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July 30, 2025 35 mins

Big companies like Proctor & Gamble are always doing market research on America’s habits. Their latest study has revealed surprising results related to stress. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will explain.

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day! 

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Nashville, Tennessee,
two Below, Mississippi, and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine and take the drive
to work with you, but better late than never. We're
grateful you're here now. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
This is your Morning Show with Michael o'deil charnon.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
Well, good morning, A segment just to ourselves, just you
and me. I can't wait seven minutes after the hour
on the air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
This is your morning Show. I'm Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
We had an eight point eight magnitude earthquake off the
coast of Russia, creates tsunami warnings for Hawaii, Alaska, and
northern California. We've got through Ohio, so we're feeling better
about Alaska. In Northern California, the Senate confirmed President's CDC
pick Boy. That's got Corey Booker up in arms. You'll
hear all about that and our Sounds of the day,

(01:08):
and you heard from White House correspondent John Decker. It
doesn't look like the Fed is going to lower rates
later today. I'm sure the President is going to be
beside himself. We'll have analysis tomorrow with David Bonson. By
the way, you guys should take a close look at
me while you can still recognize me.

Speaker 2 (01:25):
See this face, It's not going to look like this
for long. Come.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
I just made another frivolous online purchase, this time forge
Tallow Balalm. What that's right, works quickly with a proven formula.
The beef Tallow balm is specifically designed to nourish and
hydrate male skin, giving you fast results. One grass fed tallow.

(01:51):
I think I'm putting cow fat on my face. Isn't
this the same stuff that we're doing the French fries
with it? McDonald's again, Yeah, yeah, you're getting welcome to
think of it.

Speaker 2 (01:59):
I've never seen an French a facial.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
Yeah, it's got mushrooms in it some other things, but
everybody looks remarkably different after just one month.

Speaker 2 (02:10):
That's a I generated photos.

Speaker 4 (02:12):
Ninety three percent saw a reduction of appearance of visible
lines and wrinkles. One percent saw a noticeable increase in moisturization.
Seventy three percent noticed firmer skin with consistent use.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
This is it, guys, I may never be given back.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
Well, first I watched Funny Girl was a I can't
even live down.

Speaker 2 (02:35):
I'm gonna let myself live that down. Let him have it.
Birthday boy, who is looked at what you do?

Speaker 4 (02:42):
Forge face scream our first free commercial on your morning show.

Speaker 2 (02:46):
Look at me today and watch me get younger? All right, all.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
Right, So I am excited about having a segment to
ourselves again. We said at the very beginning, we want
to talk, ready to be a conversation again. You don't
need me yelling and screaming at you, waking you up
in the morning with the latest outrage and narrative. You
don't need me telling you how to think. You can
think well for yourself. We had two big stories that
a lot of people aren't talking about. One is we're
spending all the money we're gaining from tariff revenue before

(03:14):
we even collect it, and we've done the math early on.
I'm the only one that's a stickler for the up
to six hundred dollars per adult child up to six
hundred tells me there's going to be some means testing involved.
But if it's six hundred dollars and you start doing
that times however many, well we know it's more than

(03:35):
what Doze is saved. Wasn't the point of Doze to
begin the process of exploring the proper size and role
of government controlling our overspending? And then Congress take that
ball over the next day to twelve years and really
real in the spending. Now, what we ultimately need is

(03:56):
a constitutional amendment for a zero base, prioritized budget, no
continuing resolutions, no overages, no adding to the debt, and
then use this revenue from these negotiated deals to pay
down debts. So the question is do you want a
little check that gives back all the early gains or
do you want to pay down the debt? How serious
are politicians about the debt they've created? How serious is

(04:19):
this generation about the debt we've created that we've put
on our children? And doesn't look very serious. Imagine a
company having a great quarter and instead of investing back
into the company, they go give dividends to all their investors.
So take a rebate or pay down the debt. That
was one of your questions. The other is Gallayne Maxwell.

