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May 7, 2026 35 mins

Ted Turner dead, Marco to visit Pope, Epstein suicide note and Iran almost over or more bombing??

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
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(00:21):
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Enjoy why Good morning everybody.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
I'd like to throw a challenge on the table for
all our New Arkansas listeners, little Suewie soon. I hope
I didn't just wake up my wife. Low iq Vibe
Mississippi two.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Three, starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.

Speaker 1 (00:51):
Because we're in the strategibit.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
This is your morning show with Michael Gilchoman.

Speaker 1 (00:59):
Make a note of that. We can't allow too many
people from the South to sit together when we have
a little get together, jolly keep on sometimes and they
can get out of hand. I'm glad he did it,
not me woke up his wife eight minutes after the hour.
Good morning and Welcome to your morning show on the
Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. Welcome to Thursday May,
the seventh year of our Lord, twenty twenty six. Honored

(01:21):
to serve you. I'm Michael del Jorno. Jeffrey's got the
sound red. I'll keep an eye in the content, and yes,
we are welcoming Northwest Arkansas's first FM news talk station,
Freedom FM one oh one point five in Fayetteville, Fayetteville, Rogers,
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(01:46):
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hearing my voice. I'm lucky when we hear your voice,
and together we're powerful and understanding things together and uniting

(02:14):
in one voice to make a difference if you're just
waking up, all right, Marco Rubio one minute is filling
in for Caroline Levett as Press secretary and knocking him dead.
Now he's at the Vatican, and I think the Pope's
got his hands full because but whoever whatever operatives have

(02:34):
been filling the Pope's ears, he has a different voice
in his ear today. And Marco was going to give
him plenty of things in the Christendom to be focused on.
I suspect in Africa. But Secretary of State Marco Rubio
meeting with Pope Leo with the Vatican today, I don't
think this is as simple of a story as to
smooth over relations with President Trump. Speaking of President Trump,

(02:56):
he has stated that the talks are going well. Now
I have to tell you one. We saw the pause
in the escorts in the Strait that would indicate maybe
the talks are going well. Let's pause and see if
we can come to an agreement. Neither side nor Pakistan

(03:18):
for that matter, is leaking any of the twelve points
in this agreement that apparently Iran is looking over. We
don't know what's in it. Iran's not leaking what's in it.
Pakistan isn't leaking what's in it. I'm not going to
celebrate this agreement until i know what's in it. Is

(03:40):
this art of the deal or has the president cave
done something knowing we can always bomb later. So I
don't know whether to be excited about this or not.
I'm excited about they're not a nuclear threat anytime soon.
I'm excited that France has sent the the gall their

(04:03):
most sophisticated aircraft carrier, into the Strait of Horn Moves.
Finally somebody from Europe is joining the effort. The president
of one side of his mouth yesterday said well, I
think we're very close. It's going to end very very soon.
But if it doesn't, we're going to bomb them like
we've never bombed them before. So basically what we saw

(04:25):
was the market, and the market stayed up. The market closed,
Dow up six hundred and ten points, NaSTA Cup five
hundred and twelve, the S and P up one hundred
and five. Remember yesterday we had fun with the with
the roller coaster analogy. I mean, we go up, we
go Dow. We're twisting, we're turning lot more on that
with our economists and money was David Bonson in the
third hour. But the Dow certainly reacted to all of this.

(04:49):
Oil prices certainly reacted. They were at one time down
to eighty eight dollars a barrel and down fifteen percent
it closed crewed international crew seven percent down a ninety
five a barrel. That was after the President mixed in.
And if they don't take they're got to bomb. It's
not out of them. So that's kind of the update.
There is a deal on the table. We're waiting on

(05:10):
a round's response. Iron has about forty eight hours to
make some initial responses, and then from there we presume
that the perhaps escorting of ships in the Strait, the
continued closure of Iranian ports which has costing him five
hundred million dollars a day, and if we take the
president as word, some intense bombing is ahead. If they

(05:32):
don't agree, other news or noise maybe is more appropriate.
Epstein's suicide note has been released by a judge. We
live in a matrix, so I suspect this isn't going
to change anyone's opinion. Who thinks he's still alive and
living in Israel because he was an operative all along

(05:53):
eight Israel to wonder antisemitic crimes are up or do
you anything to convince any of you that he was
killed by Hillary herself and a pant suit. There was
a pant suit and the grassy knoll of the jail spotted.
But this would indicate that Epstein just had enough and

(06:17):
was saying bye. He did have enough sheets to kill
one hundred people. I don't even know if it's enough
to convince me, but that's out there. Ted Turner's died
at the age of eighty seven. You know, it's easy
to overlook. We kind of went through this a little
bit with the Michael Jackson biopic or biopic, whichever you prefer.

