All Episodes

November 10, 2025 35 mins

RORY O’NEILL will have the latest on the effort to restart the government, as well as what you might expect in the way of flight delays during the busy holiday season.   Plus, what is the latest on federal food subsidies?

President Trump says every American will receive two thousand dollars as a “Tariff Dividend,” but can he do this? What about the Supreme Court’s upcoming ruling on tariffs? White House Correspondent – and attorney – JON DECKER will have the story. 

Always revealing and often entertaining, it’s The Sounds of The Day!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard weekday
mornings in great cities like Tulsa, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, Memphis,
in Nashville, Tennessee, and we got you covered in California,
San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento. We'd love to
be a part of your morning routine. We're thrilled you're here.
Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:17):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
This is your Morning Show with Michael o'dill Jordan. Seven
minutes after the hour, Welcome to Monday, November tenth. You
have our Lord To twenty twenty five on the air
and streaming live on your iHeartRadio WEP. This is your
Morning show on Michael del Jarnond. Jeffrey's got the sound.
I don't know what Red's getting in the kitchen, but
he'll return. He's keeping an eye on the content, and

(00:47):
the content is focused on the reopening of the government.
The Senate has passed a funding measure, a major step
towards reopening the government. A tentative agreement reached by the
Senate late last night to reopen the government would restore
food asistance funding, and we'll find out a moment if
it will restore travel in America. Trump administration is working

(01:08):
on a plan to introduce the fifty year mortgage in
addition to a two thousand dollars tariff dividend, not for
every American. It's means tested, and the President issued a
new round of pardons, including Rudy Giuliani. All Right, Roy
O'Neil is our national correspondent. With the government tentatively on
track to reopen Rory, the big question is will that

(01:29):
restore travel in time for the holiday season.

Speaker 3 (01:32):
Yeah, you know, I think everyone is optimistic that can happen.
But again, we still got a long way to go
before we get this shutdown undone.

Speaker 1 (01:41):
You know, we've got to get well.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
First, the Senate has to finish approving this omnibus, this
three bill omnibus minibus plus the cr combined here that
would fund the government essentially through January fund snap through
the end of next year. That first has to formally pass.
Then the House says, once it passes the Senate, and
then they'll call back their members. Of course, those for

(02:02):
and thirty five have to fly fine flights back to Washington,
which may not be easy these days either, and then
they have to pass it again no guarantee, and then
we need to see that big, bold, beautiful signature of
Donald Trump on the bill at the end of the day.
There's no guarantee he's going to sign it. So it's
still a long way to go to get this government reopened.
Fingers crossed, it could happen by the end of the week.

(02:24):
But to your initial question, they're still going to follow
that track of continuing to cancel more and more flights
until we're at ten percent cancelations by Friday.

Speaker 1 (02:33):
Yeah. I don't think there's any question. The House members
will get back and will vote, and the President will
sign it. I think Snap will be the quickest to
be restored. I don't know how long the trickle up
will take for travel to be stabilized. You only have
a couple of weeks before Thanksgiving travel. My biggest question
would be what do the Democrats think they gained in this.

(02:57):
From one look, Rory and end up trying to play
Republican versus Democrat on either. But they get the federal
employees restored who were fired since the shutdown, So that
would have wouldn't even have happened if you hadn't pulled
this done. There's nothing in it for the subsidies of Obamacare,
although I don't know if they I don't know if

(03:17):
they prefer Obamacare or affordable Care because neither seems relevant anymore.
So I'm just trying to figure out how they're going
to spin this as getting anything, which is probably going
to feed the far left of their party, who's not
going to like that they caved. This gonna be an
interesting fight amongst themselves.

Speaker 3 (03:34):
Well yeah, but also Chuck Schumer and Hawking Jeffries are
no on this right, So, I mean, this is all
being done just because eight moderates stepped over the line
to vote for with the Republicans there. This is being
done against the objections of Chuck Schumer and Haking Jeffries,
the leaders, the Democratic leaders in the House and Senate.

Speaker 1 (03:51):
Now are they a no with a wink and a nod?

Speaker 3 (03:53):
Probably, But you know this is going to also tee
up the debate again on these healthcare subsidies mid December,
you know, because they got a guarantee of a vote,
they didn't get to guarantee that it was going to
pass and continue these subsidies, which, by the way, a
lot of moderate Republicans want these subsidies for the benefit
of their constituents. And then this only sets us up

(04:14):
through late January, so you know we're still going to
be taking down Christmas lights and this week could be
Actress again again.

