Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
Friday from three to six Pacific, five to eight Central,
and six to nine Eastern on great radio stations like
Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento or one oh four
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in Tampa, Florida. Sure hope you can join us live
(00:22):
and make us a part of your morning routine. In
the meantime, enjoy the podcast two three starting your morning
off right, A new way of talk, a new way
of understanding.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
Because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael O'Dell.
Speaker 3 (00:41):
Truman coming up next half hour. I'll make my point
on their dead and they don't know it. The CNNs,
the MSNBC's Chris Wallace kind of did the I quit
before you can fire me in mass layoffs are coming
to CNN as they're happening across the media landscape. But
why do we share with you as a bridge audience size?
It will shock you. Also, there was a focus group
(01:05):
that was done by the New York Times with young people.
Much has been talked about with the Hispanic voting block,
the black voting block, male black especially Asian voting block,
middle class making fifty thousand dollars a year or less,
and then there's been some made of.
Speaker 1 (01:23):
The youth vote.
Speaker 3 (01:24):
Something's wrong with the indoctrination through common education K through twelve,
higher education at the university level, or through the networks
that they're not watching anymore, which was daily rewriting reality
and it hasn't settled in. And I'm telling you this
next young generation, they got a great you know what
(01:46):
detector and way to hear the results from the focus
group with the New York Times, not just how I
think it was two out of the ten that ended
up voting for Kamala Harris, seven out of the ten
or thirteen it was, yeah, two out of thirteen voted
for Kamala Harris, seven out of thirteen voted for Donald Trump,
(02:07):
and the rest voted for other candidates who wrote in
different options. They didn't get away with anything, and they
saw Kamala Harris for the phony she was. They've got
a real problem with this death of journalism, transition to
digital and with younger voters. We'll get to that coming
up in thirty minutes. Let's get to Michael in I
(02:27):
Think KFYI Phoenix.
Speaker 4 (02:28):
Good morning, Jonathan K Phoenix, Arizona.
Speaker 5 (02:31):
I enjoyed a morn show with Michael Grave.
Speaker 4 (02:34):
However, you do not get Friday with forty.
Speaker 5 (02:37):
Five anymore or forty seven because of the time change.
Speaker 6 (02:42):
We can do it in the second hour.
Speaker 4 (02:43):
That's the third out.
Speaker 1 (02:45):
For the president. May have somebody to say about that.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
It was Jonathan, by the way, apologies for somebody said Michael.
That's just an open invitation to a shameless plug. You
can hear a podcast of this show through Premiere Radio
and networks. Just google Premiere Networks your Morning Show. The
whole bio will pop up and scroll down. You get
an hour by hour as well as on your iHeartRadio
(03:09):
app in the podcast section.
Speaker 1 (03:11):
Under your morning Show. Michael del Joorno.
Speaker 3 (03:12):
By the way, when it pops up, it subscribe that
waits waiting for you every day. Can't do anything about
well for everyone except Jonathan shall we.
Speaker 1 (03:24):
He's the one we all say, al do. He is
a power because he takes a shower. Ben there once
man it back there again.
Speaker 3 (03:31):
It's Friday with forty seven o'clock. Good morning, mister President, Well, good.
Speaker 7 (03:36):
Morning, and to Jonathan, we love you.
Speaker 4 (03:38):
We're gonna miss you, but you know we love the guy.
He's a great guy.
Speaker 5 (03:42):
I have to say that he's a fantastic guy. And
he'll be able to hear us some of it how
he wants. You know, if you want to hear me,
you could hear me. And he really is a tremendous person.
Speaker 4 (03:50):
But it's good to be a pizza boy. What a
great day.
Speaker 3 (03:53):
Yeah, maybe you can do something about time changes. Just
get rid of the ball together. That way doesn't affect
our weekly visits. We've been having a long conversation this morning.
I want to get you up to speed on because
you've been very busy building a cabinet. We'll get to
the cabinet positions you've built. But there are a couple
that are outstanding, like Secretary of Education or press secretary.
