.

That is affecting me.

That cannot happen.

And you articulated it perfectly, Greg.

That's the basis upon which this lawsuit

which the Supreme Court has now put its imprimatur on preceded.

It is a very, very perverse view of the world.

And again, to get back to your fundamental point, Elena Kagan says this as well, and they're very good.

I commend to your reading, frankly, the majority, but also then Elena Kagan's dissenting opinion.

She begins by talking about section two of the Voting Rights Act, 1965.

For 60 years, it has been the intention of Americans.

It has been re-upped by the legislature.

It was intended to ensure.

that people of color have the right to vote in America.

And now, you're not affirmatively saying that you don't have the right, you have now made it easy, easy to discriminate.

based upon race and all you need to do here's the formula here's the cynical formula that that sam alito embraces he says basically sit down and draw your maps based upon political lines uh there's another case uh 10 years or so ago in which they said we're not going to touch those so go ahead republicans and democrats cantile you can do the same thing draw your lines and if you happen to disenfranchise people of color the rule now is

Frankly, so what?

No longer a consequence, no longer a consequential analysis and effects analysis.

The issue instead is, what do you intend?

And when you ask me why I changed the lines and the numbers, I will say, oh, it's just for political reasons.

I wanted my Republican friends.

I wanted my Democratic friends to get into office.

Did we discriminate against blacks and other people?

Oh my goodness, that wasn't my intent.

And with that kind of a statement, what you have done is given imprimatur and given authority by the United States Supreme Court as of Wednesday of last week.

Pete Schwabba

Our guest is Jim.

Pardon?

Oh, sorry.

Jim Santel

It's stunning.

It's shocking.

Pete Schwabba

Yeah.

That's Jim Santel.

He is a former U.S.

attorney and host of Amicus, a law review here on Civic Media.

He joins us now to talk about the Voting Rights Act or the decimation of it.

Yeah, Alito is... It's like I'm in Bizarro World or the... No, no, no.

You can't... Not gerrymandering is racist because it combats racism.

We can't have that.

Like, what?

Like, I can't even figure out what he's saying sometimes.

But, Jim, how...

How long will it take?

Let's say the Democrats, if there are midterms, sweep the midterms, I've heard that this legislation can help the GOP pick up 27, as many as 27 seats in the South, in the House.

But if they don't, if the Democrats do win, how long would it take to undo damage if they even can of this legislation?

Jim Santel

That's the all-important question right now, Pete.

There is an answer to that.

There always has been.

Going back once again to Shelby County, going back to Bernovich, you're going back to now Calais.

There are things called legislative fixes.

If you get into the majority in the Congress and you probably need a supermajority in the Senate, but you can put together a fix, you can address what the Supreme Court has said as to Calais.

I can write a piece of legislation on the back of a note card today and say, here's the legislation.

We are hereby amending the Voting Rights Act to indicate to everyone out there that you do not have to prove intentional discrimination.

Instead, all you need to prove, and it's no small thing, but you simply need to prove an effect that discriminates against people of color.

That's the effects test.

You can make that change legislatively.

You can bury that, not just bury it, but you can embed it into new legislation and change what the Supreme Court has done.

You can do the same thing for Bernovich, the same thing for Shelby County.

All of these pieces of legislation, whose name is attached to them?

John Lewis.

It's the John Lewis Act, put in your number, of 2015, of 2020, of 2022.

You can make a change in all of these cases.

Virtue Overnight, the challenge, Pete, which goes to your question, is you need both houses of Congress, and they can do it if they want to.

You also need a president to sign off on this, right?

Lyndon Johnson signed off on the Voting Rights Act way back when he corralled Southern Democrats at the time.

They were the ones who opposed to this.

And he said, nope, we're doing this.

you still have to have a president who signs it.

So my own view is the best way of remitting this is to keep the Congress beyond the majority Democratic Congress, beyond 120th Congress, which we're swearing in in 2027.

2029, when you get to the 121st Congress, you've still got a majority.

You have a Democratic president, then you move, and then you make these changes in the Voting Rights Act.

You amend it to address exactly what the Supreme Court has been attacking for the past 15 to 20

20 years.

And voila, you've restored it.

Now will peo again, you bet they will.

They'll go to maintain that's illegal.

But out there and listeners should

they can turn this back, not right away, but eventually.

Greg Bach

We're going to keep the conversation going with Jim Santel.

He's the host of Amicus, a law review with us tonight here on Night Light with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach on the Civic Media Network.

Got any questions, comments?

Give us a call 855-752-4842, where we'll be right back.

Stay tuned.

Stay close.

Greg Bach (host)

Welcome back to Nightlight with Pete Schwab and Greg Bach here on the Civic Meeting Network.

You can always get in touch with us.

855-752-484-2855-757.

Leave a comment on that live stream.

We're currently streaming on Facebook, YouTube, and the platform.

We still call Twitter still lots of great programming ahead, including a discussion about our question of the night in recognition of National Paranormal Day, which was yesterday.

What is your, what is the, you know, the ghost story or the paranormal thing?

that spooks you the most.

We'd love to hear from you.

We're going to keep the conversation going right now with our guest.

He is a former U.S.

Attorney, host of Amicus Law Review here on Civic Media every Saturday from 9 a.m.

to 11 a.m.

Mr. Jim Santella is here, and we have Jack from Merrimack on the phone who's been waiting.

Jack, thank you so much for calling in.

What can we do for you tonight?

Hey, Jack.

Jack from Merrimack (caller)

Oh, good to talk with you again, Jim.

When Biden was elected, I stated that regardless of whatever issues there were, two things needed to be done.

The John Lewis Voting Rights Act needed to be passed, and the Supreme Court needed to be rebalanced.

There's not time to go into all the reasons that both needed to be done, except to say this.

Without those, I believed everything else done for the majority of Americans could be reversed, and that's exactly what's happened.

Democrats to get elected should promise the needed programs from universal medical care to increase to the minimum wage.

Um, whatever is else is is popular.

Most people don't understand the importance of those other items.

However, because after regaining control, those two things absolutely have to be done.

The other changes can follow.

because eventually they will, but without real election reform, not the lying so-called reform called for now, and without nullifying the clearly corrupt justices on the court, the other changes won't happen or won't be permanent.

Greg Bach (host)

Thank you so much, Jack, for calling.

Jim Santella (guest)

Absolutely.

Absolutely.

That's

Greg Bach (host)

the

Jim Santella (guest)

mission, right?