(04:41):
She arranged all these sexual deviant encounters, all these victims.
In fact, she even participated in some of them threesomes.
She's in jail for what she arranged and what she did.
Are we willing to let her out? Give her immunity,
give her clemency so she can go public with Congress

(05:02):
and they can make a political weapon out of her,
to feed our curiosity, to create a partisan political weapon.
And what does that say to the victims whose lives
she destroyed.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
For my money? Twenty years? Wasn't enough?

Speaker 4 (05:19):
Let alone letter off so they can play political games
with it. But we got your responses. Let's start with
is Roy First, Boy, Roy's harsh, All right, here's Roy
in Ohio. Here's what he would do, Michael, instead of
clemency for Maxwell, have a few better ideas.

Speaker 3 (05:38):
How about scapism or the brazen bull had even settle
for the blood eagle.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
They need to kick one and get at it.

Speaker 4 (05:45):
Wow, Wow, I don't think he just gives bankings. Next
up is Perry in Nashville.

Speaker 3 (05:55):
Could you explain or have someone explain what the purpose
of the Federal Reserve even is to me, that's a waste,
wasted money, wasted resources. My morning show is your a
morning show, and I love it. Brother, keep it up.

Speaker 4 (06:09):
Yeah, we've done that before with David bonsenyebe will do
it again tomorrow. It's not going to satisfy your belief
in the need of its existence, especially after the billion
and a half dollar overage on the renovation of their building.
Jill is in Phoenix, Arizona, listening to KFYI.

Speaker 2 (06:25):
Heck no, she should not get out.

Speaker 5 (06:28):
Besides, even if she did talk, how could they know
she was telling the truth.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
This is a scary situation.

Speaker 4 (06:40):
Look, she's in jail for good reason and for my money.
And I've seen a lot of documentaries, as I mentioned earlier.
My wife's seen them all and I've been forced to
overhear them. She was involved in arranging every one of
these underage girls. She even participated in some of them.

(07:00):
And this whole confusion over the names. If you're picturing
names that are going to really add something, it's not
in like a black book and a client list. These
are names that came up in depositions prior to a trial,
a trial that never happened because the accused killed himself

(07:21):
or was guilled, and then the names after his death
have been redacted. Why because everybody's innocent till proven guilty.
So you're really left with this question, do you really
want to throw away our judicial system, a constitutional foundation
of innocence still proven guilty, for public curiosity or political weaponry?

Speaker 2 (07:44):
Of course not.

Speaker 4 (07:45):
Now could Glaine Maxwell cooperate and create some new cases
and in those cases some justice come. I said this,
and you'd have to go back and listen to the
first hour. I don't want to relitigate the whole thing,
but I first and foremost priorities justice for the victims
whose lives were destroyed, one of which killed themselves. And

(08:05):
I'm not willing to trade that or our legal system
for cultural curiosity or political weaponry. And then there's people
that will say, well, if there's no list, she shouldn't
be in jail. No, she's in jail for arranging sex
with underage children and even participating in it. That's her case,

(08:29):
her names, and she's been convicted. The names that came
out in the deposition that are sealed remain sealed unless
a new case arises with a plaintiff who's not dead yet.
James is in Ohio to answer both your questions. We

(08:50):
should not be giving anything back to the American people.

Speaker 2 (08:53):
We need to pay down the debt as quickly as
possible because the interest alone is killing us.

Speaker 4 (08:58):
As far as Maxwell, twenty years was enough, she should
have gotten life because she's ruined so many young lives.
End of story. James great minds obviously think alike Chuck
is I believe in Yukon, Oklahoma?

Speaker 2 (09:12):
Hey, Michael, she will lie through her teeth. Hell no, oh, that's.