(06:40):
You know, we got to separate what we think we
know or really know about a person, or our judgments
about their character when we discuss their influence or their achievements.
In other words, I can't do anything new convention. I mean,
there is a chance that Michael Jackson was so weird

(07:02):
and so damaged from his childhood he really did like
sleepovers with kids and wasn't doing anything sexual. Then there's
a chance that it's just to odd for any of
us to conceive that he wasn't. And I get that
people have strong views about it. You can't get around
his vocal range, his talent, his creativity, his impact on

(07:26):
the music world. Can't argue that he was king of
pop and the same is true with Ted Turner. So
putting everything you've heard about Ted Turner or think you
know about Ted Turner aside, what's this impact on us? All? Well?
First and foremost, and everybody forgets the superstation, aspect and

(07:48):
some other networks, but CNM the twenty four hour news model,
just as America for the longest time would wait to
hear yesterday's news today when it arrived at their front
stoop in the form of a newspaper or I remember
my childhood, if you missed the six o'clock news, you

(08:10):
had to stay up till ten or that was it.
You didn't know what happened. By the way, you would
watch the news, and the sportscast would be six to
seven minutes put on your local news channel. Today if
they even have a sportscast, what is it a minute?
Weathers like throughout even though there's a weather channel and

(08:33):
all of them are irrelevant. If you really wanted to know,
you already know from your phone, but in its context,
and in its time, it took television from local and
network to twenty four hours a day in cable and
that was huge. And even that's not enough to understand

(08:53):
because twenty four hour news eventually became everything that has
influenced America so much last several decades, which is twenty
four hour talk. MTV started playing music videos, then it
was all reality shows. Now it's producing some of your
favorite shows. Keep an eye when you're watching. I'm trying

(09:18):
to think, what are some of the biggest Netflix series
that are done by MTV. They A'll start with the
I Want My Empty Well, I know the one with
Billy Bob Thornton is that I was thinking, Landman, Land Man.
I think the other one, what was the one where
they did like three different versions? It's in the West

(09:42):
following that family Gosh, I'm blank on it. You guys
are all screaming Yellowstone. I think Yellowstone was. There's several
like that was MTV. MTV is making no impact on
music right now, but trust me, MTV is a big
for what it's doing. And so you were the king Yeah,

(10:04):
they do Tulsa, king Kingstown, Oh, merri of Kingstown was
green Paul's drag Race, but I could do without that, Okay,
any other Lioness Mobland Mobland was good.

Speaker 4 (10:16):
Yeah, I mean the list as I'm fulled up this list,
it goes on.

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Yeah, I mean, it'll freak you out, you know when
you when you start to think about it. But CNN
went from news and the Gulf War really launched it
to Larry King crossfire. Oh, it was the talk that
took over. Then they had CNN headline news so that
in case you wanted news, you could go there for
news because in between the talk shows in primetime or

(10:41):
all these daytime basically talk shows. But don't forget the
superstation aspect of Ted Turner either TBS, TNT, the Cartoon Network,
Turner Classics. And at some point should we all scratch
our head and said and say, would we have would

(11:02):
we have ESPN if he didn't first do all news?
Would we have the Weather Channel if he didn't first
do all news pretty well listening to a nursing home.
Would we have the Game Show Network if he didn't first?
Wasn't ESPN before seeing a headline? And I'm just asking
that question. I don't think so. No, HBO was actually

(11:22):
first on cable, Yeah, home box office. Now there was ESPN.
You know, you have to go back and google that
the early days of because the early days of ESPN
are unrecognizable for what they became for the last thirty
forty years, we'll be thirty years the original There wasn't

(11:44):
a lot of sports, and it wasn't just sports, So
I don't know, but the whole concept, it all begins
with Ted Turner, who passes away at the age of
eighty seven. Certainly he would be on the mont Rushmore
of influence of media and America. I think we can
agree on that.

