Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey gang, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard
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the podcast Enjoy.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Well two three, starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're
in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.
Speaker 4 (00:36):
I see, so it's going to be one of those days,
is it. I'm ready. I'm ready. I slept seven minutes
after the hour.
Speaker 1 (00:42):
Good morning, and welcome to Monday, March the fifth year
of Our Lord, twenty twenty six. On the air and
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jarnal, honored to serve you. Jeffrey's serving
us all up with sound. You'll be handling your talkbacks.
Can't have your morning show without your voice. You can
always email Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com or if
(01:03):
you're listening on the iHeart app. I got somebody that
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(01:25):
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(01:48):
So use that talkback button. Email Michael Diat iHeartMedia dot Com.
Speaker 5 (01:51):
All right, yes, everybody there, Yeah.
Speaker 4 (01:57):
Okay, you're doing all right.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Just go ahead and record your message and we'll be
ready to rock and roll. A War Powers resolution that
would have halted President Trump from using further military action
failed in the Senate. The US is torpedoed and Iranian
ship in the Indian Ocean during Operation Epic Fury. As
it rolls on. That is the first time we have
torpedoed from a submarine an enemy ship since World War Two.
(02:23):
And the drilling or shelling, if we're going to stick
to military terms of the Attorney General Keith Ellison of
Minnesota and its Governor Tim Walls, took place in Congress yesterday.
Speaker 4 (02:40):
That's really the three big stories.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
The fraud in Minnesota meeting its hearing, the shelling of
Ellison and Walls, the Iranian vessel torpedoed by the US
submarine first since World War Two, and the War Powers
acting shot down in the Senate. Those are the three
big stories. The others are the identification of the remaining
(03:07):
two soldiers who died during Epic Fury, Chief Warrant Officer
Robert Marzon, who was fifty four years old from Sacramento, California,
and Major Jeffrey O'Brien forty.
Speaker 4 (03:19):
Five of Iowa.
Speaker 1 (03:20):
And again, as we said after the first fourth, a
grateful nation forever in their death and our thoughts and
prayers are with their family, and we lost Coach. You
know you're doing something right when all anybody has to
say is the coach, and you know who you're talking about.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
Lou Holtz.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
Amazing coaching career, amazing television career, even more amazing man
passed away at the age of eighty nine. He had
been in hospice since I believe January, and he died
in Orlando, Florida, surrounded by his family and friends. Today
(04:01):
is one of those really really busy shows. And if
I had to pick a spotlight guest that we're going
to have today, it's without question, yeah, Yel Extein of
the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews. Because war is
not a television event, it can feel like that here.
(04:25):
I mean, we just watch the images, whether we're watching
a news channel or what have you, and it could
be a video game, it could be a movie. Looks
no different, and if you're not careful, it will become
a television event.
Speaker 4 (04:39):
But I can.
Speaker 1 (04:40):
Assure you it's much different if this was happening in
your neighborhood, in your town, in your city. Israeli's they
don't love their wives or husbands, or children or elderly
parents any less than you do. So just imagine if
(05:03):
you were on Sunday afternoon with your family and all
of a sudden you hear a siren and you got
fifteen seconds to get to shelter.
Speaker 4 (05:13):
You could die.
Speaker 1 (05:15):
That feels very different when it's happening to you, When
you get to that shelter and your kids are scared
and you got your arms around them, that feels different
than what you're watching on television. And when the bombing stops,
(05:36):
there's real damage, there's real needs and they have to
be met, and that's what the IFCJ does every day,
but especially in these times of crisis. So the Reality
of War Live from Israel with the President of the
IFCJ ya Ya Lekstek coming your way. Later in the
(05:56):
third hour, David Bon's is going to join us. There's
been so much focus on the oil disruptions, and they're
mostly temporary. I mean, it's not like we can sit
here and analyze this and just you know, rip off
the top of our head about five or six things
that aren't being done that should be. I mean, everything
(06:17):
is being done. Operation Epic Theory continues to be effective, strategic, surgical, targeted,
and as we learned from the Pentagon yesterday, ahead of schedule,
and its objectives. That's number one. Number two, the alliance
(06:38):
of OPEC to produce and release excess oil during this
temporary disruption. There is the forethought and the pre actions
at President Trump involving something necessary in our hemisphere with Venezuela,
but gives us a surplus. And then we have a
(07:00):
replenished reserve for such a crisis as this. It was
depleted for political purposes and a previous administration, but it's
been restored.
