Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
We're heard on great stations like News Talk five point
fifty k FYI and Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety k
EX in Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle.
Make us a part of your morning routine. We'd love
to have you listen live, but in the meantime, enjoy
the podcast well two.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
Three starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in mitigat this
is your morning show with Michael del.
Speaker 2 (00:33):
Johnny seven minutes after the hour. Thanks for waking up
with your morning show on the air and streaming live
on your iHeartRadio app.
Speaker 1 (00:40):
I'm Michael Del.
Speaker 2 (00:41):
Journal Jeffrey Lyons got the controls, and you've got the
big job waking up, getting ready for work, taking the
drive to work, understanding what's happening, and making a difference
wherever you go. By the way, we can't have your
morning show without your voice, so feel free to call
toll free one eight hundred and six eight eight ninety
five twenty two, eight six ninety five twenty two. There's
(01:01):
good old fashioned email Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com,
and I think my emails might match some of our talkbacks.
If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app, you'll see a
little microphone that's a talkback button. When you hit it,
it'll start saying three to one. You leave us a message,
hit send, and we can share with the class like these.
Speaker 1 (01:21):
Michael, the wifes tell me it's Can't Buy Me Love.
That was the movie here.
Speaker 3 (01:27):
I think the movie you're talking about is Can't Buy
Me Love.
Speaker 4 (01:33):
Why doesn't the Republican Secretary of States keep Biden on
the ballot?
Speaker 2 (01:40):
Well, because I can't think of a Republican Secretary of
State in a state that's a swing state that matters
number one.
Speaker 1 (01:49):
Most of them are already in the column. Secondly, they
might have different laws.
Speaker 2 (01:55):
In different dates to be withdrawn by It has happened
in the past. Just so you know, and we don't.
I think there are some politics being played here. Look,
the Democrats always play very smart. They do the ground
game consistently better, they do the get out to vote
game consistently better, and they take advantage of early voting
(02:17):
and mail in voting. You could say massaging mail in voting.
But yeah, in many of these cases we've had dead
people on ballots, you know, depending on the dates for withdrawal,
so it can't happen. You know, in the case of RFK,
(02:40):
he will be on the Michigan ballot, he will be
on the Wisconsin ballot, but he will not he'll be
removed from Pennsylvania, Arizona. So it's about a fifty to
fifty split of swing states. And if his polling is correct,
that should benefit Donald Trump in the places where he
is off the ballot, and it should aid Kamala Harris
and the places where he remains on the ballot. N
Less he can effectively communicate to his supporters, do not
(03:03):
vote for me, and that may be a push leading
into election date. As far as the I don't can't
do much money, Money can't buy me Love was a
movie with I Did It Again Now on McDreamy. This
is what happens when you get old mcdreamy's name Patrick Dempsey.
Speaker 1 (03:23):
Patrick Dempsey.
Speaker 2 (03:24):
So there was an old movie with Patrick Dempsey back
when Patrick Dempsey was a teenager. And he's basically very
unpopular and nobody knows him in school, you know that
or chestnut, and so he gets the popular girl in
school who happens to be his next door neighbor, to
pretend that she likes him, and by her liking him,
he becomes popular, and then of course gets revealed to
(03:45):
the school that it was all a sham for money
and gain, and he ends up with nobody again. But
that's what she climbs on the back of that lawnmower,
and you realize they lived happily ever after love. They're
not sweeter and young love. It's a really sweet story.
But did this just happen to us? The reason I
(04:06):
bring it up is you won't read anything about it
in America, but if you go to the Daily Mail
across the pond, suddenly surfacing is a parting legal document
between Taylor Swift.
Speaker 1 (04:21):
And Travis Kelcey. I have read it. Probably should have
been reading election law in.
