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March 13, 2026 36 mins

National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the latest on an apparent terror attack at a Michigan synagogue.

 Colorectal cancer is no longer “grandpa’s disease.” A major new study says the very serious disease is now increasing in younger adults. March is Colorectal Disease Month, and Dr Joe Galati is available to discuss why you want to take this cancer seriously.

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live each weekday morning on great radio stations like k
EIB and Los Angeles, WFDF nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan,
the superstation, and the Rock of Talk sixteen hundred AM
KIVA and Albuquerque, New Mexico. We'd love to have you
listen live every morning. But glad you're here now for
the podcast Enjoyed.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Two three, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding.

Speaker 3 (00:28):
Because we're in this together.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
This is your Morning Show with Michael.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Bell Chordan seven minutes after the hour and Welcome to Friday,
the thirteenth of March twenty twenty six on the airstreaming
live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show.
Honored to serve you on Michael, Jefferys got the sound,
Red's got the content, and we got two terrorist attacks
and Democrats still refusing to fund homeland security, let alone FEMA.

(00:57):
The Coastguard TSA. Roy O'Neill is our national correspondent. He
covers all things space. We'll get to that in a second,
but also top stories, and we have two of them,
one a truck attack and I don't you might want
to clarify what the content may have been in Bloomfield, Michigan.

(01:17):
And then just before we were capable of processing that,
a la acbar was screamed and we had an attack
at Old Dominion University. We have to speed on what
we know this morning.

Speaker 4 (01:27):
Sure, First to the case in Michigan, as you said,
where a man drove a truck into a synagogue and
school complex. This is one of the biggest of its
kind in the country. Thankfully, armed security there at the
scene was able to shoot and kill this forty one
year old Lebanese born American citizen while he was still
inside the vehicle, minimizing what could have been a very

(01:49):
high casualty count. The investigation so far suggests that maybe
this man was taking action after his family members in
Lebanon were killed by Israeli airstrikes.

Speaker 3 (02:00):
That's still part of the investigation.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
Also want to know if this man was perhaps activated
as some sort of a sleeper cell or if this
was on one off. So still a lot for the
FBI and others to investigate what happened there. But again,
it's the armed security that really prevented that from getting
much much worse.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
I was curious, Well, I was just gonna say. What
I was curious about on that one is the fire
that started, and the fire started with the vehicle, So
I don't know if he was and he was still
in the car, and they had trained for weeks apparently,
and then six weeks later this happens. But these security
guards were trained for such a thing and they got
it before he ever got out of his car. But
my curiosity was was was that truck supposed to explode?

(02:39):
I mean, he wasn't expecting to get out of the cars.
What I didn't get.

Speaker 4 (02:42):
We knew that there were other or we know that
there were other incendiary devices in the vehicle, so he
wasn't there with just the car.

Speaker 3 (02:49):
It was. We don't know exactly what it was.

Speaker 4 (02:51):
Was it something that was highly technical or was it
just a bunch of gas cans filled with gas? Like
that part we haven't they haven't told us about yet,
So I think that's also part of the investigation. If
it was something more complicated, you know, how did they
figure out how to do that? Was he looking at
YouTube videos find it elsewhere? Was he trained in some way?
You know, he'd been in the country for about for

(03:12):
more than a decade after coming here from Lebanon.

Speaker 3 (03:16):
All right, now, Honda Virginia.

Speaker 4 (03:18):
Virginia, Old Dominion University of Apparently a military veteran who
later was a convicted ISIS supporter went into a classroom
of ROTC students, confronted them, asked if it was the
ROTC classroom. When they said yes, he apparently shot and
killed the instructor there, Lieutenant Colonel Brandon Shaw. Now the

(03:40):
ROTC members then jumped into action. They subdued this guy,
actually stabbed him, and we believe he was stabbed to
death by the ROTC members who responded those members saying
that this suspect was shouting a lakbar at the time
of his attack. You know exactly what led to this
happened yesterday at Old Dominion in that room. All that's

