Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern and great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live. But we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast two.
Speaker 2 (00:16):
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 michae Odell Charm.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
Good morning, and thank you so much for waking up
with us. It is Thursday, September, the twenty fifth year
of Our Lord, twenty twenty five on the air and
streaming live on your iHeart Radio app. This is your
morning show. Honor to serve you on Michael. That's Jeffrey Hi,
mixing the sound like that. Why do I refer to
you like you're some kind of disc jockey.
Speaker 4 (00:49):
I'm more like an audio bartender.
Speaker 3 (00:51):
You just come tost of sounds, your sad stories, and
I'll make your film. I mean, but you do so
much more than just push the button to music. Oh
but I don't know what else to call it. Because
we have two producers. Actually one is right now. No
pictures today yet, but yeah, he normally sends them in
the afternoon. Yeah, yesterday, I guess we're not going to
(01:12):
get any snapshots. That one yesterday early in the day
was another gorgeous one. I wanted to text back at him.
He's in the wilderness.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
He sends U these pictures of his what seven mile
hike he was on yesterday?
Speaker 3 (01:23):
Yeah, and you know how many times I have to
say that's beautiful?
Speaker 4 (01:26):
I was like, you realize, Red, miss Red only has
to run a little bit faster than you, and you're
gonna get eat my mountain lion.
Speaker 3 (01:35):
Well, you know I have a theory about her. What
plotting to kill him? Because Red is not a picture
of health going on these long hikes. Maybe we should
threaten to fire and me. He could have that view
every day. This is rust he's here. When is the
last time Red was off Christmas? At time? Christmas Day? Yeah,
(01:56):
I'll tell you why I bring all this up. Kind
of a setup. I don't know why I'm giving away
my smooth transitions, but I just thought I would telegraph
that one for free. I watched I benched a show yesterday.
I needed a day to just not think, not studying. No,
you know, we were watching Jimmy Kimmel's monologue playing replaying
(02:19):
his monologue yesterday on the show, and you made a
comment off the year. We didn't make it on the air,
but of course now he's trying to make it like
Donald Trump took him off the air. He didn't do anything.
And you know, we've done the math on it. It's
just a bad business model. The show only brings in
forty something million dollars in revenue in an ever shrinking pine.
(02:40):
It's lost eighty percent of its audience. So with forty
million dollars and his salary is fifteen gets into the twenties,
coasted almost thirty billion or thirty million. Rather with all
the incentives, I mean, it doesn't make sense. They can
barely pay for him. And he makes a reference to
(03:00):
the What Donald Trump is really going after is the
thousands of people that don't make millions that work for him,
and Jeffrey was like, thousands, we do all this with three,
we do people pulling all this off. But that's you know,
he's making my point, not his. This is a business
model that doesn't make sense. In our case. We started
(03:23):
just us, and then Premiere was kind enough to add
us Red. So once we got to two producers, I
didn't quite know what to call each. So Redd is
kind of more of a content researcher. You're more of
everything else, but everything you hear Jeffrey has created. So
but I want to make this point, So I wanted
(03:43):
to why we need ready to take some time off
When all you do every day is fill your mind
with this stuff. It's so taxing, and when there's only
three of you, you're spending a lot of your day
doing it. I used to always explain to the listeners
(04:05):
eighty probably eighty to eighty five percent of everything I
study and read never comes up on the air. It's
all the things that we have to you know, chase
or give background to, and so it just kind of
all fills up your brain. So yesterday I was like,
because I'm doing Red's job as well as the whole
(04:26):
long setup, I just needed a day blank. And so
I finished up all the stuff I had to do
and I get in my room. I would have loved
to have golf, but the weather's been terrible here. That's
where I usually clear my mind, and I'm on Netflix
and I'm a big fan of Molly Parker. She's a
Canadian actress. She's been in several things. You'd know where
(04:48):
if you saw her face, just like I am Sarah Paulson.
