Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
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grateful you're here now, enjoy the podcast. What are you
all doing? This is awful?
Speaker 2 (00:22):
One, two three, starting your morning off right, A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael O'Dell chord.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
Give me one of.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Those good COVID memories, all right? Seven minutes after the hour,
Welcome to Friday, March, the twenty first year of Our Lord,
twenty twenty five. If you're just waking up, State Department
insists Russia Ukraine, we're just a breadth away from a
full cease fire. Israeli troops are back on the ground
in Gaza. A Georgia man held in Afghanistan for over
two years has been released. I don't know why this
(01:00):
one's bothering me, but Alex Ovechkin is one goal closer
to breaking Wayne Gretzky's all time gold record, and I
really hate letting go of that. That's an end of
an era. Meanwhile, the Trump administration is moving forward with
plans to dismantle the Department of Education, not cancel and
eliminate public schools, just the bureaucracy way. I suffer him
not walk straight. Hell of the Chief. He's the one
(01:24):
we all say hail to. He has the power because
he takes a shower. Ladies and gentlemen, It's Friday with
forty seven. Good morning, mister president.
Speaker 3 (01:34):
Well, good morning, pizza boy. You know that it's a
very good morning. We're having a tremendous side And just
to let you know, we're getting rid of the Department
of Education and we're having a pizza party. You're invited.
We're having a pizza party. Yeah, let me guess you
have to bring to Jorna though you have to ring it.
Speaker 4 (01:52):
You fired rights.
Speaker 1 (01:54):
I was just going to say, and let me guess
I get to deliver the pizza. All right, do you
have let's start with that. Yes, down at the test scores.
You know, there used to not be a Department of
Education in Washington. D c until my junior year of
high school, and things were not just fine before the
Department of Education test score wise, they were better. Is
that a big motivating factor for you?
Speaker 4 (02:16):
Well, you know, we.
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Are a country of very smart people, but we educate
these kids to be very stupid people. And that's because
stupid people are teaching them.
Speaker 4 (02:24):
And we want these people to be smart. And we
are looking at it.
Speaker 3 (02:28):
You know, you have trillions of dollars, it's trillions with
the tea.
Speaker 4 (02:31):
It's very which.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
By the way, is a fraction of my net worth.
But when you look at it, you know you have
trillions of dollars being invested and nothing's getting better.
Speaker 4 (02:41):
So we call that a loss, right, we call that.
Speaker 3 (02:44):
We call that not successful, and we don't like that.
Speaker 4 (02:47):
We want these projects.
Speaker 3 (02:49):
To be successful, so we will be investing that better.
It's going to go back into the states, the beautiful states, right,
they're beautiful states, and they will be able to be
in charge of education because it's not working.
Speaker 4 (03:02):
We wanted to work.
Speaker 3 (03:03):
We want efficiency, right, we want efficiency and effectiveness and
not stupidity, which is unfortunately what we have. So we
want to have a beautiful system and that's what we're
working towards.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
I wish there was a way to get the power
all the way back to the individual schools and the parents,
I mean, the less. But this is a step forward
to get it out of the bureaucracy and waste and
control business and into the states and the education business.
So it's called.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
Baby steps, right, It's called it's called baby steps. Right.
And when I was a baby, you know, I was
born walking.
Speaker 4 (03:35):
I never even crowled.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
I was just going right. Yeah.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
I never crolled. You know, I never filled down.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
When I learned how to ride a bike, I never
filled down. So I'm a very they cool it, a
quick learner. I like to say I'm smart. My brain
is huge, and it's not smooth. You know, you have
a lot of people with a smooth brain.
Speaker 4 (03:54):
I mean it's stupid. I'm not a stupid guy.
Speaker 3 (03:55):
I'm a very smart guy, very rigid brain.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Right, lots of bumps, twists and turn your brain to bumps, lots.
Speaker 4 (04:01):
Of twists, lots of turns, lots of folds.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
Right, you have a lot of things that go on there.
It really is beautiful, right, you know.
Speaker 4 (04:07):
You've never seen it.