And my first thought was, don't fill them, or just
(04:15):
get Judy from HR to be head of Education or
acme dynamite or wrecking ball in because we're gonna dismantle
it anyway. And as far as press secretary, we went
from well, somebody like a Tucker Carlson somebody big or
don't even have one and just go on Joe Rogan weekly.
And then we kind of settled in on maybe the
room just needs to be filled with people from TikTok
(04:36):
or Joe Rogan's or Megan Kelly's and not so many
network correspondents. But two positions to fill and should you
even fill them anyway?
Speaker 5 (04:47):
Well, you look at the people that you know that
are in there now, right, and you look at a
lot of the people who are in the cabinet that
with Crook and Joe right, the.
Speaker 4 (04:56):
I call it the poop department.
Speaker 5 (04:57):
You look at these people and these are bad people.
But you look at people like Richard Levine. He calls
himself Rachel Right, he's a allow Schmidt wrote a song
about it.
Speaker 4 (05:08):
Dude looks like a lady, right, looks like a lady. Oh.
Speaker 7 (05:13):
I know Stephen Tyler very well.
Speaker 4 (05:14):
I told him, Stephen, he said, Sir.
Speaker 7 (05:17):
I said, Stephens, M Steve.
Speaker 5 (05:22):
No, I call him Stephen right because we have a
couple of things that we don't necessarily agree on.
Speaker 4 (05:27):
But a great guy, I said, walk this way.
Speaker 5 (05:30):
He said, sir, brilliant, Let's do it and I told
him about it. You know, he wrote the song Love
in an Elevator, right, he thought that that was what
happened with Ejen Carroll. I said, it never happened, right,
it never happened. But but we have a tremendous thing, right,
we have a tremendous stuff.
Speaker 4 (05:49):
We have a beautiful cabinet.
Speaker 5 (05:50):
Nobody builds cabinets like we do.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
And I build a lot of things, by the way,
But you look.
Speaker 5 (05:56):
At these positions, right, Richard Levigne, you look at these positions.
Speaker 7 (05:59):
We don't need to fill these positions.
Speaker 1 (06:00):
See we can, mister President.
Speaker 3 (06:04):
We have lost, mister President. We've lost the president, mister President.
I apologize for that. It seems to be we had
an interruption.
Speaker 7 (06:14):
I think it was Russia.
Speaker 4 (06:15):
Russia, Russia, and we're gonna have a really bad time
with them, right. I think I gotta talk to Putin.
I gotta tell him, Vladimir, knock it off.
Speaker 7 (06:23):
Okay, this is we do this on Friday mornings.
Speaker 4 (06:26):
He's got to knock it off.
Speaker 1 (06:28):
So he's we were not what we could do like
this with Butler.
Speaker 5 (06:32):
As I was saying, as I was saying before, I
was rudely interrupted by Russia. Russia, US, the cabinets who
to be tremendous. We have so many beautiful things that
are happening, and we're very excited. Bobby has officially been named.
Speaker 4 (06:48):
We love Bobby, gonna.
Speaker 5 (06:50):
Make America healthy again. But we don't need We always
call them Bobby. We don't need the Secretary of Education.
We're going to return that to the States. We could
do that because the Department of Education is a disaster anyway.
We're not educating people, We're making people stupid, and we
don't need any more stupid people in this country.
Speaker 3 (07:10):
I don't think it's fair to call Robert F. Kennedy
Junior anti vax by any stretch, but I want you
to hear how the Washington Post is covering disappointment Donald
Trump tapped vaccine skeptic RFK Junior to be Health Secretary wait,
wait for it, overseeing America's health insurance, drugs, and food.
(07:31):
The pick alarmed experts Kennedy has a history of pushing
conspiracy theories. Find ten examples by clicking here. I mean,
so you're expecting a lot of resistance to Kennedy, a
lot of resistance to Tulsey Gabbard and probably the most
for Matt Gates.
Speaker 1 (07:48):
That's all part for the course, right, Well.
Speaker 7 (07:51):
That's first of all, that's part for the course.
Speaker 4 (07:53):
But when I play golf, I eagle every hole and
he's very least.
