All Episodes

May 14, 2026 37 mins

Nancy Guthrie has now been missing for 100 days. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have an update on the investigation and where things stand now.

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

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Listen
Watch
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
on great stations across the country like Talk Radio eleven
ninety and Dallas Fort Worth, Freedom one oh four point
seven and Washington, DC and five point fifty k FYI
and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine or take us along on the drive
to work. But as we always say, better late than never.
Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
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 O'Dell Chorna.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
You don't realize we'd get much bigger ratings if we
just played our little limature videos live on the air
seven minutes after the hour. Good morning, and walkome to
Thursday May, the fourteenth year of Our Lord twenty twenty six.
Are kind of playing a game of urgent versus important.
I'm trying to figure out what China is. President Trump
signaling a desire to do business with China following meetings

(00:55):
with the Chinese leaders. BFEX Sports to China can re
start for major US producers. Meanwhile, the Senate confirming Kevin
Warsh as the next chairman of the fed reserve and
protests and Havannah breaking out as Cubans are out of fuel. Meanwhile,
Nancy Guthrie has now been missing for one hundred days.

(01:16):
You remember Nancy Guthrie, right, I hope we haven't forgotten her.
Roory Andneil, our national correspondents here with an update on
the investigation and where things stand now. Rory, why not
a peep out of this? This case is certainly gone cold,
it has.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
At least publicly, and really we're only talking about it
again because it's across this one hundred day mark.

Speaker 1 (01:35):
Now.

Speaker 3 (01:36):
The sheriff did give an interview to local media say
they are still working on some DNA evidence. He hopes
that with that evidence, combined with some digital evidence they've acquired.
He did not go into any detail that it might
be enough to finally crack the case and make an arrest.

Speaker 1 (01:52):
He says he's still confident and arrest can be made.

Speaker 3 (01:55):
And really, the only update we got from the Guthrie
family was a Mother's Day video from Savannah Guthrie talking
about her mom and how much she misses her these
past one hundred days.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
Well, that announced that she's going to host a new
game show, a word game show, which I think will
be a hit. I mean, you and I play wordle
every morning. But yeah, that and a little bit of
back and forth with the FBI being critical of local
law enforcement for not getting them involved earlier. Other than that,
it's not like there's any dangling leads out there really, no.

Speaker 3 (02:26):
You know, the conflicting information about the gloves and which
ones were there and where and who picked them up
and that sort of stuff. And you know, whether it
was Barney Fife is the sheriff or did he really
have his act together? You know, they did try this
effort to try to unsee him because maybe his resume
doesn't really match the facts. Apparently that fell short this

(02:46):
past week. But yeah, the sheriff says he's still confident
they'll crack this thing.

Speaker 1 (02:51):
Now, what were some of the big leads that have
all fallen through? Remember, we found gloves about half a
block away. None of that, none of the blood samples
that were found, nothing led to anything.

Speaker 3 (03:04):
Right, right, you know, the DNA in the gloves, perhaps
that maybe being tracked down. You know, they've talked about
DNA that was recovered inside the home that they're still
trying to work on he said it's a very slow
process and that the FBI is involved, and the sheriff
did try to push back against that cash Betel interview
where he said that they took days for the FBI

(03:24):
to get involved. The Sheriff's version of events is, you know,
I involved the local FBI immediately. Whether or not I
got up to headquarters, that's sort of out of his control,
all right. So we reached the one hundred day mark. Statistically,
an elderly woman abducted from her home, missing one hundred days.

Speaker 1 (03:42):
This doesn't with health issues. With health issues probably didn't
end well a long time ago. But we'll keep an
eye on it and see what day one hundred through
one hundred and fifty. Producers, We've always going to be
back talk a little bit more about the Beijing meetings
in China, and the President is wrapping up pretty much
or busy eating right now at a state dinner in China.

