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May 2, 2025 33 mins

In the wake of the California wildfires a new invention…a fireproof house! National Correspondent JAYSON CAMPADONIA in Los Angeles explains how it works. 

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day! 

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
Friday from three to six Pacific, five to eight Central,
and six to nine Eastern on great radio stations like
Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento or one oh four
nine The Patriot in Saint Louis and Impact Radio one
oh five nine and twelve fifty w h d Z
in Tampa, Florida. Sure hope you can join us live

(00:22):
and make us a part of your morning routine. In
the meantime, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
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 Dell charm like Geeve.
Your show is on AM eight eighty WM e Q
and Wisconsin.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
There might be a chance as some people pull that
from Minnesota.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
I like how you pulled that guy threatened and not
to listen to the show anymore, to go bleep himself.

Speaker 5 (00:57):
If you would have told them to Minnesota wild up
bound that knife like a big knife, I would have
loved it.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Everybody, get off of David been John trying to kick
him while he was down.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
I would like to go to the first caller and
say I was unaware. No, Oa Claire, Wisconsin is just
barely due east of Bloomington, Minnesota. I would have never
guessed they were that close. See geographically, I was off.
I'm assuming if David is probably listening on the iHeart app,
but if he is listening off of the Oak Claire station, yeah,

(01:31):
that would be more than close enough for him to hear.
All right, Well, we'll have to get together with my
board of bullies and see.

Speaker 3 (01:37):
If we gotta start giving Minnesota scores.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
Now on the York chance that someone across the border
is hearing the station.

Speaker 1 (01:45):
By the way, I heard the Churchill Downs. Does that
mean the Paul's here? Paul is not here? Okay? And
why did you play it?

Speaker 5 (01:50):
Well?

Speaker 1 (01:51):
I just you know, I just thought that the call
to order there would be great out of the Uh
everybody dog pile in there?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Well usually they never you know, make him stake, But
you know, when you got all these bouncing balls. Paul
Miles is our national correspondent at Churchill Downs for the
one hundred and fifty first running of the Kentucky Derby,
and it's the first leg, of course, of the Triple Crown.
The odds on favor to win the race's journalism, this
is your class at the race. Speed of the race,

(02:18):
Santa Anita winner. I like mister Sandman. Boom boom boom
boom boom boom boom boom boom bom at six to one.
This is a closer, or as some people used to
always say, bet the gray one. Got a gray one
a lot of speed in this race, and a closer
could fare very well, especially with an off track. Rodriguez

(02:41):
got scratched that that's a horse that would have done
very well in an off track. An American promise at
thirty to one, you know, talking about Donald Trump, d
Waane Lucas's horse improving the name American Promise.

Speaker 1 (02:52):
Wouldn't that be something?

Speaker 2 (02:54):
Speaking of the American Promise, Donald Trump spoke at the
University of Alabama's commencement last night. It really was a
great speech. It was vintage Donald Trump. I mean a
commencement addressed slash rally is really what it was. But
he made ten simple points, and the first one, you're
not too young to succeed. If you're here today and

(03:17):
you think you're too young to do something great. Let
me tell you you're wrong. You're never too young to have
great success. What a powerful thing to tell people commencing
from the education portion of their life into the workforce.
Number two on the list is the number one thing
I tell people. Number one, don't fret so much about

(03:37):
what you do. Focus on who you are and who
you will be no matter what you do. That's how
God views it. But when you pick something, and you
pick something you love to do, like us, we're getting
paid and we're having a ball today. I joke around
sometimes and I say, all right, we're having too much fun.
We're going to give our paycheck back today. If you

(03:59):
love what you do, gonna naturally do it well, and
you're gonna spend a lot of time doing it. So
I always say, don't skimp out on your mattress. You're
gonna spend eight hour. Well, most people do eight hours
a day on that thing. Love what you do if
you find something you love. The President says, you have

(04:21):
to follow your own instincts and listen to your parents.

Speaker 1 (04:23):
They're very wise.

Speaker 2 (04:25):
But you have to follow your instincts and your heart
and soul too, and you have to do something you love,
think big was third on the list. Work hard. Well,
that's something for a president to say to graduating students.
The political messages have been all too much penalized success
reward failure, that if you're a hard worker, you're somehow

(04:48):
been victimized by a system. No hard work is wonderful.
It's a key to success. Let me tell you something,
and everything I've ever done in life, if I I
wouldn't outthink you, and I usually could, I would outwork you.
Hard work what a great message. Don't lose your momentum.

