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October 22, 2025 32 mins

Do "no kings" protests indicate an increase in midterm momentum for the Democratic Party?  Or does it simply reveal internal party divisions, suggesting the group is at odds with itself?   Our senior contributor from YMS joins us to discuss the Trump midterm campaign and possible strategies for what he might promote.

What’s the beef that American ranchers have with President Trump’s trade policy with Argentina? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will explain.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show has heard live
from five to eight am Central, six to nine am Eastern,
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take us along on the drive to work, but better

(00:21):
late than never.

Speaker 2 (00:22):
Enjoy the podcast well two three starting your morning off right,
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding.

Speaker 3 (00:32):
Because we're in this together.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Jordan.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Don't even get me started.

Speaker 2 (00:40):
How time flies When we all get together, we must
be having fun, because time flies.

Speaker 3 (00:46):
Already the third hour, already halfway through the week.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Welcome to Wednesday, October to twenty second, twenty twenty five.
We're never gonna live Wednesday, October twenty second, twenty twenty
five again. Oh, we got to understand it together, because
we're all in it together. We gotta make differences in
other people's lives. We've got to make sure we cherish
our own. Thanks for starting your morning off right with
your morning show. We get to welcome, as David Zanati
would say, this is a big deal. Say I can't

(01:10):
do it like you, David. It's a big deal. That's
how you normally do it. It's a big deal. Somehow
it means more when I say it. It does everything
in life does. This is a big deal. We get
to welcome Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, to the Your Morning Show kitchen table.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
It's a big deal.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
Talk thirteen, twenty ninety nine point one FMWJAS in Pittsburgh.
Also a big deal is our Marion, Carbondale, Illinois, home
of Southern Illinois University, the Party School of America, News
Radio WJPF and Marion Carbondale. That's actually two stations, two two,
two stations in one. Welcome to your morning show. There's

(01:47):
ways to participate because the show belongs to you. There's
the talkback button. If you're listening on the iHeart app,
you don't rot on hold anymore. Press the button boom
thirty seconds to make your comment, ask your question, or
you can email me at Michael di atiheartmedia dot com.
From time to time you'll hear me talk to our
senior contributor, David Soonadi. He is the CEO of the
American Policy Roundtable. He's host of The Public Square, which

(02:07):
is shert on two hundred stations on demand anytime at
the public Square dot com. And he joins US as
a senior contributor on your morning show. So let me
lay this out day twenty two of the partial shutdown.
The Democrats are telling everybody it's Trump shutdown. Meanwhile, we
have the new ras Musem poll fifty one percent of
Americans want the government shutdown to continue. That's driven by

(02:28):
two thirds of Democrats. So it's Democrats wanting to harass
the president and they don't care how many of their
own people they hurt and keep the government shut down,
as they call it, the Trump shutdown. Yeah, follow the
bouncing balls, because sometimes they'll catch you in the wrong place.
And then you have Barack Obama campaigning in Virginia, New Jersey,

(02:49):
and boy do those candidates need the help and I
don't even think the Great Obama Saiah can help them.
And now Donald Trump will begin his campaigning for the
midterm election day, and it begs the question, does the
No King's protest indicate an increase in midterm momentum is
some talking heads are saying for the Democrat Party or

(03:09):
is it simply revealing the internal party divisions, the civil
war that they're in, and the fight within themselves. Our
senior contributor David Sanai's here to talk about that, as
well as the President's message in this midterm election, as
well as we'll get to Jensaki, who reveals kind of
what's coming, which is Trump derangement syndrome will become Vance

(03:33):
derangement syndrome.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
Good morning, David, Good morning, Michael, Good morning, Read, Good morning, Jeff.
It's a big deal that you're here. Good morning, Pittsburgh.
This is fantastic and in Indiana right. Have you ever
eaten at Jerome Bettis's restaurant? I haven't, but I've eaten
some of the best kitchens in all of Greater Pittsburgh
because all of my grandmothers and aunts lived.

Speaker 3 (03:55):
In cook There.