(04:03):
part of the investigation. Yeah, he went to jail.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
He met with informants I think on two occasions back
in twenty sixteen. It also praised a twenty fifteen shooting
in Tennessee. He got out of jail early. At some
point he goes from serving in our military wanting to
give back to his new adopted country, to being radicalized
and that all came to a head yesterday unfortunately at

(04:30):
Old Dominion University. All right, rysing back in the third out,
we're gonna have the very latest. Just another reminder. War
is dangerous. I mean, with all the sorties going on.
It's a refueling aircraft that ends up having the issue.
And there's six that were on board, four of which

(04:52):
have been recovered deceased. The other two have not been
recovered yet, and one might presume the odds of them
being alive are not good. So the death toll will
go to eleven, if not thirteen in Iran. War is dangerous.
Roy will have more on that when we come back.
All right, I want to start with in the order

(05:14):
in which they came. But I love Donna so much
and I know she was last, so we'll let ladies
be first. Can't have your morning show without your voice,
is Donna and Philadelphia.

Speaker 5 (05:23):
Thank you for your recommendation to watch Milania. Such an
interesting world that I never thought about before. All that
goes into preparation and fashion. But the one thing I
did enjoy is that President Trump seems to truly love
and respect his wife, and that was refreshing to say,

(05:46):
thank you.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Yeah, I think basically the whole documentary takes place in
the twenty days prior to inauguration, and so a lot
of it is kind of focused on fashion getting ready
for the inauguration, and you follow her around. I don't
recall necessarily giving this like four thumbs up and rave reviews.

(06:12):
In fact, I remember saying if this had been any
other party doing this, like if this had been Jill
Biden or Michelle Obama, you all be ripping it. I
did say it was worth seeing from this perspective, well,
on a shallow front, if you wanted to see what
Trump Tower looks like from the inside where they live,

(06:34):
or inside mar Lago down in Florida where they live,
get some nice glimpses. Inside the White House, you get
some great glimpses. But no, I'm with Donna there, and
this probably what Donna heard me talking about. There was
a line they were struggling with that is an inaugural address.

(06:55):
It was very telling, and it wasn't created and it
wasn't edited. You could tell it was a raw moment. Now,
somebody made the choice to put in the documentary, and
I'm glad they did, just like I'm glad they put
in the filthy look. You got to see what the
real Kamala Harris was like behind the scenes at the inauguration.
What a miserable, sore loser. But anyway, she's just sitting there,
and you could tell by the way she's sitting, and

(07:17):
you could tell by the way she's listening. This is
not a shallow woman. It's a very deep woman. This
is a very smart woman, maybe the smartest in the room.
And he says something, and she doesn't do this often,
but when she does it, it's kind of reminded me
of my wife. My wife doesn't have a lot to say,
so you really better shut up and listen when she does.

(07:39):
And she changed a line. And then later you see
how the president delivered the line she gave him. And
he looks back in the middle of an inaugural address
and looks back at his wife and gives her a look.
So I think she's a very thoughtful, smart person, a
lot smarter than you think. And I will tell you
the best parts of the movie evolve when Donald Trump

(08:01):
is interacting. I mean that was the loudest laugh. I
mean when he's when he's basically doing like he tweets
with his wife. You know, people were laughing, but you
can tell he does respect her. I had all the
exact same observations as you Donald, although I wouldn't say
I watch a lot of documentaries. As documentaries go, that's
other than the rare glimpses and inside glimpses you get.

(08:26):
I don't know that I would recommend it, but now
that it's out and about, maybe and you're seeing it
on the subscription that you already have, Yeah, it's definitely
worth watching. Bob's in Mississippi. Well, good morning, Crude and Mikey.
I'm with you.

