Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
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listen to us live in the morning, and of course
we're so grateful you came for the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:20):
Enjoy well two three, starting your morning off right, A
new way of talk, a new way of understanding because
we're in the stage.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
This is your morning show with Michael Bill John.
Speaker 1 (00:37):
I mean you like like a suit jacket's eyes or
is it like large extra large?
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Hey? Hey, I mean.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Yeah, problem. Hey, Like I gotta go, Michael, thank you.
I'm ordering my medical white jacket.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
Are you really? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (00:53):
If I'm going to perform as the lead doctor at
the hospital in my mother's care, I thought I should
at least have the white jacket.
Speaker 3 (00:59):
Oh, what's going on?
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Let us let's oh, you know, you have to look
after your family members. If you let somebody go into
the hospital and you leave it up to the hospital,
they'll kill him. What they It's just that that isn't
even hyperbole. So we had a very busy day. We
met with one of our bosses who drove in to
visit with us, of which Jeffrey embarrassed me immensely. What
(01:24):
did I do this time? You're gonna order the most
expensive thing on the menu. If he wasn't going to
treat and I had to treat, you were gonna make
me pay for your kabab. I was prepared to pay
for my own kebab, but then I saw the lasagna.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
You're like my son Nick.
Speaker 1 (01:41):
He purpose, I'll have the borderhouse with the baby back ribs,
with the you know, we.
Speaker 3 (01:46):
Went to one place.
Speaker 1 (01:47):
My friend was in town, Joe Vig, and he was
treating and he got the I never I botched this up.
Speaker 3 (01:52):
But what's the Japanese expensive steak like the waagi?
Speaker 1 (01:57):
It's the noise you make when you get the billah yeah,
oh yeah.
Speaker 3 (02:02):
So you know, it was like one hundred dollars for
these pieces of meats.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
And he's over there eating and I'm like you, you know,
you're somebody's guest.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
You don't order the most expensive thing, so you you were.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Gonna order something? It was forty something dollars. I looked
at you and wow, did you do the lasagna for
thirty six?
Speaker 3 (02:16):
You know what?
Speaker 4 (02:17):
I read the menu, As my wife says, can you
not read the room? I read the menu and then
was like, you know what, think I'd just go down
a little lower.
Speaker 1 (02:25):
Well, yeah, because you were at the highest for a
lunch item. I mean, that's forty six dollars for an
entree at lunch.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
It's classless. I switched it though.
Speaker 1 (02:37):
You know. Anyway, we were very busy. I get to
the hospital late in the afternoon. I walk in and
my mom had been trying to text me, but did her.
She's got some tremors so she couldn't get the code
in so many times that Apple has you know, blocked
her for seven and a half hours. Oh no, So
(02:58):
I start reading lips and I go, are you saying
you have pneumonia? I can't tell you how long it
took for me to get somebody who worked there. I
actually had a janitor, find a nurse. Hoo, fought a doctor. Wow.
So nobody my mom of course, at her voice box removed,
so she has a stoma.
Speaker 3 (03:17):
Nobody's even checked that.
Speaker 1 (03:19):
I take off the HM, which is like it's like
your nose on your trake stoma, and I take it off,
and I like all this black stuff and it was
so thick. She had no airways. So you got a
woman with pneumonia and no way to breathe. So I
call in the nurse. I go, can I get an
(03:40):
oxygen level on her? She goes ninety one. I said, well,
that's getting close to ninety. We should probably put some
oxygen on her. I kid you not, Okay, if you
see somebody with a stoma, they're breathing through their neck,
not their nose. Nothing in their nose goes anywhere anymore.
That's why they can't smell, all right. So the hole
in their neck goes straight to their lungs, their throat
(04:01):
goes straight to their stomach, unlike us who have a
valve that flips. The guy comes in and puts oxygen
on her nose. Oh come on, man, So I'm looking
at it all right, So now you got you know,
I'm thinking to myself, I know the I know the
curriculum and the rigor of my daughter's course at Belmont University,
(04:25):
and I know they're above this person in charge of
my mother already. And so that's disheartening, and I said,
have you opened this up? And it was just clogged.