Speaker 4 (09:17):
Shortened to the point. Um, well, she would certainly know
the most. Now, whether she'd be a credible, truthful, honest,
forthright witness, you would never know. And the other thing is,
don't forget the I mean, you can't blame her for
asking right. She sees everybody thirsty, but she sees the

(09:40):
Democrats using this as a political weapon, like Donald Trump
is all in it. Alan Dershowitz is the key. He's
the attorney that's said in all those depositions for a
case that never happened. He knows the names, he knows
everything you're curious about knowing everything. The Democrats are threatening,
and he's saying there's nobody in office but did anything

(10:03):
wrong or was accused of doing anything wrong. Donald Trump
is in office. He's telling you Donald Trump didn't do anything.
Your common sense will tell you Donald Trump's not a
great hasn't lived a great perfect life. He's had three marriages,
but he's not into kids. I don't think Bill comes
out that cleon Clinton. But Dershowitz is telling you there's

(10:26):
nobody in office. Some dead, but nobody in office that
is on this list, and you're going to trade justice
for these victims for those names.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
Doesn't seem like a fair trade to me. Tom is in.

Speaker 4 (10:46):
I can't read my own writing, North Canton, Ohio.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Tommy, I believe both could be true, sir, That you
could give a rebate to.

Speaker 6 (10:57):
The American citizens as well US paid down a debt
with future tax receipts with our booming economy, as well
as the tariffs that will remain in place, and also
bring in hundreds of millions of dollars.

Speaker 2 (11:12):
So I believe both can be true, sir.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
Well, they could be true. I don't know how you
could make them true right now. We just don't know.
Why are you spending money before you've made it. Now
we have seen a surge to twenty six billion dollars
in revenue in June, and June is before some of
these deals.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
Really virtually all of these deals.

Speaker 4 (11:33):
Have kicked in, but we don't know if they'll hold
or for how long they'll hold. And if you're going
by just what you've collected now early, well you're giving
back way more than you're collecting. Why when you wait
a year and see what the amount really is, I

(11:55):
don't know. I can tell you every every big mistake
ever made is spending money before it's made.

Speaker 2 (12:01):
What my father used to say.

Speaker 7 (12:02):
Don't count your chickens before they hatch.

Speaker 2 (12:05):
Let's give Julia and tennessee the final.

Speaker 5 (12:07):
Say good morning, Michael. And as much as I could
appreciate an extra six hundred dollars, it's unexpected in my
bank account, I also know that my long term financial
stability is much more tied to the stability of this nation,
and I think every bit of that money needs to

(12:27):
be going towards paying down our national debt.

Speaker 4 (12:31):
Well, listen, the thing that scares me the most, Julie
is it says up to six six hundred dollars and
there's no explanation for what the up to means. That
tells me there's some means testing involved, and a bunch
of politicians we're all headed for a midterm election, are

(12:53):
more than anxious to take this early victory that isn't
even in the bank yet and take it back to
it's district and pander and play winners and losers for
their own power. I mean, at some point, these are
the same people that created the debt now using this
new revenue too early to buy votes. It shows me
that fundamentally they're not very serious about debt. But my

(13:17):
opinion's worth no more than yours. This is your Morning
Show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 8 (13:24):
Michael, I hate to tell you this, but beef Tello
is not a magic potion. It's really really great for
your skin, and I actually just made a video on
the best way to use it, so I'll email that
to you so that you have the most effectiveness you
can out of your new purchase.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
But I hope you didn't pay too much for it.

Speaker 8 (13:46):
Next magical AI results, so good luck.

Speaker 2 (13:52):
She's laughing at me. Let me tell you something, Rachel,
I've already applied it. Guys. Look at the difference already.

Speaker 4 (14:00):
That is I look thirty five years old. Right. The
selfie light you have on right now, well, I wanted
to do the lighting right so that you guys could
see Look at how young I look.

Speaker 2 (14:13):
Who knew?

Speaker 4 (14:13):
I just needed to stick my face right into some cowfat.

Speaker 2 (14:19):
President Trump.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
Says his administration is going to be even more involved
in seeing and getting involved in the Gaza after seeing
imagery of starving children. This seems to have moved the
President and he's ready to take action.