Speaker 6 (08:40):
Let's stay positive, and i'd like to go with Trump
today with word of the day for Iranian leaders and
some of our leaders. Scumbag Low ask you, Mississippi.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
Bobby, if we were staying positive for crying out loud,
you know, we have any chance to talk about you.
We don't know what's left. There's not much left in Iran,
but they have now turned to AI, so they're using
artificial intelligence to do videos of them blowing things up
that aren't really blown up. And that's how pathetic it's getting.
So you know, I don't know, I don't even know

(09:19):
if this new Iatola is conscious. Donald the President, Donald
Trump presumes he is, but he was involved in that
initial bombing and he was injured pretty severely. But they
chose them, So maybe that's the sime. You never know.
They lie so much, you just never know. Of course,
he's vowing to continue to block the Strait of Horror

(09:40):
moves and I was just thinking, with what ai I mean?
But that kind of leads into another caller we had
earlier who basically was saying, oh, why don't we just
sit if and I can't confirm that Iranian tankers are
passing through the Strait of Horror moves. If they are,
it's because insurance is allowing them to. But well, yeah,

(10:01):
why don't we just down on the other side and
sees him. Probably not a bad idea. Let's give what
to the final second morning guys, Happy Friday. What surprises
me is the detail of the Old Dominion shooter. He's
an immigrant, he becomes a citizen, he goes to prison
for supporting Isis and upon release he's not stripped of

(10:21):
his citizenship and deported. That's got to change. He should
have been deported. Appeasement to these Islamas is silent. Surrender
well and inevitably, as the case could be death to
an innocent citizen. I don't know what it's going to say.
And meanwhile, while we have an ongoing warned threat, I mean,

(10:45):
in California, the threat was drones. Can you imagine how
horrific that could be a drone start delivering strikes and
taking out a lot of innocent citizens. But I mean,
we have chatter of sleeper cell activation. We clearly either
sleep or sell activation or loan terrorist acts, two of
them yesterday alone, one outside of Detroit and the other

(11:08):
at Oldeman University in Virginia. And still the Democrats voted
down funding for homeland security. I don't want say anything
uncomfortable or inappropriate, but what would it take to wake
these people up? God forbid? What is it going to

(11:28):
take before they put the security of their own citizens
above themselves and political theater. So you stand in line
at the DMV, you pay the fee, you smile for
the terrible photo. And what's the DMV do they turn
around and sell you your name, your address, your accident history,

(11:52):
your court records, all exposed to hundreds of companies. Think
about it, you're the customer, and they turned you into
a product, and even worse, data brokers take all that
DMB information and then they layer it with your credit score,
with your shopping habits, with your social media. Now they
have a digital file ready for sale. They might even
turn around and sell to your insurance company, and they

(12:13):
may turn it around and raise your rates. It's infuriating.
I hope it gets you mad enough to take action.
I did, and now I use and rely on in
Cognate to protect me and my family, and I think
you should too. And Cognate does all the fighting back
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(12:36):
they have to legally take it down. Now, you could
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(12:59):
they can't classify you if they can't find you. Disappear
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(13:20):
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Speaker 2 (13:29):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 3 (13:34):
Welcome to Friday, jes the thirteenth, March the thirteenth, twenty
twenty six on the airstreaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
This is your morning show. If you're just waking out,
these are your top five stories of the day. The
FBI is now leading the investigation into attack at a
temple Israel in West Bloomfield yesterday. They've identified the man
who drove a truck into the temple as a forty

(13:54):
one year old aman, Mohammed Ghazzali. He was born in Lebanon,
immigrated the United States in twenty eleven, became a citizen
in twenty sixteen. Armed security guards took him out. One
of the head.

Speaker 7 (14:07):
Of security was taken to the hospital. He got knocked
down by the car when it preached the building, and
we've had thirty law enforcement officers taken to the hospital
for smoke inhalation.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
Meanwhile, the FBI says it was a terror act with
a gunman an affiliation with ISIS that fired at Virginia's
olderman In University while shouting a La akbar. One of
the pastors, whose son was a senior at Old Dominion,
said his son and other ROTC peers helped subdue the shooter.

Speaker 8 (14:37):
What he said was that someone came into the classroom
and asked was this RTC and began shooting, at which
time he and his fellow classmates went into active protective mode.

Speaker 3 (14:50):
The gunman killed one person wounded two others on Thursday morning.
The shooter has been identified as Mohammed Joe La, a
former National guardsman who pled guilty trying to provide material
support for ISIS back in twenty sixteen. He was sentenced
to eleven years, but was released early in twenty twenty four.
Two people injured were taken to the hospital. They are

(15:11):
in stable condition. US military refueling tanker part of Operation
Epic Fury crashed in western Iraq.

