Sunday, January 18, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
1:10 PM
 XTREME Radio - LIVE at Sundance Last night, quite late in the evening, and on the show, the girl who has pledged to sell her virginity for the highest bid, convinced her to not "give it up" if a higher bid - individual or cumulative comes in to top the present $3.7 million offer that has been registered. Having done MANY interviews declining similar offers, Natalie Dylan (not her real name) has agreed to remain a virgin, and give ALL of the proceeds (that she had previously agreed to use towards graduate school) instead--to stopping the horrific practice of child sex trafficking. Stephen and I are setting up the proper connections to see this through in the event a higher bid comes in. Contact us here if interested in more information: BMXRadioNow@gmail.com. Here's the actual audio of how it all came down last night live from Sundance Film Festival in Park City Utah:
Saturday, January 17, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
12:21 AM
First up... LOTS OF THANKS for making us the FASTEST GROWING TALK SHOW IN AMERICA. In 25 weeks on-air, we have hit 162 stations. Without your interest, loyalty, and word of mouth, it never would have happened. THANK YOU! THIS SPECIAL BROADCAST BROUGHT TO YOU BY: Every two seconds another child becomes an orphan. Every 90 seconds, another orphan starves to death. $15 will feed ONE orphan for an entire month. CLICK HERE AND FEED AND ORPHAN TONIGHT888-219-0779 Here's just SOME of what we're hitting this Saturday night: (We would like to see 150 orphaned children fed tonight. Please call now...)
1. Sinful/Affliction, Pole-Dancing: 2. The $5 million dollar "virgin":
 Making it all happen...
WANT THE HOTTEST, LATEST, COOLEST 'Xtreme' Radio S.W.A.G.?
If you would like to have a station near you carry the broadcast please have that station contact - Bryan Brown - bbrown@wtru.com or call 336/480-2038.
Friday, January 16, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
6:54 PM
 LOOK OUT HUGH! 100,000 watts of FM power vs. 20,000 watts of AM bounce. Tonight I go head to head against my old friend (and Senior Editor of Townhall) Hugh Hewitt in the City of Angels... (For the publicly educated--that's Los Angeles.) I'm on tonight and Monday. I enjoy the FM talk audience of Los Angeles because to me it's younger, far more hip, and such a larger universe of listeners. I don't have a law degree, so you don't need someone to interpret what we're talking about. But I am passionate about making you think so here's what I want to hit tonight/this afternoon in market 2: I don't know what Hugh has cooking... but come on - how can you beat THAT line-up? Hey? LISTEN LIVE HERE: 99.5 FM KKLADial us up - toll free from across the U.S.: 888-995-KKLA (5552)
And join my facebook...
Friday, January 16, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
5:12 PM
From high-school friend Kelliey:
 Headlines On This Date 4 Years Ago: "Republicans spending $42 million on inauguration while troops Die in unarmored Humvees" "Bush extravagance exceeds any reason during tough economic times" "Fat cats get their $42 million inauguration party, Ordinary Americans get the shaft"
Headlines Today: "Historic Obama Inauguration will cost only $120 million" "Obama Spends $120 million on inauguration; America Needs A Big Party" "Everyman Obama shows America how to celebrate" "Citibank executives contribute $8 million to Obama Inauguration"
Friday, January 16, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
2:58 PM
Someone's quizzing me and I was hoping you could weigh in on it...
I'm supposed to be figuring out what all of these criminals have in common, and according to my friend no such similarity exists for the exiting President.
It's probably like really obvious or something but, for the life of me, I just can't see it.
Any ideas????

Friday, January 16, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
2:57 PM
 "I have confidence in the promise of America, because I know the character of our people." It was the last time he will address the American people as their President, but it was thirteen minutes of transparency, gratitude and humility. Critics will disparage it as another speech from the simpleton in chief.
President Bush did not get a free pass from me on a good deal of his handling of term two. The bail-out mania that ended his second term perhaps historically misguided, his refusal to take strong measures to merely fence up the southern border, and his expansion of government entitlement through the drug programs for medicaid/medicare are some of the biggest mistakes movement conservatives will point to.
No President gets to a 21% approval rate (still double that of Reid/Pelosi) by merely ticking off his opponents.
But as I have stated before, history will see Bush differently than the intense leftists in today's political discussions do. We know this to be true already because the incoming administration made a sudden centrist jerk after being elected and are now headed smack dab into the more or less same directions, particularly on national security/terrorism.
The fact that Mr. Obama has moved his position from "bring them home day one" on Iraq to an identical position with Bush will eventually be noted in the textbooks. The fact that Mr. Obama may sign a symbolic piece of paper indicating a vague future date to close Gitmo, but then chooses to do nothing to change it will also prove Bush right on the need to detain the most serious of monsters off of our own shores.
One thing that is difficult to be critical of President Bush in any way is his compassion for people. Karl Rove told me over dinner in New York, not two months ago that every time official business would take Bush in the vicinity of immediate relatives of fallen service personnel he would have meetings set up where he would meet individually with family after family. Looking them in the eye, putting his arm around them, and expressing his sorrow at their loss.
The blame dumped on him for Katrina was unjustified and dishonest. Anyone with an ounce of integrity that sees the facts can easily confirm. Yet again, he has time and again met with families who did lose loved ones in that tragedy.
And one thing that riveted my attention sitting across from Rove was that the President did so regardless of whether the families were pleased with his performance or angry with him. And there were ton's of both.
At the end of the day Bush's Supreme Court appointments will be seen as genius for champions of the Constitution, and perhaps his longest lasting legacy.
America stayed safe on his watch, and post 9.11 not another American life was lost on American soil due to "disruption" his strategy and commitment levied against those who wished to kill us. He chased the terrorists into caves--exactly as he promised, and from their position they have been unable to re-organize, re-supply, re-finance, or re-strategize against us.