Speaker 4 (07:13):
So you can think it's cute.
Speaker 1 (07:14):
When the President says drill, baby, drill, but it's not
cute today. So we have our reserve, we have the
Venezuelan oil, we have the OPEC commitment to produce and release,
and the concentrated effort to secure the Strait of Hormuz.
Now at what point of security? And it could even mean,
(07:37):
as we said yesterday, US ships escorting these oil tankers
whatever it takes for the insurance companies to give clearance
for these tankers to go. So, because I can't think
of anything that isn't being done or wisely being thought
(08:00):
of or pursued, I can only conclude that this is
going to be a temporary at best disruption and oil
prices are based on futures, so what you have right
now is reaction, not real barrel costs translating to the
price at the pump. But all of that aside. What
(08:24):
does war? What does an oil disruption from war or
rising prices of energy? What type of impact does that
have on an economy in a market? And for how long?
We're going to visit where the economists to money? Was
David Bonson on that, and he'll share his analysis. If
(08:47):
you're anxious, it may set your mind at ease. John
Decker is the theater of operation grows in the Middle East.
The US is trying to get Americans out of the
Middle East. We talked a little bit about this yesterday.
Just Red's a little heartless when it comes to this.
Wars and rumors and wars they become so common it's
(09:10):
funny only Rory harps on this. And I don't see
anybody on television or hear anybody on radio anywhere else
bringing up it's insurance companies blocking these tankers right now
from going through the strait of hormones.
Speaker 4 (09:28):
And nobody brings that up.
Speaker 1 (09:31):
If you had paid for an expensive trip and you
wanted to cancel even if you're trying to meet red standard,
you probably wouldn't have been refunded. Now, I get it
at some point, but these kinds of trips can be
very expensive. I mean you're talking about people that have
spent fifteen twenty grand to go on some of these cruises,
(09:54):
and and if the travel insurance isn't going to cover it,
and you hear all these rumors, all that, you go.
But it's a it's a really bad time to be
stuck at one of these ports right now. And so
it's easy to armchair quarterback and say, why the heck
did you go? I mean, who didn't see this coming? Well,
(10:16):
none of us knew when Look, I'm a pretty smart guy.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
I know how to assess things. And I was like,
I don't know. Maybe he's waiting for the ant of
the Olympics. I don't know. Maybe he's waiting for the
to get past the State of the Union. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
I just know everything was in place, I mean, the
table was set, dinner was going to be served.
Speaker 4 (10:36):
I just didn't know when the bell would ring.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
Turns out and tell it they were waiting on intelligence
from all to be in the same.
Speaker 4 (10:40):
Room and kill them.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
All.
Speaker 6 (10:42):
But Michael, in my dessence, you know you were a
heartless You were like.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
What kind of an idiot goes on a trip to
the Middle.
Speaker 6 (10:52):
If you go to the Middle East on a vacation
and do not bube the most consturans he possibly can.
Speaker 1 (10:59):
Well, I know what insured? Would insurance covered it? If
you wanted to cancel two weeks cansolation insurance? But for
any reason?
Speaker 4 (11:07):
Yeah, well then they're on their own. I would have
I would have canceled.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
How about minds and hey, maybe they maybe they just
wanted an extended stay red. Maybe they knew if they
got there and got trapped around the boat they're eating, Well,
they've got a great view.