Speaker 3 (04:08):
I had a cat scan once and they said, sir,
look at the size of this brain. It's so big,
it's so powerful. As that, I know all about it.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
I've been living with it while life. It's tremendous.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
You get along great with brains, all right. The other
thing is, you know the old bread song was if
if a picture paints a thousand words. I mean, we
used to see videos on our television of just gang
members and migrants not only just crossing the border at will,
(04:40):
but being busted into our cities and flown into our cities.
And everybody was just watching helpless as that as that happened.
And now we're seeing law and order and we're seeing
these people shackled, crunched over, getting their hair cut and
shoved into into prisons. But there is a judicial resistance
on the rise, and you're calling on the Supreme Court
(05:01):
UH to reverse some of these injunctions.
Speaker 5 (05:04):
Uh.
Speaker 1 (05:04):
Is this the the rise of the resistance? UH coming?
And the role of judges? What is it?
Speaker 3 (05:12):
Well, you have it's called tyranny of the judiciary. That's
what it's called. It's called a judicial coup. You have
these rebels and robes, right, you know, this is the
new resistance. They're walking around in UH in their bath robes, right,
swinging their gavel around, which is stupid. Right, you look
at these people, they're stupid. They look like they just
got out of the shower, but they don't smell like
(05:33):
And I can tell you that these are dumb judges.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
These are stupid judges.
Speaker 3 (05:37):
Uh And they want they want these monsters, right, Trendy
are agua, which we want to call them trenday adios.
We were doing that and then they said Trenday bring
them back.
Speaker 4 (05:46):
We don't want to do that. Uh.
Speaker 3 (05:48):
So I suggest if these judges want us to bring
back all of these very bad armbris. These are very
bad people. These are sick people, disgusting people. I mean,
you're talking about people who are more disgusting than Rosi o'donnald.
These are horrible people who by the way you look
at it, Rosio o'donald left the country and the price
of eggs has come down. What do you think about that?
Speaker 4 (06:11):
Right, I think we.
Speaker 3 (06:12):
Have it's called I like to call it cause an effect.
Speaker 4 (06:15):
Right, she left the country and now all.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
Of a sudden, the pastry consumption in our country has.
Speaker 4 (06:20):
Hit a record low.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
They're using less eggs, there's less of a demand ROSI
O'donald's out the eggs of them.
Speaker 4 (06:27):
But you look at it, you look.
Speaker 3 (06:28):
At these judges. If you want to keep the bed
embrace here, I suggest you open up your homes. I
suggest we send them to Martha's vineyard. That gonna along
very well with Martha.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
You do.
Speaker 3 (06:39):
Doesn't want anything to do with these people, she said,
keep them out of my vineyard, Sir, I said, but
we're going to send them there because of the judges.
Martha doesn't want them, the vineyard doesn't want them, the
country doesn't want them, but the judges want them.
Speaker 4 (06:52):
These are very stupid people, and they're going to hurt people.
Speaker 3 (06:54):
It's unfortunate, but they're going to put people in arms way,
and we're not gonna let it happen.
Speaker 1 (06:59):
Briday with forty seven and we're seeing a lot of
out I mean you must. There's two sides of the coin. One.
It used to be Trump derangement. Now it seems to
be Musked arrangement. And the big manifestation is setting power
stations on fires, setting teslas on fires, spray painting them.
They're trying to play the good trouble game again. But
there's a new sheriff in town. You got a message
(07:19):
for him.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
Well, we're going to find you people who are doing
horrible things. You know you're going out there, you're hurting
Tesla's And let me tell you, consequences matter, and we
are going to impose real consequences.
Speaker 4 (07:33):
This is breaking news.
Speaker 3 (07:34):
If we catch you keying of Tesla.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
Or doing any of these.
Speaker 3 (07:39):
Horrible things and it's domestic terrorism, the punishment is going
to be very harsh.
Speaker 4 (07:44):
We're going to stick you with a chair. We're gonna
chain you to the chair.
Speaker 3 (07:48):
We are going to force you to watch forty eight
hours of Joy Read and Don Lemon on a podcast together.
These ahead people, these are stupid pimple and you're never
gonna want to.
Speaker 4 (07:58):
Commit those crimes. We'll forget jail, right, jail is one thing.
We are gonna make.