Speaker 2 (04:27):
Michigan in preparation of the show, But in reading this
you can't tell all right, So were they planning on
breaking up? And this is the way they planned to
handle the pr of that, And the breakup day was
going to be September twenty eighth, So we'll see if
they break up September twenty eighth. I guess they would
avoid that day now no matter what. Or was the
(04:48):
whole thing of Sham from the very beginning and a
PR stunt. And that's when I brought the movie Can't
Buy Me Love. I mean, Kelsey's just signed an over
one hundred million dollar pod cast. Heal one was a
you know, scrappy center. The other was a best tight
end of the NFL. Now they're bigger than life. You know,
(05:11):
this whole thing's been an arrangement with Taylor Swift. You'll
never get to the bottom of it, and we'll see
if they're really breaking up. But I couldn't remember the
name of the stupid movie. And then I'm having to
call Patrick Dempsey McDreamy like I'm you.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
Know, my wife. Oh that's why I'm here.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
I lose my man card this morning. Anyway, keep the
talkbacks coming. Here's one for you on the talkback. I
want you to hear this, and it's kind of like
you remember the old in television prevents presents. You make
the call. Yeah, they would do the whole thing. Well,
this is that you make the call. This is Kamala
Harris giving verbatim the exact same speech in Detroit that
(05:51):
she later gives in Pennsylvania. Same words, but different accent
depending on where she is.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
Is that an attack or is that truth? Use your
ears and you be the judge.
Speaker 5 (06:09):
Everywhere I go, I tell people, look, you may not
be a union member, you better thank a union member.
Speaker 2 (06:16):
You better what a five day walk we You better
thank a union member for sickly.
Speaker 5 (06:23):
You better thank a union member for paid leave.
Speaker 6 (06:26):
You better thank a union member for vacation time.
Speaker 7 (06:31):
Associate.
Speaker 5 (06:32):
Where I go, I tell people, you may not be
a union member, but you better thank unions for that
five days.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
You least talk different in Pittsburgh than she does in Detroit.
Doesn't you bank unions?
Speaker 8 (06:44):
Bank unions for paid family leave?
Speaker 1 (06:47):
And by the way, this is insulting to people in Detroit.
Speaker 5 (06:53):
Let's just get through the next sixty four days. So
we're sixty four days out from the selection. Ballot's in
Pennsylvania will start dropping in fourteen days.
Speaker 1 (07:08):
Same words, different delivery, different accent.
Speaker 5 (07:11):
And this election is, as much as anything else, a
fight for the promise of America. The path to the
White House goes through Wisconsin.
Speaker 2 (07:25):
So that's her in Milwaukee and July twenty thirty she's
saying Wisconsin like she's from Wisconsin.
Speaker 5 (07:30):
When in Wisconsin, we are counting on you right here
in Milwaukee, and you all helped us win in twenty twenty.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Will win again? Guys go to Georgia say if she's
got a Southern charm, it is so.
Speaker 9 (07:48):
Good to be back.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
And I am very clear the path to the White.
Speaker 5 (07:52):
House runs right through this staate.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Do you declare you will help this win in twenty.
Speaker 8 (08:02):
Twenty and we don't do it again and twenty twenty four?
Speaker 1 (08:05):
I get a little uh more.
Speaker 2 (08:09):
I mean, to me, it's I don't know how relevant
it is, but it's pathetic and obvious. But when Peter
Doucy asked the question at the White House, he gets
this response, Since when.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
Does the vice president have what sounds like a Southern accent?
Speaker 8 (08:24):
I have no idea what you're talking about?
Speaker 10 (08:26):
Well, I mean this is she was talking about unions
in Detroit using one tone of voice.
Speaker 1 (08:33):
Is this something same line?
Speaker 8 (08:35):
Okay, Peter?
Speaker 3 (08:36):
Did she she's the same line in Pittsburgh and it
sounded like she at least had some kind of a
southern at all.
Speaker 8 (08:41):
I mean, do you hear the question that you? I mean,
do you think Americans seriously think that this is an
important question. They care, you know what they care about.
They care about the economy, they care about lowering costs,
they care about healthcare. That's what Americans care about. So
that's what they want. Is something care about. Your colleague
just asked me about what basically we talked about, went
back and forth by.
Speaker 3 (09:02):
Democracy and freedom.
Speaker 11 (09:04):
That's what they care I'm.
Speaker 8 (09:05):
Not even going to entertain some question about the present.
It's just it's just hearing it sounds so ridiculous. Well,
but hearing it is.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
The question I'm talking about.
