Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live each weekday morning on great radio stations like k
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the podcast Enjoy well two.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Three, starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
Because we're in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell charm.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
What are we into? I think something good? Seven minutes
after the offor just waking up. The House gives final
approval to the package of a nine billion dollar Doge
cut meet while forecasters are telling those along the Golf
coast beware of tropical flooding and the Persia meteor Shower
will offer skywatchers spectacular views of the best meteor shower
of the year, and that'll take place all weekend long.
(00:58):
Will Coca Cola It really changes formula. As the President
is suggesting Stephen Colbert and the Late Show. Here's the headline.
The Late Show is Stephen Colbert will end its historic
run in May of twenty history. Letterman's run might have
been historic, the two together might have been CBS historic.
(01:19):
But it's not firing Stephen Colbert. It's getting rid of
the whole show now. We just had the story earlier
in the week that Gutfeld beat The Tonight Show, the
Late Show and Jimmy Kimmel all three the irony these
late shows that were meant to be entertainment and fun
(01:40):
became political, causing their death. Then the political and news
network gets funny and that won't eventually be a credibility.
It's not the beginning of something that could destroy them,
just as it destroyed the Late Show. But the question
on everybody's mind is did Gutfeld kill the Late Show?
Did Late Show killed themselves being too political? Your Morning
(02:02):
show national correspondent Roy O'Neil is here with us, so
may he's gone, but the whole show's gone, not just him, right.
Speaker 4 (02:10):
Essentially, the CBS is saying this does not reflect the
content of the program, just the reality that no one's
watching late night TV in linear TV on old school
networks like CBS, that the audience is changing, and advertisers
who are after those younger eyes and ears aren't finding
them on network television. Instead, they're turning to online platforms
(02:33):
much more frequently.
Speaker 1 (02:35):
The original Tonight Show was designed to be the bookend
to the Today Show on NBC before the tone came
up and they later would go to it was Steve originally,
I can't remember. No, no, not Steve Garvey though, Steve Allen. Yeah,
(02:57):
it was originally Steve Allen. Then it was par then
it was car and then it was Leno and now
it's Jimmy Fallon eventually because they couldn't. There was a
Conan aspect in there for a minute too. Well yeah,
well but when when Conan went to Late Night, when
Letterman went to CBS because he didn't get the Tonight Show,
Now all.
Speaker 4 (03:16):
Three of bigon Conan come in and they put they
had that ten pm Leno show and put cold Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
That was later. They twice they took the Tonight Show
from Conan O'Brien, which is really crazy, but you know,
we saw this with Sara Knight Live. Look, even Johnny
Carson would get political in the monologue, but he was
an equal opportunity puncher. They I think they were drifting.
I think Saturday Night Live may have led them in
that drift, and then everybody went bonkers in twenty sixteen,
and the shows had become political and divisive and angry since.
(03:46):
And so I know that they're distancing themselves from the
show's performance, and they can blame it on the technology
shift in America, but I think there was also a
programming shift. I wonder what they'll do now though. That's
why I was going back into the history of late night.
So now, what does television do until maybe they'll go
back to the tone.
Speaker 4 (04:03):
Yeah, bring out the flag, yep, game shows maybe, But yeah, look,
that show's expensive. You know, it has the giant theater,
not that giant, but the Ed Sullivan Theater obviously expensive
to maintain. Gut Feld is comparatively cheaper since it's in
the same studios. But yeah, well we'll see what happens.
But it's the audience, isn't there anymore? I mean, when's
(04:25):
the last time someone said to you hate you see
Colbert last night?
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Is this the death for CBS or is this the
death of late shows in general? Time will tell not
CBS late shows for CBS. I think it's done for
late shows. I think the talk show format is dying.
Speaker 4 (04:40):
Ever since Allen DeGeneres was done, they haven't really had
as much success with daytime Kelly Clarkson, I guess, but yeah,
the format just doesn't work anymore. In ten seconds or less.
Speaker 1 (04:51):
Is Coca Cola serious about listening to the President and
going to sugarcane? They said, thanks for the advice.
Speaker 4 (04:57):
They really weren't planning on it, apparently, but they said,
you know, stand by, we might have some future offerings. Listen.
More details on new innovative offerings within our Coca Cola
product range will be shared soon.