Speaker 3 (08:03):
You watch Joy Reid and Don Lemon on their podcast together.
And then we're gonna make you watch Michelle Obama's podcast
with a very strange haircut.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
You know, you look at.
Speaker 3 (08:12):
Her haircut, she looks like the Cynthia.
Speaker 4 (08:14):
Dell from the Rugrants. Have you ever seen it?
Speaker 3 (08:16):
Angelica got a little well with her. She has the
craziest hairstyle.
Speaker 4 (08:20):
She looks like a pokemon. I've never seen anything like it.
But you look at it. This is what we're gonna do.
We're gonna subject you to that. Do you you better
cut it out?
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Do you think that's why she was absent not only
from Jimmy Carter's funeral, but so many the inauguration, so
many other events. It was the hairstyle. She was just
trying to hide it.
Speaker 3 (08:39):
But no, I think she was trying to figure out
how the hell she's.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Gonna make it work. You know, they're doing several different things.
Speaker 3 (08:45):
That is some of the worst. And you know, nobody
knows about hair as much as I do.
Speaker 4 (08:49):
I love hair, im gray hair. You know, you look
at my hair, by the.
Speaker 3 (08:52):
Way, and we talked all about it with Russia. Russia,
Russia and Ukraine, Ukraine, Ukraine.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
And rare Earth minerals. They pull my hair a terrris minerals.
It's so beautiful, right, you look at it.
Speaker 3 (09:04):
It's the most beautiful thing. Anybody said the scene. I
could give us some advice. Even joy Reen tried to
steal my hair. I could give Michelle some advice.
Speaker 4 (09:12):
Better that she wants to talk to me, all right.
Speaker 1 (09:15):
Closing moments with Friday, with forty seven, the JFK files
were released. Why was this so important for you? And
are you sorry that some people's solid security numbers were unredacted.
Speaker 3 (09:25):
Well, we're very sorry about it, but I will say this.
We love transparency, right, we love transparency.
Speaker 4 (09:33):
We getting for Bobby, right. I caught him, Bobby. We
love Bobby.
Speaker 3 (09:35):
Bobby wanted the files out. You've abby one of the
files out.
Speaker 4 (09:39):
I've called them Bobby. I was there. I delivered Bobby.
I said to the world.
Speaker 3 (09:43):
You know you you look at the lion king, you
look at Rafiki, He's the baboon and he held them right.
I did that.
Speaker 4 (09:51):
Bobby was born.
Speaker 3 (09:52):
I picked them up, I said, Bobby. He said, life,
It's tremendous.
Speaker 4 (09:57):
You were there when we get it for Bobby. He
did it for Bobby.
Speaker 3 (10:00):
And we love Bobby, and we call him Bobby.
Speaker 4 (10:02):
He's a time on this guy.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
The news report today is the State Department is insisting
Russia and Ukraine are just but a breath away from
a full cease fire, which would put you about a
gasp away from a Nobel Peace Prize. I think, well, then.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
Elvin, they'll never do that, right, They'll never do no belt,
but I should win Nobel. I should win all of
the peace.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
I should win the Nobel.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
Peace Prize, the trump Pacee pries the most beautiful pace Bride.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
You know, there's.
Speaker 3 (10:27):
Nobody's ever been bringing more peace than I have. It's
called peace through strength.
Speaker 4 (10:31):
We love it. We're strong and we're.
Speaker 3 (10:33):
Peaceful, and we're looking to stop the death. You know,
there's a lot of people who are having a hard time,
and we want to stop them from having.
Speaker 4 (10:41):
A hard time. You look at Putin, he's a great guy.
I get a little well with him.
Speaker 3 (10:45):
You look at Zelinski, he's interesting, right, he's an interesting person.
But I get a look well with him as well.
Speaker 4 (10:52):
And we have you know, he's very small.
Speaker 3 (10:54):
He represents the Lollipop Guild. But you look at him,
and we do a very good job with both of
these guys who are very good job. We invent perfect
phone goals. You know you have Dronk and Joe. Whenever
he smoked a Ladimir Putin, he did, it's called tutin
with Putin.
Speaker 4 (11:09):
We wouldn't want to do that.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
You never want to do well.