Speaker 9 (15:17):
US Central Command says it's aware of the loss of
a KC one thirty five strato tanker and that two
aircraft were involved in the incident. One of the aircraft
went down in western Iraq while the other landed safely.
SITCOM says the incident happened in friendly airspace and was
not due to hustle or friendly fire. The status of
the crew is unknown, but officials say rescue efforts are ongoing.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
I'm Mark Neefield. Attention everyone listening forty years old or younger.
One in five heart attacks in the US now occur
with people under forty years old. Sarah Lee Kessler has
the shocking story.

Speaker 10 (15:51):
Heart attacks are no longer a concern mostly limited to
older adults. The American College of Cardiology says there's been
a dramatic shift toward younger people since the start of
the twenty first century. Among the under forty group, cardiologists
say the rise in obesity and type two diabetes are
major factors, so are family history, part disease, high blood pressure,

(16:13):
and high cholesterol. They recommend knowing your numbers, getting exercise,
eating a healthy diet, and trying to eliminate chronic stress.

Speaker 3 (16:22):
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler. Today is Friday the thirteenth, and
that terrifies millions of Americans.

Speaker 9 (16:28):
Millions of people in this country have a paralyzing fear
of Friday the thirteenth. Some won't go to work today,
some won't eat in restaurants, and many would never plan
their wedding for Friday the thirteenth. No one is exactly
sure where the legend of Friday the thirteenth being unlucky began.

Speaker 3 (16:44):
The researchers feel the superstition is very.

Speaker 9 (16:46):
Old Folkmore experts say it's the combination of Friday and thirteen,
as both the day and the number have historically been
connected to bad luck.

Speaker 3 (16:55):
I'm Mark Nephield.

Speaker 2 (16:58):
This is Shannon Gregory in My Morning show.

Speaker 1 (17:01):
Is your Morning Show with Michael de Jono.

Speaker 3 (17:08):
Hi, it's Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
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. We're thrilled you're here. Now enjoy the podcast.
Use the talkback button.

Speaker 3 (17:25):
If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app, take your place
at America's kitchen table immediately, like Bob and Woody and
Donna did last segment. You can also email Michael did
at iHeartMedia dot Com thirty five minutes after the hour.
If you're just getting up in the Central time zone,
you got a little time in the Eastern time zone.
It's getting crunch time, about twenty five minutes to be
to work by eight o'clock. We've had two terrorist attacks

(17:47):
on the same day and the Democrats still refuse to
pass funding for the Department of Homeland Security. It begs
a question, what is it going to take? And war
is dangerous. We may have lost up to six more
servicemen this time. It was a oil refueling tanker and

(18:07):
four of the bodies have been recovered. Two are still
being searched for but it doesn't look good. And six
tornadoes I think in all, according to National Weather Service
in Louisiana, we've had some pretty nasty weather all week long.
We'll continue to keep an eye on that. Uh Coal
core Colo, doctor Joe, where are you? Cola director?

Speaker 11 (18:30):
Hey, I'll you Michael corectal cancer.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
Why can't we.

Speaker 11 (18:35):
Just say all morning.

Speaker 3 (18:38):
I don't know.

Speaker 12 (18:39):
We got to be politically correct here Colo rectal cancer.

Speaker 11 (18:42):
Yes there, thank you.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
It's no longer a grandpa. Good morning. It's no longer
a grandpa disease. A major news study says very serious
disease is now increasing in younger adults. I just had
the story doctor Joe seconds ago about heart attacks under
forty is increasing. So something's up. We need a doctor, doctor, doctor,
give us the news. This is Joe Glotti. I've heard
so many good things about you. I hope I love
you as much as everybody that knows you does.

Speaker 11 (19:06):
Well. Look, let's I'm a likable guy. I love what
I do.

Speaker 12 (19:10):
And in practicing medicine for a long time, and everybody
to wake up and have fun taking care of people
and being on the radio.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
So it's a pleasure to be here, Michael, it's my
honor to meet you. All right, let's talk about colon
cancer because we've had a standard of testing and it
sure looks like, Doc, we got to lower that age. Well,
well it is.

