Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day we're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty k f YI
and Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety k e X in
Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us
a part of your morning routine. We'd love to have
you listen live. But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
And I say, if they're ryan functioned, this and mis demeanor,
(00:22):
it's behind them. It is in it, boys, Yes, sir,
it is well. And I say, by the power invested
in me these boys, is hey, my pardon.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
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 Odell charm.
Speaker 1 (00:51):
You know, I'm focused, energized, delighted to be with my audience.
Wake them up, huh, allow them to feel lovedppreciated and formed.
Speaker 3 (01:01):
But I have no idea what that meant was.
Speaker 1 (01:03):
From the old brother Where aren't they soundtrack?
Speaker 3 (01:06):
But why would that be for Red?
Speaker 4 (01:09):
Red wanted to hear it yesterday when we were talking
about all of the signal stuff.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
I gotta start listening to you too when you talk
red and I have our own CHET channel going by
the way, if you haven't, if you haven't gone back
and watched you know, there's some things you go back
and you watch movies, you're gonna have to start that
sounder again. This is like an unofficial start to the show.
But brother thou, it's brother? Where art thou?
Speaker 3 (01:35):
Right? Oh brother? Oh brother, where art thou?
Speaker 1 (01:41):
Some movies don't age well, Like I don't know when's
the last time you've tried to watch Animal House? It
doesn't age well, Hollywood Knights. I tried to, you know,
because I passed things on to my son generationally, and
we were like twenty minutes in, I'm going nick, I apologized,
it's just in.
Speaker 3 (01:58):
Ah, well, I don't know what happened to this one.
Speaker 1 (02:01):
Now you put on airplane and you'll be in stitches.
But that movie holds well, and I just wonder if
people would get that kind of comedy today. That's why
I loved the movie We you Know, You're Cordially Invited.
I thought it was kind of a throwback to comedies past,
one of those really smart, brilliantly.
Speaker 3 (02:22):
Written and that's kind of how Old Brother wore Art
thou is?
Speaker 1 (02:26):
And if you haven't watched it in a long time,
and some of you are young enough, you may have
never watched it, and you know, you.
Speaker 3 (02:31):
Know it's clean.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Wouldn't have if we didn't have Old Brother where art though?
Speaker 3 (02:35):
What you that's right? That starts from? We got a
lot of Old Brother where art thou in there.
Speaker 1 (02:44):
I remember there was a time I was thinking of
finding some kind of old Brother where art thou music
to be our theme song. Uh, somebody had asked me
and sent a voice message, and I don't know how
it got to battle. Then it got from Battle to
me wanting to know what our opening song is, and
I was beieve it or not. Well, you know, I
do these things for the Platinum card listeners, so I
(03:08):
wanted to do. It's only because during my six month
non compete I had a lot of time on my hands,
and one of the movies I really binged was Flight
with Denzel Washington, Which.
Speaker 3 (03:19):
Is why I can pretty much do.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
I literally could do the I could do Feast of
Seven Fishes and Flight word for words, start to start
to credits, do the role, do the role. I love
the way you do Denzel's role.
Speaker 3 (03:30):
I'm gonna roll it.
Speaker 1 (03:32):
So anyway, but you know that one of the songs
is I'm all right and I love Joe Cocker, So
you know, then you get the whole thing. Well, if
you're gonna use it over and over again, you have
to pay for it, which that was originally gonna be
our theme feeling.
Speaker 3 (03:45):
All right, oh.
Speaker 1 (03:48):
Not feeling the good manse was gonna be the theme
to this show. So you know, then you have to
pay and all that other stuff. So we finally had
David Sinati, who does Christmas in America, has I know
you love that one band that performs here in Nashville.
They're just like the all star band members from Everybody's
the tour smoking section, and that's kind of how David's
(04:10):
band is, and they're just spectacular, and so they just
created a song that kind of had a you know,
Joe cockery feel where that came from.
Speaker 3 (04:19):
Yes, we own this song.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
Because I so then the guy, the guy's wanting to know, Hey,
man really love Michael Show and I really love that
he sounds like he's an artist. I really love that song.
Speaker 3 (04:29):
I've been listened to.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
I'm trying to figure out what it is, and I
couldn't tell him what the name of it is. Maybe
I guess I could pass it on to David. David play,
so play the intro again. This is really David and
I had no idea.
Speaker 2 (04:42):
Starting your morning off, right.