Speaker 3 (11:13):
That would be sleepy Josey and Freda, which means he
pooped in for the Putin, which is not what we want,
but we do very well and we're getting peace in
the region and peace in the world. That much I
can tell you.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
I don't know if you're aware of this, but I
am a premier talk show host, which is a great honor.
This is a great team, great leadership.
Speaker 3 (11:36):
That's because you have tremendous ratings.
Speaker 4 (11:38):
By the way, today they're up like a rocket ship.
I can you know that.
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Clay and Buck have done a terrific job. You can't
replace Russe Limba, but they've done a terrific job and
what they've created Sean Hannity, Glenn Beck and others. I
could deal with how you favored Sean over me, but
I got word that you're bringing Clay Travis on Air
Force one to the NCAA Wrestling Championship and not me.
I gotta tell you it hurts. It hurts.
Speaker 4 (12:03):
Well. I tell you what, Pizza Boy.
Speaker 3 (12:05):
Whatever doors are not open for you right away, bigger
and better and stronger and more golden doors are going
to open for you in the future. So perhaps you
look at it you say, maybe it's not my time right,
maybe it's not my com or maybe.
Speaker 4 (12:22):
Maybe there's something better. You know, I never doubt it.
Speaker 3 (12:24):
There's always something bigger and betner in your future. So
while you're not coming to wrestling, you see that. I
knew you were it into it, but that was a
fake news pressure.
Speaker 4 (12:33):
That's something that Ingre Gallas, who looks.
Speaker 3 (12:36):
Like Scott wrestler, right, she looks like stt wrestling, Uh
something she would ask me.
Speaker 4 (12:41):
But I know you're doing it, and you're nice. You're
a great guy.
Speaker 3 (12:44):
And by the way, your ratings are tremendous. We were
looking at you for vice president. You remember that, I do,
and then we picked JD because.
Speaker 4 (12:52):
We need you in this.
Speaker 3 (12:53):
If you're my vice president, who the hell is going.
Speaker 4 (12:55):
To run your morning show? We can't do it.
Speaker 3 (12:58):
So we have to keep you because you do it
a fantastic job in this role with beautiful writings.
Speaker 4 (13:03):
I can yeah, yeah, no, And I don't.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Know understand it. We've been we were going over him
yesterday and it just it appears as though they only
listen Friday for fifteen minutes. I don't know what it
has to do there.
Speaker 4 (13:12):
You have hend of the Chief.
Speaker 1 (13:14):
He's the one we all say hell too. He has
the power because he takes a shower. It's Friday, and
that was forty seven, mister President, thank you so much
for your time.
Speaker 3 (13:24):
Thank you, pitchboy.
Speaker 4 (13:25):
You're wonderful.
Speaker 3 (13:26):
You're a wonderful person.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
And we will talk to you next week.
Speaker 1 (13:29):
All right, Love it as always, uh Friday with forty seven.
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(13:52):
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of mind, It's your Morning show with Michael. I'm thinking
(15:01):
about making an executive decision. Okay, what's that? Well, I
kind of think the sounds of the day are so so,
and I got two stories I haven't been able to
get to and I only have one more segment to
get to them. Right. People need to see the dilemma
the Democrats are in in the midterm election, and Mike
Johnson is targeting some of those territories where Harris barely
(15:24):
where the congressman or woman who was running in those
districts barely survived Kamala Harris. And if we get the midterms,
even with higher support for Donald Trump, you would think
they'd be vulnerable. I don't know. I'm thinking about going
through those And then we have a great survey that
was done by Pew Research, things like when to get married,
(15:46):
best age to get married, best age to retire that
I found fascinating. What's everybody think of bumping sounds the
day to day? Unless any listeners used to talk back
about it and say, no hounds the day, just how's
the day? I may bump it. For these two stories,
I want to get to them all right. Trump administration
move forward. That executive order plans to dismantle the Department
of Education. That doesn't mean dismantled public school, just the bureaucracy,
(16:09):
waste and control from inside the Beltway. The State Department
insists Russia and Ukraine are just a breath away from
a full cease fire. Israel's back on the ground with
ground troop activity in the Gaza. A Georgia man that
was held in Afghanistan for over two years has been released.