Speaker 9 (14:35):
According to a senior White House official, the President was
disturbed and troubled by the images, most of which he
saw in news clips.

Speaker 6 (14:42):
There's nothing you can say other than it's served.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
But when you see the kids and those that kids,
you know.

Speaker 6 (14:47):
Whether they talk starvation or not, those are kids that
are starving.

Speaker 9 (14:52):
Trump has said publicly he does not agree with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin at Yonghu's assessment that no one is
starving in Gaza, and plans to work with international partners
to fund and set up food delivery centers. Trump previously
approved sixty million dollars for aid to Gaza and pointed
out the ongoing need for assistance.

Speaker 2 (15:08):
I'm mark Neefield.

Speaker 4 (15:09):
I'm sorry, I'm so distracted by this youthful image on
my computer. You're way early. What are you doing. There's
something wrong with you today. You know what you need?
Beef tallow, that is what you need. I need something godly.
I apologize my food. President Trump is seeking legal action
against former Vice President Kamala Harris and celebrities who endorsed

(15:30):
her for a legal use of campaign funding. The Senate
is confirming President Trump's pick to head the CDC. Well,
that's got Corey Booker philipbustering. He's angry. He's taking out
all the Democrats who are just laying down for this
tyrant Trump.

Speaker 2 (15:45):
You'll hear that coming up in our Sounds of the day.

Speaker 4 (15:48):
And a magnitude eight point eight earthquake off the coast
of Russia had many concern and tsunami.

Speaker 2 (15:53):
Don't you hate the thought of a tsunami? Scary?

Speaker 4 (15:56):
But we had tsunami warnings for Hawaii, Alaska, and north
in California. Tsunami's past. Hawaii wasn't as bad as we thought.
It's got hopes a lot higher for Alaska in northern California,
and yes, I had to eat crow happy Gilmore two
is setting records on Netflix. A movie created for Netflix
that I thought was it was okay. It was no
funny Girl, the Barbous streisand but it was okay, and

(16:18):
I lost my man card.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
This is Shan Paul from Oviita, Florida, and my morning
show is your Moring Show with Nostros del Jorno.

Speaker 5 (16:35):
Hi.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
It's Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:36):
Your morning show can be heard live on great radio
stations across the country like WYLM and w DOV and
Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM seven twenty the
Voice in Middle Georgia.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
We're gonna eat some blankets.

Speaker 1 (16:49):
News Radio six fifty k e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Can you believe tomorrow is the last day of July?

Speaker 4 (16:59):
And then it's Auga and then I'm sixty one, and
before you know it will all be dead, and then
everybody we knew will be dead and it'll be as
if we never existed.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
Well, there's a bright ray of sunshine this morning. Good morning.

Speaker 4 (17:12):
The most of this day, Red just criticized me because
when I was bringing up Laurence Fishburne's birthday. I brought
up Contagions, one of my all time favorite movies. How
manytime you can watch Gwyneth Paltrow graphically die a painful
death that's classic for me. But he's great in that movie.
And he goes and you don't bring up the matrix.
All you do is talk about them.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
No.

Speaker 4 (17:32):
I like Contagion because just as what you've everything, you've
happened at nine to eleven. Nine eleven was the movie
executive decision with Kurt Russell before it happened. Not to
mention the greatest actor of all time, Steven Seagal. Dave
is what you just live with? The fake presidency in
Joe Biden and Contagion. Go back and watch it. It

(17:55):
came out before COVID, before COVID. You'll watch it differently
having lived COVID. All right, Big companies like Procter and
Gamble and others, they're always doing market research on American habits. Well,
the latest study is out with some surprising results. Our
national correspondent Rory O'Neil is here with the latest.

Speaker 10 (18:13):
Good morning Rory, Hey, good morning Michael, and completely unrelated
the New York Post.

Speaker 2 (18:18):
I'm just going through.