Speaker 1 (04:21):
It was like a scene right out of the show
nine to one one falling debris over the weekend. We'll
tell you what who's fault and where it was falling
when Rory comes back in the third hour, Appreciate it.
Rory also in the third hour today be listing at
seven thirty four Central, eight thirty four Eastern. Who's had
a better year than Lee Anne Morgan? Starting with the
hit movie Cordially Invited, which if you've never seen it,

(04:42):
I cordially invite you to laugh your rear end off.
It is so funny. Will Ferrell, Reese, Witherspoon, who else
is it? It's an unbelievable cast. Well, Farrell, of course
was outstanding Lee and Morgan just deals the show with
her character, then gets her own show called Leanne. It's
a huge hit on Netflix, and now she has the

(05:04):
number one stand up special Unspeakable thing. She joins us
in the third hour to speak of all of this
great success and the last year stick around for that
shameless plug. All right, as we always say, you can't
have your morning show without your voice. Right, if it's
called your morning show and all you hear is my voice,
something's failed. You never fail. We never fail. Let's get

(05:25):
to your voice. I want to start with Phil Duffy,
A don I love have you Dona's say?

Speaker 4 (05:35):
I believe that the Republican Party would do itself a
favor by explaining why the ACA was unaffordable and that
a program is being developed to help those who need
health insurance. This could really sync the Republican Party in
twenty twenty six.

Speaker 1 (05:57):
Well, I mean there's message, messages and messenger. The problem
is we live in a matrix, which we often talk about.
So the left media, whether it's CNN, MSNBC, ABCNBCCBS, Washington Post,
New York Times, they're never gonna explain that. So the
left is going to believe that Obamacare was great, Obamacare worked,

(06:19):
and the Republicans refused to fund it. I don't play
left and right in shirts and skins. The truth is
they wanted a single payer system. They couldn't get it.
They designed Obamacare to fail in order to leave the
only option to be a single payer system, and then
we just moved on to other things. But Obamacare was

(06:42):
not an affordable care Act, nor did it succeed. It
never insured everyone. This is the part that is so
key for everybody to understand. Until the subsidies, everybody was
saying no, thank you, and there was still thirty million uninsured.
So the three prong goal of the Affordable Care Act
was We're gonna have a affordable insurance for people, so

(07:02):
everyone will be insured. But we had almost the exact
same amount of people uninsured as before Obamacare. It was
supposed to lower premiums, it didn't. It increase them. And
anyone with any kind of actuarial one oh one understanding
would know why who would be uninsurable? Well for one

(07:27):
the sickest, with a smaller pool to cover the expenses.
The other problem was most of the people they were
calling uninsured in America were choosing to be uninsured. They
were young and healthy, so nobody was interested in it. Therefore,
it didn't ensure everyone failed mission. The premiums were not lower,

(07:51):
they were higher. Failed mission, and it did not drive
up the quality of care, and you too, erod it.
So rather than shifting the cost at checkout of the hospital,
they did it to premiums. So how do they fix it?
They use taxpayers money to subsidize it, and tremendous medical

(08:17):
lobbies have been continuing that. Then Biden doubles it during
COVID to reimburse the insurance companies for all the expenses
of COVID with an expiration date. And the expiration date
arrives and the Republicans are ready to move on. The
Democrats are like, no, we want to continue to fund it.
So then they look at you and they say, well,
you're cutting people's premiums, are going to double a triple.

(08:39):
They're going to double a triple because you've been paying
them with other people's money. Now, it just took me
four minutes, Donna, to explain that, and only half of
the matrix heard it. That's why I ended with, Okay,
the government's reopened, but will the American people's ignorance on
this issue continue? And when we face another shutdown? Now

(09:07):
becomes a partisan word game. Now you're going to see
the far left, which is already in great momentum taking
over the Democrat I mean, I never thought we would
refer to Dick Durbin as a moderate. Is that a
moderate now, Dick Durban I guess it is maybe compared
to zorad Mondani. But yeah, that's h That's where a free,

(09:36):
truthful media would be real handy. Education that really educates
and teaches people how to critically think would be really handy.
I don't know if they will, but you're right, they
need to. Joe's in Georgia, Joey, Hey.