We had a fire at London's Heathrow Airport that caused
an electrical substation and widespread outage, not just for London
(16:32):
but for the airport itself. That will disrupt air traffic
throughout the day for much of the world. Quite frankly,
not I want to talk about who's at the fire
or what their intent might have been. And then we've
got Alex Ovechkin moving one goal closer to Wayne Gretzky's
all time record. That's going to sting. That'll be an
end of an era. And I got out of the
(16:54):
first half of round one with just one blemish. Got
too cute picking Utah State. But other than that, I
had all the other upsets and all the other favorites.
How's your bracket doing. We'd love to hear from you,
and we'll have those scores for you coming up next.
Speaker 4 (17:09):
Hi, my name is fern Aaron and my morning show
is Your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your Morning Show is heard live
from five to eight am Central, six to nine am Eastern,
three to six am Pacific on great radio stations like
News Radio eleven ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk
five point fifty k FYI, and Phoenix, Arizona Freedom one
oh four seven in Washington, d C. We'd love to
have you join us live in the morning, even take
us along on the drive to work. But better late
(17:42):
than never enjoyed the podcast. Michael, this is Richard from Georgia.
Speaker 4 (17:46):
I heard the President say, you're delivering each of the day.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
I've lost one with sheees.
Speaker 4 (17:51):
And one with everything on it. I'll supply with.
Speaker 3 (17:53):
Great Michael Bath, acceptive decision and lou forward.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
Well I am. I've made the decisions. By the way,
would you like red pepper, Barmejian cheese or a side
salad with that pizza? Thirty five minutes after the hour,
it's Friday. Just a brief break to talk about what's
happening in the world, and then we'll get right back
to basketball. If you're just waking up. We were going
to do sounds of the day here, but I'm making
an executive decision on a couple of these topics. So
(18:19):
believe it or not, the twenty twenty six midterms are
probably in conference rooms and in grasstops. Money bundling world
has already begun. It'll be in full swing by the
end of summer, and it proves to be a very
interesting one. Now, if there's one vulnerability in the rights perspective,
(18:42):
it's they got to grow the majority in the House.
Now the Democrats are in disarray. Sound of the Day
would have just been another demonstration of that, even Carvel saying,
I don't even know what this party's doing, and you're
gonna have a crazy showdown. It's going to start in
the midterms, but I think it's really going to come
to the forefront in the twenty eighth presidential race, and
(19:04):
that is that war within the Democrat Party with the
extreme left. So they lack a messenger, a message. They're
in obstruction mode, and they look foolish, quite frankly now,
very violent and extreme, and that is going to be
the mood and the temperature heading into the midterms. Meanwhile,
the House Speaker Johnson, he's looking to expand that slim
(19:26):
majority he has. When you look at this and Red
did a great job, this was going to be a
formal journey of discovery Democrat held districts, and there's a
way to look at Like in California, Adam Gray is
the incumbent. His margin of victory in twenty twenty four
was zero point one percent. Trump won that district by
(19:48):
five point four percent. That's a district that's a problem
for the Democrats because the question is if Donald Trump
was a five point four in the midst of all
the law fair and nonsense of the election, narrativization, cabal
of the media, and so on, and he still carried
(20:10):
that district by five point four how do you think
that district feels about him now? And I know there's
gonna be some on the on the left side of
the Democrat Party. They're going to believe all these false
narratives in the matrix that he's just deporting innocent people,
he's shutting down public education, he's a tyrant, he's got
a co president that wasn't elected. And but for most
(20:34):
we do this issue by issue by issue. The Democrats
are on the wrong side of the issue. America wants
the border secure, they want laws enforced, they want waste eliminated,
corruption revealed and removed. That's a real problem. District in California,
(20:54):
Great Wins was zero point one percent edge in a
Trump up five place LUs percent district. How worse is
that going to look in a year and a half
or even tran in district forty five where he won
by zero point two percent, and that was a district
Terrorist carried by one and a half percent. That's probably
gonna look worse. Or Maine where Jarrett Golden won by
(21:19):
zero point six percent in a district that Trump won
by nine percent. That's probably feeling more like double that
Trump eighteen percent heading into this next one. In Ohio,
Capture won by zero point six percent. Well, Mars's gonna
have a tough time. That was in a district Trump
carried by six point seven percent a year ago. What
(21:41):
might that look like today? Don Davis in North Carolina
won by one point seven percent and a district Trump
carried by three percent, but I'll bet it's more like
ten to twelve percent. And we could go down the list.