Speaker 7 (07:56):
You know that I knew you were going.
Speaker 4 (07:57):
Well.
Speaker 7 (07:58):
The album the album for us, right, the Albatross.
Speaker 4 (08:01):
We love that.
Speaker 5 (08:03):
I'm the only person, by the way, in history on
an eighteen whole round of golf to shoot at fifteen.
Speaker 4 (08:08):
Nobody's ever done that before. But you know, I got a.
Speaker 1 (08:11):
Hold of the zero. He got zero.
Speaker 5 (08:14):
You start off, you know, you start off in the hole,
the hole is, you know, the tea box, and tries
the air.
Speaker 4 (08:19):
It's beautiful.
Speaker 5 (08:20):
You don't have to do anything. It's just a tremendous thing.
I played golf like nobody's ever seen. Nobody's ever shot
a lower score.
Speaker 7 (08:26):
You look at Bobby, Well, he's definitely no.
Speaker 4 (08:30):
He's got a lot of anddicamps. You look at that guy,
and I think when.
Speaker 5 (08:33):
I met with him, I smell it was like Lionard Skinner, right.
I said, ooh, that smell right, And you look at.
Speaker 7 (08:40):
It and he's making the face, right, can't you smell it?
Speaker 4 (08:43):
Beautiful? People?
Speaker 1 (08:44):
Do you know that your president.
Speaker 7 (08:46):
If I was by the way, if I was.
Speaker 5 (08:48):
Your president, that plane never would have went down.
Speaker 4 (08:50):
I just want to say that. But we love, we
love Lionard Skinning.
Speaker 5 (08:54):
But I looked across in the Oval Office and I
see him and he's making a and then I smelled it.
Speaker 7 (09:02):
Oh, and I said, oh, my goodness.
Speaker 4 (09:04):
Diaper duty. Somebody's on diaper dutey. He's got a diaper duty.
What I'm terrible? He was. I was the pulp was
operation took zero operations.
Speaker 7 (09:13):
Culprit pudding was in full swing.
Speaker 3 (09:15):
Okay, I wasn't going to take a cheap shot, but
I was concerned with methane and that fireplace that was
roaring right behind you.
Speaker 5 (09:24):
It was very interesting, right because you have noxious, you
have gas, right, the gas came out and you didn't
know it was going to happen, you know. I thought
there was going to be maybe some sort of it's
called a flashbang. But there was nothing, Thank goodness, there
was nothing. Because I built the HVAC systems very well
in the Oval Office when I was your president.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
We made it safe, right because this guy was coming in.
We didn't want any bad things to happen. But they
call RFK.
Speaker 5 (09:51):
They call him an anti vax so I called him Bobby, right,
I called him Lobby. They should call him Bobby. He's
going to do a tremendous job. He saw stocks, big Pharma.
Speaker 4 (10:01):
Right, they were plummeting.
Speaker 5 (10:02):
The only person who made money up for that was
probably Nancy Pelosi because she knew what was going to happen.
Speaker 4 (10:07):
They were plummeting.
Speaker 1 (10:08):
Horrible.
Speaker 5 (10:09):
They're in trouble, and we're going to make America so healthy.
It's going to be the healthiest country in the history.
Speaker 4 (10:14):
Of the world.
Speaker 5 (10:15):
And Bobby said to me, sir, you have to stop
eating McDonald's.
Speaker 7 (10:18):
I said, I've got URIs for stick to what you're
good at.
Speaker 4 (10:21):
I'll stick to what I'm good at.
Speaker 3 (10:22):
Okay, Fridays with forty seven elect I know you visited
with the president.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
We wanted you to open the door and go, honey,
I'm home.
Speaker 3 (10:32):
But it was actually Joe that said, welcome, welcome back.
He realizes what happened. What a unique thing, you know,
I mean to presidents, that's a pretty you know, unique club.
You know, he beat you and then you beat him
and beat Kamala and you're back again. I noticed Milania,
she wasn't so quick to go through formalities and sip
(10:53):
tea with doctor joh hell hath no fury?
