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June 7, 2024 34 mins
Right Hunter, wrong offense…privacy is gone and the Sounds of the day

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show airs live five to
eight am Central, six to nine Eastern in great cities
like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine, but we're happier
here now. Enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:14):
Two, You're starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in mitige.

Speaker 1 (00:25):
This is your morning show with Michael del Tran. How
to believe this? Red Bull's causing me colon cancer? As
are you doing? Stop that? That's not good for you. Yeah,
my wife looked at me the other day, just out
of the blue. Oh, by the way, you're gonna stop
drinking red bull causes colon cancer. It's not good for you.
Those I'm like, how long ago did you read that?
You're just a couple of years ago. For I got

(00:48):
a couple of cajors. I gotta finish off first. Speaking
of cancer, unusual cancers have been emerging since the pandemic.
Unusual how the Washington Post asks, Well, doctors are seeing
rare times cancer become more common, and more patients are

(01:10):
dealing with multiple types, arising almost simultaneously. Why is it happening?
The Washington Post tasks, Well, some experts think the coronavirus
could be causing or accelerating the cancers. Right away, somebody's talking,
is that vac I'm telling you what's the vact there's
stuck us from cancer at COVID. Others say it's just

(01:32):
a consequence of healthcare disruptions during the pandemic in twenty twenty.
But we're keeping our eye on that. Uh, speaking of cancer,
and we were ex latall I think I'm pronouncing it right,
was linked to an increased risk of heart attack and stroke.

(01:52):
That's the popular sugar substitute used in processed foods such
as candy, gums and baked goods. So not necessarily you're splendid.
Study published yesterday, fellow, thousands of people who were fasting
and those who suffered cardiovascular events were shown to have
high blood levels of exel tall speaking of cancer, and

(02:14):
we were Hillary Clinton getting a lot of grief kidding. Wow,
Hillary did a post on the eightieth anniversary of D Day,
and it just wasn't received very well. If you're going
to address something as significant as D Day World War two,

(02:34):
Hitler true tyranny and evil. You can usually just stay
on that subject. So like President Biden today, I think
he's going to walk a very well let me rephrase that.
The body that once housed the mind of Joe Biden,
whoever's really writing everything for him and really conducting this presidency,

(02:57):
has him delivering another speech in Normandy did and in
it he's going to be trying to talk about democracy
being threatened around the world. Careful making any comparisons to
Adolf Hitler, Imperial Japan, Mussolini, that kind of evil and

(03:20):
threat I mean, unless you're talking about Jie Hottest radical Islam,
that would be of equal comparison. But to try to
conflate our political differences and bickering in the United States
to Adolf Hitler, that's a pretty dangerous place to go.

(03:43):
Did Hillary go there yesterday? So on our social media
x account, she posts eighty years ago today, thousands of
brave Americans fought to protect democracy on the shores of
Normandy this November. All we have to do is vote now.
She probably should have been a little more clear. If

(04:05):
I were forced to scratch my head and defend her.
Was she saying because of the choices made and the
bravery carried out and the victory established, freeing and liberating
the world were free today. What they sacrificed, what they
achieved allows us today. But she wasn't very clear, and

(04:31):
it caused a lot of people to kind of hear, Oh,
what you're saying is Hitler had to be stopped. Trump
is Hitler. Trump has to be stopped. And that people
found very disrespectful to our American heroes and in really
poor taste. And even if she didn't mean that, and

(04:55):
it was received that way, it's because they so often
do that. Everything is the boogeyman, everything is the tyrant.
If you elect him, he won't leave. I mean, nobody
played the boogeyman card like Robert de Niro. Right, he's
got to be stopped. Yeah, even though he was president,

(05:17):
he did leave. They played the boogeyman. They play insurrectionist
with a dog whistle to insurrectionists. Well, this kind of
grabs the attention of Russell Brand. Now, what Russell is
really explaining here is something that is a real tactic

(05:39):
made famous by Saul Alynsky, brought back to life by
Barack Obama. Same people behind Barack Obama, maybe even Barack
Obama himself are still behind Joe Biden, so they're playing
the same game, and he explains the game this way.

Speaker 4 (05:54):
For a long time, Elizabeth, I've been concerned about the
snobbery and contempt and condemnation in which people that support
Donald Trump are plainly held by his detractors.

Speaker 1 (06:03):
And this is wild.

