Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show airs live five to
eight am Central six to nine Eastern in great cities
like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine, but we're happier
here now. Enjoyed the podcast, please right now myself? Fat
guy is up and at him eight minutes after the hour,
(00:21):
walking to Monday. It's February. You know we had the
groundhog over the weekend, did we. Yeah? He was extra,
you know, fell on weekends, and you know usually when
it's during the week radio makes a big deal lot
of it. And you hear his big long speech. He
took a little dig at ai and then the groundhog proclaimed.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
Let's get another check in with Puckshatani Phil this borrow,
I miss.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Mark, so on headed back down. There's a show.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
Six more Weeks of Winter from Bucks And'tani Phlle the
abused groundhog. They flip a when they they then euthanized
shortly after the announcement, though they did not. I made
that part up, but yeah, six more weeks of winter,
although we didn't feel that in Middle Tennessee. It was
like sixty and sunny, and it was beautiful over the weekend.
(01:13):
President Trump says he will speak to the Canadian Mexican
leaders this morning. The tariffs were imposed on Saturday. Is
really Prime Minister bb net and Yah who will meet
with the President this week as well. Transportation Secretary Sean
Duffy is calling for changes in the air traffic control
following a pair of aviation disasters. We had two in
a row, as you know, and you know, the little
(01:36):
hidden secret that nobody talks about is the rivalry between
the NTSB and the FAA. The NTSB's purpose of existences.
Accidents don't happen. Something causes each of them. And if
it's human error, we need to learn from it. If
it's mechanical air, we need to learn from it. If
(01:57):
it's atmospheric, we need.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
To learn from So every time you have an accident,
the purpose of the NTSB is to a give the
cause because family members of victims want answers, and that
it's to make recommendations. You'd be shocked, or the NTSB
(02:21):
would want you to be shocked at how few of
those recommendations are ever taken. So this is this is
a much bigger line than most people would think waking
up this morning that the Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is
calling for changes. The recommendations have been there, the shortages
(02:43):
have been there, the standards have lowered, and from this
particular accident that's going to lead to recommend to changes.
That's a big deal. I keep waiting for the egg prices.
You know, this is a bigger story than it is
a reality. Like I noticed at Costco, I didn't notice
any difference, but according to the latest egg prices will
continue to soar with diminishing supply and the you know,
(03:07):
we made this joke off the year. I had children
very late. That was God's planning, not mine. So my
daughters were born when I was forty. They've kept me hip.
You know, when you when you have kids at forty,
it makes you, you know, live a life more like
a twenty four year old at forty and a thirty
(03:28):
four year old at fifty. I'm probably realistically living the
life of an early forties guy because of what I'm
exposed to and what I'm around. It's probably gonna keep
me alive longer. Maybe God do something if you ever
want to lose touch or feel old, even if you
(03:51):
don't think you feel old put on the Grammys.
Speaker 4 (03:55):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 1 (03:56):
I mean I'm sitting watching with my son aughters left
for college, where I would have loved their comments. He
didn't seem to know three quarters of them because I
didn't know anybody virtually, I mean certainly didn't know any
of the new artists. Who's the bun Shaboozi or whatever.
Shaboozy the ship country artist. Yeah, Shaboozy ends up having
(04:19):
the longest number one song I think since Elvis are
the Beatles crazy oh bar song?
Speaker 4 (04:25):
Yeah?
Speaker 1 (04:26):
Yeah, that's it. That's it, That's what That's an iconic
song right now. Uh, And so you expect him to win,
you know, Artists of the Year. No, some girl comes
out looking like Raggedy Ann wearing a Rapunzel hat and
starts passing the labels like, who's this? Gag I want
to be Meanwhile, Gaga came out was weird again. It
was just do you ever meet dress on? I mean,
(04:46):
at some point when I tell you Beyonce one country
album of the Year, really try the vl I'll be
here all week. Yeah, no further questions You're going to happen.
