Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
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Speaker 2 (00:17):
Starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell charm on
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One, then give you thirty seconds to make a comment,
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A recreational ferry crash and Clearwater, Florida, responsible for one
death and multiple injuries, DEAs has more than one hundred
undocumented immigrants were detained in a Colorado raid. Meanwhile, Ice
Florida law enforcement make nearly eight hundred arrests in a
(01:04):
multi day operation there and two suspects who are arrested
in the Christy Gnome three thousand dollar giche clutch purse
on Easter theft, and they turned out to be illegal immigrants.
And the stock market seems to be up and down,
then back up and maybe a little bit down and
then back up again. But what about gold just to
(01:25):
steady rise. National correspondent Roy O'Neil joins us with that story.
Good morning, Rory.
Speaker 4 (01:31):
The price of an ounce subcure gold is up about
sixty percent compared to where it was early in twenty
twenty four, closing last week above for thirty five hundred
dollars an ounce per a time. It has eased back
off that high, but certainly people have been scrambling toward
gold as there's more talk of a recession ahead, a
little bit more uncertainty about what the tariffs will finally
(01:53):
work out to be as some of those trade deals
are still pending, and concerns that the tariffs could be
in flat area as well. So we've seen a lot
of people exploring gold as an option. I don't want
to sound like William Devane, but yes, that's how this
works that when there's times of things a little bit uncertain,
(02:13):
people flopped the gold.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Well market down, gold up. There is some uncertainty, and
you know, we've had a conversation earlier about the tariffs
and then going through the polls, the president certainly has
kept his promise on the border and the American people
are behind him.
Speaker 2 (02:28):
That hill has been won.
Speaker 1 (02:30):
The economy is still up for grabs, and tariffs are
playing a role in uncertainty, not just in the market
with gold, but also with the perception of how the
president's doing. He may need to pivot, take whatever victories
he can and then move on dot or towards tax cuts.
All right, So not uncommon though. Right market down, gold
goes up. What's the forecast for gold? I would say
it's just a bit.
Speaker 4 (02:49):
It's a pretty rapid swing to have gold go up
about sixty percent in one year. Typically you see slower
moves in gold. That's also why it's a bit more
attractive for investors.
Speaker 2 (02:59):
The forecast. You know, it depends.
Speaker 4 (03:00):
If I'm selling you gold, I'm going to tell you
it's going to be hitting four thousand very soon, right,
But we really don't know, and we'll see how these
tariff moves play out. If we get something that stabilizes
the picture very soon, that could really slow down a
lot of this steep climb.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Let's play the game. Should I size it or melt it?
My wedding ring doesn't fit my big, pudgy fingers anymore?
Do I winend a little bitter melt it down? Only
William Devane knows. Rory's gonna be back in the third hour.
We did make some progress in those around nuke talks
that didn't seem possible, and it does seem to be
some glimmers of hope, Rory. We'll be back with that
(03:37):
story in the third hour. Thanks Rory. All right, something
we've been talking about for quite some time. You know,
I'm not just a simple cave man lawyer. I can
get the big picture, and the big picture is I'm
watching Bernie Sanders, who, let's face it, would have gotten
the Democratic presidential nomination in twenty sixteen if the DNC
(03:59):
didn't rig it for Hi Illery. He'd ha got it
again in twenty twenty if they hadn't got a deal
in South Carolina and rigged it for Joe who knows
if he could have gotten it in this last cycle.
Speaker 2 (04:10):
But Joe hung out. They didn't tell you he was.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
A fraud till after he secured all the electoral votes
in the primary and then just handed it to Kamala Harris.
And now I see him handing the torch of the
Justice Socialist Democrats to AOC. That would suggest that she's
the new face of about twenty six to thirty one
percent of the Democrat party, one that's very active in
(04:36):
the primary process. And now you may even have a
fox in the Henhouse with David Hogg to block any blocks,
although I think they're going to try to kick him out.
