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September 19, 2025 36 mins

Kamala’s quote about not choosing Mayor Pete reveals a lot about her negative view of Americans!

 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Jorno and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern on great stations like
six twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi, or Akron's News Talk
six forty WHLO and Akron, Ohio and News Radio five
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part of your morning routine, but we're glad you're here now.

(00:21):
Enjoyed the podcast on two.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Three starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael Deilchorman.

Speaker 3 (00:38):
I just realized a national cheeseburger. Dan forgot to have
a cheeseburger yesterday show.

Speaker 4 (00:44):
How could you forget to have a cheeseburger?

Speaker 3 (00:46):
Well, I didn't eat all day and by the time
I got home from the nursing home.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
No, it's not a second home for me, but it
is kind of right.

Speaker 3 (00:56):
I had Rios lasagna, which was spectacular, but I forgot
to have I got my shooessburger finally last night, six
thirty seven o'clock at a little local restaurant in our
hometown of white House, Tennis. Yeah, but you didn't take
advantage of like you know, it was it fifty cent
cheeseburgers at McDonald's and then they had the no cheeseburgers
to be celebrated. So I had a bison burger. He

(01:18):
paid the price though, yes I did. I was only
going to do it because there would be a savings.
But I did have Look at Redd, he's already on vacation.
I did have broccoli instead of potatoes, Thank you. I
used to work with Rick Cory in Tulsokaholm, a very
very very very dear friend. Rick had a theory, your
final day of work before a vacation you're out is

(01:40):
the best day of your vacation. You're out of there
because you got it all in front of you. Whereas
the minute the vacation starts, you're counting down the days
until you're back. Now, we don't hate our jobs, but
we do get exhausted from them. So look at Reddy.
He knows he's kind of hole. He's grabbing his cup
of coffee. What are you doing? Going hiking in the
mountains somewhere. He's got arms, floaties, on Are you really

(02:01):
going to Montana? Why is that all you to do?

Speaker 5 (02:08):
Me?

Speaker 4 (02:09):
Like it? You like it? I don't know. It's refreshing.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
I walked eighteen holes of golf yesterday, though, Oh did
you really? I got my steps in. I don't want
to walk a mountain. Get a hold of yourself. All right,
here we go. Welcome to Friday, the nineteenth of September,
Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty five on the year
and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 4 (02:29):
This is your morning show on Michael del Journal. Jeffrey's
got the sound.

Speaker 3 (02:32):
Red is, like we said, half on vacation, but he's
here and keeping an eye on the content. Supreme Court
is going to hear arguments on the legality of President
Trump's tariff plan. The dates have been set for November.
Charlie Kirk's widow unanimously voted CEO of Turning Point USA.
Barack Obama jumped into the warm waters, urging media companies

(02:53):
to start standing up to President Trump.

Speaker 4 (02:56):
Didn't we.

Speaker 3 (03:00):
That one was so easy? It's a sick rooster. We
told you this was coming right. The Emmy started it
off with their tribute to Stephen Colbert and his gloating
and spiking. Stephen Colbert got fired because of no audience.

(03:20):
Stephen Colbert got fired because they're losing forty million dollars.

Speaker 6 (03:25):
Now.

Speaker 4 (03:26):
A lot of it is their fault.

Speaker 3 (03:28):
They have taken late night into politics and alienated audience.

Speaker 4 (03:32):
The part that isn't their fault is technology. We've moved on.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
If it was nineteen seventy five, well, it was nineteen
seventy five. I get up watching Ray Rayner and Boso's Circuits.
But the average adult would have gotten up and watched
morning news. It was a big deal if you were
the anchor of the six and ten newscast, because people

(04:02):
watched it.

Speaker 4 (04:03):
They don't anymore.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
When's the last time you sat down and real I mean,
first of all, you already know what the weather is,
it's on your phone.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
You already know your favorite.