Greg Bach (host)

Yep, and I would say this too.

I don't just agree with Jack on that, but it's about the fact that the Democrats making promises they'll either keep or have the guts to keep if they get control of one or both of the houses.

A quick question I have for you, and I'm glad you brought up Democrats too, because we see states scrambling to redraw their maps, and now what we're also seeing is

democratically run states who are looking to axe their independent redrawing committees, which Wisconsin is trying to create one in the face in the wake of 15 years of gerrymandering maps.

And now both parties are trying to change the rules so they can so they can shore up their control, which if you get rid of those in those those independent committees, well, then that's going to be a problem for down the road because, you know,

Whether it's Democrat or Republican, they can then now redraw on political bias versus an independent group.

I mean, I just see a problem with all of this, right?

Absolutely.

Jim Santella (guest)

And again, it's that immediate satisfaction of saying, we're just fighting back against those folks who are not applying by the rules.

We know that in those states, and there are a handful of them out there that have these independent commissions,

that people look at, including places in the Midwest and out West as well, people look at those and say, yeah, these are pretty good lines.

They're not perfect, but they work.

And they work for Republicans and Democrats alike.

And so Democrats also have to be very thoughtful about what they do here.

Do you want to jump in the pool, if you will, with Republicans and do these things that are just intended to violate basic norms about how we do these things?

Or do you want to play for the long game?

And again, I recognize completely people saying, we can't be nice anymore.

We've got to play the game.

But I think Greg, your point is very well taken.

There will come a time when I believe that Americans will look to those independent commissions and say, that's what we have to do.

And let's keep this out of the Supreme Court.

Let's restore the Voting Rights Act.

And let's get commissioners

who will draw lines that we can all embrace regardless of what our party affiliation might be.

Here, here, once again.

Pete Schwab (host)

Jim, in a recent Truth Social Post, the president referred to midterms as happening unconstitutionally.

What is he referring to?

How are maps drawn without gerrymandering or pre-gerrymandering unconstitutional?

Jim Santella (guest)

What's his angle there?

All right, they are not probably somebody whispered this in his ear because I you know, I wonder out loud if my president has read

the opinion in Kelly I wish he would maybe take it back to the residence some night and when he's tweeting he should read it instead and he would understand yes that the majority has said that if you engage in the this line drawing and you do it just without intent then it's unconstitutional but but again the language there that that springs from that majority opinion has somehow gotten as an earworm into his ear

and he has said, aha, those folks who are on the majority here, they're onto something, all of this Louisiana, what Louisiana did, what those other states did, all of that is unconstitutional, and therefore all the voting that we're going to be doing here in six months from now, derives from that, it's all going to be unconstitutional.

My guess is somebody

drop that singular word into his brain and he Misinterpreted all of this and that's where we get the elections coming up and don't don't we're all Sophisticated enough to know don't assume that he's not going to drop that as the election approaches He's

Pete Schwab (host)

going to

Jim Santella (guest)

maintain that the voting is is illegal unconstitutional probably in those states where there are majority Democratic districts and maybe where we do have a non racial discrimination going on

He'll say that and who knows what he will do all these things are happening in anticipation of something something coming up Maybe maybe by September and which is going to challenge our ability to vote in November

Greg Bach (host)

Well

Jim, thank you so much for coming on the show and breaking this all down.

This is, as you said, is a very important decision from the Supreme Court.

It affects all of us.

And in one way or the other, whether we are in the South, the North, wherever it may be, but this, when you're messing with our voting rights, that's the bigger problem in the long run.

But Jim Santel is a former U S attorney, host of amicus, a law review, which is on every Saturday from nine AM to 11 AM here on civic media catch the back episodes by going to civicmedia.us slash shows, download those and listen to them when you'd like.

But we're going to take a quick break right now.

Get to you some.

When we come back, we'll be discussing the question of the night.

What urban legend, ghost story, or paranormal phenomenon scares you most?

Don't go anywhere you are listening to and or watching Nightlight with Pete Schwabba and Greg Mock here on the Civic Media Network.

Pete Schwabba

Trying to make sense of the world.

You've got Night Light with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach.

Greg Bach

Call our toll-free number now.

Pete Schwabba

Headlines, culture and real conversation.

And

Greg Bach

now, our feature presentation.

Pete Schwabba

Here's Pete and Greg.

Greg Bach

Welcome back to Night Light with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach.

here on the civic media network.

You can always get in touch with us, call or text the number is the same 855-752-484-2855-75 civic.

Leave a comment on the live stream.

We're currently streaming on Facebook, YouTube and the platform we still call Twitter.

Still ahead, we'll be talking to the cheese queen of Wisconsin, Sam Bushman.

That's coming up in just a little bit talking about, I want to know more about the title.

I want to know how she got

Pete Schwabba

it.

Was this

Greg Bach

lineage?

Was this like, you know, like the people who believed that the

The King is anointed by God.

Is she anointed by the cheese God?

I have no idea.

We'll find that.

We haven't

had royalty on this show yet to date.

So I'm

excited.

Very true.

Very, very true.

And that voice you are hearing right now is coming to you all the way from Christmas City, USA, Marinette, Wisconsin.

That is Pete Schwabber right there.

I am down the coast here in radio park and we're seeing it all the way over in Madison.

Completing the Yatterhey Triangle is Mr. Dom Lee on the ones and twos and we make up.

the coolest, the coolest radio team period.

I said it.

Dom Lee

I

Greg Bach

said it.

Also, uh, I say the, I say, I make the hot takes.

All right.

You know, you know, they might do the hot wings over there and hot ones, but we do have the hot takes and I don't have to eat terrible hot sauce then.

Uh, really quick, uh, just so folks know.

The Brewers game has been postponed.

They will make it up in July because there is, looks like there's going to be some weather in St.

Louis because they don't have a roof.

Fools.

So that will be taking place in July.

There'll be a double header to make that up, but there will be no baseball game tonight because of rain delays and rainouts.

So have a good night off, guys.

Enjoy your, enjoy your evening out down there in St.

Louis and not playing baseball.

I

think

they're gonna do Do you think they have to like do you think they have to like stay in their hotel room like they're not allowed to go out or anything like that like no rules to that I don't know I mean I have no idea

I would have mad you know what's so funny is like baseball players now or like Dom's age or a little older they they're probably just as happy to sit in and play video games right I mean no honestly

I'm sure some of them go out but

Do you ever do this, Pete?

Do you ever go to a baseball game and they say like the date of birth, you're like, oh, I am so old.