(04:06):
Can't have your morning show without your voice, nor would
we ever want to. I think we're starting in Youngstown, John.
This is John from Youngstown.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
So, Michael, how soon can we expect you to start
an apprentice series with Red and Jeffrey. I know I
think that would be pretty awesome. Networks probably fall over
themselves to televise that. That would be pretty awesome. The
Michael del Jorno Apprentice program.

Speaker 1 (04:36):
Yeah, we had a we had a cockadoodledoo moment yesterday
Vice President Vance while revealing fraud, and the big story
there was they had canceled all of these quote unquote
services being paid for by Medicaid and only a handful
bothered to call. That's how obvious. I mean, what was

(04:56):
it read? It was something like ten thousand of them
canceled and they twenty phone calls. I mean, you want
to know you're on the right track that you dozed
properly canceled ten thousand supposed medical services and have only
twenty go hey, why'd you cancel us? The other what
nine thousand, nine hundred and eighty just not a peep.

(05:20):
So that was really what But what kind of stole
the show was when somebody asked them, hey, would you
think of the president doing a straw poll between you
and Marco or discussing you and Marco as a dream ticket,
And it was JD. Vance, Vice President that acknowledged the
President is playing apprentice a bit. Maybe it's his lifelong
fascination with politics. Maybe it's his old job as the

(05:41):
host of the Apprentice, but there's no question hes playing
the Apprentice. We actually did the Apprentice at KFAQ and Tulsa.
This is twenty five years ago, and our winner actually
went on to be our sideline reporter for Arena Football,
among other thing. And we literally did a competition with

(06:02):
listeners and someone won and actually got a job. Really,
Julie Turnage I believe was her name at the time.
That's back when you were doing play by play, right,
I was colored. Mark Woodellway was played by play for
the television. But it was fun. I don't know that
I can't play apprentice with you two. You both got
your jobs and they're completely different. They're already doing them,

(06:24):
and Andrea already fixed the fire alarm issues in my studio.
I don't even know what assignments I wouldn't give you.
I don't want to do labels sound better? Could be
one today I could. I couldn't, nor look a look
at his face. You would always you always pass. You
are over and above the call of duty. I am

(06:45):
here to push buttons and to slave over a hot
broadcasting board. Yeah, I don't know how we would do
an apprentice with with with Red and Ed Jeffrey, but
that's a good idea, John, one I've done twenty five
years ago. It was very successful. Big John. Big John
had surgery, didn't he. Big John's on the men. He's

(07:07):
on the men. Keep Big John in your thoughts in prayers.
Although I think the surgery went well, he's already he's
already betting again, so he's definitely recovered. Here he is.
Let's not forget this weekend.

Speaker 5 (07:16):
We have one of Doff's majors, the PGA Championship. Just
for fun, Mike, give me Scotty Scheffler and I'll take
John Rahm.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
Who do you got? I don't have John Brahm. I
do like the Scotti Scheffler pick. Unless we're in some
extraordinary stretch with Rory, I'm gonna go with Scotty Scheffler
as well on that. And Justin Rowe is also playing
very good golf right now. I thought it was just
shocking to me you didn't bring up the Preakness, which

(07:47):
is this weekend. And of course I said early on,
I don't think there's any chance we're going to have
a triple Crown winner. In fact, I don't think we're
gonna have anyone win more than one race. In other words,
three different winners of all three jewels. Well, the scratch
makes that a reality. And now only what I think
three horses from the Kentucky Derby are even competing in

(08:08):
the Preakness. I don't think.

Speaker 5 (08:10):
I don't think any of them are except for that
one scratch, the what was it, the one that threw
his jockey off at the beginning, that's the only horse
that's going to be in it.

Speaker 1 (08:20):
The one who acted up, No, I don't think he's
even in it. The big Great White or whatever whatever
his name was, the big Giant, one great one, I
don't think he's in it.

Speaker 4 (08:30):
That.

