Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
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John Tester has been running on a haircut for almost
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(00:53):
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(01:16):
far left record that's costing you more.
Speaker 4 (01:19):
It's time to replace John Tester.
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Speaker 2 (01:30):
Hi, it's Michael.
Speaker 5 (01:30):
Your morning show airs live five to eight am Central
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This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell joan.
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It's nighttime and I'm wearing sunglasses. We're ready to go.
We're on a mission from God.
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Yes, that's us now tops none seven minutes after the hour,
Early Bird gets the war and Welcome to Tuesday, the
twenty second of October.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
Yev vall load twenty twenty four.
Speaker 5 (02:21):
If you're just waking up, I'm Michael del Jorna, and
this is your morning show on the Aaron streaming live
on your iHeartRadio app. Jeffrey Lyon's got the controls, and
of course you're ultimately the voice. It's your morning show,
so called tollfree oneteen hundred and six eight eight ninety
five twenty two, eight hundred and six eight eight ninety
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With the talkback button on your iHeartRadio app a microphone,
you can ask a question, make a comment instantly. We
can share it with the entire class here at the
kitchen table. Elections two weeks away. Both candidates are hitting
the ground running in the Swing States. Vice President Harris
campaigning is campaign is in a campaign declining a live
(03:00):
interview with Elon.
Speaker 2 (03:01):
Musk on X Well. I think that's a good move.
Speaker 5 (03:06):
You know, you can have a rally and Elon will
jump around in his T shirt, look a little goofy,
sit down an interview and he will intellectually make a
pretzel lot of you.
Speaker 2 (03:15):
We need his laugh on one of these hot buttons.
Can you imagine?
Speaker 5 (03:19):
Because you know, Elon Musk is, for whatever you think
of him, a brilliant man. I mean, he reminds me
a little bit of my son Nicholas. That goes on
between his ears, goes really fast. Yeah, he had my
son with Rubik's cub but he can do it like
eighteen seconds. It's it's insane, really yeah, And that's kind
of how he is. But if you sat Kamala Harris
(03:42):
down with him, would actually be fascinating to watch. I
think I think she would just I don't know what,
fall into trance because he's Yeah, I don't think. I
don't think I would accept that interview. Look, you're struggling
with the view. If you're struggling with the view, do
you really want to sit down for a one on
one with Elon Musk. Around eight million people are getting
(04:06):
at least another six month break on repaying their student loans.
Liam Payne reportedly had multiple drugs in his body. And
when you hear the cocktail of drugs that he had
in his body, yeah, very troubled soul. Right before the
end Ravens and Cardinals, both winters on Monday night football. Um,
there is something to be said about a stunt. We
(04:29):
don't do this much in radio anymore, but in the
old days of radio, you'd have a big morning show
guy and something would be happening in the news and
he could either talk about it, interview somebody about it,
do a monologue about it, do something funny, a punchline, jingle,
play your favorite song. Some morning people knew how to
send out somebody in the cast or themselves and do
(04:52):
a stunt, and the next thing you know, they were
on all the local news channels.
Speaker 2 (04:57):
And these are the.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
Kinds of talent and stunts make all the difference in
the world. Another analogy would be weather Nash Roberts. You know,
anybody can tell you hazy, hot and humid today with
a high one hundred. You know, anybody can do that,
But when a hurricane's coming, Nash Roberts in New Orleans
was the hurricane experts, so his television station owned the
(05:20):
weather image because of his valuableness in one season a year,
which really boiled down to maybe one or two events
a decade. That's how important a stunt can be. And
so everybody's trying to get their arms around with Donald
Trump pulled off at McDonald's. Now, whether or not Kamala
(05:41):
Harris ever really worked in McDonald's or not, she might
as well never haven't been caught in alive, just like
Tim Walls. We're never gonna know, because that's the power
of the stunt. And then they try to make him,
you know, this evil person, because that's really what you
have right now, abortion in distortion on a ballot against
(06:02):
the devil himself. That's the left narrative. And then when
you see Donald Trump with an apron on a McDonald's,
handing your bag and people gushing over him. And here's
what she can't pull off. You remember the video we
had of her coming out of the record store. This
is when it first started coming out.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
That she was.
Speaker 5 (06:21):
You know, is she identifying as black now as opposed
to India Indian. She's struggled a little bit with black
vote because of her open borders and how it's taken
all of their resources and facilities, and so what do
they do. They do a stunt with her coming out
of a record store with coincidentally all black artists. Oh,
(06:45):
this is Miles Davis like she's ever listened to Miles
Davis in her life, and she just didn't pull it off.