Speaker 4 (12:01):
ESPN launched in September of seventy nine, CNN June eighty eighty. Yeah,
there were within six months of each other.

Speaker 1 (12:09):
Yeah, and in the ESPN though, But what was it
originally because it was it was what ESPN stands for
Entertainment Sports Programming, Network Programming. Yeah, but it was it
was a lot. It wasn't just sports when it launched.
It was gonna be a little bit of everything. Remember
the early years, a lot of Australian football or rugby.

(12:32):
You know, I was on You'd see two people playing badminton.
They didn't have any real sports what rad pong from Singapore?
Ping pong from Singapore. I used to love that. I
used to think I was really good at ping pong
until that came on and I realized, Wait a minute,
I'm too close to the table. These guys are playing
fifteen twenty feet away. That's how hard they had. How
do they do that? It's not all the cornhole championships

(12:54):
and stuff. They wow Rudo cord Oh, big big deal.
So anyway, wait, I don't know influence of Ted Turner
great talkback today, Epstein. This new suicide note. Does that
change whether you think he was killed or whether he's
still alive and living as an undercover agent abroad? The war?
Is it coming to an end? Or is bombing coming?

(13:16):
I don't think the market knows it's I would say
my favorite story of the day. In addition to some
of the highlights from the governor's debate last night in California,
which you'll get in Sounds of the Day, thirteen DC
police officers have been placed on leave. They all face
termination for manipulating crime stats. The President was right, everybody

(13:42):
that was suspicious was right. And yes, that radical tyrant
King who sent in federal support in a district of
Columbia to restore peace and security was right to do so.
Things were not safe. They were lying and manipulating numbers.
And for thirteen of them they're out of a job.

(14:04):
That and more coming up between now and the end
of the third hour. You miss the little, you'll miss
a lot. You miss a lot, and we will miss you.
Good morning, and welcome to your morning show. Now here's
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(14:28):
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(14:51):
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(15:13):
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Speaker 3 (16:04):
This is your morning show with Michael del Trono.

Speaker 1 (16:09):
This is John from Youngstown.

Speaker 5 (16:11):
Ask not what your morning show can do for you,
but ask what you can do for your morning show it.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
I'm ben platinum listener here, y'all.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Ik bin, I'm banda. Jack would have been very proud
of you conflating those woods into fine time. Gotdom is no. Uh,
please give me a warning before Bob does suey again. Okay,
Just as a personal note. Twenty eight minutes after the hour,
good morning, Welcome to Thursday, May the seventh. Nobody in
the class is behaving and I'm your substitute teacher. Secretary

(16:46):
of State Marco Rubio is headed to visit with Pope
Leo today at the Vatican. President Trump says the US
has a very is having very good talks with Iron
the past few days. We're very close to this war
being over. However, if they don't accept our deal, we're
going to bomb in the We never bombed them before.
And oil went way down, and then it ticked back
up a little bit, but it's still down overall seven

(17:07):
percent of ninety five dollars a barrel. The top seven
candidates in the race for the California governor faced off
in a debate last night. I've got some of that
in our sounds at the day. Today, we have the
purported suicide note of Jeffrey Epstein that has been released
by a judge. Time to say goodbye. Ted Turner gone
at eighty seven, and Americans are expecting to spend a

(17:28):
record thirty eight billion dollars on Mother's Day. But it's Mom,
She's worth it.

Speaker 6 (17:33):
And how about them Buffalo Sabers last night four two
over the Canadian More after the break thirty minutes after
the hour, Why dinner it comes?

Speaker 1 (17:46):
This is Bruce from Beautiful Big Canoe, Georgia. You're a
morning show. It's my morning show. Hi, it's Michael. Your
morning show can be heard on great radio stations across
the country like News Talk ninety two point one and
six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee, or thirteen hundreds The

(18:07):
Patriot in Tulsa or Talk six fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California.
We invite you to listen live while you're getting ready
in the morning and Tod take us along for the
drive to work. But as we always say, better late
than never. Thanks for joining us for the podcast. I
its time look in the mirror. Let me grab one listener.
Patricia had that sound. I thought it was great, weak

(18:29):
but great. Oh thank you week.

Speaker 4 (18:34):
The entire show usually after three hours.

