Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. We'd love to have you listen every
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Speaker 2 (00:21):
Now.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Enjoy the podcast two three starting your morning golf right,
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
This is your Morning Show with Michael gill Trump. National
Guard troops in Washington, DC are now authorized to carry firearms.
The Powerball jackpot tenth largest of all time grand prize
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(00:54):
nothing yesterday. Good morning, and welcome to the final week
of August. Boy that flew by fast right, and you
know how this month ends? Me turning sixty one to
add to the depression eight minutes, what's that you should
be celebrated.
Speaker 4 (01:09):
We're so glad you were born, and thanks for hosting
your morning show.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
Bill n.
Speaker 1 (01:15):
Well, I'll be celebrating in my own unique special way,
taking the week off eight minutes after the hour. Good morning,
Welcome to Monday, August, the twenty fifth year of our Lord,
twenty twenty five. As we welcome. As they say on
the billboard, the mountains were calling and we answered. So
Talk one oh six point three, the Talk of the
Smokies in Pigeon Forge joins the Your Morning Show kitchen table.
(01:36):
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I promise we won't let you down. So welcome Pigeon Forge.
Also News Radio six ninety KTSM in El Paso, Texas
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and three affiliates. But you know how we play one
(01:57):
by one, one on one, Here we go. All right,
The federal government is buying a steak and struggling chip
maker Intel bold move, but is it brilliant or a
billion dollar blunder. National correspondent Roy O'Neil is here to
break down what Washington is really betting on and what
could go wrong? Good morning Rory, Hey, good morning Michaels.
Speaker 5 (02:18):
Essentially, this is money that was authorized under the Chips
Act to give to Intel so that they would bring
back manufacturing of their highest of high tech chips with
this big complex in Ohio, which has been delayed quite
a few years now. But instead of just writing them
a check, instead the US will be investing in Intel
(02:38):
and taking a ten percent steak in the company.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
Ah, now you're in Clendra territory, right, go ahead.
Speaker 5 (02:45):
Well, well right, We've seen this in a series of
transactions that goes back to Cilindra, goes back to Chrysler
and Jimmy Carter to bailing out the union the car
unions in the Great Recession. So this does happen, has
happened in the past, but typically it's something we like
to keep temporary, and that's not what we're seeing here.
We don't think anyway. And it does just raise some
questions about is this happening again, is this a creep
(03:09):
towards socialism, or as you said suggested, is this a
smart money move.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
So for our new listeners in both Pigeon Forge and
I'll pass so Rory isn't know it all. I know
that's usually a negative connotation, but Rory really does, so
he buried. My biggest question is this something in addition
to or is this just more of a specific earlier allocation,
because this all goes back to the Biden May of
twenty twenty four Chip Incentive Funding Priority Act, which was
(03:40):
I think seven point eighty six billion dollars. So this
is this a portion of that? Is this how that
some of that money that has been allocated as being
spent or is this even a bigger step in there
in a frighteningly wrong use of the government direction?
Speaker 5 (03:58):
Right, So it is part of the Chips Act that
was approved by Congress. I think it was a fit.
I think the Ship Chips Act was more than fifty
billion dollars at all. But Intel will be getting about
a nine billion cut here. There's another three billion that's
from a different transaction. But all told, you're going to
have the US taxpayer now get a ten percent ownership
(04:19):
stake in Intel. And again that just raised some questions
about government owning methods of production. And yes, we want
to incentivize it where we can bring back domestic production,
which we saw during the pandemic when we had no
chips and all the cars sat there without chips. We
want to bring back that production for our own national
security purposes.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
But do we really want.
Speaker 2 (04:41):
To be investing in companies that.
Speaker 5 (04:43):
Then may be more motivated about political decisions rather than
business decisions.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
And things can get pretty murky pretty fast. Maybe the
President's busy looking in other directions and miss this one
slipped in. But because this is, like you mentioned, the
really defining difference is this is actual ownership m which
by definition is communistic. But this is more like a
cylinder getting ready to happen than it is a bailout
(05:09):
of such of an industry.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
And look, two weeks ago the President Trump said that
the CEO of Intel should be fired for mismanagement.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
And now we just bought ten billion dollars worth dollars
worth of failed company.
Speaker 2 (05:21):
Go figure.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
All right, the FBI says a new billion dollar scam
is targeting retirement accounts, and your savings could be next.
