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May 28, 2025 35 mins

Amazing and revealing look at Gen Z and happiness, plus, our scary example of AI ability and chaos to come.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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 AM eighteen eighty WM e Q oh Claire,
Wisconsin and one oh 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 a

(00:20):
while two three.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Starting your morning off right? A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:32):
This is your morning.

Speaker 2 (00:34):
Show with Michael gill John.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Now you might ask, what is starting your morning off right?
Define that for us leave For Red, it's silence with
bourbon in the background, and for you it's Ricardo Montebom smile.
It's everyone smile. Well, that's how they started their vacation
off right, and then it usually went very wrong, even

(00:59):
for Barbie and Sunny Bono. Harbie Benn I missed those
old shows, all right, eight minutes after the hour, Ready
or not, here we come. Welcome to Wednesday, made the twenty.
Do you realize we're days away from entering the halfway
month of the year. Yeah, yeah, what is going on?

(01:21):
I mean, who was I watching yesterday? I've been on
a little like Bad News Bearers came on the real one. Yeah,
and here the first one and here's my son. I'm like,
you've never seen the Bad News Bearers. Our whole life
is revolved around Little League in baseball. Kelly was my hero.
You know what kind of holds up? Oh? Absolutely, it

(01:43):
holds up Walter math Al walking around with the cooler
hots kids. Absolutely, it holds up. It held up. But
you know, I'm just I've been watching a series of
things where everyone's dead and I think mortality is like
chasing me around. And then somebody popped on on TV
show that you know. It's just one of those things
where you don't see him for long. Oh no. It

(02:04):
was the commercials during Bad News Bears. The guy that
used to do all the Missing Kids, Walsh whatever his
name was, John Walsh, John Walsh, Yeah, him and his
wife were doing a commercial for joint pain, because that's
all the commercials are anymore. Well, that was what was shocking,
having laid eyes on him in decades. He's like, oh
my gosh. And then the worst part about it is

(02:27):
everything they're selling. I'm experiencing, like you know, I do
have joint pain. I can't do the activities I used to.
All of a sudden, I'm watching Bad News Bears and
you know, everyone's dead, and I'm like, Wow, what's happening
with time? By the way, halfway through the movie, Nick Lectorhan,

(02:47):
he goes dead. Yeah, you know the guy that plays
the Yankee manager. Yeah, Vic Morrow, he got decapitated. Yeah,
I'm aware. On the set of Twilight Cell, somebody's obviously
not paying attention to the movie and his googling. Nick
know that, Well, he googled, Oh, check it up on it, Nicks.
That's what we do in the car. You know, a
song comes out dead or alive. Give me the decade.

(03:10):
I don't think this guy's on nineteen eighty, nineteen seventy seven. Yeah,
we do dead or live. Just for those listening. Nick
really doesn't sound like that. That's the way he seems. Actually,
his voice was deeper young, it's getting higher as he
gets older. So this is his Niga is a toddler. Yeah,
that's more Nick at eight. Only a few of my

(03:30):
old old listeners. Nick used to be the night watchman
because there was a time. I don't think he ever
slopped really, And then he had the eye thing where
he doesn't have the muscle on his eyelids soil. We
had him surgically repaired, but you know, so he would
wait a minute sleep. Yeah, he was born with no
eye lid muscles, so Vanderbilt they attached silicone to the

(03:52):
eyebrow muscles. He doesn't his brain does it all for
him now. But there was a time he would open
his eyes by lifting his eyebrows. No, now, you can't
tell when, but he would sleep with his one eye open.
And then I'd get up in the middle of the
night and he'd be on the landing and I was like,
what is he the night watchman? He never goes to sleep.
And his voice was real deep. Its like I gave

(04:13):
Bertha Sean Connery at sixty eight. I don't know what
we were talking about. Oh, time is flying, it's almost
it's almost June. Wednesday made the twenty eighth elon Musk.
We've got descent descent today. In fact, that's going to
be the topic for our conversation with our senior contributor
David Sinatti later. A little bit about this descent. But

(04:34):
Elon Musk is very disappointed in the President's so called
big beautiful deal, our big beautiful bill bill. Maybe he
should have called a deal and then I would have
brought Well, then I would have called a bill, right,
must doesn't like the Big Beautiful Bill, or at least
he's disappointable. Talk more about that. President Trump says Canada
could pay as much as sixty one billion dollars if
they want to be protected by the Big Golden Dome.