Speaker 1 (18:36):
What was Patricia originally talking about? Do you remember it
was a movie? It was a movie. I was panning, Oh,
it was Milania Trump's. Yeah, no, Milania Trump's documentary movie.
I said, can you measure Michelle had put out a
movie like that? We'd all be bashing it that Patricia Covin.
I thought it was great. It was weak, but it

(18:56):
was great. I thought it was great, weak but great.
So every time we have him finished a half hour
of the show, that's what Jeffrey plays him out, it sounds.
I thought it was great. It was weak, but it
was great. That's good. Well, you know I made it
out of Tucker Carlson. I can't guess. I'm doing Tucker
Carlson and Charlton Hessen and you can't stop doing Red Well.

(19:17):
I mean I like to do that every once in
a while, like to right. Have you ever heard him?
Do you things that sound bad? But aren't? I mean no,
I have not. Oh he makes fun of you. When
you find something funny show him. You go, oh my god,
oh my god. Yeah, a little very They're very fenced
of you. All right, turn your echo off. You drive

(19:38):
me nuts. He's always echoing h thirty six minutes after
the art you're just waking up. Secretary of State Marco
Rubi has had to visit with the Pope Leo. By
the way, we're all just joking. We're family. I'll get
an email. Now, why are you guys so mean to Red?
Because he's so technologically challenged?

Speaker 4 (19:55):
Uh, President Trump, He's not really that challenged.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
He does have bad equipment, though, well, he has no
way to monitor live like he could monitor what we're
doing a minute and a half from now, but that
does no good. So he has to monitor by phone.
And then if he forgets when he turns the mic on,
if he forgets to turn off the phone, that echoes.
Look at now, he's getting mad. Look at it. Look
at the he goes, do it? Do it? Do it explode.

(20:19):
I'm gonna pick what I think is Red's favorite story
of the day, the Democrats eye problem. It's turned into
something much uglier. Now. This is you know, we always
sly behind every headline is a story, behind every story.
There's so much to talk about because that's where the
true understanding comes. But rhetoric matters the tone in America,

(20:41):
and so when these politicians who are playing a game
of R and D. Start playing a game of I
m P Israel and Palestine. It has impact, It has influence.
You call a president a problem, a threat to democracy,
a tyrant, a dictator, someone without a full deck of cards,

(21:04):
We'll take an action and try to kill him. I'm
not talking about twisting words like in target districts. Are
you saying target isn't put them in a target and
bomb them. I mean, those are stretches, but that isn't
what the rhetoric has turned into in America. Now nobody
ever takes the time. We're very good. Listen, I'm gonna

(21:26):
keep throwing Jack at you until you didn't get it
when Jack was alive, Maybe you can get it now
that he's gone. When Jack Kennedy said, too often we
enjoy the comfort of opinion without the discomfort of thought
that ought to be burned and etched into your mind.
Because it is so true, and every day I make
sure it's not happening with me. We have to go

(21:51):
beyond these immediate, immovable, firm positions based in no understanding
but narrative repeating. Very few people spend any of their
time really understanding Israel, really understanding Palestine really understanding Christ,

(22:14):
really understanding Muhammed, really understanding the Old and the New Testament,
and really understanding the hadith in the Qur'an. But we
spent a lot of time taking sides. Now, why would
red say the Democrats eye problem has turned into a
much uglier situation Because during the campaign season, the Democrats

(22:38):
had a real eye problem. Part of their base was
Jewish voters, and suddenly the radical end of their party
was very anti Israel. They ended up having a male
black voting problem, They ended up having a huge Hispanic
voting block problem. And yes, they had an eye problem Israel.

(23:00):
It's gotten worse, and you can bring it all back
to the beginnings of that twenty twenty race were reported.
Anti Semitic assaults in the US began to rise. Physical

(23:20):
assaults against Jewish people in the United States last year
reached the highest level since nineteen seventy nine. According to
the ADL, an overall decline in anti Jewish harassment and
vandalism didn't extend to a reduction in violence. The ADL
counted six two hundred and seventy four anti Semitic incidents

(23:40):
in twenty twenty five, while down thirty three percent from
the previous horrific year in the aftermath of all of
this election rhetoric, but still the third highest year on record.
Last year saw two hundred and three anti Jewish assaults,
up from one hundred and ninety six. Thirty two of