Speaker 1 (04:44):
But I don't know what a new way of tour way.
It's from Blues Brothers, right, I mean, well, it's similar.
Speaker 3 (04:50):
It's got that feel to it. But yeah, morning show anyway,
But we'll.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Start for real time eleven minutes after the offer, just
waking up. Welcome to Thursday, the twenty seventh of March.
President Trump down playing the signal group chat. You know,
one of the things that you will We're gonna talk
more about this again, David and I is gonna be back.
Is it embarrassing? Was a mistake, yes, But I do
kind of like the way Donald Trump handled it. You know,
(05:14):
we're gonna figure this out. Is this signal's fault, is
this green Berg's fault. Is it one of my guy's fault.
We're gonna figure that out. But bottom line is it
didn't hurt anything. It was a very successful air strike,
you know, And that's why you know, people and I
don't like to play us versus them. But that's why
a lot of people come back with and you want
to compare this a successful air strike and an oops,
(05:38):
some guy got on the on the thread to what
happened to the Biden administration in Afghanistan. So the president
finds the right way to do that. You don't bring
up Afghanistan. You say it was a very successful air
strike and we'll learn from it, and you move on.
That's the one thing that ultimately you have to arrive at,
no matter which side you're on, us or them, presuming
(06:04):
it never happens again. And I assure you, if it
happens again, there's gonna be some firings. But in between
all of that, there becomes this big question. And I
think we asked it yesterday, and for whatever motive yesterday,
I think the examples.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
I used was.
Speaker 1 (06:24):
That's why I keep my notes. I can't remember exactly
what I said. I don't think that much of myself.
Could it be to distract you from the accomplishments of
the tentative ceasefire in Russia? Could it be to do
what they couldn't do in the nominating hearings? And that is,
you know, somehow trick the Republicans in firing Hegseth, get
(06:47):
rid of Hegseth. And then you could add to that today,
could this be get Checki Schumer off the hot seat?
Nobody's talking about Checki Shumer anymore? And the answers It
could be all the above. But at the end of
the day, it really is this. Is this a big
deal to the left and to the Democrats? I think,
as Red would want me to say it, they got
(07:08):
nothing to offer, so they're just gonna play up this
mistake or almost even worse, is this all designed.
Speaker 3 (07:21):
To be a.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
Big Democrat party and of course at their Cabald table,
their shills, big legacy media issue, But it doesn't mean
all that much to the people. I mean, that's kind
of what I'm sensing now, you know, and talk radio
(07:42):
can be a part of that. You know, Red's this
is his you know, not his first go around into
but it's his first go round into radio presentation of
his gifting. And we go through cycles there are sometimes
I have often said this, this is just kind of
inside platinum card on You'll know, or at least I
(08:03):
know the difference between a good talk show host and
a bad talk show host. A good talk show host
best show sounds like this, and his worst show sounds
almost identically like this. There's just not a lot of difference.
And where it really shines is there are some days
there's nothing to talk about, and if a talk show
host was honest with you said, you know what, this
(08:23):
is a good day to turn off your radio and
go help your kids get ready for school, make a memory.
You're not going to miss anything, or go put up
when is the last time you listen to Elo? They're terrific.
Go listen to ELO. Today's not one of those days,
by the way, but it but a good talk shost
You'll never feel that way a week talk show host.
(08:44):
They need content and they need the news to drive
it because they don't have anything to say on their own.
So you know, it's not fair to say, well, ab NBCCBS,
everybody's on this. Fox is all over a talk radio
is all over it. And so at the end of
the day, while we're talking about this, we're not talking
(09:04):
about the tariffs, or we're not talking about the ceasefire
in Russia and Ukraine. So you kind of become a
part of the problem too. But I just sit here
just in pure conversation. Is this a big media deal,
a big political deal, but a no biggie at all
to the American people. I mean, at the end of
(09:27):
the day, what are we going to do? Oh, we
never should have bombed those who thies? Where you're going
with this? Do you really think this administration is incompetent
over one group text accidental member. I mean, I could
do a whole show on all my my texting Faul pause.