So he gets suction out. I said, I think we're
gonna need orstep tweezers. I don't think you're going to
get this out with suction.
Speaker 3 (04:45):
He anatomy.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
He did imagine he did, believe it or not. Through
scraping and suction, he did get like a clump that
was like literally blocking her airway. But there was stuff
down in there that had to be I said, we
need respiratory. So I'm thinking to myself, car the respiratory
therapist is coming. I said, I need the doctor stat
and I need respiratory. Respiratory arrives an hour and twenty
(05:09):
minutes later, Oh my goodness, and she's looking at me
and she's going, can you show me how to do this?
Speaker 3 (05:19):
Now?
Speaker 1 (05:19):
That was the point I thought to myself, Okay, now
I need the white coat.
Speaker 5 (05:24):
Did you.
Speaker 3 (05:26):
Now I'm I am literally running the ward.
Speaker 1 (05:28):
So how I rate did you become? Well, let's just
say I'm mature in Christ. But this was a test, okay,
all right? And so she goes, can you show I said,
So I'm trying to explain to her how you wear
the Larry tube at night because your your stoma, your
body will want to close a hole. So you know,
(05:49):
after a long time, you can get away with just
wearing it at night, kind of like you know you
wear what's the head gear when you have braces at night?
You know, kind of the headset the head So I said, well,
we're going to take off the adhesive and I'm gonna
put in the Larry tube. I said, do you have
any ky or lubricn What I said, are you going
to stick a dry rubber tube into a s? She goes,
(06:12):
could you make notes for all this? I said, you
know what I wanted to see at that point.
Speaker 3 (06:17):
Oh, believe me, I'm making notes for the lawsuit.
Speaker 1 (06:25):
I did all my mother's care, took my gloves off.
I said, Mom, I can't kiss you because I can't
get pneumonia, but I love you.
Speaker 3 (06:32):
I'll be back again. I struck again a lot. I mean,
you mean to tell me they we're gonna and oh no,
that was the best part. Oh good. So I walk
out and I go, you know what this?
Speaker 6 (06:42):
Now?
Speaker 1 (06:42):
She got pneumonia? So how important are the antibiotics in
the IV?
Speaker 3 (06:45):
Right? I'm crying? So I look over and I go,
this IV isn't even dripping. I look down stopped. So
I called the nurse.
Speaker 1 (06:55):
I go, you know, now that we got our airway clear,
it'd be nice to hit these lungs with these antibiotics. Yeah,
that's why we're running it. I said, Well, you might
want to take a closer look. You might notice it's
not tripping, nothing going into her line. Oh yeah, sometimes
that does that. What time would I mean had I
just left, was anybody gonna, you know, look to see. Oh,
(07:17):
here's somebody with a stoma. Gee, they should be having
a larry tube. It's nighttime. A larry tube sitting right
on her tray next to her bed.
Speaker 3 (07:26):
That doesn't dawn on.
Speaker 7 (07:28):
Hey, maybe I.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Should take off this hm me and take a peek
and see what's going on. She seems to be struggling breathing. Oh,
the airwave is completely obstructed. Oh, we got a patient
with pneumonia. We should be doing IVS. Maybe I should
check this if the IV is on, Welcome to the
new del Giorno. Wo okay, So no, I'm not serious.
(07:50):
I'm not gonna mention the name of the hospital or
the city that anybody can figure it out. It's not Vanderbilt,
which is where my mom might be transported to Shortlys
and I found give me.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
The can fit me. I want my white coat ceremony.
Speaker 1 (08:06):
When the respiratory therapist said, can you make some notes?
Speaker 3 (08:10):
I want to. I want to train everybody on how
to do this. I've got some notes, sugar.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
Wait a minute, you want me, the son of the patient,
to train you the respiratory therapist, Hey, why don't you
do my show in the morning while you're at it? Uh,
talk to us about where you got your little certificate.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
I've been stewing on this for twelve plus hours, haven't you.