And it was just so bad and so cheesy. But remember,
she did a stunt and it flopped. She's done interviews
and they flopped. She might be two weeks away from
(07:05):
being able to say and she ran for president and
she flopped. Donald Trump did a stunt in McDonald's and
they can't overcome, They can't get back on their feet
from it. Now, while Donald Trump had captured the hearts
of everybody went through that drive through window and everybody
that watched, Vice President compulsive liar Tim Walls went back
(07:27):
to the View clearly a high intellectual audience like Elon Musk,
what a knucklehead. Knucklehead was on tour at the View
and this poor guy, he can't even go into the
softball room, the nerf ball room.
Speaker 2 (07:48):
Without his line coming up.
Speaker 8 (07:50):
The statements you've made about your previous military record, travels
you've been in. I want to be unequivocal. Nobody lies
as much as Donald Trump. Nothing that you've mislet on
as anything on.
Speaker 7 (07:59):
The same line.
Speaker 5 (08:00):
Okay, how you're gonna give us one lie of Donald Trump's.
Speaker 8 (08:08):
So much mistruth in our politics, so many lies. Can't
there be no gray area? And how would you convey
the voters? They may be concerned that.
Speaker 4 (08:15):
There's a trusted Yeah, I do think you have to
be careful about this.
Speaker 7 (08:18):
And it's stating, you know, in Hong Kong in August
of eighty nine, thirty five years ago. I think people
do separate that between a pathological liar like Donald Trumpty.
Speaker 2 (08:28):
But see, that's interesting. I don't know that they do.
Speaker 5 (08:32):
You know, a misspeak is a misspeak, But saying I
was in Tienneman Square that's a lie.
Speaker 2 (08:39):
That's not a misspeak.
Speaker 9 (08:44):
You know.
Speaker 2 (08:45):
Saying I'm trying.
Speaker 5 (08:46):
To think of would a good would be a great
example of a misspeak. The Dolphins lost last night when
you really meant the Buccaneers, that's a misspeak. Saying you
were quarterback from Tampa Bay as they won last night,
that's a lie, all right. So you know, when he
says he was carrying a weapon in war, he didn't.
(09:09):
When he said he was the coach of a championship
high school team, he wasn't. He was a volunteer assistant.
When he said he was in Tenement Square, he wasn't
and he weren't near it. Those are lies. But watch
how they set it up, so nobody's a bigger liar
th the Donald Trump crowd roars people, and then she's trying
to even answer it for him. People know the difference
(09:31):
between a pathological liar and a misspeak, right, like a
puppet something?
Speaker 2 (09:39):
Why is that not? Oh sorry?
Speaker 5 (09:43):
I an error.
Speaker 8 (09:44):
Where there's so much mistruth in our politics, so many lies,
can't there be no gray area? And how would you
convey the voters? They may be concerned that.
Speaker 7 (09:52):
There's a trusted Yeah, I do think you have to
be careful about this orrich stating, you know, in Hong
Kong in August of eighty nine, thirty five years ago.
I think people do separate that between a pathological liar.
Speaker 4 (10:03):
Like Donald Trump. They did it out there.
Speaker 7 (10:05):
But I do think it's important that we're careful about how.
Speaker 4 (10:07):
We speak it.
Speaker 7 (10:08):
It's something for me as I think being a teacher,
being a coach, I just speak from my heart.
Speaker 4 (10:12):
I speak honestly. I speak in the moment and.
Speaker 7 (10:14):
In praying for debate, I told my team that one
of the I felt like I'm at a disadvantage in
a debate, because my tendency is to just answer the
question that you're asked as quickly as.
Speaker 1 (10:23):
You can do, never what you do in a debate.
Speaker 4 (10:27):
They would say that, so, yeah, I think so.
Speaker 7 (10:28):
But I think the public sees this the uh just
a massive amount of misinformation that gets poured out there
is important.
Speaker 4 (10:34):
To be detailed.
Speaker 5 (10:37):
So when they lie, it's a gray area. When they lie,
it's not a lie like Donald Trump. It's different, and
people know the difference. It's unbelievable. Now, the question is
is America buying this? The poule suggests that they're not.