Speaker 1 (05:10):
And it is the president. Is the President serious about
reopening Alcatraz Ory? You'll have that answer for us coming
up in the third hour. All right, can't have your
morning show without your voice. I think first up, as Mark.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
I just wanted to say that you just said that
there'll be more Biden people testifying on Capitol Hill today.
I think you meant to say that there'll be more
people taking the fifth on Capitol Hill today, because that's
all we're getting out of anybody from the Biden camp.
Speaker 1 (05:40):
I got to tell you that struck me this morning.
The President had some swelling in his leg, immediately took
action they tested him for some serious vane issues turned
out to be just everyday, typical, common pain conditions for
someone of his age. But I was struck by the
transparency of that and the scle of what was covered
(06:01):
up and hidden, and as their testify, almost to the
point where I wonder if they made such a big
deal out of it just so that you would feel
that when I have some swelling in my leg, I
let the American people know. We can't get people to
stop taking the fifth on hiding a man who was
clearly in the late stages of dementia.
Speaker 6 (06:18):
James in Telus, Oklahoma. I think if any of them
had a chance, it would be Jimmy Kimmel. I know
sometime back when this started happening in twenty sixteen, he
said that he wasn't going to get into it all,
and he held off for a long time, and then
he did get into it. So he's a funny guy,
and if he can get back to that, especially with
everybody else sticking to it, he could.
Speaker 1 (06:39):
I think he could get back to Jackie, make that
funy to get playing in Travis. I think James, I
agree with you, but I think you meant to say
Jimmy Fallon, not Jimmy Kimmel. If you's meant to say
Jimmy Fallon, I agree with you. If you meant to
say Jimmy Kimmel, I disagree, although I think Jimmy Kimmel
could benefit with Cobert out of the way and Fallin
(07:04):
not doing it as much. I mean, look, I want
to take anythingway from gutfal because now you guys are sensitive.
I don't dislike Gutfel. He's doing really insightful and really
funny stuff. I don't necessarily agree with where he's doing it,
but I mean, put him on CBS, let him compete
with these others. But don't forget Fallon, Kimmel and Colbert.
(07:33):
They all just split the same leftist audience, and that's
what allows Kimmel to win. There's nobody else doing conservative,
really funny, conservative takes obsessed on politics and news, so
reversing that out. If Colbert is gone in May, well
Kimmel's gonna get a bump. That's why I think NBC
(07:57):
and ABC are waiting to see if the other goes
along with it, because someone will be the last one
standing again. An NBC would love it to be them
because I think they have the one who hasn't betrayed
the trust most and is most versatile enough to go
back to what late Night was. I've often said if
Graham Norton's BBC Late show was every night in America,
(08:18):
it'd kill him, kill them all because he's more of
the Johnny Carson ilk and really funny. So it's interesting.
I think this is like the death of journalism, the
death of late night, and it's just a matter of
time before the other two follow. But the next step
is the toughest, because let's say it's ABC, NBC may
(08:39):
hold its guns. It's the only one in town that
could probably garnersh enough ratings, and wouldn't it be fitting
for where it all started? That's where it all ends.
Speaker 7 (08:48):
Rogers next point of Michael a couple of comments versus
about gutt filled you know, as you know, I listen
to your show every hour every day, so I either
sometimes I stay up too late and watch it, but
generally it's the next day. And what I like about
it is he does cover the current stories just in
(09:10):
a way that I can take him in differently. As
far as Late Night, I think it's been dying for years.
I haven't watched it for years, and I think that
says something.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
I didn't watch it until COVID, and I was absolutely
shocked at how vicious, ugly, one sided, and obsessed it was.
I'll answer Jess the question that we haven't had a
talkback answer yet. Did Guttfelt killed Colbert in the late show? No,
(09:41):
they killed themselves. Matt Neary, Pennsylvania, Good.
Speaker 8 (09:45):
Morning everyone, Thanks for doing such a great show.
Speaker 1 (09:49):
And also I just couldn't resist.
Speaker 8 (09:51):
I think they were talking about Tim Waltz and I
a self profane knucklehead and boys bathroom tampon king who
would say.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
Thanks, well, thanks for the two. By the way, Tim Walls,
I mean I've made that comment earlier. Comes out with
the AIG announcement I'm not running for president in twenty twenty.