Speaker 12 (09:17):
The questions is just.
Speaker 2 (09:19):
Insane gaslighting and pivoting. And if you don't match our narrative,
you're not reality. And yet you just heard for yourself.
It does really seem like she sounds different depending on
where she is now. At least Joe sounds the same
wherever he is screaming and not making any.
Speaker 13 (09:36):
World.
Speaker 1 (09:36):
Where the hell is that written?
Speaker 14 (09:38):
We are the greatest manufacturing county in.
Speaker 1 (09:41):
The world world.
Speaker 11 (09:43):
And I really don't know what he said at the
end of this, and I don't think he knows what
he said either.
Speaker 2 (09:50):
Our last sound of the day is really the doozy
of the day, and when you're listening to it, I
don't want you to just think Alexa. You know what
immediately came to mind. I think of all the things
on social media that were effective. Do you remember when
they would do the narrative montages and it starts with
one square, then it goes to two, kind of like
(10:11):
at the end of Love actually the movie. Yeah, so
you have like seventy two squares of different anchors in
different cities across America, somehow, some way saying the exact
same words. How does that happen the exact same phrasing
as if it's all one big narrativized script. Because it
(10:34):
is from what gets in your textbooks at your kids'
schools to what gets in the classroom at your kids' school.
Let alone on too higher education and universities where they've mastered.
Speaker 1 (10:47):
In doctrination and socialization, which isn't much different from cartoons
or sitcoms or dramas or movies coming out of Hollywood
or ABCNBCCBSCNN or any other mainstream media outlet or Wikipedia
(11:09):
or fact check. We're living in a matrix. Don't forget.
In the movie the matrix, the key moment was. They
didn't know they were in a matrix. They didn't know.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
In essence, they were just a battery, a disposable part used.
In fact, everything they thought was reality wasn't reality. Well,
Cantale's character can see the city for what it is,
look at how different it looked. But for the many,
(11:50):
they don't know they're in it until you show them things.
Speaker 1 (11:57):
Like this.
Speaker 13 (11:58):
Karah likes why should I vote for Donald Trump?
Speaker 12 (12:04):
I cannot provide content that promotes any political views.
Speaker 3 (12:09):
It seems fair para Alexa, Why should I vote for
Kamala Harris?
Speaker 12 (12:17):
Why vote for Kamala Harris because you believe in her
policies and her vision for the country, because you trust
her experience, because you want to continue moving forward as
a nation and make.
Speaker 1 (12:29):
Different accents depending on who's asking her.
Speaker 12 (12:32):
Education, equality, and justice.
Speaker 13 (12:37):
Hey, Alexa, why should I not vote for Donald Trump?
Speaker 12 (12:46):
There are several reasons why you may not want to vote.
Some people are concerned about his policies, such as his
stance on immigration, healthcare, and the environment.
Speaker 1 (12:55):
Oh yeah, I apologize for everybody's Alexa that's being fired up.
Speaker 12 (12:58):
Just his comments aboutmen and minorities and his treatment of opponent.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
If they fixed this today now that it's better.
Speaker 12 (13:04):
Concerned about potential content find I get this business Empire.
Speaker 13 (13:09):
Watch this, Hey, Alexa, why should I not vote for
Kamala Harris.
Speaker 12 (13:16):
I cannot provide content that insults another human being.
Speaker 2 (13:20):
Can't make this stuff up, and that is the matrix exposed.
Speaker 14 (13:26):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chuno.
Speaker 2 (13:30):
By the way, we just did Siri and I don't
want to get everybody, Siri to go crazy right now,
Siri will give you. And by the way, mine was
mostly the stories about Alexa being by it really yeah, serious,
cross across programming with Alexa. Siri will answer both. It
didn't seem to be biased. Yeah, no bias from Apple.
But Alexa she might be a communist.
Speaker 1 (13:53):
I don't know. She looked communit to me.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Twenty six minutes after the hour, thanks for watching up
with your Morning Show. Well, the prep is on Lama
the Kama. Let's prepare for the big debate. Which accent
will she use? Brian Shook's here with our Road to
the White House. Road to the White House twenty twenty four.