Speaker 1 (08:35):
I am no all joking aside, I'm beyond freaking wild
right now, beyond wild.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
Don't poke the bear. I don't mean to laugh.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
But so that was my night and right before I
go on the air, usually when he says make me laugh,
fat boy, or dance for me monkeyre what's the other
thing you always say?
Speaker 3 (08:54):
I'd like to say, get on that pole and dance
for me. Get on the pole and dance in words,
entertain me, yes, meaning entertaining you.
Speaker 4 (09:01):
Listening so much, you've started today off really well, I'm
last listen. I'm sorry about your issues, I really am.
Speaker 3 (09:07):
But I love the.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Way if you don't hover over your loved ones in
a hospital, if you don't, you know, every doctor tell
you the same thing. Oh stay off Google, no, get
on it. But I have never Now this is the
part that I don't want anybody listening to miss. If
if you haven't already been frustrated, Oh God myself, I'm
(09:30):
giving orders.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
And it's happening. That's the strangest part.
Speaker 1 (09:34):
I mean, I have had to oversee incompetence and care,
but I've never and they were all listening. Give me
respiratory stat I need the doctor. Who's the doctor on call,
because you have them either come here or call on
the phone. I'm telling the nurse go get some oxygen,
because then I come back to check on progress and uh,
he's got the oxygen in the nose.
Speaker 4 (09:54):
I'm not a doctor, but I did stay at the
Holiday and Express last night.
Speaker 1 (09:57):
But that was my final dismount right before we go
on the air. All right, you get fifteen seconds. Honestly,
I don't know. Shut up, I'm doing it. Fifteen seconds.
Fifteen seconds. By the way, I got to tell you,
I slept last night. I slept nine hours this wonderful
three seconds.
Speaker 3 (10:14):
I'm so sorry. I'm so glad you're rested. My gosh,
I was in Hell.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
I was in Dante's inferno.
Speaker 4 (10:23):
I mean, I'm trying to talk to you in the
morning and you're like, I'm busy.
Speaker 3 (10:25):
Maybe aloud, let me tell you something. Red is home.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
Yeah, we're at the hospital by now with food poisoning
at such a horrific pace.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
And I'm telling you he had the better night than me.
Speaker 4 (10:38):
Maybe you need to get over there, and he's.
Speaker 3 (10:41):
Probably not getting the care he deserves. And that's the
other kicker. Very nice.
Speaker 8 (10:46):
Gosh, this is your morning show with Michael Del Trono.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
I'll tell you how ridiculous we've taken this off there. Now,
when I walk in the hospital lobby, it's gonna be
me with glasses on.
Speaker 3 (10:58):
Is the hospital chief surgeon? It could happen. Yet, what
am I hearing? Well?
Speaker 4 (11:06):
I found some hospital ambiyonce emergency.
Speaker 3 (11:10):
I wasn't in the maternity ward. I can assure you
hit this.
Speaker 8 (11:13):
Sound effect.
Speaker 3 (11:16):
All right, twenty five minutes after the hour.
Speaker 1 (11:17):
Thanks for waking up with your morning show on the
Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app on Michael Del
Jorno and welcome to November the twelfth. President elect Donald
Trump is reportedly expected to name this would be another
nose for del Jorno.
Speaker 3 (11:32):
What did I say?
Speaker 1 (11:32):
The electoral college would be uh three two, three twelve?
Speaker 3 (11:37):
And what was it? Three twelve? Then I said?
Speaker 1 (11:42):
Marco Rubio, Secretary of State, right Mark Rightfield.
Speaker 9 (11:46):
The New York Times cites three sources familiar with Trump's
thinking who's saying the president elect could still change his mind.
Rubio was elected to the Senate in twenty ten and
has taken hawky stances on both China and Iron. He
recently said Russia's worgan Ukraine is a stalemate and needs
to be brought to a conclusion. Rubio ran against Trump
in the twenty sixteen presidential primaries.
Speaker 3 (12:07):
I'm mark meanview, all.