Speaker 1 (08:30):
I don't think there's any No, there's I think there's three.
Taj Mahal is who I think is going to win
the Preakness. This is speed horse, and that's going to
ensure that two of the Jewels of the three will
be different winners. For sure. I just sense and this
I would be interested in Big John's opinion. And if

(08:52):
they do this, this is going to be even worse
than Roger Marris. I think that there has long been
a movement to try to spread these races out more
and the minute we take again, what is the challenge
of the Triple Crown. It's three races two weeks apart.
That grueling schedule is part of it, the different distances,

(09:15):
and you got to remember, the Kentucky Derby is a
little over a mile. That's a lot for a three
year old. They're not there yet, so the Derby itself
is a stretch. Then you come back with the shorter
Preakness and then the grueling mile and a half of
the Belmont. You start spreading these out because you're gonna
I'm almost convinced that you're going to hear the narrative. Well,

(09:40):
the reason the Derby winner was just too quick of
a turnaround to go to the Preakness, and the health
of the horse is way more important than the Triple Crown.
Now you put three or four weeks between each race,
then you got well. And if that's what it takes,
then you'll never measure the Triple Crown again. They'll be
never a way to compare the two. And I think
that's what's coming. Give me taj Mahal on the breakness

(10:01):
and give me Scottie Shuffler.

Speaker 5 (10:02):
In the PGA. What Michael, you're a horse guy? What
what what changed? Why can't they do it now? Why
was it possible in the past. What's so different?

Speaker 1 (10:12):
Uh? Nothing other than it's difficult. Well yeah, okay, yeah, no,
I mean just not wanting to uh. And and for
the for the breeding market, you know, is is the
breeding more valuable with just a Kentucky Derby wind rather

(10:35):
than a Derby wind that looks like a fluke and
then a loss at the brikness in thevelment. I Big
John may be a better person answer that. What he's
in Arizona.

Speaker 6 (10:44):
You may be slaving over hot microphones all day, but
that No, she didn't have to walk backwards in snow
without a jacket to school like your parents or grandparents.
I can't tell you how many times my dad pulled
that one out and used it on.

Speaker 1 (11:00):
Well, actually my father my mom didn't have very far
to go to school, or did my father. I in
Arlington Heights, Illinois had to walk over a mile to
school every day and it was so cold. I used
to play a game when I was walking how long
could I walk on top of the snow without it?
You know, caving or giving a little bit. It was freezing.

(11:24):
I really did have a bad childhood. But it was
no more uphill or downhill coming home than it was
going but it was still a nightmare. And I remember
I used to walk with day Pond. He was a
hockey player. You know, back in those days, you didn't
know you rarely. In high school, we had a figure
skater that's really rare, and I think he's still skating

(11:45):
in shows. He's obviously my age at sixty, but he
did shows for a long time with Disney on ice
and so I'm but yeah, hockey players were rare, and
golfers were very rare, remember because everybody just played football, basketball,
and baseball. That was it. Then soccer came in in
the mid eighties. Yeah, we had one guy that was
a golfer. But day Palm was a hockey player and

(12:06):
he wore his hockey jacket. It wasn't that heavy. It
was kind of like a letterman type jacket and it
was two degrees. Meah, I was bundled. I had everything
but the dogs. It was like an I did a rod.
It looked like Ralphie's brother in the Christmas Story. Oh,
it was grueling. Remind me when I write that book
for my kids to include some chapters on that as well.
Copy ask any dog owner. Oh, by the way, I

(12:28):
did get one other email, because you can use the
talk back if you're listening on the Ihear app, but
you can also email Michael did at iHeartMedia dot com.
I did get an email from Jeffrey. I don't believe
I'm allowed to play it. You are not. I said
that this is just for you, just for me. It
was just basically an animal passing gas, but very childish
but very very fulfilling. Kind of got your mind off things,