Speaker 5 (09:51):
Michael, I think what the Democrats accomplished was ensuring that
Republicans retain a majority in the House and the Senate
in the midtime. That's what the result is of the
forty day shutdown, because everybody with any sense knows exactly
who calls the dysfunction.

Speaker 1 (10:09):
I'm not disagreeing with you, Joey. I'm just saying we
may have another shutdown in January. So the story isn't
quite over in terms of its impact on the midterms,
but we'll see. Dallas is listening in Nashville. I think
that the.

Speaker 6 (10:20):
Democrat's main goal is to make everyone believe that they
got a victory over Trump and the Republicans.

Speaker 1 (10:28):
That's it.

Speaker 6 (10:28):
They blamed the whole shutdown on Trump. People that don't
know any better. They blame Trump also, Well, we'll see.

Speaker 1 (10:37):
It depends how loud the fight amongst themselves gets, and
then people witnessing that fight in both matrixes will decide
who won or lost. I've just dug through this, and
other than getting a verbal assurance that the federal employees
that were fired since the shutdown would be rehired, I

(10:58):
can't think of a single thing they got. And the
biggest reason they said they shut the government down. They
got nothing. That'll be tough to explain to their constituents.
Dan's in Nashville. Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 7 (11:10):
All the Democrats have done is finally act like Republicans
and split and vote with the opposition party, exactly how
the ACA was passed with Rhinos like John McCain.

Speaker 1 (11:22):
They finally acted like Republicans. You know, Martin and Dan
may be talking, even though ones in Nashville and the
others in Poughkeepsie, he arrived at the same conclusion. I
have to say, I'm very proud of the Republican Party
for not caving. I thought, sure they would we have
in the past. Yeah, keep those talkbacks. Coming love to

(11:42):
know what you think. It looks as though our long
forty day nightmare is about to be over. Why did
we go through this whole anxiety forty day exercise? Definitely
a political stunt, Definitely a partisan tantrum. What will America
do with the tantrum and the unresolved problems they were
fighting over?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
Ultimately, time will tell. This is your morning show with
Michael Del Chrono.

Speaker 1 (12:10):
Let's get one more talk back on the topic of
what on earth did the Democrats achieve in this forty
day lapping of the anxiety pool. Josh Kfyi and Phoenix,
Arizona Morning.

Speaker 6 (12:25):
Michael Well, I honestly think the reason why the government
opened back up is because the Democrats caved.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
They saw the writing on the wall, mostly because of
their seance they had probably in the dark room with
Nancy Pelosi and everyone else.

Speaker 7 (12:40):
You know what.

Speaker 1 (12:42):
We gotta who, we gotta open the government back up. So, hey,
you know what it is, what it is? You know
it is what it is. What are you gonna do?
You gotta do what you're gonna do? What are you
gonna do? Red and I had a conversation about this.
Then again, this whole forty day anxiety exercise may have
been just to set up the narrative of the midterm,

(13:06):
which is, you want affordable health insurance that they took
away from you. You got to elect us. There was
nothing we could do. We didn't control the House or
the Senate. We had to cave, but we won't have
to after you give us control of the House. You
don't think they'd play. They did all this just to
set up a narrative. Next talkback question, what's the worst

(13:32):
test balloon? A fifty year mortgage or a two thousand
dollars means tested dividend. I'll let you make that call. Meanwhile,
the Senate has passed a funding measure sixty to forty
that would end the government shutdown.

Speaker 8 (13:44):
The bill oh heads to the House for final passage
before going to President Trump's desk for his signature. That
process could take several more days to complete. The shutdown
is the longest in history at forty days. I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (13:56):
President Trump says a tariff dividend of at least two
thousand dollars in person will be paid to Americans, but
not all Americans.

Speaker 9 (14:03):
As the US Supreme Court weighs the legality of President
Trump's sweeping tariffs. In his social media post, the president
says the payments would be for everyone except high income people.
The High Court heard arguments last week after agreeing to
fast track the case, and his post, Trump also took
aim at those who are against the tariffs, calling them fools.

(14:23):
The tariffs will stay in place until the court makes
a decision.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington. Can't wait to ask Chris Walker,
Republican consultant, your morning show contributor, why does the GOP
always speak against means testing, always speak against picking and
choosing winners and losers, except when they do it. Millions
are gearing up for not just cold temperatures potential snow
this week.

