Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on Your Morning Show with Michael del Choonha.
Speaker 2 (00:05):
All right, everybody buck alone. Look, you just gotta try harder.
Speaker 1 (00:09):
I'm glad for the opportunity for a brief PA Civics lesson, you're.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Perhaps who's like to be alone with a deteriorating mental
condition politics. I don't know.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
What I really like, and I go ahead, I'll do
my own music.
Speaker 4 (00:27):
Was Jim nance the first eighteenth Rory coming up looking
like he nailed the drive with the one stroke lead.
Jim starts going into all the narratives. An only child
of an impoverished Northern Ireland family, his father only had
enough money for one token Rory probably thinking, Dad, what
(00:51):
about a side hustle. I'm trying to achieve a dream here. No,
he got his thirty balls, he practiced. He's winning this
one for destiny, said, But Jim is doing all of
those narratives, and then all of a sudden he hits
it into the trap and then he bogies and we
go to sudden death.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Suddenly, what about Justin Rose's wife?
Speaker 4 (01:09):
What about the illusive green jacket? For this one of
many siblings? But I want to play for you to
get rid of I gotta get rid of it. Now
that's right, I did it, not you. Here's Jim nance.
Now we're in sudden death. We're back at the eighteen
rory with the great drive again within two yards of
where his original drive was in the final round, only
(01:32):
this time he puts it three feet from the hole.
And here comes the pot for the green jacket for
the career Grand Slam. But notice how Jim is narrating
his way even up to the final.
Speaker 5 (01:46):
The moment shadows symbolic moment, yes, very symbolic. The journey
is taken to get here in the sacrifices, were all
those history down the line I prepared to give forty
minutes ago and this goes.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Is over?
Speaker 2 (02:06):
How Aloy Haw's his masterpiece.
Speaker 4 (02:12):
I I want to tell you the difference between if
you've never played with a professional golfer like I used
to belong at kay Lord Springs here in Nashville, a
links course. It's just absolutely picturesque, one of the most
beautiful courses you'll ever play, very very difficult, and it
(02:33):
was always a struggle for me and a buddy of
mine played with from Nashville, A Shrieker, not Shrieker, Brent Snedeker,
and I said, oh, really, how did Bret Brett play?
And he goes, well, he one putted every green, which
is unthinkable for me on that course. He literally one
(02:56):
putted every single green, shot something like a fifty. I mean,
you don't know how much better they are than scratch.
They're actually so good it's inconceivable. You see, I can
go on a basketball court and I can make a
thirty footer. I can't do anything they do every Sunday.
But mostly what they do, in addition to their ability,
(03:16):
is the way they can control their mind and emotions,
something we can't do every day on a golf course.
What Rory was going through sixteen times in failing and
what he was striving for his entire life, and when
you see the split second that ball hits the hole
and how those emotions release, it was really it was
(03:37):
really a mind boggling human moment. What you saw flying
out of him is what he had been holding in
all day and managing to play. I think my take
on Rory yesterday was he played his best and worst
golf all in the same round over and over again.
And you and I would have a double bogie like that,
(04:00):
and that I have been on a golf course, I've
never twice I have too that I was like maybe
two overpower after fourteen, and my wife called with some
troubles at home. Double boge, double bogie, triple bogue, double boge,
single bogi, triple bogie.
Speaker 2 (04:15):
That's how it ended. That's how mental the game is.
Speaker 4 (04:18):
His double bogie and d Chambeau just flies in front
of him heading to hoole three.
Speaker 2 (04:23):
Would it cause most people to cave?
Speaker 4 (04:25):
He comes back, then he caves again, then he comes back,
comes back, then ends up in sudden depth and comes back,
and then you see all that. If you've never watched
the video of the minute the ball goes in the
hole and the physical emotional reaction, and when you're watching
it next time you watch it, think that's what he's
been holding in all while he was doing these extraordinary things.
Speaker 2 (04:47):
You were watching whoa has his master poose?
Speaker 4 (04:51):
And that's why we had somebody that was critical of
he wasn't high firing and talking to people on his
long walk. I was a I'm rad he wasn't gonna
be able to make it to the building. There was
so much emotion it looked like a panic attack, almost
it was just absolutely extraordinary. Look, Roy McElroy, not to
make a mountain out of a mole hill is in
(05:11):
a very elite group right now. He is now one
of great golf's greatest golfers. And only Tiger Woods, Jack Nicholas,
Gary Player, Ben Hogan and Jean Sarason have achieved what
he has. That puts you in a pretty special place.
I don't know, I've got the the latest Harry Enton
(05:32):
on the shocking numbers, I got the late.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
I don't even know why we do. Jasmine Crockett clips.
Speaker 4 (05:38):
That's like if a tree falls in the forest doesn't
make a noise, I'm gonna do Peter Peter Navarro real quick.
If Donald Trump is playing chess, if it's a mess,
Peter Navarro is the problem. If it's chess, Peter Navarro
is the solution. And here's Peter Navarro on NBC's Meet
the Press defending its chess not a mess.