(09:52):
I mean, it's starting to feel like to me it's
a much bigger deal to the media, and it's a
much bigger deal to the Democrat talking heads than it
is to any of the American people. So really, how
big of a deal is this? But I guess they'd
(10:14):
rather us talk about that than Chucky Schumer. I guess
they'd rather us talk about that than NPR and PBS
before Congress. Basically, you know, ABC, NBCCBS, New York Times,
Washington Post, CNN, MSNBC. They're all paid operatives of the
Democrat Party. The difference is with NPR and PBS, they're
(10:36):
using your money.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
To pay for it.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
I mean, if that was to distract you from that,
well played, I guess speaking of Chuckie Schumer. Not really
polls a plenty today, but two pretty significant polls and
one that might shock you. Chuckie Schumer is not as
unpopular as you think. In fact, this will just go
go to show the difference between narratives and reality. The
(11:04):
narratives are Chucky Cave, we gotta fight, He's got to go.
And of course the socialist Democrats they want it to
be AOC that runs against him and takes them out
so they can set her up in a presidential run
because they're trying to take over the Democrat.
Speaker 3 (11:18):
Party not need it. You will be shocked.
Speaker 1 (11:26):
Not only is Chucky Schumer not as unpopular as you think,
he is strikingly and decidedly hailed for the Continuing Resolution decision,
and not just by all you can imagine eighty percent,
so I think was seventy percent of Republicans of course
(11:46):
supported his decisions, but even by Democrats overwhelmingly. I don't
like the guy. I think he's a goofball. But Chuck Schumer,
if he would read the polls and stop watching television,
would see he's just swell. Do you know that it's
(12:07):
opening day of baseball today. We have a little tradition
around here. Yes, we mark the opening day of baseball
with an address, an address that answers the question, in
a day where football is America's pastime action, all the
things that have shifted, why would anybody still love baseball?
(12:31):
So slow, so boring, and, as you'll find out in
our annual Baseball Opening Day Address, because baseball is so
much more than a game. David and I is going
to be join us Rory and John Decker keeping an
eye on our big stories. One Chance to Live Today,
March the twenty seven, Thursday, Make it count. We're all
(12:51):
in this together. Let's begin understanding together. This is your
morning show. I'm Michael del Jornam. Hey, what if there
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Speaker 2 (14:26):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.
Speaker 1 (14:30):
Jeffreys had what I had for about a month. You know,
I was dying on the air for a month. Nobody cared.
But he gets a slight cough, so anyway, he's got
all these pulled muscles in his back from coughing, which
we've all experienced after bronchitis or a flu. So, you know,
I to always you think you're almost done, because what
I do is I wait for it to be over,
and then a massage needs to get all that out
(14:51):
because that's all your muscles from, you know, pushing. You know,
a cough is a pretty traumatic thing the body's doing.
Speaker 3 (14:57):
Yes, it is.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
And so I said to him, I said, you know, well,
if you're done, and if you think you're over it,
go get a massage. That'll help with all those eggs.
What time do you want me to come? Hover? Just like, Wow,
we're not that close to a group, are we?
Speaker 3 (15:12):
We get along? Well, then we can't know, he said,
Is it all the way? A knowledge?
Speaker 1 (15:18):
All right? Top five stories of the day, twenty seven
after the hour.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
Now I really don't have time to do it.
Speaker 1 (15:21):
Executives at NPR and PBS are on the hot seat
during a house doing cheering over public funding for the outlets.
Speaker 5 (15:28):
Georgia Congresswoman Marjorie Taylor Green claim that hardworking Americans are
being forced to subsidize news outlets with a communist agenda
and yours had Katherine Mara and PDS President Paula Krueger
defended their outlets, claiming they both subscribe to the highest
journalistic standards and are not biased both side of the
continued need for millions of taxpayer dollars, noting they are
(15:48):
the only source of news in smaller communities. Mar did
call a report concerning that there are eighty seven employees
that are DC Bureau that are registered Democrats and zero Republicans.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
I'm Mark Newfield.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
We didn't realize that till this hearing. We all know
you're a mouthpiece for the far left. Problem is you're
using our money to do it all right, more than
nine million Americans can see significant declines in their credit scores.
Why because you know, we don't treat our student loan
like we do our mortgage.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
But you better start.
Speaker 6 (16:18):
Delinquent student loans are soon going to start showing up
on credit reports for the first time since the COVID
nineteen pandemic, when borrowers were allowed to pause their payments.
A new report from the Federal Reserve Bank of New
York finds fifteen percent of loanholders are now behind on payments.
I'm tammage for heo.
Speaker 1 (16:34):
Chances the pop legend Johnny Mathis is announcing his retirement
from touring.
Speaker 3 (16:41):
Eighty nine year.