So and I'm not on hip. You know there's people
that you know, look bad. I could British invasion, which
dominated well, Elvis started rock and roll the fifties, that
(05:07):
reshaped things sixties a British invasion. I think from nineteen
seventy five to nineteen seventy nine, perhaps a disproportionate, crazy
amount of flawless rock and roll music was made to
the point where it's still played today. Why do I
say that, because most of the rock and roll we
(05:29):
listened to is for about a five to eight year
period of time. Yeah, still to this day, the same
six hundred songs. Now, if that were true when I
was a young teenager in nineteen seventy six or no,
I don't think it was a teenager yet, a teenager
in seventy nine, but whatever, that would have been like
people still playing you know, thirties music, or worse right,
that would have been like them playing twenties music if
(05:50):
you had Benny Goodman and all the big band stuff. Yeah, yeah,
because I mean when we're listening to Journey or Boston
or or Elo, I mean those songs are fifty years
old and we're still playing them like they're new. You
know why, because nobody made anything better after that. That's
why bunch of junk. So it's fascinating to look at,
(06:12):
you know, you go back. There was a period in
recent years from I think about I'm just gonna throw
out a number because some of them go back to
twenty twelve, but I can tell you having kids and
being forced to listen to it from twenty fourteen to
about twenty eighteen, really leading into COVID, there was some
of the best music made in decades. I mean, great,
(06:33):
great songs by a lot of different great artists. Then
COVID happened, and I guess they got brain fog and
couldn't write anymore, and I think we're back into one
of those you know. Another area would be eighty four
to eighty nine, and that would have been more of
your pop music, you know, Tina Turner, Ghent Huey Lewis ran, Yeah,
(06:56):
I mean just had all kinds of it goes in
waves and we haven't had one in a long time,
and I don't think we're in one right now. And
at some point when Beyonce gets their first Grammy and
it's a country album, that's yeah, Song of the Year,
Record of the Year.
Speaker 2 (07:14):
Both were Kendrick lamar Rap. By the way, in Beyonce's defense,
the album was good. I've I've never heard a single line.
I listened to it all. I was doing some country
stuff at the time, so I heard the whole album,
but it was not any better than any other country.
They all kind of sound the same to me, you know,
(07:35):
all music kind of sounds the same.
Speaker 1 (07:36):
This would be interesting for you guys to chime in
using the talkback line, which, by the way, a shameless plug.
If you're listening on your iHeartRadio AF there's a microphone
that's a talkback line and talk radio don't have to
call them wait on hold anymore. Instantly leave your message,
make your comment, ask a question, maybe even record your
I'm and don't do it literally like that one wise
guy from Tulsa, I'm so inscite I say so and
(08:00):
so from such and such, because every time I don't
want to make up a new name. I'm Judy Doe
from Franklin, Tennessee. And my morning show is your morning
show with Michael del Johny. You can record those there
as well, but it would be interesting to ask you.
I I am a firm believer that the only thing
left shocking in life is the truth. That's the only
thing on a daily basis that shocks me. I mean,
(08:24):
what gender could somebody come forward with today? My children
had a friend who thought he was a dog. He
literally laid on a dog matt he ate out of
a dog bowl at his house. I mean, nothing shocks.
I mean, so you know, Elvis was the first to
gyrate when he sang, and it was exciting and it
(08:45):
was natural, but it was culturally offensive. Remember when we
thought the Beatles had long hair. Then you get Alice
Cooper and kiss well that's bizarre. Then you get Madonna
woman grabbing her c I mean, we could go on
and on and on. What's left? I mean, I don't
even know who that new artist was last night. By
(09:06):
the way, when's the Grammy for new Artist? And then
Basha's labels are not taking care of her Before she
was an artist, was it che Chapel Roone? Yes, I
still didn't know what she got her name from. But anyway,
she dresses like Raggedy Ann and then wears like Rapunzel
hats and clothes. But that's the challenge, right, how can
(09:28):
you be shocking today? There's nothing that can shock anybody.
So the next thing, you know, you're like, well, maybe
if I dress like a rag doll? Yeah do that?
That made stick out. It was like when wasn't a
Madonna that showed up wearing meat never a dressa that
was Lady Gaga all this, yeah Lady Gaga. Well but yeah,
but now when you look at this grag, what is
she trying to pull? I said it? I sorry, what
is she trying to pull? A Gaga? Yeah? And then
(09:49):
then beguess you're gonna take all that off and be
pretty and then he's gonna have real talent. Right, Okay,
I'll buy it again. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (09:55):
They uh, And they love to get on social media
and say, hey, when I'm not on on stage, please
don't come up to me and ask for a picture
for an autograph.
