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March 12, 2026 37 mins

Where’s the femists in America to address Iran soccer team under true oppression and gas price perspective.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:01):
Your morning show has heard live from five to eight
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(00:22):
the podcast.

Speaker 3 (00:23):
Well two three, starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're
in this together. This is your morning show with Michael.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Del JORNA thing and welcome to Thursday, March to twelfth,
of Our Lord, twenty twenty six. I'm Michael del Jorno.
Jeffrey's got the sound, Red's keeping an eye on the content,
and this is your morning show. The US plans to
release one hundred and seventy two million barrels of oil
from the Strategic Petroleum.

Speaker 1 (01:01):
I think.

Speaker 4 (01:03):
That's out of four hundred and twenty five million available
and bowing of course, to replace it within twelve months. Meanwhile,
the IEA International Energy Agency is going to be releasing
four hundred million barrels of oil of its one point
two billion it has in reserve, all to help with
the supply of oil for gas and energy during this

(01:30):
time of war. Officials are downplaying the threat after the
FBI reportedly warned California police about Iran targeting the West Coast.
You know, it's interesting the nine to eleven commission conclusion
was failure of imagination. Wow, we just never thought accordated
effort on the same day, using box cutters, taking over jets,

(01:51):
using jets filled with fuel as missiles, even though there
was a Hollywood movie executive decision about four years earlier
that did just that. But all right, failure of imagination.
Please tell me it wouldn't be a failure of imagination
for the use of drones in this day and age.
And then I'll give you a pause. Waking up this morning,

(02:15):
I mean, his drones are everywhere. They're a big part
of war. What could drones deliver on us soil? Remember
that moment we realized, well, we're not separated by oceans anymore.

Speaker 1 (02:28):
When it comes to this, If they can.

Speaker 4 (02:31):
Deliver food right to your table with the drone, what
could a terrorist do with it? I wouldn't be downplaying anything.
I'd be shaking in my boots, and I sure as
heck would be funding homeland security. Right now, President Trump
is hosting Women's History Month at the White House. Today,
President is endorsing YouTuber turn boxer Jake Paul for any

(02:55):
political office he may run for. Well, you know, Massi's
got to be scratching his headway with him, But not me, Kristin.

Speaker 1 (03:07):
Kristin, Hey, is he looking at me? What are you doing?

Speaker 4 (03:11):
Just checking who's looking at you? You don't ever do that? No,
Like every now and then, I think my new cat
Annie is really my old cat Lexi, and she's come
back to me. So I'll go Lexi and sometimes Annie
will turn around. You believe in cantancarnation.

Speaker 1 (03:27):
I do not human but cat.

Speaker 4 (03:29):
No, I was just checking to see I think Red
might be Kristin Fleming.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
What now? Why you guys think it's so bizarre? What
am I not speaking English?

Speaker 4 (03:40):
Kristin Fleming wrote an opinion piece in The New York
Post and the title was the Iranian women's soccer team
shows what real oppression looks like. After all the feminist
Olympic belly aching, Now it's not just that, and it's rare.
We've talked about this before. How rare is it that
you ever see? But well, with Red, it would be

(04:01):
be very rare because he wears the same one every day.

Speaker 1 (04:04):
I have been picking on you a lot lately, haven't.

Speaker 4 (04:06):
I he's wearing his North Dakota State But I mean,
you would not bump into somebody. You wouldn't expect to
bump anybody wearing your North Dakota State sweatshirt. But when
we go to like Dillard's or wherever you shop, there's
only so many shirts. How come we don't bump into
people wearing a shirt we bought? Ever, it's a good question.
Do we have bad taste? Does everybody else have bad taste?