Speaker 10 (18:19):
They have a speech pathologist interviewed who says, the worst
name you can give your child is Rory.

Speaker 4 (18:24):
Really, I like Rory. It's very irish. Rory. I think
of you and Rory McElroy.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
Hello.

Speaker 10 (18:30):
End a story on Rory's as long as it's me first.
But yeah, Rory means red or redhead and irish. If
you didn't know that by here is oh graying. So
the red wasn't it when you were young?

Speaker 2 (18:44):
No, it was sort of blondish, brownish, muddy depending on.

Speaker 4 (18:48):
That's not very good. All right, Back to Proctery game. Sure,
so a study from them.

Speaker 10 (18:54):
They just had their earnings called yesterday, and what they're
noticing is consumers are stressed that more shoppers are actually
raiding the pantry. We are going bare bones in the
cupboards before we go to the supermarket because we're trying
to squeeze every drop, Squeeze the Sharman I guess from
a broad during gamble, squeeze all those staples at home

(19:15):
before we go to the store, because the prices of
those goods are awfully expensive. And when we get to
the store, we tend to buy other stuff that's not
on the list. So Americans are changing their shopping habits
and really raising the cupboard before they go to the market.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
Not me. I'm ordering Forge beef tallow lotion.

Speaker 6 (19:34):
No.

Speaker 2 (19:35):
You know a lot of people would say, oh, this sounds.

Speaker 4 (19:37):
Like more narrative, all right, you know, And I got
Sounds of the Day, a clip that kind of does that.
A democrat anecdotally talking about what she saw at the
grocery store. I mean, we know that things are getting better,
but they're not better yet. In our family, I don't
think we're rice and beaning it like Dave Ramsey. But

(19:58):
you know what, I'm a little chill. I'm going to restaurants.
I'm a little sick of average meat. I mean, me
and my son will be out making nursing home runs
and we'll just stop and just get something.

Speaker 2 (20:08):
I forgot where we were the other day.

Speaker 4 (20:09):
It was twenty eight dollars and it was like fast food.

Speaker 2 (20:14):
Right.

Speaker 4 (20:14):
So I'm a little chill on restaurants, and I'm more
inclined to eat at home than i am restaurants. I
haven't gotten to where I'm cleaning out the cat the
pantry yet, but I think all of us are making
some adjustments.

Speaker 10 (20:26):
Well, it's an overall message I think from the CFO
at P and G is that more and more consumers
are looking for value at every range of the spectrum,
for whether or not you're a low income high income earner.
They're changing their habits to try to squeeze out value
where they can.

Speaker 4 (20:44):
Well, I can tell you this that the when it
comes to Forge beef tallow balm, which I think you
know living in Florida, your skin must be must be
dry ravaged.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
I got nothing, but it's true.

Speaker 4 (21:00):
By the way, I noticed that when I moved to
No Leans, like you know in Chicago. I show pictures
of people I went to elementary school to my kids
and they think they're seventy year old men. I mean,
they don't age wall in Chicago. But New Orleans the
humidity does help. I mean, I'm never going to miss
Claire live next door. She was sixty eight years old
and didn't have a wrinkle. But anyway, with Forge, the

(21:22):
value is if you think it works, you can buy
a six month supply and then it gets cheaper and
cheaper the more bottle cheap on it. But I just
bought one to try. But everybody's a little cautious.

Speaker 2 (21:32):
I think.

Speaker 4 (21:33):
I think that's true, but the numbers show the economy
is definitely heading in the right direction. The question of
the day is how many of Americans are feeling it?

Speaker 2 (21:42):
Yeah, and should know.

Speaker 8 (21:44):
P and G.

Speaker 10 (21:44):
Also, it was their earnings call when they were talking
about consumer stress and they beat estimates yesterday. We should
also point out there, but said they're also expecting things
to be a little bit softer as they go into
the fall.

