Will Daylight Saving Time ever end?

Published: Sep 03, 2024 Duration: 00:57:01 Category: People & Blogs

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breaking news stimulating talk is what we do kvnu 610 a.m. and 102.1 FM kbnu news time is 503 I'm Bill Walter with this news update brought to you by roof rescue a new franchise concept is opening in Logan offering fresh and ready to bake meals that can be picked up on site or even delivered to the home crust Club officially opens its doors on Friday at 981 South Main suet 180 in Logan and features Take and Bake meals like pot pies casseroles pastas soups and desserts and to celebrate its grand opening franchise owner Lori Hemley says thousands of meals will be given away for free the first 2,000 to come into the store get a free individual uh white chicken enchilada meal and they're so good one of my favorites uh they will also be giving away Wooden Spoons to the first 500 patrons the original crust Club is located in Pleasant Grove Lori and husband Lance are opening the store's first ever franchise location which allows people to take meals from the crest Club kitchen to their own Hamley says the name invokes a feeling of being in a group of people who love good food so I love that it's just fresh food it's homecook you know what's in it you know we can tell you all the ingredients um and and you know how important it is to have family time and our life is so busy nowadays it's so nice to have this option just come in grab a meal pop it in your oven and have that time to spend with your family around the table Hemley says the store will be open from 8: a.m. to 8:00 p.m. and menu items have portion sizes appropriate for one person and dinners large enough to feed a family of six orders for the meals can be placed online at Crest Club or through the crust Club mobile app kbnu news time 505 kbnu weather for tonight uh mostly clear later on tonight colder overnight low 15 to 20 partly cloudy Friday morning then clearing high temperature in the upper 30s sunny and lower 40s on Saturday it's been to 39 it's 35 right now at kbnu kbnu weather brought to you by Mount Logan laundry don't pay for the expense of dry cleaning when you can clean your items at Mount Logan laundry for much less located at fifth East 9th North in Logan Mount Logan laundry has free wi-fi roof rescue is your local roof specialist dedicated to keeping your home safe and try no better the weather their team of experienced roofers is here to serve you providing top quality service at affordable prices from minor repairs to complete roof Replacements they've got you cover remember your roof is your first line to defense of protecting your family from the elements so don't wait until the next storm to discover your roof problems call roof rescue today at 435 99942 68 they're your trusted local roofing experts here to keep your home safe and dry roof rescue celebrate 10 years of providing watertight Peace of Mind kbnu news time is 506 last year the Division of Wildlife Resources fed deer in in an emergency situation because deep snow made it difficult for deer to find food in parts of cashr and Summit counties uh this year winter has been different but the snow is not as deep and the cold has not been as bad as last year mark Hadley Northern Region Outreach manager for the dwr said up to now Utah's big game have fared well this winter dwr big game coordinator Dax Mangus provided some information from his Statewide big game captures this past winter they recently finished December capture efforts associated with their deer survival study where they checked over 900 deer across the state they observed great above average weights for fawns in Central and Southern Utah including the heaviest Fawn scene since they started the project on bookcliffs Monroe Pine Valley and San Juan adley said with the mild winter and great deer condition they are optimistic that they will see high overwinter survival for both Doe's and fawns last year D dwr biologists volunteer land owners and hunters from local conservation groups started feeding deer at 11 locations in the state because of the emergency situation a driver was airlifted to a nearby hospital in critical condition after rear ending a stopped school bus in San Pete County they later died from their injuries Sergeant Cameron Rhoden with the Utah Highway Patrol said the crash happened a short time before 300 p.m. on us89 north of Fairview at mile marker 285 he said the school bus was stopped to let children off when a Honda passenger car rammed into the back of the bus all the children on the school bus were checked by Med medical personnel and none required transportation to the hospital according to Rhoden another bus was sent to the scene to pick up the children officials were later updated that the driver involved was pronounced dead after arriving at the hospital more uh additional detail including the identity gender or age of the person who who died were not released both directions of the highway remained closed as Crews investigated the scene and to allow the landing of the medical helicopter for transporting the driver of the car kvnu news time is 508 for more details on these and Other Stories visit Cash Valley daily.com this is Dr red Chiropractic physician with Red River Health and Wellness are you suffering with fatigue brain fog headaches intestinal issues weight gain and you haven't been able to find any answers before I started at Red River I was having a lot of stomach pain I was overweight severe anxiety some depression I had been to multiple doctors I'd been to Specialists we had done tests and no one could find anything that was wrong Red River Health and Wellness can help you I'm on anxiety medicine um I've lowered my dose and I'm working with u my doctor to continue to lower it I'm sleeping through the night I have energy for my kids I've lost 30 lbs I just feel really good our goal is to teach you and educate you so you know how to manage your condition a lot more effectively and you know what to do and what not to do for the rest of your life schedule your appointment today at 85555 River Red River Health and Wellness with offices in Logan South Jordan Springville and St [Music] George hi this is Gordon deal Friday on this morning America's first news a recap of President Biden's State of the Union Plus his hypocrisy regarding what he