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October 23, 2025 35 mins

Mamdani and Spanburger with memorable bad moments and a must see documentary.

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty K E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one O four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day and make us a part of your
morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
I just wanted to let you know that there is
a snake loose in our house somewhere.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
Well two, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're in
this together. This is your morning show with Michael O'Dell Trump.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
That's why I don't watch a lot of television. Nothing's
quite as interesting as what's happening in my house in
any given moment.

Speaker 5 (00:45):
Or Andrea, I'm in doc can't get my track lights
to work.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
I feel like I want to play love songs after dark,
and you're I mean, what's going on? You had a
friend you were gonna send I need all right, I'm
sending John you to phone them eight minutes after the hour.
Good morning, and welcome to Can you believe it's Thursday?
Can you believe it's my mother's eighty fourth birthday today.
Oh kidding, Happy birthday, Ma. It is Thursday, October twenty third.

(01:13):
You have all old twenty twenty five. Good morning, and
welcome to your morning show. I'm Michael del Journal on
the air, streaming live on your iHeart app. Jeffrey Lyon's
over there looking up an electrician right now. He's working
all the sound for us RED, keeping an eye on
cont There's only one thing that Read's upset about. It's
not the redistricting in North Carolina. He's all for that,

(01:33):
but we need redistricting in Texas immediately to silence.

Speaker 5 (01:37):
Jasmine Crockett is my gush.

Speaker 4 (01:40):
She's going to run for Senate. Well, how's she going
to win a statewide rate? She's only in Congress just
because of the drawn lines she's in now that are
being undrawn. But I'm'm afraid I hit that one guy
saying listen, I really enjoyed your show early on, but
you're becoming very liberal.

Speaker 5 (01:57):
I've never had in thirty six years of.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
Talk radio anybody accused me of being liberal.

Speaker 5 (02:05):
All we did was feature Stephen A.

Speaker 4 (02:07):
Smith yesterday talking about the Democrats have no message. They
have no candidates. All they're going to do is Trump
derangement to Vanced arrangement or Rubio derangement. That's all they got.
The time who steven a Yeah, why does he yell
all the time? Was you'll let me saying, well, why
do you play steven A.

Speaker 5 (02:28):
Smith?

Speaker 4 (02:28):
Although he had a doozy today, I'm tempted to play
a doozy. I don't want to be pinned as liberal.
Speaking of the liberals, all they want to do is
track Ice. They really just don't They're out of step
with the American people, and they certainly don't like anything
the president is accomplished.

Speaker 5 (02:47):
We said this yesterday.

Speaker 4 (02:50):
If any president, I don't care if they're a Republican
or a Democrat ever in the future has to deal
with the border issue, they only need to look in
the mirror. Donald Trump has proven how easy it is
to seal the border. It was easy to seal the
border all along. He's kind of doing the same thing

(03:15):
with drugs. Right now, we just struck another vessel. I
think that's nine total now strikes on vessels. I don't
know how we know which boats have the drugs, but
Boom five killed.

Speaker 5 (03:32):
So you can get to the point where you say, well,
you want to have a war on drugs.

Speaker 4 (03:34):
It's a volitional war because if you want to stop
the drugs, you can stop them before they come in,
and you can start with the boats in the Pacific Ocean,
and then you can go right to the countries they're
coming from. See Donald Trump is proofing what has been
lip service for decades. You want a secure border, it's easy.
Secure it. You want to enforce immigration laws, it's easy.

(04:00):
And for him, two million people have volitionally left, well
at one point five million volitionally half a million deported.
But no president can ever talk about this difficult isssue
this border crime. It's only a crisis if somebody's not
doing their job. Which gets me back to the Stephen A.

Speaker 5 (04:22):
Smith? Can I can I get permission? I wish that.

Speaker 4 (04:25):
I wish I had that listener's phone number you have, pion?
Can I get permission to play one clip from Stephen A.

Speaker 5 (04:31):
Smith?

Speaker 4 (04:33):
Okay, this doesn't mean that I believe in everything Stephen A.

Speaker 5 (04:37):
Smith believes.