Speaker 4 (11:21):
They're probably gonna compass. They're going to camp us, but
passes for the buffet. We'll let Decker settle this fight.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Uh, how we plan to get and evacuate these Americans
who might be in danger out of their cruise ships
and a Netflix documentary already in the making, I can
sense it.
Speaker 4 (11:43):
This and more we shall unpack.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
For you and cover between now and the end of
the third hour, because we only have one chance to
live this day, one chance to understand it together.
Speaker 4 (11:53):
Why we're all in it together.
Speaker 7 (11:57):
This is your morning show with Michael Del Tuono.
Speaker 1 (12:01):
I am Michael. I'll be your server this morning. Your
bus boy will be Jeffrey, and Red will cook.
Speaker 8 (12:09):
So you're the short order cut in the short order
audio cook.
Speaker 1 (12:12):
Red can get you any extra butter or dressings that
you might need, and I, of course am your humble
server if.
Speaker 4 (12:19):
You're just waking up.
Speaker 1 (12:19):
Twenty five minutes after the hour, the Senate Democrats have
failed to pass the War Powers Resolution that would have
halted President Trump from using any further military action against Iran.
Speaker 9 (12:29):
The vote was related to the War Powers Act, a
nineteen seventy three Vietnam War Error resolution meant to check
the president's power to enter armed conflict without consent from
the legislative branch. The effort is largely seen as symbolic
because Trump said he would likely veto the measure if
it was passed. Congress would need a two thirds majority
to override the veto, which there currently is not.
Speaker 4 (12:50):
A Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (12:51):
That sound of like a can opener going through metal
that you're hearing. That's our Health and Human Services Secretary
Robert F. Kennedy Junior, getting ready to open up a
Can on, Starbucks, Dunkin Donuts, and other big coffee chains.
Speaker 10 (13:05):
At a rally last week in Texas, Kennedy said his
agency was going to demand to see the safety data.
Speaker 5 (13:11):
Duncan Donuts and Starbucks show us the safety data that
show that is okay for a teenage girl drink an
ice coffee with one hundred and fifteen grams of.
Speaker 11 (13:21):
Sugar in it.
Speaker 10 (13:22):
The secretary said he didn't think they'd be able to
do it. Massachusetts Democratic Governor Mora Heally is hitting back
at the demand aimed at Duncan, a mass based institution.
She posted a flag on x Wednesday similar to the
one used in the eighteen thirty five Texas Revolution, declaring,
come and take it. I'm Tammy Truchuello.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
We're just talking about this with Monica yesterday. If I
had one bit of advice, it would be to make
the maximum contribution, especially if your company matches into your
four oh one K, as early as you possibly can,
and for as long as you possibly can, for as
much as you possibly can, and never touch it. I
can think of no more impactful financial advice to give,
(14:01):
but it's easier said than done. When life happens and
a record number of workers are rating their four oh
one case due to financial emergencies. Chris Caragio has more.
Speaker 8 (14:09):
New data from Fidelity Investments shows the average four oh
one K balance rows eleven percent in twenty twenty five,
but a recent Vanguard report also found an uptick in
hardship withdrawals. Vanguard data shows roughly six percent of workers
took a hardship withdrawal in twenty twenty five, marking a
record high. Divergent economy has given people record retirement savings,
(14:30):
but it has also created a bigger need to dig
into them.
Speaker 4 (14:34):
I'm Chris Karangio.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
The Department of Justice is expected to extend a plea
deal to about a dozen defendants in a mob linked
poker case that involves some NBA players Jim Rupez. More.
Speaker 12 (14:44):
Court documents filed Wednesday did not specifically say which of
the defendants will receive a plea deal. Over thirty people
are indicted in two illegal gambling cases last year. Among
those charges of the cases are members and associates of
four major mafia crime families, Miami heat guard Terry Rosier,
Portland Trailblazers head coach Jouncey, Billups and ex NBA player
(15:05):
Damon Jones.
Speaker 4 (15:06):
I'm Jim Rope.