sees price gouging and corporate greed also why blue cities are embracing more conservative anti-me measures and why is it such a pain to sometimes get a table for a larger party at a restaurant here why some eateries don't like that business Friday on this morning America's first news from 4 to 6 on News Talk kvnu 610 a.m. and 102 FM your station for news and talk [Music] oh you get me ready welcome back to kbn news for the people hour two of today's show I'm Jason Williams and because Charlie mentioned pole off mic something uh about her that he didn't like I decided to play po poly Cole there and dedicate it to Charlie Charlie and I got on a rant about my '90s music my unpopular opinion of 90s music I get I all my no one agrees with me all my friends yell at me but uh they're just they're passionate about this huh they yell Shia Twain ruined country uh Charlie goes back a bit further he blames it on uh Billy Ray Cyrus um Boot Scoot and Boogie Boot Scoot and Boogie um uh as Charlie put it when country was turned into a butt shaking competition I thought that was a great way to put it um but I get what Charlie's saying it was sort of the popic of country um which you know that wasn't the first time it won't be the last but it really the 90s really were in my opinion kind of just a bleak era of music and everyone always says what about Nirvana and some of the rock that came out of the the that very short lived grunge area um I'm not saying the music was awful uh but I yeah Pearl Jam started in the 9s right and honestly one of the most mediocre rock bands in history and people get so mad if you say that but I'm not saying they're bad and I'm not saying people are wrong for liking them but I'm saying stop pretending it was this groundbreaking era of rock music Nirvana was just a louder version of eight other rock bands that had done the same thing before everyone was like oh K Co well it was a movement the grunge well I think it it just seemed so unique because it came on the heels of the80s uh when everything was electronic and overproduced and and you know kind of over the top flashy you know so you had you went from you know the rise of Cindy loer and Madonna right and electronic music like to pesh mode uh and and Goth music was the alternative like the Cure and kind of dep PES up to and and and it was um so it was a very uh computer oriented and and kind of uh uh and I don't mean this as a as a negative necessarily because I like a lot of the music that was um you know Cutting Edge in the 80s um but uh it was a very uh cold sterile machine oriented that's what I'll say musical era um and then you had the you had the Lilith Fair singers you had Sarah mclin you had Jewel well so like the ' 80s is is cold and sterile and electronic and and and and mechanical and then Along Comes Nirvana they're playing guitars again yeah and everyone's like oh this is new no they're playing instruments it's not new it's it's really old that's a that's a guitar yeah that's my theory on on how Nirvana got to be known the way and and my but my Pearl Jam opinion is one that upsets people the most people can handle me saying I don't think Nirvana was really that groundbreaking I they were talented don't get me wrong Eddie Ed Eddie veter does have a an iconic voice yeah and and I actually enjoy some of his solo music I just I've never enjoyed there are a couple songs but I've never enjoy enjoyed Pearl Jam really I just wasn't it it just seemed very Bland to me uh but uh yeah so anyway then along comes uh mid 90s Shia Twain Cheryl Crow uh for Non Blondes I mean you all know these one hit wonders that and but it's all basically the same song with the same Melody and the same yeah and it just it was this horrible era and then it just got worse and worse and worse until until we're talking about Oasis that's another band people are oh Oasis they're like a modern Beatles are they really you know weren't weren't they just a a a very well-timed pop band yeah that's what they were I think they had early for a time I think some of their members had early Beatles haircuts yeah from the early Beatles yeah and and then finally we're we drugged through you know the late '90s The Verve remember that Bittersweet Symphony was biggest hits and it was just it was a Nike commercial it just a song for a commercial and it became people what is that song bigest pop hit of the late 90s started showing up on the radio yeah it just uh it was a it was a just a dark dark era in music and then luckily you know the the fever broke and and we we settled back into uh better times in in the uh well I guess late ' 90s early 2000s and uh but then we're I think we're kind of headed back into you know the these things uh you know I wish we had to get Dave Denton on the phone for one of these conversations one day bill because Bill Dave could talk about these these circular patterns in music but you and I have discussed them before too right they that there is there's a cycle or a history tends to repeat in music and you see things come back that were popular once again right and and and so uh I I feel like we're on the I feel like we're headed back into the 80s right now and again I'm not saying any of this is bad when I say Pearl Jam is Bland and mediocre I'm not saying that that you're wrong for liking them I'm saying that's my opinion and and sometimes I think people are because of the timing of certain music or give it a little more credit than it deserves uh and but if you look at the the long-term Trends in this you'll see these cycles and patterns and I feel like we're about to head into or I think we currently in and kind of headed deeper into sort of a repeat of of the 80s where things start to get a little overproduced and maybe sterile uh on the pop front at least and and but people are going to like it and they're going to buy it and artists are going to make money and they're going to tour and fun will be had and and I judge no one in any of this at all uh that's one of my biggest pet peeves is uh when someone judges someone else for I heard someone giving someone a hard time for being a Justin Bieber fan a while ago why do you care you know how does it offend you in any way if someone even this was an adult uh but and this was an adult man who said you know I think Justin Bieber's songs are catchy and everybody piled on oh what is wrong with you and why do you