Who was asking you to?
Speaker 9 (10:16):
Uh?
Speaker 1 (10:16):
Did you lead? You lead? You lead? From Nashville.
Speaker 10 (10:21):
I completely agree with your assessment of the Epstein scandal
and think.
Speaker 11 (10:25):
You're spot on.
Speaker 10 (10:27):
However, I also have to believe that there are names
that have been redacted who did have sex with those miners,
and those people need to be identified and brought to justice.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
Well, it's going to have to be done. Now civil
and civil cases. Because Epstein's dead, whether he killed himself
or was killed, he's not alive. So all the testimony
were these names were gathered, and this we learned from Dershowitz,
who was the attorney. And Dershowitz that's why I saying earlier,
he's the one that would know the most, way more
(11:03):
than me, way, more than you, way more than anybody
else on radio or television. He knows what those redacted
names are because he was there for the deposition and
he heard the victims say their names. Now, those names
they deserve a day in court. You can't just presume
them guilty. And if there's not going to be a
(11:23):
criminal trial, well then it would have to come out
in a civil trial. I don't know, but again there's
two things to play here. I don't know why the
White House couldn't explain it this way, but I don't
know why people on the left or the right won't
accept it. And I think it goes back to my
theory of the matrix. People form an immediate, irrational, permanent
(11:46):
position and they don't budge no matter what new information
comes out. That's the sickness we have as a country.
Joe gets the final say in this segment. Wow, he's
not very talkative. Joe, Okay, I'm about to give up.
If you are, why can you not play me? Joe? Well,
(12:09):
I'm sorry. I didn't know. I thought we'd played everybody. No,
there's a Joe more than Michael.
Speaker 9 (12:15):
I think a big influence from Late Night was Saturday
Night Live. They saw they were getting away with it,
so why not let's try it. I believe that they
are going to die in the end. Have a great weekend,
enjoy your day.
Speaker 1 (12:32):
There there's there two. Yeah, I agree with you obviously, Joe,
and I do think there was some Trump arrangement mixed in.
These people all mocked Trump, not just to their derangement
of what they've been getting away with. Haven't you figured
out the mainstream legacy media has nothing been nothing but
a megaphone for one of the two parties, and that's
been outed. And they all mocked Trump going in, and
(12:55):
then he won and discredited them. So a they had
Trump derangement because they see him as a worldview political enemy,
but also he made an idiot of all of them.
I do think they went off. They went Thelma and
Louise right, off the cliff in the twenty sixteen Derangement,
(13:15):
I'll come full circle with Joe. This is not just
the death of the Late Show Stephen Colbert, David Letterman,
who began a lot of this political stuff. This is
the tip of the iceberg. The death of journalism is
about to give way to the death of late night television.
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(13:38):
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the care from your primary provider. Takelean dot Com. Use
that promo code YMS twenty. This is your Morning show
with Michael del Chrono. Thanks for making your morning show
a part of your morning routine. The nomination for former
Fox News host Janine Piro for the United State's Attorney
for Washington, d C. Has been approved by Congress.
Speaker 12 (15:04):
No Democrats were present when the panel advanced Piro's nomination
to the full Senate on Thursday. The Democratic members of
the committee stage to walk out after Republican Senator Chuck
Grasler of Iowa cut off debate on the nomination of
Amiel Bove for a spot on the third Circuit Court
of Appeals. Piro has been DC's acting US attorney since
the Senate failed to advance the nomination of Ed Martin
In may A Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (15:25):
Christy Nome was in Nashville yesterday to introducesll to two
new airports security screening lanes.
Speaker 13 (15:31):
Homeland Security Secretary Christine Nome was at the Nashville International
Airport to announce the Honor Lane and a lane for
families traveling with young children. The Honor Lane will be
exclusively for military members and their families. With the Family lane,
Nomes that she could relate to how difficult it can
be traveling with kids, being a mother and a grandmother herself.
No previously announced. Passengers can now keep on their shoes
(15:53):
at TSA checkpoints. I'm Tammy TRUHEO.
Speaker 1 (15:55):
President Trump underwent vascular testing after experiencing some swelling in
his left eggs. White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt with
the details.
Speaker 14 (16:03):
In recent weeks, President Trump noted mild swelling in his
lower legs and keeping with routine medical care and out
of an abundance of caution, This concern was thoroughly evaluated
by the White House Medical Unit.