(24:03):
those assaults involved deadly weapons, up from twenty three and
twenty twenty four. Three people were killed in anti Semitic
attacks in twenty twenty five. It was the first year
since twenty nineteen that the Jewish people were murdered in
the US do to anti Semitic violence. They were simply
killed for being Jewish. Those attacks included a shooting at

(24:26):
the Capitol Jewish Museum in Washington, DC, a molotov cocktail
attack at a rally for Israel Israeli hostages in Colorado,
and the stabbing of a Jewish man in New York.
Global incidents spiked, with one analyst finding thirty four percent
search and anti Semitic worldwide as fighting escalates. Just to

(24:51):
give you some real context, one of our top ten
stories of the day Dateline New York Post hateful anti
Israel mob descends on historic New York City synagogue and
clashes with police and rowdy protest, which, by the way,
Fox is showing footage of an angry mob right now.

(25:15):
The hateful mob of anti Israel protesters flooded the street
at the historic Manhattan Synagogue Tuesday night, clashing with cops,
and they reportedly shouted Israel should not exist. This is
the kafaya clad anti Palestinian pro Palestinian organization. About one
hundred agitators waving Palestinian flags and banging drums swarmed the

(25:38):
half block near Parky Synagogue, chanting Palestine will never die,
stop the sale of stolen land. I don't want to incite,
I don't want to sensationalize, but twenty five years after

(25:59):
nine to eleven this September with an Islamist mayor, this
kind of anti Semitism is going on in the streets. Well,
the President warned, somebody's been fudging with the numbers. The
narrative was to pit us all against each other, as

(26:21):
the president a tyrant is he had dictators, He using
our military against his own people. By restoring law and
order in DC. After all, the leftist narrative pundits would
tell you everything's fine in DC. Crime is way down. Well,
now we know why it was way down. Thirteen DC
police officers have been placed on leave, all facing termination

(26:43):
for manipulating crime stats. The President was right, they were lying.
No trumpet blasts on CNN, no apologies from MSNBC or
anyone else who defended the narrative, but the President and
was out of line. And there's no question DC is safer,

(27:04):
and there's no question they weren't safe. And there's no
question now that thirteen different police officers personnel were fudging numbers,
purposely manipulating crime stats. Then there's Jeffrey Epstein. A suicide

(27:25):
note allegedly written by allegedly written by Jeffrey Epstein has
been released after being sealed for years. This was a
quote unquote alleged suicide note that was in one of
the books that his cellmate found. The note read, They
investigated me for months, they found nothing. Later the note,

(27:54):
it is a treat to be able to choose one's
time to say goodbye. What do you want me to do?
Bust out? This is no fun, It's not worth it
now in the matrix that we live in, I suspect
it's gonna change no one's opinion whatsoever. X number of

(28:16):
you listening are gonna believe he was an agent of Israel,
and he's alive and well at Israel. X number of
you are gonna say he was killed. Why number of
you're gonna say killed by a woman in a pantsuit
from the grass. You know that we believe was Hillary Clinton.

(28:37):
The majority of you will not know. But none of
this will change anything. Why because cameras weren't working, because
no one was watching him, because he had enough sheets
for a President's Day sale. I mean, I could go on.
I don't even know what to do with these news stories.

(29:00):
Apparently a month later after writing this note, Epstein killed
himself inside the Metropolitan Correctional Center in New York at
the age of sixty six. The note was made public
on Wednesday after The New York Times petitioned the court
to unseal it. It was not leaked, It was unsealed.
Now what do you do with this information? Is there anyone,

(29:22):
By the way, at no point in all the legal
proceedings read did anybody do a writing analysis to prove
that that was his handwriting. I mean, we keep saying alleged.
Do you think that would be the first thing that
would be done? I really thought we'd be describing something
a little.

Speaker 5 (29:42):
More what you were talking said, along with the order
they needed to look at when he put in his
order for extra sheets some of my pelow guide.