care you know you might you don't have to agree um I think Justin Bieber songs are catchy they're a little too catchy that's why I don't like him yeah but uh I uh yeah it's just it's funny I guess they didn't like Justin Bieber has has had I I don't know if he's still likeed this but when he was younger he had kind of a bad reputation for how he treated people yeah kind of Jerk it sounds like yeah and uh and and also someone I'd put in the category of not all that talented just well timed but again you know I I try to look at this as like if you're angry about that you're it's probably jealous you know um but you you can't judge someone for for and even if it's not them maybe their managers maybe someone around them is made the decision correctly to time them well and and but I don't care you know more power to them made a lot of money had a good time entertained millions of kids and some adults obviously and and it hurts nothing uh you don't have to like it but you also don't have to hate it uh but yeah I feel like we're headed back into a a sterl is not the right word how would you describe the 80s bill I mean this was it was really a very electronic era it was it pop was over the top um you had you had Wild Hair Wild on men Cindy loer had like a a CH a chess or a cross Tic Tac Toe board shaved in the side of her head and her hair was fire engine red and green um it was it was the the decade of Miami Vice people wearing skinny ties yeah that were pastel colors it was the decade when uh Axel F the theme song from Beverly Hills Cop became a a top 40 hit uh it was I can't believe I remember this Harold falm is that right yeah the the name of the artist uh but yeah this was literally just a a synthesizer a programmed song on a synthesizer but that movie was such a hit that song became a top 40 hit yeah and uh that that's maybe the best way to describe the 80s very generic programmed uh made with no real instruments theme song of a movie became a top 40 popop hit and I'm not saying this is bad I'm saying this is a great way to describe the 80s and I feel like we're kind of headed Don Henley emerged as a solo artist during the ' 80s yeah also in a very generic Way Glen Glenn Fry as well yeah that's uh it was just U it was like in the 80s it was like there was a template and and and this exists a little bit all the time uh but in the 80s there was like this template and as long as you as long as you made your music with that template your your odds of being popular for at least a brief period of time were high and then that same thing came back around mid 9s even in country music I think there was this template and if you if you cut your song with that template it it was going to at least get some play and make you some money and uh and then I think that happened again around 2005 and and I think we're headed back into it again in uh 2025 um and it's uh I I think it shows up right now mostly in uh the pop music that's getting a little um repetitious my point with all of this is check out this interesting article that I have linked to on our Facebook page where it talks about these Cycles in music uh a professor of uh sociology and a longtime music instructor uh that actually taught it USU for a little while by the way but works elsewhere now um they teamed up on this research and and they employed uh year Decades of Sociology uh they tried their best they said to tie this in with current events too because obviously current events can imp it can impact popular culture choices current events can make a movie popular or unpopular current events can make music popular or unpopular a single song or an artist entirely um so they tried their best to account for that but they said that was they they realized early on that was near impossible but what they found is that that this is the theory they came up with and Bill if you think this is out there cuz you know quite a bit about music as well uh and Dave Denton if you're out there listening I want to know if you agree with this so this is their Theory their theory is that every musical era has a 7 to 10 year lifespan 7 to 10 years and then it either gets overdone or people just kind of burn out on it and the thing that replaces it uh the thing that gets really popular next in music can't be similar does that make sense so it can't be like a a small variation so if grunge is super popular the next thing that gets popular is obnoxious whiny pop and that's exactly what happened in the '90s so that's their Theory they said that musical tastes and and cultural tastes around music tend to reflect this pattern and they they went all the way back so they started with uh the first musical recordings that uh when records were first a thing that people actually bought and owned in their home which was more than 100 years ago when that with technology existed but it didn't really get popular till the 20s 30s even when people started actually owning music in their home and uh so they went back as far as they could and they just looked at at record at at music sales data and and they said that it it fits this pattern pretty consistently throughout 7 to 10 years of a certain style being popular and and then getting too popular and then and then starting to get less popular and then eventually the bubble bursts at s years 7 to 10 years the bubble bursts and then whatever comes next Whatever Gets popular next is has it is almost always completely different and so if you if you track that pattern um next year would be the seventh year on our current musical era they say and so the bubble would burst at its earliest maybe it'll go another few years after that but there's some some styles of music that have have stuck around I mean like um Blues I I was has always been BL I was hearing on another radio station in our in our building here they played uh Howe days Collide oh remember that song now it you know that song could be released today yeah it that song doesn't sound dated yeah it came out in 2003 that's interesting to think about 21 years ago that was well and some of the Bands you know there are some Rolling Stone songs from the 60s that you could hear today and other than yeah it sounds a lot better than the stuff they just and matter of fact I think they just put out a new album I heard that one was coming yeah um but yeah like there are some some bands and and even I would say some genres