Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show is heard live
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(00:21):
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Speaker 2 (00:28):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
This is your Morning show with Michael dell Chrum. Good morning,
Welcome to October. Oh days are long, but life is short.
Time flies and can it possibly be October already? And
so much to cover this morning on the airon streaming
live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your Morning show
on Michael del Journal. FEMA working to deliver food and
(00:57):
water to those in need in North Carolina as the
stage struggles after being hit by the remnants of Hurricane Helene.
Helene now being blamed for at least one hundred and
twenty deaths in the southeast at least six hundred people
are still unaccounted for, and more than four hundred thousand
in North Carolina alone. Two million throughout the southeast still
(01:19):
without power. And to add to our day, we have
from Maine to Texas, port workers have gone on strike
as of midnight last night. Big Vice Presidential Debate Tonight,
jd Vance and Tim Walls. What's on the line with
the unfinished business of a nearly deadlocked presidential race. Major
League Baseball hit king Pete Rose is dead. I'm more
(01:40):
mad at major League Baseball than I've been since the
strike in the eighties. Rose dies at eighty three, having
never been allowed in the Baseball Hall of Fame. Jimmy
Carter to celebrate his one hundredth birthday, we had a
double header last night. I don't know how Jeffreys Titans
did it. Yeah, well, I think a shoulder injury helped.
(02:02):
Rudolph comes in at quarterback leads the Titans to a victory.
Lion's a big way to get the proper players in
on the field, That's all I gotta say. You gotta
do that. Everybody has their their own favorite versions. I
know Sinatra did the duets. Tony Bennett later on with
his live album. Uh for me, Tony Bennett, I always
(02:25):
go live. This is his voice said it's best. He
left all the time, smooth as silk. But yeah, yeah,
in the San fran San Francisco, I don't know if
I'm the one to do this. I mean, the Golden
(02:46):
Gate certainly took my breath away. Alcatraz is my favorite
places I did. I had a had a memorable afternoon
at Alcatraz. Couldn't believe the act e sis at the time.
You know, you can take the tour. You put the
headphones on, you can hear the mess all sounds. Yeah.
I went out in the yard where Clinty Eastwood film,
(03:07):
But I mean, you think of the people that lived
at Alcatraz. Anyway, we want to welcome our new radio station,
KNEW nine sixty AM. Iheared sports talking more in San
Francisco to the your morning show family, and I thought
I would do it. And Tony bennettson, I don't care.
(03:29):
She waits there listening to KNEW nine sixty AM. Welcome aboard,
this is your morning show. Listen. We don't tell you
how to think around here, but we give you a
lot to think about. There's so much information, but there's
so little understanding. So we've searched everywhere for the top stories.
Hopefully we're going to look at them in a very
unique style and give you a return to conversation in
(03:52):
the morning and facilitate you and your own personal journey
of understanding. We got enough talking points, we got a
enough people telling you how to think. We just kind
of give you the news so a you're up, you're
at them, You're informed, and then be hopefully facilitate your
journey b understanding. Now, we do a lot of people,
(04:13):
We have a lot of people on the show to
help us in that journey. Aaron Royal will be joining
us with a report on most significantly they strike from
really New York all the way to Texas and the
impact this will have on supply chains and pricing in
(04:34):
an already inflated economy. Very very significant happenings today. We
also have the relief efforts in Ashville. You know, I
started the day yesterday hoping people wouldn't make a campaign
trail out of tragedy, and I'm not so certain, you know,
(04:56):
a tragedy like this, we really just need the governor,
really just need FEMA coordinating with the current administration really
didn't need. Donald Trump did a pretty tasteful job in Georgia.