I think these are two of the best actresses of
our generation and nobody knows them by name. Sarah Paulson
can do anything. She's just and so is the smiling
So I thought I'll give a shot a show called
doc and I ended up binging it the entire entire
(05:09):
season yesterday, which I don't know what it was, ten episodes,
but it was far too much time to spend. I
went beyond clearing my mind. But the premise of the
show is what I wanted to start with. Imagine and again,
we are in life where we are by the choices
(05:31):
we've made. This is a personal responsibility and a time
alone that is very uncomfortable to spend with yourself, but
if you really break things down, I did a state
of turning thirty address as many years ago as I
was alive at the time, and that was a conclusion.
I came to everything in my life. I was exactly
(05:54):
where I was by every choice I made. I choiced
my way to write where I was now. Those choices,
some of them are choices that are good. Some of
them are choices that are really bad. I'll give you
an example. You choose to enjoy smoking, all right, Well,
(06:14):
that singular choice thirty five forty years down the line
is far different than when you made it, And you
don't choose to smoke every day. You chose to smoke
that first time, and then it became a habit and
(06:36):
a dependency and an addiction, and at some point you
might even lie to yourself you really don't have a choice.
Choices are funny that way. You'll look back at choice
and you go, oh, whether I took that job or didn't,
whether I moved there or didn't, whether I dated that
person or didn't, whether I married that person or didn't.
(06:58):
And those are choices, choices, our choices you make once
a long time ago, and then you never think about
them again, but you're still choosing them every day. Is
any of this making sense? Absolutely? Okay? I want to
make sure you know I'm not crazy. The other thing
that we can't control are things and circumstances that happen
that are out of our control that shapes our life.
(07:23):
The only control we do have in a sense is
being prepared because those things are gonna come, and when
they do, you're either prepared or you're not. If you're
not prepared, you react. If you're prepared, you respond. But
(07:46):
I think you see where I'm going. Those two are
choices we make. We choose our way into messes, we
choose our way into nots. A dear friend of my,
Michelle Pullar, used to be contemporary Christian art, but still
is a contemporar Christian artist. She wrote a book called Untangled,
(08:09):
and that's what I loved about it. As she weaves
you through her entire life, she's weaving you through the
entanglements and messes we make of our life. And in
many cases it's things that aren't our fault. They were
circumstances out of our control, but the way we reacted
(08:30):
to them by not being prepared. Why do you think
Jesus spent so much time talking about seeds and what
kind of soil they're in. Where if are being a
foundation on rock, Because these storms are going to come,
you're prepared to withstand them. A prepared person gets even stronger.
(08:51):
The good makes us stronger, and the bad makes us stronger,
and the God makes all things work together for the good.
These are profound things to understand. It will take you
from drifting through life in a storm, which would make
(09:12):
you pretty tossed about, wouldn't it, to staying on a
steady course. Let me get back to the premise of
this stupid show, as she wasn't too But it was
good and Molly was terrific as always. Imagine a doctor
and all the choices in life that led to her
not only being a doctor, but becoming the chief of
(09:36):
all doctors at a hospital. The sacrifices that means. And
then you throw things out of your control, like your
sun dies, and you have become a completely different person.
But you didn't notice it because it happened gradually. And
(09:59):
then in the rain, you lean over to see who
texted you and you run into a truck. It flips
you and you have a traumatic brain injury and you
wake up in the way the brain works and when
you damage it. I had a traumatic brain injury. It
affected my executive function. The team at Vanderbilt did a
(10:19):
great job. I'm completely normal, but it could have done
like this girl and damaged a portion of her brain
where she literally remembers everything except the last eight years.
Are you called a silly premise or just a premise,
but it's a premise. Well, when she wakes up, she's
(10:41):
missing the eight years of choices. Her son hadn't died yet,
her marriage hadn't failed yet. She had become this awful
person that she became after her child's death. So she
wakes up and she's her old self with a lot
of news waiting for her, and none of it makes
(11:05):
any sense to her. When she sees her husband, they're
not divorced, he's not remarried, expecting a new baby. That's
her husband. She's hugging them and kissing them, and this
guy's like acting awkwardly. She has to regrieve deaths now.
I don't want to ruin the show for anybody, But
(11:27):
she becomes It's like a reset button the good person
she was prior to all of this, and the second
time around processes everything right. In short, makes right choices.
The accidents and being the best thing that could have
happened to her changes the whole trajectory of her life.
