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September 19, 2025 36 mins

Meta’s $800 “computer glasses” are here, and you may want to buy a pair. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL is available to talk about what will probably be one of the hottest things under the Christmas tree this year. 

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

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show can be heard on great radio stations
across the country like News Talk ninety two point one
and six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee, or thirteen hundred
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Speaker 1 (00:14):
We invite you to listen.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
Live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work. But as
we always say, better late than never. Thanks for joining
us for the podcast.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Three, starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:27):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:34):
This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Jordan Charlotty Kirk's widow has been unanimously voted CEO of.

Speaker 1 (00:42):
Turning Point USA.

Speaker 2 (00:43):
The Supreme Court will hear arguments on the legality of
President Trump's tariff plans in November, and the bills are
now three and zero. Beating the Dolphins last night thirty
one twenty one on Thursday Night Football.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Good morning, and.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Welcome to Friday, September, the nineteenth ear of Our Lord
twenty twenty on the erin streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
This is your morning show. I'm Michael del Jerner. We're
gonna get your talkbacks in a moment. For those of
you that aren't familiar, if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app,
you'll see a little microphone. If you press that, it'll
count you down three two one and give you thirty

(01:16):
seconds to ask a question, make a statement. No longer
are the days in talk radio you call a phone
number and rod on hold. Your time is too important
and the show belongs to you, So one take advantage
of the talkback. No on hold, We have your thoughts immediately,
we can share it with the class.

Speaker 1 (01:33):
And oh, by the way, we can't have.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
Your morning show without your voice, so use the talkback
or email Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com. Well metas
eight one hundred dollars computer glasses. They're finally here and
you may want to buy a pair. National correspondent for
your morning show, roreo'neil is here to talk about what
will probably be one of the hottest things under the
Christmas tree this year. You mean this is better than

(01:56):
what I did for twenty minutes at the Apple store.

Speaker 4 (02:01):
Gee, well, there were some issues. Have you seen the video?

Speaker 2 (02:07):
No huhuh, we'll look it up.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
Mark Zuckerberg was presenting these new eight hundred dollars ray
band display glasses for Meta.

Speaker 1 (02:15):
Things did not go very well.

Speaker 4 (02:17):
They were great because they have this wrist thing that's
also part of it to help you text message and
what happens. Does you wear these glasses, you sort of
look like true carry and then the it'll display in
the lower right eye you can see texts coming in.

Speaker 1 (02:32):
If you can do video calls and things like that.

Speaker 4 (02:35):
So there's Zuckerberg showing how we can text out like
thirty words a minute with the different gestures, and he says, oh,
let's take a video call, and then things go right
down the drain. At that point, the video call doesn't work.
You can't get through. They keep calling back. It really
felt like something that would happen to the rest of us,
not one of the richest men in the country. But
these glasses are supposed to hit store shelves in about

(02:57):
two weeks. The bottom line based price, we think is
around eight hundred dollars. I was as a guy who
wears glasses, I always say, well, what about my lenses?

Speaker 1 (03:07):
What do I do?

Speaker 4 (03:08):
I can't you know, Okay, or these things are designed
for people in their twenties who don't have readers right
that they need to put on.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
So anyway, all right, so just based on what you're
based on what you're saying. And I can never remember
what Apple calls there is something. Nick and I were
at the app vision quest or vision something. They've all
they're all just vision pro. So my daughters were there
buying laptops, and you know, it was taken forever. So
Nick and I did the twenty minute presentation and it

(03:37):
takes a while to set up and has to scan
your eye and scan everything, and then once it started,
you know, it really was kind of neat. I can
set it to where I'm seeing my screen, but I
can also see through it, like if other people are
in the room, or I can set it where I
just see my screen. Then I can set where I'm at.
I mean, I could put myself at first Base at
Fenway Park. I could do my work from the surface

(04:00):
of the moon. And it's three dimensionals, so if I
look down, I see the moon. If I look up,
I see black sky and stars. It was really fascinating
and you look at something and then you do a
little gesture with your finger and that clicks it and
you really get used to it rather quickly.

Speaker 1 (04:13):
This I'm trying.