It felt a little bit more campaigning when Kamala did it,
but that may only be because she's just not as
good at doing it, and so my hope that neither
(05:19):
would both did. But what really matters is what's happening
on the ground. The death toll. We started the morning
yesterday with the death toll at ninety. It rose to
ninety nine. Now it's at one hundred and twenty, and
we expected to rise greatly. Six hundred still unaccounted for
(05:40):
four hundred thousand without power in North Carolina alone, some
two million throughout the southeast. Lots of work to be
done there. Scott Kimba will we joined us for the latest,
especially in that target area of Asheville, North Carolina. One
of things Donald Trump at least did in his news
conference is he brought Elon and some help because we've
got to get communications up in that area, which got
(06:00):
me kind of researching. I didn't realize that that musk
has that the little thing now it's now it's about
the size of a laptop computer but has a little
dish and it spins and boom, you've got internet, You've
got cell service, just like lost in space. Well it's
going to be the future, I'm thinking. But anyway, so
(06:22):
Elon Musk coordinated with Donald Trump to try to improve
communications in that devastated area. And then at that or
not enough, you got the big veep debate. Our White
House correspondent John Decker is going to be along later
with the preview. We'll probably have a preview even before that.
What's at stake in a presidential race? That according to
the Electoral College map, which is according to the polls,
(06:44):
which are starting to slightly move. See I just brought
it up in a betch. You are your morning show
bookie from the sportsbook. We'll call in with the latest
daily odds. It'll come in soon. I'm sure the daily
odds in particular still show Kabala Harris a slight favor,
but it's been diminishing daily. Now. This is gonna be
money in line now. The difference between polls grain of
(07:07):
salt right do polls? If poles do their job, they're
dated by the time I tell them to you, because
they're a snapshot in time. If an election were held today,
how would you vote, well, that day is already over
and passed. But through long term exposure and trending and
(07:32):
movement and understanding with things that are happening, you can
start projecting where things could be. Now, why are polls
off so much? Twofold one. We live in a very
matrix to polarized country, and one side doesn't like the
other and doesn't trust the other, And in particular, the
(07:53):
right doesn't trust the mainstream media and universities, and mainstream
media and universities or who do the polls, whether it's
a newspaper or a network. So you call a conservative home,
we're not telling you who are voting for. In fact,
we're not even talking to you. So Donald Trump in
particular tends to underpoll. So you see a poll where
(08:15):
Donald Trump is tied, he's probably leading by two or three.
You see Donald Trump down by one or two percent,
he could be up, which is the case in Michigan, Wisconsin,
and Pennsylvania. So that's one of the reasons he underpolls.
The other is they're usually designed not to find out
where you're at today, but to get you where they
(08:35):
want you on election day, and that's pull Shenanigan's so,
but when you come to the odds, which is fascinating,
you're gonna get a little bit of that laying off too.
So if they've got more money. I don't want to
get into like supporting casinos and gambling because I'm mad
(08:57):
at them today over Pete Rose. I'll get to that
in a minute. But your goal is to have as
much money on both sides, and then you make the
big the juice. When you bet one hundred dollars and lose,
it's really one hundred and ten or one hundred and twenty,
So you'll see those lines move to kind of even
the money out. I do think the polls are our
(09:19):
best bet. But with a little accent from our sportsbook
bookie at your morning show, I'm sure we'll get those
latest odds. Those come from Alaska, by the way, I think,
don't they The juice is loose. It's funny because we
got one from Alaska. But normally he shows up in
Nashville on the Nashville Talk Wow. When he checks O.
(09:40):
We're trying to maybe maybe he doesn't want to be
at his location identified maybe he's gonna move. We got
a bookie with a voice like he's running numbers down
in the Bronx and he's gonna break your legs. That's
coming up a little bit later on Pete Rose. Major
League Baseball. You blew it. Greatest hit of the game
(10:01):
ever knew, the hit King Charlie is gone in a
league by the way that you can't watch a game
without seeing at least two gambling commercials every commercial break
between Hennings. Major League Baseball, like the NFL, like the NBA,
and the rest of them completely in bed with gaming
and casinos. And you kept Pete Rose out of the
(10:25):
Hall of Fame, and you did just what I dreaded
you would do. Wait till he died, don't bother now.
And there's a part of me that will hate you forever.
Speaking of that. Major League Baseball wild Card playoffs today,
reason for everybody in Arizona to be hating on the Mets,
who took Game one against the Braves but then laid
(10:47):
down in Game two because of the split. The Braves
are in, the Mets are in, and the Dbacks are out.