like blues again I'll reference that that don't fit this pattern you know Blues has had its Heyday and and low points as far as record sales and popularity and things like that and it's never been a stadium filling you know musical well I don't know John Mayer got close to it he he would fill stadiums and if you went to one of his shows he was basically playing the blues for two hours what's happened to John me he went crazy uh from what I've heard he kind of went off his rocker and and went in and it's kind of taken some leave uh I don't know if he went crazy but that uh he said he went crazy um but yeah it's uh there are certain genres that that never really uh follow this pattern but in general pop music popular country music uh even popular College rock music follows this pattern and they said where you can see this 7 to 10 year cycle and then something completely different comes along and gets popular and then gets too popular and then starts to get less popular and then the bubble bursts and it follows the 7 to 10 year pattern for the last 100 years uh check it out it's really interesting research the how they did it is almost as interesting as their Theory uh but what do you think 753 5868 we'll be back right after this hello Cash Valley this is Tom Hil at Blue Sky restoration formerly AR ARS remember got a mess call ARS we want to let you know that here at Blue Sky we still have the same great staff we provide the same excellent service and are ready to help you in your time of need with water mitigation mold remediation or a fire from Blue Sky restoration thank you for trusting our staff and myself for over 35 years with your disaster needs and we will continue to be here for you they said if I got drunk if I did Coke I'd be one of the guys they said method help me get through my exams they said synthetic drugs would give me a safe high he said sniffing glue was no big deal totally safe I could party all night it would help me forget my problems he said he'd love me forever if I smoke crack with him they said I wouldn't get hooked after the first hit they said weed wouldn't lead to harder drugs they lied they lied they lied he lied find out the truth the truth about drugs drugfreeworld.org drugfreeworld.org I will wait right by your side women can have it all including cluding heart attacks but symptoms like jaw pain nausea unusual fatigue dizziness and back ache are often different and more subtle than for a man the fact is heart disease is the number one killer of women know the signs learn more at geart check.org from women's heart Alliance in partnership with womenart [Music] [Applause] welcome back to kbnu Shia Twain Defenders are piling up in the chat I'm not taking it back she ruined country music for a decade uh 75358 we should get around the show if you want to yell at me for my musical opinions but uh it's that's not fair to say she ruined country music um but um you know speaking of this just to kind of cap this uh there there are also if you think about it some musical uh some some folks the these people always kind of intrigued me they were a bit more than one hit wonders one hit wonders you're never surprised when they come and go that's what makes them one hit wonders right they have their one song super popular everyone knows it everyone can sing it most people probably bought it back when we bought music and uh and and then you know 20 years later you're having lunch with some friends and somebody says whatever happened to zo and zo and that's the first time you thought about him since that song was you know popular in your own rotation uh that's a one hit wonder but there are these other artists that were a bit more than one hit wonders they had that you know maybe an album or a full album or even a couple albums that were popular they were filling you know large venues on their tours and all that and then just disappeared and uh uh that's something that's always intrigued me in music too how how that happens juel is one that I think of uh juel had you know like two or three pretty decent hits very very talented person uh and then well she yeah she she fit the mold of of what people were looking for and came around the same time as Sarah mclin and um Natalie Merchant you know Tor Amos yeah although Tor Amos is kind of more of a she I mean she has her followers she she never achieved top 40 claim no she she was kind of an underground she had the one big hit with little earthquakes that almost got there and and but she was always just a little too uh odd yeah her music and her her style of music was was just not I think top 40 radio stayed away it just yeah there wasn't a wasn't a hook and it was all kind of uh uh you know this kind of this composition sort of like spoken word with a Melody yeah that's why I I mean I liked some of her songs I wanted to I love pianos I love the sound and that that's her instrument of choice and and so I wanted to like her so much but the lack of a hook the lack of a a Melody a catchy part of the song that you can hum to yourself later you know when it pops into your head uh her songs don't have that and it annoyed me I I do do respect her because she never changed really I mean she didn't you know cuz some artists say well you know they kind of sell out and put out a poppy song so they can make some money so she you know she has stayed true to herself but she's still making that same music today and and she still uh last time she was here in Utah she filled uh the uh what are we calling it now was the E Center for a while Maverick Stadium I think for a while out in West Valley City uh the Maverick Center Maverick Center is not Stadium that's here yeah yeah um she filled that a couple of years ago here in Utah so you know she's uh she's still popular with the crowd but she's another example of someone who who you know just kind of got kind of big for a while and and was selling a lot and then just sort of faded and but still around and and yeah music is it's just uh it's a very unpredictable thing and there's no I think it's sort of like the folks who are these days trying to figure out how to go how you know there were ad ad agencies that are pouring money into research to figure out how to go viral and they been doing this for 10 years and they and and and here's the funny thing about it they will never figure it out it's not stopping them from trying