(12:50):
didn't it. Well? That horse after that could be my
favorite for the briefness. The last time I went for
a general yearly checkup, my G suggested five different vaccines.
Shouldn't force him on me, but I just can't imagine five.
And after the COVID fiasco rsb osteoporosis, infusion, whipping cough, shingles, measles, flu, covid,

(13:18):
I'll take my chances on my God give an immune system.
That's not a bad guess, although I would say I
do the flu. Some years are better than others in
terms of coverage, but I do the flu and I
do the shingles, because shingles are a nightmare. By the way,
that shot is a nightmare. It kind of hurts. Good morning,
Michael One. Not only is President Trump having Vance and

(13:41):
Rubio compete in public, he's got his thumb on the scale.
When it came to the press conference competition, he had
JD go first. After a gap of time, he gave
Marco the last at bat, and after he hit it
out of the park, Vance's press conference had already faded. Two.
Los Angeles race and the California governor's election are the

(14:03):
beginning of what is bringing California out of the abyss,
or so it seems to me. Roger, we played earlier
and I played again in Sounds of the Day. You
have an attack ad on Pratt in the Los Angeles
Mayor's race, and the attack ad I think is the
most powerfully effective ad you could have done for Pratt.

(14:25):
Now that speaks to the matrix and how different we are.
We're not close now, we're extreme left in extreme common sense,
and so they thought it was an attack ad, but
it's actually a very powerful ad for Prett, and we're
seeing the numbers move towards him, along with a great
debate performance. But he put out a viral aiad on

(14:46):
the mayor. Now it's an attack ad using humor and
satire about the city burning down while she's out of
the country, and it's memorable. It's laugh out loud, funny,
and unfortunately for the mayor, it's very very true and damning.
So yeah, keep an eye on that race. And it

(15:07):
looks like at the moment anyway, that their little trick
that they thought was going to set them up, like
it's set up the mayor's race in New York has backfired.
You're gonna end up. It looks like at the moment
with two Republicans facing off, and you will get a
Republican governor. Ask any dog owner in a bed office

(15:27):
who hears the word cancer, joint deterioration, or organ failure.
It's the worst things you can hear. The dreaded moment
has arrived. The dog you love, you're now faced with
making a decision, and the really at first thought is
always that guilt of was there anything I could have done?
And then the expense of what you can do now.

(15:48):
MRIs specialists medication surgeries probably inevitably to just arrive at
the same place. The final act of love. Well, let's
address that first one. Is there anything you could have done?
Because there is, and the best time to do it
would be the moment that puppy came home. The next
best time is right now. A dog's body starved of

(16:12):
live nutrition becomes vulnerable over time, vulnerable to illness, to inflammation,
to disease. And that's where rough Greens comes in. For
pennies a day, you can give your dog with their
food is missing or has been baked out live probiotics, enzymes,
and mega oils, plus over twenty vitamins and minerals, all
natural made in the USA. Thousands of dogs feeling younger,

(16:34):
more energetic, happier, healthier, living longer. I'm not a spokesperson.
I depend on rough Greens because I love Boomer and
I want every minute with him. And I've watched his
life change sprinkling rough Greens on the very same food
I had been feeding him in the morning in the
afternoon his entire life. And you can see the difference

(16:55):
for yourself. You start with the same three jumpstar trial
bag I did. All you do is cover the shit.
The Roughgreens trial bag is free. Go to Roughgreens dot
com ruff Roughgreens dot Com use the discount promo code
YMS for free jumpstart trialbag. Just for being a listener,
you covered the shipping Roughgreens dot Com discount code y
ms makes every dog better, so good. The last board

(17:19):
by name reads.

Speaker 7 (17:24):
Hey, everybody's john Ford Coley of England, Dan and john
Ford Coley. And my morning show is your morning show
with Michael del Jorna.