Speaker 2 (03:56):
Yeah, this is right near the stadium, and it was
Jerome Bettis, no name Pittsburgh the bus.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
So we go in there and I don't know what
I was expecting.

Speaker 2 (04:04):
They got like an office that's open and it's like
all of his stuff and it's like, hey, that's Jerome
Bettis's office.

Speaker 3 (04:09):
I doubt it is. Maybe it is, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (04:12):
We sit down, I get this cheeseburger that is fused
with rib meat and ground meat, which I cannot tell
you what a spectacular flavor though it. So the burger
was great, fries are great.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:23):
Yeah. So then it comes time for dessert. Now I
am a carrot cake freak. I think I've had the
best carrot cakes in the world. And I look down
and it's a Grandma Bettice's carrot cake. So I order
Gramma Beticus. Best carrot cake of my life anywhere you know,
Jay Alexander says, a great carrot cake blows it away.

(04:45):
So on behalf of Jerome Bettie's restaurant. Roberto Clementi, who
ruled in right Field, the Beautiful Rivers, welcome Pittsburgh.

Speaker 3 (04:53):
To your morning show.

Speaker 4 (04:54):
It's a big deal, it is, and so so much
to talk about today. Now for those listening throughout northeastern
Ohio who know that Rachel Walgate makes the best carrot cake,
we will now have to arrange for a sampling and
a testing at Christmas in America for Michael del Zorno.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
All right, this is something I'll let you know how
it stacks up with Grama Medas right right. The other
thing I want to tell you, Michael, is something just
happened the other day. We did.

Speaker 4 (05:19):
We don't do a lot of counting up on influence
because things come and things go in this business, and
we're in the media and public policy business. But we
put together all of the different products that we are
not producing and working on every day in radio or
in podcasting across the country, and we're now connected in
over eight hundred stations, now eight hundred and two stations

(05:40):
if we count being with you today in Pittsburgh in Indiana.
And so what's happened with the public store Meedia network?
From one single station on a dat machine. Actually we
started on real, real tape. We started on real real
tape with one microphone. We're now on a weekly basis
talking to people across eight hundred different stations through five
different kinds of product lines to try to help people

(06:02):
understand what America is, what our role is, what our
responsibility is, and how to fix this mess. I will
tell you, listening to your program this morning, I could
almost get discouraged about fixing this mess.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Wait a wit, Wait, a minute.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Do you have the Flip Gregory song for David? He
probably needs to hear a little bit of that.

Speaker 3 (06:19):
No, I won't be able to that.

Speaker 4 (06:21):
Look, I am that this Congress is so rapidly dysfunctional.
And what has happened now is the two political parties
have basically reprogrammed the minds of decent people. Look, the
people that are up there in Congress, by and large,
I would love to be able to say this across
the board, the people that up there are not stupid.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Well, I don't know. I've worked there a long time, so.

Speaker 4 (06:44):
There's some that maybe you got it. But let's just say,
by and large, the people that are sitting in those seats,
particularly in the House of Representatives, are not stupid. They
have been consumed by a virus of partisanship that makes
absolutely no sense. They're playing with people's lives when they've
got the responsibility to pay the bill and they know

(07:07):
they have to build, and we know they have to
pay it, and we know it's more that you can't
fix this thing, playing with it and their play.

Speaker 2 (07:16):
Why do we lose sight of the legislative branch of government.
I mean, we focus on governors, we focus on presidents.
I look back and it was state legislatures that failed
America with COVID allowing them to change election laws going
along with all the narratives and mandates. And now we're
seeing it at the federal level as well. But they'll

(07:36):
stop at nothing. I mean, yesterday we had the story
from the Hill that basically said some insiders and leadership
of the Democrat parties said they cannot make a budget
deal because they're afraid of these seven million No King protesters.
First of all, that's buying it. With seven million, it
was probably three million. And imagine a party that's afraid

(07:56):
of its own base. That's unheard of. And I don't
know which comes first, the dysfunction of the chicken or
the egg, but it's dysfunctional. And I don't see any
end in sight. And by the way, even if you
got an end, you'd be right back at another shutdown
in three weeks.