Everybody in the desert was a Mets fan yesterday. What
good did it do? Is so the playoffs start today,
Tigers and Astros one thirty Central Royals and O's that'll
be at four eight Eastern. Tonight the Brewers will host
(11:09):
the Mets, lets say the late afternoon four to thirty Central,
and then tonight the Padres will be hosting the Braves
at seven thirty eight. Not easy for the Braves and
the Mets say to play a double hatter, try to
preserve players in case they got in. It was, you know,
the weather caused it. There was nothing we could do.
Just seemed like a bad break for the d Backs
and as I mentioned, a double header and Monday night
(11:30):
football last night, Titan's big thirty one to twelve. Dolphins
are nothing without Tua, and Tua is a tough decision
and a lot of people that think two should not
be playing football anymore because of head injuries. Oi his
head was aching watching that game last night because they're
nothing without him. And the Seahawks fell to the Lions
forty two to twenty nine last night, So we got
(11:51):
a lot to cover. Most of the attention will be
on the search, rescue and getting those necessary supplies to
those in in the Helene ravaged area, in particular in
North Carolina and eastern Tennessee. The Port strike and Jadvans
and Tim Walls squareing off and wait'll breed Tennis comes
(12:13):
and tells you everything else that represents October First. This
is your morning show with Michael del Chona. We're iHeart So.
If you go to the iHeartRadio app and listen, you'll
see a little microphone that's a talkback button. You hit it,
it'll count you down three to two to one. You
can ask us a question, you can make a comment.
A lot of people like to record there. I'm so
(12:35):
and so from San Francisco and my morning show is
your morning show with Michael del Jona. That's not to
puff us up. That's to introduce yourself to the rest
of America at our kitchen table this morning. So love
to hear from you. Either use the talkback button, email
or one eight hundred and six eighty eight ninety five
twenty two. If you're just waking up twenty six minutes
(12:55):
after the hour and I think you know what the
top story is, but it is a busy, busy newsday.
No moral Ulnall. Heleen is being blamed for at least
one hundred and twenty deaths in the Southeast and at
least six hundred people are still unaccounted for. North Carolina
Governor Roy Cooper said the damage is extensive in a state.
Speaker 3 (13:14):
Today, we did an aerial overview to see the damage
here in western North Carolina and it is extensive and devastating.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
More than four hundred thousand people in North Carolina alone
still without power. Two million throughout the southeast without power.
FEMA Administrative Director Diana Criswell said they'll do everything they
can to provide help.
Speaker 4 (13:37):
So far, we have over twelve hundred personnel from across
the federal family supporting the response efforts. That includes things
like our search and rescue teams, our medical teams from
Health and Human Services.
Speaker 1 (13:49):
As relief efforts continue, experts are going over how this
hurricane led to such historic flooding in the southeast. Katie
Gray reports.
Speaker 5 (13:57):
USDA meteorologist Brad Rippey says that Helene did the unexpected
once making landfall.
Speaker 6 (14:03):
And that unleashed catastrophic rainfall, some areas receiving more than
a foot. Even more damaging is the fact that there
was a significant rainfall event just days before Helene hit.
Speaker 5 (14:13):
Rippy says that the overwhelming amount of downpour brought on
with Helleen combine with previous showers.
Speaker 6 (14:19):
Meant and we saw some twelve to twenty inch totals,
some of the mountain locations even topping twenty inches, and
that unleashed the historic and deadly flooding.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
Many areas continue to be impacted as a relief effort
continue across multiple seats.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
I'm Katie Gray, jd vance to Dim Walls, Well Waltz.
They're going to square off at a vice presidential debate tonight.
Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 2 (14:43):
Former President Trump has high hopes for his VP pick.
I think jad is going to do the greatest.
Speaker 1 (14:48):
First fun guys done a great job. People like them
a lot.
Speaker 2 (14:51):
This ninety minute face off will be the VP candidates
one and only debate. Walls, the Democratic governor of Minnesota,
and Vance, a Republican senator from Ohio, have been prepping
for the debate for the last couple of weeks. There
will be no audience, but there will be open microphones.
The CBS hosted event starts at nine pm Eastern. I'm
Martin Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
All I kept saying to myself was at least put
him in before he dies too late. Now, Baseball hit
king Pete Rose has died at eighty three. Chris Graggio
has the story.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
Baseball's hit King Pete Rose has died at the age
of eighty three.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
He passed away today at his home in Las Vegas.