Speaker 1 (17:37):
Hey, it's Michael. Your Morning show can be heard live
each weekday morning on great stations like thirteen sixty The
Patriot in San Diego, News Talk, one oh six point
three and A M eighteen eighty WM EQ oh Claire,
Wisconsin and one O four nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri.
Would love to be a part of your morning routine.
But so glad you're here now enjoyed the podcast new

(17:58):
please dec niche if I'm not mistaken. Are made with
the same technology.

Speaker 5 (18:05):
As COVID with the NMRNA, So that's actually the problem.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Actually that's true. You can get an mRNA flu shot,
but they have the traditional flu shots as well as
the nasal sprays. I would not recommend the mRNA and
I do not get the mRNA flu shot. I get
the old fashioned style flu shot. But good point made there,
all right, President Trump enjoying a state dinner even as
we speak in China. Senate has confirmed Kevin Walsh as

(18:35):
the next chair of the Federal Reserve. Calves moved to
within one win of their first trip to the Eastern
Conference Finals since twenty eighteen, winning last night. They head
home tomorrow for Game six, and the Avs made short
work of the Wild four to three. They were down
three to nothing yesterday, came back to tie the game,
win an overtime four to three over the Wild. Wild

(18:58):
is eliminated. The Abs advanced to the Western Conference Final.
They'll take on either the Knights or the Ducks. And
you have inspired to stop it, don't you. No? No,
It is the motto yes keep come come. I'll remember that,

(19:21):
all right. Always revealing, often entertaining. Time for your Sounds
of the day. We start with Vice President Advance. We
had this long discussion earlier this morning about the difference
between urgent and important, And while it may look like
what's happening in China is more important, it really isn't.
Now there's some urgency involving the Strait of Hormuz. But

(19:43):
I mean, even if we took it like all right,
what if the President had canceled or delayed this trip again,
these two countries would probably be in the exact same place. Which,
by the way, commenting on that, I talked to great
length this morning, how I don't know what's going to
come of these meetings. I know who the President brought along.

(20:05):
I know he arrives with carrots and sticks. What I
liked is the way he was greeted, And I made
the point yesterday. Isn't it amazing how the president is
treated at home versus when he goes abroad. Now, we
didn't have the waving of the hair or the camel parade. No,
we had children, boys and girls, all dressed either in

(20:29):
white skirts or slacks, baby blue tops, and they're waving
China and American flags. You had the military on the tarmac,
You had the delegation to greet the president. A great
deal of pump circumstance and respect. These are two men.
They're going to represent their interests in their countries and negotiate.
So they are competitors, but there is a spirit of

(20:54):
unity in that we know that we can set an
example of how to work together in a world that
increasingly is troubled. We can be the example, and they'll
hold their ground and they'll fight for their country and
their best interest. But at least there's mutual respect and

(21:15):
a mutual understanding of what is possible. And I said
earlier that's enough for me. And isn't it interesting? For
as much as separates them Taiwan, the competitiveness and technology,
these two adversaries treat each other with more respect than

(21:36):
the two parties treat each other. At home, we were
having this conversation about urgent versus important. You could make
a case that that testimony and a Rand Paul Homeland
Security hearing was more important than this entire trip to China,
the truth about the ultimate fraud COVID and not a

(21:58):
single Democrat show up for the hearing, or how about
the future of the Republican Party, whether you call it
a dream ticket or playing the apprentice, You could make
a case the conversations jd. Vance was having at home
the guy left off the trip was more important than

(22:19):
the trip to China, because if you spend your entire
life not knowing the difference between urgent and important. I
can assure you you'll live in crisis management and in
the realm of urgent, and you'll never get around to important. Oh,
we should know the difference between urgent and important. So
I make a case as we start sounds of the day,
that these might be the most important sounds, the ones

(22:43):
coming from America, not China. And we start with the
vice president.

Speaker 8 (22:46):
Well, I just don't think it sounds like the President
of the United States to have a televised competition for
who would succeed him as his apprentice. I just think
that's not at all what you would expect the president
to do.