Speaker 3 (04:16):
Sports scores because you're getting the updates on your phone.
You already know the news because breaking news comes to
you at once. What could they possibly cover all the
local crimes that you're not interested in, or feel good

(04:37):
or lifestyle stories that aren't of interest, not to mention,
look at how technology has surrounded you. You know, it's
like newspapers how can they succeed what yesterday's news today?
How does that work today? So technology played a role,

(05:02):
but ultimately their strategy to turn late night from entertainment
to politics, and they knew when they were doing it.
Then Jimmy Kimmel says something outrageous. I mean, we all
have contracts. I got news for you. If I go
on the air and say something really stupid, I could

(05:25):
get suspended or fired too.

Speaker 4 (05:29):
But that's not what the left is going to do.

Speaker 3 (05:31):
As David Sanati said three days ago, he saw this,
smell this rat a mile away. Don't celebrate this. The
left is going to use this. I remember when liberal
talk radio was the new big thing and there was
no audience for it, and it failed this late night

(05:58):
just like network news, just like local news, just like
newspapers being in the back pocket of one party. It
was a predictable failure and everybody gets it. But it's
not going to stop the left from playing it. And
then Donald Trump kind of played it into their hand,
suggesting the FCC should take licenses away from TV networks

(06:19):
that are overwhelmingly critical of him. Boy, that's pat poor wording.
Now you're begging for them to go there. It's not working.
Nobody's watching. It's not working, nobody's making money. It's not
a threat. We talked about this a great Land yesterday.

(06:39):
I don't care really what Jimmy Kimmel said because I
wasn't watching, and now that he's gone, I still won't
be watching. I understand how Disney got put in this position,
but is Disney doing this to make Jimmy Kimmel this
is the person.

Speaker 4 (06:59):
Of error. Now he's the victim, and Barack Obama chimed in.

Speaker 3 (07:06):
Ah, I'm much, and all media companies stop standing up
to this president, this tyrant. They had no problem canceling
during the woe craze. But I've played this a million times.

(07:27):
People don't realize. I actually read Johnny Carson's thesis paper
at the University of Nebraska on comedy.

Speaker 4 (07:36):
He really was a smart guy, very smart.

Speaker 3 (07:41):
There was a time, perhaps roughly the way things are
in our cultural and political climate today, when then getting
away with it Bias sixty minutes was pressing Johnny Carson,
speaking down to Johnny Carson because he's not using his voice,

(08:06):
he's not using his large audience to further the left agent.

Speaker 4 (08:13):
And watch how Johnny responds.

Speaker 7 (08:14):
He gets sensitive about the fact that people say he'll never.

Speaker 4 (08:18):
Take a serious controversy.

Speaker 7 (08:21):
Well, I have an answer to that, I said, Now
tell me the last time that Jack Benny red Skelton
uh Benny comedian used his show to do serious issues.

Speaker 4 (08:32):
That's not what I'm there for. Can't they see that?
But you and I do.

Speaker 7 (08:36):
They think that just because you have it tonight's show,
that you must deal in serious issues.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
That's a danger. It's a real danger.

Speaker 7 (08:44):
Once you start that, you start to forget that self
important feeling. That's what you say has great import And
you know, strangely enough, you could use that show as
a form you could sway people, And I don't think
you should as an entertainer.

Speaker 4 (08:57):
Are you reluctant in putting together your monologue to go
hard on a guy?

Speaker 7 (09:02):
Only when I sensed the mood is in which you
can do from an audience. And I'll give you perfect illustration.
When Wilburn Mills had his problem with the famous Manny
prox and the title basement and so forth, it was
amusing to most people, and you could do jokes about it.
I stopped doing jokes immediately as soon as people found

(09:23):
out that he was an alcoholic.