Speaker 4 (04:39):
It just means his assessment of Jasmine Crockett or his
unique ability, because you can't say he's or asist. This
is a black man talking about I guess i'd go
to sexist, but that I love the way he does it.
And this is not just a Jasmine Crockett issue. Today

(04:59):
it was issue. It's a squad issue, It's a Democrat
party issue. The Republicans play this game sometimes too, not
as much. You're sitting in day twenty three of government
shutdown because none of them do their jobs. And the
queen of not doing her job is Jasmine Crockett. What
does she want a promotion?

Speaker 6 (05:18):
Listen, but how Jasmin Crockett chooses to express herself.

Speaker 5 (05:23):
I'm like, is that gonna help your district? To Jesus.

Speaker 6 (05:29):
To find a way to get stuff done as opposed
to just being an impediment to what to what Trump wants?

Speaker 5 (05:35):
How much work goes into that.

Speaker 6 (05:38):
I'm just gonna go off about Trump, cuss them out
every chance I get, say the most derogatory and send
you everything's imaginabull And that's my day's work. That ain't work.

Speaker 5 (05:49):
I'm sorry, but I'm not a liberal. That ain't work.
But he really is their best potential candidate? Really is
he really is?

Speaker 7 (05:59):
Uh?

Speaker 5 (05:59):
What I said yesterday their worst nightmare.

Speaker 4 (06:02):
Well, I can say in defense of my listener, I
did make this hyperbole comment, and that was how did
I say it? I said it in such a way
where I get where he was coming from. But it
doesn't mean I support the things that Stephen A. Smith's supports.
I'm just saying like the way he said that, and

(06:24):
I like the way that he's holding his own side accountable.
That's something I can't do in the matrix. There was
a similar moment in the in the mayor's race in
New York City. And again, I'm not praising Governor Cuomo.
I'm not a Cuomo fan by any stretch. Is he

(06:48):
less dangerous than Mom Donnie. Yes, when I prefer Sleeua
or a better candidate who chose not to run, probably,
But listen to this exchange. I like the Cuomo. I mean,
think about this is how you got to be. This
is kind of what I'm trying to say about Steven A.

Speaker 5 (07:03):
Smith too.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
You have to know the room so you can sit
and you can attack Mom Donnie all day long about
being a socialist, about being a communist, about being an Islamist,
about being a tax racer. That doesn't matter to the
people that are supporting him. They're thinking, Hey, I don't

(07:29):
care about politics. I don't care about elections. If this
guy gets elected, my bus is free, I'll vote for him. Seriously,
that's as far as their thought goes. Or you know,
good free childcare, they'll be convenience story. Then after robbing,
just walk in and takes something, I vote for him.
So once you get that group mixed in with the

(07:50):
big group, which is far left, you've got to address
things that they care about in such a way that
might jar them from the notion of a free bus ride.

Speaker 5 (07:58):
Am I making sense?

Speaker 4 (08:00):
Because I think Cuomo made great sense in addressing all
the things that would also this is it's a problem
in America that were one issue focused. We get a
hot issue and that's all that seems to matter, and
the guy goes in office and he does everything but that.
Watch how Cuomo dissects all the things that his fifty

(08:21):
percent the plan to vote for him, probably really care
about and didn't know.

Speaker 5 (08:26):
I thought it was really smart. Listen to Zoran.

Speaker 8 (08:30):
I believe, as we've stated that you have been at
the visa force in New York, and I believe that's
toxic energy.

Speaker 5 (08:38):
For New York. It's with the.

Speaker 8 (08:40):
Jewish community, it's with the Italian American community. When you
give the Columbus statue the finger, it's with the Sunni Muslims.
When you say decriminalized prostitution, which is haram, it's the Hindus.

Speaker 5 (08:55):
But then you.

Speaker 7 (08:58):
Take a picture with Rebecca Deputy Prime Minister of Uganda,
you take a picture with your father, You're smiling, he's smiling.
Gay killer Kadaga. You're a citizen of Uganda. You took
the picture.

Speaker 8 (09:16):
You said you didn't know who she was.

Speaker 5 (09:18):
It turns out you did.

Speaker 8 (09:19):
How do you not renounce your citizenship or demand b
DS against Uganda for imprisoning people.

Speaker 5 (09:30):
Who are gay?

Speaker 4 (09:32):
So it was kind of smart to go after the
things that his supporters would be passionate about.

Speaker 9 (09:40):
Now.