(04:27):
So this often happens with things that we talk about,
but this goes beyond that. It's not just covering it,
which we talked about yesterday. I mean Red was hopping mad.
Red was screaming in my ear during the break, Where's
Mecca Rappino? He was like ready to go like form
a posse like in the old Westerns and find her.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
You could go find Megan Rappino there something, but look
at her headline.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
Red, This is like you in recarnation the Iran women's
I think that's almost verbatim of how you said it
to me. Well, this Iranian women's soccer team, Now there's
what real oppression looks like. And then I so I'm
thinking maybe that's why you you know you were working
under a pen name.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
Are you writing out for the post that had to
make you feel good? To Bloom?

Speaker 4 (05:23):
It's interesting because the next story is on gas prices
and what was expected and so on. Most of what
we deal with every day is narrative versus reality.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
It really is.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
And what I can't answer you yet is America just
overwhelmed with narrative. I mean, you remember the narrative after COVID.
It took like two days and all of a sudden
the mantras were out and everybody was saying the same thing.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
Stay home, stay safe. This is the new normal. There's
going to be a food shortage, you know, all the narrative.

Speaker 4 (05:59):
I mean, you know, a visa commercial comes on and
don't forget stay home, stay saved. Burton's milk so creamy,
so delicious, and by the way, stay home, stay say due,
just smuckers, do the smuckers because a sandwich is a sandwich,
but a man which is a meal.

Speaker 1 (06:16):
It's smuckers.

Speaker 5 (06:18):
Oh, by the way, before you smear around the smuckers,
don't forget to stay home, stay safe. This is a
new normal, and stay smucker a home anyway.

Speaker 4 (06:30):
But I mean, and it comes at you from the internet,
from commercials, from television shows.

Speaker 1 (06:34):
Next thing, you're watching a sitcom. Well, I don't know.

Speaker 6 (06:36):
About you, but I'm gonna stay home and stay safe.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
You know, it's just everywhere.

Speaker 4 (06:42):
And I guess it's the old you know, tell a
lie enough times, people will believe it. But the narratives
tend to just overwhelm us. And I think most people
eventually believe the narratives over reality.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
This is a great example.

Speaker 4 (07:11):
The post Olympics news cycle was dizzying, displaying handwriting over
the supposed victimhood of empowered female athletes. If we're to
believe much of our media and the feminist commentators, these

(07:31):
women had been completely disrespected by the President of the
United States, who simply cracked a joke, don't it's going
to start on the soccer team.

Speaker 1 (07:50):
And yet you look.

Speaker 4 (07:53):
At this Olympic or this Iranian soccer team. Off the
phony controversy. We heard the refrain the women athletes are
treated like gum on the bottom of a shoe, and

(08:14):
one piece called calling all women athletes share a time
when you felt mistreated or disrespected in your sport. But
the truth is American female athletes are the most privileged
and in many cases best compensated in the world. It's
why our women dominate beyond the top notch resources at

(08:38):
their disposal. They're free to marry whom they want, where
what they want, speak out on their pet causes, even
on a world stage.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
She writes.

Speaker 4 (08:51):
Surely the brave lionesses from Iran we traded places in
a second, as they're involved than a heartbreaking human drama
and sharp contrast the freedom's females enjoy here. The running
women's soccer team now faces an uncertain future at home

(09:12):
after a quiet pregame protest while in Australia in March.
I don't know read what kind of definition for uncertainty?
Might you add to that? You think death? I mean
she's being kind. Uncertainty. Will they be beaten, will they

(09:37):
be jailed? Or will they be killed? I mean that's
the conversation, right, it was true, mean gweeks what they're
gonna ask. Yeah, I don't think it's gonna be mean tweets.
They chose not to sing the national anthem. According to
this Kristen Fleming, it was true courage on display, not

(09:59):
a gesture it might sentence them to some nasty online comments,
the one with real life consequences. It was also a
gamble and a leap of faith. Maybe they thought, I
mean this is me now, Oh, I guarantee you.

Speaker 1 (10:15):
They thought I'm not saying it's not courage.