Speaker 2 (04:14):
I'm trying to figure out how this one works and
that what are you seeing and are you able to
see both through or I mean, we got a bunch
of people walking around staring at computers and typing and
walking into walls.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
God willing, Yes, it's not buying that these these really
are like normal glasses, but they just have this little display.
So these are not as sophisticated as the ones you're
talking about.

Speaker 1 (04:41):
These are dumbed down. Also the lower price point.

Speaker 4 (04:44):
Uh so it really is just a little projected display
in the lower right through a pair of like I said,
drup garried normal glasses but with big thick rims for
some reason.

Speaker 2 (04:53):
Uh.

Speaker 4 (04:53):
And you can just see the little bit there the
lower right hand part of your screen. So they're not immersive.
They're not you're not on the Mars, you're not at Fenway. Regrettably,
this is mainly calls and texting, right correct, So, but
that's what they're supposed to do. They're not over promising
the problem is they're not over delivering either. So let's
see how how this eight hundred dollars, something goes through.

Speaker 2 (05:16):
Yeah, I don't know how many of these are going
to be under the Christmas tree until they figure out
how to take a call. Rory's going to be back
in the third hour with the controversy over the suspension
of Jimmy Kimmel. We just we've crunched some numbers on
Jimmy Kimmel real quickly, just for those of you that
are just waking up alarm clocks going off. Obviously, the
comment was very insensitive and very inaccurate, but I think

(05:38):
there's more to this, and this explains why David Sanatti
was very suspicious of the mouse and trying to make
this a narrative and a martyrdom, because now we're talking
about the injustice for Jimmy Kimmel, not the taking of
Charlie Kirk's life.

Speaker 1 (05:58):
Here's the truth.

Speaker 2 (06:00):
Even though the Emmys gave their award to Steven Colbert
and he made it into a big validation, he's gone
because they were losing forty million dollars. It wasn't a
ratings or revenue viable product. Now you can blame what
you want, them going political and one sided at that

(06:20):
or technology. Moving on, and we're simply not watching late
night television. Certainly not in mainstream network television. But either way,
it's gone. And we looked at the revenue for all
three networks. It's in half in six years, in half.
And Jimmy Kimmel's portion has been losing sixteen percent a year.

(06:43):
It's down to forty six million dollars in net revenue.
He's fifteen million a year. That doesn't make any sense.
The ratings twenty five to fifty four have gone from
one million to two hundred thousand and ten ten years,
they've lost.

Speaker 1 (07:01):
Eighty percent of their audience.

Speaker 2 (07:06):
And we think, as best we can exege you know
the numbers, it appears as they lost equally amount on revenue.
It's just not viable. That's why we played the Johnny
Carson clip earlier. Johnny said, you can't do this. I'll
play a clip of Jimmy Kimmel. I'll play him again
and the sounds of the day. And Jimmy Kimmel knew,

(07:29):
but he just cared so much about the leftist cause
it was worth it to him. And you know who's
being the most dishonest in this is Disney. They ought
to say while this comment made us take him off
the air. We're ultimately canceling him for lack of audience
and revenue because that's the reason Stephen Colbert got it.

(07:51):
And just as Noster del Journal predicted, there'd be just
one sole survivor, Jimmy Fallon and maybe not taking the
bait and being over political and without having to split
it with two other networks, maybe he can find a
place to viably remain. And America goes full circle. We're
back to just the Tonight show.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
All right?

Speaker 2 (08:14):
Uh, ken I your warning show without your voice. I
want to start with Bob, who I believe is in Mississippi.

Speaker 5 (08:19):
Should President Trump expose lies or not?

Speaker 1 (08:26):
Well, that's a lot of the blue question.

Speaker 2 (08:27):
Well yes, but if that's in reference to today's story,
which is the president on a plane suggesting the FCC
should take licenses away from TV networks that are overwhelmingly
critical to him, I would have felt a little better
if he said one sided politically, which they are.

Speaker 1 (08:50):
But unlike Kamala Harris and.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
If you didn't hear that, Kamala did a section in
her book about why she didn't choose Pete Buddhaget that just.

Speaker 1 (09:01):
Hangs her politically.

Speaker 2 (09:02):
But we all know the Democrat Party is in the
back pocket or the mainstream media is in the back
pocket of the Democrat Party. You know, the print media is,
we know social media is. Give the American people a
little bit of credit. You don't need to state all
the obvious, and you don't need to take this heated moment.

