Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
each weekday morning on great stations like thirteen sixty The
Patriot in San Diego, News Talk, one oh six point
three and AM eighteen eighty WM e Q oh Claire
Wisconsin and one oh four nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri.
Would love to be a part of your morning routine.
But so glad you're here now.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Enjoy the podcast well two three, starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
This is your.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
Morning show with Michael O'Dell, Charna.
Speaker 2 (00:35):
You, Mike mccannon, Rise and Shine one and all. Welcome
to Friday, August the twenty ninth. You about north of
twenty twenty five, the eve of my sixty first circle
around the side. Can I can I just interrupt real quick,
just real quick?
Speaker 5 (00:52):
What's that you tell everybody every day happy birthday and
you were so glad that they were born, And we
never get to row you, toast you or say anything
about you. But again this year I've invited some folks
into the studio to say, we're so glad that you
were born.
Speaker 6 (01:09):
Hey, Michael, how you doing out here. Listen, I know
you're super busy. You've got a lot going on. He
does this for I really hate to bother you, but
well there's something I've been meaning to tell you, and
I'm afraid it just can't wait any longer.
Speaker 4 (01:27):
Up at band Baby.
Speaker 7 (01:29):
Happy birthday to you, Happy birthday to you, being Red,
Happy birthday, dear myl.
Speaker 2 (01:41):
Hey Red, put the bourbon down. There's no reason to celebrate.
You have the birthdays.
Speaker 4 (01:44):
Tomorrow, birthday to Big Finish, Big Finish. He does this
for like every name possible, doesn't Yes, he does.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
I'm a special at all because I'm just gonna have
Marilyn Monroe.
Speaker 4 (02:06):
Give me the jf KI treatment. All right, enough birthdays. No,
we're gonna, we're gonna.
Speaker 5 (02:12):
We're gonna say happy birthday you all day long. And
so if you want to send Michael some happy birthday
thank you, do.
Speaker 4 (02:19):
It on the talkback. Yeah. I don't don't care.
Speaker 5 (02:23):
We don't care because you're gonna play humble and you're
gonna say it's not important, but it is.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
It is important. You need to be celebrated.
Speaker 7 (02:31):
Now.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
If somebody wants to send a cash contribution, which, by
the way, yesterday Uh, two things before we start. One
Keith Andrews, who listens down in Mobile, Alabama. Your childhood friends,
uh asked me, said, MASSA great movie, The Ballad of
Wallace Island. So you know, uh, if nothing else, I'd
(02:56):
find out what his recommendations were, Like, let me tell
you something. This is a law long, slow road to
a great meaning. So I was very grateful I watched it.
I don't know how funny I thought it it was,
but it certainly is all about getting your eyes off yourself.
Speaker 4 (03:13):
Which I think is the key to life.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
I think ultimately I get your eyes set right on God,
figure out who he is, because once you understand who
he is, you understand who you are.
Speaker 4 (03:24):
The other is. My eyes are always on other people.
Speaker 2 (03:26):
So if I'm in a room with ten people, I'm
gonna appreciate the ten people way more than I appreciate myself.
That's just the way I choose to live. And that's
really the ultimate meaning of that movie. The minute this
artist gets his eyes off himself and what he must
do next and what life is all about according to him,
and he finally subjects himself to putting someone's elf else's
(03:48):
life ahead of them, of himself. He finds it ultimately
himself and the meaning of life. So Keith, great recommendation.
You were topped only by my best birthday gift, which
came from Jeffrey. He found a Match Game documentary and
sent it to me. Let me tell you something. I
(04:09):
was a huge fan of Gen. You know what nobody
remembers about Gene Rayburn. What's that? He was the first
Ed McMahon. Nobody remembers that.
Speaker 5 (04:17):
To learn that, and I also didn't know he was
an opera singer.
Speaker 2 (04:20):
He wanted to be start the Tonight show was Steve Allen.
He was the first. In fact, you probably don't have
an Ed McMahon if you don't have a Gene Rayburn,
because that was part of the formula. But yeah, Match
Game was a pretty special show and the documentary was great.