Speaker 3 (09:25):
So two things you hear in that one, a late
night talk show is not a political show, nor should
one use their entertainment celebrity to shape minds. That's not
what the show is, and it's very dangerous, and you
could do it, he said, but it's very dangerous. The

(09:47):
other was a sensitive topic and he was just using
human compassion, elementary judgment and when it's okay and not okay.
And you say, well, that was Johnny Carr. That was
the king of talk telling you exactly what Stephen Colbert,

(10:12):
David Letterman in the latter years Stephen Colbert and Jimmy
Kimmel decisively did. And obviously in the grave, Johnny was right.
It is a huge failure. But you know what, it's
even worse than that. Jimmy Kimmel knew what he was doing.
Listen to this old clip. It's a bit of a

(10:36):
risk that you're taking talking about that stuff.

Speaker 4 (10:38):
You might lose the audience.

Speaker 8 (10:39):
Like three years ago, I was equally liked by Republicans
and Democrats, and then Republican numbers went way down, like
thirty percent or whatever. And you know, as a talk
show host, that's not ideal.

Speaker 4 (10:53):
But I did. I would do it again in a heartbeat.
So you don't mind if Republicans turn off your show,
I wouldn't say it.

Speaker 8 (10:59):
Oh mind, I mean everyone, I want everyone with a
television to watch the show. But if they're so turned
off by my opinion on healthcare and gun violence, then.

Speaker 4 (11:13):
I don't know. I probably won't want to have a
conversation with him anyway.

Speaker 3 (11:16):
If Jimmy Kimmel is without a job permanently, and by
the way, we covered this yesterday because of ratings, because
of revenue, because of lack of success, because of now.

Speaker 4 (11:34):
Consistent failure, he wasn't going.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
To get renewed at the end of the year anyway,
which is why David's and not he said, I don't
trust Disney. They could be doing this just to martyr him. Remember,
in a matrix, narrative is everything not facts. Emotion is
everything not truth. So if they can get I mean,

(12:00):
think about yesterday the notion that Jimmy Kimmels First Amendment
rights have been taken by a tyrannical president because of
his positions and opinions. As they're trying to sway you

(12:24):
away from noticing a man's life was taken for that, But.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
The truth is that isn't the reason.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
Failure is the reason, and strategy was the reason of
the failure. But in a matrix culture, narrative and narrative
repeating is everything. So the left is walking around. They're
already passed Charlie Kirk's murder and in doing so without

(12:54):
a single word against guns. Grandfathers are not in scripted
or not. And they've moved on now from Chardie Kirk,
whose life was taken violently, to Jimmy Kimmel and the
myth of a tyrant silencing his enemies.

Speaker 5 (13:22):
Now.

Speaker 3 (13:22):
The only thing I will hand them is I don't
think of a dumber thing President Trump could have said.

Speaker 4 (13:27):
Then maybe the FCC should take.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
Licenses away from TV networks that overwhelmingly are critical of him,
or maybe you should just, you know, keep cutting three
hundred and fifty billion dollar deals on these foreign visits
and move on dot org. They got no ratings, they
got no revenue, The shows are being canceled. Technology has
moved on. Don't play into their hands. We'll get more

(13:58):
into that in a little bit. Kamala Harrisoi, did she
don't I mean, don't people have editors anymore, Kamala, are
you sure you want to? Right? The Pete Bootages was
your first choice, but you wouldn't pick him because he
was gay. I mean, did anybody think that was gonna
go over big? And it didn't go over very big
with Pete either. I might add, we'll go over the

(14:22):
Kirk memorial. That's probably the most important thing to do. Unrelated,
but related opposition to trans movement, Now that's the movement.
It doesn't mean you don't have a right to be trans.
If you're an adult, that's you know, whether or not
you think you were. God made a mistake and accedentally

(14:43):
put you in the wrong body. You can either go
get help for that or you could just become that.
And that's fine once you're an adult. But the movement
to force this on our children, the opposition to that
movement remains as high as ever, only nineteen percent. Another
way of looking at it, sixty nine percent of posed

(15:04):
schools and teachers counseling students on their sexual matters, especially at.