Speaker 1 (16:16):
All results from the testing. Wein normal limits. The President
is fine.
Speaker 15 (16:20):
Next year will be our last season. The network will
be ending The Late Show in May, and CBS is
canceling The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. The network says
his final show will be in May. Colbert, who hosted
the show since twenty fifteen after David Letterman's retirement, said
he just learned on Wednesday Night. The network says it's
(16:42):
purely a financial decision, not related to the show's performance,
content or other matters, although that could.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Have had something to do with the financial decision. The
question is Jimmy Kimmel's contracts up soon? Is he next?
Birthdays Today? Actor Vin Diesel is fifty eight. What's the
show where they're dead and they're in the afterlife with
Walkin Dead? No? Kristen Bell and Oh I watched it.
(17:11):
I binged it, very very funny show. She's so talented.
Kristin Bell forty five years old. Today, Oh I forgot
the good place. I think it's called. James Brolin is
eighty five, a Yankee, former Cardinal manager and Hall of Famer.
Joe Torre is eighty five. If it's your birthday, Happy birthday.
We are so glad you were born and thanks for
sharing some of your big day with us.
Speaker 16 (17:32):
I'm Jim Schultz in Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael gill JORONAM HI.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
It's Michael. Your Morning show can be heard weekday mornings
in great cities like Tulsa in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Memphis,
in Nashville, Tennessee. And we got you covered in California,
San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine or thrilled you're here.
Now enjoy the podcast. This is your morning show. Can't
have your morning show without your voice. A couple of
(18:03):
quick calls and then we'll get to your sounds of
the day.
Speaker 17 (18:06):
Blames up first, Colbert being canceled is it was inevitable?
Speaker 1 (18:12):
He's not funny. The one other guy's were who wore
black face.
Speaker 17 (18:15):
He's going to be next because he's pathetic and the
other guy's just as bad. Says some cute stuff, but
that's about it. They were not funny. That's why they're gone.
People are still watching TV. By the way, have a
good day.
Speaker 1 (18:30):
Ah here we go. No stress sales, your no pass
it out. It shall be as it was in the beginning.
There'll be one left standing and BC, Oh are you
proud of me? Mom? Im, I'll see it in a
couple of hours. I'm gonna becoming by the nursery. Okay, yes,
(18:52):
what what?
Speaker 7 (18:52):
What what did I say when you're saying something about
somebody one left.
Speaker 1 (18:55):
Standing or something? Oh? That Colbert is out? Yeah, so
is this show. Kimmel's next by the end of the year,
and that will leave Jimmy Fallon and the NBC Tonight's
show alone and they won't fire him because they'll have
it all to themselves for at least a little while. Anyway,
put that in the show. What does mister del journal
(19:17):
keep up with all of this? I don't know. Why
does he not tell us that he's going to appear
before you? Nobody gives me a cold compress when I
need it. Corey the yard Boy.
Speaker 2 (19:28):
Good morning, Michael. You know, I won't dispute that the
political party has played a role in the death of
late night TV, but cord cutting may have something to
do with it. Is too because people have so many
other options. I couldn't tell you the last time I
watched a late night TV program. People have things that
(19:48):
they could go and watch on Netflix or you know,
watch the yard Boy on YouTube. Yeah, that'll put you
to sleep real fast.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
I can't say it will I think I'm actually considering
tipping him now. Um, he's the one that got me
to find and clip the cable. I wouldn't do it. Well,
I am very resistant to change. Really, I would have
smoked Marlboro lights all the way to death, but for
(20:16):
my health's sake, I had to quit. But I'm very
brand loyal. And then finally he started talking about you
go with these things like forty five dollars each, you
put them in the back of your TV. Then you
subscribe to Roku and then boom, there's everything. Absolutely, but
that includes your local channel. So that would have had
an impact on the product. Look, there's a reason why
I'm going to Netflix, going to Prime, going to Apple.