Speaker 1 (12:08):
Right, just to review, Jeffrey slept beautiful last night, eight nine,
ten hours something like that. Yeah, well, I was battling
a hospital. There was a group that had it a
little worse than me though. A Spirit Airlines flight. Well,
it's tough enough you're on Spirit Airlines, let alone you
come under gunfire trying to land in Haiti.
Speaker 3 (12:26):
Brian Shook has more.
Speaker 5 (12:27):
That's according to reporting from the Miami Herald. The aircraft
was flying in from Fort Lauderdale and was diverted to
an airport in the Dominican Republic, where it safely landed.
At least one person, a flight attendant, was grazed by
the bullet.
Speaker 3 (12:42):
I'm Brian Shook.
Speaker 1 (12:44):
I'm thinking every plane on autopilot would arrive at that
island and just you know, see Haiti and automatically just
turn coded the Dominican Republic Senate Republicans are going to
pick a new leader tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (12:55):
Lisa Taylor has the details.
Speaker 10 (12:57):
South Dakota's John Thune, Texas John Cornyn, and Florida's Rick
Scott are all buying for the party's leader position in
the Upper Chamber. Ryan Nobbles has more from Capitol Hill
on Rick Scott's chances.
Speaker 11 (13:07):
Scott has enlisted the help of many conservative internet influenc servis.
He's gotten the endorsement of people like Tucker Carlson and
Elon Musk.
Speaker 3 (13:15):
Unfortunately for Scott, though, none of.
Speaker 11 (13:16):
Those people actually have a vote in this secret ballot,
and while he has had a number of his fellow
senators come forward and publicly endorse him, at this point
he remains probably the third out of three possible candidates,
with John Thune and John Cornyn leading the way.
Speaker 10 (13:31):
The candidates are looking to replace Kentucky's Mitch McConnell, who's
stepping aside as Republican leader ALE'SA.
Speaker 3 (13:36):
Taylor.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
A new study shows the well being of Americans in
different areas of the country. Think about where you're at
and think about the results. Michael Casner reports.
Speaker 3 (13:51):
That night.
Speaker 12 (13:55):
A report in The Lancet shows researchers study the Human
Development Index, which includes life expectancy, education, and income. It
found that those scoring the best live in parts of Colorado, Maryland,
New York, California, Virginia, and Washington, d C.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Those who scored.
Speaker 12 (14:12):
Low on the index live in the southern part of
the country, Appalachia and the Rust Belt.
Speaker 3 (14:17):
Steak. I'm Michael Casner. Now you know I've had that
strong sucking that song stuck in my head all morning long,
all listens in the world. No I make.
Speaker 1 (14:28):
I can't relate to this at all because I craved
this year round. But if you ever wonder why you
tend to crave spicy food more in the fall and winter,
Reed Tennis is here to break down the science behind it.
Speaker 13 (14:39):
Cap Sason is the hot in chili peppers, and eating
it triggers your body to warm up. It also makes
you release indorphins that make you feel good. Healthline says
that dash or two of tabasco top of ti you
or even sirachia can also reduce stress, anxiety and boost
weight loss. Experts say shake away. You really can't overdo
it when it comes to spot because hot sauce is
(15:01):
not chemically addictive.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
That hot sauce of my base what I'm Bree Tennis.
I love Brie all right.
Speaker 1 (15:08):
So while I was busy running a hospital last night,
my fantasy football team came two yards short. I like
the Tennessee Titans of fantasy football.
Speaker 3 (15:16):
You can't be that bad.
Speaker 1 (15:18):
Do you remember who the wide receiver that came one
yard short when the Super Bowl was Van Dyson? Yes?
And you know who he is now, doctor Dyson? And
you know where that is. He's my son's principal. Oh
no kidding. Centennial High School Rams lost twenty three to fifteen.
Puka Anukah came up two yards shorter or I would
have won fantasy football. Instead, I lost, and I fall
to I think two and seven. Rams only fell to
(15:42):
four and five. Next up Thursday Night football Commanders in Eagles.
That's gonna be a great matchup.