Speaker 4 (08:11):
And the problem is that the people who are in
these positions, who run these paries, and look, you said,
why are we absorbed with the executive branch? The Republicans
are as bad, if not worse, in this regard. We
think that if you vote the person at the top.
Everything takes care of itself. The system doesn't work that way.
It's not wired that way. It's like literally trying to

(08:32):
play with all of your computer toys off the internet.
You're not connected to anything, and these people are not
connected to reality. The reality is Congress is the vortex
of power. That's the way Hamilton wrote about it in
the Federalist Papers. It's true today we have a bunch
of people. Look, I can't. I cannot do this and
upbreak commandments on this program.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
I'm uttered the same restorat. By the way, these are
self inflicted commandments that we have got. But I mean,
think about it this way. If you you really were
a legitimate, no king's marcher, I mean, the first thing
you'd have to do is get a grip with reality.
We don't have a king. We have a duly elected president.
He carried ninety percent of all counties in the United States,
he won all the swing state seventy seven million of
the popular vote in the landslide three hundred and twelve

(09:14):
in the electoral College map.

Speaker 3 (09:15):
We don't have a king. We have a duly elected president.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
But if you did think if you were fearful of
a king, stop obsessing on governors and presidents and march
against your members of Congress.

Speaker 3 (09:27):
Hello, let's talk about Pittsburgh. Perfect example of history. Rick
Santorum came from Pittsburgh.

Speaker 4 (09:32):
Is an honest, decent, god fearing family man, congress person,
did a great job in Congress.

Speaker 3 (09:38):
Decided he want to run for the Senate, but George W.

Speaker 4 (09:41):
Bush decided he would rather protect Arlen Specter in that
seat because he didn't want to take the risk of
losing because he had an incumbent. So why put this
young up, this young star coming forward, so that the
Republicans back Spector. Spector won the election and then Flipton
became a Democrat.

Speaker 3 (09:58):
You see, it's stupid. Is just playing stupid with the party. Boss.

Speaker 4 (10:02):
So starting with the White House, all the state party people,
and all the money people. What is wrong with the
money people to keep funding the Republican Party unless they
want this country to collapse? That's the question, David Satire
the Republicans is the Democrats?

Speaker 2 (10:17):
David and I as our senior contributor. He's joining us.
There was also another poll, a Gallop poll Americans see
the need for a third party, but offer very soft support.
Sixty two percent of America say a third party is needed,
but only fifteen percent would be very likely to vote
for that third party. We know, by the way, I
would love for America to wake up one day and

(10:38):
one hundred percent agree we need no party. That's what
we should be shooting for, not a third. Yeah, we
need two. We got are killing us, so let's add
one to kick us while we're down.

Speaker 3 (10:47):
But what do you make of that?

Speaker 2 (10:48):
I mean, I view this as me and I'm just
one opinion, and that don't matter more than you or
the listeners. I think all this No King's nonsense shows
how divide to the Democrat Party is and that they're
willing to do anything. They will destroy America. I mean,
they will keep the government shut down in order to
hate Trump. I mean, I go back to that Pam
Bondi line, if only you loved America as much as

(11:11):
you hate Donald Trump, and they don't care if it
cuts off their own food stamps and their kids starve.
But I think I see this as the Democrat priorty
doing whatever it takes to if they can.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
I mean, this is pure.

Speaker 2 (11:25):
Have you ever done a word study and the difference
between jealousy and envy. They're two completely different things. Jealousy
is I like David's car better, or I like the
way he says that's a big deal better. Or I
would rather host the Public Square than this show, which
isn't true.

Speaker 3 (11:40):
But you know what I'm saying. That's jealousy.

Speaker 2 (11:42):
Envy is you have something I want or that belongs
to me, and if I can't have it, you can't
have They will burn the house down before they let
you live in it. They're gonna stop at nothing, and
they were gonna do it in twenty twenty, so why
wouldn't they do it again?

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Michael.

Speaker 4 (11:58):
We are in a war right now in our country
between adolescence and maturity.