Rory's going to be back in the third hour to
reveal how it works and what you need to do
to stay safe. Rory, in the third hour, we'll be
back with that, all right, This one falls under, well,
I got some bad news, I got some bad news.
(05:42):
Maybe a little bit of good news headline Pew Research.
Majority of Americans continue to back expanded early voting and
voting by mail and voter id. President Trump's recent pledge
to lead a movement to end mail in voting comes
as a fifty eight percent of majority Americans favor allowing
(06:04):
any voter to cast their ballot by mail if they
want to. If your question immediately is well, maybe this
piece of research needed it to define more specifically what
you mean by those who qualify to mail in vote.
Is that the military serving abroad people that absolutely can't
(06:25):
be they'll be out of the country or what have you. No,
this is to cast their ballot by mail if they
want to. I would presume that means just out of preference.
But Democrats and Republicans continue to hold starkly different views.
Of course. The matrix eighty three percent of Democrats and
(06:46):
Democrat leaning independents support no excuse voting by mail, while
sixty eight percent of Republicans and Republican leaners oppose it.
A matrix. Among the most supportive proposals were acquiring electronic
voting machines to print a paperback backup of a voter's
ballot eighty four percent. Of course, you could just vote
(07:09):
on paper to begin with. Right, requiring all voters to
show government issued photo identification eighty three percent. Now, think
about how often you hear democrats. Remember we did earlier,
and go back and listen to the podcast if you
missed it in the first hour. Words and how they matter,
and the words Democrats should stop using because it proves
they're woke, elite, and out of touch with everyday Americans.
(07:35):
They'll often talk about, oh, VHOTO ID, having to show
your photo, redistricting, Jerry mannering. All these things are racist.
They seek to silence groups. Eighty three percent of Americans
don't think it's too much to show your ID and
prove you are who you are. Making early in person
voting available for at least two weeks prior to the election.
(07:58):
By the way, if you have early voting, how likely
is it, other than military or the very few that
are out of the country for an extended period of time,
would you need to mail in vote? Make an election
a federal holiday. We've talked about that. That gets seventy
four percent of support. I mean, there's a lot of
(08:19):
things here that make great sense. Show your ID eighty
three percent. We got all these federal holidays, make one
of an election day, so everybody can get there slight
expansion to early voting. The part I can't agree with,
and I'm shocked, is the amount that want mail in
for any reason. Fifty six percent oppose removing people from
(08:43):
registrations lists if they haven't voted recently or responded to
efforts to confirm their registration or address. That's a bit troubling.
I wouldn't take them off for missing two elections. But
let's just say this a long time ago, on to land,
far far way, roughly twenty three years ago, I broadcast
(09:03):
live from an empty lot that had voted faithfully in
the previous six municipal elections in Tulsa, Oklahoma. In addition
to making in person early voting available for two weeks
and mail in voting available to any registered voter who
wants about six and ten, nearly sixty percent favor automatic
(09:26):
voter registration for eligible citizens and same day voter registration
by fifty eight percent. Now, the most troubling thing about
this research is not the response to each and every
one of these things. It's the partisan difference, and it's
(09:50):
due to a variety of factors, ideology, values, rules for
those values, beliefs, priorities is a big part of it,
or in which you prioritize. For me, when I look
at this issue, my number one priority is fair and accurate.
So the number one thing I'm looking to stop is
(10:12):
fraud and political weaponization. You see, I don't mind if
that poll's accurate, if the majority of Americans and in
my opinion, are playing a dangerous game with mail in voting.
But if that's what they want, that's one thing. If
it's accurate, I think they're wrong, But at least they're
(10:36):
asking for it and getting what they deserve. What I
don't like is thinking you have a fair and accurate
election when you don't. And just like the Democrats have
been playing the game recently that only Republicans only Trump invented,
they act like Trump invented Jerry Mandarin when it's been
around since eighteen twelve from a Massachusetts governor with Jerry
(10:59):
in his name. Individuals align with the particular political party.
Could be because of their personal experience, could be because
of their upbringing, could be because of social influences, could be,
as we know, a single issue, but media political leaders
(11:24):
often play a role in shaping and reinforcing partisan divisions,
and they promote these narratives. So when you get these polls,
what you're really seeing is the matrix and how the
matrix is fed inside its bubble, and all it's really
showing you is Democrats have done a good job of
(11:48):
selling mail in voting, the convenience, the accessibility. They haven't
done a very good job on voter ID. Now for Republicans,
you know, the early voting issue has always been something
Republicans like to vote on election day. The problem with
(12:11):
that is, as Democrats, this is where you beat them
far and square, or cheat him far and square. They
would always play for the early voting and so Republicans
would start on election date already down with the ground
to make up. This was famous in twenty twenty when
all Donald Trump did was gripe. Didn't do a very
(12:32):
effective job of explaining it. I was in real time
in terms of saying, wait a minute, they're changing election
laws based on COVID, and they're not going to each
individual state's legislature to change these election laws, this is unconstitutional.