(10:57):
And in the end, look, I remember where I was
in nineteen eighty nine. Actually in nineteen eighty nine, I
was walking my dog. I lived in Georgetown, and it
was freezing and all I wished he would do is
go pooh. And I couldn't get him, so, you know,
I tried to switch. So I went across the street,
(11:21):
which by the way, was very intimidating for me. Having
grown up in suburbs of Chicago and in New Orleans,
I had never seen it like this. But I found
myself right in front of Russian guards at the Russian embassy. Wow,
and I'm staring into the face of Russians like I
used to see on television, armed in uniform across the
street from where I'm living. By the way, the uh,
(11:44):
the Soviet embassy is no longer there, it moved. And
where did Joey finally squat and poop? Almost right on
the foot of the Russian guard And I'm like, and
that's before we had bags and stuff to do. It
was just like, ahh, I'm telling you he wasn't going.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
I didn't know what he so be that. But now
imagine if I changed that story to I was.
Speaker 5 (12:07):
In Moscow, right and Joey booped right on the Russian
Emperor's front door. I mean, that's lying not anymore with
the Democrats, that's just a grey area.
Speaker 2 (12:20):
Go figure, can't make this stuff up.
Speaker 4 (12:23):
This is your Morning show with Michael Deltna.
Speaker 5 (12:27):
All right, how do the Democrats feel about being removed
from the primary process? Moreover, how do they feel now
compared to how might they feel if Kamala goes on
to lose? See lost in this entire process, there's been
the Democrat voters. Oh, they all had a primary. They
(12:50):
all went out and voted for Joe Biden. And then
someone just took Joe Biden away and someone decided without
asking them whom to give their votes to. Now, even
if Kamala Harris goes on to win, this shouldn't sit
well with them, should it. Well, the answer won't surprise you,
(13:12):
and I'm guessing they're going to feel even worse if
Kamala goes on to lose.
Speaker 2 (13:16):
That's coming up in about thirty minutes.
Speaker 5 (13:18):
Also, the travel industry is predicting big changes and where
we're all going to be spending our vacation time next year.
Speaker 2 (13:23):
How could they possibly know?
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Ah, Aaron Reyale with the reality story in less than
fifteen minutes and the election is just two weeks away.
Both candidates are hitting hard all the swing states. Vice
President Harris declining to do an interview with elon moscow X,
probably good decision there. Meanwhile, they said Vice President knucklehead
(13:45):
out on an interview tour and he couldn't even really
handle the view very well. We'll demonstrate that momentarily. And
we had a double header on Monday night football last night.
Ravens took the early game and the Cardinals took the
late game. That is a law for our listeners in
Tampa and a victory for our listeners in Phoenix. All right,
so Walls comes tumbling down on the view and I
(14:07):
played the clip for you just moments ago. When he lies,
it's not a lie, it's a gray area. It's oh,
you guys know the difference between a misspeak and a lie.
I was in Tienamen Square, just like I was in
Moscow walking my dog in nineteen eighty nine. You know,
I really like that story better if I'm in.
Speaker 4 (14:26):
Moscow, right, it sounds much more interesting.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
I mean, the Soviet embassy across the street from where
I lived in Georgetown isn't nearly as exciting as I'm
in Moscow and my dog poops right at the front
step of the Kremlin.
Speaker 2 (14:39):
I am going to start lying. Lying's fun.
Speaker 10 (14:41):
You know.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
It reminds me.
Speaker 5 (14:42):
It was the bottom of the sixth and we were
up the Yankees, and I'm sitting next to the mic,
and I said, Mick, you don't think he's gonna throw
me curveballs, do you? And he said no, I think
he's gonna come at you with a straight fastball. So
I'll dig in. I see him winding out, and I
(15:03):
remember I was thinking about the eggplant parmesan I had
the night before at two chores, and then I remembered
real quickly, right as the ball was leaving his hand
what Mick said, Expect the fastball and boom out of
the ballpark. I hit the home run that won the
World Series for the Yankees.
Speaker 2 (15:20):
You know what lying is fun? Anybody else want to
tell lie?
Speaker 5 (15:23):
You use the talk back button. My life is so
much more interesting when I lie. By the way, my
son sent me this interesting fact. While we're add In
the nineteen forty one World Series between the Dodgers and
the Yankees, the cheapest ticket at Yankee Stadium was a
(15:43):
dollar and ten cents. This year, when the Dodgers play
the Yankees at Dodgers Stadium, the cheapest ticket is one thousand,
eighty five dollars each. And I don't have to tell
you that would put you in the out field, the
far left left field corner of the outfield, where your
(16:06):
cheapest cheapest seat in nineteen forty one would have put you.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
A little bit up between home plate and third base.