Speaker 1 (10:05):
I mean that's why. Well, then when you're off stage,
don't ask me to buy your record. It's just it's like,
you know, you kind of feel sorry for him because
there's really nothing left, right, I mean, there's not really
an industry, not like you can put out an album
make money, but the only thing you can do is tour, right,
and even then, who knows how much it gets.
Speaker 2 (10:26):
To you they'll tell you it does. But I mean, seriously,
I mean, it's all given away now. Music has no
value until they tour.
Speaker 1 (10:34):
It's just fine. I wonder if anybody else felt that way.
You just watch the Grammy's like, whoa, I must have
gotten out of touch, you know, or is it just
the opposite. I kind of know how weird the world is.
This doesn't look weird enough. There's no new weird gez
did you did? She's dressed like reggity you. I just
(10:57):
I finally just rolled over and they're trying to make
their statements, and you know, it's just so over the
whole Awards thing. Yeah, you know it's I mean, I
s'll thought to any of them anymore. Let's all just
gather and praise each other and then get up and
act shocked and then just say something that would offend
(11:19):
half our audience and walk off. I'm just so done
with that, I think. So I don't know if I
felt old or just okay, no, you're getting old, not me,
And the outrage seems greater than the talent. That's been
my observation, with the exception of twenty fourteen to twenty eighteen,
(11:40):
that would be my observation for decades. The outrage seems
greater than the talent. Lady Gaga is a great example.
I can't stand Lady Gaga, what just can't stand her,
But she is a once in a lifetime talent. She's
just one of the best. It's there, She's got it.
You could you can come dressed in meat.
Speaker 4 (12:02):
Although I think it's a great waste of what I
call a beautiful Italian cop of cola or oh I'll
never forget the one time I hate so much that
I drank an entire creek in the backyard that was
so interested.
Speaker 1 (12:21):
But what a waste of beautiful you know what?
Speaker 4 (12:23):
I like to call them to because some people say
lunch and meat and that just doesn't sound I like
to call them cold cuts.
Speaker 1 (12:31):
What a name? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (12:33):
And when she wasted all those cold cuts because you know,
you can't just hang that back up afternoon and I
don't even know that you're who swept more Gega or
the or the Pistrami, but it seemed like a waste
of cold cuts?
Speaker 1 (12:49):
Am I going rare? Just out of shock, out of value?
And Beyonce one Best Country Album? What more can we
say about the Grammys Jeeves and the Eagles, or as
Mary would say, the Eggless and the Chefs are playing
this weekend. They've arrived in New Orleans for Super Bowl
fifty nine. Why we must be within a week now.
(13:12):
Guess what today is? Warree tennis? What's that? That's another
one of my favorites. Don't even start them. I'm not
going to do it. Carrot Cake Day, Yeah, I may.
I may have to hit Jonathan's today and get myself
a little carrot cake. Best carrot cake I ever in my
life was at Bettice's Jerome Bettis's restaurant in Pittsburgh. His
mom's recipe really was spectacular too. As we say, die for.
(13:37):
So a lot going on today, big stories, Polls are plenty.
How are you feeling about the fauci pardon? The immigration
raids and deportations. We've got some numbers on that. We
got some initial investigative findings in Philadelphia in that crash
All six bought, by the way. In that one, the
(13:59):
black bos recovered eight feet underground. Oh and it landed
in concrete. Wow.
Speaker 2 (14:07):
If you've seen the video, Yeah, golly, Moses and fifty
five of the sixty seven bodies.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
Have been recovered from the Potomac. They are expecting, optimistically
to get the rest today when wreckage is removed from
the river. We got a lot to discuss today, Missillia,
miss a lot, miss a lot. We'll miss you.