Then you started getting the anecdotal evidence that they were
harvesting ballots, registering people, filling them out, and taking them
(12:53):
in bulk. So Americans can choose this system. Now, how
others are going to weaponize it or abuse it will
That becomes something after the fact, when it's too late.
But the problem for Trump was all he did was
speak against early voting. All he did was speak against
mail in voting. He didn't engage in the strategy of
(13:16):
winning it, and so in twenty twenty he started a
way behind, got a record amount of votes, but suddenly,
out of nowhere and never seen before or since, was
the even more record amount of votes that Joe Biden got.
Do with that what you wish. But I think the
key to this whole conversation is the matrix and how
the left only hears they don't really critically think was
(13:41):
conversate one of those words we're not allowed to say,
but really discuss and debate and understand versus They're just
getting narratives and repeating him. And the left has done
a better job with their narratives, especially concerning early voting.
But a very interesting poll. But what I met was
wanted to really drive home. Was it all depends on
(14:06):
how you prioritize. If you prioritize fair and accurate elections,
you're certainly going to look at this differently than just
blindly wanting everyone to make it easy and have access.
And that's a part of what's dividing us.
Speaker 4 (14:25):
To But Michael, you would say that Trump did a
much better job in twenty twenty four. Was the early vote, Oh.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
That was the well, I mean there were so many Yeah,
it was a it was a landslide of things done smarter,
and then a level of dumb from the left hanging
on to Biden too long, faking a presidency, the bait
and switch on its primary voters and giving it to
Kamala and the word salads. I mean, they they did
(14:54):
so many things wrong. But had they not, that's what
we would talk about Donald Trump wanted twenty twenty four,
or because you stopped griping about early voting and mail
in voting and engaged in competing in it all Right,
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(16:47):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono. The
Kremlin dashing any hopes that the war in Ukraine will
end anytime soon. President Trump hosting the South Korean President today.
The National Guard troops in Washington, DC are authorized to
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Speaker 6 (17:19):
This is Shan Paul from Alita, Florida, and my morning
show is your morning show with Nostros deil jorno.
Speaker 1 (17:32):
Hi, It's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
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Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (17:51):
Hey, this is Joe from Michsville, Pennsylvania.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
I can't think of a tough way to spend my
morning to other than listening to your.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Morning show with Michael Bell. Jo. I just wanted to
wish you a happy early birthday.
Speaker 7 (18:03):
Minds today, Lord blessed me with fifty nine years on
this planet today, and I hope.
Speaker 2 (18:08):
He blesses you as well as he's blessed me. Have
a great day, guys.
Speaker 1 (18:12):
Oh, I love that. Joe and Pa. Happy fifty nine.
So glad you were born. Thanks for waking up with us. Yeah,
I'll be I'll be blessed even more by sixty one.
I exactly. I feel people majors.
Speaker 8 (18:28):
An online activism with a minor and puberty.
Speaker 2 (18:31):
Bok, they're going a little bit.
Speaker 9 (18:32):
You beat any of you.
Speaker 1 (18:33):
The media clearly missed the art.
Speaker 10 (18:36):
Of the deal.
Speaker 2 (18:36):
Just be cool.
Speaker 7 (18:37):
It's going to work out.
Speaker 1 (18:38):
Speaking of workout, last week, I got to tell you something,
you know, I used to dread. I didn't mind pe
when it was basketball or kickball or you know all
that stuff. Climbing rope, I don't know how people did it,
you know. And then you would be climbing a rope
(18:59):
to what four hundred foot ceiling of a gym. I
mean it's crazy. And there were guys, man, they would
just go up like ants, you know. And I just
couldn't add pull ups and climbing rope. Because I spent
my life in sports, and because I had older brothers weightlifting.
I don't remember not weightlifting. I mean that was just
(19:22):
in my brother's room. That was just in the garage,
the bench press and the weights. But you know, last week,
I got to tell you I thought our FK Junior
and Pete Hegseth were freaks of nature. They're going at it,
and let me tell you, the freak of freaks is
our FK Junior. I don't what kind of shape he's in.