(09:24):
I would have wanted to see the president. Ultimately, I
want to see the president talk to the reasonable center.
Stop viewing America like we're online. Online is the extreme
right and the extreme left. The really smart people aren't
there engaging in meaningless arguments. Richard Nixon talking to the

(09:46):
center got America out of the last crisis. Similar to
this in the late sixties early seventies might be wise,
but you could talk to keeping the focus on Charlie Kirk,
the ultimate victim. I wouldn't have I wouldn't have given
Jimmy Fallon or not Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel this much attention.

(10:09):
And I certainly wouldn't look a camera in the eye
and say, I think the SEC should take a look
at licenses of TV networks at overwhelming their critical of me.
Now you're just feeding into their narrative, James, I think
James in Ohio.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
Next.

Speaker 5 (10:25):
When Hitler would talk to his audiences, he didn't talk
to them, he would scream at them. And the two
days of the cash Baital hearings, the Democrats screamed every
one of them. Interesting and yet Charlie Kirky, you socretary
in questioning a very calm speech to convince and turn
my hearts and minds.

Speaker 2 (10:46):
Socrates gets a name dropped today. I'll give you a
great example of that. Shad Talib. She started screaming at
Byron Donald's. Now there's something brilliant. Look, it's a checkmate
for the Dummocrats. Whether Donald Trump sends National Guard into
a city or not, it brings people's attention back to

(11:07):
the powerful truth. The priority of municipal government, county government,
state government, and federal government is security. So in DC
was different because that falls under Congress. But sending in
the National Guard and putting an end to crime, it
just showed the rest of the world. You mean, we

(11:27):
don't have to live with murder, you don't have to
live with drug lords, we don't have to live with
human trafficking.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
No.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
Now, if they want to say that's fascist and tyrannical.
For you to send our military into our own street, well,
then you serve and protect your people instead of bashing
law enforcement and saying they're the problem and the perpetrators
are the victims. Get in there and clean up your
own streets. It's a checkmate from more at one. The

(11:59):
last thing you want to do. Always have to literally
send the National Guard in. But if that's what it
takes in Memphis where it's welcome, or if that's what
it takes in DC where it isn't, it gets a
great result, so be it. But here's the brilliant part
of it now in d C, leading by example instead
of just talking about it, doing something, instead of just
making a good argument, save a freaking life. So what

(12:23):
they're doing in DC is they're passing youth offender bills.
So first came the wave of enforcement. We don't have
to live with our kids killing each other, We don't
have to live with old people being mugged, raped, murdered,
human trafficking, drug overdose is we can enforce the law,

(12:43):
just like we secured the border and enforce the law.
We don't have to live like this. And the American
people are seeing the results and liking it because nobody
wants to be unsafe. Nobody wants to work where it's unsafe,
or live where it's unsafe. Nobody wants to raise their
children in words, unsafe. You can't lose on this hill.

(13:04):
But the brilliance of starting by enforcing the law and
giving them a shining example of a once dangerous city
turned safe almost as quick as the border was secured
and our nation became safe. And then the Democrats are
fighting it, and by fighting deportations and by fighting the
border secure and by fighting law enforcement, they're actually rooting

(13:28):
for crime. It's insanity. But here's the best part. Now
that we've shown them how to enforce the law, now
they're going to show them how You don't let them
walk right out the back door. You don't just arrest
them and release them. You arrest them, you charge them,
you try them, and you rehabilitate them if you can.

(13:52):
But you protect fellow citizens in the meantime, same hill,
different peak. But that didn't stop Rushia talib from attacking
Byron Donald's And just like Kamala Harris, based on a lie,
walks herself into intolerance, Watch for t Lee bends up

(14:15):
on this one. Talking to a black member of Congress,
I might remind you, listen, I think.

Speaker 6 (14:21):
It's really important you need to stand up against this
fascist takeover. That's not a bad word, it's a fact.
And here in DC Rhetorican it is so incredibly important,
mister chair, that this committee does not allow rhetoric that
the fames are paints Washington Z in a way that

(14:43):
you all haven't really truly seen.

Speaker 5 (14:45):
You're just reading it.