So I want to thank Jeffrey for the Match Game
documentary that I had to watch on my phone. At
(04:42):
least Keith Andrews movie I got to watch on my
television set. You have a streaming app and now my
birthday gets to be ruined by the Fantasy Football draft
right in the middle of the day. That's watching up
all of our plans, all right, if you're just waking up.
New Orleans is set to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of Katrina,
to kind of start there, because Katrina, like COVID, like
(05:07):
the Shadow Campaign, and then the four year fake presidency
of Joe Biden, and I guess to some degree, we
can now throw in the Covenant shooter in Nashville and
the Minneapolis shooter Robin Westman in Minnesota, things that we
refuse to learn from because we can't dare look at
(05:27):
them honestly, because we can't dare break our narratives. I
did a lot of rabbit hole searching in terms of Katrina,
and here's the bottom line. Katrina is just as likely
to happen again today.
Speaker 4 (05:48):
As it was twenty years ago.
Speaker 2 (05:55):
I really can't say that about the Shadow Campaign, though
it's possible nobody other than this show ever talks about
what they did, so I would probably say with the
exception of, well, you can't control narratives because journalism is
dead and we've all moved on unwired to podcasts and
(06:19):
you don't have a monopoly on social media. With the
Elon Musk purchase of X, that's going to make it
very problematic that and Democrat primary voters know the game
you've played three times on them. They're not going to
be as likely to go along with it a fourth time,
and it could be the end of your party. But
it's still possible. With the right contagion, it's possible. It
(06:50):
was a perfect storm figuratively and literally with Katrina. You know,
I think I started in talk radio. How many years
ago that be?
Speaker 4 (07:00):
Now?
Speaker 2 (07:01):
That means I gotta do math right, thirty six seven,
thirty seven years ago?
Speaker 4 (07:08):
I started in talk radio. Before that, I was a
disc jockey.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
You know, you could play an intro right now and
I could show them I have chop still as a
disc jockey.
Speaker 4 (07:17):
There's just no money. Is that how you want to
do this?
Speaker 8 (07:19):
All? Right?
Speaker 2 (07:21):
Hey eighty nine the Rock of Chicago w LS fourteen
minutes after the hour, getting you popped, adam and ready
for the day, or at least to give it a
good try.
Speaker 4 (07:34):
Gotta try double well, that was amportant.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
But I remember my dad and I doing interviews on
our morning show about coastal erosion, which had two significant meanings.
One you're losing land and two you're losing hurricane buffer.
So one of the perfect storms is all the loss
(07:59):
of trees in the bayou areas that used to buffer
the storm before its arrival, absorb and bust up the winds,
absorb and bust up the storm surge.
Speaker 4 (08:12):
That's number one.
Speaker 2 (08:13):
Nobody ever talks about it because it's still there, eroded more,
and still no trees. The next was a poorly antiquated
plan of levy walls, which, by the way, to show
(08:34):
you how we don't learn lessons after Katrina, they spent
billions of dollars after everybody dies, to upgrade those walls,
reinforce those walls with the same corp of engineers, which,
by the way, when they were finished, they were deemed
and predicted to be obsolete by twenty twenty three. I'll
remind everybody today's August twenty ninth, twenty twenty five. It
(08:59):
is not hyperb when I tell you it is just
as likely to happen again. Now, what would be different
if it happened today, Well, you got a different president.
For one, you wouldn't find Donald Trump on vacation, let
(09:21):
alone staying on vacation, let alone putting a guy that
was in charge of a beef council in Oklahoma or whatever.
He was in charge of emergency response. There was one
general that came over from Alabama, the only one to
take charge, and had he arrived two days before the storm.
Speaker 4 (09:41):
Maybe nobody would have died.
Speaker 2 (09:45):
Unfortunately, didn't arrive till two days after the storm and
didn't get things moving till about four days after the storm.
What you saw was a failure of federal government. The
most InCom potent governor you could ask for and an incompetent,
indecisive later removed in scandal. Mayor everyone, parish presidents, mayors, governors, FEMA,
(10:20):
the pres everyone failed those people.
Speaker 4 (10:24):
And I guess we don't want to look at it because.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
If we do, we will see the ultimate vision, which
is the left in America wants government bigger. The right
in America wants government smaller, and they never really get
beyond a those big picture things smaller, smaller, no bigger, bigger. Well,
for those who want bigger government, you need to study
(10:52):
Katrina before you ever. You need to study Obamacare and
Katrina before you ever get excited about government providing every
thing for you and always taking care of you.