Speaker 5 (16:23):
A buck in nineteen forty one, one thoy eighty five
in twenty twenty four, And I wish that was a lie.
Speaker 2 (16:32):
It's not all right.
Speaker 5 (16:32):
So Tim Walls goes on the view he's just lying away.
But it's gray and it's understandable. Now, remember how that
clip starts with the view person asking the question, saying,
we all know nobody's a pathological liar like Donald Trump.
No examples given. Crowd goes crazy. Now, let's downplay your
lies that you've been caught in hearing. Not a knucklehead,
(16:55):
you're just misunderstood. But if we compare that to the
lies that Donald Trump tells, you know, like crime is
actually down, not up. I mean, your whole narrative that
these open borders and millions that have come in are
mentally ill or prisoners or thugs from other countries. That's
(17:18):
not true because crime is actually down. Since you weren't president,
this becomes the most relevant story of the morning. When
the FBI originally released the final crime data for twenty
twenty two in September of twenty twenty three, it reported
that the nation's violent crime fell two point one percent.
This quickly became and remains a Democratic Party talking point,
(17:44):
and of course, the grounds for which Donald Trump is
a liar. He was even fact checked in a recent
interview and he fact checked.
Speaker 2 (17:52):
The fact checker.
Speaker 5 (17:55):
Why because the president knows what the FBI did. They
quietly rever those numbers and released new data that shows
violent crime actually increased by four point five percent and
twenty two twenty two didn't decrease by two point one,
increased by four and a half percent, and that new
(18:16):
data includes thousands more murders, rapes, robberies, and aggravated assaults.
The bureau, which has been at the center of a
partisan storm or two in its day, made no mention
of these revisions in its September twenty twenty four press release.
(18:37):
RCI discovered the changes through a cryptic reference on the
FBI's website that states the twenty twenty two violent crime
rate has been updated for inclusion in the report for
twenty twenty three, but there is no mention that the
numbers increased. One only sees the change by downloading the
FBI's new crime data and comparing it to a file
(18:59):
that you may have down loaded or printed from a
year prior.
Speaker 2 (19:02):
Other than that, you wouldn't even know that they changed
it now.
Speaker 5 (19:10):
It doesn't take a rocket science to see that the
FBI has been very partisan and used very recklessly to
attack political opponents, even does it when it's editing. It
spent over three weeks since the FBI released its revised data,
and the bureau's lack of acknowledgment or explanation about the
significant changes concerns researchers.
Speaker 2 (19:32):
Quote.
Speaker 5 (19:33):
I have checked the data on total violent crime from
two thousand and four to twenty twenty two, said Karl Murray,
a professor at the College of will Even Mary gorgeous
campus by the way, who specializes in studying crime, told
real clear investigations. There were no revisions from two thousand
and four to twenty and fifteen, but from twenty sixteen
to from twenty sixteen to twenty twenty there were some
(19:55):
small changes of less than one percent percentage point, but
huge changes in twenty one and twenty twenty two, especially
without an explanation, making it difficult moving forward to trust
FBI data.
Speaker 2 (20:15):
Trust isn't that a problem? Every time we turn around?
Speaker 5 (20:20):
We can't trust politicians, whether you call it a gray area,
misspeak or a blatant lie. Can't trust our agencies that
have turned against candidates and the American people. A homeland
security that was designed to protect us from enemies from
outside coming in turned against those within. We don't trust
(20:44):
the media, we don't trust politicians, we don't trust courts,
we don't trust police, we don't trust each other. And
if you ever wonder why it's stories buried like this,
remember it's the wolves that are fact checking and guarding
(21:05):
the hen House. Now knowing that little, just that one
little tidbit about the FBI, Now go back and listen
to Tim Walls on the view the.
Speaker 8 (21:17):
Statements you've made about your previous military record and travels
you'd been in. I want to be unequivocal. Nobody lies
as much as Donald Trump. Nothing that you've mislet on
is anything on the same level. So much mistruth in
our politics, so many lies. Can't there be no gray area?
And how would you convey the voters? They may be
concerned that there's.
Speaker 7 (21:36):
A trusted Yeah, I do think you have to be
careful about this or it's stating, you know, in Hong
Kong in August years ago. I think people do separate
that between a pathological liar like Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (21:48):
They did it out there. But I do think it's
important that we're.
Speaker 5 (21:51):
At the FBI table, at the selling you all this nonsense.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
Listen core The Your Boy and My Morton Show is
Your Morton Show with my buddy Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 2 (22:05):
Quick look at your top five stories of the date.
