Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard weekday
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Speaker 2 (00:16):
Three, starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
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This is your Morning Show with Michael o'deil Charman.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Seven minutes after the hour, good morning, and welcome to Wednesday,
made the twentieth year About LOLd twenty twenty six on
the airstreaming live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your
morning show. Take your place at the kitchen table. Email
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if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app. It's a microphone.
You press it gives you thirty seconds to make a comment,
ask a question. You can't have your morning show without
(00:54):
your voice. Welcome morning. President Trump says he's hoping to
end the conflict with the Ron very quickly said that
at a picnic with members of Congress. Meanwhile, you have
Congress getting ready to vote on war powers. Just to
make sure he's serious about that and rush him along. Now,
we all went on pause and waited at the behest
(01:19):
of Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates cutter because this next
deal was going to be so good it wasn't necessary
to bomb on Monday. We're very very close. Well, we're
going to go over that deal. They do want reparations.
It isn't much of a new deal. So I don't
(01:39):
know if bombing commences and then it's over, or if
the President is still hoping to find some ground to
negotiate to end this quickly. Either way, I don't know
that quickly is the word that comes to my mind.
I knew all of you would wake up and want
to know, well, what happened in Kentucky. Well, the president's
ninety five percent proclivity to call races came through again.
(02:02):
Massey failed and went down to defeat. They have some
audio of his concession speech at Gallering is the winner
and this turns out to be one of the more
expensive congressional primary races of all times. And certainly one
that got the focus because of the President's support for
(02:22):
ed Over Robert Massey. Russian President Vladimir Putin is going
to be meeting with Shijen Ping in China, and this
is just days after Trump was there, because he's going
to fill in his counterpart on everything that was discussed.
And then of course the Chinese leader is coming to
the US in September. The FBI says the two teen
(02:43):
suspects behind the deadly shooting at the Islamic Center in
San Diego were radicalized online. Add that, Jeffrey to my
resume if you could, FBI analyst. I think I said
that yesterday, didn't I yah. We placed it on there,
just in pencil yesterday, but we'll put it in bin.
Now now confirmed by the FBI, three executions are scheduled
(03:05):
this week in Arizona, Florida, and Tennessee, all three well
covered states of Your Morning Show and the caves dropped
Game one really looked like the Knicks were going to
fall into the same pattern that the Thunder fell into.
These teams that get their business done early, is rest
good or bad usually equals rust. It did for the
(03:28):
Thunder started to for the Knicks, but they got it
together and really pulled away in the second half one
fifteen one oh four over the Calves. So Cleveland now
down one game to nothing in that series. All right,
I am going to resist the urge to do any
Howard cosell impersonations, Oh Red wanted me to go down,
(03:51):
Ghosts Massy down, ghosts. Man. It's really not a shock.
Although my takeaway on this is strange. We have been
dealing with for almost a decade now, the unreliability of polls. Now,
much of that decade because we had the year lead up,
(04:12):
four years of Trump, four years off of Trump, and
now two years into Trump two. This decade is very
clouded by Trump. So the question is to MAGA supporters
want to respond to poles. If you call, they're not
(04:33):
going to answer, They're not going to tell you. In
some cases, they might be a little paranoid about what
you're up to. In most cases, we just we like
playing stealth and so on, and so poles have become
very unuseful and inaccurate, and then you get forced when
(04:53):
you're doing analysis to kind of just put it in
there as kind of not really so much ada as
it is assumption and try to feel your way in
the dark to what's coming. I mean, that's how I mean.
Someone I respect more than anyone who's a regular on
the show had Kamala Harris winning the Electoral College with
(05:17):
two hundred and eighty something ELECTORCA, and I was like, no,
it's gonna be Trump with three sixteen. Well, how do
you arrive at that? Well, the polls are so close.
If he wins in one of these swing states, he's
going to win in all of them, or he's going
to lose all of them, especially if you believe in
the Shenanigans that they pulled four years earlier are going
to be pulled again. Trump was much wiser with early
(05:40):
voting and mail in voting the second time around, And
so I went with everything I was seeing in the polls,
everything we were, you know, hearing on the ground, and
I was like, no, I think he takes them all.
You think he's gonna take every swing state. And I
would look at people and I go, well, he either
takes them all or loses them all. So change your
ta Kamala three point fifteen or don't call me a'more.