Speaker 4 (06:04):
You have an administration that's emulating his policies, plagiarizing from
Donald Trump, while simultaneously criminalizing him through the weaponization of
the legal system. In a straight choice between Donald Trump
and Joe Biden. If you care about democracy, if you
care about freedom, I don't know how you can do
anything other than vote for Donald Trump. For precisely the
reasons that they claim that you can't vote for Donald Trump.

(06:26):
They act as if a vote for Donald Trump is
almost like you're directly voting for armageddon, like you see
hysterical performances outside of court rooms, endless MSNBC bombast. But
I'm starting to think that no, a greater threat to
democracy is this kind of technological feudalism that tells you
that it cares about you and it's protecting vulnerable people,

(06:48):
all the while increasing censorship, increasing the funding of wars,
increasing the division between ordinary Americans.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
What do you think.

Speaker 5 (06:56):
I think that the armageddon that everyone's warning everyone, actually
we started when Joe Biden took office. What we're seeing
in this country and around the world, World War three.
I mean, people talk about this every single day. Because
of what's happening in Ukraine, because of what's happening in Gaza.
Look at the inflation rates here, look at our border,
Look at all the issues Americans are facing. This all
started when Joe Biden took office.

Speaker 1 (07:16):
Well, because Joe Biden made a promise that we were
going to stop all this divisive fighting over everything, that
we were going to find common ground. If you go back,
I think the two most revealing things, if you went
back and watched the twenty twenty DNC convention, that would

(07:39):
be powerful for you today. What they were calling good
trouble on the streets, which was insurrection because they were
setting up a narrative. We know because after the fact
in a manifesto in Time magazine they tell us everything
they were doing, and it was a quote unquote shadow
campaign to say democracy and in that shadow campaign, to

(08:03):
save democracy. Ultimately, if what they did didn't work, they
planned an insurrection, and they were conditioning you to see
Antifa and BLM and burning of cop cars and attacking
of people and destroying businesses and homes as good trouble
because they were planning it at a large scale. Now,

(08:26):
the bait and switch was they did. They were able
to save democracy through a shadow campaign to steal an election.
Time Magazine February fifteenth, twenty twenty one. Claim was one
of them, and he ended up being the chief of
staff for Joe Biden. This is the Democrats telling you
what they did. And they controlled narratives to the media,

(08:49):
They silenced and censored any opposing views through technocracy and
social media. Then they weaponized COVID, changed election laws, and
they stole the election. And if it hadn't work, they
had an insurrection planned. Now whether you call it stealing
election or stealing election fair and square. Here's in our

(09:12):
Sound of the Day audio. This is going back to
July of twenty twenty one. It was a Senate hearing
on an election audit in Maricopa County. Remember, weaponized COVID
to change election laws, avoided state legislatures which was unconstitutional,

(09:36):
and would it allow mail in voting, and every state
had different rules for mail in voting. All of them
were overwhelmed, some were verified, some were not till after
the fact, like in Arizona where Americopa County it was
after the fact that in twenty one, here's a testimony.

Speaker 6 (09:55):
Yeah, well, we have seventy and forty three mail in
ballots where there is no clear record of them being sent.
And just to be clear, I'm here in the state
of Arizona. There there's EV thirty twos and EV thirty
thirty threes.

Speaker 1 (10:10):
EV thirty twos.

Speaker 6 (10:11):
Is supposed to give a record of when a mail
in ballot is sent, and EV thirty three is supposed
to give a record of when the mail in ballot
is received. And so there should be an equal you know,
there should be more. EV thirty two is more sent
out than the are that are received, all.

Speaker 1 (10:27):
Right, so just soon nobody gets confused by that. And
EV thirty two is the government. And by the way,
there were some states that sent out ballots to everyone
didn't wait for them to be requested. But if you had,
unless you have one hundred percent of all ballots mailed
out to voters returned, there should always be more EV

(10:50):
thirty twos than thirty threes. And not only were there
more EV thirty threes than thirty two's, meaning more ballots
came back than were sent out, were in total, far
more than the margin of victory seventy four thousand of
these votes that there is no record of them ever
being sent Oh, but they arrived and oh they were counted.

(11:15):
Trust me. The shadow campaign to save the democracy two things.
You remember, they did it and it worked, and if
it hadn't worked, they had planned an insurrection. So what
do you think they're doing now? And what do you
think their plan is if it doesn't work? And do

(11:35):
they still control the narrative? Well, they don't control X anymore,
but they still control social media. From a television cable
or over the air standpoint mainstream media, they still control
the narrative. And are they controlling you right now? Pavek

(11:58):
Ramaswami says, they are. Listen.