Speaker 14 (15:49):
Hey, this is Lee Murphy in Cottontown, Tennessee. My morning
show is Your Morning Show with Michael o'deill Jorno.
Speaker 3 (16:07):
Hi, it's Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:07):
Your Morning show airs live five to eight am Central,
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
but we're happier here now. Enjoyed the podcast. It was
a very close selection with a very not close result.
Now they becomes, you know, a mandate at the point
(16:30):
where Donald Trump wins the popular vote, wins three hundred
and twelve electoral votes to how he got to three
twelve very close in some of these states. So just
as we predicted, it'll be a very close race with
a very not close result, and that's exactly what we got,
three twelve to two twenty six.
Speaker 3 (16:47):
So it seems there's a rejection. We're going to talk
about to wokeness and you know, to the to the
left agenda and worldview, But how does that play out
in a still very divided nation. We'll talk about that
with Davidson. Oprah got what a million dollars? I think
it was from Kamala Harris.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
We now learned that Megan the Stallion got five million,
Lizo got three million, em and m got one point
eight million. How did Eminem get almost twice as much
money as Oprah Winfrey? Now, of course it's all embarrassing,
(17:29):
fake relationships paid for with campaign money.
Speaker 3 (17:34):
I mean, how out of touch.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
We talk about the matrix and people living in the
bubble if you don't know what the matrix is. We
all get this is a part of the social dilemma,
but it goes beyond that, to media, to your neighborhood.
So the reality is you get on Facebook. One day
a guy from high school pops on, Oh man, I.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
Haven't seen you since eighty two. What did you become?
How you got family, got wife, you got kids?
Speaker 1 (18:02):
Everything glorious that About a day later he sees a
post of yours.
Speaker 3 (18:06):
He makes a comment about the posts. Actually, you know
you're fighting with the postsctual.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
You know you're unfriended, And this plays out over and
over again over time, until all that's left on your
Facebook is people that believe like you believe, with your worldview,
with your agenda, watching what you watch, reading what you read.
At the end of the day, we no longer have journalism.
We don't have news in news consumers. We have narratives
and narrative repeaters. And guard yourself against the against this,
(18:34):
or you won't be any better than Comma and the
rest of them. But what kind of a bubble were
these people in that they thought Hollywood had influence? Never mind,
yesterday we talked to great length about media. Oh, yes,
CNN is the place to be.
Speaker 7 (18:50):
Or MSNBC, give me the major networks, ABC, nbccb uh,
you might want to get your rear end to Joe Rogan.
Speaker 3 (19:01):
That's where the sixty million people are.
Speaker 1 (19:05):
But they're so out of touch, and these places are
big in their mind. That's why so many you don't
understand this. There's so many people in this country can't
figure out why Donald Trump won. Everybody listening to me
right now, you know exactly why he won, and you
go about twenty six layers deep and explaining it. They
don't see any of those layers. Why they weren't watching
what you watch, They weren't listening to what you Listen,
(19:29):
they were hearing the narrative over and over and.
Speaker 3 (19:31):
They believed it.
Speaker 1 (19:31):
They thought everybody was voting for Kamala. I mean even Lizzo,
the boss em and m Oprah. But you want to
talk about return on investment and wasted money? Who thinks
Lizzo's worth three million dollars and three times as much
as Oprah? And who thinks Oprah's worth a million? Oprah?
(19:56):
H I don't even know who megan the it is.
She's one of those rappers, right, Oh so it's not
a horse. No. Oh well then, because I was gonna say,
that's a lot of hay, that's a lot of oats.
But here's the bottom line. Look at how out of
touch they think Hollywood still has influence. That's how we
(20:19):
said the one thing we're going to have Kamala Harris
to think the end of celebrity politics. It's got to
be dead right. Who wants to be the next Robert
de Niro.
Speaker 3 (20:34):
He's got to be stopped.
Speaker 1 (20:36):
Who wants to be the next Bruce Springsteen? But that
that aside, Think about Democrat voters for a second. I mean,
I'm not a Republican or a Democrat. I was a
lifelong Republican and if they continue to live with they believe.