Speaker 3 (15:24):
Rose accumulated forty two hundred and fifty six hits over
a career that spanned twenty four seasons. He was banned
from baseball after it was determined that he bet on games.
Rose played most of his career for his hometown Cincinnati Reds,
but also spend time with the Phillies and Expos. Rose
returned to Cincinnati, where he finished his career as a
player manager. He was a seventeen time All Star. He
(15:44):
won three World Series and was the nineteen seventy three MVP.
Speaker 1 (15:50):
Greatest I ever watched as a kid. Welcome to October,
and there's so much to celebrate today alone. Here's pre Tennis.
Speaker 7 (15:58):
The new month starts out with National Taco Day. That's
thanks to Taco Bell moving it to the first Tuesday
in October. Today is also National Pumpkins Spice Day Perhaps
a Latte in your Future, which officially kicks off the
fall season. Although Starbucks launched their PSL drinks back in
August and to top it all off, today is National
Homemade Cookie Day, so we're gonna need you to get
(16:19):
busy in the kitchen.
Speaker 1 (16:20):
I'm pre tennis well for all my friends listening at
News Talk five point fifty KFYI. All we needed was
anything but a split. Whether it was the Mets or
the Braves. Somebody win both games, so naturally they split.
Diamondback season is over. Meanwhile, the Major League Baseball Wildcard
playoffs begin today. Tigers Astros one thirty, Royals and O's
(16:41):
at four eight Eastern Time, Brewers and Mets four thirty
Central Time, Podreis and Braves at seven thirty eight. Tonight
double header and Monday Night Football. Last night, Titans Big
thirty one to twelve over the Dolphins. Nothing without Tua.
Seahawks fell to the Lions forty two to twenty nine. Hi,
It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live eight
radio stations across the country like WILM and w DOV
(17:04):
and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware, or wgst AM seven twenty
the Voice in Middle Georgia. We're going to eat some blankets.
News Radio six fifty k e NI Anchorage, Alaska. We'd
love to be a part of your morning routine. Now
enjoy the podcast. This is your morning show. I'm Michael
del Jerona. That's Jeffrey Lyon running the controls, and you
(17:24):
are you. We wake up in search of understanding. FEMA
working to deliver food and water to those that need
in North Carolina. Hurricane Helene now being blamed for at
least one hundred and twenty deaths. In the southeast, at
least six hundred people still unaccounted for. More than four
hundred thousand people in North Carolina alone without power. Some
two million throughout the southeast and from Maine to Texas.
(17:46):
Port workers have gone on strike, will take effect about midnight.
This is a juicy one. This is all about no
matter whose side you're on, who's you know, sounds intelligent
on tea or not? How long does this go on?
You already are dealing with hyperinflation and high cost of
(18:09):
living in the middle of the final stretch of a
presidential run. Now, why do I bring that up? There
was a moment in the debate between Donald Trump and
Kamala Harris where Trump turns to her. It was this
only really good moment, and he's talking about Biden gonna
and by the way, he can't stand you. I don't
(18:31):
know how Joe Biden feels about Kamala Harris specifically. My
guess is, if I had to pick one way or
the other, at leans towards he can't stand her potentially,
But I can tell you what he didn't like. He
didn't like being used. Now he doesn't get become president
of the United States if he doesn't get used, but
(18:52):
he didn't like getting used. This is a guy that,
for all the mistakes he's made throughout his career in life,
thinks he's always deserved to be president, even when they
ran him off for plagiarism, even when he ran and
lost out to Hillary Well. In twenty twenty, he was
(19:15):
fourth in Iowa, seventh in New Hampshire. It was over
for Joe, but it was also over for the Democrat Party,
who for the second time, was probably going to nominate
Bernie Sanders, a socialist. They couldn't have that. Oh, they
don't mind socialism, They just don't like blatant socialism, marketed socialism.
(19:39):
The first time, they used super delegates and intervened. This time,
they cut a deal in South Carolina, hid Joe in
a basement weaponized COVID, changed election laws and got him elected.