Speaker 12 (15:07):
I've had so many wonderful thrills and experiences, and I've
always been proud of Notre Dame.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
Former Notre Dame football coach Lou Holtz has died at
the age of eighty nine. Holtz died in Orlando, Florida,
surrounded by his family. He entered hospice care sometime in January.
The College Football Hall of Fame member reached one hundred
wins earned a national championship title while coaching the Fighting
Irish from nineteen eighty six to nineteen ninety six. That
championship was in nineteen eighty eight. Lou Holtz was eighty
(15:41):
eighty nine years old. Great guy all right. Despite health issues,
Barry Madilow says he is doing well.
Speaker 5 (15:50):
Once more, just Once Before I Go, I want you.
Speaker 4 (15:57):
To hit a new Instagram video.
Speaker 9 (15:59):
These singers said, Well, it looks like I made it
and I look.
Speaker 4 (16:01):
Fabulous, right.
Speaker 9 (16:03):
He went on to announce that his latest single, Once
Before I Go, reached the top ten on the Adult
Contemporary chart. The artist also thanked fans for their support
and said he's looking forward to getting back on stage
following his lung cancer surgery. Wrapping up his video, man
Loo announced the release of his new album, called One
a Time.
Speaker 4 (16:19):
Although he didn't.
Speaker 9 (16:19):
Reveal an exact release date, he did say it would
be out real soon.
Speaker 4 (16:23):
A Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
Hey, y'all, it's Mike McCann, the announcer guy down in
New Orleans and my morning show. It's your Morning Show
with Michael del Joano.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
Hi, it's Michael. Your Morning show can be heard weekday
mornings in great cities like Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Memphis,
in Nashville, Tennessee. And we got you covered in California,
San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine or thrilled you
here now enjoy the podcast. Early Bird gets the Worm,
Sleepy Squirrel misses it? Not Roger from Sacramento email? Did
(17:03):
you say it was Monday, March the fifth? I might
have who knows, but it's Thursday, March the fifth. You
have our Lord twenty twenty six.
Speaker 4 (17:10):
If you're just.
Speaker 1 (17:11):
Waking up the Big three arm, well, I guess I'll
use all war terms. Ellison and Walls gets shelled by
Congress and hearing a RAN vessel gets torpedoed by US
sub first time since World War Two, and the war
Powers act to try to stop the President and carrying
out Operation Epic Fury gets shot down by the Senate.
(17:36):
That pretty much gets you up to speed. Lou Holtz
has died. So did I miss one? Is it Neil
sedaka Lou Holtz? And were you know they usually happen
in threes. Is there a third coming? Or did I
miss one? I've not heard a third one yet.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
I hate doing that, it seems so, but it does happen. Yeah,
but now you've But I guess you.
Speaker 1 (17:55):
Could find three on any day. It's just a matter
of finding three of notoriety, right. But lou Holtz died
surrounded by family in Orlando at the age of eighty nine.
The coach was simply one of the best on the field, coaching,
certainly in the studios of ESPN analyzing, and.
Speaker 4 (18:13):
An even more terrific human being and read. I don't know.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
I almost need to research that to believe it. I
can't believe Play Like Champion was lou Holtz because it
was there in the movie Rudy, which was Dan Devine
and and even before. That's what I thought. Yeah, I
don't think that would that would be right, But great coach,
great man. They do take liberties when they make the movies. Well, no,
(18:39):
but I don't think that's the case because I think
Play like a Champion goes way back. But someone attributed
that to Lou Holtz, and I don't think that's true,
or I would mention it. Well, I just mentioned it anyway,
even though I don't think it's true. Speaking of true
true love is rare, but virtual love it's everywhere. Monica
Nelson reports on how artificial and intelligence is now leading
(19:01):
to artificial relations.
Speaker 4 (19:03):
Good morning, Monica. I guess this would be what sign
of the times?
Speaker 11 (19:08):
I guess.
