Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
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we're so grateful you came for the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Enjoy well two three, starting your morning off right, A
new way of talk, a new way of understanding, because
where inness to get.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
This is your morning show and with Michael del Truman
seven minutes after the hour, Thanks for waking up with
your morning show on the Aaron streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app. I Am Michael del Jerno. Text messages between
law enforcement before and President Trump's assassination attempt show officers
raise concerned concerns ninety minutes before the incident. Investigation also
(00:56):
reveals the shooter planned for the better part of a year. Meanwhile,
Vice President Kamala Harris may soon announce their VP running mate,
although it won't be North Carolina Governor Ate Roy Cooper,
who has reportedly removed himself from consideration and the Democrats
rally behind President Biden's call for his hypocritical Supreme Court
to nowhere reform as Republicans speak against it. Team USA, Wow,
(01:21):
where to begin? How about men's gymnastics bringing home the
first Olympic medal since two thousand and eight. It was
a bronze, but it was quite an effort. In the
men's all around, they're calling him the pommel horse hero,
the nerd with the glasses from Penn State. Steve Netarosik
(01:43):
put him over the edge with a near perfect pommel
horse routine. US women's rugby, by the way, that was
my first time watching women's rugby. Yeah, oh is it
a hit? All women's rugby? I loved it. They advanced
to the semi finals. The US women's basketball team cruised
against Japan and their opener. Overall, the USA added eight
(02:03):
more medals on Monday, continuous lead overall in the standings
at the Paris Olympics. We now have twenty medals, including
three gold, eight silver, and nine bronze. France's second of
the standings with sixteen overall, Japan and China tied and
third with twelve pieces overall. Are the days of inexpensive
fast food over well, I have the answer to that,
(02:25):
Aaron Rayale. Yes, that's why I sit down at restaurants
now right or order pizza.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
If you're like, it's kind of split the difference. We
either go to the restaurant or just order pizza or
cook at home. Because fast food is since the pandemic,
which is so weird because tough times are usually good
for cheap food, they have had so many price increases,
like essentially run many prices, and it's scared off a
lot of fast food customers, including those in the low
(02:55):
income bracket, who actually make up a sizeable part of
the sector's customer base. We're now getting means for these
companies yesterday. These companies, and when I say these companies McDonald's,
Taco Bell, Burger King, and their parent restaurant brands International At,
Burger King, Taco Bell, Jump Brands, they're having double digit
slides in terms of sales this year. McDonald's reported yesterday
(03:15):
sales are down one percent, first decline in thirteen quarters. Actually,
they saw their first drop in sales for the first
time in years last quarter. They're cash strapped. Customers are
not going to shop there. If you have high menu prices,
and that's what we're seeing. So not only are the customers,
but also Wall Street pulling back from these.
Speaker 1 (03:33):
Isn't it interesting that we still call it fast food
because onen's the last time it was fast?
Speaker 4 (03:38):
Huh?
Speaker 1 (03:39):
Yes, I know that's not just a joke. It's like,
I mean, part of me is just like, okay, if
the biggest advantage is because nobody's going there over the
top steakhouse, you know, just because of the price. You know,
the price is a big part of it. But it's
supposed to be fast, it's supposed to be delicious, and
it's supposed to be afford right, all right, So maybe
(04:03):
if we could hand pick one or two, they might
still be delicious. But they're not healthy, they're not fast,
and they're not affordable. I guess the biggest question we
have to answer is why has this not recovered from COVID?
Why has a lot of things not recovered from COVID? Yes, exactly.
Speaker 3 (04:16):
Well, to answer your question, these brands are like, oh no,
we have no more customers, what are we going to do?
And many have returned to these five dollars menus So
McDonald's last Monday they extended their value meal past. It's
like four week window. That's because ninety three percent of
its restaurants voted in favor of doing it, because people
were coming in and if you look at the like,
(04:37):
there's a lot of a geo tagging location data that
you can get from placer Ai. And apparently since June
twenty fifth, when they launched that five dollars meal at McDonald's,
they had eight percent more visits on like an average
Tuesday than all of twenty twenty four. Yes, they're going
to keep it because I understand that everything's been hit
by inflation, but so many restaurants and so many their
(05:01):
retailers and providers also did use this as an opportunity
to kind of pad their books, to buy a little
bit more ability to price where they wanted to price.
And now that time is over.
Speaker 1 (05:12):
All, right, any sector affected by food cost or labor
instabilities more than others or.