Speaker 4 (21:55):
Softer like my skin thanks to my body. Just kidding,
have a great day, Rory will talk continue.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
I don't recognize myself.

Speaker 11 (22:04):
People who majored in online activision with a minor and
puberty bark.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
They're gonna a little bit.

Speaker 8 (22:10):
Beat Any of you in the media clearly missed the
art of the deal.

Speaker 4 (22:14):
It's gonna work out, always revealing, often entertaining time for
your sounds today.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
By the way, I am noticing a difference, aren't you.
I don't know. Big John's on the phone. Do you
want to hear him or not? He's just gonna be critical.

Speaker 4 (22:25):
No, he's not so all the high end Berger joins
a deep frying their French fries and deep tallow.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
I don't think that's something you should be putting on
your face.

Speaker 4 (22:35):
Hey, when's the last time you saw a wrinkled French fry?
I arrest my case, all right, you never know what's happening.
That's gonna, you know, get Corey Booker off. He went
on a meltdown rage in the Senate Chamber, quite unhinged,
and his target in this meltdown fellow Democrats, listen.

Speaker 7 (22:58):
The Democratic Party needs a w bacop call. I see
law firms bending a knee to this president, not caring
about the larger principles that those free speech rights that
you could take on any client.

Speaker 2 (23:11):
Why are you bending the knee?

Speaker 4 (23:13):
Do you remember when they were going to sell us
Corey Bookers the next Barack Obama just didn't happen. I
remember when people used to say, why aren't you more
for Ted? Because when early on I was a Marc
Rubio guy and not a Ted Cruz guy in a
state where everybody was kind of a Ted Cruz guy.

Speaker 2 (23:29):
And I remember I turned to one person, I said,
you know what.

Speaker 4 (23:32):
The thought of Ted Cruz is much better than the
real Ted CERTs, The casting of Corey Booker much better
than the performance of Corey Biamy. He's no Barack Obama.
What he's just gonna He's gonna play the outrage card.
Now he looks like some kind of bad emoji doing it.

Speaker 7 (23:48):
But listen, I see universities, there should be bastions of
free speech bending at the knee to this president.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
I stood up bending at the knee.

Speaker 4 (23:58):
They got all caught being pro Islamist and anti Semitic.
This is how on the wrong side of history you are.
But what's dangerous is the way you're bending the truth
and in the matrix that we live. Great performance by
Laurence Fishburn, but not the performance of contagion. This is

(24:19):
the kind of stuff that's inciting people and it's not
grounded in truth.

Speaker 7 (24:23):
See businesses taking late night talk show hosts off the
air because they dare to insult a president.

Speaker 4 (24:31):
I see Stephen Colbert didn't get taken off the air
by Donald Trump. He got taken off the air by CBS.
Because all of these late night talk show hosts took
it upon themselves to alienate half their audience and become
an arm of the Democrat Party. They jumped on the
bandwagon of the death of journalism and became the death
of late night television, attacking half the viewers because they

(24:53):
don't just take Donald Trump, they hate anybody that voted
for him, all in the name of saving demanocracy. Oh
and they were losing forty million dollars. Do you really
think CBS canceled Stephen Colbert because he dared to speak
ill of the president? You do know he sued ABC

(25:21):
in one. You do know he sued CBS and one.
You do know he's suing Rupert Murdoch, owner of Fox
and Wall Street Journal, and is probably gonna win. Not
because they're bowing, but because they're getting caught.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
You mean, there's two more minutes of this goofball.

Speaker 7 (25:41):
People who want mergers suddenly think that they have to
pay tribute to this president, and one of the very
people here elected to defend the constitution of the United
States saying, oh, well, today, let's look the other way
and pass some resources that won't go to Connecticut, that
won't go to Ille, that won't go to New York,

(26:01):
They will go to the states.

Speaker 2 (26:03):
He likes. That is complicity.