No, I'm in my extremely late twenties, Greg.

So I

can't

relate to that.

Before we get to restating the question, I wanted to say this earlier in the show, talking about age and this is again for another one for Pete because we grew up in the day and age when MTV had music videos and that's not a.

That's not a judgment.

I'm not one of those guys, but they also used to have something called MTV news where they did like real hard hitting news about like music and other things like that.

And it was led by their, their news guy, Kurt Loder.

He was

the face

of MTV news.

Today is his birthday, Pete.

And he is 81 years old today.

I, is he still alive?

He is.

I did not know that.

I thought I had heard that he had passed away or maybe it was a different MTV VJ, but yeah, I totally remember Kurt Loder.

He was like the most button down.

Like he didn't look like, I remember Mark Goodman had long hair and

Pete Schwabba

some of these

Greg Bach

guys look like X rockers, you know, but the loader was like, he could have been doing the nightly news if he had a different suit on, you know.

He just probably said a lot there at the, at the, at the buildings, like, excuse me, please, I need to get to my desk.

Excuse me, please, please put your, you got your Jack Daniels on me, Mr. Motley crew guy.

And now Kennedy from MTV, she is a pundit on Fox News.

It's very weird, very, very weird to be in America right now.

But that's all for another conversation.

We're going to get back to the question of the night.

Let's restate the question before we do that.

Dom, can I get some music, please?

Let's talk about the question.

OK, question.

Question.

Question.

Question.

Question.

OK, I have a question.

Questions.

This question.

Domanda.

Question.

Question.

Yesterday was national paranormal day.

So what urban legend, ghost story or paranormal phenomenon scares you the most?

855-752-4842-855-75, civically the comment on that live stream.

Again, we are on Facebook, YouTube and the platform.

We still call Twitter.

So Pete, you said earlier, it's not really your jam.

This thing is not really your jam, right?

The paranormal thing?

SPEAKER_??

Yeah.

Greg Bach

Yeah, I don't... Look, I'm open-minded.

I need some proof, I suppose, but, you know, we've had our friend Todd Michaels has been on, and he speaks very eloquently about all this stuff, and he makes a lot of sense, and he believes in it, but he's also skeptical, which I respect, and

Pete Schwabba

I

Greg Bach

feel like if I were to believe in the paranormal, I do kind of believe in the paranormal.

I mean, I believe in energy and where carbon goes after you die and all this stuff, and so I believe in it, and I believe that...

I'm just open-minded, I guess, is what I'm saying.

But some of it, the creepier, eerie stuff does freak me out.

And I think it's kind of fun to talk about sometimes.

And that's why I like having paranormal people on the show from time to time.

Anything involving a desolate or an abandoned asylum scares the living daylights

out of me.

Are there any abandoned, I feel like anywhere

Pete Schwabba

there's

Greg Bach

an abandoned asylum, abandoned asylum, now it's just, it's like condos now.

Dude, there's one

in Wisconsin still.

I'll find it.

But yeah, that's my thing.

I don't like abandoned, well, abandoned anything is sad, but yeah.

I had a conversation with Todd on the show once and he actually like talked to me more about, like, it's more about the connection to the spirits.

Like he

made it very, he made it, I mean, not to, I'm not being,

funny here.

He made it spiritual, like the connection you have to other people and where they are in their journey.

And I am not a person of this at all.

Like, I do not like, you can come at me with all this stuff.

I'm like, I still don't believe it.

I just don't like, there's just not like, for me personally, I have to like, if ghosts were real, that would be the top story on the news.

Like, yeah.

And so, but I don't disregard those who do and I don't

belittle people, I don't think less of them.

It's just not my jam personally.

And if you want to show me some proof, again, Pete, same as you, I'll look at what you got.

And most likely be like, okay, well, thanks, you know, good for you.

Here it is right here, Greg.

Sheboygan County Insane Asylum in Sheboygan Falls opened around 1939-1940.

It housed the mentally ill and developmentally disabled until its closure in 2002.

The current state it's considered one of Wisconsin's most haunted locations it hosts tours featuring reported ghost sightings screams and footsteps So that that's something I really don't need to be a part of because one time Todd said you can and I've had another Paranormalist on the show too at some point and he's they said you can pick up kind of like a tag That's spirit or whatever it is follows you home.

Yeah, and that's why I have no

Desire to go to these places because if that's true even if they don't want to hurt you.

No, thanks I Haven't peed the bed in over 20 years and I don't want to start again.

Okay.

Wow 20 years.

Okay.

That's right.

You're in your late 20s.

That's right.

Dom Lee

I forgot that Don what about you?

I do believe in the paranormal.

I do believe in it.

And so much so that I got myself a Ouija board a few months back.

The ones made by Parker Brothers Incorporate?

Yes.

I got one from my grandparents.

So it's a real thing, I promise.

I tried it out and nothing happened.

But it was still really cool.

And I don't know.

I really like paranormal stuff.

I like talking about this stuff.

Greg Bach

OK.

Dom Lee

It's fun to talk

Greg Bach

about.

What about you, Greg?

Dom Lee

I just told you.

Greg Bach

Yeah, sorry.

I just, whenever, now I'm sensitive because at the end of the night sometimes you go, oh, thanks for asking.

I do a preemptive ask and I was even listening to what you said.

So there you go.

Thanks for listening.

All right.

So let's get to the end.

I

Dom Lee

don't care.

Greg Bach

Uh, no, let's get to the text

Dom Lee

line.

Don, what are people saying about tonight's question?

Yeah, we have Monica from Mount Horribb said, not spooked, but the beast of Bray Road, it sounds scary.

Oh yeah, I've heard that.

What is the beast of Bray Road?

It looks like a wolf is just like standing on the edge of a road.

It's an upright, yeah, it's horrifying.

It's, oh man, it looks creepy.

Greg Bach

These all look like drawings.

Dom Lee

Well, I think they're trained to recapture

Greg Bach

everything.

That's AI.

That's just, that one's just a dog.

A dog on

two feet,

Greg?

My dog, my dog sits back on her two feet too, and I give her a little treat when she does it.

Maybe the Priest of Bray Road's just a really good boy.

Or girl, I don't know their journey.

This doesn't know how to heal What

Dom Lee

else we got?

We also got Melissa in Madison says hi guys My paranormal nightmare would be just like the movie the entity really scary imagine not being able to see the thing that's attacking you Yeah, that is creepy.

Greg Bach

I live that every single moment in my life.