Speaker 3 (12:04):
That's the war.

Speaker 4 (12:05):
And what we have is you walk across the news stations,
you read across the articles. You and I do this
every single day, twenty four hours a day, and what
you have is one group of people that's in a
perpetual temper tantrum. I don't know if they're mad at
their daddy, they're mad at their mommy, they're mad at
their grandma or their grandpa, they're med at their teachers,
if they're mad at God, if they're mad at what
they see in the mirror. They're just mad, and they

(12:28):
think that politics is the playpen in which you throw
all the toys out and create violence. They think that
they're doing somehow good living in a realm of outrage.
But what they're really doing is denying the reality that
whether you like it or not, whether you believe in
God or not, whether you go to church or not,
you got to get up every day and work to
pay the bills.

Speaker 5 (12:51):
Hey, I'm Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 3 (13:02):
Hey, it's me Michael.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
You can listen to your Morning Show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
Friday from three to six Pacific, five to eighth Central,
and six to nine Eastern on great radio stations like
TOK six fifty KSTE and Sacramento or one oh four
nine The Patriot in Saint Louis and Impact Radio one
oh five nine and twelve fifty whd Z in Tampa, Florida.

(13:24):
Sure hope you can join us live and make us
a part of your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy the.

Speaker 3 (13:28):
Podcast Your Morning Show I'm Michael del Chorno.

Speaker 2 (13:31):
What's the beef with American ranchers and the president on
trade policy? More on that with Rory O'Neil coming up
in minutes. Today is day twenty two of the partial shutdown.
We're talking about the dysfunction inside our capital as Democrat
Senator Jeff Merkley plans to speak all night in protest
of President Trump. More political theater, no statesman, no big

(13:55):
boys in the room solving problems, and Barack Obama sating
the campaign trailedge to help the candidates in New Jersey
and Virginia, and boy do they need it. By the way,
the White House denying reports of TMZ. The President Trump
is considering considering a pardon of the of the sentence
or a commutation for Sean P.

Speaker 3 (14:15):
Ditty Combs that was a.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
TMZ fabrication or a trial balloon that they have since
taken down. We're visiting with David's and Audien having a
discussion on this dysfunction, and you know, it begs the
question how far would the Democrats go. It appears that
fifty one percent of America would like the government to
remain shut down, and that's driven by two thirds of Democrats.

(14:38):
So as they're blaming this and calling this the Trump
government shutdown, a president's approval rating is up, not down,
and the blame is shifting to Democrats. But they're too
afraid to stop fighting because that's what they fear their
own base. How far would the Democrats go in this
and what would ultimately solve this?

Speaker 4 (14:58):
Well, first off, Michael, I don't want to break every bubble.
At the same time, that poll, that rasmusim poll is
it's interesting and criticizing you for reporting on it, and
it's a great platform for conversation, but I'm not so
sure anyone who even got poll on that poll knows
what they're talking about.

Speaker 3 (15:15):
Probably not.

Speaker 4 (15:16):
Yeah, the complications of how Congress works. It's designed to
be complicated because they don't want us to know. They've
got the best insider trader game in the world. They
control the biggest budget in.

Speaker 3 (15:25):
The world figuratively and literally.

Speaker 4 (15:27):
Literally, and they do it based upon their own rules,
and they just wave and smile and show up every
two years or every six years and say, remember me,
here's my name, vote for me.

Speaker 3 (15:36):
It's a syndicate.

Speaker 4 (15:37):
It is a corrupt operation, and it is fueled by
both of these political parties.

Speaker 3 (15:43):
One political party is trying to.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
Act like a bunch of grown ups, the other is
a bunch of temper tantrum adolescents. Now, on any given day,
they can switch roles on any given day, but on
this particular issue, the idea that America should pay its bills,
there is no place for either of these groups to
not be working together. Whatever it takes, blow up the

(16:08):
supermajority on this one. Do whatever you have to do,
fix the stupid problem now, because it's a technical reality.
You want to talk about long term budgetary issues, that's
going to require holding majorities in the Senate, majorities in
the House, and it's only going to creep along every
year in the budget process.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
It's a long twenty year haul.