Speaker 6 (14:46):
No, you're just reading it or something off of.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
Some yields to a question.

Speaker 6 (14:50):
Yeah, I think it's really important, lady, don't I don't
even have time I can sell you is expirement, mister chair.
But you all live here and you're not telling people
the beautiful parts that you do see in the art
nation's capital. And no, no, no, it's just wrong.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
Chairman.

Speaker 7 (15:07):
I think it's doesn't have an argument, but she's gonna
refer to the media, colleague.

Speaker 1 (15:13):
We were from the third Rich. Is insane.

Speaker 7 (15:15):
It's insane. It's insane. It's insane, like the member of
the third Right to you, Miss Lee's.

Speaker 2 (15:22):
Calling a black member of Congress a member of the
third Reich to you, you're taking is that what.

Speaker 1 (15:27):
You think, is that what you think? Is that what
you think?

Speaker 4 (15:31):
I think it's radical, and i think it's insane.

Speaker 1 (15:33):
And I'll respect everything that you're saying. You to say,
I think James pretty much hit the nail right When
you can't you.

Speaker 2 (15:41):
Just yell your grave, dear God, get us out of this.

Speaker 1 (15:48):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del.

Speaker 2 (15:52):
Cho, Charlie Kirk's widow, unanimously named CEO of Turning Point US,
A former President Barack Obama urging media companies everywhere to
stand up to President Trump after the Jimmy Kimmel suspension
and keep losing money and keep losing audience and keep
doing programming that doesn't work. And the Bells are now

(16:14):
three and after beating the Dolphins last night thirty one
to twenty one. That's just some of the top stories
waking up this morning. When we come back, your Sounds
of the day. These are OSCAR winning sound clips and
they're very revealing and somewhat entertaining.

Speaker 8 (16:30):
Next, Yo, Hi everybody, this is Dion the Wanderer. My
Morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Bell Jorderno.

Speaker 2 (16:48):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your Morning Show is heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five,
nine twelve fifty w HNZ and Tampa, Florida News Radio
five seventy wk b N and Youngstown, Ohio and New
Radio one thousand KTOK in Oklahoma City. Love to have
you listen to us live in the morning. And of
course we're so grateful you came for the podcast.

Speaker 1 (17:08):
Enjoy. Thanks for bringing us along with you.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
This is your morning show on the air and streaming
live on your iHeartRadio app.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
I am humbled and honored to serve you.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
My name is Michael Jeffrey's got control of the sounds.

Speaker 1 (17:20):
No more wildfire and mellow things. No, we're not going
to do that.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
We've got to start people's weekend off right. Red is
headed on vacation next week. There are rumors that perhaps
his mind has begun that vacation some hour and twenty
minutes ago.

Speaker 1 (17:36):
He said very little to contribute today. He looks very
relaxed already, doesn't.

Speaker 2 (17:41):
He pray for me? His wife's taking him hiking again.
I think she's trying to kill you, I really do.
She gets you out in the middle of the mountains
and nowhere, I mean, look at you. She's trying to
get like a coronary event to happen and there'll be
no one there to resuscitate you.

Speaker 1 (18:01):
I do have a pretty big life insurance policy. The
suspicion continues to mount.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
Erica Kirk, the widow of Charlie Kirk, was unanimously voted
CEO of Turning Point USA after her husband's assassination. In
addition to serving as CEO, she will also chair the
group's Board of Directors. The memorial is set. We're talking
super Bowl level security in Arizona. The main memorial will

(18:32):
be at the State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona. However,
there is overflow that is anticipated to fill yet another arena.
The US Secret Service has been designated as the federal
coordinator of this effort. You have I did the raw numbers.
I think seven of the ten that will be speaking

(18:53):
are in the line of succession. I can think of
no greater security risk in one place in American political
history than this event coming up.

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Please pray accordingly.

Speaker 2 (19:10):
The Department of Homeland Security has designated the forthcoming funeral
and memorial service a Special Event Assessment Reigning Seer Level one.
This designation is reserved for events of the highest national
significance and enables the federal government to provide the full
range of law enforcement and security resources. I can't believe
the left hasn't brought up what that cost might be.