Speaker 4 (09:41):
The debate itself was a lot of back and forth.
I think probably the moment that would be probably the
most talked about. What's the eighteen seconds where mom Donnie
refused to answer a politically charged question about a vote
the citizens are I'm going to be partaking him and

(10:02):
the moderator and Coolmo and slie Will all were like
answer the question, and he refused. He just sat there
and looked in the camera and smiled. The mom Donnie
smile as he froze like a deer in headlights. I
don't know if this debate is enough to overturn this election.
If the polls are accurate, Mom, Donnie, a socialist, a

(10:24):
Islamist is about to be mayor of our largest city.
But we'll see. I'm trying to think who is the
worst of the worst candidate, and I'm telling you, I
gotta go with Abigail Nothenberger. I mean, she is awful, awful.

(10:49):
And when we get to Sounds of the Day, she
went on, first of all, like how Katie Kirk is
still playing election anchor from her house. I just don't
get this. When I'm done, I'll be done when I'm.

Speaker 5 (11:07):
On the radio anymore.

Speaker 4 (11:08):
I guess I'm gonna be doing laughing and talking with
my wife looking for the snake that's loose in my
house about Michael.

Speaker 9 (11:14):
I honestly thought she was done. I was stunned. I
was like, is that the real Katie Kirk?

Speaker 4 (11:21):
Well, she does do some things back in the garden,
but but you know, I mean, it's just like they
don't go away. So she's playing CBS anchor. This candidate's
trying to play the role of a candidate. She asks
her a question about trans participation in youth sports, and
I mean a six minute I mean, it was a

(11:43):
salad bar that would put Kamala Harris to shame. And
so then I'm sitting here, I'm thinking, you know what,
I don't know if there's anything more impactful or entertaining
I could do today than play all six minutes of that.
But how do I get paid, you know, host a
show nationwide and play six minutes of sound?

Speaker 5 (12:04):
But it was jaw dropping.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
I mean, if you think I think it's worse than Porter,
I mean, at least Porter entertains me.

Speaker 9 (12:11):
What was even better, though, Michael, was when she wouldn't
answer the question about the text because she doesn't want
to take ten seconds.

Speaker 5 (12:19):
Well, yeah, I've got that. She went on for six
minutes of nothing. Of nothing, may.

Speaker 4 (12:28):
Go sing along with Flip Gregory is off off to
spring down just a little bit while I give him
some headlines. The crazy left wants to track Ice who's
enforcing the law, because they want amnesty and lawlessness for illegals,
drug addict Dug Peddler's gang members, murderers. We think the

(12:50):
crisis is the government is shut down the real crisis
is get flip ready.

Speaker 5 (12:55):
We just hit thirty eight trillion dollars of debt. May
the debt to go.

Speaker 4 (13:03):
I don't want to scare anybody, but the President of
the United States just hit Russia's two biggest oil firms
with more sanctions, you know, to tighten the screws on
the peace talks that have been since put on hold. Meanwhile,
President Trump also gave the Ukrainians long range missiles from

(13:24):
Europe restriction lifting. So he lifts these key restrictions on
the missiles provided by Europe, long range missiles that can
go inside of Russia. As he's tightening the screws on
two oil firms. And what's Vladdie doing. He's testing some
nukes off the coast.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
I'm thinking this is getting a little escalating.

Speaker 7 (13:44):
Isn't it.

Speaker 3 (13:47):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chronow.

Speaker 4 (13:51):
By the way, if you want access to the stories
that we're covering, or maybe bios on the team, or
links to some of the other things they have going on,
or maybe a link to our podcast, you'll find it
all online at your Morning Show online dot com. Do
you know what's interesting? I think we should start as
a form of teas. Just reading my notes. Okay, coming

(14:12):
up in about eight minutes. Parents, kids, candy cry to
see what that means. Keep listening and if you're just
waking up, these are your top five stories of the day.
The Trump administration has struck a second alleged drug trafficking vessel,

(14:35):
this time in the Pacific Ocean. Mark Mayfield has our
top story you're.