(04:58):
It's that or you have to become a part of
of our country. He's not letting up on that is
He's some things I just don't get that he does.
Tommy Tupperville, how does that work in Alabama? When somebody
like Tommy Tupperville runs for governor? Do the Obama fans? Yeah,
how does that work? He is going to launch his

(05:19):
bid to be the next governor of the great State
of Alabama. COVID vaccine no longer recommended by the CDC
for pregnant women or healthy children. I'd like the CDC
to give us an explanation if it ever should have
been recommended for pregnant women or healthy children. Remember the
other day I was bringing up one of my worst
memory visuals, and I brought up waffle house, Yes for

(05:40):
during COVID. No, the other one was and we're pretty
four mild seasons in Middle Tennessee, but on this particular
day during Little league, it must have been about one
hundred degrees, perfectly sunny and hot. And the shortstop on
the opposing team is out there at shortstop well no
one anywhere near him, wearing a mask. And I'm thinking,

(06:04):
where's this science that a healthy child with no cole
morbidities would need to protect themselves from COVID by wearing
a mask in one hundred degree heat running around playing sports?
Which do you think might be more dangerous for that
eleven year old, the mask or the virus? But what

(06:29):
we find in our journey of discovery is their journey
of discovery, which shouldn't have been a discovery. I mean,
they're the CDC, right, I'm just a talk show how
student who struggled through biology, which makes me pause and
think of Missus Rouse, who I don't know what it's

(06:49):
called red. You could do something this morning and research
what is it when a bone starts growing up out
of your foot? Because I don't think it's a bunion.
If it is, it was the largest bunyon in history.
But anyway, she was very nice bunion or a corn no,

(07:10):
not a corn no, what I'm telling you a it
would have been the circumference of that four inches growing
out of the top of her foot so much so
and not operated on to the point were no matter
what right shoes she wore. She had to cut a
hole in the top of it for the bone to

(07:30):
stick out. I'll never forget that foot. It's an absolutely
true story. A bone spur. But could a bone spur
grow that big and wide? It can't be good. I
should have well, we didn't have phones back then, or
I had taken a picture of her foot and had

(07:51):
proven it to you. I think of her, I think
of her and how I struggled through biology, and yet
I got there would be no reasonable it is to
give a COVID vaccine to a healthy child or a
pregnant woman. The CDC, now what is it, six years later,
has finally figure that out and finally come claim with
there's just no evidence that any healthy young man or

(08:12):
boy or girl would need a COVID vaccine. So they're
following the science they're finally after six years following the science.
All right, but that's kind of all the news stuff.
I'll throw in student visas halting and NPR suing Trump,
but that's basically like what the news of the day is.

(08:35):
What do we want to talk about? I don't know
anybody else's favorite story is, but I cut right to
the gen Zers. Who if you isolate those who are
the happiest among the gen Zers, what's the key to
their happiness? The return to religion and family. You gotta

(08:58):
be kidding me, right, There is a creator who did
create us in his image. He knows what we need,
he knows what makes us happy. Everything he said was true.
All alone is the great lie coming to an end,
And it started with the gen Zers. Go figure. Voters

(09:19):
were asked to compare the Republican Party is an elephant symbol.
The Democrat Party is the ass the donkey. So if
you ask people now, what you're getting, of course, through
the animals is a perception of what people think of

(09:41):
these parties. I mean, when I first saw this, I thought,
you know, this Babylon B is this onion? Is this
red playing a joke on us? These are the kind
of things that usually Jeffrey fines online somewhere with this
questionable browser history and then runs it by Red. Is
this true to which he sends pictures from a concert

(10:04):
that he's at this weekend with Tiny Kiss members Mini
Kiss Yep, that's their name. You go by Mini Kiss,
Mini Kiss, Little Peter yep. Yeah, they're all four feet
or less, right right, so to speak? And apparently it
was a great show, with the exception of I don't
think I didn't find you were pleased with Little Chris's

(10:28):
Little Peter or whatever, what is it. I think he
would go by Peter Chris or little Chris or Minnie Peter.
Little Peter's what they were calling him. Yeah, well I
would go with Minni Peter. You didn't like his version
of Beth. I did not think it was his best performance. Okay,
But the guy who's always finding stuff online and going

(10:49):
that's outrageous and going red, is this real? Is sending
pictures with Miniature Kiss people singing in concert. And it
was real? Oh, it was real, all right? I found
that I wrong, So I when I looked down, I thought, well,
this somebody's playing a joke for the Democrats. Tortoises slugs
and sloths were picked. Not very complimentary obviously for Republicans.