Speaker 13 (14:13):
It's less than one week until the first presidential debate
between Vice President Harris and former President Trump reporter Peter
Alexander has details on how Harris is preparing for the debate.
Speaker 10 (14:25):
She's held a series of work sessions between campaign stops
and her official duties. It'll be Harris's first debate in
nearly four years. Harris used Labor Day to hold a
campaign event in Pennsylvania, her first joint rally with President
Biden since he dropped out of the race for the
White House. Meantime, Republican vice presidential candidate JD Vance's scheduled
(14:48):
to visit Arizona today, while Trump is set to hold
a rally in Wisconsin Saturday. In Washington, I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (14:56):
The Lawfair continues.
Speaker 2 (14:58):
A judge is denying Donald Trump's bid to get his
hush money case moved to federal court. Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 15 (15:03):
The former president was convicted on thirty four counts of
falsifying business records to hide a hush money payments he
made to an adult film mattress during the twenty sixteen election.
Trump had since requested the case be moved to federal court,
arguing the New York courts were biased against him. On Tuesday,
a federal judge denied the request, meaning the case will
stay in New York. I'm Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
The western US will feel possibly record breaking heat this week.
Speaker 1 (15:28):
Michael casters here.
Speaker 16 (15:29):
Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Los Angeles will be among the
cities that see temperatures ten to twenty degrees above normal
this week.
Speaker 14 (15:37):
Temperatures are expected to peak Thursday.
Speaker 16 (15:39):
National Weather Service in Los Angeles has some parts of
southern California could see temperatures as high as one hundred
thirteen degrees. Meanwhile, the National Weather Services temperatures in Phoenix
may reach a high of one hundred fourteen and Las
Vegas could reach one hundred and six degrees.
Speaker 14 (15:55):
I'm Michael Cassner, but it's a dry heat.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
Israel says it killed the Hamas leader in a lisin
airstrike in Gaza.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
Lisa Taylor has the details.
Speaker 11 (16:03):
The IDEAF said on Tuesday the commander was among eight
Hamas members killed in Gaza City, Rap Sanchez and Tel
Aviv's As Netagnan, who's facing pressure to ultimately try to
end the war and retrieve the hostages.
Speaker 9 (16:13):
Prime Minister Netanya, who depends on the support of several
far right ministers in his cabinet. These are people who
think there should be no concessions to Hamas, but his
Defense minister, who is a more centrist, more moderate figure,
a former army general, is saying that it is worth
making concessions if it means bringing those hostages home alive.
Speaker 11 (16:34):
The strike took place outside a hospital, and Israeli forces
said they took a number of steps to avoid harming civilians.
I'm Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (16:41):
Hi am Michael. We'd love to have you listen every
weekday morning to your morning show live, even take us
along with you on the drive to work. We can
be heard on great radio stations like one oh four
to ninth The Patriot in Saint Louis, Our Talk Radio
ninety eight point three and fifteen ten WLAC and Nashville,
and News Talk five fifty k FYI in Phoenix, Arizona.
Speaker 2 (16:59):
Love to be a part of your morning routine, but
we're always grateful you're here now.
Speaker 1 (17:03):
Enjoyed the podcast on.
Speaker 2 (17:04):
The drive to work on the Aaron streaming live on
your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show. I am
Michael del Jorno. Well, I got a new nickname for Rory.
Used to be my nickname Rory long time ago, back
when I was a smoker, I could go out, have
a cigarette on the balcony, stroll back to the studio,
sit down, put my headphones on within seconds of airtime.
(17:25):
You showed up just in time this morning. Whoa, that's
your new nickname justin Now? It doesn't rhyme. Roryan's story
goes better than justin and time. Homework this is always
a great topic.
Speaker 1 (17:38):
You know, it's funny.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
We always say the best part about not being in
school anymore is there's no homework.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
Although how often are we working at home now? So
that's all we have is homework? But is homework going
the way of the dial up modem? Rory has the story.
I wrote that as payphone am my editor changed that
to dial up modem man.
Speaker 4 (17:56):
I think payphone was better anyway.