And meanwhile, she's raised nearly ten million dollars, So what's
up with AOC. Is she headed to the Senate to
replace Schumer and Crockett's now the new AOC? Or is
(04:58):
she headed for a run for the presidency? And should
the Republicans fear her? Republican strategist Mike Hahn is joining
us right now to discuss this.
Speaker 2 (05:07):
Let's start first and foremost.
Speaker 1 (05:09):
Any question in your mind, Mike, she's the heir apparent
to Bernie Sanders, is the head of this coalition?
Speaker 5 (05:15):
Good morning, AOC is with that question, trying to make
a run for the presidency. The number she's putting up
here are president presidential level numbers. I mean, she did
nine point six million in just the first quarter of
this year from a quarter of a million individual donors,
average donation of twenty one dollars, and not none of
(05:35):
that came from any lobbyists or a corporate pack. So look,
I think this is signaling her growing influence within the
Democrat Party. The fact of the matter is the party
is moving further left and she's the face of that.
Speaker 6 (05:47):
She's no longer the.
Speaker 5 (05:47):
Laughing stock that we thought she was, you know, just
five years ago. She is very a very serious contender.
And yes, Republicans do need to start taking her seriously, because,
like I said, these are presidential level numbers, don't I
work with many congressmen and women on the Republican side.
None of them came close watching this number, so it's
(06:08):
scary stuff. But she needs to be taken seriously.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
But you know what's funny, the Republicans are probably all
laughing at you and me. And by the way, if
the DNC doesn't get involved, she probably would get the nomination.
Speaker 2 (06:20):
I'm not just saying she's going to run for president.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
I'm telling you she could get the nomination if the
DNC doesn't get involved like they did in twenty sixteen
and twenty twenty. And that remains to be seen. But
Republicans are all laughing at this notion. The Democrats are
not laughing. They see it coming and they're scrambling to
figure out how to fix this. For Wes Moore and
Ronnie Manuel and I think the first thing is get
rid of David Hog right.
Speaker 5 (06:42):
Right, Well, well, the last thing AOC wants to get
rid of David Hogg because for folks like him in
the DNC, she's on the road to the nomination as.
Speaker 2 (06:50):
Absolutely, but they got to get rid of her.
Speaker 5 (06:53):
Oh absolutely. But here's my I think in two years
Republicans are going to be scratching their heads saying, well,
how did AOC get here? I mean, not only are
these numbers and saying you mentioned this, she is pulling
massive crowds out in Idaho in red areas with Bernie Sanders.
I mean, these are Trump twenty fifteen, twenty sixteen level rallies.
(07:17):
We can't ignore this type of this type of stuff here.
We have to realize the fact that the party has
moved further to the left, and she's she's the reason why.
I mean, she's been a huge voice, she's had a
huge media platform. She's really awoke in the younger, younger folks.
I mean, I'm a millennial, and you know, people seem
to flock towards her. They feel it's she's not an outsider,
(07:40):
but she's running on an outsider message.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
There is, like you said, there is a glaring difference, right,
all right, So everybody said Toald.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
Trump can't be president.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
Those are some of the greatest montages to watch after
the twenty sixteen election. Everybody that said they didn't take
them serious. You know, it's like the old Gandhi quote.
You know, first they laughed at him, then they mocked him,
then they fought him, then they kind of a thing.
But the notion was it was a joke that Donald
Trump could ever become president. The notion today is it's
a joke to think AOC could ever become president. And
(08:09):
Donald Trump was at least, you know, a business and
a celebrity mogul. She was an ex bartender and a
troublemaker in Congress who said some of the greatest word
salads in the history of word salads. But the Democrat
Party has been looking for a leader. They don't have one.
The people have chosen her. They're going to try to
make you think that people want wes Moore, and they
could still pull this off wes Moore and Romney Manuel.
(08:31):
But look at how it's playing with Rommy Manuel. They're
keeping wes Moore on the sidelines so he's not harmed
by it. But Romney Manuel's talking about, forget the bathroom.