Speaker 5 (14:37):
Going to post.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
On x Wednesday, Secretary of War Pete Heggsath announced three
year old edged narco terrorists were killed in the Eastern Pacific.
This comes hours after Heggsath announced that two people were
killed in a strike on Tuesday. The attacks mark and
apparent expansion of Trump's campaign against what he refers to
as a narco terrorist threat coming from Venezuela, as all
previous strikes happened in Caribbean waters.

Speaker 5 (14:58):
I'm Martnefield.

Speaker 4 (14:59):
Governor Cuomo play little offense last night in the Big Debate.

Speaker 10 (15:03):
The exchange began with mom Donnie hitting Cuomo for not
taking action on his current proposals during Cuomo's decade in
the governor's mansion. He says that taking five years to
build affordable housing is the sign of an incompetent government.
By his own words, that means he must have led
an incompetent government. Cuomo responded, noting he set a record
as governor for spending on housing, then went on the attack.

Speaker 5 (15:24):
You have never had.

Speaker 8 (15:25):
A job, You've never accomplished anything. There's no reason to
believe you have any merit or qualification for eight and
a half million lives.

Speaker 5 (15:35):
And Cuomo wasn't done there.

Speaker 8 (15:37):
You don't know how to run a government, you don't
know how to handle an emergency, and you've literally never
proposed a bill on anything that you're not talking about
in your campaign.

Speaker 4 (15:47):
Yeah, you think he would have done that while he
was in the legislature, if he really cared about it
and wasn't just pandering for votes.

Speaker 3 (15:55):
Hell you, This is Mike the Baptist in Cottontown, Tennessee.
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno.

Speaker 5 (16:06):
Hi, I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:07):
I'd love to have you listen to your morning show
live every day. We're hurt on great stations like News
Talk five point fifty KFYI and Phoenix News Radio, eleven
ninety k EX in Portland and ten ninety The Patriot
in Seattle. Make us a part of your morning routine.
We'd love to have you listen live, but in the meantime,
enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 4 (16:24):
The Senate fails for a twelfth time to advance a
House approved measure that would have ented the government shutdown.
Don't you love how that's the crisis we're on day
twenty three of the government shutdown. It must be opened.
The problem is open or closed. We just hit thirty
eight trillion dollars in debt. Maybe that's a question for
David bonson our Economists later today, what's the bigger crisis

(16:45):
day twenty three of the government shutdown or reaching thirty
eight trillion dollars. By the way, I think that's the
fastest trillion dollar increase outside of COVID in history. Republic
and our Democrat we're big spenders. Final face to face
debate took place in New York. Got plenty of that
sound and sounds of the day. I don't know what
they're going to do in Texas, but North Carolina they

(17:07):
passed new GOP friendly congressional maps and how that impact
the midterm elections.

Speaker 5 (17:13):
A little visit with David Sanadi on that.

Speaker 4 (17:15):
Also, a new national poll is out It takes a
look at how Americans feel about everything from hamas to
the government shutdown.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
Rory's got that story in thirty minutes. Okay.

Speaker 4 (17:23):
The passwords were I just wanted to be fun to
share with people, like this is all I write on
a piece of paper, and then everything else I'll never forget.
I was in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and they sent over a
news reporter. Hey, you know they got the camera outside
the glass filming me while I'm on the air, and
the reporter's just standing there. When I looked over at her,

(17:43):
she had this look like she was watching a zoo animal,
and I thought, what is is? He must really be
liberal or something. She doesn't like me or was a
little paranoid. So we finally get to a break and
I come out there and I said, man, you were
looking at me like I was some kind of zoo animal.

Speaker 5 (17:59):
She goes, you don't have a script. You know how
TV people are.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
Everything is on the teleprom No, so when I look down,
this is all I have written. Parents, kids, candy cry.

Speaker 5 (18:16):
So things can be like a game show.

Speaker 4 (18:17):
The theme from past Word Helen Ludden was a tragic death.

Speaker 5 (18:24):
No, I just want to bring it to life.

Speaker 4 (18:25):
For you. So I just felt impressed to have a
little moment, you know. I think it's it comes down
to why do I watch so many documentaries, which my
wife can't fathom. There are very few entertainment shows or
movies that I take the time to watch.

Speaker 5 (18:40):
Somebody that need.

Speaker 4 (18:42):
Tell me it looks great, or they watched it it
was great, or I saw something that intrigued me, because
there's so much more in documentaries. Those are real lives.
That gets back to this whole notion. This is what
all of us.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
Have in common.