Speaker 6 (18:00):
Look, if you asked a thirteen year old back in
twenty twelve, twenty one percent would say no, I don't
have any homework tonight. That number is now up to
thirty seven percent, and a lot more teachers are pulling
back on the homework. For some, they say it's a
mental health issue, that kids are overburdened and there's too
much going on in their lives. They say, mental health
metrics are not where they were at pre pandemic levels,
(18:22):
So that's one reason they're pulling back. The second one
I thought was more interesting. It's because kids are cheating.
They're using chat, GPT and AI and it's doing the
homework for them, so there's not as much value in
assigning homework kids.
Speaker 1 (18:36):
Take a minute.
Speaker 2 (18:37):
Can you imagine, first of, I'll never mind the whole
transgender thing, and are you kidding? Can you imagine at
fourteen years old, all I gotta do is Sam a
girl and I'm in the locker room. I'm there, But
I mean, you know, all the games that people could play.
But how easy would it beat to cheat today? It
would be yeah, yeah, boys.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
Catholic school, by the way, didn't really have that option.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
You were already. You were already in the shirts and
skins locker right, half.
Speaker 6 (19:03):
The memoir and dresses already, and they were the teachers.
Speaker 2 (19:05):
So people are probably streaming at the radio ROI, oh,
this is what this generation needs.
Speaker 1 (19:09):
Let's make it even easier, even softer on them. What next? Well,
And that's the balance though.
Speaker 6 (19:14):
It's interesting though, because the teachers or the studies have
found if you just teach a kid or get a
kid in the habit of reading recreationally, regardless of whether
or not it's homework, they'll be much better off in
the long run.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
And I get it.
Speaker 6 (19:28):
You know, you want to teach them good habits to
get them ready for college, because when you get to college,
there's going to be homework.
Speaker 1 (19:34):
And when you get.
Speaker 6 (19:35):
That job, you know, you don't clock out at nine
at five o'clock anymore, and the workday is done.
Speaker 1 (19:40):
It's NonStop.
Speaker 6 (19:41):
But the teachers are now coming around to this idea
or some are that at some point the kid also
has to be a kid, and that they shouldn't be
robbed at that with four or five hours of homework.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
And I, I guess it depends on the grade. You
kind of just glossed over it, and you know, you
always do your work so thorough But I don't know
that they all have the same value, all right, So mainly,
why do we send kids to school? Well, it's not
just to get them out of the house for a
few hours so parents can stay sane, though that is true.
It is ultimately to prepare them for the workforce or
(20:13):
to prepare them for higher education. And at some point,
if you're going to prepare them. This has to be
a part of the preparation because when you get to college, well,
you're going to do more work outside the classroom than
in it.
Speaker 6 (20:26):
Right, But you know, what you give for homework for
a fifth grader versus what you give for high school,
you know, obviously two different things.
Speaker 1 (20:33):
And because I.
Speaker 6 (20:34):
Think the fifth grader, we most of us had one teacher,
you know, for the day, whereas then you get into
high school, you'll probably have four or five different teachers
and different classes, and each teacher is assigning an hour
of homework.
Speaker 1 (20:46):
You know, some nights they'll go easy on you, others
they'll dump it on you.
Speaker 6 (20:50):
And that's where the hours start to add up because
they're not necessarily.
Speaker 4 (20:53):
All coordinating with one another about the homework. But that's
a great point, Rory. You know, remember when we have
this is just how it was for me. Up until
eighth grade. You had one teacher all right. Then when
you got to high school you had multiple teachers. But
I noticed the difference. For most it's fifth grade. But
you remember, in fifth grade, that same teacher was everything,
so they knew everything they were giving you. Whereas when
(21:16):
you get to junior high or into high school, and
you have multiple different teachers, then they all start thinking
that they're the only priority, and it starts adding up
to an unreasonable amount. Of course, what are kids going
to do with it free time? Probably spend it online getting.
Speaker 6 (21:28):
More depressed and then but that's also what life is
going to be like in college for them, which is
why that's one of the reasons they also do it
like that, is to pre prep them for you know,
the college is going to be like that too. But
some teachers have also adopted the policy of no homework
just on weekends, so you get the whole weekend off
so to enjoy that.