We got to get you know, we got to pivot
back towards the American people. No, the party's saying, we
got to go further left and fight. So there's a
divide in the party, a party that's been at war
with itself for a long time. And the new leader
they've selected first is AOC that makes her the front
(08:55):
runner and a real chance to be the Democratic nominee.
And I don't know how much which the Republicans should
fear it, but I guarantee you the Democrats are fearing
it because they simply can't have a socialist justice Democrat
former bartender be their nominee for president, can they.
Speaker 5 (09:12):
I think we've seen crazy things happen in the Democrat
Party but who knows. Look, whether the party decides who's
the nominee or not, the fact of the matter is
Ram Emmanuel wes Moore. These guys will never put up
numbers like this ever they are, They'll have to read
(09:33):
the exactly they have to Regent sixteen.
Speaker 2 (09:35):
Well, the same, Mike.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
The same was true with Bernie Sanders. Bernie Sanders was
going all over the place, having these big crowds. It
was a grassroots movement within the party and they had
to scramble and make it. Hillary was super delicate. You know,
they've scrambled every time. But with David you got to get.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Rid of David Hope. David Hoes got to go.
Speaker 1 (09:52):
Immediately or he's going to put twenty million extra dollars
to target this movement within the party. And that's a
real problem because he's the vice chair of the DNC.
Speaker 5 (10:02):
Yeah, I think we're heading towards a great divide in
this party. I think in twenty sixteen everyone was kind
of on the same page that Bernie Sanders was crazy.
He had a good, good size support. But this the
socialist movement has grown in the Democrat Party. This is
not a problem that they can ignore anymore. Or Regan
elections so that Bernie Sanders doesn't get in. It has grown,
(10:23):
it has fantasticized, and this isn't going silently. You want
to have some fun, Yeah, let's do it. Let's have
some fun, all right. Mike con is joining US Republican strategist.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
All right.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
So the Democrats go with this, and they go with
AOC and she loses. Well, the socialist justice Democrat movement
is now probably over after that loss. If they spit
and switch with Romney, Manuel and Wes Moore and lose,
then the majority will become socialist. It's already probably in
(10:56):
the thirties, but at that point it'd be fifty. If
she wins. Now you have a socialist nominee, the party
is gone either way. It's a parasite issue where the
parasite will kill the host, and when the host dies.
Speaker 2 (11:08):
The parasite dies too.
Speaker 1 (11:09):
This is the beginning of the end of the Democrat
Party by the end of the decade, I think, no
matter which way it plays, but AOC is coming.
Speaker 2 (11:15):
In fact, she's already here.
Speaker 5 (11:17):
It's a lose lose for them and a win win
for us, I guess. I mean, yeah, the fact of
the matter is that the Democrat Party can't survive.
Speaker 2 (11:23):
It's two.
Speaker 5 (11:24):
It is two differing factions in a party that doesn't
exist anymore. You know. The saying is that this isn't
your Grandpa's Republican Party anymore. It isn't. I mean, there
are two warring factions, and no matter what happens in
the next election, they're head and told to split.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
They have to be Well, what.
Speaker 1 (11:41):
About the Republican Party if presuming Donald Trump is leaving
and doesn't try to I think that would be even
a bigger disaster to pull a stunt for a third term.
But there has to be a successful handoff because I
don't know that this is a red wave or a
red rain. It's an orange wave and an orange rain.
So the Republican Party's future is just as uncertain because
it belongs to Donald Trump, who's leaving. So trump Ism
(12:03):
has to I actually think the Republican parties become the
Reagan Revolution morphed with the Tea Party, morphed with Maga
trump Ism, and that has to be a solidified identity
and through the next to the carrying of the torch.
I would presume it's jade evance, but it could there
could be a window for DeSantis if depending on how
this term finishes, or perhaps even Marco Rubio, but the
(12:26):
future of the party and how it's identified, that's not
an easy course to navigate either.