Speaker 4 (10:20):
I'm just saying, in addition to courage, I think this
is the nail on the head. They thought they were
going to return home to a different Iran. They thought
the Iran of that anthem was disappearing, and it didn't,
and their uncertain future is probably at least jail or death.

(10:48):
But I got to wrap up the segment to Red's point,
and he must have felt so good waking up seeing
someone else saying it. And boy, I hope you guys
all share on your Facebook pages. I don't know what
good it'll do. Narratives are thick, truth is hard to find.

(11:09):
Reality is often ignored because it doesn't fit the narrative
that was created. We used to stay behind every headline
as a story, and behind every story, there's so much.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
To talk about. The headline sets at all.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
The Ironing women's soccer team shows what real oppression looks like.
But where is everybody that sold you the narrative? Where's
Megan Rappno now? Because if you really do love women

(11:44):
and women's rights and you really love sport, these women
are about to die. I gotta be honest with you.
The leftist talking point when they were happening barely registered.

(12:08):
The silence is deafening, and it just goes to show
you how it's always narrative that seems to win only
in the chaos, only in the moment. In the end,
the truth always wins. Reality will always become just that real,

(12:39):
whether it's something like an Iranian women's soccer team. But
we've been here before. This could be a wake up
call what America knew about gas. We wake up every

(12:59):
morning and I got news for you. We talk about
we're in search of understanding and truth at this kitchen table,
not perpetuating narratives. Most of what is the riptide we're
swimming through is narratives.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Kristin.

Speaker 4 (13:21):
Kristin say he looked, are you Kristin Fleming doing? I
think he's this writer.

Speaker 1 (13:28):
One of the odds.

Speaker 4 (13:29):
This woman writes exactly what he said yesterday. Take about
Red Kristin, whatever your name is. Incognit all right. Every
time you get a spam call, every single scam text,
you get, every sketchy email with your name on it,
or trick they try to pull off.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
It all starts the same way.

Speaker 4 (13:49):
Somebody found you, probably because you did something normal like
bought something, or as we talked about recently, went to
the DMV and got your driver's license renewed, and then
they sold you.

Speaker 1 (14:04):
But somebody found you. Somebody has all your goods.

Speaker 4 (14:07):
They have your name, they have your dress, they have
your email, they have your kids age, they have your
work address. It's all there, and then they're selling it,
your personal information available to the wrong person.

Speaker 1 (14:21):
That's how it all begins.

Speaker 4 (14:23):
And the only solution could possibly be you need to disappear,
and I know just who can make you disappear.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
In cognate. I use in cognate.

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(14:52):
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Speaker 7 (15:38):
This is your morning show with Michael del Truno.

Speaker 1 (15:43):
They shout out to the Italian baseball team, I'm knocking
out Mexico and health in the US. They must have
been the espressop. We'll get in the morning Vella. I
just got to say about this COVID. Hey, I love
talking about the Lord.

Speaker 5 (15:56):
But if you're really busy and you're at home and
witnesses show up and you just.

Speaker 6 (16:02):
Don't have the time and you don't want to be
really calf and say COVID, they'll run like water out
of a.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
Buffet hole in its Mississippi.

Speaker 4 (16:17):
I said this, this is for Big John. I said
this to Red off the air. I mean, I went,
I went to bed last night. I could not stay up.
But I knew, but believe it or not, there was
if there was some crazy tiebreaker stuff like if Mexico
had scored five or more runs that two could have
knocked the US out. It's a really crazy scenario. But

(16:40):
I mean, we're everybody's under the presumption, what was that
Italy fluke beat in the US, and now we need
them to beat Mexico or we're out. We don't get
to play the Dominican Republican or Japan or anybody else.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Well literally came through. But Big John.

Speaker 4 (16:56):
What I turned to Red and said this morning is, Hey,
what if we're all under to maybe these neighborhood bisons
and they are for real? What if it's it's Italy
that's gonna take down Japan or Dimitican Republic. But yes,
they kept us alive and we'll play Canada. I know
it always comes down to Canada, and that'll be coming
up on Friday night. That one I will stay up for.