Speaker 3 (05:21):
So obviously fast food was a big part of them.
They had to get people, and they had to get
people working in their restaurants and serving their customers.
Speaker 5 (05:27):
So this took a hit too.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
But again they didn't they didn't. They're not they're not
going out of business.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
They're not completely going broke.
Speaker 3 (05:35):
The fact of the matter is they use this as
an opportunity to seriously jack up prices. Well, now the
customer says, no more, not going to do it, We're
not coming in. This is one we're seeing the reset.
And I think that this sector, along with many others,
is going to begin to do this because it has
been so many quarters of price increases. We're hoping the
Fed's going to speak this week actually about rates.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
It's a big one. It's a very big one.
Speaker 3 (05:58):
We're hoping for some sort of relief. Every cycle, there's
ups and downs every cycle. What's interesting about this one
is now again like usually tough times economically are very
good for fast food, and that hasn't been the case.
But I think that we're gonna if you at the
changes that have come into place, aka those five dollars menus,
if you let them take hold, we might see a
(06:19):
return of customer. It's very likely given how how dropped
people are at the moment.
Speaker 1 (06:23):
So basically we used to battle over fast food not
getting our order right. Now apparently we're correcting how they
didn't get our price right. Is that pretty much summarize it.
Aaron's going to be back next hour. We're going to
talk about a new study that's out which which states
have the best and worst healthcare when your morning show
(06:43):
continues next hour thereon Reale, thanks for joining us, Aaron,
we'll talk to them. Thanks all right, twelve minutes after
the hour.
Speaker 6 (06:50):
You just waking up.
Speaker 1 (06:51):
These your top five stories of the day. Well, the
Biden wore on the judicial branch of government in the
name of democracy, of course, is off to nowhere. Mark
Mayfield has today in politics.
Speaker 7 (07:05):
While speaking from the LBJ Presidential Library in Austin, Texas,
Biden called for eighteen year term limits for justices and
an enforceable code of ethics. He also proposed a constitutional
amendment to limit the broad immunity granted to presidents by
a recent Supreme Court decision. Biden argued that extreme opinions
from the Supreme Court in recent years have undermined long
(07:26):
established civil rights protections. He cited the Court's decision to
overturn Roe v. Wade and grant brown immunity to presidents.
I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (07:35):
Why does it take so much money to run for
president and present such an easy choice to American voters? Well,
We can't answer that all in one day, but a
lot of it is boots on the ground to manipulate
or advertising to manipulate how the voters see such an
easy choice. The fact of the matter is does take
(07:55):
a lot of money, and a lot of money's been raised.
Here's Brian Shook with our expensive Road to the White
House today.
Speaker 8 (08:01):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four. Former President
Trump was in New Jersey again on Sunday for another
fundraiser as Kamala Harris hits a fundraising milestone Lea, with
the Harris campaign claiming it raised two hundred million dollars
in the week since she became the presumptive Democratic nominee.
(08:21):
Trump was at the Jersey Shore again over the weekend
for a private fundraiser, this time.
Speaker 9 (08:26):
He's a radical left LUDATECT.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
She has no clue.
Speaker 9 (08:30):
She's evil.
Speaker 8 (08:31):
The latest ABC Ipsis poll shows Harris's favorability rising to
forty three percent, with Trump slipping to thirty six percent
after getting a post GOP convention bump in Washington.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
I'm Brian Shook. Evil's a little harsh for President Donald
Trump is explaining what he meant when he told the
Conservative Christian summit. They won't have to vote anymore after
the November election. Here's what he told Fox News host
Laura Ingram yesterday.
Speaker 10 (09:01):
Christians are not known as a big voting group. They
don't vote, and I'm explaining that to them.
Speaker 1 (09:06):
You never vote.
Speaker 10 (09:08):
This time vote, I'll straighten out the country. You won't
have to vote anymore. I won't need you vote.
Speaker 1 (09:13):
Is comments in Florida Friday drew swift backlash for many
who interpreted it as suggesting that there'd be no more
elections under a second Donald Trump presidency. You know, that's
probably the news story. Let's go find the people that
actually thought that's what he meant. Yeah, I'd like to
talk to him. Oh, that would be the mainstream media
who has pivoted now and they're once again trying to
(09:33):
dictate an outcome of an election. All Right, the typical
starter home is worth at least a million dollars in
some two hundred and thirty seven cities across the nation.