Speaker 5 (12:33):
Right, Here's the good news that the Republican Party is
quite unified in the sense, you know, when we're looking
at the Democrat Party. But I think that no matter
what happened, I think I think President Trump will leave office.
I think he's just just just joshing around with the media.
I think he'll leave office, and when he does, his
endorsement is going to weigh heavy on who the next
(12:54):
Republican nominee is going to be.
Speaker 2 (12:55):
Well, isn't that an interesting question?
Speaker 1 (12:57):
Mike Back Not to interrupt, but I think Donald Trump
Junior loves JD. Vance and I think Donald Trump does too.
But I think Marco Rubio is Donald Trump's man.
Speaker 5 (13:08):
Not It's not a shot that Marco Ruvio would like
to be president. I mean, he ran in twenty sixteen.
Fact of the matter is, and here's what's good is
that both Rubio and Vance are pretty young dudes. They're
going to have a shot at this in the future,
whether it's next election or you know, even ten years
down the line. So I'm hoping that we could put
(13:29):
aside our differences pick who the better option is. We'll see,
We'll see where the polls of the base is at
the time. And ultimately, this is Donald Trump's party, and
whoever Donald Trump wants to be the Republican nominee is
going to be the Republican nominee and have his support.
So I think we need to come to terms with that.
And I think the fact that we actually have a
leader in our party where the Democrats don't is fantastic
(13:51):
because we could look to that person to make decisions
about the future of the party for however long that
that may be, and not fracture the party, which is
where the Democrat.
Speaker 2 (14:01):
Well the Republican parties headed towards advance Rubio ticket.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
I don't know who. I don't know who AOC would
put with herself. I can't imagine who she would choose
as a running mate. Oh I hope now she's got
to take up the new AOC role. Mike Counr, Republican Strategist,
really enjoyed our time together.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
Thank you so much for stopping by. It's your morning
show with Michael del Chno.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
I guess during the Civil War there was one America,
even though America was split, and the North had the
president and the South had a president Jefferson Davis, and
I loved his house.
Speaker 2 (14:38):
By the way, I've been in it. This party is
in a civil war.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
So if we're going to call the Establishment Democrat Party
the North, the North doesn't have a leader yet, the
North doesn't have a message yet. That's what you're seeing
fought about every day. That's what the Senator in Michigan
is trying to engage in. That's what Ronny Manuel is
trying to engage in. That could be the ticket for
(15:07):
the North or Wesmore. That's what's brewing. Meanwhile, the South,
which is the Justice Socialist portion of the Democrat Party,
they have a leader and they have a message and
it's go further left and it's AOC. So AOC is
(15:31):
the early leader of the Justice Democrats. The Established Democrats
don't have an early leader yet. And this is just
how they're going to beat him in the primary too,
because they will be behind they're far left, new leader
and message and direction, and they will get her enough
votes to get the nomination. Unless the DNC scrambles to
(15:53):
do what they did in twenty sixteen and twenty twenty.
So the answer is both one part of the party
does have a leader, the establishment part doesn't. I think
that's what he was saying. Maybe I'm just saying it better,
but come on, I am the host.
Speaker 2 (16:09):
I'm joking.
Speaker 5 (16:12):
My name is Stuart. I'm from Monkeytown, Tennessee, and my
morning shows Your Morning Show with Pizza Boy.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:25):
Your Morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here.
Speaker 2 (16:37):
Now enjoy the podcast. This is Your Morning Show.
Speaker 1 (16:40):
A recreational ferry crash in Clearwater, Florida, responsible for one
death and multiple injuries. The field is set for the
one hundred and fifty first running of the Kentucky Derby,
and with the funeral behind us, now, the work of
the cardinals to select a next pope.
Speaker 2 (16:57):
Is on, and President Trump says he thinks.
Speaker 1 (17:00):
That Russian President Vladimir Putin may be stringing him along
concerning the war in the Ukraine. And then we also
have simultaneously the story today that the Russian Foreign Minister
says the country is open to negotiations to end the war.