Speaker 4 (10:56):
Right, Well, you look at dupla. I call it a
Doppler Jill right, because the dresses that she wears looks
like the Doppler radar.
Speaker 5 (11:05):
Right, Lewis travel with an update Saba thunderstorm boarding. Oh wait,
that's just crooked Jill Biden.
Speaker 4 (11:10):
That's a dress. You know. You look at that, it's terrible.
Speaker 7 (11:13):
And you see someone like that, you.
Speaker 5 (11:14):
Expect to see Read Timmer, we know who that is, right.
Speaker 4 (11:17):
He's a storm chaser.
Speaker 5 (11:18):
You expect to see him coming down the road chasing
a tornado when you see Doppler Jill's dress. But Malania
didn't want to do that because her and Dopplo Gill
don't get along very well.
Speaker 4 (11:30):
But I get along well with everybody. As you know.
I make fantastic deals.
Speaker 7 (11:35):
And I have to say something.
Speaker 5 (11:37):
By the way, shame on you for saying he beat me.
Speaker 4 (11:39):
He didn't beat me. It was a ring deal. You
understand that. But now we're back and he welcomed me back,
and you know what happened. You know, we're looking at it.
Speaker 7 (11:50):
The last time I stood next daim We were.
Speaker 5 (11:52):
On the debate's edge, and he was completely and totally lost.
Speaker 4 (11:55):
But he looked a little joyful. Right. It looked like
he was the party of joy because.
Speaker 5 (12:00):
Kamala, right, the cackling hyena, who was twenty million dollars
in debt. And I wonder how she's gonna make that money.
And I wonder who sent her some supplies to help
him make that money.
Speaker 4 (12:13):
Maybe I don't know, only fans or something.
Speaker 5 (12:17):
But she's in trouble, right, She's in trouble, and we're
not in trouble in our country's not in trouble. And
Crooked Joe knows that. He knows that we're going to
make America great again, and he's I think he's happy
that I won. I think he's.
Speaker 4 (12:29):
Happy that she lost, and I do too.
Speaker 7 (12:32):
He looked very joyful.
Speaker 4 (12:33):
He looked very happy, right, He looked very happy.
Speaker 7 (12:35):
Even though he made a doochie, he looked very happy.
Speaker 3 (12:38):
The first word to describe Kamala Harris in a New
York Times focus group with thirteen young voters was phony.
I think whether we nicknamed her that or not, America
figured that out.
Speaker 1 (12:49):
America.
Speaker 3 (12:50):
Seventy percent of America thinks we're heading in the wrong direction,
and they've elected you, sir, to write that course. You
filled the cabinet with people like Lieutenant Colonel Tulsea Gabbard,
Doug Berghram, the Great Governor, we got Rfk, we got
Elon Musk. Gates might be the roughest road to confirmation,
but you've surrounded yourself with the very people that walked
(13:12):
with you on the road to victory, and America should
be very excited. They wanted a new direction and they're
going to get one starting in January. Good work this week.
Speaker 5 (13:20):
We are turning the page new generation of leadership, unburdened
from what has been.
Speaker 7 (13:26):
I could kill you that there.
Speaker 3 (13:29):
It is Friday, with forty five now forty seven elect
As always, mister President, thank you for your time, Thank
you Peter Boy, and thank you Vladimir Putin for hacking me.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
You made this fantasy. Whee were perfect.
Speaker 1 (13:46):
I think it was Russia, not China.
Speaker 4 (13:48):
Russia, Russia, Russia, Russia.
Speaker 3 (13:50):
We'll talk again next week and everyone will hear it
except Phoenix. Twenty one minutes after the hour, your Top
five stories are next.
Speaker 1 (14:00):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Trono.
Speaker 3 (14:04):
Who would have thought Donald Trump listening to ooh that smell?
Who would have thought? Are you kidding me? But I
was a huge skinnered fan. I was even believe it
or not true confessions. I was a bigger thirty eight
Special fan.
Speaker 1 (14:17):
Me too.