So if only Trump's proved to me he'll live what
he believes, I might go back. But I have nothing
(20:57):
in common with the Democrats. I should have everything in
common with the Republicans, but they so rarely live what
they believe. But that's life, right. Some people fail because
they don't know what to do. Some people fail because
they don't do what they know. But can you imagine
what it's like to be a Democrat? You just had
a primary process where you voted for an incumbent president
(21:21):
and then you find out And I don't know why
it took that debate for you to find out. I
don't know how much you were covering your eyes to
not notice, Wow, this guy's really out of it. He's
got to go. And did they have an open primary
for you? No, they just took your votes and gave
it to who they wanted to.
Speaker 4 (21:41):
Do.
Speaker 1 (21:41):
You see the betrayal in that. Can you meagine what
that feels like as a voter. I gave you my
vote and you just gave it to someone else without
asking me. There's a great episode in Curb Your Enthusiasm.
There's this waitress. She sweats. The sweat drips into his soup.
She's disgusting. They're all gagging. The owner sees this fires her.
(22:06):
He later bumps into her at a bus stop and
she tells him that she got fired. He said, you know,
then they get an argument off Wehe nobody wants sweating
their soup. Asked her she needs a ride home because
cars are expensive. She doesn't have one. He stops to
get a car. When he buys his car, he gives
her his old one. And what does she do? She
sells it on eBay. Think of that. Somebody extends that
(22:33):
kind of grace and mercy and gift to you and
you just give it away. That's how the voters must feel,
the Democrats. They voted in a primer. So I just
gave my votes to Kamala. By the way, she's stunk,
we might have picked better. Now you find out you
gave your money to a candidate, presumably to hire workers
(22:55):
or buy ads, you know, to get elected. I trusted
you with my vote and you gave it to this person.
And I'm trusting you with my money. And you gave
it to Lizzo, you gave it to Oprah, You give
it to Meghan the Stallion and she's not even a horse.
(23:15):
How much repair do the Democrats have ahead of them
to restore trust with their own voters that what they
need to clearly see is the truth.
Speaker 3 (23:25):
We've kind of rooted a lot of this out.
Speaker 1 (23:28):
Right, I should say Republicans have kind of rooted a
lot of this South bumped into any never Trumper's lately.
You know, you see where the establishment has headed. Where's
Jeb Bush today? But I mean they they have a
complete disregard for their constituents and voters. And by the way,
(23:52):
if that's what they do during elections, what do you
think they're doing to really represent you when they're governing.
I mean, the bold prediction, I think one of these
parties is gone by the end of the decade. Now,
it could be like media where they're just walking corpses.
They're dead and they don't know it. But in terms
of credibility and effectiveness, I'll give you another example. Joy
(24:16):
Reid's show is down fifty four point six percent on MSNBC.
Are Melber's down forty nine point six percent, Chris Hayes
is down forty seven point two percent. Alex Wagner is
down fifty three point six percent, The Morning Joe is
down thirty nine point six percent, Andrew Mitchell's down thirty
nine point seven percent, seventy Rules down sixty seven percent.
(24:40):
It's a fascinating conversation. What becomes of these networks. The
clearly we're selling narratives, if not fabrications. It used to
be all you had in life in media was your uniqueness,
your credibility, and the key benefit of what you were delivering.
(25:05):
You breach credibility, you're gone. If you're a marriage expert
and you get caught cheating on your wife, you lose
all credibility.
Speaker 3 (25:13):
You're gone.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
But see, we live in a new tolerance culture where
anything goes. So it's just a weapon that we can
use against Kevin Spacey, but we don't use it against
this one or that one.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
But these kinds of dramatic falls this suggests.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
I mean, have you seen the montage of the the
MSNBC coverage on election night. I mean, it's embarrassing, and
it's proof that they really believe their own narrative. They
really thought they were gonna win big. They were joyful
and giggly at first, and Rachel Maddow is setting you
up for history, a night of history. And of course
(25:53):
there they are at the end with egg in their face.