(11:19):
I think this is actually kind of very complimentary. Why
was it? Do we know the origins of the elephant?
Grand old Party, large animal? What was it? I don't
even know. Look, none of us know. But here's what
respondents said for Republicans. Lions, tigers and sharks. Oh, my begs.

(11:43):
The question now is this their view of the new
Trump Republican Party? Are you what are you sending me?
I don't even I'm afraid to even look. Just more
pictures from Saturday Night. Oh, the one guy does kind
of like a little Gene Simmons. Well, and then there's
actually when they got the Minnie Peters pyrotechnics and everything,
don't they was awesome? Yeah? Huh, just a unique stick.

(12:12):
Should have gone. Try to tell you I have a
life anyway, to make a long story short, what do
we make of lions, tigers and sharks for Republicans and turtles,
slugs and sloths or do you have anything better? Don't
forget to use that talkback. Throughout the show, the Dems
drop twenty million dollars on Sam. Who the heck is Sam? Well,

(12:32):
it's a bizarre American men's strategy plan to get out
of the hole they find themselves in. It has nothing
to do with criminals are great, cops are bad. We're
all systemically racist and responsible for everything bad that happened
in history. America sucks, the rest of the world is great.

(12:55):
We don't know the first thing about what a man
or a woman is. We could even define a woman
or what bath you should go to. No, we're just
must not be using the right words to reach men.
Which leads me to the Sounds of the Day, where
Dan Pfeiffer is going to basically break down the whole
the Democrats find themselves in, especially with Hispanic voters. So

(13:17):
did I mention the speaker new Dingrich on the show
today to discuss Trump's triumph. You did a couple of
times yesterday, not so far today though his forty fourth
book is out. These will join us to talk about
other I think this dissent descent or strange bedfellows. And
now we get some fighting with the Elon Musk. Roy's

(13:40):
going to keep an eye on the market and the
labor force and the feud with Harvard. It's a big,
big show. One chance to live this Wednesday, made the
twenty eighth. Because time flies, whether you're.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Awake or not, It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
NPR is suing President Trump over an executive order toase
sees all federal funding from the nonprofit broadcast as they
are tax supported broadcasters. Mark Mayfield has all the details.

Speaker 3 (14:11):
Three other public radio stations fillowed the lawsuit along with NPR,
alleging Trump's May first order violates the First Amendments protections
of speech and of the Press, and steps on Congress's authority.
The lawsuit also argues that Congress has long recognized as
speech at supports with public funding remains private and thus
fully protected from censorship, retaliation, or other forms of governmental interference.

(14:32):
The broadcasters are now seeking to have the order permanently
blocked and declared unconstitutional.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
I'm Mark Neefield. President Trump says Canada could pay as
much as sixty one billion dollars to be protected by
his Golden.

Speaker 4 (14:44):
Dome, or they could get it for free by joining
the US. Trump made the announcement on truth Social Tuesday
and claimed Canada very much wants to be part of
his proposed missile defense system, is that it would cost
them zero dollars if they become our cherished fifty first state,
his boe said, Canada's can considering the offer. It came
just hours after the UK's King Charles made a rare

(15:04):
speech in Canada emphasizing Canadian sovereignty. I'm tammaged for HEO.

Speaker 1 (15:08):
SpaceX engineers are troubleshooting several issues that plagued Tuesday night's
final test flight of Starship. Your Morning show's Roy O'Neil
here has more.

Speaker 5 (15:17):
A highlight of the test is the first reuse of
a Starship booster with its thirty three engines. It later
failed other test objectives ahead of its destruction over the
Gulf of America. Leaks aboard Starship later prevented the opening
of cargo bay doors. Then it began to spin out

(15:40):
of control before its plan splash down in the Indian Ocean.

Speaker 1 (15:44):
I'm rory O'Neil. Well, whether you go for the two cheeseburger,
frying a coke or the quarter pounder, this is your day,
National Hamburger Day, bre Tennis with what's for lunch or dinner?

Speaker 6 (15:55):
Americans sink their teeth into fifty billion hamburgers every year.
That's a lot about one hundred and fifty per person,
and without the cheese, they're not all that bad for us.
According to the Department of Agriculture, one burger has about
two hundred and fifty calories, lots of protein, but a
lot of sodium and cholesterol. Today we'll focus on the good.
There are deals from just about every burger joint coast

(16:18):
to coast. I'm Bree Tennis.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Birthday's today. Oh, a velvet voice and one of the
nicest women I ever met in real life. Eighty one
years old Today, Gladys Knight minus Sir Pips CCRs. John
Fogerty is eighty The Mayor Rudi Giuliani is eighty one,
and Secretary of State Marco Rubio is fifty four. If
it's your birthday, Happy birthday. So glad you were born
and thanks for making your morning show a part of
your big day.