(05:08):
President said, you have to know if you're losing, and
you have to know when you're losing. And so maybe
you stop. Maybe it's time to stop, Listen to feedback,
think through your plan carefully, keep moving forward, but don't
lose your momentum. Well, he should know about this. This
is what elected and president. Be an outsider. Successful people

(05:29):
can't be afraid to take risks and be an outsider.
If you wanted to change the world, you have to
have the courage to be an outsider. In other words,
you have to take certain risks to do things a
little bit differently. Otherwise, if that weren't the case, everyone
would be successful. Seventh, he told them to trust their instincts.

(05:51):
How many times is that a lost message? We have
a liner Mike McCann does because he's a smart Alec
quote in Yogi Barro, when you see a fork in
the road, take it. But sometimes the biggest decisions in
life don't make sense, and you've gotta trust your instincts. Eighth,

(06:11):
pretty good message for him to deliver. Believe in the
American dream. It's real and it's right there before you.
Don't let anybody tell you it's not there. You don't
to think of themselves as a winner.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
You warn't.

Speaker 2 (06:24):
Don't consider yourself a victim, consider yourself a winner, and
never give up. Out of all of them, I love
the think big one. Mark Gorman is a minister, and

(06:46):
I'm not one. I'm bad at asking God for anything.
I just never want to bother him. Think I can
handle it on my own. All those kinds of life lessons,
and I never felt that the goal was my dream,
and in understanding that God will put that dream in

(07:07):
my heart for his will. I'm always looking for his will.
I'm always looking to serve him. I don't have time
to serve me, and I don't have time to dream.
For me, that is really bad wiring. And so I
come across this minister and he's preaching a sermon. He goes,
if your dream, listen to this. This is right up

(07:27):
there with Billy Joel's quote earlier in our Christy Brinkley interview.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
This is big. You can use this.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
If your dream doesn't change who you are and how
you live, you're not dreaming big enough. That's what the
President's really saying when he says think big. If your
dream's big enough, you're going to sleep different. You're gonna
think different, you're gonna speak different, you're going to do different.

Speaker 1 (07:57):
And it's those.

Speaker 2 (07:58):
Actions, passion, the focus and actions that will set in motion.

Speaker 1 (08:04):
This is not prosperity theology by any stretch. It'll set
in motion a direction that will arrive at a destination.
If you don't have big things, you didn't think big,
you don't have big things, you didn't dream big. Maybe
you didn't want big things and you got exactly what
you got, And that's fine. But I love the section

(08:26):
on think big.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
And then if I had to pick a favorite moment,
it was this one because it really was. How many
of you two watch this in its entirety, did either
of you it read?

Speaker 1 (08:37):
Did? Of course it really was.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
Well, it's just Donald Trump and his most authentic, right,
his most charming. I don't know how many kids he
won last night. I don't know how, you know, starting out,
how many wanted in there, how many were just so
glad he was there. He seemed very well received by
It looked visually like eight out of ten, and I
think by the end of the speech it was ten

(09:03):
out of ten. He was just that charming, that relaxed,
that fun, and that insightful. What a great commencement. But
it did have a rally field too, didn't it. I'll
give you this towards the closing. Listen to this.

Speaker 1 (09:17):
I love this.

Speaker 6 (09:18):
That's not here, that's not here on the Actually, most
of what I've said tonight is not have the telebrupter.
That's all right, isn't nice? E? A president doesn't need
a telibrupter, and those sort of can sort of have
a lot of fun because I feel that this is home.

Speaker 1 (09:34):
You know, it's been such a great state for me.
I feel it's home.

Speaker 6 (09:37):
When they said Alabama, I said, that has.

Speaker 1 (09:40):
A good ring to me.

Speaker 6 (09:41):
But it's something nice about somebody that doesn't need a teleprompter,
isn't it Huh? But for the past four years, you've
lived in a state known for its fighters, its champions,
and its warriors. And you've lived in the great state
of Alabama, one of the greatest of them all, from
Huntsville to Birmingham, from Montgomery to Mobile, and from right

(10:03):
here in Tuscaloosa to the gleaming shores of the Gulf
of America.