(17:17):
But yes, by Baison's Italy took them out at the knees.
They went to the mattresses, and the USA is still alive.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
I'm Joe Big in Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
Hi, It's Michael. Your Morning show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
w DOV and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware, or wgst AM
seven twenty the Voice in Middle Georgia. And we're gonna
need some blankets. News Radio six fifty k e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast. I'd like to know why.

Speaker 4 (18:00):
It is every morning I'm the first one at the table.
One day I'd like to wake up and somebody beats
me up and.

Speaker 1 (18:07):
Is at the table.

Speaker 4 (18:08):
Of course, I have a little advantage over Jeffrey who's
got to drive twenty six miles or he can be
showed up at the light that stirl h thirty five
minutes after the astra friendly reminder, if you step out
this morning, it's going.

Speaker 1 (18:21):
To be really cold. Well, yeah, it was sixty yesterday
when I left the house. It was forty this morning.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
We had some very warm air meet very cold air
and thunderstorms yesterday. A lot of that is coming again
to the Gulf Coast and the mid Atlantic in the
late evening and night hours tonight. So but this is like,
you know, we go from snowstorms to now, you know,

(18:49):
spring thunderstorms.

Speaker 1 (18:51):
I got.

Speaker 4 (18:53):
Where's the quiet spring, you know with green fairways and
who sound effects? Where's that possum that predicted all this? Yes, yeah,
the groundhog. Well he was right, he said six more weeks.
All right, if you're just getting up, stroll in the kitchen,
grab yourself a coffee, sit down. We'll get you up
to speed. I'm Michael, Jeffrey's got the sound. Red's keep
an eye on the content, and this is your day,

(19:13):
and this is your morning show. The US plans to
release one hundred and seventy two million barrels of oil
from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. But add to that, the IEA,
the International Energy Agency, is going to release four hundred
million barrels. In the case of the US, we have
a reserve of four hundred and twenty five million.

Speaker 1 (19:34):
I think I'm accurate hold of my bread.

Speaker 4 (19:39):
I think over Red just gave me a thumbs up. Well,
you know, I have a photographic memory, so but it
doesn't mean I trust it as I get like whatever
people always go, what does that mean? When I was
taking a test in school and it asked a question,
I didn't just remember the answer. I could see it

(20:01):
in the way I first saw it. So like when
I get stories or i'm reading, I read little facts
and it like it takes pictures.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (20:13):
It's just the weirdness of how I made And so
I can see four hundred and twenty five million, I can.
I can see the words when I read it. But
then again I'm old and I'm wondering, well, is that
really what I saw? So I used to always know
it and trust it. Now I still know it, but
I don't trust it. But I was right on that one.

(20:35):
That was like a very tom cruise. In fact, right
let's do that from now on. From now on, when
I'm right about something, I want you to go like that.
Remember how I used to do that. He do the
salute and the thumbs up. It's testosterone. But yeah, so
and and if we do release one hundred and seventy two,
it's not quite anywhere near about it's about a third

(20:57):
of our reserve, and the administration is saying they'll have
that replenished in twelve months.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
So we're issue.

Speaker 4 (21:06):
We're releasing one hundred and seventy two million barrels that
would be directly into the United States, whereas the IEA
will be releasing four hundred million barrels into the world,
all of this to offset two weeks of Operation Epic
fury and disruption, primarily from the Strait of Horror moves. Now,

(21:26):
I want to get to reality versus narrative. The narrative
had gotten so bad that I think it's legitimate that
in hindsight, or it may have been, you could make

(21:50):
the case this should have been addressed immediately, or could
it have been addressed immediately, they still would have taken
it and run. And again, we don't overreact to what
they take and run with because there's not as many
people listening to them as we think. In fact, we
spend more time responding or reacting to them than they

(22:12):
have people reading it. But I will tell you point
blank about half of my pool of stories that I
have to pick from every day I could not use.
That's how poorly and biased and narrativized it is. And

(22:38):
I can't keep it from happening everywhere else, but I
can keep it from happening here because it's just not
the right context and perspective, and it's all written in
a way that's coming from a hysterical mindset. In other words,
they have a narrative and a worldview and everything has

(23:01):
to be formed to.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
Fit it, and so it's all hysteria.