That's just called me being mean to myself

That's just like, that's like, you're your own worst enemy.

Exactly, exactly.

I'm too scared to watch that movie.

I've heard it's really freaky.

Okay.

So, all right.

So that's a, it's like a horror movie or is it a pair?

Okay.

I've never heard of it.

I don't I don't have my toe in the horror movie world So I'm so

I think it's supposed to be one of the best ever and the most scary ever Dom if I'm if I'm correct

Dom Lee

here, but

Greg Bach

I would watch that with a group But it's not something I'm gonna put in right before I go to bed.

Dom Lee

It's just yeah It's just so ominous like the whole movie is just like oh it gets you on the edge of the seat for sure Same thing is like lights out as well.

So either kind of remind Is that

Greg Bach

is entity the one that starts with a decapitation or is that

Dom Lee

I think that's I think I'm not certain

Okay, anyway We also have John from Columbia saying phantasm scared the poop out of me.

Greg Bach

I Remember that like that was the thing like those that movie phantasm and Hellraiser Because those two films you know before that we had and they're scary and they're violent and they're paranormal based I guess cuz like Jason and Michael Myers and Freddy Krueger.

They're all like

unkillable supervillains, but Hellraiser and Phantasm were different.

They were just like, they, they fed on the, the most dreadful human, like they, they fed on your most dread, dreaded fears period.

And like, I remember just reading articles and fan, cause I don't know why I don't watch horror movies, but I would read, uh, uh, was it Phant, no Phan, Van Goria?

Van Goria, the magazine, cause I was like, it looked terrifying.

I'm like, why would anyone watch this?

Because they like to be freaked out.

Yeah, I wish I'd

so jealous so so jealous We've got some good Facebook comments here to our pal Frank Anderson says ghost chickens of out of gamey County You could talk about paranormal stuff with because he doesn't believe in it at all, but he loves talking about the legends Yeah, let me know what you find out there Greg Tim Joyce on Facebook says the most of

The most afraid, I'm most afraid of the legend of Pete Hankseth.

The death room at the Old Holly Hotel.

I walked into it once, felt very cold by its bed and what I can only describe as the presence of death and psychic pain.

What is that?

The

Old Holly Hotel.

Um, I looked up ghost, I looked up ghost chickens of out of gaming County and the fourth picture is a, uh, chicken fingers and fries.

So I don't know what that one's so scary.

Yeah.

That'll kill you.

Yeah.

Especially if you eat those late night.

Oh my gosh.

That's a paranormal experience in the bathroom.

Oh my good gravy.

No, thank you.

Can you Google the death room at the old Holly hotel and see what comes up?

I'm curious about that.

I do remember what was that movie?

Greg with Barbara Hershey or was that the entity?

I don't know.

She was the devil was like stalking her.

And she always knew it was in the room when there was, was this like horrible smell and it got cold and that freaked me out.

I think the, it's the entity.

Yeah.

The, it says here, the entity.

She also starred in the manner, but yeah, the lead character,

the

benevolent.

It's called by a benevolent entity in the 1982 cult classic, the entity.

I thought this was brand new.

I thought this was brand new.

Like you guys are talking about like, oh, it must

be a movie.

I thought it was too.

Yeah.

That makes sense now.

Nick on Facebook says the hauntings at JFK prep.

I think that's

Green

Bay High

School, maybe.

I guess.

I wasn't cool enough to go to a prep school.

Laura on Facebook says, when I was a kid, there was a show called Colchak, the Night Stalker.

Yes, I remember.

Those are available now to watch with Dean Harry McGat.

What's his name?

Yeah, I know exactly what you're talking about.

I saw that.

Darren McGavin.

Yeah, I saw it.

Yeah, that looked, I was going to watch it.

I'm like, nah, I'm good.

I just, it's okay.

Thank you.

It's like the X files before the X files and are we are we short on time here?

Yeah, we gotta get going.

Oh dear god.

Okay.

I'll continue.

We'll talk about this more in the nightcap.

So don't go anywhere folks.

We'll come back.

We'll be talking to the cheese queen of Wisconsin, Sam Bushman.

So

don't go anywhere.

You are watching and or listening to Nightlight with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach here on the Civic Media Network.

Stay tuned.

Stay close.

Pete Schwabba

I'm alright Nobody but about me Why

Greg Bach

you

Pete Schwabba

got to give me a fight?

Can't you just let it be?

I'm alright Don't nobody but about me

Hey, it's great to have you here, folks.

This is Tuesday night at Nightlight with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach.

I am Pete Schwabba coming to you live from Marinette, Wisconsin, a.k.a.

Christmas City, USA.

At least I'm trying to get that to stick.

And Greg is coming to us live from Radio Park.

And Racine Dom Lee, as he is affectionately called, is in Madison working the board and producing the show.

And we are...

We are jamming through hour number two here.

Our question of the night is, in honor of yesterday being a national paranormal day, what paranormal stories scare you the most or ghost stories or happenings or occurrences, whatever?

What freaks you out?

Let us know.

And maybe after our next guest, we'll find a cheese that goes with your fear properly.

Our next guest is a Wisconsin influencer and a big fan of cheese, and she is.

The Cheese Queen of Wisconsin, she's so busy with cheese, it was hard to get her on the show, but we finally did it, slam dunk.

Sam Bushman joins us now over the stream.

Hi, Sam.

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

Hello, thank you for having me.

Pete Schwabba

It's great to have you here.

I'm so excited to talk about this topic because not just of where we live, but

In or out of Wisconsin, people love cheese.

So let's get into it.

I want to ask you first.

You obviously are a big fan of cheese, but how did this fascination with it start to the point where you decided to make your living at it or make it your biggest hobby or become an influencer?

How did you become the cheese queen?

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

Um, I was bored during COVID, like, you know, most stories.

Yeah, it was, I got laid off for my job and I didn't have anything to do.

And I was, you know, what can I do on social media?

I wasn't into the TikTok dancing.

That was not really my vibe.

Pete Schwabba

Oh, come on.

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

So I wanted to do something that like helped the local businesses during that shutdown time.

So I was like, I'm going to go out once a week and get cheese curds.

And we're going to start reading them.

And I put it on YouTube at first.

That didn't really get very far.

But then I started posting it on Instagram and it just kind of went from there.

Pete Schwabba

Oh, that's cool.

Greg Bach

Whenever I hear those stories that begin with, well, I was in the middle of COVID and it's a story of someone doing something really great.

I just think about me during the COVID lockdown.

finding out how fun it is to drink wine in bed.