Speaker 7 (12:00):
The Hunter Biden prosecution trial that's ongoing right now is
a sham. It's designed to distract you from what's actually
important on two levels. First of all, look at the
crime he's actually being charged with here, it's a felony
gun charge, gun possession charge. Well, the reality is if
you're going after Hunter Biden for one thing, you know
what it should be. It should be peddling off influence

(12:20):
and trading on the Biden family name while Biden was
the vice president of the United States, using that to
make his family rich. That's the true betrayal of this country.
Hunter Biden sat on the board of Barisma without an
iota of energy, experience, at iota of any insider value
to add to that company's board other than being affiliated.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Now, this is not the same as pulling a Capone
for all the people al Capone killed, for all the
crimes al Capone committed. What do we get him on
tax evasion? No? But in this case it's different. You'll
still get Hunter Biden. Then you'll get him on a
legal gun possession. You'll get him on tax evation. But

(13:01):
what you won't get is his uncle and his dad,
a sitting president. Are you being played? Oh? You think
you know everything there is to know about it. A
dealer named Wookie, But there's another dealer in between the
mainstream media and they may be duping you. Donald Trump
gets it. That's why he addressed it this way in Arizona.

(13:22):
These elections. Let me tell you.

Speaker 7 (13:23):
If we could have honest elections of this country, I
would have stopped campaigning two weeks ago.

Speaker 1 (13:29):
We would have had it made. But we don't have that.

Speaker 8 (13:32):
So we're watching it very carefully, and I'm working my
ass off to make sure we get.

Speaker 1 (13:37):
Too big to rig, too big. We want to be
too big to rig. You know, it gets to be
a point where they can't rig it. So we have
an expression. Charlie and I were just saying, it's called
too big to rig, too big to rig. And that's
your Sounds of the day. This is your morning show

(13:58):
with Michael del Chona. Michael, it's pronounced xylotol. Xylotol is
the artificial sweetener. That's what I'm meant to say. That'll
give you a stroke and a heart attack. That's what
your job is to help me with those kinds of pronunciations.
Twenty seven minutes after the hour, when your morning show
continues in about eight minutes, Aaron Reale, we'll talk about

(14:20):
new features in our cars and phones. They're tracking everything.
We're doing so much for privacy, as Princess Diane used
to say, for just waking up Hunter Biden's federal firearms trial,
continues in Delaware. The President, of course, at an ABC interview,
no matter where this goes, he will not pardon his
sons long as you don't notice the real case about
his son getting money and sending it to him. Former

(14:41):
President Trump's conviction, well, it's made about twenty seven percent
of voters more likely to vote for him. Obviously, the
love has backfired? Is really Prime Minister bb Netnyeaho's set
to address Congress in the United States next month. The
Boston Celtics proved going to take five good players to

(15:02):
beat them. I think they're seventeen point lead after the
first quarter is the biggest largest margin of lead after
a first quarter and NBA Final history, and they went
on to win by eighteen one oh seven eighty nine,
taking Game one at TD Gardens in Boston in the
NBA Finals. Your NHL Finals start tomorrow night at seven
o'clock Dallas. Edmonton Oilers will be taking on the Florida

(15:27):
Panthers in Florida tomorrow night, and the Final Wheel of
Fortune episode hosted by Pat Sajack already filmed but set
to air today. Forty three years with Pat Sajack, do
you realize if you started watching Pat Sajack at forty
years old, and it is a sign of age. There

(15:49):
was a time you know this this this, this job
makes me feel a little old. I'm gonna have to
eat at four o'clock. I have to go to bed
at seven o'clock. Yep, you know. And I actually uttered
the words to my wife. Hey, after dinner, you want
to just go watch the Wheel and go to bed.
And I even called it the Wheel, which is a
sign of aging. But if you started watching at forty
or eighty three years old today, that's just amazing. If

(16:11):
you started watching when you were fourteen years old, you're
pushing sixty. I mean, you don't remember life without Pat's ajack.
And of course then it will continue, and who will
take his place? Gotta be Ryan Seacrest? Right, You would
think if Miss America fails to be able to fulfill
her duties, he becomes Miss America. Is that true? No,
of course not the Ryan Seacrest seems to get everything.