Speaker 10 (14:47):
It's due to an area of low pressure moving down
from Canada and into the eastern part of the country
that started on Sunday. Cities in the Midwest we'll see
temperatures in the twenty degree range today. What places like Atlanta, Dallas,
and Nashville could see how in the thirties by tomorrow.
Record lows are possible across the southeast. I'm Tammy Trujillo Well.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
Rock and Roll Hall of Fame has a new class
of inductees. The ceremony took place on Saturday in Los Angeles.
Joined the ranks of this year the Hall of Fame
inductees Bad Company, We still don't know who the White
Stripes are, Sound Garden, Chubby Checker, Joe Cocker, can't believe
he wasn't already in, Cindy Lauper, who you just heard?
And outcast already in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. outIn.

(15:29):
John had a special tribute to the late Brian Wilson
at the ceremonies. Oh God Knows What.

Speaker 8 (15:41):
Without John performed God only Knows and recalled his first
meeting with Wilson in nineteen seventy. He described Wilson as
his idol and a major influence on his songwriting. Wilson
passed away in June at the age of eighty two,
following a long battle with dementia.

Speaker 1 (15:57):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
This is Kay from Surprise, Arizona. My Morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (16:16):
Hey, it's Michael. I'm so glad you found the podcast
and don't forget you can listen to your morning show
live each weekday morning. Your Morning Show can be heard
in great cities like Youngstown, Ohio, Nashville, Tennessee, Saint Louis, Sacramento, Phoenix,
just to name a few. You can find the your
Morning Show city closest to you on our website, Your
Morningshowonline dot com. And we're glad you're here for the podcast.

(16:37):
Enjoy Well, they're not getting any cooler. In fact, they're
getting hotter. In Ukraine and Russia, they exchanged massive attacks,
each attacking each other's power grids over the weekend. No
cooler heads prevailing there thirty five minutes after the hour,
twenty five minutes to be to work by eight o'clock
if you're listening in the Eastern time zone, and thanks
for bringing us along with you on the air, streaming

(16:58):
live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show
coming up in the third hour. Leanne Morgan what a year.
Hit movie Cordially Invited with Will Ferrell and Reese Witherspoon,
Then they hit Netflix sitcom series LeeAnne, self titled, and
now she has a number one stand up special on Netflix,
Unspeakable Thing. She's had quite a year of success. We'll

(17:21):
see what that feels like when we visit with her.
Next hour, be listening for that. President Trump is issuing
new rounds of pardons. He's also proposing a two thousand
dollars means tested dividend check, and perhaps, uh, maybe the
worst idea of them all, a fifty year fixed rate mortgage.

(17:42):
We did a two hundred thousand dollars home at six percent,
and you're basically paying six hundred plus thousand dollars for
a two hundred thousand dollars home. By the end of
the mortgage, that's four hundred thousand an interest, two hundred
thousand for the home. Now, what makes this an even
worse analogy? Your payment on a six percent fifty year

(18:03):
fixed mortgage of a two hundred thousand dollars home is
one thousand and nine dollars. Do that same loan thirty
years and it's only one ninety nine. So two hundred
dollars a month is the difference. Well, that and about
two hundred and something thousand dollars in interest. We were

(18:25):
thinking earlier. Can you imagine somebody picking up the phone
and calling Dave Ramsey. Dave, the president's proposing a fifty
year mortgage. Do you think that's a good idea? I
think that's a load of crap. But turn my phones
out and hear myself. Why you need to hear yourself
more sound?

Speaker 6 (18:41):
Right?

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Wouldn't that make it more affordable? And that better than
throwing money away on rent? You're throwing money away. Pack
that and send. So it begs the question for our
talkback line, what is the worst test balloon Donald Trump's
fifty year mortgage idea or a means tested to two

(19:02):
thousand dollars dividend? Check? Use the talkback button your iHeartRadio app,
and we look forward to hearing your response.

Speaker 11 (19:10):
At that.

Speaker 1 (19:10):
You can also email Michael d and I heard media
Canada is taking over Canada on that? Do you want
to make that a third one? You keep bringing that up? No,
I actually think taking over Canada was a better tribalon
than a fifty year mortgage at a two thousand dollars
means tested rebate. Use the talk backline or email meet
Michael Di at iHeartMedia dot com. All right, President Trump
says every American will receive two thousand dollars as a

(19:31):
tariff dividend. Will not? Actually every American, it is means
tested the richest will not. Those that spend the most
will not receive a rebate. I thought Republicans are against
means testing and picking, choosing winners and losers. White House
correspondent and attorney John Decker's here with the story. Good morning, John.

