Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
morning show live. Make us a part of your morning
routine or your drive to work companion on great stations
like Talk Radio ninety eight point three and fifteen ten
WLAC in Nashville, Tupelos News and Talk one on one
point one and ten sixty WKMQ, and how about Talk
six fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California. Love to have you
(00:21):
listen live, but are grateful you're here now for the
podcast Enjoy.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Well two three, starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in the stupid This is your morning show with Michael
O'Dell charm.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
You know, I've never one of those to look back.
I unfortunately look too much forward and don't live enough
in the moment. But every now and then I just
get this wild urge to go back and relive the
seventies in the eighties. Oh, I want to go. I
want to go, And I mean to see Mary Tyler
(01:02):
Moore on television and be in love again, to hear
Paul Harvey and Rush Limbaugh on the radio. Charlie's Angels
on Wednesday night after church but I guess, and in
a sense, what we're really doing is looking forward because
someday we'll all be reunited. All right, it's eight minutes
after the hour, and thanks, By the way, what did
you enjoy? More Like, right before we went on the air,
I just shared a very affirming thought about you and
(01:25):
red straight from my heart. That's not as fun as
when I make fun of you, is it? It's uncomfortable
when you pay us compliments. I prefer when you're giving
us a hard time. Well, we had a little bit
of a distraction we did in the show prep hour,
but we've overcome it and we're ready to set the
table for you on this Friday morning. I can honestly
(01:47):
tell you, like Tuesday, Wednesday, Ish, I started feeling better
and then I quickly kind of relapsed. Now I think
I'm I'm at a manageable state with my fluid. Only
took two weeks. So this is a Friday I sell
bright and look forward to being full force on Monday.
If you're just waking up, let's start with good news.
The hostage release deal is officially reached between Israel and Hamas,
(02:11):
and hostages will begin to be released this weekend. We'll
see just how many as the phases go on, our
remains versus living human beings. The more good Riddens data
is out today, and it would be easy in kind
of like, oh, you know, typical partisan talk radio to
(02:37):
relish in this, and I really don't what I relish
in is. And it's going to lead to one of
my favorite stories of the day. Despite despite a c
A bias from K through twelve, to higher education from
every newspaper and magazine and paper form, digital form, to
(03:01):
everything on television, despite a wall from Hollywood, the American
people's ability to have seen through it all so clearly
not to be dramatic is breathtaking. It literally takes my
(03:25):
breath away. And we can start searching for game balls
to hand out. Donald Trump, the Great Disruptor, the role
of Elon Musk, or the strange unity of Telsea Gabbert,
a Democratic presidential candidate, r FK Junior, a Democratic presidential
candidate uniting with Donald Trump, the VC Graham Miswami. We we
(03:48):
could go down the list of game balls to some degree.
The death of journalism that led and bled over into
the death of primetime cable news, which turned people to
Tucker Carlson, or to Megan Kelly, or to Joe Rogan,
(04:10):
who managed to see through and get it. You could
probably had a game ball to the trust that was
broken in COVID whatever it is, and I don't know
what it is. I'm in awe of how the American
people saw through all of it and sought through it
so crystal clear. And when we talk about the death
of journalism, and I think they're in decomposition state now
(04:34):
trying to find a resurrection state. And I don't think
it's coming any more than I think it's coming for
the CDC, the World Health Organization or other people who
have I think you're reparably lost trust. But one of
my favorite stories at the Washington Post announcing its new
mission and wait till you hear it. So let's start
(04:55):
with yes, it's not a farewell to Joe Biden, good riddance.
More disastrous polling, this time from tip number of questions
that get to how voters feel about the job Joe
Biden has done. Now, obviously he could do elementary talk radio.
(05:16):
Compare that to his farewell address. But the more important
question is how'd they see through it all so clearly?
Thirty eight percent gave him a favorability rating fifty one
(05:40):
percent unfavorable. As we always do, we slap in the
face the seven percent that said they didn't have enough
information to provide an opinion. What do you need now?
Overall thirty eight to fifty one among Democrats, seventy one
seventeen among Republicans eighty one disapproval, unfavorable, fifteen percent favorable.