Speaker 1 (22:59):
But no, I look, I think the.

Speaker 8 (23:00):
President he's always been fascinated by politics. If you talk
to him, he was fascinated by politics thirty years before
he ever ran for office. So I think it's natural
for him to joke around with us a little bit,
to play around with the idea. But I can tell
you the President is as focused as any of us
on making sure we do as good of a job
now for the American people.

Speaker 1 (23:18):
All Right, that's a good answer. Isn't it interesting though,
that the vice president chose the word apprentice. I've been
saying that for over a year and a half. For
over two and a half years, I've been saying, I
know Mark Rubio is the President's man, and I know
that his kids talked him into JD. Vance, And I
know it's not even in it's not even in Donald

(23:39):
Trump's makeup to forget JD. Vance was once a never Trumper,
but he has been literally playing the apprentice with both
of them to try to help you pick the right one.
And everybody wonders if this all ends with the President

(23:59):
pretty much tell telling you who won. They press jd
on it, and that forced him to comment on Marco
and the whole concept of a dream ticket. You're going
to hear glowing words about Marco. You're not going to
hear any indication concerning not just the dream ticket, but
anybody even focused on who's going to run, which is

(24:21):
a little insulting because you know they better be thinking
about it. There's just not that much time before they
do run.

Speaker 8 (24:26):
I've answered this question probably in any number of ways.
I love Marco. I think he's a great Secretary of State.
He's become a very very dear friend. But I think
both of us are very much focused on accomplishing the
American people's business right now. If I was the American people,
there are a few things that I would hate more
than a person who's barely been in one office for
a year and a half, who's angling for a job

(24:47):
two and a half years down the road.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
Let's do a good job now we are. We just
got to keep at it. Perfect answer then to the
business of hand this is by far and away, and again,
don't forget being the frauds are is his apprentice task.

(25:08):
But they identified ten thousand quote unquote medical service providers
who have been taking advantage of Medicaid, canceled them. You
would think you'd have heard from them. I mean, if

(25:30):
they were legitimate. Hey, wait a minute, what are you
doing canceling us? Out of the ten thousand they canceled,
this is Jdvan's telling you how many they heard from.
I want to make sure I understand this well.

Speaker 8 (25:39):
So you're saying that we kicked off eight hundred of
fraudulent healthcare providers off of the Medicare system, and not
a single one of them called the government and said, hey,
you made a mistake.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
We've had a handful of calls.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
We're not sure they're legitimate yet, but it's less than
twenty out of eight hundred, and we're auditing them.

Speaker 8 (25:54):
Unbelievable, So at least seven hundred and eighty are not
even trying to cli that they're not fraudulent. And again,
those are businesses that we were giving hundreds of millions,
in some cases billions of dollars to not to provide services,
but to make a frauds to rich It's just completely insane.
Drives home the scale and skill of the problem, all.

Speaker 1 (26:13):
Right, So that it was ten thousand worthy the frauds
that have been identified, but eight hundred of those that
were providing services that were closed in less than twenty
they're not even sure if the twenty calls they got
are legit. It tells you the massive fraud that is
out there. Now. The truth of the matter is, if

(26:35):
we're going to talk about fraud, we should be interested
in the greatest fraud ever perpetrated on any people by
its government, COVID. So this is CIA whistleblower James Erdman third,
testifying before a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee

(26:55):
chaired by Rand Paul that not a single Democrat appeared
at listen.

Speaker 9 (27:04):
The b SEX scientists influenced national Laboratory WMD research policy decisions,
finished analysis, and other intelligence matters, creating misaligned incentives and
conflicts of interest, as well as counterintelligence issues. Since two

(27:26):
thousand and six, the b SET consulted part time on
biodefense issues for the IC while conducting government funded research
and holding academia positions, as well as maintaining roles in
public health institutions and serving as members in the National
Academy of Science. They received funding from NIAID and other
agencies for vaccine research.