But what's their future? See ann of course Ted Turner's
great vision, right, Ah, we'll do news twenty four hours
a day. Why are we waiting for five, six, and ten?
Just twenty four. Whenever people want news, it's there now
if you ever. Whenever you want weather, the weather channel
is there. Whenever you want sports, ESPN, FOG, they're all there.
(26:16):
But when Ted Turner did it, nobody thought you're gonna
just do news all day?
Speaker 3 (26:20):
Yeah all day ooh would sit and watch it all day.
Speaker 1 (26:23):
You'd be surprised till the logo burns into their television screen.
And of course what really put him over the top
was the coverage of the Gulf War.
Speaker 3 (26:31):
That was it.
Speaker 1 (26:32):
They were solidified. But then like MTV that started with music. Oh,
it's music videos all day then, you know, I remember
by the time I was in college, you couldn't even
see a music video on MTV. It was all reality TV.
Then you go to MTV two to see music. I
don't even think MTV two has music now. And so
what did see an end do? Well, let's just move
talk shows in our prime time, and then the poll
to the left, and then the competition to balance and
(26:58):
offset the voice that pulls the right from fog. Now,
when MSNBC got in the game, I said, oh wait
a minute. Now you're playing a whole different game. You
have a mother network, NBC, and if you do something
slanted left on NBC, you're going to take your entire
network with you, which they did, and slowly we went
from media bias to death of journalism. What's the blow
(27:22):
of this election to the process. Well, you can't get
much more dead than it is. You can't get much
lower ratings than they have, you can't become less influential
than they already are. But this whole thing, and at
the end of the day, where does this leave death
of journalism moving forward? They couldn't compete with liberal radio,
(27:48):
they couldn't compete with liberal news TV. Can they compete
in the liberal world of podcasting? Because that's where it's headed.
In fact, we're already there. It kind of leads to
our conversation we're going to have with David Sonati, what
is this mandate electoral victory? How does it play in
a still divided country? And for the left that created
(28:10):
these false narratives and lies and then believed them and
got another shocking result. Where are they aded? What's the
future of wokeness? What's the future of these liberal television
stations and liberal websites and newspapers. That's the unanswered questions
that we get to live moving forward. We have the
(28:31):
answer on the election. We don't have the answer on that,
but you have the promise. We're going to go through
it together.
Speaker 8 (28:37):
It's your morning show with Michael del Churno.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
You know, I've never wanted to do television.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
I always had a theory of colleges produce people on TV,
life produces people on the radio. But I mean the
notion that you would just sit there and read a
teleprompter right radio is so intimate, isn't it a nice
You're not like watching a screen with a studio audience
ends and people sitting on cow.
Speaker 3 (29:01):
It's just you and me right here.
Speaker 1 (29:04):
I never wish you could see us necessarily except for today,
because now all I have to do to get us
both giggling like children as I get in my seat.
Speaker 3 (29:13):
But you have to see it because I do it
perfect form, because.
Speaker 1 (29:15):
I'm doctor Mike in gloves, mask and a Yankees jersey.
Speaker 3 (29:19):
That's me doing my compressions. That'll be today.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
I'll be resuscitating people while they dab my forehead.
Speaker 4 (29:25):
If you have just woken up, please go back and
listen to the first the first part of the podcast.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
Today Today's top story of hospital tries to kill my
mother and I won't allow it.
Speaker 3 (29:38):
If just waking up.
Speaker 1 (29:39):
Fifty four minutes after the hour, thanks for letting.
Speaker 3 (29:42):
Us be a part of your morning routine. This is
your morning show.
Speaker 1 (29:45):
Well, the Kremlin is denying that President elect Trump and
Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke by phone last week.
Speaker 3 (29:52):
Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 9 (29:54):
This comes after multiple news reports emerged about the phone call,
in which Trump apparently recommended that Putin not escalate the
war in Ukraine. He also allegedly reminded Putin of the
significant military presence of the US in Europe. Russian state
owned media Task reports. The Kremlin spokesperson said reports to
the call are pure fiction. Putin did publicly congratulate Trump
on his election win the same day that the reports
(30:15):
came out at a security conference in Russia.