Speaker 4 (23:11):
An unjust, illegal, unfair war is going to cause our
economy to collapse as the President breaks his palm promise
and becomes a nation builder world king instead of peacemaker
and now gas and then that's going to go to trucks,
and then that's going to go to goods and services

(23:32):
and life as you know, it's going to end. And
the rest of us are looking at it and going, well,
a year and a half ago, two years ago, when
nothing was happening. We were paying two dollars more than this.

Speaker 1 (23:46):
What was that? Now?

Speaker 4 (23:49):
I'm not going to say nothing's happening. In March of
twenty twenty five, the average games, according to Triple A
in America was three dollars and ten cents. That was
down dramatically just the election of Donald Trump. In March

(24:13):
of twenty twenty six, twelve months later, it was three
dollars and eleven cents. One penny over one year and
an operation epic theory starts. And so now and we're
not quite too the mid March. We're about four days

(24:34):
short of three and a half days short of the
mid March. We're three dollars and fifty eight cents. So
I'm not gonna lie to you and say gases en up.
It's up forty eight cents. We did this yesterday, So
I don't want to bore everyone. But if you'd have

(24:55):
tapped me on the shoulder and said we're gonna start
bombing Aroun, you think gas is going to do? I
say it's going to go up temporarily how much, I
don't know. Fifty cents a dollar depends how long it lasts.

(25:17):
Will it be forever. No, but nobody was pointing to
Joe Biden when Russia invaded Ukraine and gas went up
two dollars and something cents, but now over fifty cents.

(25:38):
By the way, these same people that are producing these stories,
they won't tell you the story of the IEA. They
won't tell you the story of Trump tapping the oil
reserves that he replenished, and they won't prognosticate how that
will offset or stop the climb, just like they all

(26:03):
told you when oil went up to one hundred and
twenty nine dollars a barrel, but they didn't want to.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Cover when it came right back down.

Speaker 4 (26:08):
To eighty eight. Now it's back to one hundred. I
get that, but at the time, and they won't tell
you that, even though gas is up forty eight cents
a gallon, how much of that is based on this?

Speaker 1 (26:20):
Nobody ever has an answer.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
When you go, wait a minute, the war starts and
immediately gas goes up fifty cents. How come when the
price for the per barrel came all the way down,
the prices.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
Didn't come down with it. Oh well, so I.

Speaker 4 (26:37):
Can't even tell you how much of that forty eight
cens we can blame on war. They were jacking up
the price of gas on oil or gasoline they already
had bought at a set price on oil. And I'm
sure I could find somebody from the gas and oil
companies to come on here and wax poetically about how
that happens at your local quick trip.

Speaker 1 (26:58):
But I.

Speaker 4 (27:01):
But here's the point. I'm not that smart. We would
have all, hey, we're gonna bomb around. What do you
think is gonna happen? Well, guess is gonna go up.
The question remains how high is he good and okay with?
And for how long? That's a different conversation. So let's

(27:24):
start with the polling. The latest Rasmuson Report national poll
found forty one percent of American adults say the price
of gasoline is now higher than it was a year ago. Well,
I just for context, shared with you prior to the
first missiles being launched, it was one cent higher. Now,

(27:47):
this survey is done in such a timing that I
presume now the fighting has started and it is up
to forty eight cents higher. So forty one percent would
be right. But I hope that was based on real numbers,
real understanding, and not reflections of narratives. Well, I know