Begs the question which is it? And how are things
going and ending this Russian Ukraine conflict. John Decker is
(17:23):
our White House correspondent. He joins us he's been following
the story over the weekend. Well, which is it?
Speaker 6 (17:27):
John, Well, I have seen nothing to believe anything that
Russia says, anything that anyone who speaks on behalf of
Russia says.
Speaker 2 (17:36):
I don't think you have either.
Speaker 6 (17:38):
And I think that's a frustrating thing for the President
as well, because despite all of the meetings that have
taken place between Steve Witkopf and Russian officials, nothing has
materialized out of it.
Speaker 2 (17:50):
To lead to any kind of just.
Speaker 6 (17:52):
Thirty day ceasefire before you can even talk about a
permanent peace.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
So there's kind of three different lenses to see this
play out. Is that Russia will say, Gee, we're not
going anywhere with this, Let's take our off ramp and
get out of this thing.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
I don't see that brewing.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
The other might be Okay, let's go at it another
year and see where things are in a year, and
then the third could be at least a ceasefire and
begin to have the talks. It's looking more like the
middle now, how much more pressure?
Speaker 2 (18:22):
I'll tell you. It was a great visual.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
The president's in the Vatican City for the funeral, and
there he is sitting in two chairs with President Zelensky,
and no one quite knows what they were talking about.
But if you're Vladimir Putin, for all the things the
president has said, he's got new interests in New zeal
to stand behind Ukraine, Europe's behind Ukraine, I just think,
now you bring on the sanctions and make it more painful.
Speaker 6 (18:47):
Well, that's exactly right. And the president is threatening that before.
And you know, the only way an adversary understands anything
is if you actually impose what it is that you're threatening.
Speaker 2 (18:58):
So perhaps the president.
Speaker 6 (19:00):
And it will do that. I agree with you one
hundred percent. That was quite a visual. That picture that
you saw.
Speaker 2 (19:04):
Oh my god, that's one meeting with Zelenski.
Speaker 6 (19:07):
Yeah, and you may have seen another picture the President
huddling with European leaders and Zelensky, and you know they're
putting essentially the full core press on the president to
understand that there's only one side in this conflict, and
that's the.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Side of freedom, the side.
Speaker 6 (19:23):
Of democracy, that's the side of Ukraine. So we'll see
ultimately what happens. The President is facing an awful lot
of pressure and he's given last week. He gave Russia
essentially one week to come to some sort.
Speaker 7 (19:34):
Of deal to at least agree to. That thirty day
cease fire wasn't a picture. It was more of a
video and a visual Donald Trump coming down the escalator.
That's how it all began. Donald Trump at the rally
after being shot, with blood coming down his ear and
his fist in the air. An iconic picture.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
But I'm telling you, in the middle, in the middle
of the Vatican, to be sitting on two folding chairs
having a conversation with Zelensky, that's a picture. That's that's
gonna be a part of history, all right, And well,
I agree.
Speaker 6 (20:03):
With you one hundred percent.
Speaker 2 (20:04):
Thanks a lot.
Speaker 6 (20:04):
But you know what, Michael, I agree with you. You know
there are these pictures that you know, you look at them,
they're iconic. That was an iconic picture, and you agreed
it's going to be part of history.
Speaker 1 (20:13):
Can I do one more thing to just embarrass you
a little bit? I have never received anything, and I
have never received anything.
Speaker 2 (20:19):
Including a Macaroni Award. John Decker one.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Of my favorite pieces ever in radio that I've heard,
and then you went back on his hundredth birthday. But
your piece with that World War Two veteran nominated for
an Emmy. Congratulations. That's so kind of you. Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 6 (20:37):
You know it's because of the person I profiled, a
great American hero, someone who took part in the D
Day Invasion on June the sixth, nineteen forty four. Last month,
as you know, I went down to North Carolina to
celebrate his one hundredth birthday. And we'll see what happens.
The Emmy ceremony will be on June the fourteenth, Flag Day,
so we'll see, we'll see what happens with that. But
(20:59):
just a great honor to be nominated, for sure.