(19:35):
In terms of who is expected to speak the complete rundown,
the President of the United States, the Vice President of
the United States, the widow of Charlie Kirk Erica. White
House Chief of Staff Susie Wiles, who work closely with
Charlie Kirk. The Secretary of State Marco Rubio will speak.

(20:00):
Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Junior will speak.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseeth, Director of National Intelligence Telsey Gabbard,
the son of the President Donald Trump Junior, Tucker Carlson
will speak. White House Deputy and Chief of Staff Stephen
Miller will also be speaking. There are many other musical

(20:22):
artists who have been added in the tribute ceremony. I
believe it's eleven Mountain one Central to Eastern on Sunday,
and I know we'll have complete live coverage on iHeart
radio stations, and I'm sure Fox will cover it live.
It'll be interesting to see who else does. Hey, if
you're just waking up. We say it this way, always

(20:46):
revealing and often entertaining time for your sounds of the day.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
You did on the consequences.

Speaker 4 (20:53):
This is the best way to get back on your
fatis to get up.

Speaker 1 (20:55):
Off your eye. I've been living rent free in that
guy's head for years and that's just a.

Speaker 5 (20:59):
Bum chicken a aud they're just blowing off.

Speaker 2 (21:02):
Steve, where to begin? Let's start with the beginning. Now,
the beginning, of course, wasn't Johnny Carson. We used to
have tones followed by well the national anthem followed by
tones followed by static, and then NBC started the Today's
Show to start America's morning off with news. Somewhere along

(21:27):
the line, rather than going dark early, the idea came, well,
let's have if we have the Today's Show, the Tonight Show,
let's end their night the way we started it with
news with a little bit of a twist, and nobody
did that like Steve Allen. And then from Steve Allen
it went to Jack Park which really kind of gave you.

Speaker 1 (21:49):
The format that Johnny perfected.

Speaker 2 (21:54):
Jack Parr was an early exit after a very successful
few years, and then Johnny for three decades, the king
of late night talk, well, the transition of Johnny leaving
that didn't even go smoothly, with the tug of war
with David Letterman and Jay Leno, and Leno ultimately got

(22:16):
the Tonight show. David ultimately walked across the street to CBS.
There had been other shows from Dick Cavett to Joan
Rivers to Ourcinio Hall. That kind of came and went.
But then we entered the era of all three networks
having late night shows what they used to call their

(22:39):
eleven PM and then their late night after midnight. But
something changed, starting with Letterman towards the end, and certainly
with Jimmy Kimmel and certainly with Stephen Colbert, they became
far left political shows. Now I have to say, in
his defense, j never went there, and Jimmy Fallon didn't

(23:02):
go there. And then maybe why Jimmy Fallon is the
sole survivor and we predicted he'd be the sole survivor.
Why did Stephen Colbert get fired? Because they were losing
forty million dollars. It wasn't by ratings and viewers or
by revenue a viable product anymore. Had nothing to do

(23:25):
with Donald Trump, though they'll try to make that narrative
a reality.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
And now.

Speaker 2 (23:34):
Jimmy Kimmel makes a very inappropriate remark and he gets martyred.
But the reason he's going is the same reason as
Stephen Colbert. In ten years, his twenty five to fifty
four year old audience went from one million to two
hundred thousand. You lose eighty percent of your audience, you
get fired. The entire Late Night Pie for all late

(23:58):
night shows and all three network or has lost half
of its revenue in six years. Now, whether you blame technology,
we're getting too far left. It's a reality. And for
the Jimmy Timmel Show, the revenue's down to forty six
million dollars. His salary is fifteen. Never mind the writers,

(24:21):
never mind the band, never mind the producers, never mind
what the guests get paid. Funny how Disney doesn't want
us to know what CBS let us know just how
much money they were losing. Maybe the mouse is playing
games and want you to see this, says you can't
be against Donald Trump and survive. This happened long before that.

(24:46):
And going back to the King himself, when he was
pressed by sixty minutes, just as he predicted, he.

Speaker 3 (24:56):
Gets sensitive about the fact that people say he'll never
take a serious controversy. Well, I have an answer to that.
I said, no. Tell me the last time that Jack
Benny red Skelton Benny comedian used his show to do
serious issues. That's not what I'm there for.

Speaker 1 (25:15):
Can't they see that? But you and I do.