Speaker 1 (10:19):
God, I can't hit stop. I want to eat too,
can't stop. Everybody loves it.

Speaker 6 (10:28):
I wouldn't say Mexico is thrilled, but you can't have
them all.

Speaker 1 (10:31):
You cannot thrilled.

Speaker 6 (10:33):
You continue the legacy of Alabama. Legends who blazed the trails,
won the games till the fields forded the steels, built
the ships, and gave us the victories that built America
and changed the world. The entire world was changed by
our victories. This is the state that gave us the
might of the Iron City, the power of the Saturn

(10:56):
five rocket, and the roaring engines of Talladega.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
Talladaga.

Speaker 6 (11:03):
You love Tallagaan, we love Talladaga. This is the state
that gave us nothing but victory. The state of some
of the greatest heroes and history, like Willie Mays, Jesse Owens,
Joe Lewis, your coach, Nick Saban, Hank Williams, and many others.

(11:23):
Some of you will leave here today and travel the world,
but you will always know that the state as this
is really sweet home Alabama.

Speaker 1 (11:32):
Right, It's always going to be your flowed.

Speaker 2 (11:34):
It was just I have to hit stop the clock,
says I do. I had a thought I wanted to
share with everybody. So when I think of Ronald Reagan,
I'm a sophomore in high school. I'm a senior in
high school. I'm a young, scared, seventeen year old on

(11:57):
the campus of LSU thinking is it okay to do this?

Speaker 5 (12:01):
No?

Speaker 1 (12:01):
I was thinking is that legal?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
No? I'm telling you it was a very intimidating campus
to be on. I was starting to see the path
of what my career would be. I started taking the
first three four steps in that career that took me
to different states all alone. Whenever I think of Ronald Reagan,

(12:25):
I become that fourteen, eighteen, twenty two, twenty four year
old and he's trapped in time, and I am that
person again. When I think of him. Why do I
say all this? Where am I going with all this?
Because I have a view of Donald Trump. But what

(12:49):
I don't know is what does Donald Trump look like
to a fifteen year old? What is seeing Donald Trump
through a high school graduating senior's eyes. What is Donald
Trump look like on the campus of Alabama last night
delivering this commencement address because.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
I got this for I.

Speaker 2 (13:10):
You know, I could see old footage of JFK of FDR,
but Reagan was just like, there's never been anything like this.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
Oh my gosh, there's never been anything like that. Can
you imagine what he looks like?

Speaker 2 (13:27):
They're graduating eyes of a crimson tide of Alabama Senior.
It's your morning show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 1 (13:36):
Dave n here again.

Speaker 7 (13:37):
I just want to say, I'll always listen to you.
You have good guests, good content, and I love your
Live with forty seven on Fridays. Just remember I'm in Minnesota,
the most lib tarted state that there is, and I have.

Speaker 1 (13:52):
To deal with that. We've met your gun. I love
my sports, all right. I know Big John was forming
a posse to come look for him and blow me tonight.

Speaker 8 (14:00):
Everybody get off David's back all right.

Speaker 1 (14:02):
He had a bad choice of words an hour ago.
He's back, He's he's sorry. We move on, speaking, moving on.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
Big John has put a pen to his racing form,
as I have, and here are his picks for the
one hundred and fifty first running of the Kentucky Derby.

Speaker 5 (14:15):
Yeah, let me get my picks in before you have
your prognostic hator. Come on, I'm gonna take four horses
that could be in the money. I'm taking the one
horse Citizen's Bull. I got baffored. Give me this seven
horse Lopsoil. The Japanese horse had a crazy great workout yesterday.
Everybody was waiting for it. Journalism, how can you not
bet that horse? You got a good price at seventy two.

(14:37):
I feel like just pressing the whole button with that.
And then look at Burnham Square. Give me the one, seven,
eight nine, And just to finish up, looking at the jockeys.
Rispoli is one of the hot jockeys over the last
ten days. He's on journalism, and watch out for that Baeza.
It's a big price. Pratt is on him. Been hot

(14:58):
over the last ten days. Book Gate all.