That can't be right, right, Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 5 (09:47):
That's according to new numbers published by real estate marketplace Zillow,
which defines a starter home as those in the lowest
third of home values in a given area. Five years ago,
only eighty seven city saw starter home prices of a
million dollars, or more more than half of the city
seeing the surge or in California. New York came in second,
followed by New Jersey, Florida, and Massachusetts. I'mly Citaylor.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
The US is buying oil to replenish the strategic petroleum
reserve that had robbed in order to protect Joe Biden's
presidential ratings. That's not how the news story reads, but
that's the truth. Oh. By the way, you'll also know
this nowhere. The news story doesn't tell you whom we
bought it from. Tammy Trihilo reports.
Speaker 4 (10:26):
The purchase of more than four point six million barrels
of crude oil is the latest as the Department of
Energy works to refill the emergency stockpile. More than one
hundred and eighty million barrels were released in twenty twenty
two in an effort to heat gas prices down after
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. As of July nineteenth, the reserve,
which is located in Louisiana, had about three hundred and
(10:47):
seventy four million barrels of oil I'm Tammy Trehillo.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
A group of climate protesters are under arrest after sitting
in front of Ohio Senator J D Vance's office. No
cats were involved in this protest. Brian me all night
long has more.
Speaker 8 (11:02):
A few dozen Sunrise Movement demonstrators gathered in front of
the Trump running mates office, chanting Vance is a liar,
our planet is on fire. A spokesperson for Capitol Police
said the arrests were made for violating protest laws inside
congressional office buildings. The eight arrested refused to move when
police tried to clear the area. I'm Brian Schuk. COVID Con.
(11:24):
I mean Comic Con is over, but you may have
brought something you didn't want home with you.
Speaker 1 (11:29):
Pre Tennis has more.
Speaker 6 (11:31):
The event is playfully being called Comic crud or Corona
Con because a lot of people who attended Comic Con
have now tested positive for COVID nineteen. Many attendees isolated
in expensive hotels, unable to use their non transferable event tickets.
The county says there's a fourteen percent increase in COVID
nineteen cases in San Diego right now, but event organizers
(11:53):
say there's no way to trace how many people contracted
COVID nineteen over the weekend or if they even got
it at Comic Con. I'm pre tennis.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
The US men's gymnastics team bringing home a medal for
the first time since two thousand and eight just one
of the many highlights from the Summer Olympic Games in
Paris yesterday. Here's your morning update.
Speaker 11 (12:11):
Olympic action in Paris continues today. The highlight for the
US yesterday was the men's gymnastics team, are in their
first medal and team competition since two thousand and eight,
Americans earning bronze. The US was led by veteran brodium Alone,
who says they fed off of a very supportive crowd.
Speaker 5 (12:27):
It makes it very easy to go out and hit
really good routines when you've got energy like that in
the crowd.
Speaker 11 (12:33):
Also yesterday, at the tennis tournament, American Cocoa Golf Advance,
cruising to a win. The top men's match yesterday pitted
stars Novak Djokovic against Spain's Rafael Na Dhal. The Serbian
Djokovic won in straight sets. Action today will include Team
USA's men's soccer team wrapping up group play against Guinea
and Simone Biles leading the women's gymnastics team into their
(12:56):
team final. Team USA added eight medals yesterday. They lead
the metal count with twenty three goals, eight silver, nine bronze.
France is second right now in the medal count, they
check in with sixteen. This has been an NBC News
Radio Olympic reports.
Speaker 9 (13:11):
He failed to mention Agio Wilson twenty four points, thirteen rebounds,
literally USh women too and easily win over the much
shorter Japanese team.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Uh he did? Sounded like Harry Cary's offspring.
Speaker 8 (13:27):
Did it?
Speaker 1 (13:27):
Gleg his love child? Speaking of Harry Cary and baseball,
Rangers won six to three over our Cardinals. The Guardians
won eight to four of the Tigers. Dbecks won nine
to eight over the Nats. Mariners lost fourteen to seven
to the Red Sox. The Rays were off birthdays today.
Have him my babe, he'd probably want to be known
(13:48):
for my way. When I think of paul Anka, I
think of having my babe. Yeah, you woman in love
and I love what it's do. Dune he had a
bunch of great hits. I'm look those up. We're gonna
take a deep gut later in the morning show, our
engineer Jeffrey will sing a medley of Paul Lanka hits.