(19:53):
Obviously you can tell I'm not a fan.

Speaker 12 (19:55):
You ident tell that absolutely.

Speaker 1 (19:57):
You may recall.

Speaker 12 (19:58):
Back in July, July the fifth, I made this suggestion
to President Trump, and he loved the idea, the idea
of a trade tariff rebate to every American taxpayer. And
here we are a few months later, and you may
ask Michael why now, why is he putting this idea
out on social media now over the weekend. I think
it has everything to do, Michael, with what happened at

(20:18):
the Supreme Court last Wednesday. He knows it did not
go well for the administration at the Supreme Court last Wednesday.
I think he's trying to get buy in for his
tariffs from every one of the members of the American
Electric to be on board this idea that the President
should be able to impose tariffs unilaterally on every one

(20:39):
of America's trading partners.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
All right, if we have taxation, and we do, the
wealthy pay the highest amount of taxes. If we have
tariffs and their attacks. The wealthiest spending the most are
presumably paying the most, but none of your great idea
of a tariff dividend comes back to them. The means
testing this it's pretty inconsistent.

Speaker 12 (21:03):
It is inconsistent, and as a result, you know, the
President putting this idea out on social media doesn't mean
the President can, you know, start sending out the checks
from the US Treasury he needs to get buy him
from Congress. Congress controls the purse strings. There is a
bill that has been introduced in the Senate. It was
introduced a day after I made this suggestion to the President,

(21:26):
Senator Josh Holly of Missouri. However, it does not have
great likelihood of passing in the US. For the reason
that you decided, Michael, is that so many Republicans it's
in their DNA to be against means testing for these
types of proposals.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
All right, so we got the fifty year mortgage idea too,
that is being floated. I'll never forget I was up
for a job in San Francisco and that was the
final straw. I don't think I got very far down
the road when you know, I was like man, you know,
across to living here is ridiculous, especially to buy a house, like, oh,
don't worry about that. We have one hundred year mortgag.
Is there eighty one hundred year mortgages? And I'm like, well,

(22:02):
I don't want to live there. But we just ran
the numbers on a fifty year mortgage for a two
hundred thousand dollars house at six percent interest. You're talking
about four hundred thousand dollars in interest, two hundred thousand
for the home six hundred thousand, and by the way,
you do it it thirty years and the payment only
goes from a thousand to eleven hundred and ninety nine.
I mean, it just doesn't make any sense. And it

(22:23):
reminds me of when we were trying to get people
into a home just to achieve the American dream when
they had no business potentially having that home, and the
bubble it created. So they're both kind of really bad ideas.
I do suspect the President will be in a good
mood today though, over the what appears to be the
end of the government shutdown. How quickly can we get
this signed and move on, well.

Speaker 12 (22:45):
Hopefully by the end of this week. The reason being
it still has to move through the Senate. We know
it passed a procedural hurdle last night. Then it goes
over the House of Representatives. Remember it's different than what
the House paths back in September, so they would need
to vote on it. And you already have the leader
for Democrats in the House, Kim Jefferies, saying that at
least the way he expressed it last night in his statement, Michael,

(23:09):
he's against this. So I will have to wait and see.
Remember it's a simple majority, that's all you need at
the House. So they don't need Democrats. If every Republican
votes for this compromise that is coming.

Speaker 1 (23:20):
Through the US Senate. Yeah, they just need the eight
Democrats who sided with the Republicans to side again when
it comes back. There's really not much a game Jefferies
can do, though. They may be setting up a narrative
for next year that you know, but nobody's going to
have a serious conversation about the biggest fight, which is

(23:40):
Obamacare is not an affordable care act. It never did
ensure everyone until they propped it up with subsidies and
made it free, so it was other people paying for
other people's insurance, which is no better than everybody belts
leaving the hospital paying for their hospital bill and those
who didn't pay, and the premiums went up, not down.
They've just been hidden by these subsidies. So you know,

(24:03):
the government will open until January through January thirtieth, and
for some things all the way through the next fiscal year.
But the understanding of the issues, I doubt we'll get
any better, and they'll all be messaging in the midterm election.
Should be should be interesting.