Speaker 2 (15:01):
Right, obviously, it's going to be raining at Churchill Downs.
The track is going to be at least sloppy. We're
looking at an echinch and a half of rain. That
changes things. There's a lot of speed in this race.
There's a lot of class in this race, but speed
can burn itself out. I like a closer. I like
a closer like Sandman. And this is a horse in
a field with a lot of speed, with an off track,

(15:25):
and it's the gray one. Bet the gray one. The
wise woman once said journalism. Big John is right, you
can't go wrong with this horse, and there's value there,
so win place and show on journalism is the no
brain or bet of the Kentucky Derby. But if you're
looking for someone to put with it to find a
little value, Sandman at six to one is a really

(15:47):
good choice. That's the Arkansas Derby winner. And I'm telling
you with this off track American promise that d Wayne
Lucas horse is in play and it should respond at
thirty to one. I gonna give you a lot of money.
So Big John likes the one seven eighty nine, give
me the seventeen eighty five, or is I like to

(16:07):
say give me this sad man.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
I'm Joe Big in Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 2 (16:23):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k e n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas, Fort Wort, and Freedom one oh four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day. Make us a part of your morning routine,
but better late than never. Enjoy the podcast. This is
your morning show.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
The horses stop doing. What do you do that for?
I'm not gonna do I'm leaving the paddock.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
No, that's not the horses at Churchill Downs. That's me,
joy My nickore et gum which, by the way, hey,
thanks to gum.

Speaker 1 (17:00):
I can't speak a little Spanish.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
Really, Pedro that was my name in Spanish class Pedro, Pedro, Pedro,
chigle in la basuna, chigle in la.

Speaker 1 (17:11):
Basuna, which was put your gum in the trash. I
was fixing. I say, do I need to hit the
dumb button? So let me do that right now.

Speaker 2 (17:18):
Vice President advanced with a little surprise for everybody at
the Atlantic Mike Waltz is not being fired. He's becoming
the ambassador to the UN. It's actually a promotion, a
little jousting between the White House and Signal Gate and
the Atlantic April jobs report coming out later this morning.
The Maple Leafs, Golden Knights, and the Oilers all headed
to the second round of the Stanley Cup playoffs.

Speaker 1 (17:40):
And how a young bed from cake.

Speaker 8 (17:44):
Ki, Illinois, Jason Camp, Bedonia, who every time he's on
the show, all I can think of, Steve is how
much Harry carry would have loved this name. Little Jason
shouldn't Camp but done yet?

Speaker 1 (18:03):
Jason.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
In the wake of the California wirefires, she ran called
in fireproof houses, we get the fireproof house invention.

Speaker 1 (18:11):
How does that work? Yeah, it's pretty sweet.

Speaker 9 (18:15):
So what they basically do is they use more steel
in the construction.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
That's number one.

Speaker 9 (18:22):
And it's kind of cool how they've they've textured it now,
so the company KB Home that the developers, they've come
up with a way to create some fencing along your
home that is all steel, but it's textured to look
like wood, textured and stained to look like wood. So
it's pretty sweet encampment.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
I like that, right, exactly.

Speaker 9 (18:46):
Also, they've come up with a design and a patent
for cement siding, which is pretty cool. So it's kind
of one of these things that it's not really fireproof,
fire resilient kind of a thing. And one thing that
we did learn through these two wildfires out here in
southern California recently was that even if you have a

(19:07):
fireproof safe, if the fire gets hot enough, that stuff
inside there is just going to spontaneously combust or melt
or whatever because the flames may not touch it, but
if the fire is so hot, it's going to burn.
So it's going to be interesting to see, you know,
how these these homes play out. By the way, most homes,
if you need to get this fireproofing, probably cost you

(19:29):
about one hundred grand.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
I was just gonna say there's going to be a cost.
Why Two questions One and how much more is this
going to cost? And then how much more will your
home be to ensure if you don't take on this cost?
And I guess my third question is going to be
and how does this type of construction fair in an earthquake?

Speaker 1 (19:47):
Is it more vulnerable or less vulnerable? Right?

Speaker 2 (19:51):
And I think you make the biggest point too. Nothing
about this is fireproof but deterring, that's for sure, exactly
exactly right.

Speaker 9 (20:00):
And there's some California lawmakers that are trying to push
for some federal funds to retrofit your house to withstand
mother nature, if you will, so that might help.

Speaker 1 (20:11):
On that end.