Speaker 13 (19:08):
So I'm here with my hard eyed emojis standing by.
Speaker 4 (19:13):
Yes.
Speaker 13 (19:14):
No, this kind of creeped a lot of people out,
but a lot of people were enjoying it too, turning
this little wine bar into an AI dating cafe. So
all these guests booked solo tables, put their phones on
stands across from them, ordered drinks, there was soft music,
red walls which make everyone look better, you know, and
(19:36):
went on full dates with their AI chat box companion.
Speaker 4 (19:40):
All right, so time out.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
These are real human beings at a real location, sitting
at a real table, drinking real drinks. And they're all
tables for one and these lonely people never talk to
each other. They're just talking to their perfectly created bot.
Speaker 13 (19:56):
YEP, live voice, live video, real bar, real candle, just not.
Speaker 4 (20:01):
It can't get anywhere, It can't get lower than this.
You can't get anywhere.
Speaker 13 (20:04):
Well it you know, when you think back, remember that
movie Her was at the scene Phoenix, and it creeped
me out, Like I couldn't even watch it because I
was like, this guy has some issues, you know, yeah, right,
But it's turned into a thing. I mean, it really is.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
Now.
Speaker 13 (20:20):
Keep in mind this bar that they set up was
only for two or three days.
Speaker 11 (20:23):
It was kind of like a test location.
Speaker 13 (20:25):
But a lot of people are saying, hey, you know,
instead of the awkward first dates and you.
Speaker 11 (20:31):
Know, should I hold her hand? Should I kiss her?
Should all that?
Speaker 13 (20:34):
This chatbot knows exactly what you need. So you still
still not too much. You feel beautiful or handsome, but
it's not real. But it's not real. But you know,
I later when I saw this, I'm like, I need
to google what does it feel like like?
Speaker 11 (20:50):
Love? What are you supposed to feel? You know this long.
Speaker 13 (20:54):
Story, but anyway, it says you feel safe being yourself,
and you feel both excitement and and you're generous with
your time and attention. And think about phones in general.
Everybody's pretty generous with their time and attention toward those right.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
Well, I am of maybe this is I don't want
to get into serious commentary necessarily, but we were created
by a creator. Uh there's a reason God looked down
and said, whoa, this isn't good, and Adam went into
a deep sleep. As Archie Bunker would say, he cut
out Adam's rib a cheap a cut of meat, damn meathead,
(21:31):
and made woman. All right, So we need real human contact.
Put that aside. Am I the only one that goes
to a restaurant? And you know I wouldn't. I don't
eat alone because I'd feel sorry for me if I
eat alone.
Speaker 4 (21:44):
I mean that that's what the drive through is for.
Speaker 1 (21:46):
But if I'm sitting there with my wife or my
kids are something, and I meet and there's someone alone,
I am this may be so Italian. I am inclined
to have them join us, or at least I mean,
I just don't you mean to tell me there's going
to be places where that's all there is are tables for.
Speaker 4 (22:02):
One and loan.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
This is for all the lonely people don't even know
they're lonely anymore, and there's going to be sitting there
in a virtual date.
Speaker 4 (22:11):
This is sick start.
Speaker 11 (22:13):
It couldn't be part of the future. Who knows.
Speaker 1 (22:15):
But if you Jeffrey wants to chime in, can you
hear Jeffrey when he talks, by the.
Speaker 4 (22:20):
Way, Yeah, she should be able to.
Speaker 11 (22:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
So didn't this all start when they conditioned kids to
play with digital pets? Remember though I had Yeah, yeah,
I don't even get me started. You know, I had
one of those virtual cats on my computer. This is
like the late nineties, see what I'm saying. And I
forgot to feed it. It died. It was it was
(22:43):
like screaming and whining. Then it eventually died. It was awful.
I'm still scarred over that. I still can't convince myself
that it wasn't a real thing.
Speaker 4 (22:52):
But I don't know.