Speaker 4 (14:22):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Can't have your morning show, which, by the way, I
finally got the video of Let's make Time to make
the Donuts. Yeah, and it is a Dunkin Donuts commercial
from the seventies, right, and it is Red.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
It is in the commercial that's his first acting job
before he became.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
And everybody notices it looks exactly like Red. But Red, Yeah,
that guy looks exactly like you Red. If anybody's curious
what Red looks like, find the Dunkin Donuts at can't
have your morning show without your voice. Let's start with
Garyett k f YI in Phoenix.
Speaker 5 (15:00):
Good morning, Michael Dill's joan. No, this is Gary out
of the Phoenix, Arizona area. Definitely feel you in having
the children at a late age. I'm fifty years old
with five children. Oldest is twenty in college, youngest is
three years old, so I definitely feel much younger than fifty.
But I'm not looking forward to walking my three year
(15:21):
old down the aisle. Years and years from now, hopefully
I'll be able to walk them down the aisle.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
So love your morning show. Have a good day. You know,
I could go Phoenix on everybody. That is one station
I've always loved, always wanted to work for, and I
love my Phoenix listeners. Yeah, I don't know if you
do this. I do this with my wife all the
time when we're we're at school gatherings. Do you think
they think I'm the grandfather or the father, But I
really don't look that much older than everybody else. We'll
(15:47):
get some more of your calls. We it's the top
five stories the day and the latest done the investigations
in the two plane crashes. When your Morning show continues
next to stay with us.
Speaker 6 (15:56):
I'm Jim Schultz in Tampa, and my morning show is
your Morning show Show with Michael Giljorona.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
Hi, It's Michael. Your Morning Show could be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work. Live, but we're glad you're here now,
enjoyed the podcast. Jeffrey lyon controlling the sound, serving you.
Jeffrey's got an eye on the content. Only does he
have the eye on the content today, So he says
(16:29):
to me off the air, Oh, showing up at the
Grammy's naked isn't shocking enough for you. I'm like, well,
I remember the red carpet being on in the background
while I was getting thumbs last night. So apparently I
didn't even know. I always thought Kanye was married to
one of the Kardashians. Apparently they had gotten divorced. Yeah, Kim,
(16:52):
and so he has remarried now. Yeah, and though I
missed the wedding, I haven't missed the wedding night. Kanye West, thirty,
who has previously shocked audiences with the risque displays and
rumors his wife, showed up completely naked, wearing only a
tight see through dress. But it's the headline in the
(17:15):
Daily Mail talking about I know this is beneath the show,
but secret boob. There's no secret when you show up
naked and then a designer below. I didn't even know
there was such a thing. Yeah, just okay, that's well,
(17:36):
it's not shocking that somebody would come nothing, you shocked,
naked or revealing, But she really showed up naked at
the Grammys. She had a dress and that was because
he wanted her to come that way? Is that what
you were saying, honey, what should I wear nothing? And
she did? Here's some cell of face. The Grammys. I
(17:58):
have no use for them. And you know, I always say,
you know, do I wake up one morning and just
start yelling at kids to get off my lawn? I
don't know. It hasn't happened yet, but the Grammys are
the closest I come to that. I just I don't
these kids, and I roll over and I go to bed.
Uh two quick voices from our line that we'll get
(18:18):
to our stories. We are at Brian, I believe in
uh okay.
Speaker 7 (18:24):
How did win Best Country Album? But they don't even
play her videos from music on the country music channel.
I'm confused.
Speaker 1 (18:37):
I'm what shocked me was I didn't realize till today
that she had never is that? But that's her Her
husband always goes on tie rates over there, right? How
she's never won a Grammy? O J. Yeah, I don't.
I don't know are they involved in all that weird
stuff that's been going on.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
There are rumors and accusations just that jay z is
too is all up in it yet.
Speaker 1 (18:59):
Yeah, she finally won a Grammy and it was an
Album of the Year Country Album for the Year album
not R and B but country country Uh and uh.
Record and Song of the Year went to Lamar Kendrick
and Raggedy Ann or whatever her name is one Best
New Artist and then bashed all the labels. That's the
Grammys for you, all right. Last one's John.