(11:51):
Can you imagine if somebody got in a car accident
and woke up today and I had to explain today
to that the things that are in today's news alone,
that would make no sense. What do you mean we
(12:11):
don't know what a boy or a girl is. What
do you mean we're on the brink of a civil war?
What do you mean? There's no such thing as hypocrisy anymore,
There's no such thing as right or wrong anymore. Could
you imagine? That's what my job feels like every day.
(12:34):
And I'm beginning to fear it's going to take some
kind of tragic accident to reset us, because apparently assassinating
a young man that isn't tragic enough. Another young man
inscribing on his bullets, shooting at ice incited by we
(12:56):
don't know who. And it depends on which side you
listen to. I used to always it was very awkward
signing autographs because I don't ever want to be a celebrity.
I always want to just be your friend, your brother,
someone that goes through life with you. But you write
(13:17):
a book, people want you to sign it, so you
sign it. And I always ended it was Second Chronicles
seven fourteen, and I thought I knew what that meant
twenty five years ago. Oh please, God's people, we need
to humble ourselves, confess our sins. We need to repent,
(13:39):
we need to pray, and maybe, because God's faithful, even
more faithless, he'll rise up and heal our land because
boy do we need it, Boy do we need each other.
It's a good thing. After this analogy, I wake up
a years later with not the responsibility to figure it
(14:06):
all out and tell you the way out, but to
go through it with you and figure it out together,
because we're all in it together. And I assure you
we got another full plate today. Some of it is
second verse, same as the first, but here we go again.
Speaker 2 (14:24):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 3 (14:29):
One detainee is dead and two are hurt after a
shooter opens fire on a Dallas ice facility. Mark Mayfield
has your top story at twenty seven minutes after the hour.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
Mince, president of JD VANS, said the rhetoric is out
of control.
Speaker 6 (14:43):
When the LUTs wing media lies about what they're doing,
when they lie about who they're arresting, when they lie
about the actual job of law enforcement, what they're doing
is encouraging crazy people to go and commit violence.
Speaker 5 (14:55):
The shooter has been identified as twenty nine year old
Joshua Jean. He was found dead from a cel phone
inflicted gunshot wounded a near my apartment building. FBI director
Cash Mattel posted a picture on ex of shellcasings with
the phrase anti ICE that were found at the scene.
Speaker 3 (15:08):
No ICE agents were injured in the shooting. I'm Mark
mean Field. President Trump is expected to sign a deal
today that will allow Chinese company to sell TikTok. Jim
Roop has the details.
Speaker 7 (15:20):
White House sources tell NBC News the deal will facilitate
the sale of the popular social media app to a
group of American investors. Under the deal, the app's US
operations will be run by a new company. TikTok's current owner,
China based Byte Dance, will hold under twenty percent of
stock in this new company. Congress had voted last year
to ban the video sharing app for national security reasons
(15:41):
unless it sells its US operations, and the presidents expected
to extend a deadline to allow that deal to go through.
Speaker 3 (15:48):
I'm Jim Roop. The family of a man killed at
a mid air collision earlier this year in Washington, DC
is suing the airlines involved and the federal government. Tammy
TRIHILLO has that story.
Speaker 8 (15:58):
The family's attorney, Bob Clifford, says they're seeking accountability.
Speaker 9 (16:02):
The crash of American Eagle fifty three forty two was predictable,
It was preventable, and caused the needless loss of sixty
seven lives.
Speaker 8 (16:14):
The American Airlines flight collided with an Army Blackhawk helicopter
over the Potomac River in January. Rachel Crafton's husband, Casey,
was on the passenger plane, and she has filed a
wrongful death in negligent's lawsuit. Crafton suit American Airlines and
regional jet operator PSA Airlines. The lawsuit states the airline
should have known the flight was heading into one of
the busiest airspaces in the US and should have been
(16:36):
aware of the risks. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 3 (16:38):
And that's your Top five stories.
Speaker 8 (16:42):
This is Dan from Heree, Pennsylvania.
Speaker 5 (16:44):
My Morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Deljianna.
Speaker 3 (16:54):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Your Morning show can be heard live five to eight
am Central, six to nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine, and we're grateful you're here now enjoy
the podcast, and we'd like to welcome w E l
m AM fourteen ten Elmira, New York and wats AM
(17:17):
nine sixty in Sayer, Pennsylvania, two new members.