Speaker 4 (16:43):
Hi.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
I am actress Lisa Varga and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael del Giordo. Hey, gang, it's Michael.
Your Morning show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great radio stations like k EIB in Los Angeles,
WFDF nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan. The superstation and the

(17:04):
rock of Talk sixteen hundred AM KIVA in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
We'd love to have you listen live every morning, but
glad you're here now for the podcast. Enjoy. I normally,
you know, stick to what the team has decided we
are going to do. But I'm going to take a
turn right now, I said from the very beginning. Okay,

(17:27):
here we go from the divided states of America into
the social dilemma, and here comes Ai. Here comes the
accelerant on this fire, this inferno, and I think I

(17:50):
view it. You know, I always view life through a
biblical lens, a geopolitical lens, and a historic lens. And
this is far different than the Industrial revolution, This is
far different than the advent of television and radio. And
what we've seen ultimately social media do is lead us

(18:11):
into isolation, to stop actually living and project a life
rather than really living it. And now here comes the accelerant. AI.
I know that the big spiritual battle is life and death,

(18:33):
eternal life and eternal separation and death. So if the
enemy's job is to rob and steal and to be death,
one big victory could possibly be keeping you from living.

(18:53):
And I always bring up that profound moment where I
was at the Apple store and we were doing computers
the girls to go to college with, and Nick and
I were bored, So for twenty minutes we did the
and I can never remember the name of it. It's
the goggles you put on, the Apple goggles something quest
or whatever it is, and it's a twenty minute demonstration

(19:16):
and it really is amazing. It has to measure your
eyes and everything first, and then you have to learn
that when you look at something, if I just tap
my two fingers together, that clicks it. By wide my fingers,
that opens it. You know all these different things and
eventually you'd be surprised how quick you can learn it.
It's the vision pro vision pro and so you know,
whether it's being in a recording studio with Alicia Keys

(19:39):
and you're three dimensionally standing right next to her. It's
like you're really there while she's recording her song, or
whether it's just working on the surface of the moon,
and I mean the surface of the moon. Look down
and you see the dust, look up, you see nothing
but space all while you're working. Where would you rather
work your cubicle, your office or on the surface of

(20:02):
the moon, and I thought, we're going to go from
being a generation that walks around staring at our phones
and not talking to each other to never leaving the
home and just putting this on and going wherever we
want to go without really going anywhere, living anything we
want to live, without ever really living. Could this be
something really sinister? And so right now none of us

(20:26):
can put our finger on exactly. You know, Pandora's out
of the box, but we just don't know much about her,
So we don't know how big she's going to get,
where she's gonna go, what she's gonna wear with AI,
my son discovered something, and I just thought it was
so revealing. I thought, well, this is going to take
a long time. Would my audience enjoy this? Because here's

(20:47):
this AI great unknown. What if I could apply a
little known to it. So we do a little joke
when we're bored, and you know, if I really want
to say I love you to my son, or here
my son say I love you to me, I'll just
out of the blues say something like, oh man, look
at this what Fox News headline Franklin son hates father,

(21:10):
you know, something like that, And that just became kind
of like a ten year joke that we do. So
my son, yesterday, while we were visiting my mother in
the nursing home, decides to type into AI. Let me
know at any point if you guys don't find this fascinating,
and I'll stop. I want you to know. All he

(21:31):
typed in was are you ready for this? Think of
this in terms of a journalist. Imagine a journalist just
wants to create a narrative and he just says one
little simple statement. And watch what AI can create. Now
as I do this, Notice everything that AI knows about me.
Notice how it writes and crafts the whole story vaguely

(21:54):
in terms of covering its allegation, rumored this and that,
and all the anecdotal evidence to just destroy my character
with something that isn't even real. Notice all of that.
So is AI scary? All right? All my son typed
into the AI was make a news article. Gives it

(22:15):
the order make a news article about talk show host
Michael del Journo that hates his son Nick. That's all
he typed into AI. Would you be And we just
wanted to pick something silly and stupid. That means something
does to nobody else. Obviously, I don't hate my son
or as close as to human beings can be on earth.