(06:04):
And of course I turned out to be right, but
that's how inaccurate polls are. Now we can break it
down sensibly. Well, there's no more home phones. People are
very fragmented, very busy. Even if they did still have
a home phone, if they don't recognize the number, they
don't answer. Just like if you knock on their door
(06:25):
and they look and as nobody they know, they don't
answer anymore. And when you call their smartphone, if they
don't see the face and name of someone they know,
they don't answer. So they can't get to the people
to get accurate polls. But we talked yesterday, but now
that we're betting on everything. When you saw Massy go
(06:47):
from who was it sixty four percent to forty four
percent in ten days, I don't know. I think these
these live betting apps are far more accurate than poles,
and they sure were. In Kentucky, Thomas Massey lost his
Republican primary. Trump handpicked then endorsed ed Gallerin, whose victory
(07:15):
demonstrated the president's influence over the GOP. How do you
like my garbage truck? Yeah, well I think he's liking it.
Now here's the issue. How long does Donald Trump reign
over this party? And does he reign two years from now.
(07:35):
Give me an example. Could he hand pick the Republican
nominee himself? Maybe that's why he's playing apprentice with JD
and Marco. Ronald Reagan wasn't nearly as influential for eight
years as president as his revolution was for two two
(07:58):
and a half decades after or for still today? Is
that where Donald Trump is headed? Think of Donald Trump
the millionaire, the developer, all the years of both parties
coming to him, kissing up to him, asking for money,
(08:19):
wanting his support. For how long well Donald Trump rain
over the Republican Party even after he leaves? Time will
tell on that. We can debate that. You can use
the talk back if you'd like to. But the question
is he does rain now? And for Thomas Massey, you
(08:40):
mess with the bull, you get the horns. Though he's
still in a bit of denial, this is his concession after.
Speaker 4 (08:48):
We weren't really running against ed Galryan, we weren't running
against Donald Trump.
Speaker 5 (08:56):
We were running for what we believe in.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Yeah, and what you believe in didn't match what the
voters believed in, which was a president far more than
you or I think more specifically, and I think accurately.
I do this all the time, and I just think
it cuts through the mess the best. If Donald Trump
(09:22):
is so different than a Republican, someone tell me what
he's done that is counter to the Republican party platform.
Make that the talk back today, make that the emails today.
Can anyone name one thing that Donald Trump? Now, I
(09:42):
will tell you most Republicans taught. This is why I'm
not a Republican anymore. I would never be a Democrat.
Have nothing in common with them. Their platform I really
don't believe has much in common with America anymore. But
that's a whole other story. My problem is they live
they believe, and it's counter completely anesthetical to my entire worldview,
(10:07):
let alone policy views. So it could never be a Democrat.
Why am I not a Republican anymore? Because they so
rarely live their platform. If Republicans lived their party platform,
it would almost virtually match mine. But they don't, and
I don't have any trust they will. And Donald Trump
(10:30):
is only a freak because he does. Isn't that in
the end what really got Massy not living the very
platform that he represents. His voters looked at the President,
looked at him, listened to the President, listened to him,
(10:50):
and they sided with the President, and he's headed home.
And that ninety five percent clivity for anyone Donald Trump
endorses goes on to win, even if it's a if
it's a late entry, well, I mean, at some point
(11:12):
you're getting into the definition of insanity to keep going
against the president. Massey was defeated by d Gallerin, who
was backed by the President. This was one of the
top races many believed that would test the measure of
Donald Trump's grip on the GOP. I guess the President
passed the test, and just ask the victorious one at Gallerin.
Speaker 6 (11:34):
It was a David versus Goliath. I was the underdog.
I want to thank the President. I want to thank
the Conservative Republicans from this district and my supporters and
team because it sends a message that we the people
are going to stand up.
Speaker 3 (11:48):
How many times does that message have to be sent
before these inside the beltwigh politicians will stop believing the
kool aid they're drinking in Washington and start listening to
voters at home and across the country. So big Shock
Massey goes the way of Cassie. President Trump is hoping
(12:14):
to end the conflict very quickly. We're going to go
and come back through what we can glean from this
latest offer, and it just doesn't look that much different.