Speaker 2 (06:01):
Listen.
Speaker 6 (06:01):
We had really good news on the inflation front. Both
the producer Price Index, which the Hotel Prices Consumer Price
Index had the lowest print since the fall of twenty
twenty three.
Speaker 2 (06:12):
Really good news and nobody expected that.
Speaker 6 (06:15):
And the reason why that kind of thing's happening is
because the Trump policies on other fronts, with oils down
to sixty one dollars a.
Speaker 2 (06:22):
Barrel, okay.
Speaker 6 (06:23):
But the other thing, and this is like should have
been in that little package you had at the beginning.
The Congress passed the resolution, the Budget Resolution, which lays
the ground work for having the biggest broadest tax cut
in American history before August.
Speaker 2 (06:40):
Now, what does that mean.
Speaker 6 (06:41):
What does it mean for both recession and inflation. It
means that we're going to have a debt neutral tax
cut financed by tariff revenues that's going to stimulate growth.
It could be worth as much of a point and
a half in terms of GDP growth. At the same time,
it's deflation, not inflation. It's unlike the Biden fiscal measures,
(07:04):
which were just pure debt driven.
Speaker 2 (07:06):
So there's really good news here.
Speaker 6 (07:08):
And I predicted fifty thousand on the down, predicted a
broad based SMP rally. I don't even know this person,
but it was seven AI stocks that pulled up the
S and P five hundred during the Biden years.
Speaker 2 (07:20):
That's not gross and yet all right, So that's that
side of it.
Speaker 4 (07:27):
Now the chess would indicate that it's not one isolated
thing or the other. It's removing these trade barriers, it's
leveling the playing field, it's isolating China. It's getting the
tax cuts. It may even be ultimately using the tariff
(07:47):
revenue to maybe even look at dramatically lowering going from
dramatically lowering federal taxation to eliminating it. Is it chess
or is it mess? Time will tell it, really will.
I don't know how much of this one. This one
has the you know what bomb in it.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
I better not do it.
Speaker 4 (08:11):
But we spent a lot of time. This is the safest.
It jumps around, and it's not the best. But Bill
Maher reported on his show about his visit to the
White House with Donald Trump. Here's how it sounded, but dinner.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
It was set up by my friend Kid Rock first
good Sign. Before I left for the Capitol, I had
my staff collect and print out this list of almost
sixty different insulting epithets that the President has said about me.
I brought this to the White House because I wanted
him to sign it, which he did, which he did
(08:50):
with good humor. And I know, as I say that
millions of liberal sphincters just tightened.
Speaker 4 (08:56):
Oh, and I read the comments earlier in the five
o'clock hour. They were tight, and then one from the
Washington Post reporter even attacked him for it, and he
put him in his place.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
But here's Bill Maher reporting on how the visit went.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
So no, I didn't go.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Maga, and to the President's credit, there was no pressure too.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
Just for starters. He laughs. I'd never seen him laugh
in public, but he.
Speaker 3 (09:24):
Does, including it himself, and it's not fake. At one
point we were walking through his amazing it is an
amazing tour of the whole house, and I don't remember
exactly what we were talking about, but it must have
been something with the twenty twenty election, because I know
he used the word lost, and I distinctly remember saying, wow,
I never thought.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
I'd hear you say that. He didn't get mad. He's
much more self aware and he lets on in public. Look,
I get it.
Speaker 3 (09:52):
It doesn't matter who he is at a private dinner
with a comedian. It matters who he is on the
world stage. I'm just taking as a positive that this
person exists, because everything I've ever not liked about him
was I swear to God absent, at least on this
night with this guy. Bob kid Rock told me the
(10:12):
night before, he said, if you want to get a
word in edgewise, you're gonna have to cut him off.
Speaker 5 (10:16):
He'll just go on.
Speaker 1 (10:17):
Not at all.
Speaker 3 (10:18):
I've had so many conversations with prominent people who were
much less connected, people who don't look you in the eye,
people who don't really listen because they just want to
get to their next thing, people whose responds to things
you say just doesn't track, like what. None of that
with him, and he mostly steered the conversation too.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
What do you think about this? I know your mind
is blown, so's mine. He goes on and on. Look,
the bottom line is.
Speaker 4 (10:49):
He found the president not to be the devil, not
to be a crazy boogeyman, and that you can be
with somebody and have disagreements and you don't have to
hate them. And it begs the question in America, could
(11:10):
we ever return to where if we don't agree on
and it's not we agree on most of the things
we agree on, but we focus on any one thing.
I think it was somebody from Saint Louis called in
earlier and said, think about this moment There was a
time you'd be canceled if you said something good about
(11:30):
Donald Trump. Now he's got a lot of grief, he's
getting for it. But what if it ends as a
role model that it's okay to disagree without demonizing and hating.
Speaker 1 (11:43):
Miss a little, miss a lot, miss a lot, and
will miss you. It's your morning Show with Michael del Churno.