Speaker 3 (25:18):
They think that just because you have it tonight's show,
that you must deal in serious issues.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
That's a danger. It's a real danger.

Speaker 3 (25:26):
Once you start that, do 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.

Speaker 1 (25:37):
As an entertainer. It gets worse.

Speaker 2 (25:42):
Jimmy Kimmel himself knew what he was doing as he
was doing it, as he answered to a CBS morning show.

Speaker 6 (25:49):
It's a bit of a risk that you're taking talking
about that stuff.

Speaker 1 (25:52):
You might lose the audience.

Speaker 9 (25:53):
Like three years ago, I was equally liked by Republicans
and Democrats, and.

Speaker 8 (25:59):
Then republic numbers when it's real fun or whatever.

Speaker 9 (26:04):
And you know, as a talk show host, that's not ideal,
But I did.

Speaker 1 (26:08):
I would do it again. In a heartbeat.

Speaker 6 (26:10):
So you don't mind if Republicans turn off your.

Speaker 1 (26:12):
Show, I wouldn't say it, Oh mind. I mean, I
love for everyone.

Speaker 9 (26:14):
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 I don't know. I probably
won't want to have a conversation with them anyway.

Speaker 1 (26:30):
Well, and you're not.

Speaker 2 (26:33):
And it wasn't just thirty percent, it was eighty percent
of your audience. You lost over a decade, and your
revenue is down to forty six million and your salary's
fifteen million. Now there is the double standard that's being played.
MSNBC's Chris Hayes gives us a great example. Here's Hayes

(26:54):
on Jimmy Kimmel the Martyr versus Hayes on Tucker Carlson
in the Asked Listen.

Speaker 10 (27:01):
ABC Media announce that Kimmel would indeed be taken off
the year indefinitely. And this is just the latest chapter
in Donald Trump's ongoing campaign to crack down on free speech,
dominate the media, and essentially render the First Amendment meaningless.
So it was for the Journeyman cable news host Tucker
Carlson just fired from his third network. He believed he

(27:23):
could say anything no matter how vile, no matter how disgusting,
no matter how offensive now ror dehumanizing or belittling, And
if you act like a sociopath over and over and
over and over, you will become unpopular on.

Speaker 1 (27:39):
The national stage.

Speaker 10 (27:41):
That's just like a basic principle over time.

Speaker 2 (27:43):
Probably a basic principle that he got when it was
Tucker doesn't seem to get now that it's Jimmy Kimmel. Yeah,
hypocrisy is playing a role. Here's AOC to give you
another example.

Speaker 1 (27:57):
Tucker Carlson is out at News.

Speaker 11 (28:02):
Couldn't have happened to a better guy.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
What I will say though, is.

Speaker 11 (28:11):
Well, I'm very glad that the person that was arguably
responsible for the some of the largest driving some of
the most amounts of death threats and violent threats not
just to my office but to plenty of people across
the country. I also kind of feel like I'm like
waiting for the cut scene at the end of a

(28:32):
Marvel movie, after all the credits have rolled and then
you see like the villains like hand.

Speaker 12 (28:39):
Re emerge out to grip over like the end of
a building.

Speaker 2 (28:44):
Or something. Yeah, you're right, he's probably reached well, I
know he's reaching millions more now than he did on Fox.
Censorship is never wrong if it's censoring the opposition. Guns

(29:06):
are never the fault if they're aimed at the opposition. Breathtaking,
isn't it? I pray it is. I hope you see
it that clearly. We did this in the platinum or
shameless plug for the podcast. You'll find it on our website,

(29:26):
your morning show online dot com, the Lincoln or the
station you're listening to, I'm sure has it on its website.
You can listen on the podcast to that. But yeah,
Kamala Harris writes in a book really ultimately what she
thinks of the American people, not just Pete Bootagic, not

(29:47):
just homosexuality, but the American people. She says, we already
are asking a lot of the American people to accept
a woman. It's a lot for America to accept a woman,
a black woman. It's a lot. Are you saying that
we are sexist and racist? Oh wait, it gets worse.