Speaker 3 (30:18):
I'm Mark Neefield.
Speaker 1 (30:19):
Donald Trump is putting yet together his next administration. Brian
Shook as our road to a Trump White House. Road
to the White House twenty twenty four. President elect Trump
is putting together his team. Former Congressman Lee Zelden was
picked to lead the Environmental Protection Agency, and he described
the phone call he got from Trump when.
Speaker 3 (30:38):
He called me up.
Speaker 5 (30:40):
He was rattling off fifteen to twenty different priorities, a
clear focus.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
He wasn't reading off of some sheet. It's the top
of his head.
Speaker 5 (30:48):
Former lobbyist Susy Wilds will be White House Chief of Staff,
the first female to hold that position.
Speaker 3 (30:54):
Trump said.
Speaker 5 (30:54):
Former ICE Director Tom Homan will be his Border Czar,
in charge of enforcing immigration policy. And New York Congresswoman
Elise Stefanik has been nominated to serve as US Ambassador
to the United Nations in Washington.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
I'm Brian Schuck.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Senate Republicans have a big choice to make picking the
new leader of their Senate.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
That'll be tomorrow. Lisa Taylor has the details.
Speaker 10 (31:17):
South Dakotas John Thune, texass John Cornyn, and Florida's Rick
Scott are all buying for the party's leader position in
the Upper Chamber. Ryan Nibbles has more from Capitol Hill
on Rick Scott's chances.
Speaker 11 (31:27):
Scott has enlisted the help of many conservative internet influencers.
He's gotten the endorsement of people like Tucker Carlson and
Elon Musk. Unfortunately for Scott, though, none of those people
actually have a vote in this secret ballot, and while
he has had a number of his fellow senators come
forward and publicly endorse him, at this point he remains
probably the third out of three possible candidates, with John
(31:49):
Thune and John Cornyn leading the way.
Speaker 10 (31:51):
The candidates are looking to replace Kentucky's Mitch McConnell, who's
stepping aside as Republican leader. I'm Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 3 (31:57):
I pretty much tick to CBS and Walt Green's.
Speaker 1 (31:59):
But officials are warning of illegal online pharmacies selling counterfeit
pills made with fentanyl and meth.
Speaker 3 (32:06):
Details now from Tammy Trehedo.
Speaker 15 (32:07):
The US Drug Enforcement Administration issue of public safety alert
saying there's been an increase in illegal online often foreign
based websites that are targeting Americans. The DEA says it
found websites in the Dominican Republic and India that have
been working with drug traffickers but claim to be legitimate.
Speaker 3 (32:24):
A warning was also.
Speaker 15 (32:25):
Issued by the CDC this week about a potential public
health risk from ordering what appear to be prescription medications
from online pharmacies. I'm Tammy Truheo.
Speaker 1 (32:34):
Post election stress levels they're rising, and one mental health
expert says, unplugged if you're anxious.
Speaker 3 (32:40):
Karen Curtis reports Hollywood Memorial.
Speaker 16 (32:42):
Chief psychiatrist doctor Daniel Bober says three quarters of the
population is experiencing anxiety from the election.
Speaker 6 (32:49):
I have patients who are stockpiling weapons, they're hiding cash
and their mattress, and I've seen a lot of extreme,
sort of catastrophic end of the world type behaviors. The
partisan media.
Speaker 3 (32:59):
Is the fuel on the phone.
Speaker 16 (33:00):
Doctor Bober says, if you're overwhelmed by the results, try
spending your time with people who bring you peace, not
drama and chaos.
Speaker 6 (33:07):
Get off the grid to put your self care first, exercise, sleep, nutrition.
Speaker 16 (33:13):
Yeah, it's people need to process the election results with
logic rather than emotionally reactive thinking.
Speaker 3 (33:18):
Karen Curtis, Miami.
Speaker 8 (33:20):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Nheld Joano