(06:08):
We're still a very partisan split nation. What kill them? Independence?
Fifty nine percent unfavorable, twenty six percent favorable. And independence
aren't what independents used to be anymore? Right? The Democrat
Party has gotten so far left what's left? The Republican
(06:34):
Party has failed to live what it believes so consistently
and persistently that it's divided in who Look, I'm one
who left. My opinion isn't counted in that Republican anymore.
I'm an independent. I don't trust any of them. I
(06:54):
think the two party system is the problem. We need
to return to being self governed individual Americans, and I
take it one issue at a time and one candidate
at a time. I caught us heavily with the Republican Party.
I'll admit half of America rated Joe Biden's leadership is weak. Now,
(07:16):
whenever you do this kind of research, like take the
leadership question, you're really just you throw out. I mean,
sometimes you can combine very strong and strong and weak
and very weak. You really want to get to the
heart of it, throw it all out except for very
strong and very weak, and overall three to one very
(07:37):
weak to very strong. This is a failed presidency and
as I have warned you, time will not be kind
to it, for he leaves office one of the most
unpopular failed presidents ever. Time will prove he was never
actually president. Still partisan, very strong Democrats twenty eight percent.
(08:00):
And again this speaks to how divided their party is.
To Israel. For example, he just couldn't please him. If
he sided with the Palestinians, he had a lot of
Jewish supporting Democrats against him. When he sided with Israel,
he had all of the Palestinian I mean that this
party is so divided. I don't know that the party
even exists anymore. And if it did, who could possibly lead?
(08:22):
You know, people throw that question around, who's the leader
now of the Democrat Party? Who could possibly be? Hey,
there's nothing to lead and be there's no ability to
unite them. They're so divided. But if you throw it
all out, very strong twenty eight percent not good compared
(08:42):
to the rest, but very weak. Only four percent Republicans
just the opposite. Very I can't believe there's six percent
of Republicans who think his leadership was very strong, but
sixty five percent said very weak. Here's what killed them independence.
Only seven percent of Independence found to be a very
strong leader to thirty four percent very weak. But let's
(09:05):
take them all one at a time. I want you
to share in this awe because this is what happens.
You think you need a Trump to be a savior,
a Reagan to be a savior, an RF, a JFK,
or an FDR to be a savior, and you don't.
We the people are the savior. It's we, the people
(09:30):
that awaken, We the people that get it and return
to our intent. And for parties and politicians who make
the mistake of underestimating the American people, even in the
social dilemma, even in the death of journalism, to not
figure it.
Speaker 4 (09:46):
Out well, you assumed wrong on handling of the immigration
and border situation.
Speaker 3 (09:57):
Again, we're going to these are a through F grades.
Let's just look at versus f's handling of immigration eight
percent a thirty eight percent failed nearly five to one
handling of the economy eleven percent give them an A
thirty four percent three to one give them an F
(10:19):
handling the violence and crime in the country. Ten percent
gave them an A. Thirty one percent gave him an
F three to one handling of Israel Hamas conflict that
he was trying to take credit for. Seven percent give
him an A thirty percent four and a half to
one give him an F. Handling of spending in taxes
(10:39):
ten percent give them an A three to one thirty
two percent give them an F. Handling of Russia nine
percent give him an A twenty eight percent give them
an F Iran eight percent, a twenty nine percent F
handling of China nine percent, a twenty six percent F
North Korea, nine percent, a twenty six percent F Anti Semitism,
(11:02):
prejudice against Jewish people ten percent, a twenty five percent
F overall twelve percent, a thirty two percent F. This
says it failed presidency and if you had just left
it at the personality politics, remember when Trump was the
boogeyman and the devil himself and the insurrectionist. Now he's
(11:25):
the savior, but that isn't what's happening. We go issue
by issue and the American people paint the clear picture,
and it'd be even clearer if you took the partisanship
out of it. They didn't get away with anything. And
that's why your hope should be so much higher than
(11:46):
just Donald Trump in one hundred days or four years.