(20:39):
It's the product. It's the content that is driving it
now with younger people. This is why, whether it's television
or radio, twenty five to fifty four used to be
the demo. But now the good news is there is
an economic shift in America more thirty five to sixty four,
So you really want to reach more, thirty five to
sixty four year olds are the ones with money and
spending it. And sixty four year olds don't act old
(21:01):
like they used to. So they're not still sitting on
their nineteen sixty three couch. They're out buying furniture, they're
out buying cars. I say all that to say it's
still content driven now. Young people they grew up with
things everywhere, But for most people thirty five to sixty four,
they're still choosing things. So I don't care how much
(21:22):
CBS tries to say this has nothing to do with
the well, the contents, what created the economic question for you?
It's yes, it's and I think it's suicide more than
gutfelt killed them, although the gutfelt didn't help what he's
gonna get the final stick because I got to get
to sounds of the day.
Speaker 7 (21:39):
The depth of late night so called comedy reminds me
of the line in the movie The Sixth Sense.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
They're dead and they don't even know it. Yeah. I
always use that line for a death of journalism, and
now this is death of late night TV.
Speaker 9 (21:53):
No.
Speaker 1 (21:54):
I think more of the Chinese restaurant owner and Howard
Stern's private parts who comes to the table and he
tells howard make funny not fun Now that one might
explain the death of late nineteen.
Speaker 11 (22:13):
People who majored in an online activision with a minor
and puberty bomb.
Speaker 14 (22:18):
They're a little bit Any of you in the media
clearly missed the art.
Speaker 2 (22:22):
Of the deal.
Speaker 1 (22:23):
It's going to work out, all right. This has gone viral.
You know, there's two ways for me to do it,
Ignore it or address it. You know what I'm choosing
to address it. But this is the video that's gone viral.
A man makes a really bad choice to have an
affair and cheat on his wife and then go to
a Coldplay concert and sit there having their romantic moment
(22:49):
when the kiss cam finds them. It created quite a
moment in the stadium that's now worldwide. Right, Well, it
was very shy. I'm not very shy. They were actually
having an affair and a family's been destroyed. A couple
(23:12):
of observations one and I'm not soft on adultery. It's
a ten commandment and the wages of sin or death,
And let me tell you something undealt with could lead
to eternal death. Thanks be to God and his conquering
of hell and death and the Cross. It can be
(23:33):
dealt with, but there can still be death on earth,
like death to a marriage and death to a family.
So first and foremost, I don't delight in the misfortune
of others. And we live in a strange time. It
was bad enough in earlier times when people would get
caught in these embarrassing moments and families would be destroyed,
but for this man to be everywhere and mocked. I
(23:58):
was a child, and I can tell you there is
nothing worse than seeing your father walk out the front
door with a suitcase. It is the most unsettling, unnatural
thing on earth. And I can't even fathom if I
had to go to school and everybody's you know, had
laughs and seen my father all over the internet. So
(24:19):
it's a reminder there's no such thing as privacy. I
can tell you this. I am very blessed and that
my best friend is my wife, and the only person
that I'm obsessively attracted to still is my wife, so
she makes it very easy. But if I wasn't, oh
my gosh, everywhere I am is right on life three sixty.
(24:42):
I don't know how people cheat anymore. I don't know
how you go to a concert and just sit there
and have a romantic moment. And I can't blame cold
Play for doing this. I mean, Red's got the conspiracy theory.
Jeff wonders with a conspiracy theory. Who happened to just
be filming the jambotron and it was this all as
And how did he know it was adultery? And I
(25:03):
don't think that's the case at all. But there is
no privacy anymore. I mean it's it's harder to sin
and get away with it. I can tell you that,
and you were never able to get away with it,
not eternally or earthly. But what troubles me the most,
and the reason I've chosen to bring it up, is
when you read the comments and people are posting. It
(25:28):
reminds me so much of Jesus's time, where they would
just stone people, just pick up a rock and start
killing him. Only now instead of a rock, it's a
comment on social media. And I wonder if Jesus would
still look at us all and look at you and
look at me today and say are you without sin?
Maybe not that sin, but are you without sin? Do
you feel justified? And then the human me experiential me
(25:54):
would say, before you do, think of me as a kid,
because somewhere this guy has chilled and I can't imagine
what they're going through. I can't imagine. I can't imagine
what a destroyed family looks like. I don't see where
(26:16):
that's easy humor. I pray the guy doesn't kill himself.
I'm sure it's crossing his mind. I've sinned a lot,
and I can't imagine how I feel if everybody was
commenting and watching videos of me sinning. I'm grateful to
God walked me through that phase, forgave me, changed me.