Speaker 1 (16:42):
Old crooner is still on the road and currently on
his Voice of Romance tour. The announcement said due to
matthis's age eighty nine and memory issues dementia Alzheimer's, it
has accelerated his need to retire.
Speaker 3 (16:56):
That's the end of an era.
Speaker 1 (16:57):
His final concert will be May eighteenth in Inglewood, New Jersey.
On the hardwood, it's the so he Heats sixteen, beginning
at six on CBS by You and Bama. That's the
six versus two on TBS True TV at six thirty nine,
number four fourth rank Maryland against one seed Florida at
eight thirty nine, second half of the doubleheader on CBS
(17:18):
four seed Arizona, one seed Duke, and then at TBS
True TV at nine oh nine the Cinderella ten seed
Arkansas versus three seed Texas Tech. Tonight is the Sweet
sixteen and today is the opening day of baseball.
Speaker 3 (17:31):
More on that our address coming up, Missus Patrick from Christiana, Tennessee.
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Dell Jorno. Hi,
I'm Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:49):
We'd love to have you listen every weekday morning to
your morning show live, even take us along with you
on the drive to work. We can be heard on
great radio stations like one oh four ninth The Patriot
in Saint Louis, Our Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville, and News Talk five
fifty k f YI in Phoenix, Arizona. Love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're always grateful
(18:09):
you're here.
Speaker 3 (18:09):
Now enjoyed The podcast.
Speaker 1 (18:11):
Sweet sixteen gets underway tonight. That'll be mostly a doubleheader
on CBS and then TPS and True TV, and then
of course it's opening day of baseball.
Speaker 3 (18:19):
Some you'll be taking that.
Speaker 1 (18:20):
In news wise, President Trump is down playing the entire
Signal group chat mistake hack, whatever it turns out to be.
It reminds everybody the attacks went off flawlessly on the
hoofy targets and we'll learn from this and it won't
happen again. Executives at NPR and PBS got put in
(18:41):
the hot seat for their political bias before Congress, and
Vice President Vance and his wife are changing their plans
for this week's trip to Greenland.
Speaker 3 (18:50):
Will have more on that coming up.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
I was telling you about this this new survey, and
I really think the takeaway is not Chucky Schumer's the
jolly goodfellow, just sometimes and I think signal breach is
one of those we get caught up in these narratives,
and I think talk radio gets caught up in it,
just like the narrative sources on the left and television
(19:14):
in print. But I don't know that it's a real
big deal with the people. I'll give you an example.
Every knife is out and pointed at Chuckie Schumer to
the point where if you were just filling time and
you were just you know, loving the sound of your
own voice, you could talk yourself into this guy's dead meat.
(19:35):
They're gonna run AOC She's gonna defeat him. Then they're
gonna run for breather, you know, all that kind of
theory and conjecture. And then the truth of the matter
is this poll comes out, and what do you do
with this. Clearly no one's happier about signal gate, the
Chuckie Schumer, at least we're not talking about him for
(19:56):
a change. So Rasmus Musen does a pole forty percent
of like the US voters view Schumer favorably, including thirteen
percent with a very favorable impression of him. He's viewed
unfavorably by forty five percent, twenty eight percent very unfavorably.
(20:18):
I ste research for radio for many, many years, and
when we would test our talk show hosts, you'd say, well, you.
Speaker 3 (20:25):
Don't want something.
Speaker 1 (20:26):
You want to know how Rush Limbaugh tested the opposite
of Chuckie Schumer. It would be like thirty three percent
very favorable. There'd be about half of that sixteen percent
very unfavorable. Hate is God's love, hate, a little bit
more love than hate, very little in between.
Speaker 3 (20:48):
So when I look at this and I see.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Thirteen love, twenty eight hate, the forty and forty five
are really unremarkable numbers. It's the love hate. But among
Democrat voters. Now we narrow it down to Democrats fifty
three percent favorability. Sixty five percent of likely voters approved this.
(21:14):
This should just knock you over this morning, and again,
remember why we're doing this. This is the difference between
what narratives make you believe and reality. All Democrats hate
Chuck Schumer.
Speaker 3 (21:28):
He caved to Trump.
Speaker 1 (21:30):
He caved and didn't shut down the government. He's a
he's a.
Speaker 3 (21:33):
He's A.