So I, you know, at some point I got to
look at Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Cutter
and say, just what were you seeing? The President has
(12:35):
the prerogative to hold off on bombing, but the presumption
was they're seeing something in the negotiations they think could
end this. I don't see that coming. So is bombing
commencing or the conflict in Iran ending very quickly? And
how much of that is the discussion between Putin and
(12:58):
she and China? Well make sense of all of this,
miss little, You'll miss a lot, miss a lot, and
will miss you. Rory's got the latest on all these
primary elections in the power of Trump. Decker's going to
join us from the White House. Jd definitely did better
in his second time working the press room. Do we
assume Marco has a date coming again? Soon? As we
(13:19):
continue to play the Apprentice, we'll ask our White House
correspondent John Decker about that, Davids and not he's going
to be joining us to go over these races and
what they mean as well as I'm going to run
by him the death of Late Night too. I know
that's something he's been following. And Red Night crunched some
ratings numbers. Let me tell you something. If you think
journalism dead is dead, well, then SNL is in late
(13:46):
late decomposition. It's so dead. And then Roy I'll have
the latest on summer vacation plans. I see a lot
of stacations in America's future due to gas prices and
debt and economic pressure. Well right now, voices in our
culture are very loud. Truth is often silent. I like
(14:10):
to break through the loud and get to the truth.
Women who faced on planned pregnancies, they're always pressured to
act quickly, and let's face it, pressured to lean towards
one choice. There's no other explanation for why they're never
(14:31):
allowed to see an ultrasound but that this culture likes
to say pro choice, but they don't seem to like
when the life choice is made At a preborn network clinic.
You walk in. First of all, you're met with compassion.
You're also given a free ultrasound. When an expecting mother
(14:55):
sees her baby for the first time. Here's its heartbeat
for the first time. She's twice as likely to choose life.
And if you really are pro choice, you shouldn't care
which choice is made. And if you are pro life,
getting these ultrasounds provided would be key to going beyond
an opinion and really making a difference with life. Twenty
(15:16):
eight dollars provides an ultrasound one hundred and forty dollars
with sponsor five and by statistical proclivity, would save two
and a half lives. Do you want to just say
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(15:37):
online at preborn dot com, forward slash yms, Come on Yms,
Audience be the solution. Preborn dot com Forward slash Yms
sponsored by Preborn. All gifts are are tax deductible, and
of course God bless you should give the gift of life.
Speaker 7 (15:55):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 3 (15:59):
Good morning, gentlemen.
Speaker 4 (16:00):
Let's get this Wednesday up day off to a great start.
Speaker 7 (16:05):
I haven't spoken to my wife.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
In almost three years. I don't want to interrupt her.
Speaker 8 (16:10):
Boom Bennie and both forget about it.
Speaker 3 (16:17):
I can see everybody's going to be in a good
mode with all these Trump victories. Hey, I got it
twenty eight minutes after the hour. That's really the question
of the day, Washally, I got a better question. You know,
you mess with the bull, you get the horns. It's
Donald Trump's party. How many times are they gonna have
to learn this lesson? I mean, if you're a Republican
and you go all anti Trump, I hope you know
your day's are numbered. It's a definition of an insanity
(16:40):
to continue to do that and unexpect to be ousted.
How did jd Vance go from never Trumper to next
in line vice president? That's really amazing. Bill Cassidy was
the first. Thomas Massey fell yesterday. It begs the question
for all of us, who is next? And wasn't the
(17:00):
only one to fall last night. We'll look at some
other Trump defeats in primaries across America in six states
when your morning show continues. Also your top five stories
of the day and the new movement now to boycott
I presume all sec athletic events in the South as
(17:23):
the divided Democrat Party continues to be at war with
itself and try to get us to all fight with
each other.
Speaker 7 (17:31):
Brett and Franklin, Tennessee.
Speaker 5 (17:32):
On My Morning Show is your Morning Show with Michael
Del Johno.
Speaker 3 (17:42):
Hey, it's Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
I'm so glad you found the podcast, and don't forget
you can listen to your morning show live each weekday morning.
Your morning show can be heard in great cities like Youngstown, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee,
Saint Louis, Sacramento, Phoenix, just to name a few. You
can find that your morning show city closest to you
on our website, Your Morningshow online dot com, and we're
glad you're here for the podcast.