(26:38):
I no longer desire to sin anymore, but catching other people.
I only pray that somehow this works together. I still,
I seriously look at this and I pray for the
kids and the wife and the family to be restored.
Maybe it's possible. Would that be a bad ending to
that story? If it is, there's something wrong with us?
All right, all this stuff about Donald Trump, all these poles,
(27:00):
all this Epstein stuff, And I warned you a mile
away the left, because that's all we play is matrix
shirts and skins. The Left is going to be pounding
away at Epstein implying the Trump's in there and that's
the cover up, and the right will just pound mom
Donnie and communist socialist Democrats. It's the same game, and
they're both wrong for playing it. The problem is the
(27:23):
Democrats have their lowest polling numbers ever again, and that
seems to be a monthly occurrence. They go lower. You
can play the limbo theme song low can you go
lower and lower? But how is it all affecting Donald Trump?
Harryton explains to the audience at CNN.
Speaker 18 (27:38):
I guess the question here is, is this whole saga
with Epstein having any impact on Trump's approval rating overall
when it comes to the Grand Old Party?
Speaker 19 (27:47):
Yeah, I mean, look, I think this one surprised me
a bit because of all these complaints online going after
Trump and the Epstein fager might think his approval ratings
were going down Republicans, If anything, they're going up. Republicans
who all roof of Trump. Look at our CNN pull
the prior one eighty six percent, the one out this
week eighty eight percent with Republicans. How about Quinnipiac the
prior poll eighty seven percent approval of Republicans this week.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Out ninety percent with Republicans.
Speaker 19 (28:11):
If anything, Donald Trump's approval rating has gone up since
this whole Epstein saga started. He is at the apex
or close there too, in terms of his popularity with
Republican voters.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
So if the Democrats strategy is use Epstreet Epstein to
create division within the Republican Party, it's not working. That's
number one. Then he turns his attention to this.
Speaker 18 (28:37):
Still, Congressional Democrats have been trying to seize on this.
You hear them also parroting what you're hearing online saying
release the files as this terrible blah blah blah. I mean,
is that working for them?
Speaker 1 (28:48):
No?
Speaker 19 (28:48):
I mean, look here, here's what's so important. You know,
we talk about the potential of Republicans leaving Donald Trump.
They're not leaving them, But what about Congressional Democrats and
problems with their own base? Democrats and that approval of
Congressional Democrats According to Quinnipiac University in June of twenty
twenty five, it was their second worst ever at minus
twelve points.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
It's not not low enough for you? How about we
go even lower?
Speaker 19 (29:08):
In July of twenty twenty five, minus thirteen points, their
worst net approval rating for congressional Democrats. Among Democrats, ever,
Donald Trump is not the one who has problems with
this political base. It is Congressional Democrats are the ones
who have problems with.
Speaker 1 (29:21):
And what are they doing about it? Well, they can't
get close enough to Mom Donnie and Mom Donnie. Well,
he's got a little bit of an issue because of
a video that surfaced. Yes, Mom Donnie, the Kami in
a video causing a firestorm approving the seizure of private property.
Speaker 20 (29:43):
Listen, my platform is that every single person should have housed.
And I think, faced with these two options, the system,
the system has hundreds of thousands of people unhoused. Right
for what and if if there was any system that
guarantee each person housing, whether you call it the abolition
(30:04):
of private property or you call it, you know, just
a state wide house and guarantee.
Speaker 1 (30:08):
Kind of like you know, intifada. He's not against the navada,
but he doesn't like calling for a global intefada, you know,
using that phrase again. If you want to put your
eyes on moral relativism, put your eyes on social media,
put your eyes on crazy tosanme politicians. That's fine. I
keep my eyes on our intent and the inspiration of
(30:31):
who we are, the Declaration of Independence, and we're endowed
by our creator with inalienable rights like life, liberty, and
the pursuit of happiness. Not a home. You want a home.
Take school seriously, take your trade seriously, take your job seriously.
(30:52):
As you work hard and you do well, good things
will happen. You may start out with a condo, you
may start out with the townhouse. Eventually you get a home.
You may rent and then eventually own. But you're not
entitled a home. You're not entitled to take something from
someone else who earned it and give it to yourself
because that's you're right and you don't have to earn it.