And I did nothing with that whatsoever.

I didn't monetize it.

I didn't do it.

I didn't even put it on film.

I just sat there.

I'm like, this would be really fun to watch Parks and Rec again and drink some Merlot.

Sam, so I'm taking it then.

The Cheese Queen of Wisconsin.

Was it a title bestowed upon you or did you just say, that's me?

It's mine.

I shall come for the crown.

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

I actually don't know where it started.

I think after I had, you know, like a hundred cheese curd reviews, it was just kind of like a nickname people gave me.

She's

Greg Bach

the cheese

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

girl.

She's the cheese queen.

Um, so, and it's just kind of stuck.

So that's kind of my alter ego at this point,

Greg Bach

which is nicer.

Things you can see in the comment section.

I'm sure.

So,

Pete Schwabba

well, we have never officially had royalty on this show before.

So this is a first

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

time.

Pete Schwabba

It's nice to have an official cheese expert of Nightlight.

Maybe we could talk you into that at some point.

But before we get into more of what you do and you're influencing and events coming up, Greg and I have this thing.

We'd like you to take a side, Sam.

We're going to make things awkward here for a moment.

But Greg likes cottage cheese.

Oh, God.

OK.

You know what?

SPEAKER_??

I just.

Pete Schwabba

I don't like cottage cheese.

I don't even like talking about cottage cheese.

Yeah, you

Greg Bach

brought

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

it

Pete Schwabba

up.

Where do you stand on cottage cheese?

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

I'm going to have to side with Greg.

I'm a cottage cheese fan.

SPEAKER_??

Wow.

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

I'm into it.

Pete Schwabba

Dom said he was going to put it on.

Dom makes tacos every Tuesday.

He's like the taco king of Wisconsin.

He said he puts cottage cheese on his tacos.

How do you feel about that, Sam?

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

I have not heard of that before.

I mix them with my eggs a lot.

I'll

Pete Schwabba

put

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

them in random stuff.

Greg Bach

You just blew Dom's mind right there.

If anyone just heard that, oh, that was Dom going.

Here's the thing about, okay.

So all right.

Well, Pete brought it up.

So I'm just going to get into this.

I treat cottage cheese like a dessert.

And what I mean by that is that like when I make my dinner, I usually have, so like I'll make, you know, I'll make.

Whatever like a piece of chicken and some sweet potatoes and then I'll have just like a half a cup of cottage cheese I always eat the cottage cheese last.

I don't know

Pete Schwabba

what

Greg Bach

it is But

Pete Schwabba

for some

Greg Bach

reason I always view it as like that's my dessert because it's so good And it's got good by itself who people will say like oh if you do this I used to put hot sauce on mine, but I don't even do that anymore I just like it's great the way it is so I'm not telling you Pete you have to try to you should I'm just saying maybe it's time

Okay, well, I mean recently that's what I'm saying sometimes taste buds change things change I'm just saying who knows you never know buddy You never know you've got the cheese queen right here.

I'm

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

telling you

Greg Bach

it's good

Pete Schwabba

I see I prefer a smoked Gouda, but that's there Do you do you have a favorite do you have a favorite cheese that you like to eat?

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

Um, my go to is always the Sartori, uh, Bella Vitano Merlot cheese.

Greg Bach

It's like

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

soaked in Merlot wine and that one is 10 out of 10.

Um, that's usually what I bring anywhere I go or my, it's always in the fridge.

Greg Bach

I, I know what you mean there, Sam.

I really love the Merck's bucket of cheese Merlot style where I can just take a knife and just put it, I don't even need the cracker.

The cracker's a conduit.

I don't need the cracker.

That's all I need.

Uh,

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

yeah.

Greg Bach

So okay, so by that answer I mean if this is not just like you Get into it.

This is a thing.

Do you actually do you make cheese?

Are you a cheese monger or something you want to do or you strictly about the advocacy of cheese?

Sam Bushman (Cheese Queen)

So I did attempt to make cheese a couple of times That's hard making cheese is not easy So you know I am not a professional cheese monger.

I mostly just eat it.

I it didn't go well.

So I gave that up

Greg Bach

Well, we'll be talking more about cheese, cheese endeavors, and maybe talking more about the beauty of cottage cheese with Pete here on the other side of the break with the news coming up.

So don't go anywhere.

We are talking to the cheese queen of Wisconsin.

Sam Bushman is our guest.

Don't go anywhere.

Stay tuned.

Stay close.

You are listening to and or watching Nightlight with Pete Schwab and Greg Bach here on the Civic Media Network.

Stay tuned.

Stay close.

Pete Schwabba

Cheese Cheese Come back tonight light ladies and gentlemen.

I am peach wabba joined by Greg Bak as always and Dom Lee Producing the show in Madison.

We're in the middle of a conversation about cheese

We have actual royalty on the show tonight.

Samantha, Sam Bushman is the cheese queen of Wisconsin.

She knows her stuff.

She's got followers.

She's an influencer.

And we are talking cheese.

It's great to have you here, Sam.

Welcome to Nightlight once again.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, thank you.

Pete Schwabba

So tell us about this.

interactive cheese curd map you have.

I love this.

Tell people how they can find it and how did you come up with this and how is it hard to maintain?

It looks like a lot of work.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, it is.

I had actually a company out of downtown Milwaukee reach out to me and they had some interns that they wanted to

find projects for.

And it started as an Excel spreadsheet just on my website.

And they were like, Hey, can we have our interns make this a map for you?

And I was like, Sure, let's do it.

So they did it for free.

They set the whole thing up.

So you can yeah, you can search for fried cheese curds by city, you can search by breading or battered by sauce type by

I don't know, a bunch of different things.

And yeah, I try to keep it updated.

I think I have a couple that are not on there right now, but it's got like over 200 cheese curds at this point.

Pete Schwabba

It's incredible.

You don't have Marinette on there, I noticed.

How

Greg Bach

can we

Pete Schwabba

fix this?

Who, who,

Greg Bach

who do we have to talk to, you know, like that throw?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

I gotta get some Marinette cheese curd recommendations on my list so I can

Greg Bach

make a trip.

I got an Andrew Jackson here that will help you figure

Samantha Bushman (guest)

out whether

Greg Bach

or not there's a Marinette on that map there.

Do you, when, when it comes to like the, you know, you've done a lot of research, you've eaten a lot of cheese curds, you've, you've done a lot of, as far as.