Speaker 3 (18:03):
Enjoy Rise and Shine. Early Bird gets the warm Sleepy
Squirrel missus and we got ourselves on Wednesday, May twentieth,
twenty twenty six, to live together and understand together, because
we're all in this together. This is your morning show,
Honored to serve you. On Michael Jeffer's got the Sound,
Red's keeping an eye on the numbers. I think the
your morning show and we could be roostering a lot
this morning. Couldn't we But we don't do that. That
(18:23):
would break a commandment. But our consensus is first Bill Cassidy,
then Thomas Massey. Who's next, Who's next to cross the
bowl and get the horns of Donald Trump. We're gonna
go with John Cornine in Texas next week. That'll be
a week from yesterday. By the way, Massey was not
the only victory. The President had another political foe. He
(18:50):
took down Georgia's Secretary of State Brad Rafensberger Tuesday, became
the latest Trump casualty in a mid term primary. In
a primary, Raffensberger, who well is well known for rebuking
the President pushing to overturn the twenty twenty election, came
in dead last in a field of three candidates buying
(19:12):
for the GOP nomination for Georgia governor, earning less than
fifteen percent of voters support. Trump endorsed the Georgia Lieutenant
governor Bert Jones, who led the crowded primary with thirty
eight point seven eight percent of the vote. Billionaire healthcare
executive Rick Jackson gathered thirty two point eighty five percent
(19:33):
of the vote. Neither met the fifty percent threshold to
win the nomination outright. The two are projected to advance
in a runoff for the general election for governor in
the Peach State. Burt Jones three hundred and fifty seven
thousand votes, Rick Jackson three hundred and three thousand votes,
Brad Raffensberger just one hundred and thirty nine thousand. Now
(19:58):
where does the off take us? Time will tell, But
you can add raf as a murger to the Thomas
Massey Bill Cassidy list as well. And as for who's next,
We're gonna go with John Corny in Texas. But use
a talkback buttoner emails if you want to express who
you think might be next. Got an email Michael, did
(20:21):
I heart me? Please be advised that someone is using
your account to create a duplicate account using your name.
I can't I can't control that. All I can tell
you is I pay out a pocket for there to
be a little check mark. So unless you see the
check mark by my name, it's not really me. And
that's all we can do. When you guys tip me
(20:43):
to this, I always notify Facebook. I don't know how
good they are at removing them, but I'll add yours
to the list. That's not money, Mike, that's not you.
I can't believe no one started a diamond biking. Now, yes,
you can unfollow that one. Roger writes historically, how many
polls have had elements of push polling? I remember the
(21:06):
only time I actually received a call to participate in
a poll. It was when I still had a landline
I could record. By the way, I get a lot
of political texts. I think I don't respond to political
texts more than I do calls, and I don't respond.
And I think that's the problem. A lot of people
(21:27):
don't respond. Could it be that the polymarkets actually make
push polling ineffective? Just to thought, Well, I can tell
you the poly markets are far more accurate than polls. Now,
I mean, I think that in the case of massive
we brought this up before it happened, and we're bringing
it up now after it happened. In fact, what did
(21:50):
Massey end up with? He lost by ten percentage points
ten thousand votes, which became ten percentage points. Now you
wouldn't execute it this way. Or but he had a
forty five chance in the poly betting to win, down
(22:14):
from sixty four, and he ended up getting forty five
percent of the vote and losing. So I mean, I
do I think these I think these betting apps are
going to be more that that's where people will talk
with their betting money and give you a better clue,
whereas there's a phantom America that is not able to
(22:35):
be recorded in regular polling. I think. So you don't
only vote with your feet, ye vote with your dollars
as well. Well, I don't even want to start that
because I'm bound to be better at that than I
am at sports. Not that I bet sports anymore, haven't
in decades, but yeah, it is interesting. I mean, that
(22:58):
was my main takeaway is that these these polymarkets are
going to be more effective than polling and seeing what's coming,
especially late money, and the late money was all on
ed Gallery, and ed Gallery went on to win today
or yesterday. All right, so NAACP. Now again, this is
(23:24):
going to be a problem moving forward for the left.