(16:33):
It's Michael Strahanna Ryan Seacrest. And I don't know, there's
just something that's been I don't know that I'll ever,
I don't I Casino came on the other day and
I couldn't watch it. I just Robert Junior has just
ruined his career for me, and I don't know what
Will Smith. I used to love Will Smith, I think
in Pursuit of Happiness, some great movies, But he watched

(16:55):
across the stage and slapped Chris Rock in the face.
It hasn't been the same. We'll see if it effects
the numbers for Bad Boys opening this weekend. Hi, it's Michael.
Your morning show could be heard live weekday mornings five
to eight am, six to nine am Eastern and great
cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
We'd love to join you on the drive to work live,

(17:15):
but we're glad you here now. Enjoyed the podcast, all right,
thanks for waking up with us. We live in a
time where there is just no privacy whatsoever. As Princess
Diana would say, We've got new features on our cars
and our phone apps, and they're tracking us and everywhere
we go. I can tell you as a parent, I'm
very grateful that I know exactly where my kids are
at all times and how fast they're going. But you know, Aaron,

(17:40):
this never crosses my mind. I'm sure it doesn't crush
your husband's mind. But I mean, how would a guy
or a woman cheat on their spouse these days? How
would you even do it? I mean, my dad always
went fishing wearing a sport coat and slacks. I never
got it. But how could you do that today? There's
no privacy? What's everything's tracking? Everybody is in it.

Speaker 9 (18:02):
You know, you're totally right, Like, I don't know how
you could possibly do it. I don't like, if the
person that you're with had any interest in looking, they
would find it probably, But know what, so can the
federal government, and so can every marketer that exists, because
any expectation of privacy today is pretty much gone if
you're operating in the modern world. But here's the dark

(18:25):
side of convenience, particularly with cars. Mozilla Foundation which is
a tech nonprofit, they examine examine the privacy practices of
a lot of different categories, but they look at cars
and they say that they are the absolute worst offender
in terms of privacy. So those vehicles sday, Like you said, Hey,
you can watch your kids. You can see how fast
they're driving, how hard they break. You can see where

(18:46):
in individual parks, how much time they spend there, the
music and podcasts they listen to, who they text, all
of that information.

Speaker 1 (18:52):
Wait a minute, I don't know how to track what
they're listening to.

Speaker 9 (18:56):
Oh well no, no, you Actually it's harder for the
individual like you to track your kids. But the car
company that has all that and what they do is
it's a gold mine for marketers and insurers.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
It's also a target for hackers.

Speaker 9 (19:11):
And then privacy researchers say that you basically sign this
away when you purchase your car. Now, what I think
is the most concerning here, Michael, is that, yes, it's
terrible that marketers have it, but it's I mean, it's
not the end of the world. What is very concerning
and potentially a constitutional argument to ban against us, is
that the privacy policies for car makers they actually share

(19:34):
driver information with law enforcement, sometimes without a warrant. You
technically allow them to when you sign that. But the
fact that this is such common practice and commonplace, I'm
surprised it hasn't gone to, you know, a federal legislative
body to figure out if this is eve.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
When it comes, when it becomes, when awareness kicks in.
All right, So the first question I have I think
everybody listening would have. Is all right, so your car
is doing a lot of this stuff we welcome in
like I mean, well, there's two ways to look at it.
Have you noticed you get an email from the from
the car dealership you bought your vehicle, and it knows
how many miles are on your car and that you're

(20:12):
due for service, and it's inviting you with a service
special to me. So that's how they're using it marketing wise.
And for some people it's going to be oh, I
must be due for service, you want to service your car.
For others, well, they don't know. I'm broke. I have
to put it off a couple thousand miles. Leave me alone.
But my first question is what does your car know?
I mean, obviously there's gonna be some specific things, but
of real concern to privacy that they already don't know

(20:35):
from your phone that's with you in the car, because
nobody gets in their car without their phone anyway.

Speaker 9 (20:40):
Right, exactly, Well, it's more like a location track. And
you're right, you have your phone with you at all times.
So what's the difference. And that's a valid argument. I
forgot who said this quote, but I heard it like
a couple of years back, and I wish I could
give them credit, but it's so true. It's that there's
two there's going to be two classes of people in
the future, those who have the data and those who

(21:00):
are the data.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
I think we're there.