Speaker 1 (21:00):
You know, you know what my nickname is, Noel journal.
I told you the day that aired, actually you actually
sent me it an email for him before we aired it,
and I told you that's an award winner. That was
a spectacular piece that deserves the award. And the way
you followed up humanly without anybody knowing, got my respect.
(21:22):
Congratulations on Flag Day. Come on, the Emmy's coming your way,
I predicted John Decker. Thanks for joining us, all right,
if you're just waking up. We did our top three
stories of the day that aren't necessarily in the news.
There was one I would have gotten in ahead I
had time, and I want to just take a moment
share with you. And again this I'm not going to
(21:44):
relitigate the death of journalism and media bias and all
that like we do. Hopefully enough of you've listened long
enough to catch on. But the headline of the Daily
Signal is the liberals loathe the arrival of MAGA media.
I actually resent the no that it's magamedia, that we're
going to just frame it in the matrix wording, because
(22:08):
you know, I think there's a good portion of I
don't even know what MAGA is anymore. I mean, if
it's making America great, why isn't that an American media.
But obviously the Republican Party has become something between the
Reagan Revolution, Tea Party and trump Ism, and maybe that's
MAGA and maybe those that but the media landscape has
so dramatically changed that you can't put it under the
(22:30):
headline of Magamedia. Media is reshaping, just like it went
from radio to television, just like it went from television
to cable, just like it went from magazine a newspaper
to the Internet.
Speaker 2 (22:45):
I mean, that was the lesson of this election.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Everybody worried about what sixty minutes thinks, would ABC, NBCCBS
or MSNBC or CNN thinks, And you go on the
Joe Rogan podcast win the election, and so this White
House And I understand it's political, I get it. But
this White House, if there were no partisanships, if there
(23:11):
were no lanes, if there were no death of journalism,
if there were no matrix, would have to be looking
differently at the press room because America is getting its
information differently. And if nobody's watching ABCNBCCBS or CNN or
MSNBC or even Fox that much for that matter, why
are they the ones in that room and nobody's removing
(23:34):
them and adding others are just adding.
Speaker 2 (23:36):
So But that's what gets the best part.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
The liberal mainstream media appears to not like freedom of speech,
and of course they don't. They only want to have
that right for their narrative and their audience. Can you
imagine a media that complains about other media because of
the matrix. And by the way, before you look at
(24:03):
that and laugh out loud, make sure we all look
in the mirror too.
Speaker 2 (24:11):
This is the part nobody ever liked.
Speaker 1 (24:13):
When I shot straight with him, I'd explain the matrix,
and I'd explain the narratives and narratives over reality. And
everybody could see the left doing it, but they couldn't
see Fox doing it. They couldn't see talk radio doing it.
They couldn't see themselves doing it. And I'll do just
social media because that won't step on anybody's toes.
Speaker 2 (24:37):
Sure I've seen this. I'd witnessed this.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
People on the left get on Facebook, then they start
fighting with conservatives, and then they unfriend them. I don't
fight with people on the internet. I have a talk show.
I think everybody knows what I think. I don't take
the bait. You'll never see me in a long exchange
on Facebook. Fighting with somebody are never productive. But I've
(25:02):
seen Republicans giving a one sided view and then being
rude and then unfriending two. See, the matrix is a
two way street, and we're I used to want to
write a book called sins are a lot like passing gas.
We all do it, but we think only the others think.