There's something else brewing. There is a reawakening that's brewing,
which leads to our other favorite story of the day. Now,
the Washington Post has come out with its new mission,
Are you ready for it? Reach all of America? Shouldn't
(12:12):
that have been their mission all along?
Speaker 4 (12:14):
Right?
Speaker 3 (12:15):
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com forward slash del journal. It's your Morning show with
Michael del Jorno early Friday local time. Is really primate
bb Detnyah, who released a statement saying both parties have
agreed to a hostage release and a cease fire deal.
(14:05):
The deal will go to Israel's cabinet for approval today.
The statement also said that the families of hostages have
been informed and hostage exchanges should begin this weekend. One
great big flop here's Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 5 (14:18):
But today in politics, with President Biden sent to depart
the Oval Office, Americans are weighing in on his job performance.
According to a CNN survey, sixty one percent of Americans
view Biden's presidency as more of a failure than a success.
Speaker 3 (14:33):
I can see how yeah, I mean, what did he do?
Sixty one percent. I gotta go with the sixty one
percent bought on the economy, inflation, groceries. I mean, it's
hard for people to make his meet decent enough for
his age. I love him. Wasn't a failure?
Speaker 5 (14:48):
Just twenty eight percent of respondent said the economy is
in good shape. Biden's favorability ratings stands at thirty three percent,
with fifty eight percent viewing him as unfavorable, and the
outgoing Attorney General Merrick Garland, is emphasizing the importance of
an independent Justice Department. In his farewell speech Thursday, Garland
said only an independent DOJ can protect the safety and
civil rights of everyone in our country. Garland said the
(15:10):
department has been wrongly criticized as politically motivated. President Elector
Trump has repeatedly attacked the justice system as politicize and corrupt.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
That's politics. I'm Mark Mayfield. The flags are being raised
to full staff at the US Capitol this coming Monday
to honor the inauguration of President elect Donald Trump. Michael
Casner reports.
Speaker 6 (15:28):
Last month, following President President Biden ordered American flags lowered
to half staff for thirty days in remembrance of former
President Jimmy Carter. On Tuesday, Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson
posted on x that flags at the Capitol would fly
at full staff on inauguration Day and then lowered back
to half staff the following day to continue honoring Carter.
Speaker 3 (15:52):
I'm Michael Cassner. Meanwhile, good news for my listeners with
diabetes research at the University of Virginia say a relatively
new technology can help doctors treat type one diabetics. Tammy
Trihuilo has the details.
Speaker 7 (16:05):
A study published this month by researchers at the Center
for Diabetes Technology analyze data from a ten year study
involving more than fourteen hundred diabetes patients. The research showed
that keeping blood sugar levels within a certain range helped
patients avoid complications like blindness and kidney damage. UVA researchers
are recommending the use of continuous glucose monitors to help
(16:25):
doctors identify and treat patients with a higher risk of
diabetes complications. I'm Tammy Trichios.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
One of my all time favorite kid rock songs. The
musicians performing for President elect Donald Trump's inauguration weekend are
being announced. Carrie Underwood, Kid Rock, Billie Ray, Cyrus, Jason Aldean,
Rascal Flats, and The Village People will all perform this weekend.
A statement from the inaugural committee said that the weekend
will be a celebration of music, unity and patriotism, ushering
(16:54):
in a new American Golden Age. The list includes a
surprise musical guest to perform at the Liberty Ball on
Monday night, not a peep as too. That surprise is
we'll get to the divisional rounds of playoffs starting tomorrow
Texans and Chiefs. Than at night Lions and Commanders. Sunday
Eagles and Rams and the Ravens and Bills OKC in Cleveland,
(17:16):
Matt on the Hardwood last night, two best teams from
the West and the East under one this time one
thirty four to one fourteen.
Speaker 5 (17:25):
This is James from Greenwood, South Carolina, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael Dojorno.
Speaker 3 (17:37):
Hi, It's Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
Your Morning Show can be heard on great radio stations
across the country, like News Talk ninety two point one
and six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee, or thirteen hundred
The Patriot in Tulsa or Talk six fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California.