because the first person that does they're thinking is is never going to have to worry about money again which is true if that ever happens but it won't because you'll never figure out how to go viral because just like with music no one knows everyone's trying to guess everyone's trying to predict uh but uh you never yeah you're not you never know it's going to catch on yeah and if you think about it most of the big biggest uh shifts in music artists who have come along who kind of reset the direction of pop or country for a time uh most of those it was a combination of accident and timing that that propelled them because oftentimes you go back and you find out they were doing this for years or there were other bands that came before them that were doing the same thing as good but this band for whatever reason was there at the right time and the right place which is Nirvana's story basically that's why I I I refused to see them as these Rock icons because they actually came Midway through that movement they were just well timed and MTV was looking for something new because they were losing viewers and uh and that that first video just uh kind of propelled them into the spotlight at a time but they were was MTV still actually showing videos at that time that was the last those were the last days of MTV being that that Network you know they actually played music videos and then and then they started mtv2 right or M2 or something yeah then they're like okay the videos will be on mtv2 we're now and that's probably not even around anymore yeah we're now a reality tv/ they had some great shows you know they had these two-hour shows where they'd focus on a certain genre of music and interview the artists and I thought that was a great idea but it just didn't work it turns out people just wanted the videos was it VH1 Behind the Music yeah that was that was that was another one that was fun it's a great Simpsons episode where they the parody behind the music for The Simpsons family hilarious I can't quote any of it on the show but it is really funny um and yeah anyway okay that that's enough opining about the pop culture but again a really interesting study if you want to read it it shows that there are these somewhat trackable not to an exact science not to the very year not the to the point where you could predict what's going to happen next year but there are these very noticeable patterns in music uh where you see a lifespan for a certain style that everyone does until it gets too popular and then they do it for a few more years when they should have quit but they don't and then the public finally reacts and says enough they stop paying attention or buying it or listening to it uh and then uh something else comes along and that something else has to be very different and the pattern holds up again and again and again it's an really really cool set of research with visualizations so I've linked to it on on our Facebook page we'll be back with more of kvn news for the people after these headlines with kvn news Bill [Music] Walter thank you Jason kbnu news time is 5:34 and the news is brought to you by Bell medical now that the smoke has cleared following the 2024 General Session of the legislature the details and the price tag for Utah's newly approved Pro strategic homelessness initiative have emerged Governor Cox praised the work of lawmakers addressing that concerns saying that he's grateful to live in a state where we take care of each other and the most vulnerable the 66.2 million homeless package approved by the legislature includes funding for affordable housing Mental Health Services shelter for families and the elderly detox facilities and youth shelters the nonprofit Utah impact partnership has also committed an additional $15 million to help support the state's vulnerable population making the total 81.2 million that Utah will spend on the homeless problem in fiscal 2025 the emergency shelter Investments envisioned by lawmakers includes $25 million for low barrier uh shelter development 21.8 million for Statewide homeless support 2.5 million to mitigate homeless shelters in cities and another 1.4 million for other shelter supports a Provo mother and father were arrested and booked into jail Tuesday on child abuse charges after their autistic daughter was found chained to a bed in the home the mother and father were were both arrested on one count each of abuse or neglect of a child with a disability a third degree felony the Provo Police Department stated the parents were arrested after off officers visited the home and found an 8-year-old nonverbal child chained to a bed by their ankle arresting documents detail the Utah Division of Child and Family Services visited the home and witnessed the couple's daughter chained to the top level of a bunk bed in the living room of the home officers arrived and told the father to un uh unchain the child he initially uh refused but then pulled a key from his pocket and unlock the padlock after the chain was removed officers witnessed Impressions on the child's skin from the tightness of the chain the father agreed to speak with officers admitting that this was not the first in instance of the child being chained to the bed and a 17-year-old shot in a McDonald's parking lot in Murray has now died from their injuries the incident occurred on Saturday uh near 4500 South and i50 according to police three teens were in a car when a gun went off critically injuring one person police said the teen died on Tuesday following the shooting 20-year-old Jean Alvaro alaran Paredes fled the scene and traveled to Colorado Murray police contacted officials in Mesa County Colorado to help locate petus who was wanted as a fugitive a deputy found paredes's vehicle parked at an Exxon gas station in Fuda Colorado upon investigation parus was quickly identified and taken into custody kvnu news time is 537 wouldn't it be nice to lose a minimum of 2 to 5 Ines of fat just like that at Bell medical with our uniquely patented FDA clear procedures we are able to permanently remove that stubborn hormonal fat that almost seems impossible to get rid of and we are able to do it in a way that is so precise we can guarantee a minimum of 2 to 5 in of fat loss after one visit with us schedule your free consultation at our Bountiful clinic at bellm medical.com and let us make your dreams a reality ABC News I'm