Speaker 9 (21:02):
We're there, and again, the expectation of privacy should not
be It shouldn't be there. You have none, and there's
no way to opt out of it. Now, there's some
things you can do.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
I was just going to say, when it comes to
the car, is there ways to block this data sharing?

Speaker 9 (21:19):
Yes, So don't use the vehicles apps and services that
are connected online. Basically you can't do if you don't
download the vehicles app, then you're not going to be
able to remote start it, to unlock it, to lock it,
all that stuff. But that helps turn off precise location
within your phone. And then don't allow your dashboard entertainment
to sync with your text, your calendar, your phone address

(21:41):
book that's stores in the car's memory.

Speaker 2 (21:43):
It's accessible to the car.

Speaker 9 (21:44):
Maker and then other outsiders. And then avoid the Apple
car Play or the Google Android audit.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
That's what everybody. Yeah, and we've had this conversation my daughters.
You know, this is scary for those of us that
make our living in radio. At least you could you
make some in television. But kids today they don't listen
to the radio, and they don't and they're not interested
in having serious XM. They get in with their car
play and everything's on their phone. So they have captured

(22:11):
that generation completely. Yeah, they wouldn't know what to do
if they didn't use it.

Speaker 9 (22:16):
That's why I keep hearing like the the government insist
upon AM radio and cars. Obviously that's in our personal
best interest, but the idea is, like, you know, you
don't want to fight progress. How do you make AM
available on a podcast type platform? I think is the
answer as opposed to being like just insist on the
AM and every car because it's not going to like

(22:36):
this generation is going to come up and it's going
to be good.

Speaker 1 (22:38):
That's not what they listen to. It's a pain.

Speaker 9 (22:39):
It's not going to continue to happen. So it is
kind of like fighting progress. How do you evolve into
where the ears are today?

Speaker 2 (22:46):
Is the better question.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
It's like technology is introduced and it's introduced to us
as a great service and convenience, and we welcome it in,
but you're welcoming in all of it. And we had
the same conversation with RFID technology. You know, I used
to use this analogy. Who wouldn't like that when you
because it's seeing these are little mundane things that are
a pain. You pull into a pump and it instantly enters,

(23:11):
and maybe you use like your Kroger card number so
you can get your ten fifteen cent discount. It knows
it's you, it knows your credit card, everything's ready to
just put in and pump. You'd go, oh, that's great,
But that's the same RFID technology that brings with it,
you know a lot of other scary things down the road.

(23:31):
So it's second verse, same as the first technology comes.
If it's free and if it's convenient, you really ought
to be suspicious because you're probably.

Speaker 9 (23:40):
The product, right you are the product, not probably like
guaranteed if it's free, and yes, you are the product.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
That's it. And then even if you do all these
things like you're saying, well, then you look at your
daughter and you go, hey, why do you have your
location turned off? Where are you? So you really don't
get away with it anyway. I mean, it's got of like.

Speaker 9 (24:01):
I mean, well, here's the rebuttal to that a child
doesn't have any expectation of privacy. Now I think that Now.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
We're just like, well, right, yeah, that's a difference.

Speaker 9 (24:13):
Well no, you're right, that's assuming an adult does, but
we most categorically do not anymore.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
That's gone, we don't have it. Well yeah, I mean,
you know, and then your wife goes, hey, why is
your location off? But I don't have anything to hide.
I'll ever get I was a in a city where
somebody was trying to They didn't like the things I
was talking about, and so I was informed that I
was being followed. I was like, oh, they're going to
be bored, you know, because I don't really hide. I
you know, go home, maybe I go to the gym

(24:38):
with my son. I'm the one with the frown. Yeah
I don't. But yeah, this is all. But we live
in a different time, don't we. Period end of story.
But the latest is your car, and what will happen
is you're at the dealership and it's hey, this how
you can remote start your car. This is how you'll
know where your service is. This how you can pay
you your monthly payment. They'll have a million reasons, and
they will literally set up your account online before you

(25:01):
leave as a way of kind of like the same
way they show you features in the car, and then
you've set up your car play and boom boom boom,
and you're all linked in everywhere they need you. That's scary.

Speaker 9 (25:12):
That's how that's how it operates now, and I think
that it's important to just know that. Again, I don't
know how this I don't know how this changes. I
don't think it will. I think that this is just
where we live now, and if you don't want to
participate in it, you can go off the grid. But
the world is not going to change for anyone else.