(28:12):
when I watch Fox it says this. Well, I know
when I watch everything else it says that I couldn't
even tell you what this is, showing how uninformed the
American people, how are how misinformed the American people are.
But a simple chat GPT show me the gas price

(28:35):
March first, twenty twenty five and March first, twenty twenty six,
and you see it was a one cent different. And
yet all this goes to Forty one percent say the
price of gasoline is now higher. Twenty four percent say
the price has gone down, as are Fox viewers well
know from Biden, dammit. Twenty five percent closest to being

(28:57):
right about the same. Now we're playing prices right with gasline.
According to the US Energy Information Administration, the average price
of gasoline regular, which was two dollars and ninety four
cents in late February, has now hit three dollars and
fifty cents of forty three cents from a year ago.
I think it's since gone to forty eight cents. Fifty
four percent believe that over the next year the price
of gasoline will go up. So they were expecting it

(29:22):
to go up, and it did, and they're expecting it
to go up some more. Fifty three percent say the
price of gasoline where they live is now more than
three dollars a gallon.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
They start getting in a party of filiate.

Speaker 4 (29:31):
Sixty one percent of Democrats, Forty six percent of Republicans
say the price of gasoline where they live is now
more than three dollars now. Depending on what party you
are is what you read on a sign the Democrats
are seeing. I thought I saw six today driving to work.
I think it was six dollars a gallon.

Speaker 1 (29:50):
Republicans like I swear I saw it. It said go
Trump and two dollars.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
This is a crazy world with a forty nine percent
of Democrats, Twenty nine percent of Republican.

Speaker 1 (30:02):
Believe the gasoline is higher now than it was a
year ago.

Speaker 4 (30:06):
Sixty eight percent of Democrats, forty percent of Republicans say
price of gasoline will go up. Adults under forty are
most likely to expect gasoline prices to go up. Those
forty and older are less likely. Yeah, we've seen this
crap before. That's exactly what it is. I don't even
know how this works. I mean, the price of gasoline

(30:26):
is a number.

Speaker 1 (30:27):
Go look at it.

Speaker 4 (30:28):
You mean we could all stand there, Hey, what's the
white guy?

Speaker 1 (30:30):
See? I don't know what's the black guys? What'say Hispanic? See?

Speaker 4 (30:34):
They all see different things, different numbers. Fifty two fifty
percent of blacks, forty nine percent of Hispanic, sixty percent
of minorities say they're not paying more than three dollars
a galling Michael. The young people are saying, what's gas?
I take uber. I hadn't even thought of that, But
as you're gonna find out in their sounds the day
nuke Ingrid hits the nail right on the head. I

(31:01):
don't care what it costs. You get the strait of
hermus open, and you keep it open, because if you don't,
this war will become an American defeat. And nobody knows
the time frame for that. Which is now why I

(31:25):
come back to my first thought. The strait of Hormu
should have been a part of the strategic planning of this.

Speaker 1 (31:35):
Now.

Speaker 4 (31:35):
I know you wanted to decapitate the snake, and I
know the priority was to have a different Iran dreaming,
a regime change, fantasizing, but it probably should have been
a priority from day one, and the communication of the
American people would be this is a real threat to

(31:57):
the region, to our allies, to us, and to the world,
and we gotta go. And I'm going to need you
to make some sacrifices as we do. I'll protect you
from the largest state sponsor of terrorism in the world.

(32:19):
But you're gonna just stick with me. It's probably going
to be a little bit more for gas for a while.
That needed to be stated up front and maybe even
strategized to get to keep the straight open. You could
have simultaneously seized it as you were air striking the
command centers. But now I'm with newt This avalanche of

(32:43):
narratives has to be impacted with action, and action has
to be You got to get that straight open. You
don't have that much time, and the President is going
around bragging about victory. Well you got it. Just don't
lose it. Get that straight opened up because you're fighting

(33:03):
narratives and reality, and usually the narratives win over reality.
So I had heard about this doctor Dennis Black credible
background as a doctor helping humans live twenty five years longer. Well,

(33:25):
he started doing the same thing for pets, so he
hasn't win for cats and I'm talking about the one
he that has for dog.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
It's called rough Greens.