Dariel alinger President Biden is preparing to deliver his State of the Union Address and ABC Steven pornoy says he'll make history no matter what he says tonight marks the 100th inperson delivery of the State of the Union addressed to a joint session of Congress over a century ago woodro Wilson revived a ition that began with George Washington in 1790 Joe Biden who's been in the house chamber for most of the State of the Union addresses delivered over the past 50 years will use his speech tonight to lay out his vision for the country Alabama Senator Katie Britt will deliver the Republican response families of some of the 19 students and two teachers who were killed in the 2022 massacre at Rob Elementary sat in shock as they listen to the results of an investigation which placed no blame on yaldi Texas police officers and defended their response an earlier report described a Cascade of failures this is ABC News K and new weather tonight decreasing clouds becoming mostly clear overnight low 15 to 20 and then partly cloudy Friday morning then clearing high temperature in the upper 30s mostly sunny on Saturday high temperature in the low 40s nice on Sunday upper 40s for the high it's been to 39 it's 34 right now at kbnu if you own a business and your work or com rates are skyrocketing Matt Robbins with quality first insurance as answers to your questions for more information go to q1 ns.com you can always get more news at Cash Valley daily.com snow rain or Sunshine the Utah weather is unpredictable this is Mark an injury attorney with The Advocates no matter what the weather is in Utah we all need to be aware while driving or even walking into your favorite store if you've been injured in a car trucking or slip and fall accident and haven't spoken to an injury attorney yet call The Advocates today there is no cost to you to find out if you have a case chat online at Utah advocates.com or call 801- 35555 you deserve an advocate attention northern Utah tired of dry irritated eyes ready to rejuvenate your look and refresh your vision mark your calendar for a night of Radiance at the northern Utah Eye Center ocular Aesthetics and advanced dry eye open house Thursday March 14th from 6:00 to 730 p.m. discover the power of IPL photo facials flipa flow and BOTOX for rejuvenating your eyes and enhancing your natural beauty remember March 14th reserve your spot now for special eventon pricing sign up through Facebook northern Utah I center.com or in office Friday edition clay Travis Buck Sexton show we'll roll you into the weekend with a breakdown of everything we heard at the State of the Union Plus will'll get you all ready for what could be basically the first weekend of the big racing 2024 all that and more Friday edition come hang 10 to1 on News Talk kvnu 102 FM at 610 a.m. let's go girls [Music] welcome back Bill's just torturing me now well I I felt a little sorry for Shia ruined country music for a decade which is an overstatement there was a lot of great country music that came the same year and after but uh but she did she did take country music down a road that I did not enjoy for several years um at least as far as what was topping the charts she she has a very compelling story though of how she got started it didn't she have to raise her siblings yeah at least after her parent their parents were killed in a in a car accident she raised I believe a younger brother and a younger sister and uh yeah their parents were killed in a car accident both in the car at the same time and uh and it was yeah and she herself is a very likable person if you've ever seen her in an interview or talking about her life she's a very likable person uh but ruined country music for a day decade uh I'm just trying to get a rise out of everyone but I I really thought someone would call in about my Pearl Jam comments that's usually the one that gets people my age the most flared up when you say Pearl Jam they were actually pretty mediocre uh so uh speaking of mediocre uh you hear me say on the show all the time that if you want to make one positive change in your life stop consuming cable news because it well a couple of reasons stop being news for the most part and this is all of them CNN MSNBC Fox uh this is nothing to do with which one so you have your Fox which is of course uh leaning quite right um it's the Republican Outlet you have MSNBC which leans quite left that's the Democrats outlet and you have CNN trying their hardest to be there in the middle and and say we're still just a middle uh of the road uh politically news Outlet the problem is is that and I think CNN's correct in in positioning themselves that way but uh the problem is is C cable news the whole model right now for making money in cable news just doesn't work for actual news it it there was a day bill and I are both old enough to remember this but remember um before I think it was before CNN it was called headline news I think or I can't remember well there's CNN and then there's yeah head news spun off of the regular CNN okay so CNN was first okay I couldn't remember who was first I remember though that there were these days when it was literally a 24-hour looping news feed I I mean it would it would repeat and that's what made it well that's yeah that was headline news or is it still I don't even is headline news still around so out of the loop it's not the same anymore they have like ncy Grace or whatever the my goodness the ambulance Chaser court reporter uh but yeah uh so they're different now too but but actually that's a great example because that's what's become of the the big cable news news networks and on CNN I think uh Patrick green lob or green law who had been at Channel 2 for many years I think he was he was kind of on the ground floor of CNN as I recall when they first started yeah that when they first started they were actual news stations and and I remember people would complain that oh if you watch it for two hours it just repeats you know and man what I'd give now to go back to that it was so different I mean cuz before that you had the network evening newsest you had your you had Walter kronite yeah so your news options throughout the average day was a a you had a a once a day I mean this is pre- internet so you had a once a day printed newspaper maybe uh you had top and bottom of the hour news breaks here on kvnu or your radio station of choice uh you