(25:26):
And it's similar to that. So you can't have a
one sided view of the matrix. If we're going to
solve the matrix, we got to solve it on the
left and the right. But here's the left calling the
new media cheerleaders for Trump. Okay, and are you haters
(25:50):
of Trump? Did the old Obama? I'm just these are
just questions. I think you can look in the mirror
and pass a lot of them. But the old Obama
derangement syndrome has now become Trump derangement syndrome? Is the
view any different? I would say this about the first
(26:12):
term of Donald Trump. Was his narcissism any different than
Obama's narcissism? The difference is Donald Trump got shot. Donald Trump,
I believe, has a newfound faith, and Donald Trump is
bearing fruit of that new found faith. He's a different
man this time. But yes, it is laughable that the
mainstream legacy media is appalled with the new media being
(26:36):
invited into the White House, as if no changes in
audience shift or technology has taken place, as if the
other matrix is appalling to them, but their own matrix,
of course is not. Let me tell you something in
this signal story, if you take it at the servant
at the surface. New York Times recently published a hissy
(26:58):
fit about the White House allowing orders into the briefing
room who didn't vote for Kamala Harris. Longtime White House
reporters say the results have been an erosion of their independence.
I mean, the notion that they would say, oh, other voices,
even though I still have a voice, is somehow silencing
of my voice, Like we have a right to freedom
(27:18):
of speech, but they don't. And because they do, now
we don't have freedom of speech. That's a dysfunction of
the matrix. And you still haven't solved it. I mean,
that's a surface story. But we could go on for
hours on this one. This is fascinating and we're all
a lot more involved in it than the media who
is supposedly representing us.
Speaker 2 (27:39):
All. This is your morning show with Michael del Chno.
Here are your top five stories.
Speaker 1 (27:48):
Are no. Police in Canada now say eleven people were
killed after a car plowed into a crowded street festival
in Vancouver.
Speaker 8 (28:00):
Investigators say dozens of others were also injured when a
black suv spin into a pack celebration at a Filipino
Bloc party. At a news conference Sunday, authority said that
a thirty year old Vancouver man with a history of
mental illness has been arrested for the attack. Prime Minister
Mark Carney has offered his condolences to the Filipino community
in Vancouver and called the attack horrific.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (28:21):
Well, I don't know how likely either is. I thought
both would be pretty heavy lifting. But who would have
thought we could make more ground with Iran than we've
been able to make with Russia and Ukraine. The US
and Iran set to hold more talks on a nukes
deal after a pretty productive weekend meeting in Omen.
Speaker 2 (28:38):
Here's more with Brian Schuff.
Speaker 9 (28:39):
The White House described Saturday's talks as positive and productive.
President Trump's Special Envoy Steve Whitkoff and Aron's Foreign minister
led the two delegations, with the discussions lasting about four hours.
The talks come after a massive chemical explosion in a
major Iranian port killed at least eight people and in
(29:00):
hundreds more The next meeting is scheduled to take place
in Oman on May third.
Speaker 2 (29:05):
I'm Brian Schuk. We in our Platinum our first hour
of the show.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
We talked about in our polls of plenty the latest
drafts musin and it shows the President and the Republicans
with clear trust and support from the American people on
the border. It's a little bit more of a mixed
bag when it comes to the economy, and we discussed
and we'll talk more about this with Chris Walker coming
up in about fifteen minutes. Is a time for the
President to pivot from these tariffs, get the tax cuts done,
(29:30):
and start securing the economy as he has the border.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Well.
Speaker 1 (29:35):
This week, we'll give him a starting point because the
week starts off with a couple of major economic reports
on the calendar.
Speaker 2 (29:43):
Tammy Trihillo has more.
Speaker 3 (29:44):
Things will pick up Tuesday with word on consumer confidence,
job openings, and the SNP K Schiller Home Price Index.
The focus is on first quarter GDP the following day,
along with ADP's employment report, ending home sales plus personal
income and spending Day brings weekly jobless claims, with most
analysts expecting increase of at least a few thousand from
(30:05):
the previous week. Also look for auto sales data to
be released throughout the day. The week wraps up on
Friday with the always highly anticipated monthly Employment Report. I'm
Tammy Trhio.
Speaker 2 (30:15):
Well.
Speaker 1 (30:15):
There have been more than four million downloads already of
the mi shake app, details from Lisa Cardon.