There's a laundry list of these examples, from New York
(22:01):
to California to Washington to Florida, New Jersey to Texas
to Michigan, Indiana, Nevada, Virginia. Just digging through these numbers
in these vulnerable districts that Trump carried or narrowly lost
a year ago, and how different America feels about Trump today. Boy,
(22:26):
never mind, the Democrats need to find a messenger. They
need to find a message. They're playing a dangerous game
of obstruction and dying on hills. They can't win. DEI
transgendered in women's sports, the border or government waste and overspending. Boy,
(22:46):
things look rough for them come midterms. Meanwhile, CNN released
because you're all in the spirit of brackets right now
with basketball, they did a presidential bracket. The joke of
it is and it's interactive. I'll make it available on
my Facebook ball if you want to do it. The
seatings are ridiculous, like they got Kamala Harris the number
(23:06):
one seat she is not. In fact, she's polling in
last place and they're all losing to none of the above.
But it's fun when you play it. And when I did,
I end up with Wes Moore and Ronnie Manuel and
the Democrats semi final, and I actually think that's the ticket.
What I don't know is which one's going to be
on top. And we did that in our journey of
(23:30):
discovery in the Platinum Card hour. But you better get
used to AOC. She's the new Bernie Sanders, and Bernie
Sanders was the party's choice in twenty sixteen, even though
the Party force Tillery. He was the choice in twenty twenty,
even though the party forced Biden. She will get a
good thirty three percent of the vote, and then the
(23:50):
other percentage of the votes will be divided primarily with
Wes Moore, probably Josh Shapiro, and I think Ram Emmanuel
will rise to be a pretty big play and here
Pete will start out pretty well. So AOC is going
to be around. I don't ever losing till the Elite eight,
but it's a fun bracket to do, and it's interesting.
I don't buy the way they have the seeds. I
(24:14):
think it might end up being Vance and Rubio, but
the way they did the brackets, I ended up with
Vance and DeSantis, and that's that's my other pick to
click what the ticket will be. I don't know what
Arkansas would bring to the table to be enough to
have Sanders make her way all the way to the ticket.
(24:36):
But you know, a fun, silly, stupid CNN game filled
with their bias of the way they see to decide,
you really end up with what twenty twenty eight I
believe is going to look like more in Emmanuel versus
Vance and DeSantis, or maybe Vance and Rubio anyway, play that.
It's fun. It's on your on the CNN and I'll
(24:57):
put it on my Facebook. Well, if you want to
do it, you'll probably enjoy it. And then I just
loved We did a featured story today on Tesla and
I walked through all of what they did in twenty
twenty and prior to twenty twenty, and I'm telling you
this is the tip of the iceberg. They're going to
do far more so, just as they did the autonomous
zone in Seattle, just as they were doing what Kamala
(25:19):
called and Biden called good trouble, burning cities, burning cop cars, looting,
there was no consequence. Now you have the extreme left
getting violent and destructive again because they're the party of insurrection,
and they planned an insurrection in twenty twenty. I Biden
didn't win. They're going to do it again, and you're
(25:40):
seeing it start a year in with Tesla being the target.
But Pambodi was our winner of the day for reminding
them the days of committing crimes without consequence have ended.
There's a new sheriff in town. It won't play out
the same way. And then there was this great poll,
which by the way, is ridiculous just in the question itself,
(26:02):
Like when you ask a question and Pew did. What's
the best age to get married? That is an individual question.
I can tell you for me thirty five. I wasn't
ready in my teens or twenties. There are some who are.
But about a half of the American people say there
(26:23):
is no best age to get married. I gotta tell
you I was impressed. Rarely in a survey does the
American people wisely answer? Depends on the person. If you
start giving them age choices, twenty three percent said twenty
five to twenty nine. Remember, with the social dilemma and
media and growing up on phones, these ages are going
(26:44):
to be later, I think for my generation, for me
after thirty, for my kids, I hope they don't even
come to me before thirty because we change so much.