Speaker 4 (11:03):
They have the worst track record, whether it's.
Speaker 2 (11:07):
The War on poverty, whether it's federal control of our
education system, healthcare or protecting you from rising waters. Good luck,
(11:27):
But like COVID and like a fake presidency in the
shadow campaign that got it there. Oh, we don't want
to look at these lessons. I mean, I watched it yesterday.
Nobody you want to hear the worst clip I can
play today later in the sounds of the day. You
(11:48):
know what we're not allowed to talk about right now?
We did yesterday and others have sense the Federalist did
a whole piece. We don't evenmre on control. We need
to go back and look at classifying gender dysphoria as
a mental illness.
Speaker 4 (12:05):
Again, that's the key clue. But then.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
Today we find out yesterday, but the New York Post
hays the story. Today, the Minneapolis school shooter confesses he's
tired of being trans. He wished he never brainwashed himself.
Trans is the key clue, And it's not just a
clue to being transgendered. It's a clue to, in this
(12:33):
particular case, what he was taking and how mentally ill
he was. Then after you watch the video, then if
you see all his writings, well then you know it's
just plain evil.
Speaker 4 (12:41):
And I think the kid was demon possessed to boot.
But what is.
Speaker 2 (12:50):
Jake Tapper at CNN most concerned about, Oh, that we
get his name right.
Speaker 9 (12:55):
Another piece of the puzzle as to who the shooter
was in Minneapolis, start Rebuting says, according to court records,
because there's been some confusion about what the shooter's name was,
Robin Westman's mother applied to change her child's name in
twenty nineteen. It was at one point Robert Paul Westman,
but since she identifies as a female and wants her
name to reflect that identification was underage, it's now Robin Wes.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
And so the journey to sweep, just as he did
with the Covenant shooter in Nashville, to make sure that
lead is really buried and swept under a rug. Talk
about death of journalism. Two children are dead, and what's
(13:40):
this goofball? Worried about making sure we're saying his name right?
And then you wake up the next morning you find
out he wish he'd never been trans It's nothing but
ruin his life. Why did I brainwash myself or was
he brainwashed? Look, we can't even get this stuff in
real time, let alone looking back and looking back twenty
(14:01):
years the citizens of New Orleans, and by the way,
the media's role in that has been lost. The way
they portrayed those who stayed behind, like they all stayed
behind on purpose to wreak havoc. They were either too
(14:22):
ill to move, they weren't told when to move in time,
and then they were too poor to do it. And
you knew it before because you had the study, but
you had no plan. And then Marinagan sits on the
mandatory evacuation too long. There were no buses. Then the
media tells you all these lies at all. You can't
go in there, you get shot. Then they had the
(14:42):
buses and they couldn't get any bus drivers they were
willing to drive in. And what guardsmen were sent are
pointing guns at the people starving and dying of thirst.
Nine to eleven, twenty four years later, until Donald Trump
(15:05):
took office a second term and secured the border. I
don't think we learned anything COVID. You haven't even begun
to learn. Greatest hoax in human history, the Shadow Campaign
and the fake Presidency, the greatest political scandal in American
political history, and COVID the greatest government failure to rescue
(15:28):
well to protect, then rescue and serve its citizens, and
virtually all of them are just as likely to happen
again as they were when they did, which for Katrina
is twenty years ago.
Speaker 4 (15:44):
Today.
Speaker 3 (15:46):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 2 (15:50):
You're just getting up New Orleans set to commemorate the
twentieth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Speaker 4 (15:55):
Labor Day, travel is set.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Gas is at the lowest price since and TSA will
screen more than seventeen million people over this period. And Nitty,
it's time for cottage football. It's time to strap it
out again. They're going to put those leather helmets own.
They're going to really wreck you down. And you've got
a great lineup of cottage football to kick off the weekend.
(16:18):
It actually starts tonight Illinois twelfth ranked Illinois, the ali
in a Western Illinois.