(30:10):
A black woman married to a Jewish man. So now
her view of America is we're anti Semitic, we don't
respect women and we're racists. How did an editor let
this stand? But then she goes on to say, part
of me wanted Pete Boodhaje, you know, just to say
screw it and let's do it. But knowing what was

(30:31):
at stake, it was just too big of a risk.
I mean, had he been a white heterosexual, I would
have selected him. This from the Party of Inclusion and diversity.
This out of the abundance of the heart. The mouth speaks.
Scott Jennings had this to say about it.

Speaker 13 (30:54):
So you couldn't pick Pete Boutagigt because he was gay,
but you could endorse taxpayer funded sex change for minors,
I mean honestly, and then you picked Tim Walls. There
is not a single political operative alive who believes that
Tim Walls was a good choice or helped the ticket.
Pete Budage would have been a far superior choice. And
the idea that you're going to go blame it on

(31:16):
that now shows just how unfitch she was for the
presidency in the first place.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
And it ought to be the final nail inner Coffin.
Now we have scandals far worse. Shadow campaign to save
the democracy, weaponization of COVID a fake presidency for four years,
way bigger political scandals than Watergate. We don't even view
him as scandals. H. W. Bush said, read my lips,

(31:40):
and he didn't get to get beat be president again.

Speaker 1 (31:42):
He looked at his watch during a debate.

Speaker 2 (31:44):
As I said earlier, maybe he had to go to
the bathroom, and he's seeing how much longer looking at
his watch cost him the presidency. How can Kamala Harris
politically survive this statement? Well, Jasmine Crockett is the new AOC,
because AOC is the new Bernie Sanders.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Boy, she had a douzy yesterday.

Speaker 2 (32:06):
You know, when somebody commits a crime, that doesn't necessarily
make them a criminal, you know.

Speaker 12 (32:13):
And so I do want people to know that just
because someone has committed a crime, it doesn't make them
a criminal.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
That is I got to go back. I like the
leftist podcaster that found that so profound. Oh yeah, listen
to him watch.

Speaker 12 (32:30):
I'm a criminal. That is completely different. Being a criminal
is more so about your mindset. Committing a crime can
come for a lot.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Of different reasons.

Speaker 2 (32:41):
So if you get raped, it wasn't a rapist. You
get robbed, that isn't a robber, you commit a crime,
you're not a criminal. Mark Helprin was our Sound of
the Day yesterday. It is simply making the case that

(33:02):
the Left keeps blowing it on this assassination because they
first and foremost did not know who this guy was.
They didn't know how powerfully Charlie kirk had reached an
entire generation. Obviously, neither does Barack Obama.

Speaker 1 (33:30):
Listen.

Speaker 14 (33:30):
As Obama would say, look not surprising a party that's
moved to the far left and for ten years has
not understood the appeal of Donald Trump and has failed
to grapple as Pogo would say, that the enemy is
that Donald Trump's a great politician. He's done a lot
of smart things tactically and strategically, but he won two
out of three presidential elections because the Democratic Party has

(33:51):
failed to understand where it's out of step with the
American people. It takes a lot, at this point in
my career to stun me, and I will say I
am stunned and by their failure to and an eclip
with President Obama, their failure to understand just how painful
this is for people in this country who knew Charlie
kirkan they.

Speaker 1 (34:10):
Continue to not understand it.

Speaker 14 (34:11):
They don't know what he accomplished, they don't know his heart,
they don't know what he's about. And they're continuing to
operate on one principle. If Donald Trump feels something, they
hate it.

Speaker 2 (34:21):
He's so right. They're trying to make it about Jimmy Kimmel.
They don't get it. And that's one of the top
strategist democratic.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
Minds, Mark Helprin. And that is your sound. You're very revealing,
not so entertaining, but very revealing sounds of the day.
All right, everybody blockade.

Speaker 13 (34:48):
Look, you just gotta try harder, not the sum at
the opportunity for a brief civics lesson.

Speaker 8 (34:53):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with the deteriorating
mental condition.

Speaker 1 (35:00):
You don't know us in them.

Speaker 2 (35:02):
I got a question for you. How safe is your retirement?
War is everywhere, Debt continues to skyrocket, and the dollar
is losing purchasing power. The value of the dollar is
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more people are converting their ira in four oh one
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savings diversify. In twenty twenty five, both gold and silver

(35:24):
have risen an impressive twenty nine percent, and many expert
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Speaker 1 (36:07):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Vintel Chorno
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