Speaker 1 (27:49):
Now he's going to the conflicts of interest. The biggest
point of the entire testimony is Fauci and how he
misled the President and the American people.

Speaker 9 (27:59):
Listen, Intentional or not, the ICs actions resulted in cover up,
wasted resources, and a failure to properly inform policymakers. Public
health policy would have been very different had the American
public been made aware that a virus from a lab

(28:20):
in China was going to serve as the foundation for
an Emergency Use Authorization mRNA products being mandated by the
former administration.

Speaker 1 (28:34):
The Mulcan Institute. I could find that and play it
for you. This is months before COVID, and these are
all the top scientists from around the world. Fauci's there,
Fauci's all but leading the discussion, and they're talking about
mr NA technology, and they're talking about the burden. You know,

(28:55):
this could take a decade of trials, this could take
millions and millions of dollars. It's just so frustrating. Of course,
those trials are always worth having, because if there's problems,
you don't want to kill innos in Americans. But that
was all just an inconvenience for them waiting in the
wings to profit. And then one of the other scientists,

(29:16):
it wasn't Fauci, one of the other scientists said, but wait,
what if there was like a crisis. What if there
was a situation where, let's say, you know, one of
these gain of function viruses leaked from a lab and
it created like a worldwide pandemic and we were forced
to have to try to rush something, and then two
months later it happened. Wouldn't that be an interesting piece

(29:41):
of video for everyone to look at. Isn't it funny
the CIA whistleblower is explaining just that. Listen to this section.

Speaker 9 (29:54):
The CIA and D and I analytic manager is responsible
for examining the origin of COVID made decisions inconsistent with
the conclusions of subject matter experts and analytical tradecraft, consistently
favoring the theory of zoonosis or in natural origin. Following

(30:14):
the CIA's COVID relook that culminated in twenty twenty three,
the CIA retaliated against analysts supporting the lab leaque hypothesis.
CI analysts were not bribed. The analysts that supported the
twenty twenty three Lab League conclusion took every administrative measure

(30:38):
available to them to address their deep concerns regarding the
analytic integrity of their finished intelligence. CIA managers retaliated against
them for their refusal to agree with managements middle of
the night anonymous rewrite of the analysis.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
So throughout this testimony you get this general feel. Obviously Fauci,
Obviously America was aware of the gain of function research
that they denied being aware of in this Wuhan lab.
Obviously it leaked accidentally or intentionally. Obviously China had a
lot to gain by destroying the Trump administration, and obviously

(31:19):
the Left took great advantage of it to change election
laws Eventually, But bottom line. This was an attempt to
rush mRNA technology that has cost Americans lives. This was
all a vast cover up and it led ultimately. This

(31:43):
could be a little bit me, but it should be
anyone's takeaway. A vagueness and void that could be filled
with a narrative, and a narrative that led to, if
you get COVID, we don't know what it is, we
don't know how to solve it, we don't have a
vACC and you'll probably die. Therefore, stay home, stay safe.

(32:06):
This is the new normal. It created the fear and
the void to insert misleading narratives, which ultimately leads up
to Fauci walking into the Oval office and telling Trump,
if you don't shut this country down, you don't lock
up every healthy American at home, you'll have two million
dead by Easter. And that's simply not the truth. The

(32:29):
truth is Fauci was involved in this research, knew exactly
what this gain of function research was. He was itching
to introduce mRNA technology and this was a great crisis
to do it, and then mis led the American people
on its lethality and his involvement. And he was the

(32:50):
infallible point person. I mean, getting back to important versus urgent.
Is this urgent well to the degree that they might
try to pull this stunt again with a hunt of
virus maybe, but no, Ultimately this is important. China is
actually urgent. Help with the strait of Hormuz. Finally, you