Don't I have to do history, right, Joe? You're a
line dog face pony soldier. I am not. What are
(20:00):
you doing up this early? Him and Bruno Mars Yes.
So anyway, make a long story short, he was to
shuffle along, and they get their first female president, let
alone first female president of color, and Joe's gone. You see,
you had a marrying of the Clinton apparatus and the
(20:22):
Obama apparatus in the ticket alone. But Podesta, who ran
eight years of Bill Clinton, eight years of Barack Obama,
and the last four years of Joe Biden, was orchestrating everything.
But Joe refused to go. He waited sixty four days
to do a news conference, and when he did, he
handed the border to Kamala that was a poison apple,
(20:42):
knowing it would destroy her career and protect him. And they
sent him out on that stage for the debate, and
then they had the networks turn on him, and the
operatives turned on him, and the strategists and the grassroots
and grasstops money turned on him, and they mugged him
through them in a trunk and gave it all to Kamala.
(21:06):
Joe Biden could intervene and end this port strike. If
Kamala has any chance, that's what he would do, unless
he can't stand her. Meanwhile, let's just stick to the
nuts and bolts of it. Tens of thousands of dock
workers launched a strike at midnight last night, and this
(21:27):
extends from Maine all the way to Texas. This immediately
strands stacks and stacks of shipping containers, not to mention
leave's ship idle in the harbors. Now, eventually the question
becomes how long does this go? I mean sooner or
(21:51):
later if those ships go, I gotta not word of dumb.
I'm just going home now. You've got a major disruption.
So so probably what's on everybody's mind is how long
does this go on before we start feeling it and
there's no bananas or prices start going through the roof.
And then if this is where the supplies are arriving,
(22:13):
what kind of production begins to cease and be disrupted?
And nobody really has the magic number on that, I
can tell you it's five weeks till election day. And
this is an awful thing to happen right before an incumbent.
Let's face it, that's what she is, is getting ready
(22:36):
to run for reelection, even if it's a switch to
the top of the ticket. But somewhere around five weeks
it starts becoming a jam. Somewhere around two three months,
it starts becoming like a COVID with lasting effects beyond that,
a nightmare. The union represents about forty seven thousand workers,
(23:06):
and they walked at midnight. It's unclear what the next
steps might be to resolving this dispute. And take sides
all you want between the International Longshoremen's Association, the shippers,
the port operators. Where you take the sides of the
forty seven thousand workers, But the side you better be on,
(23:29):
without question is resolve before it hits your produce section.
Very busy day as anticipated on the ground in Israel.
We're gonna have more Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano in our
third hour, but Israel's ground forces made limited moves into
southern Lebanon. According to the military, it marks a significant
(23:50):
escalation of an offensive against Hesbelah militants. They have been precise.
You know, there's a lot of this. It would be
interesting to talk about with James Carafana. We said from
the very beginning at the time, Joe Biden has an
eye problem. Israel's a problem for him because there's a
(24:13):
good portion of his party that is pro Palestinian. There's
a small portion of his party this pro terrorist, anti American.
So he has to walk the fine line of standing
next to Israel but always telling Israel to stop. But
Israel's doing the precise right things to dismantle these proxies
(24:34):
of Iran. The Ayatolas in hiding. The Israeli troops are
on the ground. Military said it began a limited, localized
and targeted ground raid against Hesbela's targets in southern Lebanon.
This follows the precision bombing that has been done that's
(24:54):
always he said, she said. Hesbla said it's targeted groups
of soldiers in several Israeli border areas with artillery, shelling
and rockets, but it was not immediately clear if any
soldiers were actually hit. Makee no mistake about at Israel
(25:16):
will be precise as they were with their air strikes,
with their ground and some argued this should have been
done from the beginning. Now it's being done well. Primarily
America and Joe Biden is calling for a cease, So
is this an escalation or necessary? Well, last Lieutenant Colonel
(25:38):
James Carefoual a little bit later on in the Morning Show,
and then the first and only vice presidential debate. You know,
we only got one presidential debate between Kamala Harris and
Donald Trump. I think both claimed victory. My objective opinion
was was not a good night for Donald Trump. It's
hard to ever call Kamala Harris a victor. But you know,
(25:59):
there were no real bumps in the polls to suggest
anybody really won or that it played any big role
in people's decision. And after all, really it matters what
happens in Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Nevada, North Carolina, and Georgia.