Speaker 8 (19:20):
This is John from Youngstown. I remember as a kid
writing around with my parents on mccarnell. We used to
listen to music on an AM radio. I was a
speaker in the dashboard. Uh, Mitch, Mitch McConnell ed a's
Andy Williams, Wayne newby Barbara Streis And I was raised
(19:41):
on all that stuff, And so I used to sneak
over to my sister's room listen to all her Beatles albums.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Man, did he say Mitch McConnell, I thought he did too.
Do you mean Mitch Rider? Maybe in the Detroit Wills,
I don't know. Was there a Mitch McConnell or not
the same. Mitch McConnell. Was it drink and bourbon back
then and singing country? Yeah. Memorable moments, I have several.
I remember American Pie. The first time I heard that,
(20:12):
my brother brought out the eye. I remember the Beatles
Blue Album was the first Beatles album I ever had
in my hand, and I remember just dropping the needle
on masterpiece after masterpiece as I'm looking at their picture
and rather quickly realized I was a pall guy. I
(20:36):
remember the oddity of like we would listen to the
Carpenters and not think it's uncool, and then put like
on Boston or Zeppelin right after that, and there was
no oddity in that. I remember that. Probably my most
graphic memory was in my dad's bedroom and he was
at work and I went. He had his little shoeshine thing,
(20:58):
you know, they had the red spine in the black
spun on each end and used to shiner shoda and
it would sit right next to her. He had a
stereo setup and there was an eight track and it
had all this crazy print on it. I didn't know
quite what it looked like, but it looked differ because
you know, back then, every album pretty much featured a
picture of the artist, you know, like the carpenters were
(21:20):
just the brother and sister, you know, close up of
them standing there kind of a thing. And this wasn't
it looked kind of very African and bizarre. And I
remember pushing it in and hitting play, and I remember
Sir Duke came on, Oh boy, And that was when
I discovered Stevie Wonder's songs in the Key of Life,
and I have never I remember, even at that age,
(21:43):
thinking I've never heard anything like this. And I just
kept listening and listening, and nothing felt like I was
hearing it for the first time. They just all felt
like instantly, isn't she loved Lacey? Sir Duke. I have
several memories and then my first record ever. I remember
I walked to Skate shopping Center, which I think I
would have or I should have got in trouble for
(22:04):
walking to because she crossed a couple of busy streets
in Arlington Heights. And I bought my first forty five
and it was Doctor My Eyes Jackson Brown. Oh no kidding.
And back then, you know you can only afford it
forty five, so you just came home and just listened
to it over and over and over, and then my
brother came home with Dancing with the Moonlight. I was like, oh,
Dancing to the Moonlight. I love that. But yeah, music,
(22:26):
I don't know. I think it goes, you know, like
I did this in the opening. I don't want to
revisit it. But there are certain windows of genius. I
think a window opened with Elvis and Buddy Holly and
Chuck Berry in the fifties. I think a window opened
up with the Beatles in the sixties and some others.
(22:46):
I don't leave anybody out later in the mid to
late seventies, the same classic rock. When you think of
rock and roll as we know it and listen in
the car, whether it's like on Serious EXMDGE or all
the different channels they have Classic Rewind and all of those,
(23:07):
you're basically hearing bands from a five year period of time,
and its song after song and band after band and
artist after artist, and it's still the deepest format played
fifty years later. I mean, that's a Bob Siegert. That's
a window. Yeah, that's a window that opened up and
I brought up you know that maybe from eighty four
(23:28):
daty nine, was another one of those windows. I really
believe that twenty twenty thirteen, fourteen to twenty eighteen was
a window. There was some great music by a lot
of different artists. When you called me see yauty da,
you know, I can't think of anything but just it
was this one from Maroon five to twenty one pilots.
(23:48):
What was the ones that started on the talent competition?
I don't know, maybe I'm perfect. Then they all went
on to have solo careers. I'm blank. I don't know
about that. Justin Bieber Dualipa just I love Bieber, But
what's the way you know the band that one direction? Yeah,
(24:12):
one direction? Yeah? They read So, I mean, we have
these little windows. I don't think, just from what little
I saw last night, we're in one of those windows.
Was my main point. And then my other main point
was in a world where the only thing left shocking
in life is the truth. What's really left for them?
You know, it's like, all right, so was it Kanye?
I get them all confused?