Speaker 3 (17:21):
I think we're at one hundred and four. We turned
one hundred and four this week, one hundred four Philly. Yeah,
and we got a big one coming next week for you.
But no matter how many we have, it really is
just us, isn't it one big American kitchen table, waking
up and making sense of all this? And we can't
have your warning show without your voice. And thankfully we
(17:42):
never have to to truck or russ we go. I've
got a I'd like to think it was a simple question.
Speaker 10 (17:47):
We're going to turn out the big strain to complicate it.
How do we get the left to be accountable for
their action shows without crossing the land in doing the
thing ross in the land and doing the thing offs
in the land, in doing the thing.
Speaker 3 (18:05):
I've never had that happen. Yeah, my needles stuck. I'm
sorry on the record there, give him a honk. I
think the gist of the question was, how do we
hold the left accountable without playing their same game. Well,
(18:25):
that's kind of what I was dancing around earlier in
the week with right some of the things that President Trump.
I'm gonna answer your question in a second, but let
me start with this image. January sixth. I was live
on the air January sixth when the Great Insurrection of
insurrections took place, and in real time, if you were
(18:51):
responsibly broadcasting, you had already been talking about the threats
and I don't mean the crack and then never came,
but the threats of wrongdoing on that day. In fact,
I had already talked to my audience about and giving
(19:12):
them a little background because a lot of people don't
realize that the Sergeant of Arms of the Capitol Police,
which is a real force. By the way, I lived
in Washington, d C. Post nine to eleven. They walk
around with machine guns around the Capitol. When I first
got to Washington, d C. Me and my friend used
(19:32):
to take walks around the Capitol. There were no you
could walk up. Remember I tell the story about when
we won the golf War and I was just visiting
with Britty Hume. He was just standing out in front
of the White House, because you could walk right up.
You know. Now there's fences and barrack street barricades and
the Capitol you can't get anywhere near. And then there's
a machine guns Capitol policemen walking around. The security you
(19:54):
go through is so tight. But the Capitol Police a
real security police force. The Sergeant of Arms is over
the Capitol Police, and the sergeant of Arms reports to
the Speaker of the House. And the Sergeant of Arms
(20:18):
had gone to Speaker Nancy Pelosi and said, there is
a lot of chatter and a lot of evidence that
a major uprising is coming. We need to make plans,
maybe even bring in National Guard. At the same time,
the Secret Service and the President were briefed on the
(20:39):
same thing. Russ I promise this. It's getting to your answer.
So I'm live on the air and I'm covering the
President's speech during a rally. I guess you would call
it outside the White House. Now, I know that he
knows the elements that are there, and I know that
(21:00):
Nancy Pelosi knows, and I know neither did anything with
the pre warning to prepare, in the case of Nancy Pelosi,
to have a force ready to stop it, in the
case of the president to maybe guard what you say
(21:21):
and how you say it. And so the President's going
on with all of this bizarre loose talk. I remember
being and I'm not the biggest fan, but I remember thinking,
for a guy like Mike Pence, who has been so
loyal to this president, boy, not only did you just
throw him under the bus, you may have just endangered
(21:45):
his life. Funny, that's all lost now because nobody on
the right or the left wants to prosecute that or
create a fictitious narrative about that. But he was really
awful to Mike Pence on something that was lawfully untrue.
(22:07):
But then at one point of this speech, he said,
I'm gonna go down there with you, and I'm thinking
to myself, well, wait a minute. This is the president
of the United States. He can't just go to the
Capitol unless Secret Service is pre prepared for this. And
I remember part of my brain thinking, hey, maybe uh,
maybe they have fortified the Capitol. That could be the
(22:27):
silver lining of this, or that's really reckless speech, knowing
what could be brewing today. And as the president gin
did up and I love him and I'm glad he
got reelected and up until a couple of weeks ago
he was being very responsible, but at the time he
was wrong. No, the President gins it up, He's not
(22:51):
going anywhere. He goes back in the White House, and
all help breaks loose at the Capitol, and Nancy Pelosi
was loving it because for a party that had strategized
insurrection but didn't need to do it because Joe accidentally won.