We don't know who we are. We're not who we're
going to be until thirty. Let alone choose who we're
(27:05):
going to be a width, but the top on the
list if you give an age twenty five to twenty nine,
I think they're wrong. I think the age is going
to get older. It's going to get closer. One in ten,
say getting married between the ages of twenty and twenty
four is ideal, and a similar share said thirty to
thirty four. I guarantee you it's thirty to thirty four.
For the next generation, it's a very immature. They're going
(27:27):
to develop late because of growing up on a phone
and isolated. They're not having human interactions, let alone the
kind of human interactions and experience you need to make
a marriage work. You might be herself. What was the
best age to have your first child? Mine was forty
That's a little late, I'll admit, but we had some
fertility issues and had to wait on a miracle from
God in his perfect timing. The consensus was kind of
(27:51):
there again, there is no best age to have a
first child, ready or not. The child will come and
you'll get ready. But twenty eight percent set between twenty
five and twenty nine. Best age to buy a home
twenty five to thirty four. Oh only if Donald Trump
can achieve making America great again. I fear the next
(28:11):
generation may not even be able to achieve the dream
of a single family home detached. Best age to retire.
I like how America says sixty five to sixty nine.
My wife is a few years younger than me. So
I'm going to go all the way to seventy just
so she can get the full retirement after I pass
away from the stress of providing or the life that
I've provided. Or as I explained it to my wife,
you know how when people go to an all inclusive
(28:33):
resort and they get like the wristband, and it's like
the greatest week of their life. They can do whatever
they want, eat whatever they want, drink whatever they want,
get whatever they want, and the band is just free.
I said, that's kind of the life I've provided for you.
That's why you look young and I look worn out.
So I'm going to work till seventy, enjoy a good
five years of golf and travel, and then I'll settle
(28:54):
into the nursing home around seventy six. But no, America
thinks somewhere in your sixties is the overwhelming number one answer.
And if you pinpointed sixty five to sixty nine, all
in all, I was shocked by two things. I don't
know what Red's perspective was on. It was how smart
America was. You can't come up with these things. They're individual.
Some people are mature enough they know who they are,
(29:15):
They're who they're going to be. They find the right
person and they're ready to be married at twenty me
was not trustworthy TI Lapter thirty. But I thought it
was fascinating how America got it right on retirement, marriage,
children and everything. You don't think we're getting smarter, do you.
We're finally waking up in America. I think our kids
(29:36):
are smarter. I do too. Anyway, that was in lieu
of Sounds of the Day. I just thought those stories
were my three favorite stories of the day. This is
Your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono on the air
and streaming live on your heeartradio app, which might explain
Indiana because I don't know if a station in Indiana
(29:56):
that we're on. But Randy's listening with this story.
Speaker 5 (30:00):
Michael, this is Randy from Greenwood, Indiana. iHeart listener. I
married my wife at eighteen. We grew up from nursery
in church. I knew from the day I've met her.
We went to kindergarten, we went to high school, great school.
We just celebrated our fifty first wedding anniversary and going strong.
(30:21):
So it does work, true love. We've had our troubles
but we've made it. We're doing well. What a great story.
Thank you for sharing it. Ready, Yeah, for me, I
knew the minute I walked into a room and Andrew
was thereyone. Oh there goes my fun, there's my wife.
So for me, the right age was thirty five because
that's when God chose for Andrew to walk into my.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
Life, you know. And for him it was in school.
But it was fascinating that America got that you can't
put an age on It depends on the individual when
they're ready, when they meet the right person. That was fun.
Speaker 4 (30:55):
All right.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
We got some going on at Heathrow. A fire at
an electrical sub station which caused a widespread power power outage.
It's going to disrupt things in flight, not just at
the airport in London but around the world. Who set
the fire, why it's led to mass power outages. Roy
O'Neil is here to talk about something completely different. But
let's start with that. Rory, what do we know, what's
(31:16):
the latest on this and why is there no discussion
as to what started the fire?