know and that's a a 2 to 5 minute news break you know and then you had your 30 minutes of evening news and that was news you know that that was it I mean the local stations had had a new news and all that yeah they do a longer show or something and uh but then Along Comes so you're in the that's the environment you live in and then Along Comes cable news and suddenly there's this 247 News Channel you can tune in at any time and if you watch for about half an hour uh you're going to get most everything and I think CNN did Loop it did repeat I think they coined the phrase breaking news yeah because before that break TV networks would well they'd have news bulletins yeah because it was something special reports something important that happened but probably earlier that day um and and so yeah breaking news was really a cable news thing and yeah they had a big thing they had this graphic where CNN would go by your screen in huge letters CNN and then breaking news so they had the journalist there reading the news like a traditional television news anchor and then they had the additional news in the the scrolling ticker across the bottom so you can just read while you're listening to the story they're talking about you could just read the other headlines and it was just headlines but man it was really news and it was really I think useful and and flip it on now you know it now it's it's eight people who Lord only knows why anyone should care what their opinions are well CNN underg a a whole revamping because they they brought on a third one in a row a CEO that's just looking to slash salaries and and everything and he's unpopular he kind of stepped in it right out of the gate um and so he's probably gone soon anyway uh there they're so the the problem is though is it's become they're still holding on to the news and they're still bringing you news and they're still you know if there is breaking news CNN Fox MBC all of them are going to go to it so for breaking news an event uh you know uh remember the OJ Bronco Chase and the yeah this was this was probably 17 seconds of video and it filled the cable news networks for days that 17 seconds of video CNN owned the trial yeah and so many millions of people tuning in for oh yeah and that's yeah that was they actually beat all the the the traditional network channels for a good month or so yeah it was just and so when things like that happen they're still going to be all over it because that's you know just free money for them uh but on the average day when there isn't a big breaking national story or even a a really big state or local story that that they can use it's just people yapping about the news and and and it's not very informative and and they actually don't cover that many stories um and and there's so there's an example of this and again remember this is my this sort of my lecture to everyone if you want to improve your attitude your understanding and and I would say even your level of being informed find something other than cable news uh just try it for a week and see if if you find me to have a point um I think you will uh but so here's a great example uh CNN uh Fox and I can't see anything on M MSNBC right now uh but so Yahoo news has a a news tracker um and and they do this uh as part of their own you know online news feed but they have a a Tracker up right now on the uh what the cable news networks are saying about the State of the Union which mind you has not happened yet we'll go to it at 7 o'cl tonight here on our airwav so you can tune in at 700 you get an hour of Dave Ramsey 7:00 we'll move over to the State of the Union and you can hear it live here on kvnu tonight but my point is it has not occurred yet 7:00 tonight uh but the cable news networks have been talking about it according to the Yahoo Cable News Network tracker since about well for for CNN it's noon Fox and MSNBC Fox is is about 1 when they did their first little show and the show titles these are funny too what to expect from the state of the Union tonight uh well now here's a very practical one USA Today with a story what time is the state of the union tonight that that one we'll give him a pass for that one uh live updates and Analysis of Biden's address tonight uh Biden State of the Union live what to expect uh Biden forced into historic moment expected to give historic State of the Union Address tonight these are some of the things that they've been talking about since this afternoon on the cable quote news networks and and I'm not saying this isn't an important story I'm not say this isn't a diss on on the president this isn't a dis on on the State of the Union being you know this archaic thing that maybe doesn't need to happen anymore just put it on YouTube everybody will see it um but I I it's none of that what what I'm saying here is that while these cable news networks have been talking about the State of the Union all afternoon long slow news day and yeah and we'll continue to do to do until it happens and then after Abid you'll have the postgame analysis while that's all happening filling at least I would I would guess in the end this have spilled 12 hours of quote unquote news coverage on all three of the major networks ma major cable news networks think of all the stories they weren't talking about think of all the state level coverage they could have provided think about International stories that would be interesting to people and informative for people that they weren't talking about think about all the all the United States or even North American news stories that are relevant to us in any state uh that would be interesting that viewers might not hear about otherwise and you've got this huge platform millions and millions of viewers but you're going to talk about the state of the union for 6 hours before it happens and and two hours at least after it happens if not more and then probably the next day and and then yeah a good chunk into the next day as well that's cable news so that's my big criticism of cable news I we get lost sometimes and people are like oh I don't watch CNN because they're biased well they're less biased than Fox and MSNBC so they're the best of the three um but that kind of misses the point uh and the point I'm trying to make here is is you have these 247 news networks and that's still how they're billing themselves in selling themselves to advertisers