Speaker 11 (19:32):
And for everybody that's fifty.

Speaker 12 (19:34):
And over, it was almost a bit of a gag
when you'd have your fiftieth birthday party, that there would
be cards and other things at the party and say, well, now, Bob,
it's time to get your colonos to be and it's
his dreaded procedure. But for the last several years, that
age for screening was knocked down to forty five. And

(19:55):
this was not just a simple random idea that the
American Cancas Society and others had in their up their sleeve.
It really is because over the last almost decade or so,
we were seeing younger people showing up.

Speaker 3 (20:12):
With colon cancer.

Speaker 11 (20:14):
And as you said earlier, it was sort of.

Speaker 3 (20:16):
A disease of your your grandfather.

Speaker 12 (20:19):
We're now seeing people with colon cancer less than forty five.

Speaker 11 (20:24):
It's slightly more aggressive and we have to do something.
So the question begs, why is this happening?

Speaker 3 (20:31):
Well, yeah, it's the food. Is it the food diet,
right or lack of access questions? Yeah, so all right,
so we got to delay. What's the million dollar answer?
I mean, I would think it's probably one of those
all of the aboves.

Speaker 12 (20:44):
Right, Joe, it really is. And when you look at
what has happened, there's no doubt that the obesity crisis
is fueling You mentioned heart disease, so much of that.

Speaker 11 (20:55):
But obesity is connected with an increased risk.

Speaker 12 (20:59):
Of not only liver cancer, liver disease and.

Speaker 11 (21:02):
Cirrhosis, but it is associated with an increase of breast cancer,
pancreatic cancer, and now colon cancer.

Speaker 3 (21:09):
So it.

Speaker 11 (21:11):
Comes back to the diet and exercise, and we would
be sticking our head in the sand.

Speaker 3 (21:17):
If we did not address it aggressively. All right, Doctor
Jocolotti joining us. We've talked a little bit about the
heart numbers heart attacks or those are forty and younger.
That's staggering to me. And now we have the colon
cancer cases rising at younger and younger ages. What does
this say in general about you know, how do I

(21:40):
do this without offending somebody? Doc? All right, look, I
think it's a jerk would make fun of somebody for
being morbidly obese. That only an idiot would taunt and
bully somebody like that. However, don't celebrate it either, and
don't promote it as wonderful and normal when it's danger

(22:00):
as culture has done too. And I think rather than
wanting to know the truth and adjusting our life to
it or paying the consequence, we try to make everything,
you know, some new kind of acceptable behavior, but it's not.
And that's when I say all the above, I mean
all of the above, the level of stress and both

(22:21):
working and no exercise, and everything's at our desk and
eating processed foods, And I mean, how does somebody like you,
a doctor, really help someone navigate this.

Speaker 11 (22:32):
Well, I think it comes down.

Speaker 3 (22:33):
To being honest.

Speaker 12 (22:34):
And you're absolutely correct, Michael in that the new norm,
the new set point, is love your body, even if
you are morbidly obese.

Speaker 11 (22:43):
Now there will be the occasional.

Speaker 12 (22:45):
Person, and I've seen them that are morbidly obeses that
do not have a cholesterol issue and not diabetic, they
don't have high blood pressure.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
But that is the rare case.

Speaker 12 (22:55):
You are a sitting duck if you are morbidly obese
with all of these consequences. And so with regard to
the colon cancer story, part of the problem is there
is almost a disbelief out there in the community to say,
I'm thirty five or forty years old, I have abdominal pain,
I have bloed my stool. There's no way I have

(23:15):
coalon cancer. And what happens is there is a delete
in seeking help part of it is the patient themselves
may not connect the dots, and I have to say
sometimes you're family practitioner, and I'm not here to rag
on family practitioners. They may say, look, you're forty years old,
you're healthy, you have a little recubilieding, it's just hemorrhoids.
Eat more fiber, and.

Speaker 11 (23:37):
Then you know, six months later you find out that
it's colon cancer or something leading up to colon cancer.

Speaker 12 (23:42):
So there have to be an awareness that there is
something going on with our food.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
We're eating too.