Speaker 4 (15:10):
The ages they're doing it, it's sick.

Speaker 3 (15:13):
Nearly seven and ten sixty nine percent agree there are
only two genders, male and female. If there is such
a thing as a trans movement. It's failed. And that's
majorities of all parties, of all genders, and of all races.

(15:43):
A lot to kick around today, a lot to understand,
and only one chance to live. This Friday, September, the
nineteenth year of Our Lord, twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
Five, This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono Morning.

Speaker 5 (15:57):
Michael David said that maybe Disney took Kimmel off the
air to martyr him My question is, maybe Jimmy Kimmel
said what he said to martyr himself. He saw all
the attention that his friend Stephen Colbert was getting.

Speaker 4 (16:13):
He knew he was not going to be around at
the end of.

Speaker 5 (16:15):
The year, So let's go out in a blaze of
glory and be a martyr or.

Speaker 3 (16:20):
Even worse, he knows what he's doing next, and this
is a great way to get a lot of attention
to him for when he launches it, especially if it's
just YouTube. Yeah, all of that, all the above, and
shane him on all of them for not having basic.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
Compassion and funeral etiquette.

Speaker 3 (16:41):
This is all a Matrix tug award to get the
attention away from Charlie Kirk, who is the real victim
of the last two weeks.

Speaker 5 (16:50):
This is Pebe from White House and your morning show
is My Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno.

Speaker 4 (17:02):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:03):
You can listen to your morning show live. Make us
a part of your morning routine or your drive to
work companion on great stations like Talk Radio ninety eight
point three and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville, Tupelo's News
and Talk one to one point one and ten sixty WKMQ,
and how about Talk six to fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California.
Love to have you listen live, but are grateful you're

(17:25):
here now for the podcast.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
Enjoy Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 9 (17:28):
Concerning Jimmy Kimmel, he actually lied, that was the bottom line.
He told a Layton lie. Used his platform provided to
him by Disney and ABC to tell a lie. And
I think that's perfect grounds fire anybody. I mean, I
could hire anyone for any reason, but you know, if
you're gonna use the platform to tell a lie this

(17:50):
way the audience, I mean, good on ABC.

Speaker 3 (17:52):
No, don't don't do that to Dallas. I can't.

Speaker 4 (17:55):
I say, it just happens automatically.

Speaker 3 (17:57):
I can't stop that obviously if you go over there
thirty seconds the orchestra will start playing No. That's a
great point, Dallas. I think it's also worthy of note.
I'm not ignoring the flagrant foul of the play, but
you need to know something about the team prior to
the play call ten years ago, twenty five to fifty four.

(18:20):
Remember the clip I just played from Jimmy Keimley's I
didn't care. You know, he lost thirty percent of his
Republican audience, but he doesn't care. Well, it's twenty five
to fifty four audience, and I think this is as
much technology as it is bad strategy and going political.
But twenty five to fifty four, he once had a
million viewers. He now has two hundred thousand. That's quick math.

(18:45):
He's lost eighty percent of his audience. And you're paying
fifteen million dollars a year to this guy to lose
eighty percent of his audience. The comment got him taken
off the air indefinitely. The reason he wasn't going to
get renewed and the reason why he's probably not coming back,
or if he is, it's just to say goodbye for

(19:05):
a month or so. Is failure, But that's not going
to stop the left. What ultimately did Jimmy Kimmel do well,
He tried to make it look like the Trump administration
is scrambling to keep you from seeing this was a

(19:28):
MAGA supporter that shot a mega operative. That is both yes,
in error, but also very insensitive and timing. And that's
what they're really insensitively doing, whether it's Barack Obama, whether

(19:49):
it's the media, they're trying to set the narrative of
Jimmy Kimmel is now the martyr, not Charlie Kirk, that
Jimmy Kimmel is somehow a vict him because he can't
express his free speech and opinions, while ignoring Charlie Kirk
being killed for his I mean, it's right up there