Speaker 1 (21:34):
He's A. He's A. Sixty five percent of likely voters
approve how Schumer handled the spending agreement, including thirty two
percent who strongly approved. You could actually make the case,
if you don't mind me being dramatic, you think Chucky
Schumer made his final mistake.
Speaker 3 (21:53):
He's out.
Speaker 1 (21:53):
No, Chucky Schumer finally did something everybody loved, and he's in.
That's how different the reality is from narratives. And so
I just begged the question, at what point could that
be true for signal as well? I don't think the
average American gives a crap that whof he's got bombed
ships or at see who cares.
Speaker 3 (22:14):
And for what little interest its do find out how
the guy got on.
Speaker 1 (22:19):
I don't use signal, I use teams, I use zoom.
I don't know if they've got hacked into. I don't
know if he actually got on a list. I don't
know if there's a mole inside the administration that invited
this guy in. I don't know why they're not using
videos and pictures to prove everybody is who there is.
I don't know if they'll ever use it again. I mean,
at the end of the day. The big loser is signal.
How many people are wanting to get on signal today?
(22:40):
I think I'll give teams a try. But look at that.
I mean, wouldn't you have thought Chucky Schumer? Who would
test worse than Chucky Schumer? No, the question is who's
testing higher than Chucky Schumer right now and over the
very thing the left is trying to crucify him for
us by him No, give him a make him king.
Speaker 3 (23:06):
I would have never guessed this.
Speaker 1 (23:07):
Sixty five percent of likely voters approved of how Schumer
handled it, thirty two percent strongly approved. That includes sixty
five percent of Democrats who approve of how he handled it.
We always talk about how out of touch the Democrats
are with the American people. Look at how out of
touch the Democrats are with their own party. Would you
(23:33):
have loved to see Chucky schlumped over because he can't
stand up straight anymore. He's been in a chair so
long his body is taken the shape of a chair.
But can't you see what this half reading? Glasses down
his nose looking down at this?
Speaker 3 (23:44):
Are you kidding me?
Speaker 1 (23:45):
I'm the jolly good fellow, and this is why I'm
always reminding you don't forget the aocs, the Bernie Sanders,
the Elizabeth Warrens, the squad. Their goal is not to
defeat Republicans. First goal is to defeat Democrats, take over
the party. This is their stated goals. This isn't my theory.
(24:07):
Then remove the Electoral College, then dismantled the republic So
their first priority is destroyed the Democrat Party. And for
a while the entire party went along with their narrative
that had the endgame of us sharing in AOC, she's
the heir apparent. I mean, they can't run Bernie and
Elizabeth anymore. Well, at some point, shouldn't we all look
(24:28):
each other in your I and go, well, good luck
with that? Oh AAOC. Apparently this guy's the jolly good
fellow for what he did. And this is not a
vulnerable center. By the way, we're talking about members of
Congress where you can see approval ratings in.
Speaker 3 (24:42):
The twenty.
Speaker 1 (24:44):
Sixty five percent of Democrats approve of his handling, seventy
percent of Republican, sixty one percent of non affiliated voters.
He's a jolly goodfellow for allowing the government to avoid
a shutdown. Forty one percent of likely voters believe Schumer
is valuable leader for the Senate dem Democrats. Thirty six
percent thinks Senate Democrats need to get rid of Schumer.
(25:05):
Twenty three percent are not sure it's not the done deal.
The narrative makes you think most Democrat voters will support Schumer,
with fifty two percent considering him a valuable leader in
the Senator and the Senate, compared to thirty percent of
Republicans and forty percent of unaffiliated. I don't know what
(25:28):
Red thought when he read that, but what I thought
is he would be a very difficult person to beat
in a primary if you could get to a general
election against somebody who's you know, like a Democratic name only.
Speaker 3 (25:46):
Or a you know.
Speaker 1 (25:48):
I don't know what it would take to the feed him,
but it'd be really hard to beat him in a primary,
especially statewide. Thirty seven percent of Whites, fifty six percent
of Blacks, thirty eight percent of Hispanics, and fifty three
percent of other minorities consider Schumer a valuable leader. Again,
there are some chinks in their armor when it comes
to black vote and Hispanic vote. The Hispanic support down
(26:09):
to thirty thirty eight percent Black vote down at fifty
six percent. Those are bad numbers for a Democrat. But
isn't that a shocker? Who to thunk that? That's all
you've heard? And again it's that same dynamic. The left
creates the narrative. They've got PBS, NBR, MSNBC, CNN, ABCNBCCBS,
(26:35):
the talking head shows on the weekend, sixty minute, this
and that, New York Times, Washington Post, they got all
these ways, the Atlantic, and they set this narrative. This
guy's done. He made the biggest political blunder in history.