and selling themselves to you as a news consumer but what they brought you today for news was 6 hours of talking about the State of the Union the state of the union and two hours of talking about the State of the Union after it happens that was their news lineup for today that's not news that the this is this is cops with the TV show with a a different subject same thing though it's just something entertaining to plug into doesn't cost you anything doesn't ask you to use your brain uh and and then you turn it off when you're bored but that's the best thing they can think to do with the platform they have yeah send them a message and shut off your cable news networks I guarantee you'll find yourself more informed especially if you choose local news options you'll find out more about what's going on around you and every hour or half hour even 10 minutes spent watch cable news watching cable news I guarantee you're learning less than if you spend that same amount of time on a a local news option or or even a Statewide news option than the time you spend with CNN Fox Rams MBC on so uh shut it down we'll be back right after this living room bedrooms bathrooms kitchen family room laundry room mud rooms and more deciding what flooring goes best in each room of your home can be a decision Fiasco heart Floor Company helps people just like you make those decisions every day whether you're building or remodeling heart floor company will show you ideas with stunning designs and sensible solutions to fit your lifestyle whether it's carpet vinyl tile LBT or hardwood make sure you visit heart Floor Company at 390 north10 West in Logan the above and beyond salute hello this is Robert my name is will felite I'm calling from kvnu I understand you're a hospice nurse is that right yes I am well someone in our community had contacted us anonymously told us about some of the work that you have done helping their family members and so to tell you thanks we've got a $40 gift card for you from Firehouse Subs oh well that's great I enjoy what I do and if I can make a difference it's worth it thank you the above and beyond salute sponsored by Firehouse Subs on News Talk kvnu 24 NCAA appearances 17 conference championships 10 tournament championships new head coach Denny wrinkle and the Aggies are carrying on the commitment to Excellence tip to brown brown at the three yes it's the three what a shot the Utah State peggies play here with pregame beginning 1 hour before tip off playby playay and postgame interviews and Aggie call afterwards it's Aggie basketball on News Talk kvnu [Music] welcome back to kbn news for the people once again feel like it's been a show full of of rants uh at least it wasn't like all politics in my rants today a little bit there with the cable News Rant but uh uh music and things like that an Eclectic hour of rants but uh still trying to make sure we wrap up each show on a a lighter note if possible and uh so today we're going to wrap up with just a little bit of uh tiny little bit of History um so we're coming up on uh daylight savings time and most people out there probably know the the origins of of daylight savings time this was a a a war time well there were some areas that dabbled with this before for growing season reasons and things like that even in uh parts of Northern Europe uh where where you know their days are shorter they they dabbled with having changing clocks and and things like that winter to summer um but in the US this was really a wartime energy saving thing um at least that's how it was you know first sold and and how it was uh you know originally thought of but um Ben Franklin he it so he wrote this uh satirical essay in 1784 and and sort of making fun of daylight savings time he he in the satirical essay he wrote about uh moving the clocks around as a money-saving tactic uh and and it's funny if you want to read that and then and then uh years later so and and then that so that's the first time there was a mention of of something like da like savings time in US history uh then uh 1895 an anthologist named George Vernon Hudson he actually pitched it uh to the the Royal Society the governing body at the time in New Zealand uh as a way to to uh prolong daylight during bug hunting season this was a thing that happened in New Zealand because there were some invasive species but also them being an island they had some native species that weren't great for crops and it was causing some concern around that time and uh and so they they talked about extending the day uh for a while to give people you know more time to go out bug hunting after dark but have it still be you know a decent time of day to do it on the clock uh but it wasn't until World War I really that under again under the the explanation of this being an energy conserving thing uh that they and this was to be honest with you this was mostly about coal um and Germany actually was the first to give I'm sorry world World War I I said World War II uh but during World War I uh Germany was the first to give uh a green light to Daylight Savings time it was in 196 and again it was mostly about coal uh it was it was extending the day to reduce the amount of coal being burned to light and heat homes and uh then Britain and European countries followed suit uh we didn't start it until 1918 and then we immediately dropped it uh if like immediately and that's kind of a forgotten history of this everyone knows that this really took hold as a as an energy saving thing in World War II but yeah the US actually dabbled with Daylight Savings Time way back in 1918 and uh and then yanked it right back in 1920 uh everyone hated it uh so uh a little bit of uh prehistory history on daylight savings time you notice as well this didn't come up during the legis of session that fever seems to have broken uh talk for years session after session of doing away with daylight savings time I'm indifferent as long as we pick the right time uh we should definitely we're about to spring forward and I'm okay if we never fall back again but if we fall back and never spring forward again oh I'm going to be mad I'd love that 9 to 10:00 hour in June I would hate to give that up and most of the Agricultural Community agrees with me so uh yeah let's if we get of it spring forward not fall back one last time but lawmakers seem to

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