Speaker 5 (22:08):
Vice President Harris's campaign is declining a live interview with
Elon mus Musk on X.
Speaker 2 (22:13):
I think that's a good move. Brian Shook has the story.
Speaker 11 (22:17):
That's according to billionaire investor Mark Cuban on CNBC. He
said he told the Harris campaign he could try to
connect them with Musk, who owns X, but the Harris
campaign reportedly said they didn't trust that Musk would stick
to the topic of the election. Musk responded to Cuban's comments,
writing on X that he'd be happy to have a
(22:37):
live discussion so there can't be any distortion.
Speaker 4 (22:40):
I'm Brian Shuk for.
Speaker 5 (22:42):
President Donald Trump and Vice President Harris are hitting the
key swing states two weeks before election date.
Speaker 2 (22:47):
Mark Mayfield has the update.
Speaker 12 (22:49):
Trump was in North Carolina on Monday to tour of
hurricane damage in Ashville.
Speaker 7 (22:53):
Well, stop throwing our money overseas and we're going to
let our country benefit.
Speaker 4 (22:59):
We're going to put him.
Speaker 12 (23:00):
On Tuesday, Trump will hold a rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, Meanwhile,
Harris ex sitting several swing states, including Michigan, Wisconsin, in
Pennsylvania just the name of you, most poles have them
neck and neck in these key states.
Speaker 5 (23:12):
On Mark Mayfield, a deadly doc collapses under investigation off
the Georgia Coast.
Speaker 2 (23:16):
Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 10 (23:17):
It happens Saturday during the festival celebrating a community of
descendants of slaves. Kriyashreider has more.
Speaker 13 (23:23):
Typically, there's only about one hundred people that make their
way over to the island every single day. Over the weekend,
there were seven hundred people on the island, so we
don't know if that could have been a contributing factor.
Speaker 10 (23:35):
The Department of Natural Resources say at least twenty people
fell into the water when a gangway collapse ats Appellow
Island's marsh Landing dock. Seven of those people died and
several others were in critical condition. The structure had reportedly
just been inspected within the last year.
Speaker 5 (23:48):
I'le se Taylor, Aaron Rayel, wherever you are, don't write that.
Quinnipiac University check just yet. Around eight million people are
getting at least another six months break on repaying their
federal student loans. Tammy Trihilo has more those.
Speaker 9 (24:00):
Eligible are enrolled in the Biden Administration's Save Plan. The
Department of Education said on Monday that the enrollees will
be put in an interest free forbearance. The pause and
repayment comes as the Save Plan is being challenged in
court by Republican Attorneys General. They accused President Biden of
trying to find a loophole to forgive student debt after
a broader debt cancelation plan was struck down by the
(24:23):
Supreme Court earlier this year. I'm Tammy Trio.
Speaker 2 (24:26):
Our listeners in Phoenix are celebrating.
Speaker 5 (24:28):
Our listeners in Tampa are mourning Baker Mayfield at three
hundred and seventy yards and three touchdowns, But it was
the two interceptions that led to scores that allowed the
Ravens to win forty one to thirty one. Bucks loose
last night and Kyler Murray and the Cardinals a winner over.
Speaker 2 (24:43):
That would be the Los Angeles Chargers.
Speaker 5 (24:45):
Now almost said San Diego seventeen fifteen and eight Monday
night football double header. While the travel industry is predicting
big changes and where we're all going to be spending
our vacations next year. How could they possibly know, Aaron,
where we're going.
Speaker 14 (25:00):
Oh no, they just seemed to know at the trends
of like where the airlines go. They have these travel
trends and the idea of like the greatest of all
time vacation to the Paris, to the Bali, to the London.
Apparently people took those and now they want off the
beaten paths. This is according to Expedia and bookings dot Com.
(25:20):
Apparently sixty three percent of travelers Michael said they want
to visit an off the beaten track destination.
Speaker 2 (25:27):
What does that look like?
Speaker 14 (25:29):
Ron's France, Brescia, Italy, Cozumel, Mexico, Santa Barbara, gorgeous, Waikato,
New Zealand, Girona in Spain, fuku Oka, Abu Dabi Krabi, Thailand.
Been there, It's awesome. Can Moore, Canada? Interesting? Different? What
are your thoughts?
Speaker 5 (25:48):
Is the pad tie in Thailand as good as the
pad Thai in America?
Speaker 4 (25:52):
Much better?