(20:12):
with the shooter. We have the story of how he
was so afraid the cops were going to shoot him.
That's what we waited for hours that night for for
him to negotiate a safe way to be turned over
where he knew he wouldn't get hurt. Hours after he
didn't mind hurting someone else. Narcissism of anyone. But yeah,

(20:43):
there's a lot of play here, but ultimately, you know,
you lose eighty percent of your audience and you're going
to lose the need to be on the air. All right,
Kamala Harris, why would you write this book? I mean,
you know, this is like a self inflicted wound. So

(21:05):
here's the Democrat Party trying to say, you know, they're
the party of diversity, They're the party of inclusive inclusion.

Speaker 4 (21:13):
And then you know, Kama comes out with her book.

Speaker 3 (21:18):
Well, I really wanted Mayor Pete Budajeedge to be my
running mate.

Speaker 4 (21:22):
But I went with Tim Walls. Why would you do that?

Speaker 3 (21:28):
Well, I mean, Pete was my close friend, but I
thought it was too big of a risk, you know,
for a black woman to run with a gay man.
But Pete would have been the ideal partner if only
he was white and straight. I mean, why would you

(21:55):
think that Let alone say that, let alone type that,
let alone not.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
Edit that, let alone printed. I mean, you're sure that
wasn't a Babylon.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
D No, no, no, this is actually from the book. Although, boy,
the Babylon b has just been on a roll this week,
haven't they. My favorite was the one earlier in the week.
You know, Democrats got to stop saying things that deranged
killers are etching on their weapons and ammunition, but they
haven't stopped. We're already asking a lot of Americans, you know,

(22:29):
to an except a woman. Is there something inferior about
a woman?

Speaker 4 (22:34):
You know?

Speaker 3 (22:34):
I really thought the representative from Hawaii couldn't be topped
this week when she's drilling cash Pattel for making FBI
candidates have to do a single pull up and she
literally well read for the first time where it's prepared
for her ignorantly.

Speaker 4 (22:58):
You can't have a demand on a woman.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
To do something that men with a physical geological advantage.
I mean, she just dispelled their entire argument for transgendered
males participating in women's sports. Do you know why I

(23:23):
never liked to lie? I mean, when you start thinking
about fantastic lies like I, this is inconceivable to me.
And if somebody's in this situation, please I'm not thinking
of you, or don't be offended. I don't even know
how you would carry on an affair. How would you
do that? How would you carry that guilt? How would

(23:45):
did you carry that double mindedness or or all the
lies that it would take to find time to And
then again part of me is in off how do
you do that with life? Three sixty? Like yesterday, I'm
sitting in the nursing home. Oh, I see you decided
to go see your mom after Gough. Well, I guess
I could have an affair with somebody in the nursing home.

(24:07):
That would probably be my only Oh God, that made
me laugh. But how exhausting. Let me tell something. It's
not exhausting at all to live in truth. It's not
exhausting at all to speak the truth. But lies look
so exhausting to me because our brains aren't worded to

(24:31):
remember all our lies. And for every lie you tell,
you got to tell ten lives to cover the lies.

Speaker 4 (24:39):
It's just exhausting.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
Jesus said, I Am the Way, the Truth, and the Life.
We uttered those words people of faith all the time.
Do you ever take them wanted to and just fall
to your knees and gratitude for each I'm just you know,
I am grateful for him and what that provides for

(25:13):
my abundant life on earth. And I could give you
circumstance after circumstance where he's calmed the storm or conquered
the evil.

Speaker 4 (25:23):
But how about truth? He is the truth, the truth.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
It's a thing. It's a being, and it never fails.
Isn't that wonderful? Because these people living by a false gospel,
a false worldview, of false ideology.

Speaker 4 (25:41):
It's all built on lies.