I don't know what's the yoga, uh, what's the blue
(19:46):
drops he puts in his water, how much he runs,
what he does, and he works out in jeans. I
mean he was an anamal so I guess for those
that have been watching that you'll have a a whole
other take on this. But this is Zoran Mandani showing
(20:09):
off his muscles at Men's Day in Brooklyn. He's thirty
three years old. They're all chanting, you know, and the
guy spotting is really doing lifting. I mean, he can't
even get to one hundred and thirty five pounds. He
can't do two reps on the bench press. Here's how
(20:30):
it sounds.
Speaker 11 (20:30):
Ok, Let go, let go, let's go.
Speaker 12 (20:34):
Let go, Yeah, let me go one more, let me go,
let me get do, let me get do get.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
You ain't getting there. You ain't get there, You're only getting.
Speaker 8 (20:45):
Two booky boogey.
Speaker 2 (20:48):
Look look at that.
Speaker 1 (20:51):
You know, earlier in the five o'clock hour, we did
the the forty eight words. Democrats should stop saying it
proves they're elitist, to proves are out of touch with
the everyday America people. Can I add one those kinds
of stunts, stop doing those.
Speaker 4 (21:05):
I love where the guys said, this is where the
poll's numbers go up.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
This is where the poll doverers go up.
Speaker 2 (21:11):
Yeah, I knowe, this is where they go down.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
I'm I'm trying to think, who couldn't do Maybe that's
what we should do bench presses to see who becomes mayor.
All Right, ABC's John Carl hosting Donna Brazil was the first,
and then we have Rinse Previous, so you get the
Obama Democrat machine commenting on the loss of registered voters
(21:37):
for the Democrats, and then Rince Previous giving you the
establishment Republican view of how Republicans are doing though that's
really a Trump phenomenon, and when we don't know that
exists after Trump leaves, let's start with Donna Brazil.
Speaker 11 (21:51):
Absolutely, and look, Independence have also grown and they're popularity.
Democratic Party has also so many of his functions to
third party organizations that did not produce the kind of
registration number. This is a wake up call clearly as
Democrats gather starting tomorrow in Minnesota, where we're going to
have to figure out what is the road forward. We
(22:13):
have to do the basic things, but we also have
to be prepared to do with Gavin Newsom is now
urging Democrats all different persuasions fight that punch hortap because
if we're going to regain the Congress and get ready
for the White House, Democrats are going to have to
come up with a different playbook.
Speaker 1 (22:30):
Yeah, So that means they somehow think see how they're
lost in They're parties that were with itself and the
far left socialist and now Birthing is longest portion of
their party is just ripping it apart. And they still
(22:56):
think the answer is go further left because they don't
see how all those further left views in the mainstream
has cost them. They think the podcast was the mistake,
and now the fighting and using AI to be like
Trump on social media is the solution, or Mom Donnie
(23:18):
is the solution? AOC is the solution. Again, they don't
realize it's their worldview that's feeding their policy view, which
is feeding their verbiage. What does fight?
Speaker 2 (23:33):
Fight?
Speaker 1 (23:34):
Fight more criminals on the streets, open borders, don't stop wars,
keep fighting. They don't get they're out of touch with
the American people. They're not speaking the same language, they're
not critically thinking in the same way. They're not even
in step with their worldview, and what are they gonna do?
(23:56):
Their solution is to go further left. Well, that had
to be wonderful dudes for others like rense previous on
the Republicans souse, Well.
Speaker 12 (24:11):
First of all, it's Donna knows the most important thing
in winning elections number one to know where your voters
are at, and then not the strongest indicator for that
is voter registration. They got there getting trampled in all
thirty states, every battleground state, fifty right, but there's only
thirty that you report.
Speaker 1 (24:32):
Sorry, I'm I thought I had you to got you
and interrupted, But go ahead. Make the point that we
refuse to see this is like naturalna. You can track
it in thirty.
Speaker 12 (24:43):
But the bigger problemise and you're we're the elephant the
room here is that the Democrats are on the wrong
side of normal the people, that they're out of step.
Speaker 1 (24:52):
With the norms of society.
Speaker 12 (24:54):
It's so bad that the Democrats this week put on
a memo and they listed forty five things that Democrats
shouldn't say.
Speaker 1 (25:01):
It's all therapy speak.
Speaker 12 (25:03):
And explaining away from memo from home, and it's it's
all because because it's not.