Speaker 3 (14:17):
And so we get a chance. Oh so caught up
in you, I've actually I've actually sat my son down.
I'll have to tell him the story. And us told
don loosely to explain to my son, you don't suffocate
a girl. You know, you got to you gotta hang on,
but not too tight, you know, just enough or you know.
And probably second Chance might be.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
My all time favorite. What a great song.
Speaker 3 (14:42):
And so we're gonna have a chance to have them
in studio next Thursday, So we'll meet both Donnie and
uh and Johnny will be in studio with us. Their
band's in and they're coming out with a Christian album, Kidding,
their first steps into Christian music.
Speaker 1 (15:00):
It's going to be a terrific visit next week. I'm
looking forward to that, all right.
Speaker 3 (15:02):
When we come back our final one on one, this
is where I like to get everything out of the
way and just you and I talk and I want
to share with you a New York Times focus group,
there's something very encouraging about the young people in America today.
Speaker 1 (15:16):
Now the Democrats, they don't get it.
Speaker 3 (15:18):
It ain't about Nancy, it ain't about Chuckie, ain't about
any of them anymore. It ain't about ABCNBCCBS, Meet the
Press sixty minutes, CNNMSNBC are really quite frankly Fox for
that matter, and somewhere along the line. And we can't
put our finger on it yet, although I just watch
my children go through K through twelve and they're now
in college and none of this in doctrination is working.
Speaker 1 (15:40):
Even at the college level.
Speaker 3 (15:42):
They got a real big problem.
Speaker 8 (15:46):
This is James from Greenwood, South Carolina and My Morning Show,
a dual morning show with Michael Dojorno.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
Hi, it's me Michael.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
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 oh four seven in Washington, d C.
We'd love to have you listen live every day. Make
us a part of your morning routine, but better late
than never. Enjoy the podcast. Gym is next. Jim I
think this is.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
A journey from eerie.
Speaker 6 (16:25):
Why doesn't Donald Trump cut the interest rate for student loans,
making it easier to pay, and maybe extending the rate
or the term. I think that would go a long
way to help these kids out without us paying for
all their student loans.
Speaker 1 (16:43):
By the way, I think Jim's getting ready for work.
Speaker 3 (16:45):
Did you hear the feet walking around on the head food?
Have we yet to get a talkback with the bathroom
echo or the fan on in the background, you know, Like,
that's what I'm thinking. I get calls from the hot
sometimes and I've been disposed, but I have to answer.
I get rid of the fan, but the echo is
still there. All I appreciate it. That's a that's a
(17:07):
great segue into what I wanted to talk about. So
we call this our one on one segment, as you know,
my tribute to hol of notes, just you and me together.
I have a feature story today for our one on one.
This is the New York Times that did an ongoing
focus group with thirteen young voters. Now he's talking about
(17:29):
you know, obviously we don't believe in just paying off
people's student loans unconstitutionally, but you could do a lower
interest and extend the time, do something for them, because
I got news for you. The young people in America
are not just an election phenomenon. They're real, true free agents,
(17:49):
and they're not caught in the old matrix. I said this,
and I admitted it was purely anecdotal. I'm watching Anna,
Alex and Nick grow up in all this craziness. And
if you think I sit around talking like a talk
show with my kids, I don't.
Speaker 1 (18:08):
I'm their father.
Speaker 3 (18:10):
I never discuss issues with them, unless, of course, they
bring them up. And even if they bring them up,
I'm listening more than talking. And unless they ask me
for a specific answer, I don't chime in. And my
observation I said this last week. They get gay, they're
(18:31):
not buying transgendered. There's different nuances. Did the left go
too far left? Did woke go too woke? Yes, this
generation seize right through it. You were probably sitting throughout
the elections saying, gosh, who would vote for Kamala Harrison.
Speaker 1 (18:46):
I hope America is seeing through this well.