Speaker 7 (26:08):
Where an authoritarian leader who is trashing our constitution. It's
time for Democrats have a backbone. It's time for us
to fight. It's time for us to draw lines and
when it comes to the safety of my state being
denied these grants, That's why I'm standing here. Don't question
my integrity, don't question my motives. I'm standing for Jersey.
I am standing for my police officers. I'm standing for

(26:31):
the Constitution, and I'm.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
Standing for what's right.

Speaker 7 (26:34):
And Dear God, if you want to come up me
that way, you're gonna have to take it up with me,
because there's too much.

Speaker 2 (26:39):
On the line right now in America.

Speaker 7 (26:43):
As people's due process rights and freedom of the speech rights,
and secret police are running around this country picking people
up off the streets who have a legal right to
be here.

Speaker 2 (26:52):
There's too much gold. Let me tell you something.

Speaker 4 (26:57):
If you're in this country legally and you're not human trafficking,
you're not drug trafficking, you're not raping, murdering, carjacking, robbing,
no secret police is going to round you up today.
I mean, if all these lies that they sell as
narratives were.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
True, I'd be outraged too.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
I'm going to cut to one other real quick, because
this is the kind of outrage.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
It's kind You're the most irrelevant man in Washington, Chucky Schumer.

Speaker 10 (27:34):
Listen because These guys are undoing everything in every way
they can.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
They don't want poor people to vote, they don't want
people of.

Speaker 4 (27:40):
Color to vote, they don't want Democrats to vote.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
They don't believe in democracy. We do.

Speaker 4 (27:48):
Now, do you know what he's talking ago? This is
Chucky Schumer talking about voter ID. Now I would reverse
the question and say, Okay, if you believe in a
democratic vote in a constitutional republic, and we have a
lot of voter fraud, what is your solution? Because I
don't think fraud is good for democracy either is it?

(28:12):
And I don't think requiring an ID like we would
if you wrote a check or tried to buy tobacco
or whatever else that were daily required to show our
ID for because people show it and buy their drink,
They show it and write their check. But being for

(28:34):
a fair and accurate election is not anti democratic and
it's not calling people to not vote for Democrats or
allow Democrat votes.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
And this is just where they lose their relevancy.

Speaker 4 (28:48):
You know, one of the guys that's really on a
surge is Scott Jennings, and I don't know that he's
on a surge towards office, though that would be interesting
I think he's on a surge for a higher profile
place in media. Yeah, and in this day and age,
you don't need a national television show a radio show
to have a high profile. That's why podcasting is so powerful.

(29:08):
And now he's got one, and he's doing well at CNN.
And I think the secret sauce to his success is
he says all the things we talk about every morning.
There's just something about the way he says it.

Speaker 11 (29:20):
Listen, Democrats, because of the Biden presidency, because they lied
about Joe Biden's condition, because they lied to the country
about the inflationary impacts of his policies, have dug themselves
the deepest hole they've ever been in in the history
of their party.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
That's number one.

Speaker 11 (29:36):
Number two cultural radicalism. I mean, when the hills you're
willing to die on are boys and girls sports paying
for transgender surgeries of inmates, which Kamala Harris had in
the last election. When you're willing to die on these hills,
when you're willing to go and say Maryland man unfairly

(29:57):
deported back to his home country, I mean, when you're
willing to die on all these eighty twenty hills, eventually
your approval rating will wind up. I'm no mathematician, but
around twenty they're getting there. And so this hole they've
dug themselves in, Like, if I can't trust you not
to put a boy in my daughter's locker room, why
would I talk to you about taxation policy or inflation
or tariffs.

Speaker 2 (30:17):
Or anything else. You're trying to put a boy at
my girl's locker room, right, why you know?