And not only is it not a blunder, it's his
greatest success story. And not only is he just a
(26:59):
matter of time gone. I mean, I'll bet Chuck Schumer
a week ago was thinking about stepping down. He's probably
reading these numbers. Now.
Speaker 3 (27:05):
What was I thinking?
Speaker 1 (27:09):
He was almost done in by the own narrative of
his own party and the media at his Cabald table.
I thought that was the poll of the day and
reality of the day. But then again, how do narratives
always die? They die of great reality? All right, forty
five minutes after the hour, if you're just waking up
(27:29):
these eye, you on top five stories of the day,
President Trump is putting into action new tariffs on automobiles.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 5 (27:38):
On Wednesday, Trump signed an executive order putting twenty five
percent tariffs on foreign made cars and trucks. He sent
the order aims to increase domestic manufacturing of cars and almoparts.
He added that buyers will be able to deduct the
interest on their car loans if their vehicle was made
in America. Trump claimed the tariffs will bring between six
hundred billion and a trillion dollars into the US within
(27:58):
the first year.
Speaker 1 (27:59):
I Mark Mayfield. President Trump says he could extend the
deadline for the upcoming TikTok ban if he wants to.
Speaker 6 (28:05):
Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Trump also said he might give
China reduction in tariffs if its government approves a TikTok
deal brokered buy America, well.
Speaker 7 (28:13):
It'll be There are numerous ways you can buy TikTok,
and we will find the one that's best for the country.
Speaker 1 (28:19):
For our country, I'm worried about our country more.
Speaker 3 (28:22):
Than anything else.
Speaker 6 (28:24):
TikTok's fate isn't up in the air for months due
to a bill that forces its Chinese owned parent company
Bite downs to sell the app to a non Chinese
buyer or be banned in the US. Vice President Vance
has been working to find a buyer for the app,
but so far there have been no takers. I'm Tammy Trio.
Speaker 1 (28:40):
So he plays the tariff card, and the tariff card
starts looking like a negative and a deterrent, hurting more
than helping. And ultimately all tariffs hurt because they're just attacks.
He hasn't been doing this all along just to get
the TikTok Impossible to solve problems solved? Are we in
the midst of another art of the deal? Hey, the
power ball jackpot has officially crossed a half billion dollar mark.
(29:03):
Let me think for a second. No, I'm still not
going to get one. There was no grand prize winner
last night in the drawing the drive driving the jackpot
now to at least five hundred and fifteen million dollars.
The cash option would be two hundred and forty three million.
But remember this, you have a one in two hundred
and ninety two million chance of ever winding, ever winning.
I'm surprised. I'm not more depressed because I love salt
(29:26):
and I eat a lot of it. It's salt and
often equal depression. Michael Kastner reports.
Speaker 7 (29:32):
Scientists in China say they found a link between high
salt diets and depression like behavior in mice. In a
study published last week, the scientists found that excessive salt
intake can trigger immune responses in the brain that can
lead to behaviors resembling depression. The study says mice fed
with high salt diets displayed heightened anxiety and behavioral despair
(29:55):
like being motionless. They say it's not the first study
the link high salt diets and depression, but it's the
first to offer a potential explanation for that connection. I'm
Michael Cass and don't even get a mouse started about
the bloat.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
I've never seen one of them, but I'll back like
I know what I'm talking about. Marvel Studios is unveiling
the cast for Avengers Doomsday. The studio revealed Chris Hemsworth, Helmsworth,
Anthony Mackie, Paul Rudd, Tom Heatleston are among the stars returning.
It will also announce that original X Men cast members
(30:31):
Patrick Stewart, Kelsey Grammer, Rebecca Romaine, James Marston, oh I
love James Morriston. Alan Cummings will also be joining the MCU.
Robert Downey Junior will also be coming back to MCU,
but as the villain Doctor Doom instead of Iron Men Avengers.