Paul ank is eighty three years old. Today actor Governor
(14:10):
Arnold Schwatzenega. He'll be back. He'd be back with a walker.
He's seventy seven years old. We're getting old. That was
Onnold seventy seven. Laurence Fishburgh terrific actor, sixty three years old.
Today and Friends actress Lisa kudrou is sixty one. But
your birthday, Happy birthday, were so glad you were born.
And guess what you early morning writers are writers and risers.
(14:33):
You are up to speed. This is your morning show
with Michael del Trono. I want to do a little
fun story just for you, my Platinum card listeners, because
those that get up this early to listen, you deserve
a little something special, little VIP treatment. So in Telsklaholm,
at a radio station called k FAQ, I was interviewing
(14:55):
this top Elvis impersonator, very very well known, and I
don't know why. During the break or some time, I
started singing Little Neil Diamond and then he and his
manager were like talking, and I said, what is that?
A bad Neil Diamond. No, No, we were just talking.
That's an incredible Neil Diamond. You know, we were just
saying you were minus a lot of Garrett. You know,
(15:15):
they bring up some guy who's like a Neil Diamond
impersonator in Vegas. So after the interview make a long
story short, and I was pretty miserable in radio at
that time. They came met to him. They said, listen,
if you'd like to go to Vegas. I actually contemplated listen.
I tried out for the Texas Rangers and made it
as a radio stunt. They were sending me to but Montana.
(15:37):
Then I'm doing Neil Diamond with some Elvis impersonator and
his big manager, his little colonel or whatever it was,
Colonel Parker. He's ready to bring me to Vegas. I'm thinking,
you know what I could get out of radio? You
sing some Neil Diamond every night and some sparkly clothes.
You would have done well this close to not having me.
You were you and Carrot Top. I almost took a
(15:59):
drag my last cigarettes. The same people that are telling
you Kamala Harris is great. She's coronated, she is everything
you ever dreamt of are the same ones that we're
telling you Joe Biden was fit just a week ago
and then exposed. They're all in a massive pivot of
(16:26):
narrative in the media. The problem is it is a
narrativized momentum that is going to meet a political reality.
And I'll share some of that reality it's already meeting,
especially on the electoral college map. When your a Morning
(16:47):
show continues next, 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.
You'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
We're happier here now. Enjoyed the podcast on the Aaron
Streaming live and your iHeart app. This is your morning show.
I am Michael del Journal. So many ways to make
(17:08):
your voice heard throughout the show. You can call toll
free one eight hundred six eight eight ninety five twenty
two one eight hundred six eight eight ninety five twenty two.
There's also a little microphone if you're listening on the
iHeartRadio app, press it leave a message, It comes to
us immediately. We can share it with the class. That's
where a lot of people like to record. There. I'm
so and so from such and such this hour. You
(17:29):
would say, I'm a platinum card listener to your morning
show with Michael del Jernam. That would be fun to hear. Yeah,
well you need a platinum card reference. But no, that's
where people do there. Your morning show is my morning show,
is your Morning Show with Michael del journal liners, So
feel free to do that as well. We'd love to
share them. That's just your way of introducing yourself to
everybody else at the kitchen table and to call. Of course,
there's always good old fashioned email Michael D at iHeartMedia
(17:51):
dot com. Text message is between law enforcement for former
President Trump's assassination attempt, show officers, race concerns ninety minutes
before the incident, and the shooter himself planned for almost
a year. Vice President Kamala Harris may soon announce their
VP pick, but it won't be North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper.
(18:12):
Democrats are rallying behind President Biden's call for a Supreme
Court Overaul. It'll never happen, and Tmusa added eight more
medals yesterday. They still lead the world with twenty all right,
we were talking about narrativised momentum, as we said earlier
late last week and earlier this week. Did you notice
the media pivot. Did you notice when they were trying
(18:35):
to get rid of Joe Biden, how there was no
death of journalism for a while, everybody Axios, Washington Post,
New York Times, CNN, everybody on the same page doing
their job. Why they knew Joe Biden was going to lose,
so they did their job for a couple weeks to
run them off. Now that they got Kamala, they're back
(18:57):
to doing their line. They're back to doing their narratives.
We're back to the death of journalism. And it's not
just how hunky dory everything is with Kamala Harris. I
mean that's coming. There's all the narrativized momentum, but it's
about to meet a political reality. In fact, it already
is and never stopped meeting that reality on the electoral
(19:20):
college map or on the issues that matter most of voters.