Speaker 12 (23:48):
Many process and ultra processed foods. We're not eating enough
fruits and vegetable, it's not getting enough fiber, we're gaining weight.
We have to address this because the overall health of
our nation is in and the client. Yeah, and all
these things add up to you know, very expensive care.
Uh and and and in some cases long term care.

(24:10):
You could have a stroke and then have long term care.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
So uh, it's an issue of national uh financial security
in addition to life and health. All right, doc, I
guess I would say this in terms of and we
had a very famous actor die of colon cancer at
a very young age. It started a whole nation Conversation,
National Conversation. Listen, if you're having pain and you're seeing
blood in your stool, for good, I don't care. I

(24:34):
don't care what your doctor says. I mean, if nothing
else you could. I know they're not as accurate doct
but one of those mail in kits something, because early
detection means better outcomes and catching things before they spread.
I mean, at some point I've learned this with my mother.
You have to be an activist, you know, an advocate
for your mother when they get to that age. You

(24:55):
got to be an advocate for yourself at all ages.
And you know what, bet are paranoid than not, especially
if it's something like blood in the stool.

Speaker 12 (25:03):
Oh absolutely, And you said the word. We love to
talk about being an advocate for yourself, and you're you're
the only one that's going to.

Speaker 11 (25:12):
Advocate for yourself. And I think what we talk about on.

Speaker 12 (25:15):
The radio all the time is being a better consumer
of healthcare, raising your health by Q That really is it.

Speaker 11 (25:21):
Where patients come in and they will say.

Speaker 12 (25:24):
Oh, I didn't realize blood my stool is a bad thing.

Speaker 3 (25:27):
Yes, it is a bad thing.

Speaker 12 (25:28):
Create a little paranoia that's going to save lives. So
be aware, listen to your body at all times, and
never ever. This is doctor Galotti rule number one. Assume nothing.
That's the way to go by the way. I just
want everybody to know it's not me that does this.
Our lieutenant colonel is Carafano, our senior contributor is Zanati.

Speaker 3 (25:50):
My doctor is Galatti. I don't know. There's a deal
Journal Paison Italian thing going on here. Uh, doc, appreciate
your time together, right, No, but I mean I was
eighteen years old and I have blood in my stool
and I was horrified. My parents didn't, you know, know anything.
They were just that's not right. I had a flexible
Do you remember when they did flexible sigmoid oscopies? Well

(26:13):
they still.

Speaker 11 (26:14):
Will eva occasionally do them.

Speaker 12 (26:16):
We would prefer colonoscopy by far is oh perior. I
don't know how much time you may have to go
to your next car. This is where you walk in
a room.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
There's a doctor and in my case, two gorgeous nurses
and I'm a self conscious eighteen year old and so
I start laying on the little thing. They go, oh no, no, no,
you kneel here. I go, Neil, Yeah, neil right there,
and then this whole table goes up in the air,
so imagine your butts in the air. And then they
put this hose and you're up for the whole thing
while they inflate your entire colon and you're making embarrassing

(26:47):
sounds in front of beautiful nurses and oh it was
the most uncomfortable, worse cramping you could ever imagine. Yeah, listen,
a colonoscopy is nothing. There's a little bit of prep
and you'll feel nice and thin afterwards and you're sound
asleep when they do it. There's nothing to fear here
other than the symptom. And you've got to take action
because I don't care what age you are. This age

(27:09):
needs to slide because it's now. If you were thirty
five years old and having emptoms, I'd want you to
go have a COLONNASKI what do you got to lose? Now?
Of course there's insurance and coverage and the doctor ordering it,
but yeah, yeah, no, I mean.

Speaker 11 (27:24):
There be this awareness and just one last thing.

Speaker 3 (27:27):
On the whole thing about the heart disease.

Speaker 12 (27:29):
So I am a loose special just here in Houston,
and we.

Speaker 11 (27:34):
Are seeing something called fatty living.

Speaker 3 (27:37):
Michael would be great to come and talk about that again.

Speaker 11 (27:40):
But with fatty liver, the patients.