Speaker 4 (16:23):
Than tomorrow.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
You got Texas Ohio State one versus three, the Ques
and the Balls, oh You and Illinois State, LSU, Clemson, Michigan,
New Mexico, and then Sunday Notre Dame in Miami.
Speaker 4 (16:37):
So enjoy some college football this weekend. My name is Stuart.
I'm from Monkeytown, Tennessee, and my morning shows. Your morning
show with Pizza Boy. Hey gang, it's Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Your morning show can be heard live each weekday morning
on great radio stations like k EIB in Los Angeles,
WFD nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan, the Superstation, and the
Rock of Talk sixteen hundred AM KIVA and Albuquerque, New Mexico.
We'd love to have you listen live every morning, but
glad you're here now for the podcast.
Speaker 4 (17:11):
Enjoy.
Speaker 8 (17:11):
Good morning Michael, Happy early birthday.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
Thank you for being the heart of the show and
part of our lives. We are so glad that you
were born. Oh, good morning, Michael.
Speaker 6 (17:22):
This is Perry in beautiful Tennessee, every wishing you an
early happy birthday.
Speaker 4 (17:27):
My friend, you have a great one.
Speaker 10 (17:28):
Good morning, Michael, wanted to wish you a happy birthday.
This is Scott out of Jacksonville. I'm actually listening to
you on kt okay out of Oklahoma City, where I
am from. Just wanted to let you know that it
is always a pleasure to start my day off listening
to my morning show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 4 (17:50):
And how about there Zukerlahoma Suitters. They're going to kick
off the season against delanois State. You always like to
start with it. You know.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Well, with the exception of LSU Clemson, it's nine verses
four Texas Ohio State is one versus three. The ques
Ques will have their hands full on the road. In
tennis in Knoxville, taken on the balls. But usually, you know,
in the Notre Dame Miami on Sunday. But normally you
have a game like Michigan New Mexico. You know something
that you know you they're the lion and you're the
(18:19):
meat kind of a thing. And that's the case. I mean,
Illinois State hopefully is a dead meat heading into a
game against the Oklahoma Centers. But college football kicks off.
Great to hear from Oklahoma. All right, thank you for
the birthday wishes. I don't do compliments and birthday wishes.
And this is killing you, isn't it. But I will
tell you this is a heck of a lot better
(18:40):
than when I was like eleven years old and we
had the bowling party and mom invited all of her
friends kids that weren't really my friends, and I had
to bowl with them.
Speaker 4 (18:47):
Oh wow, although I did meet Allison Gillette.
Speaker 2 (18:50):
Anyway, thirty seven minutes after the hour, early bird gets
the worm.
Speaker 4 (18:54):
Lazy squirrel misses that.
Speaker 2 (18:55):
Not stop it, Throw that leg over the side of
the bed, Shuffle in and get yourself some coffee. We
got a day to figure out. It's Friday, August the
twenty ninth, twenty twenty five, New Orleans set to commemorate
the twentieth anniversary of Hurricane Katrina.
Speaker 4 (19:09):
You know, I've often talked about my dad.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
And his his strange fears, Like my dad gets very
fearful over people in motorized chairs.
Speaker 4 (19:20):
He's convinced they're gonna kill somebody.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Ah, I'll tell you, well, I don't like what dad.
Speaker 4 (19:28):
Carjackers, murderers.
Speaker 2 (19:31):
I like all these people at the casino and these
motorized they're gonna kill somebody in those motorized chairs. That's
kind of an irrational fear. But you know, when it
comes to Katrina. Somebody on the radio in New Orleans said,
(19:52):
what are you gonna do to celebrate the twentieth anniversary
of Katrina. That set my dad off for three days,
and I get it. He was doing twelve hour shifts
on the radio, talking to people as they were dying.
He had to eventually leave across the street from the
Superdome and try to get home and what he saw
(20:14):
he's never forgotten. Yeah, bad choice of words. You don't
celebrate it, You remember it honestly for the horror it was,
for the lives that were lost, and what needs to
(20:34):
be done to make sure it never happens again, though
that commemoration has never even begun. Labor Day travel is
set gas at its lowest price since twenty twenty. That's
good news for those of you that are driving this
Labor Day. Apparently seventeen million are expect to get frisked
by DSA and be flying, and authorities say that they
(20:56):
haven't spoken to the mother of the suspect in Wednesday's
Catholic school shooting. Well, I don't know if anybody else.