But notice how they're right back to attacking Donald Trump
so much for his near death experience. Now his vice
president is weird, and the President's indicating we think you'll
never vote again. If he's elected, democracy will end? Is
(19:41):
that what he meant? This is narrative manipulative messaging. This
is propaganda. And do you notice how they all get
on the same script at the same time. That's the
one that marvels me. How do they all get to
saying the same thing their candidate is saying it? All
(20:03):
the networks are saying, all the different hosts and anchors
are saying, is there a memo? Am I not on
the email list? This is what propaganda sounds like. In
the Death of Journalists, And listen some of.
Speaker 3 (20:16):
What he and his running bad are saying.
Speaker 1 (20:18):
It's just playing weird.
Speaker 12 (20:22):
These guys are just weird. That's where they are, as
weird and creepy as Jadie Vance.
Speaker 7 (20:27):
A super weird idea from jad Vance.
Speaker 10 (20:31):
Yeah it's not.
Speaker 1 (20:31):
I mean, it's quite weird.
Speaker 7 (20:32):
They're just playing weird, just playing weird, just playing weird.
Speaker 12 (20:36):
That stuff is weird. They come across weird and then
they start being weird.
Speaker 1 (20:40):
Yeah they're weird, being a really weird. It's such a weirdo.
Trumping is weirdo. Running Mate are weird, deeply and profoundly weird.
They are weird. These Republicans just being weird. It's just weird.
It's really weird looking.
Speaker 10 (20:52):
Weirdness goes even deeper.
Speaker 7 (20:54):
She said, a lot of things that are weird, a
weird style that he brings.
Speaker 1 (20:58):
Weird policies are with the weird thing because it is
a thing, you know.
Speaker 3 (21:03):
I was.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
What a pleasure it was to spend another evening with
Rush Limbaugh. We were I was very young, he was young.
I was a nobody. He was still practically a nobody.
And we're wandering around in a tuxedo at a seapack invention.
And I remember Rush at one point because I was just,
(21:26):
you know, I couldn't believe, you know, I standing in
a room with senators Congress, yeah, you know. And I
looked at him and thinking, oh my gosh, I don't know,
maybe we better not, you know, talk to anybody. And
he looked at me as only he could. He was
just act like you belong and he just started walking
up in meeting the people. They had no idea who
we were worked well for. But then we eventually had
(21:50):
our dinner and it was time for a keynote address,
and it was Dan Quaile, the Vice President of the
United States, and I remember sitting there and already had
the perception from the media that he was some kind
of an idiot, because that's what the media told me,
he was an idiot, and then they would show clips
to kind of try to prove he was an idiot
and not a spelled potato. I always had any too
(22:17):
to potato. But anyway, so we're sitting there and as
he's giving the speech, all I could think of was,
oh my gosh, this guy is like eloquent, charismatic. He
really reminded me of a John F. Kennedy. He really did,
even though the the famous vice presidential debate line. At
(22:44):
one point he was talking about a Japanese prime minister
or something and mispronounced his name, went to pronounce it right,
did it again, and then the third time he got it,
and he just moved on. It was no big deal.
I wouldn't even have remembered it right. And I remember
I got home to my co and Maryland that night
and it was like late at night, it was like
after midnight, and I'm I flick on and that's all
(23:05):
we had then with CNN, and that's the clip CNN's
playing as they're all making fun of it. Over and
I thought to myself, Wow, this is a game, and
they can position somebody, remember positioning anybody out Well, there
are no such thing as program directors, are there anymore? Well,
at a young program directors out there. Positioning is not
(23:26):
what you do to the product. Positioning is what you
do to the mind of the user. It's what every
great radio program director failed to get. Your product is
separate from your positioning, which is also separate from your imaging.
And I thought to myself, they had positioned this guy
(23:46):
as an idiot in my mind, and I believed it.
They know what they're doing, and they know what they're
doing to your mind or what they're attempting to do
to your mind. And we talk about the matrix that
we live in, and it must be solved before we
(24:10):
can ever solve any of these problems. We can't agree on.
But you have the right in their silo, the left
and their silo the rights, watching the channel they watch,
the radio stations they listen to, and the websites they
go to, and the people they follow on Twitter. And
they're not consuming and they're not understanding. They're just repeating
what they're hearing. And anybody that disagrees, they're unfriended, and
(24:33):
the left is doing the same. So this positioning that
you're hearing right now, we're like, wow, this is really creepy. Yeah,
But to their side, it's uniting and they're believing it.