Speaker 12 (27:42):
Are overweight or obese, they have high cholesterol, they have
high pre diabetes, and the patients almost every single day,
the physi that are seeing these patients, they say, well,
you have just a touch of diabetes, a touch of
high cholesterol, and all of these early warning abnormal lamp

(28:03):
tanks or symptoms are just kicked down the road, kicking
the can down the road. And when I see them,
these are.

Speaker 11 (28:09):
Patients that have advanced liver disease and soosis. And you
talk about an expensive disease, chronic liver disease leading.

Speaker 12 (28:18):
To cerosis, liver transplant. It is a nightmare. And but
but doctor, if you can an awareness, But doctor, if
we rewind eight years when that doctor said, oh, you're
this age, and yeah, that's going to tick up a
little bit, that's a that's a normal level of fat
in your liver to show up at this age.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
But had somebody taken serious action, then they don't show
up at your office with cirrhosis. It doesn't get down
the road to that. But when you do that, it's
too late. So yeah, you got to take these things seriously. Now,
I shouldn't have done this because my wife her last
test showed a little and my wife is looks a
perfect shape. But you don't have to be fat in
order to have faty liver, right. But she's taken immediate action.

(28:59):
She's exercise even more, but she never stops moving as
it is, and I mean not even a casual drink
on the weekend. Nothing right, But you got to take
action before it's too late unless you're trying to get
out early. You're trying to get out early. We get it.
There's either easier ways to do that. Let's do fatty
liver next week, Joe.

Speaker 11 (29:17):
It's my tip, absolutely, Michael.

Speaker 3 (29:21):
It was a real pleasure of getting together with you.
It was nice to meet you. God bless you. Joke
a lot that doctor, Joe, everybody. Doctor doctor gave us
the news we might start visiting with him on a
regular basis. Wouldn't you love to have a doctor that
smart and fun? Yeah? Well you do. Now everybody's talking
about weight loss injections. Why they get results? Of course
they do. They lower your blood sugar, they reduce your appetite.

(29:43):
You stop eating, now you're gonna lose a lot of fat,
but you're gonna lose a lot of muscle too. But
they work, But what if you want to lose the
weight without the painful weekly injections or any of the
intensive side effects or ultimately, the question is what are
you gonna do with someday when you stop. That's why
the doctor's created the weight loss supplement LEAN, and the

(30:05):
results are remarkable. The studied ingredients and LEAN have been
showed to lower blood sugar sound familiar, burns fat by
converting it into energy so you feel great, curbs your
appetite and craving, so you eat less, you're not as hungry.
Guess what, you lose weight only the kind of weight
that stays off because you combine it with your already

(30:26):
lifestyle changes of healthy diet and exercise, and you feel
even greater, and you move even faster, and you burn
even more. But listen, Lean is not for the casual
diet or just trying to lose a pound or two.
This is for people that are frustrated dietors trying to
lose ten or more pounds, and when you combine it
with your healthy diet and exercise, plant, I want you
to get twenty percent off plus free rush shipping just

(30:47):
for being a your morning show listener. So go to
takeleen dot com. I warn you there's another thing people
accuse me of making up. Your kids will steal it
and take it to college. You'll go to take your
Lean in the mart. Seejeffreys. Lean's waiting for him every morning.
Red Lean's waiting him every morning. I go to take it.
It's gone. It's gone. It's at a university. But go

(31:08):
to take lean dot com. Take lean dot com. Use
the promo code yms for your morning show for twenty
percent off and free rush shipping. Promo code yms at
take lean dot com.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
Can you get doctor Joe Glotti back on the line.
I'd like to say cola rectal cancer. Now that I
can suddenly say col erect please stand by. I'll let
the doctor. Why could I not say cole erectal a
minute ago? You just had one of those earworms. You
just decided you couldn't say it, and you got stuck
so something that my brain just wouldn't connect.

Speaker 12 (31:39):
Yeah, I just explained that about a lot of Probably
he's gonna get on the phone.

Speaker 3 (31:44):
Man that guy. You guys got a national show. He
doesn't know how to say coal erect I do. I
just didn't. Then US military refueling tanker that was a
part of Operation Epic Furious crash in western Iraq. For
our dead. Two are still unaccounted for. Mark Mayfield has
our story.