Speaker 9 (20:11):
But I mean, the average cost of a home out
here is about eight hundred to nine hundred thousand dollars
for it, so that affordable exactly exactly. And now you
put a one hundred thousand dollars on top of that,
you're looking at the medium price of a home, you know,
about a million bucks.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
So wonder they're all moving to my neighborhood, which is
triple the value of my home. But let me tell
you something that all these California license plates on Campus
Park down front's got to end, all right, Jason Campadonia,
you're reporting in the wake of the California wildfire. Is
this new fireproof or fire deterring housing plan going to
be very expensive in an area homes are already expensive.

(20:48):
Any word on all of this concrete and steel and
how it plays in earthquakes to do we know? And
it will this be grandfathered in because most of the
homes are already built and they're.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
Not going to have this correct, so that is yet
to be determined.

Speaker 9 (21:04):
Also, the head of the insurance, the commissioner out here,
has not said whether or not this will lower your
cost or raise your costs as.

Speaker 1 (21:12):
Far as homeowners insurance goes.

Speaker 9 (21:14):
Most earthquake and fire insurance is a separate policy, by
the way out here. So if you have your insurance,
you have you know, minimal fire damage, you know, flood
coverage and things like that. But if you live in
a high prone area, obviously these insurance companies have found
a way to make more money and say no, no,
that's a separate policy. Here's your insurance for you know,

(21:35):
earthquakes or for fires, or for floods or whatever. So
it really is just going to cost the average Joe
a heck of a lot more money just to have
a roof over his head.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Seriously, the question, Jason is why do you stay and
live in that state?

Speaker 1 (21:48):
It just gets warm.

Speaker 9 (21:49):
I'll be honest, man, that sun is a beautiful thing
out of here.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
You know, we air condition the streets. Man, I'm telling
you you are one of our favorites.

Speaker 2 (21:57):
We rarely get you and when we do, it's always
something out of California. And we would love to have
you albumost daily obviously, but you have.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
To ask it.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
I have to ask you this. It doesn't offend you
when I do the Harry Carey does it. He would
have loved your name. I know he not, not in
the least bit. Not in the least bit.

Speaker 9 (22:13):
And to be honest with you, I think was it
the Beach Boys said it correctly. I wish they could
all be California girls. So there you go, there you go,
there's your Well. But Camp you know, Jason Campadonia, I
mean we had two, we had two of I don't know,
probably Kirk Goudy I would throw in this list, probably

(22:35):
Mel Allen as well.

Speaker 1 (22:36):
But I mean you and I had the.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
Two greatest announcers that ever lived, Harry Carey in Chicago
when you had Vincecully. So Scully, we have a lot,
you know in common there.

Speaker 8 (22:44):
But Jason camp Patonia, Hey, Jason going to be back
in the third hour to talk about the firing? Or
was it a promotion for the National Security Advisor? That's
the eye of the ball, Jason Camp but Dounia from
Tank to Key ILLANOI will be back at the third hour.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
That all, let's get you your top five stories of
the day waking up. While President Trump has signed that
executive order aimed at cutting taxpayer funding for NPR and PBS.

Speaker 10 (23:19):
Trump said in the order that government funding of news
media in this environment is not only outdated and unnecessary,
but corrosive to the appearance of journalistic independence. The White
House said on its X profile that outlets receive millions
from taxpayers to spread what it called radical woke propaganda
disguised his news. The broadcasters receive upwards of half of

(23:39):
billion dollars through the Corporation for Public Broadcasting.

Speaker 1 (23:43):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
The cause wokeness has been addressed, the problem has not
been solved till now. Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy launching a
new air Traffic Controller recruitment and retention program.

Speaker 11 (23:56):
The FAA will give five thousand dollars bonuses to all
academy graduates and new hires that complete initial qualification training.
Academy graduates assigned to thirteen facilities that have faced additional
hiring struggles will receive ten thousand dollars bonuses. New incentives
are being offered for a limited time. However, a formal

(24:18):
deadline has not been set. I'm Brian Schuck.