Speaker 2 (25:52):
Oh? Really?
Speaker 14 (25:54):
Like significant? And I love pad Thai here too, but
it's it's different but better.
Speaker 4 (25:58):
Yeah, I love it.
Speaker 5 (26:00):
I don't I don't know any of those, and I
don't even know how people are thinking.
Speaker 2 (26:02):
I mean off.
Speaker 5 (26:03):
The beaten path to me is picky un Mississippi and
going to see my father.
Speaker 2 (26:08):
I don't relate, I guess I don't really. I can Understan.
Speaker 5 (26:10):
I can relate to dream vacations. We're going to be
taking listeners to Italy next year the Dover Coast. Yeah,
and that should be wonderful. But Paris is always a
dream mine has always been, and I've never done it.
Canard is the Rolls Royce of cruise lines, and Canard
does a cruise where I believe you start in Barcelona, Spain,
(26:33):
you do all of Italy, and you end in Athens, Greece.
Speaker 2 (26:35):
I can't imagine.
Speaker 5 (26:39):
That would be the beaten path, that would be the
beaten checking account because I can't imagine what that would
that would cost. But I mean, I get you spend big,
you spend little, but you know, for us, we spend big,
and then when we spend little, we do something fun
like Dollywood and gatlin.
Speaker 14 (26:54):
Burg, right, And it's a you know, kind of an
interesting one in the sense that you're like, well, okay,
if you want to spend they are cheaper, by the way,
which is definitely a driving factor. And then you can
get if you look at like United Airlines they're now
offering this month expanded international travel to Senegal, Greenland and Mongolia.
(27:15):
Like these are serious destinations, and I think the idea
that also social media plays in this is big. It's
not a non factor in the sense that you see
these trips that people are taking too truly remote destinations
that offer you a cheaper like cheaper and more relaxing,
and they want it.
Speaker 5 (27:33):
So Aaron and I, when we're alike, we're just alike.
And when we're different, we're completely different. See, you have
fearless with this stuff, and I think it has to
do with when you came out of college, especially with
ESPN and living in foreign countries. See all that's so
intimidating to me, Like Mongolia, I would be afraid.
Speaker 2 (27:50):
I don't know anybody in Mongolia.
Speaker 5 (27:51):
I wouldn't know how to talk or get lost or
I would be so that.
Speaker 14 (27:55):
But you're just like you would be great, Michael. You
could handle it, and I know you now you would
love it. It's enriching. I feel like for me, it's
like the stuff that just it's it's soul reaffirming, it's
life reaffirming. It shows you how small you are in
this and how just be.
Speaker 2 (28:11):
Nicer, Like, I don't know.
Speaker 14 (28:12):
For me, it's just like the easiest thing to do
in the sense that it's that experience of like.
Speaker 5 (28:18):
Oh wow, so a little off the beaten path rather
than in Rome or in Paris, you get a lot
more bang for your buck. That seems to be the trend,
which tells us coming out of COVID, we blew big
bucks and went to high end destinations. Now we're going
to try to lay Low. By the way, speaking of
lay Low, you were missing yesterday. Now, just I want
you to know something. I'm a person of very very
(28:38):
high faith, but I'm also of complete Italian blood, so
I believe in God. I exercise great faith as I worry.
If you don't show up, we leave you on Friday,
you're going to be in a polo match with a
strange horse, and then you're off on Monday.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
We thought you got thrown from a horse.
Speaker 5 (28:56):
I was running right now at the top of the
Empire State Building to see if you were in a wheelchair.
Speaker 4 (29:01):
I mean, yeah, oh, thank you.
Speaker 14 (29:03):
No, it was all good. And that was actually like
a planned day that I needed for my kids stuff.
It was it just happened to fall.
Speaker 2 (29:10):
Well, how'd you do on your new horse?
Speaker 10 (29:12):
Honestly?
Speaker 12 (29:12):
Pretty well?
Speaker 10 (29:13):
I got a goal.
Speaker 14 (29:13):
It was a penalty goal, so I don't want to
be like I wasn't bombing down the field and got it.
It was pretty close to the goal. But I got
a goal and it was awesome. It was really fun.
And one of these, so I had two. One was
great and then the horse that I ironed and went lame.
So I had to have two horses. I didn't know.
One was awesome, one was hot, and yeah, all in
all it was I was so happy with it.
Speaker 2 (29:31):
Charlene is writing a new song.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
I'd never been to Aaron because you live a more
exciting life than even Charlene did in that song.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Enfield showing Now.
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