Speaker 3 (17:51):
We invite you to listen.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
Live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work.
Speaker 3 (17:56):
But as we always say, better late than ever.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Thanks for joining us for the podcast.
Speaker 3 (18:00):
This segment really would have the headline something bigger than
Donald Trump has seemingly won, and something far bigger than
Kamala Harris has lost two headlines that scream out along
with the amazing ability for the American people in the
(18:25):
midst of a social dilemma, in the midst of death
of journalism and lies and mischaracterations and distortions, seeing through
issue by issue the truth. There's a reason Donald Trump won.
And it wasn't because Donald Trump. Because America saw clearly
(18:47):
every single failure. And that's where you should find hope
beyond the next one hundred days or even four years.
But let's hone in on this. Could something bigger than
Donald Trump have won and something far bigger than Kamala
Harris lost. Well, here's a pretty good piece of evidence, headline,
(19:13):
The Washington Post's new mission reach all of America. Now,
it is very easy to quickly laugh at that, right,
Why weren't you doing that all along? What did you
just admit you've been doing all along? I mean, if
(19:37):
democracy dies in darkness, what's democratic about? You haven't been
honest about reaching all of America all along? This game
set match, this is bye by resistance. One might say
(20:02):
this is the ultimate Trump victory. No, the ultimate Trump effect. No,
this is the ultimate America has finally seen it. Because
they've seen it. It's over. This is how the really
big lies, the really deceiving elements are defeated, the defeated
(20:25):
by the truth, just seeing it and it's over. You've
dealt with that in your personal life, right. People can
tell you things, you can read things, doctors can diagnose things.
But when you see things from what they really are,
that's when it's over. Trump just drove, just broke the
(20:54):
Washington Post. Well, I think I would say it more
like a revelation and at getting it. I think the
America beat beyond one talk show host. America finally saw
the media for what it was. It's a trust that
is lost forever, and I don't know if the Washington
Post can resurrect it. Even saying, wow, we have a
new mission. The Washington Post narrative and agenda just died
(21:23):
in light. This week, the Post began trying out a
new mission statement, riveting storytelling for all of America. After
Donald Trump entered the White House in twenty seventeen, the
Washington Post adopted a slogan that underscored the newspaper's traditional
role as a government watchdog. Democracy dies in darkness, Now
(21:48):
riveting storytelling for all America. Good luck with that. This week,
as mister Trump prepares to re enter the White House,
the newspaper debut a mission statement that evokes a more
expansive view. The statement is meant to be an internal
rallying point for employees. Now listen, I get it, I
(22:10):
get I was really big on this in management. To
this day when I see them, I really respect the
businesses that have a mission statement. I had a mission
statement and a war cry, a war cry that would
in a single line, remind everybody of every word that
was in that mission statement, and I had in every
(22:31):
room of the building. I wanted it to be the
first thing, most thing, and last thing you saw every day.
Who we are, what we are, why we are, and
who we do it for. So if it's riveting storytelling
(22:51):
for all of America, what was it before Abizo's hopes
at the post would be read by more blue collar Americans?
Firefighters mentioning people like firefighters in Cleveland and others. But
what's laughable is, for over a century, decade after decade,
(23:19):
generation after generation, these papers have bullied their customers. You've
witnessed this over your lifetime. I lived in Telso, Caloma.
There's a small pocket of good old boys and leftists,
but the majority were god fearing, neighbor loving conservative Americans,
(23:40):
And every day, plopped on their driveway was a paper
that was anathetical to that to every one of their beliefs,
just an intellectual bullying, and people were buying it. They
don't buy it anymore, and there are no monopolies anymore.