Speaker 4 (16:30):
This is all theater and it's totally stupid, and it
should be done.

Speaker 2 (16:35):
So one of the things is the filibuster and the
history of that and the use of that, because that
would apply to ending this rather quickly, and that would
put it back into the hands of the people. Because
if you really want to, you know, you really want
to have no king, march to the polls in the
midterm elections and elect your party the majority, and then

(16:58):
your party can handle that agenda. But you don't hold
up the budget process in order to do what should
be done in an elective process. I mean, I think
that's it's it's it's so childish. It's hard to try
to analyze this from a mature standpoint.

Speaker 3 (17:13):
This is pure political the all of us hostage.

Speaker 4 (17:15):
Yeah, and it's just it's like just getting beat up
in the back yard of the playground. I mean, this
is not right now as far as the filibuster goes. Look,
here's here's the challenge that we have. Most many, many
of the people that are conservatives today have a reactionary
button that's overworked. And I understand completely, I truly do.
We're so fed up with stupid that you just you

(17:39):
just don't have any boundary. Just your barriers are broken down.
It's like the button doesn't work. You hit pause, you
hit quiet, you hit the lay, but it doesn't work anymore.
We're so frustrated, and sometimes we transfer that legitimate outrage
onto things that don't deserve outrage. They need quiet consideration,
like the rules of the Senate.

Speaker 3 (17:59):
What is the filibuster? Why is it? Why does it.

Speaker 4 (18:01):
Empower one body over the other, and why does that
body now become run by a handful of six or
eight people who control everything in our government. Is that
sound like the US Constitution to you? Of course it doesn't.
It happened in the realm of Woodrow Wilson. It's been
going forward ever since, and somehow conservative commentators have gotten
the idea that it's somehow.

Speaker 3 (18:22):
I mean Wilson, the father of progressivism. Yeah, oh yeah, yeah,
that guy. It would be wood He was at it again.

Speaker 4 (18:28):
Okay, And here we are in a situation where conservative commentators,
even conservative scholarship around and defend it as if it
has some moment of virtue. It's a syndicate.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
I mean, maybe you've got to be Italian to see this.

Speaker 4 (18:40):
It is an absolute syndicate. And it's set up that
whoever controls the Senate, whether they have sixty or not,
plays the biggest role.

Speaker 3 (18:48):
But here's the other thing about the filibuster. Even if
you are not in.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
The majority party, you still get a seat at the table,
you still get paid, you still get all your bonuses.

Speaker 3 (18:56):
Okay. So the bottom line is this, The filibuster is
not in the constant. It was not presumed to be
a constitutional principle.

Speaker 4 (19:03):
The Constitution clearly gave the Senate specific instructions on when
to use supermajority votes and for what, and.

Speaker 3 (19:10):
The general business of the country was not one of them.

Speaker 2 (19:14):
Of them all right, So let's bring this thing all round.
Is it possible this is their strategy to distract from
the secured border, what the American people wanted and got
for the economy that is improving, to distract from the
peace in the Middle East and potential peace in Russia.

(19:36):
In other words, are they trying to set the tone
for the midterm election and make it about this dysfunction.

Speaker 4 (19:43):
Well, we're talking about the Atlantic magazine for weeks from
I'm talking about it more. Some of the people that
are written for The Atlantic are even using Saul Olenski
now as a casual reference. All Olinsky rules for radicals
is how the Democrat Party of today functions, and chaos
is the goal. Anything that creates chaos is good for them,

(20:03):
because they know people lose their minds in chaos. They
want people to be afraid, whether it's COVID or whether
it's the budget, or whether the airplanes are going to
drop out of the sky, because they're the adolescents throwing
the temper tantrum. They don't want to solve problems. They
want to create panic so they can take power. That's
their objective. Somebody's got to solve problems. And this one's
so simple. We've done it over and over and over again.