Speaker 4 (30:24):
And then you got Corey Booker says, we're not even fighting,
willing to die in the hill. They're still charging the hill.
And this as the far left, the socialist I mean,
their approval ratings are down thirty percent, under water, as

(30:44):
the other socialist side is just about taking over the party,
as there's a new rise of an Islamist party within
the Democrat Party. And I don't know what the role
is going to be, but the latest research, and I'll
try to I don't think we're gonna I could skip
top stories and do it, but there's three other stories

(31:07):
I really wanted to get in today, and not the
least of which is the polling information out of New
York City. If the polls are accurate, Mondani has more
support than all five other competitors combined, and there's not
much less than five percent undecided. It looks like he's
going to run away with this election. And I think
he is the seed to a new Islamist party that

(31:29):
the Socialists have made a strange bedfellow of. But that's
how irrelevant the Democrat Party is. There's those inside the
Democrat Party trying to find some new sect to cling
to because the current players on the stage, the Scott

(31:51):
Jennings point, are untrusted, not taken serious and not done
being nuts.

Speaker 9 (31:57):
All right, everybody look aloud, you gotta try harder, not
the show.

Speaker 2 (32:02):
So I'm going after the opportunity for a brief pacifics lesson.

Speaker 4 (32:04):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with a deteriorating
mental conditions.

Speaker 2 (32:11):
I don't know. And that's your Sounds of the Day.

Speaker 1 (32:15):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
Now I'm getting attacked by email, are you?

Speaker 4 (32:23):
Catherine Wright's I went on the Forged website and these
are the prices I see. One month forty nine dollars,
three months one hundred and forty nine dollars. Well, the
price goes down per bottle, end up depending on how
many bottles, you get.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
So, but she did the math on it.

Speaker 4 (32:43):
Jesus, the one that she's seeing it actually goes up
a penny per bottle.

Speaker 2 (32:46):
But I'll have to go back and look at it.
Who knows if it's this?

Speaker 4 (32:49):
You know what, I'm fascinated with all the wonderful things
that we've talked about.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
You're focused on my beef tale balm? And what was
the other thing? Oh, the movies? Is Arnold Schwartzen Nigger?
Was it? Absolutely? Listen all day.

Speaker 4 (33:00):
You're gonna hear the top five stories of the day,
the tsunami that isn't going to be as dangerous as
we thought. You're going to hear a lot about the
Fed not lowering rates and the President going nuts over that.
The ones I want to keep your eye on. Make
sure you didn't miss, And that's why we have the podcast.
You can go back and catch up everything we covered,
especially an hour one, an hour and two. Pete hegg
Sath the rumor is he's coming back. He lives in

(33:21):
Middle Tennessee, just outside Nashville and Brentwood, that he's going
to come back to Tennessee and run for governor. This
guy looks presidential. I think he's going to be presidential.
He's young enough and smart enough to know that trump
Ism is going to get handed off either to Marc
or Rubio JD. Bans or both as the ticket, and
he's going to position himself for eight years later and

(33:43):
come back to Tennessee. Keep an eye on that story.
I mentioned the man Donnie polling numbers reds clinging to
the sliver of hope that maybe the polls are trying
to draw people out, but it would suggest that with
the undecided down to less than five percent, he's got
more votes in polling that all five competitors combined, and
leads fifty to the next twenty two percent Cuomo and

(34:08):
Sliwa down to thirteen percent, and if somebody leaves the race,
his lead just increases. Here comes the seed for an
Islamis party. Here comes a lot of danger to New
York City. If this is true, he's going to be
a big victory. And then we got to keep her
eye on the glean Maxwell. She's asking for clemency and immunity,
and then what to do with money that we haven't
even collected yet, and will it be means tested and

(34:31):
given to the American people.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
I hope we made a difference today.

Speaker 4 (34:34):
Remember one chance, you will never get to live Wednesday,
July thirtieth, twenty twenty five again, and it'll go by fast.
Go make a difference in some way in someone's life.
Make sure you cherish your own, and we'll see it
right back here tomorrow morning for the next your morning Show.

Speaker 2 (34:48):
We're all in this together.

Speaker 11 (34:50):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael nhild Joo

Speaker 9 (35:00):
H
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