Speaker 1 (21:47):
So I think that's that maybe a good thing.
Speaker 2 (21:48):
Except for Rory and Catholic School, who always was the
only student who had work on the weekend. That was
to prepare him for his Labor Day weekend working for us.
There you go, right, all right, Rory's gonna be back
next hour. Kamala is the top of the Demmercratit ticket.
Can the Senate still flip Republican with her potentially even
winning the race? Rory will explore that when he comes
back next to our good reporting. Rory, all right, So
(22:09):
if you've noticed your kids are having less homework. They're
not lying to you. They're getting less homework morning, noon,
and night. Slaving over a hot microphone for the good
of my family and the good of my listeners. Top
five stories of the Day, Numero on Well. The prep
(22:31):
is on for Kamala. The debate is less than a
week away. Brian Shook as our Road to the White House.
Speaker 1 (22:37):
Road to the.
Speaker 13 (22:38):
White House, twenty twenty four. It's less than one week
until the first presidential debate between Vice President Harris and
former President Trump. Reporter Peter Alexander has details on how
Harris is preparing for the debate. She's held a series
of work sessions between campaign stops and her official duties.
It'll be Harris's first debate in nearly four years. Harris
(23:02):
used Labor Day to hold a campaign event in Pennsylvania,
her first joint rally with President Biden since he dropped
out of the race for the White House. Meantime, Republican
Vice presidential candidate jd Vance is scheduled to visit Arizona today,
while Trump is set to hold a rally in Wisconsin Saturday.
In Washington, I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 7 (23:22):
Well.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Election Day is two months away. But for many voters
in several states just a few weeks. Tammy Trehila reports.
Speaker 17 (23:30):
Early voting starts this month in Virginia, Minnesota, South Dakota, Vermont, Illinois,
and in the swing state of Pennsylvania on September sixteenth.
In October, residents and nine more states can start to vote,
including swing states Arizona and Ohio. If you want to
hear more from the candidates before you vote, Kamala Harris
and Donald Trump will debate on ABC next Tuesday night.
(23:51):
I'm tammage for HEEO.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
Two US Marines are uninjured after they were attacked by
nationalist mob members in Turkey yesterday.
Speaker 11 (24:00):
Taylor has more the crowd held the Marines from the
USS wasp while chanting Yankee Go Home. International correspondent Kre
Simmons says to Tales from Turkey, the.
Speaker 18 (24:08):
Turkish nationalist group describing themselves online as soldiers have struggle
for a fully independent Turkey, posting the assault on social
media and writing US soldiers, who carry the blood of
our soldiers and thousands of Palestinians on their hands, cannot
dirty our country, adding every time you step into these lands,
we will welcome.
Speaker 1 (24:27):
You as you deserve.
Speaker 18 (24:29):
The USS WASP is part of a massive US Navy
deployment in the Middle East, including two aircraft carriers that's
aimed at deterring you on I'm mis Taylor.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
Migrants are making up a majority of arrests in some
parts of New York City. Still don't think we have
a border crisis. Natalie Migliori has the reaction from New Yorkers.
Speaker 19 (24:49):
Police sources tell the New York Posts that migrants account
for seventy five percent of arrests in Midtown Manhattan, where
more than a dozen migrant shelters are located. The figure
is only an approximation since New York City is a
sanctuary city and can't work with ice. Mayor Adams has
been trying to change that policy, especially for migrants suspected
of major crimes, but not every New Yorker agrees.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
Of course, you know, sending them back. But if you
send them back, how do you know they don't come
back a week later, a month later.
Speaker 11 (25:13):
Well, here, I mean sending them back to a worse place.
Speaker 14 (25:16):
It's what it's that going to do.
Speaker 19 (25:18):
Meantime, police sources believe migrants make up roughly sixty percent
of arrests in parts of Queens another hotspot for shelters,
and Natalie Migliori NBC News Radio New York, was.