Speaker 2 (31:21):
Well, we got a quick update from the fire chief
about an hour ago. They're not getting into the police
investigation as to the exact cause at this substation. The
fire is about four miles away from the airport itself,
so there's still a lot of questions about why backup
systems were also affected. What kind of a backup is
that if they're both on the same area, So really
(31:42):
why there was this monumental failure is part of an
investigation just beginning. But more than thirteen hundred flights canceled today.
It probably will spill into tomorrow as well as they
still have yet to restore the power there. It's causing
major disruptions and what is Europe's busiest.
Speaker 1 (32:00):
Airport, you know, I guess we live in a very
suspicious time. And the internet of course feeds this all
the conspiracy theories. I don't know if you've had a chance,
but it's all the waiting you online. Everything from this
was a dry run. This could be some agitators testing
out what they can get done to do something bigger.
And it's just too early to know, right.
Speaker 2 (32:19):
Yeah, and again, plenty of time to figure out exactly
what happened. But I think the disruptions today are so
significant because to have an airport at this size and
on this have a shutdown of this scale. I mean,
we had flights that were halfway over the Atlantic turning
around to go back to the to the too, places
like Washington and New York. And I saw one flight
(32:41):
out of here in Orlando. It ended up landing in
Ireland instead for about an hour. Then it continued on
to Glasgow, Scotland in order to try to get closer
to Heathrow. So it's a lot of it's a logistical
challenge for so many airlines because more airlines I think
use London Heathrow than any other airport in the world.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Royaldel getting the final state today. You know, if I
have a political difference with somebody, it's just that, a
political difference, and it's prioritized.
Speaker 4 (33:11):
You know.
Speaker 1 (33:11):
It still has nothing to do with God, still has
nothing to do with their marriage, has nothing to do
with their kids, has nothing to do with how I
love them, all that stuff. Somehow political differences become about
taking action. And so now we've got people that have
political differences with the role that Elon Musk is playing
with Doze or Doze in general, and now they think
it's acceptable behavior to burn charging stations and burn vehicles
(33:33):
and disrupt and paint and so on and so forth.
What is the FBI? What is the government going to do?
Because Pambody made a crystal clear this is not the
old presidency. You break the law, we will find you
and you will pay the price. We will uphold the law.
So what are they doing?
Speaker 2 (33:51):
Well, we did hear from the Attorney General, as you said,
who said there could be charges of domestic terrorism, which
would bump up what might be considered a local crime
of vandalism to a federal charge of domestic terrorism which
could result in decades in prison. Dan Bongino, the Deputy
director of the FBI, putting some messages out on X
yesterday as well, promising a full investigation to see if
(34:14):
these are connected. Are these lone wolf actors maybe inspired
by the Internet or is there some bigger force behind this?
You know, there is a website out there that can
direct you to the teslaw owner nearest to your home and.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
The cursor's of Malotov cocktail too.
Speaker 2 (34:30):
Cocktail, right, So that's the kind of stuff that's out there.
Who's behind that project and where's that money coming from?
Speaker 1 (34:37):
And the reason we asked that is because what was
there were very sincere Black Lives Matter people that were protesting,
but then we knew that in TIEF and some other
groups were involved to agitate even further, and some of
them were funded. So got to be suspicious of that
and learn from that, but not to be political. You
got to get ahead of this because this could be
the tip of the iceberg. It may be Tesla's today.
Who knows what this could grow in too. By midterms
(35:00):
the next presidential election. We saw things just grow in
intensity with BLM and Antifa and others. We don't want
to relive that again.
Speaker 2 (35:08):
I don't know, certainly not right, and you know they're
trying to get on this, as you said.
Speaker 1 (35:13):
Put it out as quickly as possible.
Speaker 2 (35:14):
Also, those scene this year erupt across Canada as well,
so it's not just here in the States.
Speaker 1 (35:19):
Yeah, I mean you have a right to you know,
not like what DOS is doing. I do like what
DOS is doing. Great, stay away from my car. There's
things I believe that you don't believe. And I don't
go blow up your stuff, all right, Roy, great reporting.
I encourage everybody to listen to the Weekend. I've heard
on iHeart stations across the country and I did get
it right. I love you have a great weekend. We're
all in this together. This is your Morning Show with
(35:42):
Michael Hild Joe Now