Speaker 2 (24:21):
I'm trying. I was watching the movie Secretariat and crying again. Well,
that Diane Lane is a beautiful woman, brings tears to
my eyes. Everything No the horse. But I think it
was sometime around midday, not long before or afternoon, that
the news broke that the National Security Advisor was leaving
his post. And immediately The Atlantic comes out with the

(24:44):
story by David Graham. If signal Gate hadn't led to
the ousting of Trump's national security advisor, the president still wasn't.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Likely to keep him around very long.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
So the editor of The Atlantic is one that creates
signal gateho it's on that line, stays on that line,
and then despicably reveals everything that was said in that
military correspondence. And they got it out for Waltz, and
they got it out for the Secretary of Defense.

Speaker 1 (25:17):
There's some kind of game being played here.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
They go on and say, for weeks, Washington has been
waiting to see how long National Security Advisor Michael Waltz
could hold on to his job. The answer, now we
know one hundred and one days. They were taking victory laps,
and then Jade Vance, the Vice President of the United
States of America, goes on Fox News to announce he
didn't get fired, got promoted.

Speaker 12 (25:40):
I think the media wants to frame this as a firing.
Donald Trump has fired a lot of people. He doesn't
give him Senate confirmed appointments afterwards. What he thinks is
that Mike Waltz is going to better serve the administration
most importantly of the American people in that role, and
I haven't agree with him.

Speaker 2 (25:54):
Waltz will leave his position. He will actually become the
ambassad to the United States. Now, Waltz face scrutiny for
mistakenly adding a reporter, the editor of The Atlantic, to
a signal group chat that discussed plans for a military
strike and op post. Trump said that in the interim
Secretary of State, Marco Rubio will serve as the National

(26:15):
Security Advisor, while continuing his strong leadership in the State Department.
Van says Trump simply decided Waltz was better serving elsewhere.

Speaker 12 (26:23):
That's the President citing a guy who's a very good guy,
and Mike Waltz could do a better job at a
different role.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
The first leg of the trip of prow the run
for the Roses.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
The one hundred and fifty first.

Speaker 2 (26:37):
Kentucky Derby is tomorrow and the favorite to win in
Louisville is Journalism, who won the Santa Anita Derby and
has three to one odds. Other favorites that may have
moved to seven to two by the way. Other favorites
will be Sovereignty at five to one. Mister Sandman Boom
Boom boom bad is my big boom boom boom boom,

(26:58):
the Arkansas Derby winner. He's going to be the closer
in a field of fast horses, which fares well for
a closer and potentially even an off track. Post time
for Churchill downs a six fifty seven Eastern, five fifty
seven central, and the forecast is clearly changed. In this
it says partly cloudy with a high of sixty seven,

(27:19):
but now that forecast has changed to rain, potentially up
to an inch and a half that could make it
an off track.

Speaker 1 (27:25):
Sloppy is what is expected.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
Americans urged to pay attention to their mental health this month.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
Tammy trihillo has More.

Speaker 13 (27:31):
May is mental Health Awareness Month, which has been observed
in the US since nineteen forty nine, a leading doctor
in the US, doctor Jen Brule of the American Academy
of Family Physicians is urging people to find healthy ways
to cope with stress. Experts recommend having a healthy work
life balance and finding a support system to avoid social isolation.

Speaker 2 (27:51):
I'm Tammy t Rheo Well, Space cadets, listen up. Today
is National Space Day. Pre Tennis with more on the
reason for the day.

Speaker 14 (28:00):
DAN recognizes advancements and achievements in space exploration. It promotes math, science, technology,
and engineering, all things required for people to go to space.
Last year, more than eight thousand people applied for the
NASA Astronaut Program. Twelve to sixteen were selected. And if
you go, you might not be alone. UFOs have been
reported by many astronauts while in space, but NASA isn't talking.

(28:24):
I'm Bree Tennis.

Speaker 1 (28:26):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chrono. What
he's back? All right?

Speaker 2 (28:35):
Big John at the Your Morning Shows Sports book back
with an update on the Derby. I took a deeper
look into that sand Man. You know, it may have
a promising shot. It could run in the mud. Good trainer.

Speaker 1 (28:47):
Starting to say things my way?

Speaker 11 (28:49):
Are you mister Sadvan measured in online activity.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Now'll take a good long look at American promise too
a little bit. Any of you in the media clearly
missed the part of the deal to work out. I
don't know how much of this we can get in
the short period of time. But the always revealing, often
entertaining sounds of the day starts at CNN. Everybody knows
how He's been there all along, Harry and telling CNN

(29:16):
the truth Trump was gonna win. Trump was gonna win.
They would ignore him. Now the new narrative is everyone
regrets their vote for Trump. Trump is awful. This is chaos. No,
here comes the buzzkill. Here comes the narrative killer. Here
comes Harry who would be doing a.