Speaker 11 (24:18):
Now.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
The main thing on the whole tariff dividend is you
may not even have tariffs once the Supreme Court rules.
When are we expecting that ruling?

Speaker 12 (24:27):
John, I would expect the Supreme Court to rule on
that case that they heard last Wednesday, by the end
of this year, by the end of next month. So
we'll get decision from the Supreme Court, all nine justices.
And then if indeed the Supreme Court rules against President
Trump on this issue, the White House, the President needs
to think about Plan B, right, you.

Speaker 1 (24:47):
Got any other ideas, Maybe we should funnel all of
our ideas. How about a zero based prioritize balanced budget.
Can you bring that up at a night White House
News conference. I think I'll get an opportunity this week. Sure,
I already gave you already get I gave you a
shameless plug early this morning because I remember when you
recommended that to the President and how he responded to you.
If you want to hear more, the White House Briefing

(25:07):
Room with John Decker podcast will be out at nine
eastern eighth Central. You'll hear more and we'll talk tomorrow.
Great work, John, Thanks funny work well. The Senate has
voted to pass a funding measure, marking a major step
towards reopening the government. Not opened yet, but moving in
that direction. Mark Mayfield has more.

Speaker 8 (25:29):
Eight members of the Senate Democratic Caucus joined Republicans in
advancing the measure.

Speaker 13 (25:33):
On this vote, the Yays are sixty and the nays
a forty three fifths of the Senate duly chosen and
sworn having voted in the affirmative. The motion upon reconsideration
is agreed to.

Speaker 8 (25:45):
It includes a stompcap measure to fund the government through
January thirtieth. Sunday's vote broke a forty day deadlinck in
the Chamber after an agreement was reached that included a
future vote on extending healthcare subsidies and assurances that federal
workers furlough during the shutdown would be reinstated. Still, hurdles
remain before the government can fully reopen, and any Senator
could slow the process for several days.

Speaker 1 (26:06):
A marketet field Attention. All your morning show listeners who
drive Honda Civics Attention. More than four hundred thousand of
them are under recall.

Speaker 9 (26:13):
Honda announced the voluntary recall Friday, impacting about four hundred
and six thousand cars sold in the US with model
years between twenty sixteen and twenty twenty one. The automaker
says the issue stems from a supplier error and could
cause aluminum accessory wheel nuts to loosen that eventually detach.
Officials with Honda urge owners to take their cars to

(26:34):
an authorized dealer for a free inspection.

Speaker 1 (26:37):
If needed.

Speaker 9 (26:37):
The dealership, they say, we'll replace the wheels at no cost.
I'm Scott Carr.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
The famous Rockefeller Christmas tree has arrived in New York City.

Speaker 10 (26:45):
Seventy five foot Norway spruce weighing eleven tons made the
one hundred and fifty mile journey to Midtown Manhattan from
just outside of Albany, for the next few weeks. It
will be surrounded by scaffoldings so Cruz can wrap it
in fifty thousand lights and top it with a nine
hundred pounds wharofsky crystal. A lighting ceremony will be held
on December third and air on NBC. In Peacock, I'm

(27:06):
Tammy Trhio.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
NBA star and coach Lenny Wilkins is being remembered not
only as a great coach a great player, but for
his contributions to the city of Seattle.

Speaker 14 (27:15):
Lenny Wilkins dine Sunday at age eighty eight. He spent
more than five decades in the NBA as a player
and a coach. He was also known for volunteer work
in Seattle to benefit children. In June, Wilkins was honored
with the first statue outside of Climate Fledgerina.

Speaker 1 (27:29):
There's also a street named in his honor.

Speaker 14 (27:31):
He led the Seattle SuperSonics to their first and only
NBA championship in nineteen seventy nine.

Speaker 1 (27:37):
I'm Brad fod Tomorrow Gabbs one hundred and seventy two yards,
three touchdowns. Great for my fantasy team and great for
the Lions. Forty four to twenty two over the Commander's
Jets kickoff return for a touchdown. Next time they touched
the ball a punt return for a touchdown. Fourteen points
on special teams, more than enough to beat the Browns
twenty seven to twenty Baker Mayfield two hundred and seventy
three yards and three touchdown passes, but still not enough.

(27:59):
Bucks lose at home twenty eight twenty three to the Patriots.
Devon a Chain Oh, I had a chance to draft
him and I didn't. One hundred and seventy four yards,
two touchdowns. Fins dominate the Buffalo Bills head home thirty
to thirteen. Cardinals fall to three and six, losing to
the Seahawks forty four to twenty two. They take a
portion of the NFC West lead along with the Rams.