Speaker 1 (22:54):
Yeah, well that or I guess just social media in general, right,
I mean, we think we know these people and we
see their comments, but we're not really having a human connection.
Speaker 4 (23:06):
I think that would be more of.
Speaker 11 (23:09):
Mm hm. A young person told me though.
Speaker 13 (23:11):
There is a new movie out too called Companion, and
that's where like a group of guys order up kind
of like fake women robots basically, but they're beautiful and
normal looking. Okay, Well, one of those robots realizes that
she can hack his phone. She hacks the phone and
(23:32):
finds out when he was building her, he set her
intelligence at like forty percent. So she's like this robot
and let me guess she was blond too, right, redheaded?
But he ends up gonzo.
Speaker 1 (23:50):
So anyway, by the way, my DIF friends off the air,
Monica is always making references to herself as a blonde.
All right, so she I don't think of blonde women.
It's less intelligent. I'm just go ahead, okay, yeah, I may.
Speaker 4 (24:04):
I may, I may have just dug it deeper there,
I did. I did.
Speaker 1 (24:08):
I did a little yoke for you, and I didn't
realize how it would sound. Everyone else nobody set a
brain at and yeah okay, and then she moved it
to one hundred. And then he ended up like he's over.
You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 13 (24:21):
So you want you don't want to be one hundred
percent and one hundred percent, probably because no one would
ever hang out together.
Speaker 1 (24:28):
Well, the goal in life isn't to find something imaginary
that will tolerate you no matter how you are. It's
for two completely different individuals to find each other, commit
and a covenant to each other, meet each other's needs,
and love each other in spite of our failures, which
(24:49):
are we're going to always be a human condition. I mean,
this is so far from what was intended. I can't
even have fun with it.
Speaker 11 (24:56):
This is sick, right, But quite honestly, I.
Speaker 4 (24:59):
Have to pay for both. Does the bargain get both
drinks or no?
Speaker 11 (25:05):
It's a much cheaper day.
Speaker 4 (25:07):
But don't let me get this. No, I'll get this.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
I guess you can't really fight over the tab when
the other person isn't real, right.
Speaker 13 (25:14):
Right, right? But there is nothing like a human connection.
Let's keep that in mind. I think everybody on the planet,
if they had a choice, would always want that extra.
Speaker 11 (25:23):
Arm to hold on time.
Speaker 4 (25:24):
I like.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
I like the thought of the bot ordering like the
most expensive thing on the menu. That's it, You're out
of here, Monica Nelson, Who needs true love when you
can have virtual love? Artificial intelligence now creating artificial relations.
There is an old song I always quoted, stop the world.
I want to get off. This is too weird for me.
Randy Stonehill was wiser than I thought back in nineteen
(25:48):
eighty one. All right, Monica Nelson, we'll talk again tomorrow.
God bless if you're just waking up forty four minutes
after the How are these your top five stories of
the day. Well, the Department of Justice is ending investigation
into former President Biden's auto pen. Remember when that was
the big deal auto pen and getting to the.
Speaker 4 (26:07):
Bottom of it? Not so much anymore.
Speaker 9 (26:10):
Things failed to gain traction after the DOJ failed to
build a criminal case and it was never presented to
a grand jury. President Trump wanted that investigation after criticizing Biden,
saying that he and his aides broke the law in
using the autopen to sign presidential documents. It's unclear how
often Biden used an autopen, as there is no official
government record of when it is used.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
By Mark Mayfield, Well, it looks like RFK Junior is
going after Dunkin Donuts, Starbucks and others.
Speaker 4 (26:36):
Tammy Trehel with why.
Speaker 11 (26:38):
At a rally last week in Texas.
Speaker 10 (26:40):
Kennedy said his agency was going to demand to see
the safety data.
Speaker 5 (26:43):
Duncan Donuts and Starbucks show us the safety data that
show that is okay for a teenage girl drink an
ice coffee with one hundred and fifteen grams of sugar.