But you do that for one hundred years and then
(24:02):
suddenly you change an internal slogan into rivetting storytelling for
all of America. You tell me if that's possible, I'll
tell you. I think it's a sign that's something bigger
than just Donald Trump won an election, and something bigger
(24:22):
than Kamala Harris just lost. Here's another example, And the
timing couldn't be more obvious, could it. Heading into the
weekend of inauguration, the Trump effect continues. FBI scraps its
DEI office and overall of woke policies. Just days before
Trump takes office, the FBI has shut it it's controversial,
(24:51):
taxpayer funded Diversity, Equity and Inclusion office just ahead of
Donald Trump's inauguration. In recent weeks, the FBI took steps
to close the Office of Diversity and Inclusion effective December
of twenty twenty four. The closing of the DEI office
just ahead of the president elect swearing in, signals the
FBI's anticipating reforms for the incoming administration and for Cash Patel,
(25:15):
who's about to take them over. DEI has been a
target of Republicans who claim prioritizing diversity, equity, inclusion over
merit and ability is wrong and dangerous. Well, I can
give you a great example of that. This is twenty
(25:41):
one days before the fires broke out in Los Angeles,
as the firefighters of Los Angeles were begging their city
council not to cut their funding. You want to hear
what DEI over merit and debility sounds like. Here's twenty
(26:09):
one days before the fire.
Speaker 8 (26:10):
If we cut one position, if we close one station,
if we close one resource, the residents of Los Angeles
are going to pay the ultimate sacrifice and someone will die.
Speaker 7 (26:22):
Just last month, fire personnel packed in LA Fire Commission meeting,
sagging the city to rethink the budget.
Speaker 3 (26:29):
These cuts came in exactly the wrong time, with calls
for services at an all time high and our firefighters
at their breaking point. We are straining our departments resources
beyond the brink and we cannot continue on this path.
City council Woman Tracy Park was there too. There is
(26:51):
no stronger line then close one resource.
Speaker 8 (26:54):
The residents of Los Angeles are going to pay the
ultimate sacrifice, and someone will die.
Speaker 3 (27:00):
Someone will die. The death toll rose to twenty seven yesterday.
I won't give any particulars, but I was talking to
two owners of a radio group that I was working for.
(27:21):
They asked for my assessment and opinion, and I gave it.
In the midst of that conversation, they informed me that
they were going to take a ten person news staff
down to two. And I remember looking at them and saying,
even if you had to, even if you wanted to,
(27:42):
why would you do it forty five days before the
most consequential election in American history? Why when you wait
forty five days? And one of them looked at me
and said, you seem troubled by this decision. And I
looked at them and said, you were two of the
(28:03):
most unimpressive people I've ever met. And you know I
didn't get fired. Wish they had. Did you what the
firefighter was saying, And you were wanting to do this
twenty one days before the Santa Ana wins twenty one
(28:24):
days before fire season, twenty three million dollars, of which
they got seventeen million dollars in cuts, and all the polling.
I just showed you an issue by issue, from Iran
to Russia, to China, to the border to the economy.
(28:48):
The American people saw through all of it. And that's
before the fire. I mean, one loose thing I could
say to you is, you know somehow COVID plus FEMA
after a hurricane, plus fires in California, plus Donald Trump's
defeat over everyone, not two Democratic presidential challengers, but the media, everyone,
(29:13):
the courts, everyone. They don't equal four. They equal what
I But I wanted to be our journey of discovery
today and I'll let you draw the conclusions. Something bigger
than Donald Trump is won, Something bigger than Kamala Harris
or Joe Biden has lost, which means something bigger is
(29:37):
about to begin. And that gives me a great deal
of hope. This is your Morning Show with Michael do Turno. Riisensheine.
It's Friday, hey, by the way, our final Friday with
forty five. As he is on the eve of being
Friday with forty seven. That's coming up in the third hour.
By the way, watch that movie yesterday. As a matter
(29:59):
of fact, I thought of you, and he was on
the punt coverage and that song was playing, and then
he got knocked out of bounds. I almost filmed it
and sent it to you, but I figured you wouldn't
look at the phone either. You can never watch me
on camera when I'm doing it. I saw you time
just Mark Wahlberg Invincible playing Vinci Babali. That's a movie,
you know. Outside came to the conclusion of if you
were to ask me who's your favorite actor, Gene Hackman
(30:21):
might come up. Can't say Robert de Niro anymore. Al
Pacino would come up. But I watched this seemingly in concept,
stupid movie about a futuristic twenty to fifty spaceship fighter
who's trying to go back in time to find his
(30:42):
wife and ends up in his childhood home interacting with
himself as a child. What. Yeah, but it was Ryan Reynolds,
and I have come to the conclusion I don't think
there's any script you could hand Ryan Reynolds that he
wouldn't make good. Have you ever seen a bad Ryan Renolds? Well,
It's always just the same Ryan Rimmel's character in every movie.