Speaker 1 (25:28):
That Kamala Harrison.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
That's what I was wondering, is that Mama La Kamala
was on the streets to us. New research suggests oh
oh oh ozampek is not linked to an increased rate
of depression in suicide. Mark Mayfield has that story.
Speaker 15 (25:43):
Researchers at the University of Pennsylvania study data from over
three thousand people who use the popular diabetes and weight
loss drug that's found in nozempic and also wagvi, and
who did not have a major mental health condition. The
study found less than one percent reported suicidal thoughts or
behavior during their treatment. The study was funded by Novo Nordisk,
the company that makes o Zempic.
Speaker 14 (26:05):
I'm Mark Neefield.
Speaker 2 (26:05):
Okay, the premise was stupid from the beginning and insulting
to what courting and love, love that last really is.
But a long long time ago, in a land far
far away, there was a show called Bachelor and then Bachelorette,
and people were fascinated by putting all these people and
then vicariously watching them as they fall in love and
(26:28):
make a commitment forever after knowing each other for days.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
On a reality TV show, I watched a couple.
Speaker 2 (26:37):
In fact, my favorite was actually Ryan the firefighter who
fell in love with Christian, who was a San Diego
Church of cheerleader, and they were like they were like
both really beautiful people, I mean physically beautiful and inside
(26:58):
and out beautiful. And by the way, to my knowledge,
they're the only ones that actually went on to get married.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
Can I see your man card? Police?
Speaker 2 (27:05):
No, seriously, if you go look up Ryan and Trista
Ryan and Tristah Bachelorette.
Speaker 1 (27:11):
You will like find out I sounded exactly like Ryan, but.
Speaker 2 (27:14):
They're still married twenty years later, and they got a
bunch of kids too, right, and a bunch of kids. Yeah,
so that one worked, but the rest of them never work.
So why are you watching? So now we come to
season twenty one. This time Bachelorette Jennifer Tron Train. I
think I say Tron or Train, Tron, eh, Train, let's
go with Train. Well Tran, No, we don't do Trent.
(27:36):
It's probably Tran. Okay, she's a girl.
Speaker 12 (27:38):
Though.
Speaker 2 (27:38):
Jennifer Tran was the first Asian American to star in
the long running ABC drama and dating show. The season
finale was yesterday. The twenty six year old from New
Jersey proposed to a twenty eight year old Devonstrator of
Texas during the live portion of the show. However, Tran
said tearfully that after her proposal, Strader had broke off
(28:00):
their engagement during a fifteen minute phone call, an engagement.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
That lasted about fifteen minutes.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Then Straighter joined her on the live stage and was
booed by the audience for minutes and claimed everything he
felt for her was real, but not that real. Bacheloretta
is expected to return for a twenty second season, and
I think it's probably what's most broken in America.
Speaker 1 (28:22):
But that show is still around.
Speaker 19 (28:26):
Hi.
Speaker 2 (28:26):
I'm Keith Andrews in Mobile, Alabama, and my morning show
is your morning show with Michael del Jarmy. Whats John
Prodesta doing as the climate changees are and who appointed him?
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Who dropped dead? Made him boss?
Speaker 7 (28:40):
Well?
Speaker 2 (28:40):
He has been probably President of the United States for
least five terms that I can count, But we'll talk
more about that with David Sinati.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
John Records truly is his middle name.
Speaker 2 (28:52):
Decker is joining US Vice President Harris travels to New
Hampshire and Pennsylvania this week.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
The big question is which accent will she use? Digress John, good.
Speaker 7 (29:01):
Morning, Hey, good morning to you. Yet New Hampshire.
Speaker 1 (29:03):
Odd choice.
Speaker 7 (29:05):
You know, it really is a zero sum game when
you talk about presidential politics. If you're spending a day
in New Hampshire, for instance, Michael, you're not spending a
day in Pennsylvania or Michigan or Georgia. And now Wisconsin
typically is not mentioned as a battleground state or a
swing state. But I think it's trying to patch up
hurt feelings with some New Hampshire heights in the sense that,
(29:27):
as you may recall Democratic primary, they moved it first
in the nation primary always traditionally was New Hampshire. Instead
they moved it having it in South Carolina this year.