I want to just do it as and it could
be a talk back, but just with the red real quick.
What does that say to you that the mother's not cooperating,
not wanting to talk. I had an immediate thought, guilty conscience, Yeah, no,
(21:16):
I didn't go there. Where I went was this shooter
in particular didn't leave clues. This shooter left no doubt whatsoever.
It's impairment, derangement, maybe even demonic possession and clear crystal
(21:37):
clear motive as well as its specific target children and
children suffering. I pointed that out yesterday. I put myself
through it, and it was disgusting but revealing. I played
a couple of clips that clearly sound like clips from conjuring.
(21:59):
I'm not certain that this kid wasn't audibly visibly demon possessed.
But when you look at the totality of the manifesto,
that he films the pages so that you can read
every word, turns them, films them, turns them, films them.
(22:21):
Then he goes over every weapon and ammunition that he
has written, his motives all over, his fascination with other shooters,
his hatred for really ultimately, and I'm not going to
revisit yesterday, so nobody panic and feel like you need
to leave this guy. I mean, the guttural bro I
(22:41):
don't know where that boy came from. Was when he
saw the image of Christ came up on his camera
when he had Jesus's face supermposed on a shooting target,
and the mocking of God was the clear motive. He
hates the Creator and he hates every creation. That's why
(23:03):
you can go down the list. He hated Christians, He
hated Jews, he haateed Mexicans, he hated Blacks, he hated everybody.
Speaker 4 (23:08):
He hated at God's creation.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
You're missing like nefarious, the movie, the ultimid story here.
Speaker 4 (23:15):
But having said all that, let me get to my point.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
So when this is all said and done, this is
a kid who confesses his depression, confesses his regret for
being trans, not for being born something and everybody persecuting
him for wanting to be something else. No, he tormented himself.
(23:40):
That's the headline in the New York Post. I really
regret being trans. I don't know why I let myself
be Actually, why I let myself even be brainwashed. I'm
not so certain culture didn't brainwash him, or school didn't
brainwash him, the Internet brainwashed him.
Speaker 4 (23:58):
Either way, he regretted it.
Speaker 2 (24:02):
Ultimately, if you really want to, we have got to
figure out. This is three trans shootings now, and you
wouldn't let the manifesto of Covenant Nashville be released. You
tried to cover it up. It didn't fit a narrative
to try to do it again. But maybe you should
be looking at it the trans aspect. You should be
looking at his blood work. We should know what drugs
(24:24):
this kid was on. But ultimately, why is this mom
not cooperating?
Speaker 8 (24:35):
Oh?
Speaker 2 (24:35):
I think you know the answer. It's the question we
asked yesterday. This kid was sick. You need to tell me.
Nobody knew what I saw in that video for twenty minutes,
was walking around at parties and going and interacting with people,
and nobody noticed.
Speaker 4 (24:55):
He never said anything.
Speaker 2 (24:56):
Troubling because if law enforcement hones in on the parents
who allowed him to live in their home, show all
these signs a mass weapons and ammunition and did nothing. Oh,
I guarantee you she's not cooperating because she's lawyering up.
(25:23):
You talk about they wanted to bury the trans aspect.
Can you imagine if the legacy media is even going
to discuss whether or not we should look at how
the trans movement pressured the psychiatric community to dump gender
(25:46):
identity disorder and make it gender dysphoria go from something
that was considered a mental illness to something that is
affirmed and praised and acknowledged as normal. I don't know,
could that be a part of this story. Federalist headline
(26:08):
today is we don't need gun control, we need to
classify gender dysphoria is a mental illness again, or at
least not be afraid to have the conversation, because that's
at least the common thread in three of the of
the last mass shootings, which I think is three of
the last five, isn't it. I don't think there's been
(26:29):
that many outside of it.
Speaker 8 (26:31):
And Michael, wouldn't you say in general, with all shootings
it's about the mental.
Speaker 4 (26:38):
Well, yeah, yeah, but I mean in this case, I.
Speaker 8 (26:40):
Mean, I mean, it focuses here because it's such a
small segment of the population and it seems to be
a little out of control.