I was the first pundit in all of America to predict that Barrack Obama would be the next President. I have been just in my scrutiny of Obama prior to his election, and I have been fair to him in commenting on his moves since, giving credit where credit is due.
Unfortunately those on the left will never recognize, even after his admission of things that did not work out so well, that President Bush's motivation in all of it was to do what he felt was best for the nation he loved and served.
And though I hope for President Obama's success, because the nation depends on it... (And have even cut him a bit of slack since his election, understanding that his actions will have merits to be judged by once he is in office.)
I will miss President Bush, and I wish him well for guiding us through America's most terrified season, and reminding that some things like freedom are virtues still worth protecting and even dying for.
Friday, January 16, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
10:15 AM
 Strategy... Room... yeah baby! Heather Nauert hosts. Likely topics - The plane in the Hudson, the Bush goodbye speech... ... and tons more.
Watch us... its like poker without the cards and cigar smoke...
Thursday, January 15, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
11:09 PM
 $3,000 tax credit? What $3,000 tax credit.. Over at Spot On, Scott Olin Schmidt does a good job of describing how, as he puts it, Obama's "Yes We Can" slogan has become"Maybe Not!" He also hits the nail on the head by describing the real problems our economy currently faces: "The economy's two largest enemies today are the lack of liquidity in the markets and the lack of consumer credit - both created by debt. Even though equities are cheap, people have no money to invest. Even though retailers are slashing prices, nobody has the disposable income to buy anything. Obama's economic stimulus should focus on these two obstacles to recovery, and avoid anything which might hinder their repair.
On the consumer side, Washington should consider ways to free up credit for consumers, rather than constrict it. The Obama plan has new regulations on credit card companies and payday lenders which would actually reduce the availability of credit, even if it is done in the name of protecting the consumer."
When will people learn that freeing up credit to consumers is better than restricting it?Or maybe instead of sliding credit into the column of a holding company like a bank at all, just giving the cash directly to we the people, thus we can take those low prices, improve our lives, and jump start the economy all in one fell swoop!
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
1:57 PM
This entry is a post from Michele Reithmayr, our newest blogger here. She serves as the director of a Women's Resource Center, and can be contacted at:
 "what's your bid?" I first read the headline and thought, "this has to be a joke." Miss Natalie Dylan, 22 has decided to give herself away to the highest bidder--more specifically--her virginity. The California native is attempting to raise money to pay off school loans taken out for her Master's Degree. This got me thinking about the path that women before us have taken to get to where we are today. In biblical times, women were considered property and negotiated for. In the 1800's, we earned the right to vote, sit on juries and let our voices be heard. It wasn't until the 1960's that we demanded equality in the workforce and a law was passed for equal pay to women. This week I decided to apply for grad school. I thank my lucky stars that I have the ability to do this--in some countries it is still illegal to even educate women. I find it ironic that Miss Dylan is willing to put herself on the auction block and prostitute herself, to be negotiated for-all for the sake of paying for the education she could not have otherwise received had the courageous women before her NOT fought for gender equality. Did I forget to mention that her Master's will be in Women's Studies? Miss Dylan, you just wasted a LOT of money on a education that seems to have taught you nothing.
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
9:26 AM
 Strategy... Room... yeah baby!
Wednesday, January 14, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
12:14 AM
 New Posse for Idol Alright a yearly tradition has returned. For the past several seasons American Idol has won the ratings race in American television and your humble correspondent has accurately predicted its winner each year for the past four years. All that to say that the early rounds are still more or less useless, except for one purpose--build lots of hype for the live rounds. There will be nothing but entertainment in the first weeks of the broadcast, and they have decided to try to improve on the process. My reactions... New Judge: Kara DioGuardi. Big thumbs up. She is WAY more musically atuned than Paula, and ultimately will probably be more well respected than the former Laker girl. Paula's role for the show for far too long has been to be the supportive mother hen. But she took it way too far, and ended up making a joke, not to mention an occasional amorous scandal out of the job along the way. Kara is new blood, but with a resume that rivals Randy's and Simon's thus putting her on the same level as the other two "producers" at the table. Randy was also a performer so he still has that experience to draw upon, as does Paula. So Paula still serves a purpose--at least this year, while we all get to see the wheels turn behind the successful DioGuardi's brain. Bikini girl: Was that necessary? Her voice was um... her looks weren't even all that marketable. It was gratuitous and her behavior was one of a streetwalker. Simon's amusement, and Randy's playing along was worth the outrage that Kara exhibited and Paula was thinking, though she never spoke up. Blind Guy: After twelve throw-to-breaks by Ryan, I expected Bocelli. What we got was a low-rent session singer tops. And realizing I will get crucified for saying it, if he were not blind, he would not have made it through. Priceless moment: Seacrest turning into Joe Biden (who asked a paralytic to stand), when he tried to "hi-five" the blind guy... UPDATE: Idol is hotter than ever... 92 comments to my facebook status on the matter in just a few minutes tell me so...
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
6:48 PM
 So about those Iranians... Looks like they were burning the image of the the Chosen "O" in Tehran today.
Still wanna sit down and talk without condition?
So the whole "changing the tone" to the rest of the world... still a good idea?
Amazing what a few national security briefings "change"...
Tuesday, January 13, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
11:32 AM
 Which one's the rapist?
Monday, January 12, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
8:19 PM
 Planned Parenthood Bankrupter They're laying people off, even having to stop services. 20% of its federation's workforce is being let go. I guess approximately 337 million of our tax dollars doesn't go as far as it used to.
Monday, January 12, 2009
Posted by:
Kevin McCullough
at
1:10 PM
 "Yes I know its shiny..."
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