(20:24):
They're gaming us.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
Yeah, we're in desperate Native statesmen and grown ups, all right.
So bottom line is in with this now the second
longest shutdown? Why is the discussion never a zero based
prioritize budget so we don't deal with continuing resolutions? Why
isn't the subject ever maybe even having zero based prioritized
budgets tied to the two year terms of legislatures.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
No company with a budget one's emphesize of the US
government would operate on an annual budget. They all operate
on two year budgets because it's a lot of work
and it makes more sense.

Speaker 3 (20:59):
Why does Congress out right on a one year budget?

Speaker 4 (21:01):
Because it gives the politicians a chance to shake down
the lobbyist and industry every single year instead of once
every session. That's why it's corrupt. It's a syndicate. We
should have a two year budget.

Speaker 2 (21:13):
Why is the government shutdown for the same dysfunction we've
talked about and done nothing about for sixty years. It's
all here, just kind of like it's you know, if
you want to know what's coming after Donald Trump, it's
all in Jensaki's comments. Everything about our intent versus what
we've made it and our failures as a government is

(21:34):
present in the shutdown. Be a good time to maybe
have a teachable moment.

Speaker 4 (21:38):
Well, and Jensaki and her colleagues are after one thing,
power and chaos is their portal to power.

Speaker 3 (21:43):
David Sanati, are you back tomorrow? Yeah? Good, I'll talk
to you in the second hour tomorrow. Appreciate your time.

Speaker 2 (21:48):
You can hear David's thoughts on the Public Square on
demand at the public square dot com, or on over
two hundred stations nationwide.

Speaker 3 (21:55):
All right, if you're just waking up.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Authorities are giving there's more details on the arrest of
the man who threatened to shoot up Atlanta's International airport.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
Mark Mayfield is back with the details.

Speaker 6 (22:06):
Police arrested Billy Joe Kagel Monday after getting a tip
from the man's family, and Atlanta Police Chief Darren Sheerbaum
says they knew the threat was serious and immediately began
pulling in resources. Kaegel was arrested inside of domestic terminal
minutes after police first spotted him in the building. Investigators
say they found an AR fifteen and dozens of rounds
of ammunition in his truck.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
I'm Mark Mayfield, all.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
Right, The talks and buddhapests are temporarily off, but the
President wants to keep the pressure on Vladimir Putin. All
the more reason this is important. The President has announced
the Prime Minister of India has agreed to reduce its
purchase of Russian oil and a phone call they had
between the two leaders yesterday. Tammy Trihel reports.

Speaker 7 (22:47):
Trump made the claim Tuesday during a White House celebration
of Duwali, they Hindu festival of lights. The President said
he spoke to Prime Minister to render a modi on
the phone, and that India wants the Russian war in
Ukraine to end, and that they're not going to be
buying too much oil from Russia and have already, in
his words, cut it way back. Modey commented on social
media that he had warm greetings with Trump but didn't

(23:10):
mention Russian oil. I'm Tammy Trihelloh, well.

Speaker 3 (23:12):
The media isn't the only thing bias judges.

Speaker 2 (23:14):
A judge on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals is
asked that the case involving National Guard troops in Portland
be heard by the full court.

Speaker 8 (23:22):
Attorneys for Portland, the State of Oregon, and the federal
government have been asked to present briefs on the issue
by the end of the day Wednesday. Twenty nine judges
on the court would then vote to determine if there'd
be a full review by the court. If that happens,
eleven judges would hear the case. A three judge panel
ruled President Trump has the authority to deploy the National
Guard in Portland and the courts couldn't stop it.

Speaker 3 (23:43):
I brad Ford.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Former Today Show host Brian Gumbel is in the hospital
after suffering a medical emergency.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
Liz Warner has more.

Speaker 9 (23:49):
TMZ has reported that Gumble was taken from his Manhattan
apartment to the hospital Monday night. The seventy seven year
old broadcasters condition remains unknown, although a family men reportedly
said Gumble is okay. He served as a co host
on the popular morning show for fifteen years, and he
also had his own show on HBO. Gumble underwent surgery

(24:10):
for lung cancer in two thousand and nine.

Speaker 3 (24:12):
Is brother.