Speaker 2 (26:46):
Yeah, And I don't want to suggest everybody that's transgendered
is a violent threat, but if there's a link, you
can't be afraid to look at it, because if we
find out it is what the psychiatric community he used
to always say it was, then it's not something to
be affirmed and celebrated and protected.
Speaker 4 (27:08):
It's something to be watched.
Speaker 2 (27:13):
But that was our first I mean, when this guy
was so over the top, the writings on paper, the
writings on the weapon and the ammunition, how to know
red flags pop up on this guy, so that red
flag laws could have protected those kids.
Speaker 4 (27:33):
And remember buying a firearm.
Speaker 2 (27:37):
It reminds me almost This is a lame analogy, but
it almost reminds me of what Donald Trump said. You
don't need Congress, you don't need new laws, you don't
need any funding. Apparently, when it came to securing the border,
you just needed a new president. I can't tell you
how many times we have a shooting where these gun
laws didn't work as they're asking for more laws, or
(27:59):
if the laws were in place, they weren't pursued properly.
I mean the last thing, you know, it's kind of
like when we deal with the debt our. Solution for
the dead is we raised the ceiling. Like you came
home and your sewage backed up and the fire department's there.
(28:20):
What's going on? Well, your house is full of crap?
The sewage backed up? What do you mean it's full?
I mean the entire first floor, second floor, and into
the attic. Well, is there any area that isn't affected?
You got about two inches in the attic. So what
should we do. I'd raise the roof three feet. Can
(28:41):
you imagine how ridiculous that would be? You'd say, God, here,
how about the laws? It's another narrative. Nobody wants to
how about the laws in place in Minnesota that failed,
and you're asking for more laws?
Speaker 4 (28:58):
What laws?
Speaker 2 (28:59):
What laws would have stopped it? How do you not
look at these other things? How do you not look
at the parents? How do you not look at red
flag laws? How do you not look at the psychiatric community?
Changing this from a disorder and a mental illness to
something affirmed and celebrated. If you're really interested in understanding,
(29:19):
and if you're really interested in going beyond just thoughts
and prayers, but to doing something that will make this
less likely to happen. But one of the big stories
you're gonna hear all day, the mother's not cooperating with authorities. Yeah,
she's lawyering up as crazy as this kid was. How'd
(29:40):
you allow me to have guns in his room? Do
you ever go in his room? I can't imagine what
would happen in my home. First of all, my wife
is a snoop like you've never met Colombo, has nothing
on her. She's in the drawers, sifting through stuff.
Speaker 4 (30:03):
What do we have here? Going through his freaking surch history?
Speaker 2 (30:08):
Can you imagine walking in his room and right next
to his Anthony Rizzo poster is a shooting target with
Jesus's face on it.
Speaker 4 (30:16):
How that get missed?
Speaker 2 (30:19):
Honey? Do you think it's a problem that Robert, I mean,
Robin has Jesus on a shooting target along with a
couple of semi automatic rifles and five pistols and a
bunch of ammo. Yes, dear, that might be a problem.
They're gonna get arrested before this is over. That's why
they're not cooperating and talking. Meanwhile, just know amount of time.
(30:44):
But the DC mayor, Bowser, you got to give this
woman credit for fighting and fighting and fighting, and then
eventually you know there's nothing she can do. Because Trump
does have the right to send federal guards into protect
the nation's capital. He does not have that right to
do it in Boston, Chicago, or anywhere else. And I
don't even think that's what he's after. He's just gonna
(31:05):
embarrass the snot out of him. He's gonna do it
in DC and then he's gonna like gonna dog poops
on the rug and you stick his nose.
Speaker 4 (31:11):
In it, you go outside.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
He's gonna take DC and he's gonna put these inner
city mayor's nose in it and go you do this here.
There's even rumors he's gonna do a tour. I think
that's the game he's playing. But even Mayor Bowser had
to come out and say, well, Trump's federal deployments they
have certainly lowered crime. That's the biggest problem, not just
(31:38):
the things that Trump does to disprove their narratives, but
what he does disproves their narratives and works.
Speaker 4 (31:44):
Now, what do you do.
Speaker 2 (31:47):
No, we gotta get back to raping and homelessness and murder.