(31:12):
And communism has happened and failed now Representative from Washington
Prama La Jaya Paul. She was just so charmed by
the guy. She thinks he's the future of the party
and anybody that doesn't endorse him is missing a real opportunity.
(31:33):
And then meanwhile she's playing the matrix on Epstein.
Speaker 21 (31:35):
What is in these files, including that client list that
apparently was there and now is no longer there.
Speaker 22 (31:41):
Well, and DOOJ says there isn't a client list, and
I know that the embody said what she said.
Speaker 1 (31:47):
Our sources tell.
Speaker 22 (31:48):
Us that when she was asked about the client.
Speaker 1 (31:50):
List, she was talking about something that was.
Speaker 22 (31:51):
Already publicly available, that was handed to influencers.
Speaker 18 (31:54):
But I just want to follow up.
Speaker 22 (31:55):
If you see such a need to investigate this, why
didn't you raise it during the Bide administration. Ian we
couldn't find that you made any public comments about Epstein
and previous administrations.
Speaker 21 (32:06):
Well, I would have been happy to raise it then
as well. Frankly, we were focused on so many different pieces.
But I have been one of the Democrats that has
been consistent on what I call out Republican presidents for
and Democratic presidents for, whether it is Faiza reforms that
we need, whatever it has been. I've been pretty consistent
war powers. I've criticized Joe Biden just as I'm criticizing
(32:29):
Donald Trump. I think transparency is not something that should
happen only.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
When you have By the way, my favorite part of
the clip is is is Pamela Brown trying to act
like she's asking the tough gotcha question? I know, well,
in fact, she's trying to offset the narrative. The problem
(32:54):
is she couldn't get her guest to do in a
good way. And the question is pretty obvious, since when
does the left care so much about Epstein? Well, because
they think it was dividing his base. Go back to
Harry Anton. It's not. And they're at their lowest approval ratings,
and they're at their lowest level in the generic congressional polling,
(33:15):
and they're coming close to a midterm and the only
candidate ideas they're embracing is a communist candidate for mayor.
That's only a round because they played a Shenanigan in
the primary with rank File. I mean, I hope they're
following the ball on all this. I guess it boils
down to cheaters never win. So let's go back to
our other big story, Stephen Colbert. Is this a Stephen
(33:37):
Colbert failure? Is this a Late night failure? CBS is
saying it's not Stephen Colbert, it's a business decision. We're
not replacing him, We're getting rid of the show altogether.
Is this the beginning of the death of late night television?
And everyone will argue, what was the cause? Was it?
Technology shifts? Well, Johnny Carson over fifty five years ago
in a smug interview by Mike Wallace on Sixty Minutes,
(34:02):
addressed or prophesied, let's go back to the King of
Late Night, and maybe you'll figure out the death of
Late Night, because I don't think it ends with Colbert,
and I do think Jimmy Kimmel's next.
Speaker 3 (34:14):
You get sensitive about the fact that people say he'll
never take a serious controversy. Well, I have an answer
to that. I said, Now tell me the last time
that Jack Benny red Skelton Benny comedian used his show
to do serious issues.
Speaker 1 (34:32):
That's not what I'm there for. Can't they see that?
But you and I do.
Speaker 3 (34:36):
They think that just because you have it Tonight's show,
that you must deal in serious issues.
Speaker 1 (34:42):
That's a danger. It's a real danger.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
Once you start that, do you start to forget that
self important feeling that what you say has great import
And you know, strangely enough, you could use that show
as a form you could swaye people, and I don't
think you should as an entertainer.
Speaker 1 (34:56):
Are you reluctant in putting? And they did? And you
see the first death David Letterman's Late Show taken over
in twenty fifteen by Stephen Colbert canceled the death of
Late Night Begins. If they'd only if Mike Wallace had
only listened to Johnny Carson and respected him, but had
the networks listened to him and respected him, maybe they
(35:19):
wouldn't be dead today.
Speaker 11 (35:24):
People who majored in online activision with a minor and
puberty bob a little bit up.
Speaker 22 (35:31):
Any of you in the media clearly missed the art
of the deal just before it's going.
Speaker 19 (35:35):
To work out.
Speaker 1 (35:35):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael nhild Joino