Even if let's say energy stays high, interest rates stay high,
the economy you know, seems troubled. What are they going
to be offering in message? Now? I do think the
midterm message could be stronger than the presidential which is
(23:47):
two years later. But The early talk of all the
presidential candidates, especially Kamala Harris, is everything that we have
to break, got to break the Supreme Court stack, the court,
gotta change these laws, got outlaw this gotta you know,
it's all about taking down the Republic, dismantling the republic.
(24:13):
And it's all if we did a brainstorming designed not
for your security, not for your prosperity, not for your liberty,
not for your freedom. It's for whatever we have to
do so that the d's can win. And it's not
even nuanced. And I think I would add this NAACP
(24:37):
to that. So while everybody's focused, I'll give you a
great example. Everybody's focused on the price of gas right now.
What a terrible time to consider suggest or propose to
the people, let's raise gas taxes. I mean, timing does
(25:04):
have a say, doesn't it. And of course that got
rejected immediately in Oregon. This is just as stupid. Now
the NAACP wants all black athletes to boycott schools in
the South. I don't have to tell you in the
(25:28):
SEC where many of the major university opportunities in the
South exist, the percentage of black athletes or the name
and likeness, dollars or the ability to have a long,
very financially successful future at the next level in the
(25:51):
National Football League comes by way of these schools. But
you got how King Jeffries, the Black Caucus, you got
all calling on black athletes to boycott these schools in
the South. I think these athletes are going to pretty
much treat this the same way as proposing a gas
tax increase in the middle of a gas crisis. I
(26:13):
doubt they're going to listen. But this is the kind
of wait, you're talking about, what, Well, everybody's focused on this,
and it's all this old game of division that I
think America has somewhat moved on from. So we'll keep
(26:36):
an eye on that. If you think Donald Trump is
a powerful influence, don't ever underestimate the craziness within the
Democrat Party to focus on all the wrong things at
all the perfect wrong time. The FBI says that the
two teen suspects behind the deadly shooting at the Islamic
(26:56):
Center in San Diego were radicalized online. I think that
was pretty obvious to all of us. Two teenagers who
met online seemed to be radicalized into white supremacy online
(27:17):
steal their mother's guns one mother's guns, steal the BMW,
and then go on a shooting rampage at a mosque.
The mother had called the police, who were in search
of them. Both couldn't get to them before they got
to the mosque, and it took a heroic guard to
really stop most of them. But the two teenagers who
(27:43):
shot and killed three people in the attack appeared to
be radicalized online, according to the FBI, where they first
met online and shared white supremacist views. According to authorities,
the pair didn't discriminate on who they hated. I tried
to find a delicate way to bring this up because
(28:04):
we're in a conflict with Iran, which is a radical
form of Islam. Somebody's going to try to turn this
into Islamophobia, and it has no calling cards at that.
These two, as the FBI said, did not discriminate on
(28:24):
who they hated. The writings obtained by the Associated Press
included hateful rhetoric towards Jewish people, So they can't be
islam at phobic and anti Semitic as well as homophobic.
I mean, they had a lot of hate for the
LGBT community, a lot of hate for black people, a
(28:44):
lot of hate for women, a lot of hate for
the political left and the political right. I mean, they
were all over the road. These are just you know,
you're looking at the product of the social dilemma, which
is a loneliness, an isolation, and then a radicalization for
(29:05):
what they drifted towards online, which in this case was
just hate. This was clearly that had all the markings
at this time yesterday. And go back and listen to
the podcast. I said, this is not aslamophobia. This is
mental illness combined with social dilemma and online radicalization. Both
(29:32):
express beliefs that white people are being eliminated. That paranoia
one writes about mental health struggles and being rejected by women.
Investigators also found at least thirty guns. I know, I
got to I don't have time to be friends with
all the listeners, but one that I do go back
and forth with a lot is Roger in Sacramento. I'm
(29:56):
on the golf course yesterday and he cracked me up.
There's some reports there's at least thirty guns, even a crossbow.
This woman needed more than she needed more than one save.
You know, how many guns did this woman have? I
loved the crossbow. Yeah, they had their I mean they
(30:18):
must have said, hey, come to my house. I think
I got some stuff. So they found at least thirty guns,
ammunition a crossbow at two residences after Monday's attack in
San Diego, and we're trying to uncover whether the shooters
had broader plans. Caine Clark seventeen, Caleb Basquez. I can't
be the only one that has saw this. I mean,
(30:40):
it appears White's supremacy was the main calling card, and
the name is Masquez. I'm just wondering if I'm the
only one that tried to put those two things together.