Speaker 3 (25:43):
And it's constantly tripping them up, and they're the only
ones that don't see it. So let me get this straight.
You're a black woman, and an Indian woman and a woman.
Those three things voters can overcome. But Pete being gay,

(26:06):
they can't. Now, I gotta tell you something, Just when
you think I can't get any worse, she even throws
in her husband's Jewish I.

Speaker 4 (26:22):
Don't even know.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
I mean, do you think an editor looked at this
and said, you probably don't want to say this. Here
was her direct quote from the book. But we are
already asking a lot of America now stop right there,
because right now, mostly what we're talking about is the
ignorance of her statement. She is implying that we are

(26:48):
that ignorant and bigoted. This is their view of America
coming out. Oh look, I'm already asking a lot of
the you know, deplorable American people who cling to their
guns and bibles to accept me a woman. Oh so
your view is it's a stretch for America to respect women.

(27:12):
Live with that. Oh, you think America's racist, so we
don't respect women. We don't like black people. Oh and
you're married to a Jewish man, so we don't like
Jews either.

Speaker 4 (27:34):
That's what she's saying.

Speaker 3 (27:37):
We're already asking a lot of America to accept a woman,
a black woman, a black woman married to a Jewish man.
I mean, part of me wanted to say, screw it,
let's just do it, but knowing what was at stake,
you know, democracy, it was too big to risk, and.

Speaker 4 (27:59):
The safe play was Governor Timmy. That was the same play.
That's the punchline.

Speaker 3 (28:05):
Do you see the humor Jimmy Timmel's missing while being
so political? Harris writes, Bootage originally topped her list of
eight names. Oh I love Pete, love working with Pete,
he and his husband chasing their friends. Bootaji fell out
of the running because Harris narrowed down her list to

(28:27):
a few finalists and just thought it was too risky.
I love Pete's response, Well, I'm surprised to read this
passage in her book. Surprised that I would have been
her running mate had I been white and straight, That

(28:53):
he takes the high road. But my experience in politics
has been that the way you earn trust with voters
is based mostly on what they think you're going to
do for their lives, not on categories. Now we have
scandals every day that are worse than Watergate, and Watergate

(29:17):
cost Richard Nixon the presidency cost ultimately the Republican Party
later the presidency, and we ignore much bigger scandals every day.
A quote like this in a book, let me make
two points that should be the end of her political career.

Speaker 4 (29:39):
Those kinds of mistakes. All H. W.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
Bush said is read my lips, no new taxes out.
All he did in debate was just kind of glance
at his watch. For all we knew he had to
pee and he didn't want to see how much time
he had left.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
I mean, we don't know that did it? He lost?

Speaker 3 (30:00):
How can she survive this quote with her own party,
let alone American voters, And if she does, we got
bigger problems than her.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
We got bigger problems than Barack Obama.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
Just like in the death of Charlie Kirk, as bad
as that moment was, and I still can't get past
a wife who lost her husband or two children that
lost their father. What's been revealed since in a completely

(30:42):
different way just as horrific to witness in my opinion.
All Right, Kamala Harris, thank you. I don't even know
if loser the day applies. It's a shocking thoughtless of
the day.

Speaker 4 (31:04):
Kavala Harris.

Speaker 3 (31:05):
And she has no idea what she said, and they
printed it anyway.

Speaker 2 (31:09):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 4 (31:14):
For just waking up.

Speaker 3 (31:15):
The widow of Charlie Kirk has been unanimously voted and
named the Turning Point USA next CEO.

Speaker 6 (31:24):
Take over the organization that her husband helped create. Kirk
was assassinated last week while speaking at a college in Utah.
In a statement, Turning Points board members said they will
not surrender or kneel before evil. Turning Point USA was
founded in twenty twelve and is credited with helping to
galvanize a youth voters in support of President Trump.