Speaker 1 (25:31):
I'm a solar panel and a generator and a little
piece of property. You know, that's a different when you
live in a country, you're on property. Yeah you got
a house, so you live in the suburbs, but you
get a piece of property, gates yourself, a shoular panel,
get yourself some pro pain. Then you're free. Otherwise someone's
tracking you, either to sell you something or to know
where you're at all. Right, Well, as this becomes more

(25:53):
and more aware, I suspect it'll become more and more
people looking for a political protection and solution. Aaron, great report,
Have a great weekend, have a great week next week,
and be nice to Ryan who'll be filling in.

Speaker 9 (26:03):
Oh, thank you, right, we'll miss you and I look
forward to here.

Speaker 1 (26:07):
Make sure you don't at the end of the week
like him better. That would be not gonna happen. That
would be disappointing. Have a great weekend. I am actressle
Savarga and my morning show is your morning show with
Michael del Giorno. This is your morning show. I'm Michael
del Joorno. On Friday, June the seventh, You're of our Lord,
twenty twenty four at ten minutes before the top of
the hour. Here's what you need to know. President Biden

(26:30):
says that if his son is convicted of any of
these charges, there will be no pardon.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
Brian Shook reports, in an interview with ABC News, Biden
said he would accept the outcome of his son's trial
and not issue a pardon. Biden also discussed the conviction
of his political rival Donald Trump, saying Trump got a
fair trial but is seeking to undermine the rule of
law by claiming the proceedings were rigged against him. Hunter

(26:56):
Biden is currently on trial in Delaware on three felony
charges related to allegedly buying and possessing a gun while
being addicted to drugs in twenty eighteen. I'm Brian Shuk.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Former President Donald Trump's campaign is beginning to vet those
final potential candidates for VEEP. More from Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 8 (27:13):
Reports say the vetting process as focused on four possible candidates,
Florida Senator Marco Rubio, South Carolina Senator Tim Scott, Ohio
Senator j d Vance, and North Dakota Governor Doug Bergham.
Trump's shortlist is said not to be complete yet, with
other possible names including South Dakota Governor Christinome, New York
Congresswoman Etlis Stefanik, and former Housing and Urban Development Secretary

(27:35):
Ben Carson.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
The Trump campaign.

Speaker 8 (27:37):
Said anyone who tells you they know who, how, or
when President Trump will choose his VP is lying. The
Republican National Convention is set to be held July fifteenth
through the eighteenth.

Speaker 1 (27:47):
I'm Mark Neefield. The FDA is reversing its ban on
jewel e cigarettes. Lisa Taylor has details.

Speaker 10 (27:52):
Thursday, the FDA said it's reviewing new court decisions and
updated information from the company. The FDA halted the product
in twenty twenty two, but they stayed on shelves pending
in appeal. The CDC reports E cigarette use grew nearly
fifty percent between January twenty twenty and December twenty twenty two.
I'm Lisa Taylor.

Speaker 1 (28:10):
Well, it's good to be Caitlyn Clark, and it's good
to be Taylor Swift. Everything seems to be going their way.
As for Caitlin Clark and her popularity, it's impacting baby names.
A new report from the website baby Center shows the
name Caitlin up sixteen, moving up sixteen hundred notches. This week,

(28:31):
Caitlyn Clark, her last name, has moved up fifteen spots
for boys' names. Roy O'Neil, your morning show correspondent, is
joining us. Can you imagine you're a kid named Clark
and twenty years now? And he goes, are you named
after Superman? No, I'm named after a female basketball player.
Basketball player that would be a tough one too. And
then there's Rory. There's no rights. That's a name right there,

(28:54):
all right.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Next to mister McElroy for helping more people learn about.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
The name's Yeah, but you're who are you named after? Yeah? No,
we didn't. Yeah, there isn't a Rory in the family.
Oh there isn't. You're the first roar, You're the one
and only, right, But then my consin named his daughter Rory.
Just well, that'll make a family reunion confusing. She happens

(29:20):
to live in Nashville. Rory O'Neil. Just in time for summer.
The airport's to avoid, I would say, all of them,
but go ahead.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
Well right, and look, this is the data from the
month of May. And that's interesting because this air help
report really does do a good job of breaking down
how many flights were disrupted. But now that the summer
is here, summer storms can create some different kinds of problems.
So yeah, great, Salt Lake City had fantastic performance in
the month of May. Well it's May, you know, call

(29:49):
me in January and February, Salt Lake things get a
little bit different there.