Speaker 10 (26:55):
Added, The secretary said he didn't think they'd be able
to do it. Massachusetts Democratic Governor More Healy is hitting
back at the demand aimed at Duncan, a mass based institution.
She posted a flag on X Wednesday similar to the
one used in the eighteen thirty five Texas Revolution, declaring,
come and take it. I'm Tammy Trichello.
Speaker 1 (27:12):
Former Notre Dame head football coach, national champion, I might
add ESPN commentator analyst Lou Holtz has died at the
age of eighty nine. He died in Orlando, Florida, surrounded
by his family. Entered hospice care back in January. The
College Football Hall of Fame member reached one hundred wins
earned a national championship title with the Fighting Irish from
(27:33):
nineteen eighty six to nineteen ninety six. He also coached
William and Mary, probably arguably the most enchanting beautiful campus
on the face of the earth. Have you ever been
to william and Mary No, it's in Williamsburg, Virginia, just
absolutely gorgeous. He was at NC State. I do remember
him at Arkansas. I don't think I remember him at Minnesota.
(27:55):
Of course, I remember South Carolina after Notre Dame. And
does anybody remember that he coached the Jets in the
NFL for one year, one salved year.
Speaker 4 (28:06):
He and Saban both.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
Later went on to be And by the way, my
team likes to send me all the clips of Lou
Holtz having tantrums on the ESPN set.
Speaker 4 (28:14):
The one with Mark may is priceless, but really so.
Speaker 6 (28:18):
He did put up the sign in nineteen eighty six,
Play Like a Champion.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
It was not there before him, even though they had
it in the Rudy movie.
Speaker 6 (28:27):
That's called a poetic license by Hollywood. Okay, well, then
let's give him credit for that. The Play Like Champion
players hit it on their way out to the field
before every game. Lou Holtz, What an amazing coach, What
an amazing man, What an amazing story and human being.
A former White House Correspondent Association Dinner headliner Conan O'Brien
(28:49):
is sharing his experience entertaining the crowd of attendees.
Speaker 9 (28:53):
O'Brian served as the headliner at the twenty thirteen wh
andCA dinner, and he says the audience at the black
tie event is far from a media's typical crowd. According
to O'Brien, attendees are thinking a lot about their own world,
and he explained that an entertainer needs to be funny,
but you can't act like you know too much because
then they'll resent you for that or think you don't belong.
Speaker 4 (29:12):
He likened the experience to.
Speaker 9 (29:13):
The Oscars and said you got to calculate then have fun.
Speaker 1 (29:17):
At mart Mayfield. I don't think Conan O'Brien gets enough credit.
I'll never forget. I was taking a trip and I
don't remember where. It was, from Telsa to somewhere, and
I was in the middle of nowhere, just entering Arkansas,
and it was very late at night, and I remember
seeing Conan O'Brien and he just almost looked like a
like a cartoon character. This is when he first took
(29:37):
over late night and I guess I was put off
by appearance. It just didn't look like a late night
show host to me. But driving in the car and
the only station I could pick up was the audio
from TV, and hearing his show, I found him to
be brilliant. He's hilarious, natural and entertaining and a really
(29:58):
deep down a thoughtful man. And so that is how
I overcame my visual bias and became a huge fan.
Now since then, I'm over all of that. I can
just tell you I think he's one of the funniest,
smartest people you'll well Harvard University, right, I'm sure he
did a terrific job.
Speaker 4 (30:17):
All right.
Speaker 1 (30:17):
Today is the day for snackers who don't mind orange fingers.
I know we're all thinking cheetos, right, pre Tennis with
what you need to be reaching for today.
Speaker 14 (30:28):
It's National Cheese Doodle Day, celebrating the not founded nature
orange cheddar coated snack. We've been eating them since the fifties.
They're actually a mistake created by an animal feet machine
that was processing corn meal. Someone baked them and cover
them in cheese and a snack was made. Your mission
today is easy, open a bag and don't stop eating
(30:48):
until you've achieved full cheetle.