Speaker 1 (25:11):
It's not a matter of.
Speaker 12 (25:12):
They can't put people on the doors and register people.
That's all that is. It's that they're putting people on
the doors. They're trying to win voter registrations. They are
state parties counting parties, district parties, and they can't sell
it because it's not normal.
Speaker 1 (25:25):
People don't want it.
Speaker 10 (25:26):
Okay, So but but Rachel, if you what I found
interesting about this is that the Republican gains and.
Speaker 2 (25:32):
Registration are virtually everywhere.
Speaker 10 (25:35):
Yeah, I mean it's red states, it's blue states, across demographics.
This happened again well Biden was president. That's happened over
largely the last four years.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Yeah.
Speaker 13 (25:44):
I mean, look, I think race is right. I mean,
a lot of voters think Democrats are out of touch.
They think it's a party of the sort of elites
that they are sort of focused on political correctness, you know.
And there's a there's a fracturing too in the American
public where a lot of voters are uncomfortable with the
party and it's sort of moved left economically as well,
so of the populist wing of the Democratic Party. But
(26:05):
then a lot of Democrats want to see a movement
further left in terms of economics.
Speaker 1 (26:10):
So, I mean the party has a real problem right now.
They yeah, I say they have a real problem. And
again when I was a child, there wasn't that big
of it. Well, first of all, throughout my life there
hasn't been anybody right of John F. Kennedy, and he
was a Democrat. Now, the Democrats didn't like that, and
that's why the party was split. They wanted to go
(26:32):
left like Lyndon Johnson, and they got it after the bullet,
But there weren't that many dramatic differences between Republican and Democrats.
Now it's an ocean, and now the Democrats are out
of step with where most people live in that ocean,
and they can't get back. They just don't know how to.
(26:58):
And that's why it's easy to look at today and
see a lot of nineteen eighty eight.
Speaker 14 (27:05):
Jonathan, nineteen eighty eight was the only time since World
War Two where one party left the White House or
the income and president didn't run and his party won
the election. And when you look at why, it's because
Democrats were perceived as out of touch on social issues,
on the death penalty, the great clip you just saw,
and they were out of touch on the economy. They
(27:26):
were unable to make a clear economic argument. Michael Decocca
started that campaign up by seventeen points and ended up
getting routed because voters believed that his party was no
longer in touch with their everyday concerns. It's just feeling really,
really like nineteen eighty eight to me right now, Jonathan, Yes,
you two was my favorite band, and their great Joshua
(27:48):
Tree album that You and I Love came out that year.
But what is also true is right now Democrats are
trailing the Republicans by historic numbers. We have the lowest
approval ratings since World War Two. Right now, sixty six
percent of Americans disapprove of the Democratic Party, including the
majority of Democrats, because they don't believe that we have
a credible economic argument.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Democratic strategist in twenty twelve Obama campaign manager Jim Messina
and on the wrong side of the border, on the
wrong side of crime, on the wrong side of wokeness, DEI,
transgendered issues, wrong side of war. Well, that's a lot
to fix in teen minus thirteen months, especially when you
(28:30):
might be focused on the bad news of kids not
having teen sex.
Speaker 2 (28:33):
Listen, back in.
Speaker 15 (28:34):
The day, in high school, it was a function of
where are we going, not whether we're going out. And
this is as soon as I saw that drinking headline,
and oh, I got to tell you one more thing,
I'll say it quickly.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Don't worry. It's like the sex headline.
Speaker 15 (28:50):
You see the headline that says that that fewer teens
are having sex, and as a parent, you say, well, boy,
that's good news. And similarly, Americans are drinking, Well that's
good news.
Speaker 1 (29:02):
No, they're bad.
Speaker 15 (29:02):
They're actually bad news because it's also representative of a
decline in relationships. And that's the biggest problem this country faces.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
That's the existential threat to America. Kids aren't drinking and
having teen sex or if he's trying to make the
more profound point of the social dilemma, it's that level
of communication. It's why they're struggling.
Speaker 2 (29:23):
Now.
Speaker 1 (29:23):
Bill Maher had a different take. It's how Donald Trump
masters the divided, scattered, single issue voters. And he's done
it again. Finally new rule. I told you so.
Speaker 8 (29:39):
I've been telling Democrats for years, the Republicans are going
to steal pot from you as an issue, and now
Trump says.
Speaker 14 (29:47):
We're looking at reclassification and we'll make a determination.