(22:36):
But just to show you how Ai works, all he
types in make a news article about talk show hosts
Michael del journal that hates the sun Nick this is
what it creates. Headline. Talk show host Michael de del
Journo embroiled in controversy over alleged feud with his son,

(22:57):
Nicholas mad twenty twenty five. Michael del Jorno, the outspoken
host of Your Morning show on iHeartRadio, is facing intense
scrutiny following rumors of a deeply strained relationship with his
eighteen year old son, Nicholas del Jorno. How does it
know his he's eighteen years old? How did he know
all the other stuff? The allegations, well, this is what's scary.

(23:18):
The allegations, which have gained traction on social media platforms
like x, suggests that the conservative talk show host Harbor's
animosity towards his son, sparking heated debates among fans and
critics alike. The controversy erupted after an unverified ex post
from Truthseeker twenty two claimed heard Michael del Jorno. Can't

(23:39):
stand his son Nick talks about family values on the air,
but can't practice them at home. The post, which garnered
over ten thousand reposts, fueled speculation, with some users pointing
to del Jorno's on air persona known for his unapologetic
type takes on faith and social conservativism, as evidence a

(24:02):
potential family discord. However, no concrete evidence has surfaced to
confirm these claims, and the narrative remains speculative. In September
of twenty twenty four episode of Your Morning Show, del
Journal briefly mentioned his son Nick, saying, my son's eighteen. Yeah,
Nicholas is eighteen. You want to see a picture of him.

(24:22):
The tone, described by the listeners as neutral, has been
dissected online, with distractors arguing at lacked warmth, while supporters
insist it was a typical proud parent moment. Sources close
to the del Journal family, speaking anonymously to The Daily Pulse,
they just start creating up. Sources dismiss the rumors baseless

(24:43):
gossip emphasize that Michael is a private individual off air,
keeping family matters out of the spotlight. They noted that Nick,
a recent high school graduate. It knows Nick graduate how
in the world is pursuing his own path through details
about it endeavors remaining scares on X reactions are polarized

(25:04):
at faithful Fan forty five posted Michael Saman of God,
no way he'd hate his own son. This is just
the Left trying to tear him down, conversing now they
they whip into their own matrix. Conversely, gossip guru x wrote,
if del Jorno's preaching family values but can't get along
with Nick, that hypocrisy. The hashtag del Jarno drama has

(25:27):
trended with over five hundred thousand posts, reflecting the public's
fascination with a story watch this. Del Giorno, a radio
veteran with over forty years in the industry, has not
directly addressed the allegations. His show, known for tackling faith
and conservative issues, continues to air weekdays from six to
nine Eastern, with recent episodes focusing on holiday themes like
his Top ten Christmas Stories and songs. As the story unfolds,

(25:53):
the lack of verifiable evidence leaves room for skepticism. Critics
argue the rumors may be an attempt to discribe del
Jono's outspoken persona well, that is, demand transparency from the host.
Neither Michael nor Nick has issued a public statement, and
until they do, the alleged feud remains a topic of
speculation rather than fact. It brings up fifty stations, Flint

(26:20):
native carried on WFDF, the superstation in Detroit. I mean
the stuff, it knows, it even creates a fake staff
writer Jamal Carter, who wrote it.

Speaker 7 (26:35):
I read the same article on the Huffington Post this morning.
That's my takeaway. Okay, one, how scary is AI? What
all about us is out there?

Speaker 1 (26:50):
And whether a graduate with a journalism degree and any
integrity or ethics is out there searching it. AI already
knows it and can grab whatever it wants. Look what
it all? He said, create a news story about talk
sho host Michael del journal hating his son, like we joke,

(27:11):
and look at that story. And then I was going
to end with what Red just pointed out. I was
going to say The Atlantic, But it could be huffing
to boast, it could be CNN, it could be at MSNBC.
How it the way it looks just like they would
destroy any political opponent in a narrative news story it's

(27:35):
written the exact same. Is it scary or is it stupid?
All you do is give it a simple order and
it reveals all it knows and how it can assemble it,
and how similar it is to how public figures are

(27:56):
attacked every day in the media. I wonder how much
AI is writing news right now. So I bring it
up one because I don't think any of us have
put skin on this AI threat yet, and maybe this
is just a few skin cells. I don't know. I mean,

(28:20):
we have Democrats right now spending twenty million dollars on
a bizarre American Men's Strategy plan study. It's called SAM
and the headline could have easily better. These people stuck
on stupid. They can't define a woman, and they won't

(28:43):
if you force them to. And now they want to
figure out how to relate to men, you know, men police,
white men, white men police. Is there any worse? Talk