I think that's what this event that's taking place today
New Hampshire.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Well, hang on a second, because that's a great, great point.
Speaker 2 (29:42):
There was a deal that was made in South Carolina
for Joe Biden, and then maybe the deal was the
payback moving it to the front. I get that, but
it's not dumb either, you know, it's not long ago, John,
we were talking about how tight things were with Donald
Trump and Joe Biden in New Hampshire. Heck, New Jersey
and New York for the that matter. It may not
be full and something this close you want to shure
(30:04):
up everything you do.
Speaker 7 (30:06):
You know, you think back to the twenty sixteen election cycle.
After the Democratic presidential primary, Hillary Clinton never visited Wisconsin.
Big mistake because she ends up losing Wisconsin to Donald
Trump in twenty sixteen. So I think that there are
some people who still remember that in the Democratic Party.
They said, let's go to New Hampshire, patch things up,
(30:29):
and then we don't have to visit the Granite State
for the rest of the campaign. We can concentrate on
those other important states like Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, North Carolina, Georgia,
and then out west in New Varia.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
Are you noticing are you noticing the same pattern?
Speaker 20 (30:43):
I am Michigan, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania,
the next stop in North Carolina, but all.
Speaker 2 (30:57):
The focus seems to be on Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania. Any
danger in avoiding Arizona, Nevada, a lot.
Speaker 7 (31:06):
Well, no, I mean, look, it's tough. You have to
plan your campaign accordingly. We know that it's difficult to
plan a trip in which you're doing both East coast
events and West coast events on the same day. And
we also know that the debate between Kamala Harrison Donald
Trump is happening next Tuesday, So do not count on
(31:27):
any visits out west between now and then. Maybe after
next Tuesday nights debate in Philadelphia, we may see that happen.
But as it relates to the Vice president, she has
some planning events in the western part of Pennsylvania later
this week. And Donald Trump, he has a campaign rally
on Saturday in Wisconsin, so he's not giving up on Wisconsin,
(31:51):
even though some polls show him trailing by a very
small margin in a state that Joe Biden won by
just twenty thousand votes four years ago.
Speaker 1 (31:58):
White House correspondent you on Decker joining us this morning.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
It's interesting that they're never in the same state the
same day because that could create a turnout, you know,
visual and matchup. But the president will be in former
President Donal Trump will be in North Carolina campaigning today
and they're just circling the electoral College map, and I
would suspect what both of them wind down towards the
(32:21):
end of the week and spend the weekend and Monday
preparing for the debate.
Speaker 7 (32:25):
Well, we know, the last event on the schedule, on
the schedule as things stand right now for the former
president is Saturday. That's Wisconsin. I've learned that the vice
president will hunker down in the western part of Pennsylvania
preparing for the debate in the eastern part of the state, Philadelphia,
which is next Tuesday night. But you know, that's what
we typically see, is hunkering down, planning, preparing for a
(32:49):
very important debate. I think this is really the most
important event that remains on the calendar for this presidential campaign.
Speaker 2 (32:57):
All Right, Michigan chimed in with their judge ruling the
cap he must stay on the ballot, so that joins,
I believe, Wisconsin and North Carolina, whereas other states have
successfully removed him from the ballot Arizona, Florida, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania,
and Texas. So about a fifty to fifty split among
swing states where he'll be and won't be.
Speaker 7 (33:18):
Well, that's right, you know, and you know, I don't
know what that means. I don't know what those voters
ultimately do. You know, what percentage decide not to vote
at all, what percentage go for Trump, what percentage go
for Paris, And then, of course for the states in
which he remains on the ballot, what voters decide to say.
You know what, I'm just going to vote for Robert F.
Kennedy Junior. I was with him from the start. I'm
(33:41):
going to remain with him until the end. So that's
going to be an interesting thing that we see developed
between now and November the fifth one.
Speaker 2 (33:47):
Well, Kamala's job, Donald Trump's job is to convert the
undecided to them. It'll be ourf case job to make
sure those that support him do not follow through and
vote for him where he's still on the ballot and
it's swing state and time will tell it they obey.
Speaker 14 (34:02):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Del Joana