So it's only a matter of time. And I don't
have an answer for you. And it's frightening to even contemplate.
(24:55):
How do they all get on the same word and
the same page. I mean, you've seen those montages before,
and it doesn't matter if you grab a television anchor
from a little town in Georgia or a major city
like San Francisco, New York, or Los Angeles. They're all
using the exact same words. Somebody's coordinating this. I'll go
(25:16):
one step further. I worked for a company where we
would get mandates from upon high days before it was
in the news, and I'm thinking, who's coordinating all this?
(25:37):
Forget the weird, crazy odds it would take to win
a lottery, what are the odds that all these people
would be saying the exact same thing no matter where
you tune.
Speaker 12 (25:50):
What was weird was talking about diet mountain dew, who
drinks diet mountain dew.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
Who ever seen the guy laugh.
Speaker 12 (25:56):
That seems very weird to me that an adult can
go through six and a half years of being in
the public eye. If he has left, it's at someone,
not with someone. That that is weird behavior, weird and cultish.
These are weird people. On the other side, it.
Speaker 3 (26:08):
Kind of doubled down on his weird ideas.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
I think weird is probably generous simply weird.
Speaker 6 (26:13):
These guys are just playing weird fans as weird, you know.
Speaker 7 (26:16):
As the campus said weird.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
It really is just plain weird. So I can't tell
how many of these anchors too, By the way, are
former Democrat political operatives. What do you remember, Rocky, when
Jimmy Kimmel was funny and he would play the montages
of different anchors from around the country all doing the
same script. Yeah, did you ever say it was scary then?
So they're trying to position in your mind jd Vance
(26:40):
and Donald Trump is weird tyrannical dictators. They're right back
to their old tricks. After two weeks of journalism being
journalism and the free press doing what the free press
should do for we the people. They got rid of
Biden and now they're already on the fast track to
(27:02):
making him out to be an amazing patriot, an unprecedented
successful president. I don't know how they're going to get
you to forget what he really was, a massive pivot
back to the death of journalism, a narrativized momentum. But
(27:26):
it's about to meet and I connect the dots today
for you to meet the political reality that doesn't match
a couple of quick stories, and then we got to
get onto James Carafano is going to join us about
what's happening in the Middle East as Israel tries to
respond appropriately to a Hesba Llah missile attack without escalating
(27:49):
the war in the Middle East, and how concern should
we be as it escalated. I mean, remember, this is
a chilling fact. I've studied a lot of wars just
because I go down rabbit holes, and I've noticed one thing.
Wars rarely and where they begin in the same borders,
they begin with, the same players, they begin with. Escalations
(28:12):
should be of great concern, especially in the epicenter of
the world, the Middle East. Of visit Lieutenant James kre
Carafinal minutes away and your top five stories of the
day are next.
Speaker 5 (28:23):
Right.
Speaker 6 (28:23):
This is Jenny Bourne my morning show.
Speaker 5 (28:25):
This is your morning show with Michael Del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (28:28):
It's about time to get this party started. If you
will it, I guess our next stop is officially a
deep announcement fifty two minutes after the hour. Thanks for
waking up with your morning show on Michael del Journal.
These are your top five stories of the day. Well,
it won't be North Carolina Governor Roy Cooper. He's reportedly
removing himself from consideration to being Kamala Harris's vice presidential
(28:52):
running back. Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 7 (28:57):
Ce anam Serned Soursus, who said that he was concerned
with going through the process at the age.
Speaker 1 (29:01):
Of sixty seven.
Speaker 7 (29:02):
Cooper was seen as one of the top contenders for
the role, along with Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro, Michigan Governor
Gretchen Whitmer, and Arizona Senator Mark Kelly.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
I'm Mark Mayfield. Well, our elected officials are big spenders.
See our thirty five trillion dollars of debt. But we're
big spenders too. About who we choose? Brian Shook as
our expensive road to the White House.
Speaker 8 (29:24):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four, Former President
Trump was in New Jersey again on Sunday for another
fundraiser as Kamala Harris hits a fundraising milestone, with the
Harris campaign claiming it raised two hundred million dollars in
the week since she became the presumptive Democratic nominee. Trump
(29:45):
was at the Jersey Shore again over the weekend for
a private fundraiser.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
This time, he's a radical left ludatech. She has no
clue she's evil.