Speaker 3 (18:48):
I can't speak for all of America, but black voters
did Hispanic voters did middle class fifty thousand dollars year
in underdid, and young people did young people did in
mass this focus group with thirteen young people all at
the beginning, we're undecided voters at the beginning of the
news cycle. The oldest in this group. I can't impress
(19:12):
upon you because whenever we talk about thirty and under,
you're probably fixated on thirty. I'm telling you, my son
is eighteen years old. They don't have They don't occupy
an inch of space in his brain. I'm a little afraid,
if I can be really honest with you, there is
(19:33):
such a unique impressive and it shouldn't be.
Speaker 1 (19:38):
They should be crippled for what they've lived through.
Speaker 3 (19:42):
But just as God knew World War two was coming
and allowed the Depression to create the kind of generation
that would liberate the world through their tough time, they
were raised him politically. There was no tougher time to
live in America than the chaos that anybody twenty years
or younger has just lived through. Oh, it's talk radio
(20:03):
fodder for you. They've been going through this crap at school,
and I'm telling you instinctively at seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve, thirteen,
they saw through all of it. COVID, they saw through
all of it. They thought it was ridiculous. So we
(20:25):
always talk about thirty and under. The oldest in this
focus group was twenty seven. We're talking about eighteen to
twenty four year olds, primarily, all thirteen of them undecided.
The New York Times follows them throughout the campaign, past
election day, and oh, by the way, how did you
(20:47):
vote and why? In the end, only two of the
thirteen ended up voting for Kamala Harris? Can you dupe
the next generation? Just two out of thirteen? Seven of
the thirteen, I'd get you in the Hall of Fame.
That's over five hundred voted for Donald Trump, and then
(21:08):
four of the thirteen supported other candidates or wrote someone in.
You want to know what their final The word that
came up most often to describe Kamala Harris you were worried.
Are all these young girls going to vote for her
(21:28):
because of abortion? Are all these young boys gonna believe
this nonsense? The number one word this focus group used
over and overgin to describe Kamala Harris was phony. A
phony vice president, a phony presidential candidate, a phony for
flip flopping. The second word they used most to describe
(21:54):
Kamala Harris as a candidate, empty empty knowledge, empty promises,
empty empty empty Listen, what's encouraging about this next generation
is the problems the left are going to have A
and choosing candidates, and B and getting young people to
(22:16):
send their money. You just went through a primary process
and you disregarded our vote and gave it to somebody
else without asking us. You asked for our money, we
gave it to you, and you gave it to Oprah.
Who was the pony or the stallion? I didn't even
know who that was? Mean the stallion? Megan the stallion
And it turns out it's not a horse, right, No,
(22:36):
it is not. That wouldn't mind if it gave three
and a half million dollars to a horse. They got
some real problems down the road. Much of the support
for Donald Trump, believe it or not, was somewhat reluctant,
but those that supported him ultimately pulled the trigger for him,
(22:57):
often despite a sense that they were heavily outnumbered within
social groups in their real life. There's a scripture in
Romans twelve one. Therefore, do not conform to the patterns
of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of
your mind. I'm not suggesting at all that there is
a spiritual revival or a cultural reawakening yet, but in
(23:18):
their discernment, in their gut of gut, they're not go alongers,
and they see through the narratives and they see through
the lies. This should be very encouraging to you and
a very big problem for the Democrats moving forward.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
There's a story that kind of goes along with it.
Speaker 3 (23:41):
We were going to make it a part of Sound today,
and it just didn't make the COT because we had
some great sounds of the day. But remember Sean O'Brien,
the Teamster's president, spoke at the RNC convention. In the end, Teamsters,
like other unions, and it's people were supporting Trump. Its
(24:02):
union leaders wouldn't necessarily give an endorsement, but you could
see a shift, not just in Asian voters, not just
in Hispanic voters, not just in black voters, not just
in young voters, not just in the middle class, those
making under fifty thousand. You know, the border was its
own issue, but even among union workers. Now that might
have been strong had it been old Joe, but it
(24:22):
wasn't strong with the phony Kamala Harris. Now you have
Sean O'Brien saying it's time for Pelosi and Schumer. They've
outlived their political usefulness. It's time for them to step aside.
You know, they were right about one thing in all
their narratives, there is a new generation coming.