(33:12):
had Mayor Bass do an attack ad on Pratt in
the mayor's race in Los Angeles. This is fascinating for
anybody that's not even in California. We played it for you.
It sounded like the greatest ad you could have ever
made for Pratt, which is somewhat of a editorial on
how differing we have become in this nation far far

(33:36):
far far crazy left common sense rest of us, I
won't even say far right. Well, a great moment in
a debate. That attack ad has led to Bass falling
flat and Pratt rising fast. And then the Pratt team
put out this AI generated fake ad that's gone viral,

(34:00):
basically showing you a city burning down with an incompetent
mayor making excuses about being out of the country during
the fire, about homelessness and everything else, and then ultimately
finishing with that very powerful political question, Hey, look, if
you think things are great, by all means reelect. Karen Bass.
Watch it's hilarious.

Speaker 4 (34:18):
I'm Karen Bass, and I'm running on my accomplishments.

Speaker 5 (34:24):
Tower Inferno, Los Angeles on fire mayor nowhere to be
found hanging out.

Speaker 1 (34:29):
We're so prepared for wildfires.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
I didn't even have to be in the country when
the town burned.

Speaker 5 (34:36):
I've addressed the homeless problem.

Speaker 4 (34:39):
Now most of them won't stab you as.

Speaker 1 (34:42):
Long as you don't make eye contact.

Speaker 5 (34:45):
Our climate change policy is so strong. We've brought down
energy use in the.

Speaker 1 (34:51):
Part of burned down neighbors ninety nine percent scared kids.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
None of the needles in children's playground have aids on them.

Speaker 3 (35:01):
If you like the last four years, you're going to
love the next four.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
Vote Bass. Obviously you can't run that on television. You'd
probably get sued. But oh, what an effective viral ad
where people are watching most on social media. And that's
your sounds of the day, everybody. I'm not joking. I
don't think we should be taking the advice from a
group of people who can't define what a woman is.

(35:29):
That was just complete da and that's your sound of
the day right now. Voices in our culture are loud,
but truth is often silent. I refuse to be silent.
Preborn needs you to not just know what's right, not
be pro life, do something pro life. Women facing unplanned

(35:49):
pregnancies are often pressured to act quickly before they have
time to pause, breathe, or hear all sides of the truth.
At Preborn, a woman is welcomed with compassion and given
a ultrasound because when she sees the life growing inside her,
here's that baby's heartbeat for the first time, she quickly
realizes this is not a problem to be solved, This

(36:11):
is a life to be celebrated and protected, and she
chooses life twice as often. Twenty eight dollars provides one ultrasound,
one hundred and forty dollars will provide five. Statistically the
proclivity as you would save two and a half lives.
Isn't that better than just an opinion? To donate now

(36:33):
pound two fifty, say the keyword baby, pound two fifty,
keyword baby, or gift securely online at preborn dot com
forward slash Yms. That's preborn dot com Forward slash Yms
sponsored by Preborn. All gifts are tax deductible and God
bless you as you get We're all in this together.
This is your Morning Show with Michael Vindheld Choo
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb

Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb

Joy is essential. And it's also elusive. You can't order it, borrow it, or simply hope it into life. But now, there's a new and exciting way to start your journey toward a more joyful existence: The Joy 101 Podcast with Hoda! Best known for her Emmy-winning work and co-anchoring Today, Hoda Kotb infuses her authenticity, curiosity, and warmth into conversations with the world’s most fascinating people. Entertainment legends, sport icons, wellness experts, and everyday folks will share how they find, allow, and experience joy. Hoda will offer her own tips and takes on seeking a more balanced, harmonious life. If you're craving inspiration, support, and useful tools to maximize your joy, tune in to these candid, uplifting, and moving on-air chats. Joy after a breakup, joy as an empty-nester, joy after loss, joy as a caretaker — Hoda's new podcast will speak to you. Joy 101 with Hoda Kotb, an iHeartPodcast.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2026 iHeartMedia, Inc.

  • Help
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • AdChoicesAd Choices