With regard to cheese in Wisconsin when someone just comes to you with with a request for recommendation Are you decide person who just says check the website or do you say like give me a moment?

Let me think about this Where are you going and you like put you know you give them a real like curated recommendation about where they should go

or

Samantha Bushman (guest)

what they should eat.

Yeah, I give them a real curated.

I would love to tell people just go look it up themselves, but I'm like, no, let me think about the area and what's over there.

Um, and I get, I get a lot of out of towners that will message me on Instagram and Facebook asking for recommendations to wherever they're visiting.

So I try to try to speak from the heart.

Pete Schwabba

There you go.

I love the authenticity and I would expect nothing less from McQueen.

Um, Sam.

What are you know when sometimes let's clarify this because to me a cheese curd is deep fried It's an orange cheese like cheddar and I don't know it seemed like when they first came out and I'm probably off on this but like what late 80s Maybe is the first time I think I ate cheese curds They were all like cheddar and then all of a sudden they're all these white cheeses and I don't have any room for that in my arsenal I like an orange cheese

I like it deep fried.

And now I'll dunk it in balsamic, whatever.

But a lot of people don't like their cheese curds with breading on them.

Where are you in this whole mess of cheese

Samantha Bushman (guest)

curd cheddar?

I'm gonna say something that might blow your mind a little bit.

Please.

The yellow cheese curds are dyed.

They don't come that way.

Yeah, the white cheese curds are the I remember I was Well Sam, thanks a

Greg Bach

lot for the great.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Thanks

Greg Bach

a lot

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, so white cheese curds are more original authentic Really?

Yeah But where do I fall I I'm a fried I usually prefer fried over fresh Depends on the mood quite honestly

So

Greg Bach

I, I find, I mean, like if I want to cheat, if I want cheese curds, like a, like a, like a restaurant, they got to be fried.

Like if you, if I go to a restaurant and they give me just a, you know, a basket of cheese curds that are just cold.

And I mean, they're fresh and everything.

Like, this is not what I wanted.

I

Samantha Bushman (guest)

wanted, I don't know.

That's the thing

Greg Bach

is, is, yeah.

But I also, I feel like in this day and age of cheese curds, it's getting very, very meticulous as far as like you go to a place and like my wife and I went to a place recently and the cheese curds were okay, but they were all like really small.

They were like all

Samantha Bushman (guest)

like

Greg Bach

pebble type small.

Nowadays you go to a place like, if you see it on the list here and a leg from brewery, they're huge cheese curds.

They're gigantic.

They're, they're meal in it itself.

And I feel like the game has been upped in the past five years with cheese curds and there's

things people will accept.

And then like for us, we're like, well, we'll never order these again, because it's they're expensive and they're not, I don't know, they're not good.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, for sure.

I can tell typically just by looking at a photo whether or not they're going to be good at this

Greg Bach

point.

Training

Samantha Bushman (guest)

training on the science.

Pete Schwabba

Yeah.

So if you were to dip cheese curds, most people go for the ranch.

I kind of didn't want to like ranch with cheese curds because ranch is not people dip their pizza and it's everywhere people dip ranch and ranch now it's insanity.

But I do dip the ramp, but why don't they offer more sauces at most places with cheese curds?

Or maybe it's because I live in the middle of nowhere.

I

Samantha Bushman (guest)

don't know.

Yeah, I think that does have something to do with it, but usually it's a ranch or marinara.

I prefer the ranch, but I've had some crazy unique sauces come with the cheese curds before, like blackberry jam.

I'm trying to like a garlic butter type situation.

So there are places that get creative with it.

Greg Bach

Really quick before we move on, John, John and Madison listening to WMDX, he said, I think talking about cottage cheese said, put sliced peaches and heavy syrup on the cottage cheese.

Awesome, add in.

It's his dessert often.

I'm not gonna, that's awesome.

I love that.

But to me, that that's just like your taste and that's peaches and syrup.

Then it's like, I just want the cheese.

I just want the cottage cheese.

Thank you very much.

But I

I have no problem with peaches and heavy syrup.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

I've never had syrup on cottage cheese.

I have done the peaches, but not the syrup, so I'll have to give that a shot.

Pete Schwabba

So also, oh,

Greg Bach

go ahead,

Pete Schwabba

Craig,

Greg Bach

sorry.

Oh, no, no, he had one more thing.

Go ahead,

Pete Schwabba

Sam.

Yeah, he said, Peter, you should try it again after the Parmesan fiasco.

You are ready.

Sam, last week I spoke about how I had fresh Parmesan on my pasta, and I hadn't had that in a while because it's convenient to get the shaker or whatever.

My God.

Fresh Parmesan is a is a game changer.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yes.

Am

Pete Schwabba

I right?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yes.

Okay.

Yeah.

I introduced my fiance to Fresh Parmesan.

He didn't even know that existed.

He thought it was only out of the shaker.

So it was pretty mind blowing for him.

Greg Bach

Oh, that's awesome.

Pete Schwabba

I love that.

That's

Greg Bach

true love.

That's how I knew he was the right man.

So.

Here's a question I have for, we're going to move off of cheese curds for a moment.

And, you know, I've got friends who live overseas and one of the things they love to do is they love to make fun of America for their cheeses.

Specifically, they'll say things like, you know, the, you know, cheese isn't supposed to be orange and whatnot.

What do you say to folks when they kind of like, you know, dig on America, specifically Wisconsin saying, well, you guys have cheese whiz and you have this and you have, you know, singles and in plastic.

What do you say to folks who say, well, yeah, you guys don't, America doesn't have good cheese.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

I say they're wrong.

There is more research.

I mean, I feel like it's all over the spectrum, right?

There are things that are gross and not good when it comes to cheese.

And there are some really great cheese places, um, cheese makers around the U S. So it's all over the place.

Pete Schwabba

Our guest is Sam Bushman.

She is the cheese queen of Wisconsin.

You can follow her on social media if you want to learn about cheese curd.

She's got a map.

She's got opinions on cheese and all this great stuff.

You're a really fun follow, Sam.

And I don't want to beat the dead cheese curd here, but I do want to go back to the cheese curd.

What are your thoughts on the Kerter Burger, Sam?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Have you heard of the Kerter Burger?

I did have the Kerter Burger the first year it came out.

It was a lot.

I felt pretty unwell afterwards.

I was just taking a nap.

It wasn't bad.

I was surprised.

It was better than I thought it was going to be, but it was, I mean, it's just a block of fried cheese.

Pete Schwabba

It just seems wrong.

Yeah.