Doomsday to hit the Theatre's May the first of next year,
(30:55):
twenty twenty six. All Right March Madnes Sweet sixteen opening
round six o'clock Tonight, Sesbyubama six thirty nine, Maryland, Florida,
eight thirty nine on CBS Arizona, Duke and at nine
oh nine TBS True TV, Arkansas, the remaining Cinderella a
ten seed versus three seed Texas Tech on the NBA
Hardwood Last night in Cities of Your Morning Show Interest
(31:17):
A squeak by the Lakers one over the Pacers one
twenty one nineteen Clippers beat the nixt one twenty six
one thirteen Sons blown out by the Celtics one thirty
two to one oh two on the Ice one Game
of Interest, the Ducks on five to two over the Bruins.
Birthdays Today, Pop Diva Mariah Carey. Other than all I
(31:37):
Want for Christmas? Is you believe it or not? I no,
I loved hero.
Speaker 3 (31:42):
There is a I didn't even know how she got
to diva status.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
She kind of came out as diva status and she
was a what golly, Tommy.
Speaker 3 (31:51):
Well, when was Mariah Carey's last head?
Speaker 1 (31:54):
I mean, you know share By fifty six, she had
already had the comeback with Believe. I mean, there's this,
I don't I'm removing Diva from the rest of the
show and only the Platinum card will know it. Okay.
Pop singer Mariah Carey fifty six years old, Black Eyed
Peas Fergie fifty. Director Quentin Tarantino is sixty two and
one of my favorite catchers. Former Giant Foster Posey thirty
eight years old. Today on this opening day of baseball,
(32:15):
if it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We are so glad
you were born. And thanks for waking up with your
morning show.
Speaker 2 (32:22):
This is your morning show with Michael del Trono. Hey
like Biley Foudener Laker from all thely's gone on the.
Speaker 3 (32:32):
Last ten years.
Speaker 4 (32:34):
Great morning show, Michael. The hypocrisy of the mainstream media
is stunning. So many stories about President Trump's TIFFs and
the impact on Americans reciprocal tariffs, but they don't have
a single story report of all the foreign countries teriffs
on American products and the impact on our citizens and industries.
Speaker 1 (32:56):
You know, what a brilliant observation. And it goes even
beyond that. You know, it's kind of like Red and
I were talking off the Earth, which is very similar
to what you were kind of talking about on the
talk back while we were doing it, And that is,
you know, how the media plays along with the aocs and.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
Crockets and so on.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
I don't know that any of them would want to
see AOC or Crocket become something and lead I mean,
what direction would they lead this country. They're just agitators,
as I said, you know, and I don't mean this mean,
I'm just being observational. It's like a parasite. How do
you root for the parasite? If it wins, the host
dies and everything dies. But they're not really interested in
(33:42):
what Crockett has to say or where she might take
the nation, or AOC for that matter, if they were
president tomorrow, it'd be a disaster even for them, but
they'll report it because it's agitating the provocative, maybe depending
on what it is, even interesting. They're not interested in
(34:05):
the person or where they would take you. They're just
interested in the entertainment value and the audience that it might.
You know, if you ever watched the movie about Fox, Bombshell,
and clearly there was a highly sexual charged energy in
(34:25):
that building.
Speaker 3 (34:26):
Coming from Roger Rails.
Speaker 1 (34:28):
But down and what makes me sick to my stomach
is if you watch Bombshell and you know it's true,
virtually every big name host and even little name hosts
that you would know maybe here in the local area,
they've all been sued.
Speaker 3 (34:41):
For sexual harassment.
Speaker 1 (34:44):
And yet when you turn it on, it doesn't look
like much has changed, is it. They're still all looking
the same, dressing the same. But there is one explanation
where she's walking the new producer and she's trying to
explain to her, you know what is and what is
in a Fox story? If it will scare your grandmother
(35:10):
and pee off your grandfather, that's a Fox story. It's
all about shock and titaly, shock and tittaly, shock and titaate.
That's the cycle. It's destructive and sometimes even when you're
fighting the other side for doing it, you're in essence
doing it and perpetuating it.
Speaker 3 (35:32):
So it really is a bizarre evil web.
Speaker 1 (35:35):
Great, great observation, but I mean today, just to nail
it in the final ten seconds. Everybody thinks Chucky Schumer
blew it, biggest political mistake in history. He's done, he's
gonna leave, he's gonna lose the Senate seat. Just the opposite.
The reality is, he's got supportive Democrats in most of
America and especially the tune of eighty percent plus for
his decision to support the continuing resolution. Reality is so
(35:57):
different from narratives. Hopefully this show helps you understand those tefences.
Speaker 2 (36:01):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Mintel, journo