Speaker 9 (24:12):
Longtime CBS Sports anchor Greg Gumbel, passed away last year
from pancreatic cancer. Liz Warner, NBC News Radio, New York.

Speaker 3 (24:23):
Kate Pop Demon Hunters.

Speaker 2 (24:26):
Fans will be able to get their hands on plenty
of new toys and collectibles and games starting next year.
Netflix announced yesterday it has reached a license deal with
both Mattel and Hasbro. Mattel will put its first products,
a three pack of dolls, up for pre order on
November the twelfth. Meanwhile, Hasbro has already put up a

(24:47):
monopoly deal k Pop Demon Hunters. It's up for pre
order on various retail sites like Target, Walmart, and Amazon.
K Pop Demon Hunters it's Netflix's most popular movie ever
since the streaming service started airing it in June, well
after fifteen years of development. There's a new fruit hitting
the grocery stores this month. To tell you all about it,

(25:09):
in the produce section, we find Breed Tennis on Aisle three.

Speaker 5 (25:13):
The Dole Company has created a new fruit. It's called
the Dole Colada Royale pineapple. It was developed in Honduras
and the company says it tastes like a pinut colada
with hints of coconut. The research team says the fruit
has a smaller core and packs two and a half
times the B six and a regular pineapple. And if
you want to try it, experts say the fruit is
picked ripe, so no need to thump, squeeze, or pull

(25:36):
top leaves. The new pineapple expected to sell for under
six bucks. I'm bre Tennis.

Speaker 2 (25:41):
In Sports of your morning shows City interests. On the ice,
the Blues got a point but lost in over time
two to one of the Kings. Pres lost five to
two at home to the Ducks. Caps beat the Krack
and four to one of the Penguins one easy at
home five to one over the Canooks.

Speaker 3 (25:56):
On the hardwood, the thunder were up.

Speaker 2 (26:00):
Twenty five one twenty four in overtime over the Rockets
for the champs.

Speaker 3 (26:04):
Warriors beat the Lakers.

Speaker 2 (26:05):
One nineteen one oh nine birthdays today the Wizard of
Oz himself actor Jeff Goldbloom, seventy three years old. Today
Back to the Future is Christopher Lloyd eighty seven. Modern Families,
Jesse Tyler Ferguson fifty and I used to do this.
I do this for Scott Hamilton. This is my Brian Boitano.
Well you're not gonna be able to see totally of
the Cabeca. I'm doing the Brian Boitano where he does

(26:26):
the Remember he used to skate with the feet out
like that. I usually do it with a sock. But
I digress. Brian Boitano sixty two years old. Today, if
it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We're so glad you were born.
And thanks for making your morning show a part of
your big day. And that's the information you need to
start your day off right. That's your top five stories

(26:46):
of the day. Hey, did you hear The best performing
assets of twenty twenty five are not stocks, they're precious metals.
This year, gold and silver resent a staggering twenty nine percent,
and some experts believe the gold and silver bowl market
has just been on. Central banks are buying gold to
protect against the falling dollar and silver. It's powering the
future with skyrocketing demand for solar evs AI. Silver is

(27:10):
the new oil. So how high could gold and silver sore?
Find out? Contact my friends at Lyric Capital, the precious
metals leader eight hundred five to one one thirty seven hundred.
Get your free Wealth Protection kit. See how gold and
silver can not only help your retirement plans, but make
your dreams come true. You can even own metals now

(27:30):
in your IRA. With over three billion dollars in trusted transactions,
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Call now, get that free Wealth Protection Kit and you
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(27:52):
five to one one thirty seven hundred.

Speaker 3 (27:55):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Journo. Is the
last may Is Debate?

Speaker 10 (28:02):
And I'll tell you right now, those two guys call
moll Man. Donnie beat up Trump that time, Curtis was
the only one who protected Trump. This time around tonight
he protects Trump and takes it all away viral. He
goes viral tonight and everybody opens their eyes about Curtis.