Speaker 4 (31:42):
I Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 3 (31:43):
Protesters are speaking out after Jimmy Kimmelive was suspended indefinitely
by ABC Tammy Trehio.

Speaker 4 (31:49):
As details, protest.

Speaker 10 (31:50):
Was held outside the El Capitan Theater in Hollywood and
led by Refusefascism dot org. This follows Kimmel's comments criticizing
the right wing response to Charlie Kirk's assess that led
to the show's suspension. Protesters condemn the suspension as politically
motivated censorship and a violation of free speech. The group
is calling for the immediate reinstatement of Kimmel's show I'm

(32:11):
Tammy Trio.

Speaker 3 (32:12):
Meanwhile, Disney's going what Jimmy Kimmel has, as we just noted,
lost seventy three percent of his audience in a decade,
seventy three percent from one million down to two hundred thousand.

Speaker 4 (32:25):
The ad revenue looks even worse.

Speaker 3 (32:31):
Ad spending for the late night segment across ABC, CBS,
and NBC collectively for all three.

Speaker 4 (32:40):
This speaks to my point.

Speaker 3 (32:42):
Yes, technology has moved on, but also the strategy to
get political was a huge mistake. As Johnny Carson warned,
ad spending in six years for late night television went
from four f one hundred and thirty nine million to
two hundred and twenty one million and half, So the

(33:07):
three are competing for half the dollars was seventy percent
less of the audience, and in the case of Jimmy Kimmel.
It's one of the worst scenarios. Jimmy Kimmellive dropped sixteen
percent in revenue year over year, earning an estimated just
forty six million dollars, of which he's fifteen million alone.

(33:30):
That's before you pay for the room, the lighting, the producers,
the directors, the guests, the band. It's all a matrix
game for narrative. But why doesn't Disney at least be honest.

(33:51):
Jimmy Kimmel's was going to be gone anyway, They're all
going to be gone. Maybe there's a way for Jimmy
fallon the sole survivor. At least he wouldn't have to
divide up the audience and the revenue. They killed late
night television with an assist from technology. Meanwhile, playing right

(34:13):
into that narrative game, President Trump on the plane suggested
the FCC should take licenses away from networks that are
overwhelmingly critical of him, playing right into the narrative.

Speaker 11 (34:25):
President Trump made the remarks Thursday aboard Air Force One,
a day after Disney owned ABC took Jimmy Kimmel off
the air indefinitely. The FCC had threatened to take action
following the comedian's comments about the alleged assassin of political
activist Charlie Kirk. When asked if FCC Commissioner Brendan Carr
should go after other talk show hosts, Trump said maybe

(34:46):
their licenses should be taken away. The President said when
all the evening shows are critical of him, they're not
allowed to do that, calling them, quote an arm of
the Democrat Party.

Speaker 4 (34:57):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 3 (34:58):
In sports, Josh Allen three touchdowns, James Cook one hundred
and eight yards in a touchdown, big interception in the
fourth quarter. Bill's now three and zero, winning thirty one
to twenty one over the Miami Dolphins.

Speaker 4 (35:10):
Last night.

Speaker 3 (35:10):
On Thursday Night football and baseball, Tiger swept by the
Guardians lost again three to one. Yesterday, Red's beat the
Cubs one to nothing, Ray shut out the Jays four nothing.
Brew Crew beat the Angels five to two, A's one
to five, three over the Red Sox, and the Dad
Ja Blue two to one over the Giants. Padres lost
six to one to the Mets. Birthdays today well. Speaking
of the sole survivor, tonight's show, host Jimmy Fallon fifty one,

(35:34):
actor Jeremy Irons seventy seven, Trish Yearwood sixty one, and
Good Morning America's one of their first hosts, Joan London
seventy five years old.

Speaker 4 (35:43):
Today, that's your birthday.

Speaker 3 (35:44):
Happy birthday, So glad you were born and thanks for
waking up with your morning show.

Speaker 2 (35:49):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld Joano
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