This is ridiculous. The checkmate checkmate move continues to play
out on the chessboard of America in politics, but most
importantly are inner cities and the safety of its citizens,
which was supposed to be the priority of municipal, county,
(32:09):
state and federal government. Listen, if you've been living on
your credit cards, meaning not just groceries, gas and bills,
though they stack up even surprises, next thing you know,
you're buried in high interest credit card debt. These interest
rates are brutal. You feel trapped and you are. Why
(32:29):
keep those twenty thirty percent rates with banks when you
could call my friends American Financing, they have mortgage rates
in the fives they're showing people every day how they
can keep more of their hard earned money in their
pocket and not in the banks vaults. And they're getting
(32:51):
out of credit card debt.
Speaker 4 (32:52):
Right now.
Speaker 2 (32:52):
American Financing is helping homeowners save on average eight hundred
dollars a month.
Speaker 4 (32:55):
And there's nothing average about your debt.
Speaker 2 (32:56):
I know, no upfront fees, no obligation, just to ten
minute call with a salary based mortgage consultant, not getting commissions,
no high pressure ten minutes with somebody that wants to
help and can. And here's the kicker. If you start today,
you could delay your next two payments. How about more
breathing room. What are your payments? Twenty five hundred dollars
(33:17):
its five grand in your pocket, But nothing happens if
you don't call. Call American Financing today. Eight sixty six
eight five, nineteen forty eight. You need the breathing room,
you need the peace of mind, you need this solution.
Eight six six eighty five nineteen forty eight. NMLS one
eight two three three four NMLS. Consumer Access dot Org
APR rates in the five started six point three two
(33:39):
seven percent for well qualified buyers. And I think probably
the best way to get started is right online Americanfinancing
dot net forward slash Michael, and you get all the
details about creditcross in terms americanfinancing dot net forward slash
Michael eight six six eighty five, nineteen forty eight.
Speaker 3 (33:57):
It's your morning show with Michael del Choano.
Speaker 2 (34:02):
Don't forget, we can't and we would never want to
have your morning show without your voice. Use that talkback
button on your iHeart radio app. There's a little microphone.
Speaker 4 (34:10):
Click it.
Speaker 2 (34:11):
You got thirty seconds to make a comment, ask a question.
Take your place at this morning's kitchen table to get
to more of your talkbacks. I made an executive decision.
Ask me where I get the authority? Where do you
get the authority? Oh? I am the birthday boy. I
did want to rush my visit. Kevin surreally is a
futurist and he is just one of our most valuable reporters.
(34:32):
And so we're going to look at Labor Day, the
changing face of labor. I'll give you an example, returning
to the office fights. That's yesterday's news. The real story
is how humans and machines are going to team up
and be the future of labor. I had a Labor
Day so I didn't want to rush that, so I'm
I'm moving him to six thirty four Central, seven thirty
(34:52):
four Eastern if you want to hear that, And if
you're not available, of course, there's always the podcast and
you'll find the link to the podcast at your morning
show online dot. So Rory's got how the tariffs are
going to impact Christmas shopping. Then we'll have Kevin Sarrilli
talk about the changing face of labor as we face
Labor Day. Plus Sounds of the Day. And it is Friday,
So we've got two presidents today. Did you know that
(35:15):
I did not. Oh, yes we do. We have the
president who's had a very busy week. Well, you're the
leader of the free world, right and a true leader,
not a fake presidency. But lucky for us, he always
finds time. It's Friday, Friday with forty seven coming up.
And then Tim Daily. You know him best from Wings first,
then Madam Secretary. Now he is the love interest of
(35:39):
Leanne Morgan in her new Netflix hit series Leanne. He's
also a president. We'll tell you what he's president of
and he'll be joining us in the seven o'clock hour
as well. We look forward to meeting him, or if
you're just waking up today, Mark's the twentieth anniversary of
Katrina Labor Day.
Speaker 4 (35:57):
Travel is expected to get underway today.
Speaker 2 (36:00):
The Price is cooperating Lewis Sin's twenty twenty TSA expecting
to screen more than seventeen million people over the weekend,
and it's college football's week one big kickoff.
Speaker 3 (36:09):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndheld Joano