(31:06):
Oh and that really hurt Meg Ryan Well, Julia Roberts,
I mean they all. Meryl Streep doesn't ever play the
same person twice, but I do. I just love all
of his movies. I think Ryan Rewlds might be my
favorite actor. I hate to admit it. Coming up, I'm
going to feature one of our emailers and combine that
with a Washington Post story. Don't miss that if you're
(31:29):
just waking up. The confirmed death toll is now twenty
seven in the wildfire ravaged southern California area. Firefighters are
still battling two massive blaze blazes that are burning in
Los Angeles, and there are major rumblings now over whether
or not California Governor Gavin Newsom will retain his job
once these wildfires are under control and put out. The
(31:51):
hostage release deal is on. Here's an interesting thing that
I don't think most people realize. Waking up, you have
to this is what Israel has read to. They have
to give up thirty terrorist prisoners for each male hostage released,
and they have to give up fifty terrorist prisoners for
(32:15):
each female hostage released. The thirty fifty unfair deal, but
it's back on and the Kannesset will vote on it today.
President elect Trump's inauguration is being called an attractive potential
target for violent extremists. Mark Mayfield has more on that story.
Speaker 5 (32:39):
That's according to US national security agencies. The FBI, Secret Service,
Capital Police, the Washington DC government, and the Supreme Court's
Police Department have compiled a threat assessment. It laid out
various scenarios and the types of people like foreign or
domestic terrorists who could make them happen. Officials have been
on high alert, especially after last summer's assassination attempts on
(32:59):
Trump and the New Year's Day attacks in New Orleans
and Las Vegas. The agencies do know that there are
no specific credible threats.
Speaker 3 (33:06):
I'm Mark Mayfield. Well. He may have been a mediocre
baseball player in the sixties and very early seventies, but
in the mid to late seventies and eighties he was
an American treasurer. Legendary baseball broadcaster Bob Bucher is dead
at the age of nineties.
Speaker 6 (33:19):
His death was confirmed by the Milwaukee Brewers. Uker called
Brewers games for fifty four years.
Speaker 9 (33:26):
Into the wind up in his spurs, confering Josh By.
Speaker 3 (33:31):
In the corner of this.
Speaker 6 (33:32):
He played in the MLB from nineteen sixty two to
nineteen sixty seven for the Milwaukee Braves, Saint Louis Cardinals,
Philadelphia Phillies, and Atlanta Braves, winning the World Series with
the Cardinals in nineteen sixty four. Uker also was known
for his appearances throughout pop culture, including in the Major
League Film Trilogy, and is in the Celebrity wing of
(33:53):
the WWE Hall of Fame.
Speaker 3 (33:55):
I'm Michael Casner, good job on that one. Michael rapper
Buster Rhymes is being charged with assault, accused of punching
him out of the face in Brooklyn, or, as they
call it the rap world, a comeback.
Speaker 9 (34:07):
Rymes, whose real name is Trevor George Smith Junior, was
arrested Tuesday night. According to police, the fifty two year
old Brooklyn native reportedly got into a fight with his
fifty year old assistant near Jay and Front Streets in
downtown Brooklyn and repeatedly punched him in the face. The
assistant was treated for swelling. Rhymes was given a desk
ticket and charged with third degree assault. Andrew Whitman NBC
(34:31):
News Radio New York.
Speaker 3 (34:32):
I decided to just give you the results ahead of time.
Chiefs easy over the Texans. Saturday Lions hang on to
win over the Commanders, Eagles shocked by the Rams and
the Ravens, and the Bills go down to the wire.
They played this week in a divisional playoff round. We're
all in this together. This is your Morning Show with
Michael Nheld Joano