Go figure, they were barely able to call off their
(23:13):
insurrection when Donald Trump walks right in. Because remember it's
classic Salolenski, classic Barack Obama, which has become classic Democratic
Party strategy. Anything you're attacking is really confessing. If they're
attacking the other party about this, that means they've been
doing it. And in this case, the classic was our
(23:36):
plan was insurrection. We were conditioning you for insurrection. That's
what Antifa and Black Lives Matter was all about. You
getting used to seeing cities burned and business is looted
and homes destroyed and cop cars turned over. That's just
good trouble. That was to condition you for the big
insurrection they had planned. And then they pinned the little
(23:57):
insurrection and make it big on Donald Trump. And I'm
standing there, like the security guy on the street corner
an animal house watching all of this mayhem and I
can't do anything to stop it. I didn't realize at
(24:17):
the time what a local dry rehearsal that would be
for me to play it at a much higher level,
with much bigger stakes on a national level, because that's
exactly what I'm witnessing right now. And then a trucker
(24:40):
with millions of miles under his wheels, celebrating his thirtieth
anniversary ticket free this week, Ross is you know, how
do you drive a truck thirty years and never get
caught speeding? If Franklin Plice's that doesn't mean that I speed.
(25:01):
It just means that's a long time to be driving,
and you know I'll lose track of how fast you're going,
Thank you anyway, And then he asks a question like that, Well,
my answer is right now, yes, I think it's time
(25:22):
that we the people, ultimately the jury, judge and jury
in the court room of public opinion, realize we are
literally playing with civil war fire here. And I don't
mean a cold civil war like we've been living. We
now got shots being fired, people dying. Do you remember
(25:46):
right after the assassination when I said, well, this can
play one of two ways. We can move towards unity
and healing, or we can take a giant leap forward
towards civil war, because it's potential, like nineteen sixty eight,
this shot, which is like a Martin Luther King RFK
death to our young people is the final act of
(26:09):
violence before healing, or it's the first shot of a
civil war that, unlike nineteen sixty eight, we're going to
choose a different path. And then I honed in on
Russ Richard Nixon and the role that he played, and
television and the role it played, and the hippie movement
(26:30):
that turned Jesus movement that created Please forgive me if
this is offensive. What I can document was a spiritual
revival and a cultural awakening not declared in a memorial service,
but I can now, through the lens of looking back
in history, tell you and I am the product of
that spiritual revival and cultural awakening that isn't happening right now.
(27:00):
And just like January sixth, Nancy Pelosi, Well, actually the
bad actors are ultimately to blame. And secondarily, Nancy Pelosi
for January sixth, I'm watching Donald Trump fanning the flames
with some of his rhetoric. To answer your question, Russ,
(27:26):
my hope is not in a politician, whether it's a president,
a senator, or a congressman. It's certainly not any of
these TV networks. I think that's played out sufficiently this week.
But it is in the American people that, like nineteen
sixty eight, seeing innocent people die. I don't know what
(27:54):
this particular shooter is going to turn out to be yet.
I don't think transgender, but who knows. He likes to
write on bullets like the two transgender shooters. But the
American people are going to have to wake up and
be sick of the matrix, be sick of all the
(28:19):
partisan divisions we've taken the bait in, be sick of
seeing people bleeding and dying, and say enough, it's going
to take the American people to hold these politicians accountable,
not a vice president. Most of the sound that I
(28:41):
have today simply could not have happened eight years ago,
let alone eighteen, let alone thirty years ago. They would
have been instantly destroyed. The hardest question Ross I have
to ask today is I could make a great case
of hypocrisy for the left today a profound own case
of hypocrisy, a hypocrisy so much greater than Watergate. But
(29:06):
I'm not sure hypocrisy exists in moral relativism. I'm not
sure hypocrisy exists in the midst of this crazy matrix
were living in. I guess that's a question for us
(29:27):
and your contributor David Zanatti when he joins us in
thirty minutes. But I can tell you this, in nineteen
sixty eight, hippies exhausted every other way to peace, every
other way to enlightenment, and every other way to fulfillment
(29:48):
from hallucinogetic son and settled on Christ and the Holy
Spirit took it and ran. We need such a revival today.