Speaker 9 (32:00):
Central Command says it's aware of the loss of a
KC one thirty five Strato tanker and that two aircraft
were involved in the incident. One of the aircraft went
down in western Iraq while the other landed safely. SITCOM
says the incident happened in friendly airspace and was not
due to hustle or friendly fire. The status of the
crew is unknown, but officials say rescue efforts are ongoing.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
I'm Mark Neefield. The FBI says it was a terrorist
act when a gunman with ISIS ties opened fire at
Virginia's Old Dominion University while shouting praise a La hawkbar.
A pastor Jermaine Bago says his son, a senior at
Old Dominion, and his other ROTC peers helped subdue the
shooter who began to fire at their instructor.

Speaker 8 (32:40):
What he said was that someone came into the classroom
and asked was his RTC and began shooting, at which
time he and his fellow classmates went into active protective mode.

Speaker 3 (32:54):
They killed them. The gunman killed one person and wounded
two others before taking out. Now what do we know
about the shooter identified as Mohammed Jolar, a former National
guardsman who pled guilty to trying to provide material support
to ISIS in twenty sixteen. He was given eleven years only.
He was released early in twenty twenty four. The two

(33:14):
people injured were taken to the hospital. They are currently
in stable condition. Meanwhile, the FBI is now leading the
investigation in the attack at Temple Israel in West Bloomfield, Michigan.
They have identified that gunman who drove a truck into
the temple as forty one year old Ahman Mohammad Gazali,
who was born in Lebanon, immigrated to the United States
in twenty eleven became an American citizen. In twenty sixteen,

(33:37):
armed security guards and Ghazali engaged in a shootout. The
suspect was killed. The Oakland County Sheriff's Sheriff Michael Bouchard
says he was the only fatality in the incident. One
of the head.

Speaker 7 (33:50):
Of security was taken to the hospital. He got knocked
down by the car when it breached the building. And
we've had thirty law enforcement officers taken to the hospital
for smoke inhalation.

Speaker 3 (34:00):
A federal judge is handing President Trump his first win
in the New York New Jersey Gateway Tunnel project lawsuit.

Speaker 10 (34:06):
Judge Richard Hurtling of the Federal Claims Court in Washington
has dismissed six of eight counts in the lawsuit over
the Trump administration temporarily freezing funds for a new rail
tunnel under the Hudson River that happened last October and
led to one thousand construction worker layoffs, stopping work on
the sixteen billion dollar project for more than.

Speaker 3 (34:26):
A week last month.

Speaker 10 (34:27):
The judge says the case is mostly moved because offense
had resumed the flow of two hundred million dollars and
it had frozen. New Jersey Governor Mikey Cheryl's response, we
will continue to fight and continue to win if Donald
Trump tries to illegally stop funding again.

Speaker 3 (34:42):
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler, Mighty Cyrus. She's going to receive
the Innovator Award at the twenty twenty six iHeart Music Awards.
The award is given to an artist it was continuously
contributing to pop culture and the music industry. Past recipients
Taylor Swift, Beyond Say, Alicia Key's Lady Gaga, Bruno mars
In Moore. The iHeartRadio Music Awards will air live on

(35:06):
March the twenty sixth on Fox and can be heard
on your iHeart station or on the iHeartRadio app. Well.
There is a saying that everyone's a wee bit to
Irish when it comes to Saint Patrick's Day on Tuesday,
and according to the US Census Bureau, about thirty five
million people in America claim Irish ancestry. Pree Tennis says more.

Speaker 13 (35:25):
That's about ten percent of the US population, but that
small group parties big. There will be hundreds of Saint
Patrick's Day celebrations across the country this weekend, parades, festivals,
Leprechaun runs, Dying the River in Chicago, and don't forget
the pub crawls, Irish music and lots of dancing. It's
enough to make anyone want to be Irish. And on
Saint Patrick's day. You can be because he was an

(35:48):
Irish either, Saint Patrick was British.

Speaker 3 (35:51):
I'm bre Tennis.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joano.

Speaker 11 (36:01):
Do you pay s
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