Speaker 3 (28:19):
Leeva, let's go. We ain't giving up this justin.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
The Mets are going to make a comeback and just
show up at the World Series and beat both book
the Blue Jays and the Dodgers.

Speaker 3 (28:29):
He won't give up on Sliwa, will he?

Speaker 4 (28:31):
You know what you better wear the red beret tonight,
come out with the beret.

Speaker 3 (28:37):
Day twenty two.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
Of the partial government shutdown, millions of Americans who rely
on snap food assistants will soon be impacted. We're already
getting impacted with delays, with air traffic controllers carding and
sick not showing up for work.

Speaker 3 (28:51):
That's what unded the last shutdown. Let's see what that
influence is.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Obama hits the trail to campaign for New Jersey and
Virginia gubernatorial candidates, and both need the help. And the
White House is denying reports that President Trump is considering
a pardon or sentenced commutation for Sean p. D.

Speaker 3 (29:07):
D Combs.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
That story begins and ends at TMZ only. And what's
the beef with American ranchers? What's their beef with the
president's trade policies with Argentina National Coursepondent roy O'Neil is
here to explain. Boy, does that bring up the old
commercial where's the beef? Clara Peller and all? And yet
this is a lot to explain.

Speaker 11 (29:29):
So remember, first, America and China have trade issues. China
has stopped buying all soybeans from the US, now buying
them from Argentina. That's a country where China also has
deals for their lithium and their rare earth materials.

Speaker 3 (29:44):
Catching a theme here.

Speaker 11 (29:46):
The US President Trump is a close ally with the
president of Argentina. He's promised forty billion dollars in total support,
twenty billion in a currency swap that he'll have moved
forward if the ar Continuan voter keeps the president in power.
And then add to that this week, and the President saying,
and you know, to further help out the Argentinian economy,

(30:08):
we should be importing more of their beef products. So
now you've got American soybef farmers and American cattle ranchers saying.

Speaker 3 (30:15):
Hey, what's the deal.

Speaker 11 (30:16):
Even some Republican stallwarts supporters of Donald Trump senators from
deep red states like Nebraska and Iowa are saying, wait
a minute, now, what's the deal here? So hoping that
President Trump's upcoming trip to Asia will hopefully turn the
tide on.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
Some of these you know, I think you laid it
out very well for people to understand there's a lot
of different moving parts here that make these decisions up.
But you know, there's probably the President and a lot
of people maybe even listening this morning, saying, have you
seen the.

Speaker 3 (30:47):
Price of beef? If you don't like it, produce some more.

Speaker 2 (30:50):
But yeah, this is complex, and I think there's a
lot of moving parts that explain ultimately the decision because
this has been a president who has champion for farmers,
but they're not seeing this as a championing cause by
any stretch.

Speaker 11 (31:04):
Right, And they are releasing another three billion dollars today
in some funds that could help soybean and corn growers,
but there is talk that maybe we need almost ten
times that amount. The President has said, you know, help
farmers out now in the short term, that the deals
he's trying to make with China long term will be
will prove beneficial in the long run.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
All Right.

Speaker 2 (31:24):
The last time, there's the second longest shutdown now in
American history. The last time we had one, what really
kind of brought it to an end was the disruptions
with air travel that's begun. We're getting to have as
many air traffic controllers being uber drivers as up there
controlling the planes.

Speaker 3 (31:39):
That problem's brewing once again. Yeah, it is.

Speaker 11 (31:42):
I think it's going to really start to come to
a head when the rent is due first of the month.
You know, we'll be going getting closer to the holiday
travel period. Obviously a lot of focus on that. But
even if you pass the CR, that still doesn't even
cover the holiday travel period. So there's a lot of issues.
Whether the House comes back and tries to adjust that
November twenty first date, and then that opens up a

(32:04):
whole new can of worms on what could be done
to this pending legislation, or if there's some sideline settlement
deal that the leadership in both parties in both chambers
isn't getting the job done, and some members on the
side and they have to figure out something that works
for everyone.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
Your morning show, national correspondent Roy and Neil. Great reporting
as always, we'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 3 (32:22):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld, Joano
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