Speaker 1 (29:53):
Minneapolis also did well.

Speaker 2 (29:55):
For the month of May, but so did JFK, third
best in the country.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
How about that. I've never flown in or out of JFK.
Every single time it's been LaGuardia.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
I've done both yeah, Well, if I'm flying internationally, I've
gone out of JFK a couple of times.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
LaGuardia usually domestic. It's what about like the traditional ones
that we always view, probably Atlanta, probably O'Hare in Chicago.
Aren't those the ones that everybody kind of In Atlanta
they dread the most.

Speaker 2 (30:24):
And for good reason. So Atlanta came in at number nine,
ninth worst. Twenty eight point four percent of the flights
were disrupted in some way.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
O'Hare was number four. I'm doing my casey case and two.

Speaker 2 (30:39):
Yeah, o' haair was number four with thirty four percent
of the flights to lay the worst two in the
month of May. Dallas and Houston, Texas had some pretty
lousy weather last month.

Speaker 1 (30:49):
Well, yeah, they were rocked by storms. Sorry, so that
would probably be mostly weather related. When we say Dallas,
we're not talking about love Field though, right, We're talking
about DFW, Oh.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
Yeah, DFW Dallas Fort Worth International and Houston George Bush.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
Right where for those of us that fly on the
Southwest Airlines, we do love Field and hobbies, so it
really doesn't affect us. But you know, it's interesting because
you know, lately since COVID, it hasn't really been the
airports we focus on as much as the airlines themselves. Well,
I think two of the.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
Control tower workers. The air traffic control system has also
been much more of an X factor.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
In this and these routes.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
And you know, you get a bad storm in that
area off the coast of Florida, Georgia and the Carolinas,
A bad storm in that corridor throws everything off, and
that's where we're still struggling.

Speaker 1 (31:38):
So I wanted to hitch out of the Blue because
we want to end where we began. Today we're talking
about Pat Sajak final show airs to Wheel of Fortune. Now,
of course my favorite Richard Dawson was terrific in Family Feud.
Steve Harvey today in Family Feud, I think is pretty special, terrific.
We went back to Wink, Martindale, Tic Tac Doo and
some others. I had to pick a favorite. I went

(32:00):
with Groucho Marx say the sacre, you want a duck
and bet your life? Did you have a favorite game
show growing up?

Speaker 6 (32:07):
Well?

Speaker 2 (32:08):
Not, well, my broadcaster, I absolutely loved in absolutely everything,
and so I'm going to say, Regius.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
Oh, so you want to be a million what was
it a millionaire.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
I want to be a millionaire, so I'd always go through.
But old school. I've got to give it to Bob Barker,
the fact would take those shows in real time and
he banged them out in an hour.

Speaker 1 (32:28):
Yeah, no, Bob Barker was. And by the way, Pat's
ahech surpasses Bob Barker forty three years. He didn't retire
until he made that mark. And as always, when somebody leaves,
when I leave, some day, when you leave, someday, Ryan
Seacrest is going to take over. I'm going to say.
Jean Raper, Oh, Geen Rayburn was spectacular, Jim Kennedy match game,

(32:49):
Jimber Jim Kennedy had that great voice. I'm trying to remember,
what was the guy that did the Honeymooners? Yes, I know,
I can't believe I'm going to blank on he was?

Speaker 10 (33:01):
He was.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
These are all former radio people and great at it. Yeah,
and the one that did the Dating Game I forgot
his name, and Colin who did password? The guy who
did the Dating Game? Yeah he was a disc jockey. Yeah, terrific,
But no, I stand corrected, Regis Philbin, Yeah he was.

(33:23):
That was pretty magical. I'm gonna put Regis Groucho Wink,
Richard Dawson, Steve Harvey, and today we say goodbye to
Pat Say Jack. I don't know if the wheel will
march on. Do you remember who the original wheel fortune
back in two and two, back in two and two,
but that was his dating show. It was two and two,
but yeah, he was the original Wheel of Fortune. Right,

(33:43):
have a great weekend. Don't enjoy This is my warning
to everybody. Don't enjoy. Enjoy Ryan Gorman, but don't enjoy
him too much. I'll be back on July seventeenth, and
we'll see when we get back. Have a great week worry.
We're all in this together. This is your morning Show
with Michaelton Hill jowing up the spect bistecn st
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