Speaker 4 (18:55):
No matter where we're at right now, we're all in
the midst of this one sacred, precious life. That's why
I try to remind you every day the date and
how it will never happen again, and don't take it
for granted. Live it like you're dying, because you are.
And so we all have this in common. We're living

(19:16):
this one life, and we're all making mistakes. But how
we respond to those mistakes or how we avoid those mistakes,
that's what fascinates me. We go through life first as children,
and as children we're the watchers. We're watching everybody. We're

(19:40):
trying to figure everything out. A day is set by
not how I'm feeling, but how my parents are feeling.
The day is set not by my mood, but by
what my father's mood might be that day. And they're
doing these things, and it's creating this show for us
that we're left to either observe or interpret. Then we

(20:03):
become adults, living still as children in our minds. Have
somebody talked about that child's voice? Have you ever noticed
that little you? Your soul, you're that same child all
through life. The first time they let me drive off
in the car, You're gonna let me drive this car.

(20:24):
First time I was a program director, You're gonna let
me run this radio station. I have no idea what
I'm doing. I'm just a kid, because that child stays
alive forever in our mind.

Speaker 5 (20:38):
So I was struck by this.

Speaker 4 (20:39):
My daughters popped in from university and I didn't know
they were here. And I walk out of the bedroom
and you can tell I've been crying. And Andrew goes,
the girls are here, and I go, how have they
been here? And they were sitting at the kitchen table. Well,
we've been here a little while. Why are you crying?

(21:04):
And I just stopped dead in my tracks at that
moment because I thought of remember when I was a
kid and everything was about the parents. If my dad
and he never did, but if my dad ever walked
out and he was crying, I'd be like, that would
be very unsettling. And yet we do it. Do you
ever think about how we live and what our kids
are seeing. We never think about how what our kids
are seeing. But as kids, we grew up only seeing

(21:25):
what our parents were doing. And I looked at them
and I said, I just watched an incredible documentary on
John Candy too, which, of course, who's John Candy. Once
I was done beating them, you beat them over there, No,
you can do that.

Speaker 9 (21:43):
I put my.

Speaker 6 (21:45):
White beaterter shirt and I gave him all a biff
and a buff and a swat.

Speaker 5 (21:49):
In the grand.

Speaker 4 (21:51):
And I said, oh, he was a great actor. You've
probably seen him in some movies. You just don't know
who he is.

Speaker 5 (21:57):
And it was just.

Speaker 4 (22:00):
I loved John Candy before this documentary started. I love
him so much more now. And I guess we just
all went through this exercise together with Charlie Kirk, and
I think that's on the table to where we can
you know, at least feel it, sense it, touch it,

(22:21):
and talk about it. Because what we're really saying is,
here's a guy who lived, and first of all, you're
only seeing what he did. You know the first thing
about what he was like as a kid. Did you
know it was a great quarterback. Have you ever seen
Charlie Kirk throw it pass like eighty yards on a dime?

(22:45):
He had a little athletic ability. Yeah, yeah, so, but
we don't know anything about him. We just know what
he was doing on campus. We just know the deals
he cut with very wealthy people to reach those campuses.
We know who we married, we know he had two children,
but we don't really know him. You would need a
documentary to truly understand him, and even in his death,

(23:06):
we didn't take the time to do that. Like everything else,
everybody took a firm position and stuck to it no
matter what. He was hate, he hated, gaze, he hated.
He was a founding father, He would have been a president.
He was the greatest evangelicy. He made Billy Graham look

(23:28):
like a coward. You know, all the extremes nothing based
in reality. I guess I'm more of a Kennedy. I
try not to make people more in death than they
were in life. But Charlie Kirk, he was a lot
in life and he's even more in death. And that's
kind of how I felt watching this documentary because you realize,

(23:56):
one how we're all having the same struggles. One guy
it might be his weight, one guy it might be
going bald, one guy it might be his teeth. You know,
but we're all going to the same insecurities and struggles.
We all have dreamed. Some of us achieve them, some
of us don't. We all have gifting. Some of us

(24:18):
know it and use it, some of us take it
for granted. It was a complete picture of John Candy's life,
but we all have one life to live, and oh
to live it like John Candy, doing what you love,