(28:20):
Matthew Stafford two hundred and eighty yards, four touchdown passes,
Rams forty two to twenty six over the forty nine Ers.
Steelers dropped to five and four, losing to the Chargers
twenty five to ten. Monday Night Football Tonight, Eagles and Packers.
Oh my birthdays today, Ellen Pompeo from Gray's Anatomy, Not
that I've ever watched it fifty six years old. She
was also in Old School. People Forget that loved her

(28:43):
in that movie. She's fifty six years old today. Singer
Miranda Lambert is forty two. White Lotus star Walton Goggins
is fifty four and One Day at a Time. By
the way, my son had a big thing. He said,
you gotta say Righteous Gemstones. Oh he was. He was
the uncle in Righteous Jemsons. Yeah, he was terrific. And
White Lotus to This to the Moon he soared, was

(29:04):
starred and Walton Goggins fifty four and one day at Times.
Mackenzie Phillips boy shamefully embarrassing. Earlier this morning, Red thought
he could stop me. Can you name the first movie
Mackenzie Phillips was ever? And how long did I take?
It was like less than a second American Graffiti? Come on,
come on, This is like when I'm at the nursing

(29:26):
home playing Jeopardy. I just dominate. Well's I never saw.

Speaker 7 (29:32):
Walter in the Shield, like one of his first big
acting deals with man.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
What an incredible series that was on FX. Talk about
Walton Goggins, Yeah, yeah, sorry, yeah, he was terrific. Well, yeah,
he's a great actor. Mackenzie Phillips is sixty six years old.
But your birthday, happy birthday. Were so glad you were born,
and thank God that you had the right to live
and have a birthday. We're living in a time when
truth is under attack. Lies are easy to tell, they're

(29:58):
easy to spread, and fortunately they're easy to believe. The
truth we don't even hunger for it, and it's costly.
And nowhere is the cost greater than from mothers in crisis.
When a woman is told abortion is their only option,
silence and lies surround her. When she walks into a
Preborn Network clinic, she's met with compassion, support and truth

(30:22):
about the life growing inside of her. The moment of
truth happens when she gets a free ultrasound. The ultrasound
is the game changer. Even if you believe in choice,
you shouldn't care what choice is made. And when a
woman sees that ultrasound, sees her baby's face, here's its
heartbeat that literally doubles the chances she'll choose life. Preborn

(30:44):
Network clinics are on the front lines, meeting women in
their darkest hour, loving them, helping them choose life, and
sharing truth. As we approach the end of the year.
In giving just twenty eight dollars provides an ultrasound which
has a fifty to fifty chance of providing life. Just
called pound two fifty and say baby, Pound two fifty

(31:05):
and say baby to give, or you can give online
at preborn dot com. Forward slash yms that stands for
your morning show. Preborn dot com Forward slash yms. That's
Preborn dot Com Forward slash Yms sponsored by Preborn.

Speaker 2 (31:19):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 11 (31:24):
The White Stripes are a duo of Jack White and
his sister Meg. They have a famous song called Seven
Nation Army that I think you'd recognize if you heard it.
The cool thing about Jack White He's got a record
label and store and recording place in a bar right
there in Nashville called Third Man Records.

Speaker 1 (31:43):
It's a very cool place to stop and check it out.
All right, Thanks Jack Black Eyed knew Jack whitey didn't.
Thanks Mary all right?

Speaker 6 (31:54):
Majored in online activision with a minor and puberty bough to.

Speaker 10 (31:59):
It much time for the day to day give you
and the media clearly missed the art of the deal.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
It's going to work out all right, obviously, Bernie Sanders
was not happy that the government shut down, maybe ending
He had this to say.

Speaker 15 (32:11):
Tonight, eight Democrats voted with the Republicans to allow them
to go forward on this continuing Resolution.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Into my mind, this was a very very bad vote.

Speaker 15 (32:25):
What it does, first of all, is it raises healthcare
premiums for over twenty million Americans by doubling and in
some cases tripling or quadrupling.

Speaker 1 (32:36):
People can't afford that. Well, they couldn't afford it because
the Affordable Care Act did not lower premiums. And the
only reason they had these policies is because you subsidized
them and paid for them with other taxpayers money. You
don't want to call it Obamacare anymore. He's not left
enough for you. But you certainly can't call it an
Affordable Care Act because it was affordable to no one.