Speaker 9 (24:32):
Was it?
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Yeah, Kanye shows up with his wife naked. Okay, that
really doesn't shock me at all. Uh. And then when
you have a new artist, you know, after everything's been done,
I guess, I guess I'll put a Rapunzel hat on,
wear a sheet and look like Raggedy ann. You know,
it's just it's also tired and old for me. Or
(24:53):
maybe I'm just getting tired and old and I'm not
into all the weirdness. But there's a lot more attempts
to be outrageous than talented. That's a big problem for music.
Then they got industry problems that are a problem as well.
All right, if you're just waking up, Frump did do
the band the tariff for other fifteen twenty five percent
tariff on Canada and Mexico. He plans to talk to
(25:13):
both leaders from both countries today. The Israeli Prime minister
coming for a visit with Trump at the White House.
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy is calling for changes and air
traffic control following a pair of aviation disasters. Egg prices
continue to rise, And yes, Beyonce won her first Grammy ever.
If you want a couple a few, I guess I
(25:34):
should say, you've got Country Album of the Year. She
got another one too, I can't remember what it was for.
Kendrick Lamar gets the coveted Record of the Year and
Song of the Year at the Grammys last night. All right,
official set on Sunday, I gotta do this quickly. Now
that I rattled on and on about the Grammys, it
sounds like that old kadja. Oh these kids today dressing
(25:57):
up like rag down, going up with wives with no
clothes on. Officials said Sunday that the remains of fifty
five of the sixty seven victims have been recovered. They
plan to lift wreckage from the Potomac River today and
there are hopes that the remaining remains will be recovered.
(26:20):
Of the fifty five of the sixty seven that were recovered,
they were all positively identified, and a news briefing official
said that first light today, the salvage teams from the
Army Corps of Engineers will begin the process of lifting
the wreckage of the American Airlines Flight fifty three forty
two from the Potomac, an operation that is expected to
take three days in total. Preliminary data from the data
(26:42):
recorder recovered from the plane. Now, this was a big,
long news conference, I believe on Saturday night you've got
the hard recorder debt. By the way, this Blackhawk and
most don't does have a black Boy, so they will
get the black box from the black Hawk, which is significant.
(27:06):
You'll get the exact data, altitude, so on and so forth.
But they're trying to be transparent. It's such a followed
tragedy that they're normally the NTSP will give you a
preliminary report after a month. You won't even get conclusive
fightings for almost a year or longer. They're trying to
give information to the public as quickly as possible. So
(27:27):
what happened was when they came forward Saturday, they had
the flight recorder black box data from the plane. They
did not have it yet from the Blackhawk. It was wet,
it had to go through a treatment, and then they
had preliminary data from the control tower, and there were discrepancies.
(27:47):
Anybody that watched that news conference you know exactly what
I'm talking about for an hour until the guy got
so frustrated he took three violent SIPs of water and
walked off. All right, So the data recorder shows the
American Airlines flight at three hundred and twenty five feet
give or take twenty five feet, so it could have
been thirty five, could have been three hundred somewhere in there.
(28:08):
And again that's the distance between the bottom the plane
and the top of the plane. And meanwhile the tower
did show both. But again you know it's a radar sweep,
so you don't know where it's at in its sweep.
So the sweep of the plane had the plane at
(28:28):
three hundred feet, and then it had the preliminary and
it hasn't been enhanced yet, had the helicopter at potentially
two hundred feet that would be at ceiling, not above it. Clearly,
they hit each other. Clearly, the data from the plane
is more accurate. Clearly, when we get the Blackhawk black
(28:48):
box data, it's going to match. They hit each other.