Speaker 8 (29:54):
The latest ABC Ipsis poll shows Harris's favorability rising to
forty three percent, with Trump slipping to thirty six percent.
After getting a post GOP Convention bump in Washington, I'm
Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Former President Donald Trump explaining what he meant when he
told a conservative Christian summit they won't have to vote
anymore after the November election. Here's what he told Fox
News host Laura Ingram yesterday.
Speaker 10 (30:19):
Christians are not known as a big voting group.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
They don't vote, and I'm explaining that to him.
Speaker 10 (30:25):
You never vote this time vote. I'll straighten out the country.
You won't have to vote anymore. I won't need you vote.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
It's comments in Florida Friday drew swift backlash flabias media
as many interpreted as comments as suggesting there'll be no
more elections after he's elected because democracy every get it
was going maybe that's the news. But moron really heard
that and thought that the typical starter home in America
(30:53):
is worth at least a million dollars. Let me repeat that,
so that can sink in. Used to be you see
somebody in a million dollar home and they were rich,
a typical starter home. How many people can start at
a home worth a million dollars? And that's the average
in two hundred and thirty seven cities across the nation.
Lisa Taylor has the Startling News.
Speaker 5 (31:13):
That's according to new numbers published by real estate marketplace Zillow,
which defines a starter home as those in the lowest
third of home values in a given area. Five years ago,
only eighty seven cities saw starter home prices of a
million dollars, or more more than half of the city
seeing the surge or in California. New York came in second,
followed by New Jersey, Florida, and Massachusetts. I'm Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
So Joe Biden was having an eye problem Israel with
constituents within his party. A border crisis, an economy problem
primarily interest rates, inflation, and yes, high energy costs.
Speaker 4 (31:48):
Well.
Speaker 1 (31:48):
As president, he tried to address the high energy costs
by tapping into our oil reserves to keep the prices down.
And when I say down, I mean in the four
dollar range. And now, while he was using our reserves
to benefit him politically, he's using your money to replenish
(32:09):
the strategic petroleum reserves. By the way, nowhere in this
story or anywhere online will you find who we bought
all this oil from. Either. Here's Tammy Trihilo.
Speaker 4 (32:18):
The purchase of more than four point six million barrels
of crude oil is the latest as the Department of
Energy works to refill the emergency stockpile. More than one
hundred and eighty million barrels were released in twenty twenty
two in an effort to heat gas prices down after
Russia's invasion of Ukraine. As of July nineteenth, the reserve,
which is located in Louisiana, had about three hundred and
(32:38):
seventy four million barrels of oil. I'm Tammy Trichio.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
Items belonging to the late O. J. Simpson will be
auctioned off to raise money to pay his civil claims.
Mark Mayfield is back with that story.
Speaker 7 (32:49):
In nineteen ninety seven, the families of Nicole Brown, Simpson,
and Ron Goldman were awarded thirty three and a half
million dollars in a wrongful death of lawsuit. They have
yet to collect the money. The auction comes just one
day after Fred Goldman filed a one hundred and seventeen
million dollar creditor claim against Simpson's estate. Items in the
auction include Simpson's personal property like his Heisman trophy, golf clubs,
(33:10):
and a high end suv. Simpson died on April the tenth,
after a long battle with prostate cancer on Marketfield.
Speaker 1 (33:18):
Oh the Olympics. What a journey it was for me.
I think if I had to pick a highlight, it
was hands down Team USA men's gymnastics. For the first
time since two thousand and eight, they medaled a bronze medal.
(33:39):
Simone Biles will be leading Team USA as she aims
for a fifth Olympic gold medal and eighth medal overall
later Today, stars and stripes continue to dominate in the pool.
Katie Grimes Emmy Wyant picked up silver and bronze medals
and the women's four hundred meters individual medley. Luke Hobson
won a bronze medal in the men's two hundred meter freestyle,
(34:01):
and Ryan Murphy also captured a bronze medal in the
one hundred meter backstroke. The US women's basketball team cruised
over Japan one oh two to seventy six in their opener,
and I really got into the US women's rugby team.
That seventh squad made history making it to the semifinals
with a seventeen seven win over Great Britain. Tmusa will
(34:23):
take on New Zealand in the semifinals today. Tmusa ate
it in all yesterday added eight medals to the count.
They lead the world with twenty medals overall, three gold,
eight silver, and nine bronze. We're all in this together.
This is your Morning Show with michaeldenheld Joiner