Could this one create a bump? Is there anything in
(26:21):
this that would make somebody make a deciding factor? I
think in the most memorable moment in vice presidential debate
history was Lloyd Benson embarrassing Dan Quayle. But I'll remind
everybody dan Quayle and hw Bush went on to win
the election. So you wonder how much a vice presidential
debate can matter do they have unfinished business from the
(26:42):
top of the tickets performance in their only debate. We'll
see tonight. The night has arrived. They're going to get
it on. Senator J. D. Evans and Democratic nominee Minnesota
Governor Tim Wallas. All right, we got your top five
stories of the day coming up, next to the visit
with Aaron Rayal.
Speaker 8 (27:01):
Hi Am, actress Lisa Varga, and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno.
Speaker 1 (27:07):
Heleene being blamed for one hundred and twenty deaths, at
least six hundred people still unaccounted for, about four hundred
thousand people in North Carolina and two million throughout the
southeast still without power. Former President Donald Trump was in
Georgia as it tries to recover from the damage from Helene.
Lisa Taylor has the details.
Speaker 8 (27:25):
The former president was in Valdosta in the southern part
of the state with supplies in tow.
Speaker 6 (27:30):
We're working with the people in North Carolina now to
get him hooked up for communication. And in the meantime,
we're at Valdosta and we're gonna go.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
With the Maaron, Congressman, everybody else. We've brought a lot
of supplies.
Speaker 8 (27:44):
Trump says he knows many thousands are without power and
he hopes he can help. He said he spoke with
Elon Musk and he's working to get him to get
his Starlink internet system up and running so people can
stay connected. Trump added he's putting politics aside for the
time being.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
Only se Taylor workers at ports from Aimed to Texas,
so hitting the picket lines and what could be the
most disruptive walkout in US economic history in decades. Mark
Mayfield has more it.
Speaker 2 (28:07):
Couldn't stop the flow of household goods, clothing, toys, cars,
and just about anything you can imagine. Right before the
holiday is kickoff. JP Morgan says the cost to the
country will be roughly five billion dollars a day. The
White House says it will not invoke its legal powers
to intervene Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
Baseball hit King Pete Rose has died at the age
of eighty three. Chris Caragio has our story.
Speaker 3 (28:29):
Baseball's hit King Pete Rose has died at the age
of eighty three.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
He passed away today at his home in Las Vegas.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
Rose accumulated forty two hundred and fifty six hits over
a career that spanned twenty four seasons. He was banned
from baseball after it was determined that he bet on games.
Rose played most of his career for his hometown Cincinnati Reds,
but also spend time with the Phillies and Expos. Rose
returned to Cincinnati, where he finished his career as a
player manager. He was a seventeen time All Star. He
(28:55):
won three World Series and was the nineteen seventy three MVP.
October is Breast Cancer Awareness Month. CDC director Mandy Cohen
explains its importance.
Speaker 9 (29:06):
It's a time to honor survivors, remember loved ones, and
educate ourselves about early detection.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
Breast cancer is now the second leading cause of death
in the United States. It is one of the most
commonly diagnosed cancers in women, and it increases with age.
About eighty three percent of breast cancer diagnosis each year
are among women fifty and older.
Speaker 9 (29:25):
Remember, taking steps to stay healthy can reduce your risk
of developing breast cancer and increase your chances of surviving.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
If you ever face this battle, and if you love
restaurants like I love restaurants, if you love gourmet food
like I love gourmet food, you might be a foodie
and the cost of eating out, well, I can tell
you Eron, you want me to do this story for
you today, it's more than it's more than a mortgage.
Speaker 10 (29:50):
Yeah, it's expensive, but also you can find dives, dives
with some of the best food on the planet, and
foodies enjoy discovering new food. It's new flavors, even in
their own kitchen. So wallet Hub, oh, wallet Hub, they
put together the best places for foodie scenes and they
gave us the top ten cities. You ready, are you
(30:10):
sitting down?
Speaker 1 (30:12):
I yeah, okay, I know. New Orleans is going to
be there, New York's going to be there, Chicago's gonna
be the San Francisco. We welcome Kate n e W
nine sixty am today to the show.