(24:43):
taking every human interaction so seriously that it eventually kills
you and have everyone after you're gone. I mean, this
is John Candy. There's probably about twenty two performances in
particular you could remember him for and nobody. I mean,

(25:07):
there was moments where they would talk about his work,
but overshadowing at all was the life he lived and
lived so well, And I thought, what an inspiring, inspiring
thing for everybody to watch. We use this analogy. What

(25:27):
was it read? Since Charlie Kirk's death, Bible sales were up.
I want to say I have a photographic memory and
I'm seeing like thirty eight but it was something like that.
Bible sales searched thirty eight percent in the month of
his death. And I thought, can you imagine? Can you
imagine how different America would be? If every American citizen
read the Bible, let alone twenty percent of them lived

(25:50):
what they read. How different this show would sound, How
different your drive to work would be. There'd be no looting,
there'd be no rape, there'd be no murder, just everyone
doing the best they can to obey God because he

(26:11):
knows what's best for us, and to love others and
not ourselves. How different would the world be. And I
thought thirty eight percent surge in Bible sales, that that's
got equal something if they actually read them. And I think,
if you would watch this documentary on John Candy and

(26:32):
if it would no matter. Don't define yourself by your work.
Down John Candy's case, it was a very tragic way.
He learned to live life so well and in some
ways didn't really live it. He was riddled in anxiety.
But you know, I I don't know if I should
throw this in gratuitously. I actually had my father leave

(26:54):
us on my birthday. I don't think he knew it
was my birthday. He's very rarely remembered my birthday. You know,
when your dad moves out, that's traumatic, no matter what
age and what day. When it happens on your birthday,
you don't John Candy's father dropped dead of a heart
attack on his fifth birthday, and the family so didn't

(27:14):
know how to handle grief. They had John Candy's birthday party.

Speaker 5 (27:18):
Anyway.

Speaker 4 (27:19):
You don't think that sticks with you for a lifetime.
WHOA He spent his whole life waiting to die at
thirty five and thinking he would die. So he lived
like he was dying. And what did that? How did
that impact him? Didn't matter how famous he got. He
bought the Argonauts. I'll give you one quick. I could
do this all morning long, and I'm gonna try not to,

(27:40):
all right, So John Candy, Wayne Gretzky can't remember the
other guy they buy the Argonauts. So he starts getting
into the Because he wanted to be a football player.
He was a very good football player until he blew
out his knee. And so now John Candy's at a
Canadian football game. Well he's John Candy, He's not like
some no name, And so they would line up and

(28:03):
he would spend four hours signing autographs at a football game,
four hours he didn't have. Or Conan O'Brien tells the story.
You know, I'm at Harvard. We invite him, my gosh,
he says yes. Then he shows up. He spent all
day with us. And when John Candy talks to you,
he's the star.

Speaker 5 (28:22):
You're not.

Speaker 4 (28:22):
But all he cares about is you, and he's looking
you in the eye and ask you how are you?
And I thought, it's just such. It was such an
inspirational example of making the most of your one shot
at life in failure, eating, drinking, giving himself away to everybody.

(28:44):
I mean, John Candy would look at his brother and
get mad, you're not taking care of yourself, as he's
not taking care of himself. So I'm not trying to
make him more in depth than he was in life.
He had flaws. The one flaw he didn't have he
never took a moment for granted. And I guess fate
made sure of that by his father dying on his
fifth birthday, and he made every moment count. I think

(29:06):
you'll find it very inspiring. It's called I Like Me,
and it's a document and you're gonna be His best
friends are Steve Martin, Bill Murray, Dan Ackroyd. You're gonna
love the whole journey, trust me. And this has only
happened twice. I didn't really cry in sadness. I cried
and enjoy. I can't stand him now since he slapped

(29:30):
Chris Rock. But if you've never seen Will Smith in
Pursuit of Happiness, oh my gosh, it was up until
yesterday the only time I had literally cried, I mean
out loud enjoy. That's how inspirational that movie was. That's
how amazing his performance was. You'll feel the same way

(29:52):
watching John Candy I Like Me documentary on Netflix.

Speaker 5 (29:56):
Very very well done. And that's why.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
Movies ever live up to an average documentary, and nothing
rarely on television lives up to What's Happening in My
Own Home? Cute Andrea and the Snake.