Speaker 3 (29:34):
Better job as president? Guess who comes out on top?
Within the margin, Urber comes on top. This looks a
lot like the election result, right Trump forty five percent,
two points ahead of Harris.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
At forty three.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
Twelve percent say they'd be doing about the same. But
this is the key nugget here. It's not just about
regretting that vote. It's literally saying who would be doing
the better job right now? And Trump continues to score
a higher percentage of the vote than Kamal Harris looks
a heck of a lot like the election result. We
have just seen this in poll after poll after poul

(30:04):
Despite the fact that Trump's fable ratings aren't too hot
to trout when he's matched up against who is matched
up in twenty twenty four, He's still across the polls
scores a higher percentage than Kamala.

Speaker 1 (30:14):
Harris said.

Speaker 2 (30:15):
I couldn't help but think of David Sanati, who brings
this up, and I'm surprised you all haven't turned on
him over it. Donald Trump's won two elections and in
both cases because he was an outsider.

Speaker 13 (30:28):
Even if they don't know exactly what she would have done, they.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
That accidentally hit that.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
And in both cases, by the way, I used to
spill drinks at the radio station and not care because
it wasn't there, It wasn't my equipment.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
This is my equipment, and there went my red bull.

Speaker 2 (30:44):
But David always says he won twice as an outsider,
and he won twice because they were voting against who
he ran for. And we see that even today. The
second part is how he fares against Congress.

Speaker 14 (30:55):
Listen, what about when he's matched up against congressional Democrats,
who we know have had some pretty rough numbers.

Speaker 1 (31:01):
Yeah, they have had some pretty rough numbers.

Speaker 3 (31:03):
So Kamala Harris obviously as it doesn't hold elected office
right now, but Democrats in Congress sure do. So who
do you trust more on the US main problems? The
main problems in the United States?

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Well, what do we have here?

Speaker 3 (31:13):
It's the same exact picture, folks, It's the same exact picture.
When you mentioned much Donald Trump against his actual competition,
Donald Trump comes out ahead. Look at this forty percent
to congressional Democrats thirty two percent.

Speaker 2 (31:25):
What do narratives always die of reality? It's a narrative
that we all regret Donald Trump's selection. It's a narrative
that it's chaos. It's a narrative that it's a constitutional crisis,
and it's a narrative being presented by the media and

(31:46):
the Democrats who have absolutely no credibility with the American voters.
Nothing has changed, is the truth. I love this sound,
I love anything with Victor Davis Hansen. But here's his
take on where Donald Trump stands right now.

Speaker 4 (32:06):
Everything is in play and we have no idea how
it's going to turn out or what will happen, But
it could be what Donald Trump called a golden age,
all of hysteria. I think it's fueled by fear and
there's only one pathway. And whether you like Donald Trump,
you or not you think he's crude. He is embracing
policies that in bygone days both Democrats and Republicans saw

(32:27):
was the solution, and that Democrats are terrified that it
is not only the viable solution, but it's going to work.

Speaker 2 (32:34):
Terrified it's going to work because that's the reality, that's
the truth. And these are issued by issues, and I
can play montages a former Democrat president's telling you can't
just come into this country. You got to come legally,
and if you don't, you'll be deported. So he's doing

(32:56):
things as they've always been done. The only thing that's
changed is this matrix and feeling in America of sure,
it's and skins and us in them, but if you're
really about the issue and you're really about solving it,
he's taken all brilliantly positions that were bipartisan. That's a
problem for them, and he may be right. Their biggest

(33:18):
fear is, oh my gosh, it would have worked. Then
it did work, Then it'll work now. Oh then what
are we?

Speaker 6 (33:24):
All right?

Speaker 1 (33:24):
Everybody luck aloud? Look, you just gotta try harder not
to shock the opportunity for a brief By the way,
I'm glad I got in the Trump commencement speech earlier
because we ran out of time.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
It sounds the day, but he was just simply brilliant
with the students last night in Alabama.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
We're all in this together. This is your morning Show
with Michaeldenhild Joe Now
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