But Kane Clark seventeen, Caleb Vasquez eighteen, they both killed themselves.
There was some reporting that it was Vasquez who encouraged
(31:02):
Clark to kill him after the mass shooting in somewhere
a long line. Maybe he did and then killed himself.
We don't know. But I mean, the calling card is
not a Islamophobia. The calling card is mental illness, social dilemma,
online radicalization. And I hope you didn't need the FBI
to make that clear, but we do have more information.
(31:23):
We'll kick that around with Rory as well. All Right,
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Speaker 7 (32:40):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.
Speaker 3 (32:44):
President Trump told lawmakers that the White House Congressional picnick
he hopes to end the conflict with Iran very quickly.
Speaker 5 (32:52):
He said Iron was eager for a deal and argue
the situation should have happened for forty seven years. Trump
added that action would come fast and adicted oil prices
would fall as a result, while insisting the administration was
close to resolving the war and preventing Iran from obtaining
a nuclear weapon. His remarks came just hours after the
Senate advanced a War Powers resolution, which is aimed at
(33:13):
requiring the withdrawal of US forces from.
Speaker 3 (33:16):
The Iran conflict. A Mark Maathiew Republican Congressman Thomas Massey,
a vocal critic of the president, conceded defeat in the
Republican primary in Kentucky's fourth congressional district.
Speaker 4 (33:27):
We weren't really running against Ed Goweran, We weren't running
against Donald Trump.
Speaker 5 (33:36):
We were running for what we believe in.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
And they were voting for their own platform. Massey was
defeated by Ed Gowering, who was backed by President Trump.
This was one of the most one of those races
that was kind of hand picked is to identify whether
or not the President still had a grip on the GOP.
And he still has a grip on the GOP. In fact,
just ask the victorious Ed Gowery.
Speaker 6 (34:00):
Was that David versus Goliath? I was the underdog. I
want to thank the President. I want to thank the
Conservative Republicans from this district and my supporters and team
because it sends a message that we need the people
are going to stand up.
Speaker 3 (34:12):
The US is making a special exception to health regulations
to let the Democrat Republic of Congo's soccer team into
the country for the World Cup.
Speaker 9 (34:20):
Currently, non Americans who have been in the drc Uganda
or South Sudan in the last twenty one days are
barred from entry because of an outbreak of the deadly ebolavirus.
A State Department official said that efforts underway to let
team members in while still subjecting them to the same
screening is required for returning US citizens. Fans from the
DRC are not eligible for the exemption. The DRC is
(34:41):
set to play its first World Cup match in Texas
on June seventeenth against Portugal. I'm Tammy Trhio.
Speaker 3 (34:47):
Well. We had one for Bob Dylan, it was outstanding.
We had one for Bruce Springsteen not so good. He's
already had a great documentary. Why not a bio pick
on Billy Joel? You have a piano.
Speaker 10 (35:00):
Man sing Us AsSalt Tonight, Well Around and the Mode,
directed by John Ottman, Billy and Me will chronicle the
formative years of the superstar singer pianist through the eyes
of Joel's first manager, Erwin Massour, who discovered the singer
in nineteen sixty six.
Speaker 5 (35:19):
Billy Joel apparently not pleased with the idea.
Speaker 10 (35:22):
The Hollywood Reporter quotes him as calling the project both
legally and professionally misguided.
Speaker 3 (35:27):
Are Mark Mayfield a tennis legend, proves kind of like
an athlete legend earlier this week that it's never too
late to go back to school.
Speaker 8 (35:36):
In nineteen sixty one, Billy Jean King started taking classes
at count State Los Angeles, studying history, but before finishing,
she left to focus on her professional tennis career, where
she'd gone to win twelve Grand Slam singles championships. Sixty
five years later, she finally got that history degree, graduating
Monday and telling students one of her favorite life lessons
she picked up along the way.
Speaker 6 (35:54):
Everything we do winning or losing, good or bad, it's feedback,
not fit, it's.
Speaker 8 (36:01):
The eighty two year old also said she hopes to
inspire others to finish school.
Speaker 3 (36:05):
I'm Jason Athenson.
Speaker 7 (36:06):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Nteld Chorno