You know.

I

Greg Bach

don't

Pete Schwabba

know.

You're really trying to put on weight fast.

I don't get it.

I thought it was good.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, that was the other thing.

I could feel my arteries clogging from eating

Greg Bach

that.

Dom, do you want to repeat that statement you just made right there on the download for no one to hear?

I thought it was good.

I thought it was really good.

OK, don't say it like that.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

OK, weirdo.

Greg Bach

The big arch might get jealous when you're talking like that.

Like goodness.

OK, so you are an advocate of cheese.

You love cheese.

You love talking about it.

It's your business.

Is there a cheese or, you know, specifically that I don't want to say don't like, I don't want to get into the hate game.

I just basically, you know, is there a cheese when you say, not my jam, not for me, great for you, but I don't, I don't enjoy myself.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

I'm going to have to go with blue cheese, probably.

Greg Bach

Really?

I

Samantha Bushman (guest)

worked with a brand recently and they sent me smoked blue cheese and that was actually really good.

That I could eat, but standard blue cheese is just not my jam.

Greg Bach

I feel like such a little kid about this one.

I feel like if I'm gonna have blue cheese, there has to be a dress.

I'll have blue cheese in a dressing, but I'm not just gonna eat blue cheese.

Or it's a part of something.

We crumble blue cheese onto a burger,

Samantha Bushman (guest)

but I'm

Greg Bach

not just gonna be like, ooh, I'll take a slice of that blue cheese.

No, that's not.

I don't do that with any cheese.

Pete Schwabba

You

Greg Bach

guys just eat

Pete Schwabba

cheese with no crack or anything?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Are you a born raised Wisconsinite?

Pete Schwabba

Are you

Greg Bach

what?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Are you okay?

I'm a

Greg Bach

transplant,

Samantha Bushman (guest)

but... You okay?

That explains it.

Greg Bach

Wait a minute, wait.

You've never just, you've just, okay, okay, okay.

And this is, hey, this is a safe space.

I accept your journey, Pete.

Bring it.

You've never, no, this is not about criticism.

I'm just trying to lay out the map of your life now, the history of your experiences.

Oh, that'll be fun with Elizabeth.

Have you never gone to a party?

where there's like just, you know, a grazing table and you just saw a slice of cheddar in a nice little square shape and you just picked up that piece of cheddar cheese and just and walked on.

Pete Schwabba

Never.

Greg Bach

You've never ever done that.

Pete Schwabba

I'm not saying I never did it, but

Greg Bach

that's okay.

All right.

Let the record show you just said I never ever

Pete Schwabba

did it.

I would have to be starving.

No, but no, I don't make a practice of that.

I typically need a cracker or something to

Wash it down with maybe I have a slice of cheese with like a little bit of red wine or something.

Yeah, I always I have an X an accent with my cheese Sam

Samantha Bushman (guest)

you want to

Pete Schwabba

take this one?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, I was snacking on cheese slices while I was making my dinner That's a regular occurrence for

Greg Bach

me

Yeah.

I was going to say, Tony, the trucker on the text line says, Pete, try cottage cheese as a dip with Frito scoops or wavy lace potato chips.

Growing up, my mom thought chip dip was a luxury.

So my brother's and myself improvised with cottage cheese, capital, yum.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

You can make some salsa in there, too.

I've done that before.

Oh, that sounds amazing.

That's good.

Pete Schwabba

Great text.

Thank you, Tony.

So hungry.

So all right, Sam.

Before I let you go, you're sitting down to watch some color television.

You've got cheese on the mind.

What kind of cheese are you having?

What are you gonna snack on to watch your favorite show or a great movie?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

I do love the big things of string cheese from Cedar Valley Cheese Store.

Specifically, they make the best string cheese there in Belgium.

So either that or some fresh cheese curds are literally my two options that I use when I'm just having a snack on the couch.

Greg Bach

Sam, have you ever had clock shadow cheese curds?

Samantha Bushman (guest)

That's my favorite.

And also the big ones that Lakefront Brewer uses.

Yes, they

Greg Bach

do.

Yes, they do.

Wow.

I just had some string cheese today.

Before we get on out of here, we only have about a minute left, but I want to get this live stream comment from Sydney here, Sydney Frankenstein.

He says, my dad is from Iran and our daily breakfast was lavish bread, feta cheese, parley or parsley, and black tea, and sometimes reddish as cheese is very close to me.

Oh yes, parsley.

Thank you so much, Sydney Frankenstein for getting in touch with us.

No, I appreciate that.

Pete Schwabba

And then real quick, Sam, before we let you get out of here, we got about 20 seconds.

Favorite wine with cheese.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Oh, just a good red merlot.

Pete Schwabba

There you all done.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Yeah, this is awesome.

Pete Schwabba

Thank you.

All hail the queen.

We

Samantha Bushman (guest)

appreciate your

Pete Schwabba

time tonight.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

It was awesome,

Pete Schwabba

Sam.

Thank you so much.

Continued success and come back soon.

Please.

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Thanks.

Pete Schwabba

All right, Sam Bushman.

Follow her on social media.

She is the cheese queen of Wisconsin.

And we will be right back, folks, to close down the show with the nightcap and read some of your texts.

And we'll talk more about cheese, probably, too.

This is

Samantha Bushman (guest)

Pete

Pete Schwabba

Schwabba and Greg Bach in Nightlight on the Civic Media Network.

Pete Schwabba (host)

It's time to wind it down.

Let's take a moment to look back and ask.

What did we learn today?

This is Nightcap with Greg and Pete.

Greg Bach (host)

Welcome back tonight.

Look nightlight with Pete Schwabba and Greg Bach here on the civic media network.

You can always get in touch with us 8557 5248 4285 575 civic.

Leave a comment on that live stream.

We're currently streaming on Facebook, YouTube and the platform.

We still call Twitter still can get in touch with us about our question in memory and commemorating national paranormal day yesterday.

What is the paranormal phenomenon ghost story that scares you?

Let us know right now.

Drop him in the comments on the live stream or in text form.

We'd love to get

And before we get to what we learned here in the nightcap, let's get to some last-minute texts from the world around us.

Dom, what do we have

Dom (regular contributor)

in the text line?

Yeah, we have John Murray from Madison, texting in on WMDX, says, Never fear perceived goats, but watch the humans like a hawk.

They are the ones who will get you.

That is true.

Okay,

Pete Schwabba (host)

there we go.

Then he also

Dom (regular contributor)

was talking about the entity, which is, he said the entity yes, assuming that's pretty scary and he didn't like it.