Speaker 10 (30:21):
Any surprises yep, that you only hit one of the
top ten and what.
Speaker 2 (30:26):
You just mean really ready?
Speaker 1 (30:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 10 (30:28):
I know, I know. Number one Miami. I will say this,
So have you eaten in Miami lately? It's gotten so
good in the past couple of years. I really mean that, Like,
I'm shocked at the Miami food scene, follow by San Francisco,
not surprising, Orlando, Portland, Oregon, Tampa, Sacramento, Vegas, Seattle, Denver,
(30:50):
San Diego. Did I feel like every time I'm in Vegas,
I feel like spiritually ill, like I just really I
I don't know, like a lot of the food is
like the outpost of the greatest restaurant in another city,
as opposed to like actual like cool, Like Miami's not
bad because you can like find like incredible places in
(31:11):
like Little Haiti or Little Havana, or like there's just
such great interesting way we take.
Speaker 1 (31:16):
The hill in Saint Louis. Any day, I'll take a
agle deep dish beza, whether it's.
Speaker 3 (31:23):
Those those ordam those little more Natties.
Speaker 1 (31:27):
I can't believe New Orleans is not on that list.
I'll tell you something. And in defense of me, this
was before children, but Andrew and I we eat out
so often that when we were living in Tels, Oklahoma,
we said, all right, we're kind of getting sick of
these main restaurants we always go to. Let's make a pact.
We're gonna eat somewhere new every day until we've ate everywhere.
I know that sounds so stupid cool, and it was
(31:51):
really kind of fun, and we found some places that
nobody ever talked about. Nobody even knew about that were
really good. And then one days we got lower and
lower on the list. We came across a restaurant in
a trailer park. Now what do you do? And we
went in, we ate and both got deathly ill and
(32:12):
and returned the next week to a main chain but
no but the eating out and then the tips Bury
you like, we went. My daughter got her white we
had the white coat ceremony, and she begins her journey
to caring for others the rest of her life. So
we went and made it a j Alexander's No big deal.
Was just the three of us and it was two
hundred dollars. I mean it's crazy.
Speaker 10 (32:31):
Wow, yeah, it's really expensive.
Speaker 2 (32:34):
Actually.
Speaker 10 (32:34):
One of the things about this list is that the
dataset ranges from like cost of groceries, affordability, accessibility like
and then also Michelin rated restaurants like so everything from
like why do we care about the tire things?
Speaker 1 (32:49):
I never get in my car. Before I get in
the car, asked my tire, Hey, continental, where do you
think we should go today?
Speaker 10 (32:56):
It's really funny and it's like so international, like the
Mischion like it I don't think like it has the
cloud that it used to yeah, or the dread light ballsing. Yeah, No,
it's it's an interesting one. And like, listen, everybody loves food,
and then I think like a foodie, Like like you said,
like clearly you're a foody because you have to be able,
willing to take the risks, willing to go into the
(33:18):
trailer park and get ill to find something special. But
when you do and when you like it is it
is thrilling and it's exciting and it's a joy of.
Speaker 1 (33:26):
Like, well, I do I love like a family owned
little restaurant. I mean that's what I love about little literally,
I mean every and in the hill in Saint Louis.
You know, these are all family restaurants that go back generations.
I'll tell you, one of the best meals I ever
had came out of a food truck and it.
Speaker 10 (33:42):
Was that's not surprising, yeah, hot chick.
Speaker 1 (33:45):
And then what he did with the pimento, uh oh,
what do you call macaroni and cheese? It was just
it was incredible. But yeah, there's good food all around,
but it costs a lot. And you're gonna be back
to talk about thet I might even be costing more.
Pretty soon we might be going bananas over there's no bananas.
(34:05):
What are zucchinies costing?
Speaker 2 (34:08):
Buzzing?
Speaker 1 (34:09):
But seriously, this is uh, this goes on for weeks.
It's a problem.
Speaker 6 (34:15):
Oh, it's going to be a huge problem.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
This goes on for months and it's a crisis. So indeed,
serious conversation about that when Aaron comes back next hour.
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Hill shown no