So there's a discrepancy at this point. But that's what
we have so far, and they'll learn a lot in
the coming days. As I mentioned in the Philadelphia crash,
and we don't know a whole lot about exactly what
(29:09):
caused it. That black box was recovered eight feet underground
on a Leer jet that crashed into concrete. I mean,
that'll give you a sense of the force. So we
know that six died on the plane, and then there
(29:30):
was one reported death on the ground. The National Transportation
and Safety Board, which has been on the ground since Friday,
says it'll take several days potentially weeks, to collect and
analyze evidence from the sprawling crash site. Investigators have recovered
the jets black box that will be invaluable. They found
it eight feet underground, along with an enhanced ground proximity
(29:52):
warning system that could contain flight data as well. They
also found the plane's engines. The parts are being sent
to the agency lab in Washington, d C. To be
analyzed again. You're gonna look at pilot error, you're gonna
look at conditions, and you're gonna look at mechanical that
will be invaluable. For mechanical, the medical jet climbed to
(30:13):
about fifteen hundred feet this much we know from radar,
before descending at a forty five degree angle and crashing
on Cottman Avenue, about three and a half miles away
from the airport, So the plane didn't get up very
high and then came straight down. Crew didn't send any
distress messages from the cockpit and didn't respond to any
transmissions from air traffic control, and the jet was in
the air less than a minute. We know very little
(30:36):
of black boxes that recovered on the Philadelphia. We got
fifty five of the sixty seven bodies recovered in the Potomac,
with optimism to get the remaining twelve as the beginning
of removing the plane from the Potomac begins at sun
up today, which is right about now in our nation's capital.
This is your morning show with Michael del Choan. Well.
(31:00):
The twenty five percent tariffs were imposed on Saturday by
President Trump, and today he expects to talk to both leaders.
Speaker 6 (31:06):
President Trump says he will be speaking with Canadian and
Mexican leaders Monday morning.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
I'm speaking with Prime Minister Trudeau and I'm also speaking
with Mexico. And I don't expect anything very dramatic. And
we put tariff's on. They owe us a lot of money,
and I'm sure they're going to pay.
Speaker 6 (31:25):
Trump told reporters Sunday before he boarded Marine one to
hinto the White House he would speak with Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau in the morning, along with Mexico, although
he failed to say if it would be with President
Claudia Shinbaum or somebody else from the Mexican government. Both
Trudeau and Scheinbaum have criticized Trump's recent tariffs, which Trump
announced would be twenty five percent on imports from the
countries and is reely Prime Minister Benjamin Netyah, who will
(31:46):
meet with President Trump this week. He's expected to travel
to the White House on Tuesday, where he'll be the
first foreign leader to meet with Trump in his second term. Netanyah,
who is currently being sought by the International Criminal Court
for alleged war crimes committed during Israel's war in Gaza.
As It comes as negotiations are expected to resume between
Israel and Helmas As Politics by Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (32:06):
Now, I'm guessing it has a lot more to do
with Mexico than Canada, and you'd like to avoid it
getting and escalating to this point. But certainly everyone should
have everyone's attention now in the negotiation I suspect will begin.
I think for Canada the retaliation will be simple, a
tariff on crude crude that defects shipping fuel. I knew
(32:31):
that was coming, aviation fuel and such. For China, they're
going to start with lawsuits. Scott Carr has more from Washington,
calling the new tariffs a serious violation. China's Commerce Ministry
says in a statement the lawsuit will be filed at
the World Trade Organization and that China will take corresponding
countermeasures to firmly safeguard its own rights and interests. While
(32:53):
Canada and Mexico have both said they would retaliate with
tariffs of their own placed on goods from the US.
In executive orders, President Trump imposed twenty five percent tariffs
on Mexican and most Canadian imports and raise tariffs by
ten percent on goods from China starting on Tuesday. I'm
Scott Carr in Washington. Donald Trump is and the only
(33:13):
one making As employees come back to work more and
more companies like Amazon, at and T, Boeing, Dell, and
Walmart they're requiring their employees to return to the office
in twenty twenty five as well.
Speaker 9 (33:23):
But recent research shows that return to office orders can
cause even the best employees to quit. A survey by
the Few Research Center involving over five thousand people found
that almost half of hybrid and remote workers say they're
unlikely to stay at a job if they have to
be in the office full time, and research from ZIP
recruiters suggests that companies looking to dramatically scale back on
hiring or more likely to enforce ourto orders. The online
(33:46):
job Marketplace also found that these companies report higher turnovers. Meanwhile,
researchers at the University of Pittsburgh found the turn of
a rates are especially high among women, senior and skilled employees.
I'm Tammy Trihea.
Speaker 1 (33:58):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael del Jno.