Speaker 5 (30:12):
Do you remember the day that happened?

Speaker 4 (30:14):
And were getting all these talkbacks and they're just rolling
and rolling, and all of sudden the last one airs
and it sounds like.

Speaker 5 (30:19):
I just wanted to let you know that. Did I
hear the house somewhere? There's a snake somewhere else? What red?

Speaker 9 (30:25):
Did I hear the kids were over last night?

Speaker 5 (30:27):
Just the girl, the two girls stop by?

Speaker 7 (30:29):
You?

Speaker 5 (30:29):
Did you check the lean supply? I should have.

Speaker 4 (30:32):
Said, uncle Jeffrey's going through withdrawal. Which one of you
was trying to get the twenty percent off and it
wouldn't let you do it?

Speaker 5 (30:38):
Or I was? I was, you have like a limit
on the twenty percent off? Yeah?

Speaker 4 (30:43):
Yeah, we'll have your wife by the next batch. I
should do that to my own client. But right there's workaround.
We are listen, there's health reasons to take lean, and
that's not the commercial right now. But you, as I joke,
and I'm not joking, you're gonna love the way you feel.
Andrew takes a lean and vacuums the entire house, all right,
So Jefferies like I.

Speaker 5 (31:04):
Take a lean and do an entire radio show. I
need my fix, all right.

Speaker 4 (31:10):
I don't know if you've heard this or not, but
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against the falling dollar and silver.

Speaker 5 (31:29):
Oh, it's powering the future.

Speaker 4 (31:31):
With skyrocketing demand for solar evs AI. Silver is like
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(31:54):
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Speaker 3 (32:19):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Chino.

Speaker 4 (32:24):
Can't have your morning show without your voice. Don't forget
to use that talk back button, just like this caller.

Speaker 2 (32:29):
So you're talking about how different it would be if
twenty percent of Americans actually live the Bible, and then
you said, can you imagine how different this show would sound?

Speaker 5 (32:39):
Draft Kings presents a message and responsible game.

Speaker 2 (32:42):
If you're going to play the game boy, you gotta
learn to play right.

Speaker 6 (32:47):
Whatever you wag it, sometimes you got when the whole
There are no locks or short things, so no when
to fold, and if you feel like.

Speaker 5 (32:56):
You're ready for a break, no when the wofully. Remember
it's more fun when it's for.

Speaker 2 (33:02):
Fun, well said man Well sid At Draft Kings, we
believe it's more fun when it's for fun, and.

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We wanted to stay that way. We provide customers with helpful.

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Tools so they can set budgets, let me say, cool
off periods, and we encourage all customers to use these
tools so played responsibly.

Speaker 5 (33:20):
Draft Kings.

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The Crown is yours gambling problem called one eight hundred
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Help is available for problem gambling called eight eight seven
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Speaker 4 (33:40):
And test well, So they redo the ending and they
remembered a character he used to do. This is before
SC S, C T, SEC T, S.

Speaker 5 (33:50):
TV, S TV.

Speaker 4 (33:51):
I don't know a SA Well, it bombed, I mean
it lingered in syndication in Canada, but basically was a
bomb for about five years. Then it went away and
then it came back and then it became a nationwide hit.

Speaker 5 (34:08):
And he used to do a character.

Speaker 4 (34:09):
And so John Hughes was like, well, what if we
had such and such that character? And you know he
was the security guard when they get there and the
park is closed, and John Hughes had always wanted to
meet him. So, just like everything else in life, if
you called John Candy, he never said no, which could
have been a warning from God, because I'm that way.

Speaker 5 (34:28):
I never say no. I go.

Speaker 4 (34:30):
You remember I preached a great sermon one time to
two blades of grass and one person. But you know
he went and he flew. He didn't have it on
a time, on a schedule, flies there. He only has
twenty four hours, and he took twenty three hours to
film the ending of that movie. And of course a
lot of people say that's the best ending to a
Vegas movie. So yeah, it's an extraordinary life.

Speaker 5 (34:52):
I like me.

Speaker 4 (34:52):
John Candy's documentary it's on Netflix, a must see.

Speaker 3 (34:56):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael and Heeled jowinw
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