Speaker 10 (30:21):
Governor Gavin Newsom says the app provides Californians with life
saving seconds before earthquakes strike. According to the Governor's office,
since its inception, the app has delivered more than five
million alerts for nearly one hundred and seventy earthquakes. The
state is encouraging people to pair the my Shake app
with a cal Oes earthquake Readiness guide.
Speaker 2 (30:41):
The app is free to download. I'm Lisa Carton. Rock
and Roll Hall of Fame.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Has announced its twenty twenty five class of inductees, headlined
by Chovy Checker. It's about time Joe Cocker and Bad
Company Johnny made a record when straight up to number one.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
Don't you know that cue? That was one of my
favorite Shooting Star You like that? Don't you love Shooting Star?
Speaker 1 (31:07):
But they had a lot of It's a bad Company
Good a Good Ada member Cindy Lauper.
Speaker 2 (31:11):
I don't know what I call that rock and roll.
I like Cidy Lapper, but rock and roll sound Garden.
Speaker 4 (31:15):
I guess seriously, Soundgarden definitely rock and roll.
Speaker 1 (31:20):
E come on, I don't know, well, mellow rock anyway,
pretty soon.
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Sound Garden, sound Garden was spoon man, I'll play.
Speaker 1 (31:31):
Wait, maybe I'm confusing, confusing them with Savage Garden. I am, yeah, yeah, yeah,
but you would have to be yeah, sound Garden, all right, Yeah,
that's rock and roll and the White Stripes anyway. The
twenty twenty five Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction
will be held at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles
on November eighth.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
Why not at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
I can't figure out everything, but some things just don't
make any sense. Uh if I was just a little
bit fatter and I had a bugle. The field is
set for the one hundred and fifty first run for
the Roses in Kentucky on May third.
Speaker 2 (32:03):
A field of twenty has been drawn. Paul Miles reports
eight journalism murto Rispoley.
Speaker 11 (32:09):
Trainer Michael McCarthy's journalism has won his past four starts,
highlighted by the Santa Anita Derby. The colt is the
three to one morning line favorite.
Speaker 5 (32:19):
Where that horse belongs, He's I believe his body of work,
his resume has been exemplary this year.
Speaker 2 (32:24):
He trains like horse it should be the right favorite.
Speaker 11 (32:26):
Second choice on the morning line at five to one
is Sovereignty trained by Bill Mott. Third choice at six
to one is Arkansas Derby Winter Sandman trained by Mark
Cassie at Churchill Downs.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
I'm Paul Miles. Now journalism loses what we call that
a part of the death of journalism.
Speaker 1 (32:43):
Today we celebrate an exclusively American berry wrapped up for
the pastry. Get your fark ready Breeds Breed Tennis with
a treat you need to dig into.
Speaker 12 (32:53):
Today's National Blueberry Pie Day. According to instagart, it's America's
sixth favorite pie beneath since eighteen seventy two. You can
thank early American settlers for that. It's a pie, but
blueberries are good for you, packed with vitamins, antioxidants, and
they're super yummy. Today you can celebrate by baking a
pie or buying one and then eating nothing else required
(33:16):
to celebrate the day, I'm Bree Tennis.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Dagger up New Orleans. We never said super yummy, we
always said tasty tasty.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Nicks beat the Pistons by one. That hurt, ninety four
to ninety three. Next lead the series three games to one.
Lakers lost by three to the Wolves. Wolves can eliminate him.
They're up three games to one. Bucks lost one twenty
nine one to oh three to the Pacers, and he
leads the series three games to one. Thunderswept Memphis already.
They wait the winner of Denver and the Clippers in
Round two NHL Playoffs.
Speaker 2 (33:43):
How bucked them.
Speaker 1 (33:44):
Blues Baby five to one over the Jets, evening the
series up in two games apiece. Caps now up three
one after beating the Canadians, and the Kings lost four
to three in overtime to the Oilers.
Speaker 2 (33:53):
That series now tied to two games apiece. We're all
in this together. This is your morning show with Michael
who Joy now
Speaker 9 (34:06):
M