And then he said Barbara was...

was Foxy.

Okay.

Greg Bach (host)

Alright.

Dom (regular contributor)

John

Greg Bach (host)

showing his age there.

Dom (regular contributor)

I love

Greg Bach (host)

that.

Foxy.

Foxy Bob and Hersey there with the entity 1982 called Classic.

Yeah, we're gonna be watching that later.

Foxy.

I had a serious crush on Barbara Hershey.

She was gorgeous.

I had a comedic crush on Barbara Hershey.

That's even better because then you know, you don't get your heart broken.

You can laugh.

Dom (regular contributor)

What else we got?

All right, we have Melissa from Willy Street says back in the day I used to travel for work and had to stay at some strange hotels that gave me some really weird vibes One was a days in that was a converted hospital.

I cannot stay there and it was still giving off hospital vibes.

Oh, that's terrible

And then what else did she go on to say, Dom?

She said, by the way, Dom, I miss my moniker, Melissa from Willy Street.

And Melissa from Willy Street, I will start calling you Melissa from Willy Street.

Yes, you will don Melissa he is sorry very sorry And then we also going back to John he says also demons like the one in the omen That's really scary movie that needs to be exercised will kill you all the way dozens of these are documented and wanted want to talk to one of those Catholic priests and Get the skinny dot-dot.

Wow.

I would love to know

Greg Bach (host)

more about this whole documented thing.

Yeah, that's I call I call What are they called bunk?

I call bunk on that

All right, John, challenge.

Let us know,

Dom (regular contributor)

buddy.

I would love to read

Greg Bach (host)

that, too.

Yeah.

Dom (regular contributor)

Yeah.

We also have Tony, the trucker, said, Gents, when I see a large number of birds sitting on a power line or congregating in a tree, I feel a little uneasy.

Well, at least Tony thinks birds are real.

So we'll start there and move on.

We're going to attack Tony.

And I think, I think that's it guys.

I think that's what we got on the test line.

Yeah.

Oh yeah.

That's it.

That's all we

Greg Bach (host)

got.

What do we also have on the Sidney's Greg on the screen?

Yeah, we

had.

Yes.

Absolutely.

First comment from Sidney earlier, Sidney Frankenstein.

Is this Sidney Sidney?

This is Sidney.

Sometimes he's

Sidney politics.

Other nights he's Sidney Frankenstein.

Well, then I just sorry for his girlfriend because she has to deal with both.

But yeah.

happy belated birthday, Rachel, and also just one because

I wanted

to say this happy new year.

But Sidney Frankenstein says I used to listen to coast to coast AM the radio show back in the day and they had a call in from a guy who claimed aliens were real and they were interdimensional beings living among us.

I mean, I think that was the basis for all calls on coast to coast.

Like, I think that was their bread and butter.

Like, it wasn't like, hey, today we're gonna be cooking with allspice.

No, it was always about someone.

I've been in area 51, man,

you

understand.

You know, I looked up Tim Joyce.

He texted on Facebook and talked about the Holly Hotel.

The historic Holly Hotel in Holly, Michigan is renowned as one of the most haunted locations in Michigan and often referred to as the most haunted historic building in America by some.

While it does not feature one specific death room, the entire structure is considered a hotbed for paranormal activity.

This makes me think of the book the devil in the white city.

Yeah, and the murder castle is a real guy who killed They don't even know how many people he killed and he prayed on people around the world's fair in 1893 when they built the white city So you read it great.

Yeah, it's like two books in one because this guy I can't think of his name was Herman HH Holmes HH Holmes, maybe the most Herman Mudger

Yeah, and then how Daniel Burnham built the World's Fair and they try to compete with Paris your Incredible book.

We should have that author on if I mean it was

it was Eric Larson is the author of that book He's written a bunch of other great books.

It was a three.

It was a house.

It was a property that took up three blocks specifically designed for one thing and one thing only murder and that was

it hallways that went nowhere Closet that if he locked you into gases that came in and he would

Dominic

read the devil in the white city, and there's also a another book about him.

It's just about HH Holmes Okay, I can't remember the name.

It's a one where I'll find out but yeah, it will freak you out.

It was and he was a real human.

This was real thing.

So

yeah, it's not even paranormal.

It's not at all

Jigsaw games

He's

not

a nice guy, Dom.

No, there was no

parable.

There was no there was no learning that we glean from HH Holmes.

Herman

Webster Mudgeit, that was his real name.

That was a 19th century name right.

Herman Webster Mudgeit.

Oh my good gracious.

Pete, do we

have any other comments on the Facebook

page?

We just another one here quickly from John, who says it's all fun and games till your head spins and projectile sludge flies.

We've got I wouldn't argue with that Yeah, Facebook.

We've got I can't read some of these they're too long, but I'll get to Jay Campbell says I don't want to I don't want to wake up in a bathtub full of ice missing a kidney I don't want to I don't I don't do much to keep myself out of situations where it could happen though That's not so much paranormal That's not paranormal as it is something completely different.

I'm just

that's

just basic irresponsibility.

Yeah, that's about who you hang out with

Right.

Tim says the one-armed hobo.

I don't remember that.

Thank you, Tim.

Richard Vargas says eating KFC at the drive-in in the dark and something seems weird, so you turn your car light on and you're holding a fried rat that you just bit into.

So this is what happens when I put the question out there.

We just get really interesting answers.

Chris Michael says they do paranormal investigations, so not really.

And finally, we've got Bill Miller.

Ghosts are scary.

I guess not to Bill.

All right, Bill.

Bill and I went to high school together.

So really quick, Pete, what did you learn?

Oh, man, I learned about cheese, Greg.

And apparently, I'm not a cheese guru.

I need to just eat cheese plain.

Dom (regular contributor)

There

Greg Bach (host)

you go.

Dom (regular contributor)

Try it.

Tom, what about you?

I learned that I'm going to start watching The Entity.

It sounds like a very scary movie.

Greg Bach (host)

Oh, you are a brave boy.

Oh my goodness gracious.

All right.

So, uh, thank you so much to Dominic, to Tucker, engineering and traffic, everyone who, uh, got in touch with us, everyone who dropped a comment on the live stream, everybody who helps us in any way, shape or form, whether it's in front of or behind the scenes, we appreciate you.

Thank you so much for being here.

We're going to have a great show for you tomorrow night, but we got to get out of here.

So Pete, say good night to the people.

Good night, Wisconsin.

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