Speaker 11 (30:51):
That's when your fingers turn orange.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
I'm bre Tennis, and by the way, if you haven't
done this in a while, and I haven't obviously with
this diet, but go back and get old school puffy Cheetos,
not the crunchy, not puffy, yeah, and let them just
shrink in your mouth.
Speaker 15 (31:11):
And then save the every now and then what I
do is, if I get a lessons holdy, satisfying Cheeto,
I'll go to the finger to add a little of
the extra cheesy salty flavor to the texture of the
puffy Cheeto, and then I might add also, this is
a great moment.
Speaker 4 (31:31):
This is when you know you're having a really good
day beyond world. We're going to be really late. Shut
up anyway.
Speaker 15 (31:40):
It's like an hour later and you feel something in
your tooth and you start messing with it when your
tongue and what do you find?
Speaker 4 (31:48):
A quarter of a cheeto. I call that an encore?
How did this all happen? All right?
Speaker 1 (31:57):
And Sport's thunderbeat the next one O three one Blazer's
one twenty two, one to fourteen over my Griz Clippers
blew out the Pacers one thirty one oh seven on
the ice. Red Wings lost in overtime, but we get
a point four to three to the Knights Blues one
three to two over the Cracking Ducks Easy five to
one over the Islanders. Birthdays Today, magician Pendulet can I
say something. He's a very outspoken atheist, and I'm thinking
(32:22):
once you're seventy one, you might want to rethink things.
Speaker 4 (32:24):
He's getting awful clothes before we're all gonna go, Oh,
Pendelette die, who wonder where he is?
Speaker 1 (32:30):
Actor Sabamendez is fifty two and former Cubby, Former Philly.
Speaker 4 (32:35):
Kyle Schwarber Shortby.
Speaker 1 (32:37):
Thirty three years old. Today, if it's your birthday, Happy birthday,
and we're so glad you were born. Speaking of birthdays,
there were eighty thousand of them.
Speaker 4 (32:45):
Thanks to you.
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Last year, Preborn helped rescue over eighty thousand babies. That's
going beyond being pro life and having a position to
take in an action that actually really is creating life.
Because thousands of women face the lawy day abortion, you're
only option, You're all alone, there is no hope. But
that all changes when they walk into Preborn Network clinic.
(33:06):
They see their baby on the ultrasound, the real game changer.
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(33:30):
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Once you join me in supporting Preborn and making this
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(33:52):
or gives securely online at preborn dot com forward slash yms.
That's preborn dot com forward slash y ms.
Speaker 7 (34:00):
It's your morning show with Michael del Journo.
Speaker 1 (34:04):
Wow, I can tell you that I don't have a
segment all day long enough. I could do a lengthy
analysis and podcast just on Tim Walls and Keith Ellison
facing the firing squad if you will of Congress on
fraud in Minnesota, and probably should. It's that big of
(34:27):
a story. It's that big of a fraud. I had
one listener who I love. I hear from every morning,
and he's like this ought to be a serenade Live Bat.
I have come to the conclusion, after wasting about two
and a half hours of my life listening to this
(34:48):
Q and A in testimony, I think Tim isn't playing.
Speaker 4 (34:53):
I think he really is that blank. If you will,
you know, I mean, if I have nothing good to say,
I say nothing at all. But I am somewhat in awe.
Speaker 1 (35:02):
And I mean even in gotcha moments, he wasn't bright
enough to know he was in a gotcha moment. So
I mean he's just deer in a headlights. Keith Ellison
is just trying to takia lie his way through this,
and it was an absolute shelling of Keith Ellison and
Tim Walls. And I don't think we're any closer to
getting to the bottom of how this happened or how
(35:24):
deep the scandal is. But I can tell you it's
ten times worse than watergame difference is nobody's going to
be going away.
Speaker 4 (35:30):
We'll have more on that coming up and Sounds of
the Day.
Speaker 7 (35:32):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Vindheld journo