(32:57):
This was an interesting exchange. I think you will like.
This is Bill Maher talking about Zoran mam Donnie's election
with a representative from Florida Party is not new. This
is just a new face. He's charismatic. You've talked a
lot about that about it. Do you worry have to?

Speaker 16 (33:14):
I mean, they call themselves democratic socialists. I think they
should drop the Democratic Party because that means that you
have to answer for everything the socialists do, and he's
plainly maybe he is a communist, maybe it's very far left.

Speaker 1 (33:28):
Whatever it is, it's not what we've seen before, and
Republicans are trying to do that. They're trying to make
me and others answer for everything he does. What's weird
is like, I don't remember Eric Adams being the head
of the Democratic Party. Is he unaware that Hakeem Jeffreys
and others have called Zoran mam Donni the head of
the republic the Democrat Party. It's them, it's the far

(33:48):
left taking you over that are calling him that, or
Michael Bloomberg being the head of the republic Party.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
But Republicans are trying to make him now the head
of the party.

Speaker 16 (33:56):
Because those guys weren't as out of the mainstream of
the Democratic Party he is. But they're trying to make
that the mainstream. Should the question you're going to get
and you should get it, and I'm going to give
it to you.

Speaker 1 (34:08):
Let's go where do you eat Hamburgers?

Speaker 11 (34:13):
No?

Speaker 1 (34:18):
Should should this be the direction the party is going to.

Speaker 16 (34:21):
He's not the only Democratic Socialist is about one hundred
in different offices and places where they've worn in this country.
I mean, here's a Mandamie quote from his speech. He said,
we will prove that there is no problem too large
for government to solve. Yeah, wait, wait till I can
tell Bill O'Reilly thinks that's.

Speaker 1 (34:40):
The one question you should have asked. And you did ask.
You didn't gi him a chance to answer. That's okay,
you didn't have one. I would say that the gipper, would.

Speaker 9 (34:49):
You like to call?

Speaker 1 (34:50):
The play?

Speaker 17 (34:50):
Was a little better if you'd like me to, But
I will showing your backup quarterback is a good quarterback,
and he's had some very good games for you, and
you're first three quarterback has the potential, I think to
be a great quarterback.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
He's got to stop the injuries somehow. And let's see.

Speaker 17 (35:07):
We have a very important, I think is a very
important couple of plays.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
Here we go seven, right, second and seven. Let's see
what happens. Well, that's all right, Corosky mass that's the call.
Donald Trump doing commander's play by play with the box
crew and Kenny Albert.

Speaker 2 (35:25):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndel Joano
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Ruthie's Table 4

Ruthie's Table 4

For more than 30 years The River Cafe in London, has been the home-from-home of artists, architects, designers, actors, collectors, writers, activists, and politicians. Michael Caine, Glenn Close, JJ Abrams, Steve McQueen, Victoria and David Beckham, and Lily Allen, are just some of the people who love to call The River Cafe home. On River Cafe Table 4, Rogers sits down with her customers—who have become friends—to talk about food memories. Table 4 explores how food impacts every aspect of our lives. “Foods is politics, food is cultural, food is how you express love, food is about your heritage, it defines who you and who you want to be,” says Rogers. Each week, Rogers invites her guest to reminisce about family suppers and first dates, what they cook, how they eat when performing, the restaurants they choose, and what food they seek when they need comfort. And to punctuate each episode of Table 4, guests such as Ralph Fiennes, Emily Blunt, and Alfonso Cuarón, read their favourite recipe from one of the best-selling River Cafe cookbooks. Table 4 itself, is situated near The River Cafe’s open kitchen, close to the bright pink wood-fired oven and next to the glossy yellow pass, where Ruthie oversees the restaurant. You are invited to take a seat at this intimate table and join the conversation. For more information, recipes, and ingredients, go to https://shoptherivercafe.co.uk/ Web: https://rivercafe.co.uk/ Instagram: www.instagram.com/therivercafelondon/ Facebook: https://en-gb.facebook.com/therivercafelondon/ For more podcasts from iHeartRadio, visit the iheartradio app, apple podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com

The Joe Rogan Experience

The Joe Rogan Experience

The official podcast of comedian Joe Rogan.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.