I don't see it happening. We need a president who
doesn't talk to the extreme right or the extreme left,
(30:09):
but the sensible, calm center, like Richard Nixon did. That's
not happening yet. And we need the American people to
see another shooting differently than they saw the previous two
in the last two weeks. And I don't see that
(30:34):
happening either. But that's the prayer and that's the hope,
because nineteen sixty eight was headed towards a civil war
at a time of world unrest. Here we are again.
The world has never been more unrest than it is now.
(30:57):
I don't know what's coming next, a world war or
a civil war inside our borders, but it's got my attention.
And like the guy in Animal House, I can wave
my arms all I want, I can't seem to stop.
So I'm not gonna wave my arms, and I'm gonna
bend my knees and I'm gonna keep praying that God
will heal our land. And maybe that's your ultimate answer.
Speaker 2 (31:19):
It's Your Morning Show with Michael Delchano.
Speaker 3 (31:24):
The Department of Homeland Security says it's going to immediately
ramp up security nationwide after at least one detainee died
and two were injured in a shooting at a Dallas
ice facility. Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 5 (31:35):
The shooter has been identified as twenty nine year old
Joshua John. He was found dead from a self inflicted
gunshot wound at a nearby apartment building. The FBI is
investigating the shooting as an act of targeted violence. FBI
Director Cash Mattel posted a picture on acts of shellcasings
with a phrase anti ice that were found at the scene.
No ICE agents were injured in the shooting. By Mark Mayfield,
(31:56):
can you play Big John real quick? I'd like him
to set up our next story. I can do that.
Speaker 4 (32:00):
In all the news.
Speaker 3 (32:01):
Cash Fattel was at the White House yesterday. We could
have a James Comy indictment today.
Speaker 7 (32:06):
BOOKI the probes examining whether Komi made false statements during
his September twenty twenty testimony to Congress on his handling
of the investigation into Russia allegedly meddling in the twenty
sixteen presidential election. Prosecutors would generally only have five years
to the day to bring a charge, and according to
people familiar with the investigation, a legal deadline is expiring Tuesday.
(32:26):
Comey has maintained his innocence, and if a federal grand
jury approves the case, it would mark one of the
highest profile indictments of a political figure.
Speaker 3 (32:35):
I'm Jim Roup Big John anchored news on national show
Just Keeping Your Resume Updated. California has the highest unemployment
rate in the US.
Speaker 8 (32:44):
It stands at five and a half percent, unchanged since July.
That's according to a new US Bureau of Labor Statistics report,
the national average is just over four percent, with thirty
five states below that in thirteen above it. Nevada follows
just behind California and Washington, d C hasn't even higher
rate of six percent. Experts say contributing factors to California's
unemployment include high living costs, minimum wage laws, strict regulations,
(33:08):
and slow job growth. They say California companies are allowing
more remote work options, impacting local job opportunities. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 3 (33:15):
Queen will be celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of their album
A Night at the Opera, Diamond certified single Bohemian Rhapsody,
with vinyl reissues. Mark Mayfield as that story.
Speaker 5 (33:26):
The album will be available globally on Crystal Clear vinyl
October seventeenth. Bohemian Rhapsody will be reissued on October the
thirty first on transparent blue vinyl. Queen guitarist Brian may
says A Night at the Opera was a hugely important
album for the band, adding it opened up the world
for us. The nineteen seventy five album and single are
available to pre order now.
Speaker 3 (33:47):
I'm Mark Mayfield and Nick took my record player to
his storm. The girls have my lean. I guess I'll
be left on my own. Free samples our rite of
passage for shoppers. But there's a science behind the product
treat and it turns out that free item isn't really free.
Make no mistake.
Speaker 11 (34:04):
Free samples are a marketing employee to get you to
spend more money, and it's a proven method to lure
you in with a little nugget that big box stores
say has an eighty percent by rate. Psychologists say stores
make the sale because that little freebie, whether it be
food or cosmetics, makes your brain think it's a reduced risk,
so we buy with full knowledge.
Speaker 3 (34:25):
It's a trick.
Speaker 11 (34:26):
I'm free, Tennis.
Speaker 2 (34:27):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Nheld, Journo