(29:03):
about second class citizen? They've made masculinity toxic, and now
they want to figure out how to talk to men
with credibility and they're spending twenty million dollars. Red pointed
out the funniest part about it. So there, where were
they at again? They're at a slinky hotel in San Francisco, California.
Yeah yeah, like in San Francisco, at this high end hotel,

(29:25):
Eat and Caviar are trying to figure out how can
we talk to men and get them to vote for us?
Not drinking a six pack, speaking with American men. A
Strategic Plan is a twenty million dollar project crafted by
Democrats to study to study the Syntex language and content
that gains attention and virality in these spaces of male

(29:46):
voters known as SAM. They still think it's a wording issue.
Never remind the attacks, the alienation, the demanization. Now they
got to get him to vote for him. They want
to figure out how to talk to them. And I
just thought, why don't they sit there and eat their

(30:11):
canvy or open up AI and say, write us a
report on how to talk to men and get them
to vote for Who knows what it would spit out,
but whatever it did spit out, something tells me we'll
be reading about it very soon. I just found that fascinating.
I don't know if anybody else did. It just shows
you the capacity of AI. I don't know if we

(30:31):
wake up, you know, because the next big question is
all right, if somebody did post that, who do you sue?
You can't sue AI, you can't sue I can't remember
the reporter's name, Jamal Carter whatever, what he don't exist?
Who do you sue? And so eventually you're just going

(30:53):
to have real news people constructing real news stories, fact
and sourced, mixed with all of the how are we
going to know what's real and what isn't? And what
happens is nothing ends up real, nothing ends up trusted.
You could have a breaking news story about this star

(31:14):
was found in a pool, was seven hundred naked dolphins
and two mermaids, and it could be true, it couldn't
be true. But because we don't know, nothing's true, that's
just kind of where we're headed and then ultimately too
But when you think about it, it's all just kind

(31:34):
of a very carefully crafted jigsaw puzzle of removing life,
true living. That's why I think the most impressive story
today are these gen zers and where are they finding
their happiness? Returning to family, real relationships, religion, and a
real relationship with God. Let me tell you something, no

(31:58):
matter what you're listening to today, no matter what you
watch today, the ultimate battle is still between life and death.
Life's going to win. Boy, there's some scary volleys coming
from death. And my son has a new toy, so
at least he's not playing video games.

Speaker 2 (32:17):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
So red now you are having a conversation off the air.
It's not that I don't I'm fascinated or didn't know.
All this stuff is public and online somewhere in some form.
That whole story was crafted in five seconds, number one.
That's astonishing how fast it will do it. But what
really concerns me is, look, the media is struggling right now.

(32:46):
I don't know I'm wanting Foxes on my television right now.
I don't know how they're paying all these salaries with
a few pharma ads and direct response adds. I don't
know how they're covering it. Who's back in all this
and sooner or later? Newspapers. Who's struggling more than newspapers.
You know, they're not gonna be able to have reporters.

(33:07):
So you're gonna have like one guy that can just
type in seven facts and it spits out a story.
I mean, look how much it reads like a real
story that it's gonna take such discernment. Probably the better experiment. Well,
the first scary thought was what if somebody just tuned
in the middle of that and think I really making
national We just typed in something silly like talk show

(33:30):
host Tate Son, and it printed that whole long and
it's very hard to discern. You can do other ones
and you might fool it. But or what we started
talking about was term papers. College are going to do
work hard to discern this, but it's gonna be hard.
These things in a single command can write a ten

(33:51):
page term paper five seconds, and I don't know how
you're gonna know who wrote it with footnotes with footnotes,
but I don't give me every time for getting the fund.
I don't know. I just thought it was a very
interesting little exercise. We know ais out there Generically people
are either like, oh, it's going to be great, or
they're generically, oh, it's gonna be the end of the

(34:11):
world as we know it. I just thought i'd put
a little skin on. I thought it was fighting and
then how much it already sounded like so much that
we read and you could do other experiments where you
could put more factual things in there and just watch
it spit out everything like we read. But boy, are
we going to need discernment to know what's narrative and
what's truth more than ever. All Right, Elon Musk disappointed

(34:34):
in the big beautiful bill and descent. Descent is now
on the table. We'll talk about that with Deezy a
little bit later on. President Trump says Canada can pay
sixty one billion dollars and be a part of the
Golden Dome, or they can get it for free and
become a state of the United States. Yes, he won't
let go of that old chustnut.

Speaker 2 (34:53):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael En Hill, Joe No, the

Speaker 1 (35:01):
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