Speaker 2 (29:52):
What do you expect.
Speaker 8 (29:53):
He is the master at winning votes from small groups
who are passionate about one issue, picking up a couple
percent in here, a couple there, and doing what's your
night it's why mcla while Democrats offer up high minded
(30:19):
intangibles like equity and saving the soul of America. Trump says, hey, waitress,
how'd you like to pay no tax on those tips?
Remember that?
Speaker 1 (30:29):
And everybody was like or the garbage truck or McDonald's,
you know sometimes in life, and this is what they
failed to realize. It's it's all of the above. But
that was all the talk of the talking head shows.
Why are Democrats registrations down? Why are Republicans up? Why
(30:50):
are the Democrats out of money? Why do the Republicans
have eighty million? All of the above.
Speaker 15 (30:59):
People who in online tradition and puberty book, they're gony,
little bit beat.
Speaker 16 (31:05):
Any of you in the media clearly mist the art
of the deal.
Speaker 1 (31:09):
Just be cool, it's going to work out. It's your
morning show with Michael del Chorno.
Speaker 6 (31:16):
The fitness regime of RFK Junior and Feete Hedge Beth.
I've got a very strict fitness regime every morning.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
It's called fitness biscuit in my mouth. Well sounded like
it the way you are announced, pronouncing pete excess nay,
wearing biscuits in your mouth as we speak. Top five
stories the day at fifty four minutes after the hour,
no more, Oh no, Well, the Powerball jackpot rolled over
once again. Details from Lisa Cardon, So.
Speaker 7 (31:46):
The seven hundred million dollar jackpot will now roll over
to Monday's drawing, when the grand prize will be worth
an estimated seven hundred and fifty million bucks. Lottery players
are still being urged to check their powerball tickets. Someone
in the York matched five numbers to win a million dollars,
two people in Maine won a million bucks, and someone
in South Dakota won two million dollars because they paid
(32:08):
a dollar more for the power Play option. Just in
case you were wondering about your chances of winning, the
odds of matching all five numbers and the power Bawl
number is one in two hundred and ninety two point
two million.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
Good luck.
Speaker 7 (32:22):
I'm Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (32:23):
I know we kind of left to hanging over the weekend.
One Menendez brother denied parole, the other we didn't know yet. Well,
both remained behind bars. Denied parole. Tammy Trijello has more.
Speaker 16 (32:33):
San Diego Parole Board turned down Lyle Menenda's request for
parole on Friday night, a day after his brother Eric
was also denied. Three months ago, Eric and Lyle were
re sentenced to fifty years to life for the nineteen
eighty nine shotgun murders of their parents. The brothers have
maintained the killings were in self defense, claiming they were
sexually abused by their father. They'll be eligible to try
(32:54):
for parole once again in three years. I'm Tammy Trio.
Speaker 1 (32:57):
President Trump's borders ares defiant after a federal judge ordered
the closure of Florida's so called Alligator Alcatraz.
Speaker 9 (33:03):
The federal court ordered the immigrant detention center at the
Florida Everglades to close within sixty days. Borders are Tom
Holman tells News Nation, though the order is not going
to stop the operations of immigration and customs enforcement and
that federal authorities will continue making arrests. The judge in
the case at state and federal authorities broke several environmental
(33:25):
laws as they race to build the detention center. State
officials in Florida have appealed the injunction. I'm Scott Carr.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
It's hard to go to a movie and dinner and
go on a date because there's really ever a good
movie at the theater. They're all on Netflix Prime. Well,
finally a Netflix movie, an animation K Pop Demon Hunters.
It hit the big screen and had quite the weekend,
bringing in an eighteen estimated eighteen million dollars at the
(33:53):
box office, and that's despite being available on Netflix over
the last two months. As for us, we found Empty Nesters.
We chose Weapons. Oh my, oh my, what a terrible movie,
although I did like the Recliner, if that makes any difference.
(34:14):
There's something most people do without even knowing they're doing it.
Pre Tennis has more.
Speaker 17 (34:19):
Psychologists say about sixty percent of the population hums a song,
a melody, even gibberish. They say, keep it up because
it's good for you. Humming manage his mood, relieve stress,
and sometimes it helps to get an earworm out of
your head. It has health benefits too, improve breathing, lower
blood pressure. It's not addictive, fat free, and if you
hear someone humming, you'll most likely join in, so it's
(34:42):
kind of social. I'm pre Tennis.
Speaker 1 (34:48):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael nhild Joino