Speaker 4 (33:32):
And what you do is you take the same food
that your dog is eating and just sprinkled it on
the food. So on Boomer's dry dog food, I sprinkle
in the morning on his wet food. In the afternoon,
same food, but now he's getting live, bioavailable nutrients including
essential vitamins, minerals, probiotics, digestive enzymes, and mago oils, some
of the things that are a lot of things that

(33:53):
are baked out in the dry dog food. They work
together and it leads to new and absorption. So he's
getting these nutrients for the first time. They maintain healthy
muscle and join enhance overall vitality and length of life.
So I just start sprinkling it out and watching, and
my dog transformed in days. I mean, it's not something

(34:16):
now I just talk about. It's something I rely on,
depend on. Allergy's gone, bad, breath, gone sleeping a lot,
gone bouncing around like a puppy again. So do what
I did. Start with the exact same free Jumpstart trial bag.
It's absolutely free. You'll see results before you ever purchase.

(34:36):
All you gotta do is cover the shipping, So go
to Roughgreens ruff roughgreens dot Com promo code yms. Roughgreens
dot Com promo code yms. Don't change your dog's food,
just add Roughgreens and watch the health benefits come alive.
Roughgreens dot Com promo code yms for your morning show,
for your free jumpstart trial bag of rough Greens today.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
And I'm not doing it for you today. I will
not be abused by you and the other police. Get
that picture, get that video.

Speaker 4 (35:05):
Okay, So rough Greens is so good your dog, We'll
ask for it by day.

Speaker 1 (35:09):
Here we go. He does. He starts roughing. Yeah, when
he sees you.

Speaker 4 (35:14):
Pull out the things not allergies. Well, Andrew has been
feeding him in the morning and I've been. I'll try
to do this afternoon and I'll record it.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
To the habitat. You always forget to do that. I do.
I'm a busy man.

Speaker 7 (35:28):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 4 (35:33):
Officials are downplaying the threat after the FBI reportedly warrened
California police about Iran targeting the West Coast to retaliate
for US strikes on their country. Mark Mayfield, it fills the.

Speaker 8 (35:44):
Sin the alert issued at the end of last month
said the FBI had information about Iran wanting to launch
unmanned drones in a surprise attack in the event of
US strikes. It went on to say that the threat
was specifically against unspecified targets in California, law enforcement sources
now to multiple outlets there was no specific threat that
underpinned the alert. California Governor Gavin Newsom said in a

(36:05):
post on x that authorities are not aware of any
imminent threats, but they remain prepared for any emergency.

Speaker 1 (36:12):
I'm Mark Neyfield.

Speaker 4 (36:12):
Defense Department officials say the first six days of war
against Iran cost about eleven billion dollars.

Speaker 6 (36:19):
NBC News is reporting officials told senators and a closed
door briefing Tuesday that was the estimated cost, although some
senators believe the amount is actually more. Wednesday, Democrat Chris
Coons said he feels the amount doesn't include every aspect
of things. Meanwhile, in an interview with Axios, President Trump
said the war will end soon, adding there's nothing left

(36:40):
to target.

Speaker 1 (36:42):
I'm Jim Roop.

Speaker 4 (36:44):
Ozzy Osbourne's granddaughter is being named after him.

Speaker 1 (36:48):
Granddaughter named after him.

Speaker 4 (36:49):
Jack Osborne and his wife had a seven pound baby girl,
and they've named her Ozzi Matilda Osborne after Grandpa Ozzy.
Matilda is Jack and Harry's second child together.

Speaker 7 (37:00):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Del Jorno.
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