Speaker 1 (29:55):
Uh well, it definitely had more sheets than he had beds,
and more sheets than he had had more pillow cases
that he had pillows, I can tell you that. And
then Ted Turner, billionaire dies at the age of eighty seven,
really conquered the broadcast industry, did something very very innovative.
I don't know how much we would ultimately have to
suspect we owe to Ted Turner. And this has nothing

(30:17):
to do with him personally. This is just his achievement
in media. The first obviously do to twenty four hour
news fledgling at first until the Gulf War that really
launched it and then its transitioned into more primetime talk.
Larry King was a big part of that. Crossfire was
a big part of that. But twenty four hour news

(30:40):
changed everything. No longer did you have to watch the
six and ten or wait for Network news with Tom
Brojaw or anyone else. Was just there whenever you want it.
Now it's on your phone whenever you want it. But
that twenty four hour news also led to eventually twenty
four hour Sports, twenty four hour Weather, and then the

(31:02):
cat was out of the bag. He also should be
credited with the superstation concept, which is still alive and
well today. TBSTNT, you've probably been watching NHL NBA playoffs
on that the cartoon network Turner Classic. Then remember the
controversy when they started colorizing the old movies. Yeah, that
was horrible. I loved it, did you? Then again? You

(31:24):
know me, I'm not a big fan of black and
white unless it's the Marx Brothers of James Cagney. But
I mean very, very innovative. His fingerprints are all over
media usage today. He certainly made an impact. Ted Turner
gone at the age of eighty seven. We presume dementia
because he announced what about a decade ago, that he

(31:45):
suffered from dementia, but no real cause has been given.
Ted Turner dead at the age of eighty seven. All right,
those are the interesting stories. The real news is there
has been a deal sent to Iran. We don't know.
There's been no leaks on the US side, no leaks,

(32:08):
foreign ministers not saying a peep in Iran about it.
The President not a peep, not a leak from Pakistan.
So we don't know what this war ending offer is exactly.
We just know the expectation is Iran has forty eight
hours to respond. A President Trump, in classic Trump style,

(32:29):
said he felt very good about the talks. That's why
he paused the escorts in the strait of horror moves.
He really thinks we're close. Even said at one point
the end of this war is coming very very soon. Well,
the market went nuts. Oi'll plunge. The market went through
the roof. Then the President elaborated further, however, if they

(32:50):
don't accept this agreement, we're going to bomb them like
we've never found them before. The market stayed high, but
oil crept up a little bit. It's still ended down
quite a bit, seven percent down at ninety five dollars
a barrel, but Dow was up six hundred points, Nastak
was up five hundred and twelve s, and p up
one hundred and five. If you like roller coasters, you're

(33:11):
loving this negotiation as well as its impact on oil
in the market. More on that with our economist and
Money was David Bonson in the third hour. What was
your analogy read about like a weather man, right, so
you know, here's Donald Trump. Gary Shore was our weather
guy for a long time in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and the

(33:33):
station I was at, karam G had an affiliation with
Channel two, so he was the meteorologist for a radio
station as well. Gary has since passed away, but Gary
was famous for anything anywhere from a light dusting to
seventeen inches of snow. And I remember what after do
and I was saying, Gary, yes, anywhere from a light

(33:54):
dusting to seventeen inches. I mean, you're bound to be
right at that point, it's got to be something between
a light eds. Can we get more specific about the
expectation anywhere from this is going to be over to
bombing like you've never seen before. Is how the day ended.
But the presumption is Iron has the deal, the President's confident,
they're going to accept it. Marco's with the Pope, and

(34:16):
they've got forty eight hours or they get bombed. That's
pretty much Thursday, May the seventh. I'm just set the table.
I don't set the menu. I just set the table
here at your kitchen table in America.

Speaker 3 (34:28):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chano.

Speaker 1 (34:33):
Mary in Boyse Idaho, Idaho.

Speaker 7 (34:36):
In anticipation of Mother's Day, I just wanted to offer
that motherhood is the eternal pursuit of someone else's happiness.
So if you want to give your mom something great,
show her that you're okay, show her that you're happy.
And if you can't do that, at least go out
and buy her a Tinka guess and maybe throw in
a car wash.

Speaker 6 (34:52):
Have a great day, always wise, that's our Mary and Boise,
or start kicking in and then thirty eight billion dollars
we all planned spend on Mother's Day.

Speaker 1 (35:01):
But mom's worth it. But she's right, just wants to
know you're okay. So tell her you're okay, show where
you're okay, and love, honor and maybe throw in a
car watch. That's not a bad idea, All right, Rory
with Ai Chaos and John Decker from the White House
on the Latest Sun. These peace negotiations all straight ahead,
don't move.

Speaker 3 (35:18):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael hild Show Now
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