Speaker 1 (24:38):
I don't think they have it. In fact, I think
they've lost it.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
And moving forward, they got real problems with candidates that
are going to be viable and believable, and they got
a real problem in fundraising because of how they squandered
their votes and squandered their money.
Speaker 1 (24:55):
But make no mistake about it, the.
Speaker 3 (24:58):
Hispanic problem is real because it's been building for decades
based on the ultimate narrative lie that they're all somehow
here illegally.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
They're not.
Speaker 2 (25:12):
Millions came here legally and worked very hard, and they
believe in family, not abortion. They believe in hard work
and no government meddling. That one's real. The other one
that I think is the most real that might surprise you.
Speaker 3 (25:27):
They do not have this next generation. Now how they
used to hold the previous generation. They rewrote history through
K through twelve and higher education that was in doctrination,
not education, that was socialization not education, And they got
away with it, and you didn't even fix it as
much as God raised up the next generation to just
(25:48):
have a natural discernment, No, this don't make sense.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
And part of that is because they went too far.
Speaker 3 (25:54):
The other way they would do it is rewrite reality
daily to reinforce it from cartoons and kid shows, but
primary through newspapers, through radio, and through television, and then
for a brief period, radio was the last bastion of
truth because television, newspaper, it was all tainted. But what
they didn't see coming was the death of terrestrial radio
(26:15):
and television and the birth of digital. So the very thought,
the very apparatus that really allowed them to control the
twenty twenty election was dead by the twenty twenty four election,
and nobody cared what sixty minutes thought. Nobody cared what ABCNBCCBSCNNS, MSNBC,
or really, quite frankly Fox was saying, or the Washington
(26:37):
Post of the New York Times, they're already gone, to
quote the Eagles.
Speaker 1 (26:45):
Someone did a great job of reaching our.
Speaker 3 (26:47):
Kids on TikTok of all places, because in this election cycle,
without me ever discussing it, my kids knew all the
narrative busting, and they sought through it all, just like
the Republicans didn't occupy the space in Battle with mail,
in voting and early voting. The Democrats made the deadly
(27:07):
mistake of not embracing the internet, podcasting and digital broadcasting,
because that's where the listeners and viewers already went.
Speaker 1 (27:15):
Final point.
Speaker 3 (27:18):
I said earlier in the show, and I really don't
want this isn't to impress you. I just I want
to impress upon you how dead these cable networks are.
So you're going to see massive layoffs this weekend at CNN.
One of them would have been Chris Wallace. But Chris
did something preemptive. He left before they could fire him.
(27:39):
But just to impress upon you, Chris Wallace makes the move,
gets millions of dollars to go to CNN. Do you
know what his average twenty five to fifty four audience
was at CNN eighty five thousand, fifteen thousand less than
my weekly cume at KRMG and No. Nineteen ninety six
(28:01):
in the sixty fourth radio market, with a ninety percent
proclivity to listen to FM over AM, and Karen g
was on AM only done, there's nobody watching and there's
nobody buying advertising. In fact, all that's left are pharmaceutical ads.
And I don't have to tell you when RFK Junior's done,
that'll dry up too.
Speaker 1 (28:24):
I see dead people.
Speaker 3 (28:27):
They're everywhere, newspapers, television stations, networks.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
Oh, don't miss the best part. And they don't know it.
It's your Morning show with Michael del JOHNO.
Speaker 8 (28:44):
Hey, this is Jeff from Tulsa, Oklahoma, and my morning
show is your Morning Show with Michael del Joorna.
Speaker 3 (28:53):
I knew when I heard the echo that was ending
with an archie we were talking earlier. We've gotten a
lot of strange talkbacks. We haven't gotten one from a
bathroom yet, obviously, Jeff, Tulsa. That's another one that we
would have sat next together in school, next to on
the bench in the principal's office quite often. All right,
(29:13):
Rick Scott indicating he like RNC chair Laura Trump to
replace Marco Rubio. By the way, roy O'Neil has just
informed me he's on vacation next week.
Speaker 8 (29:23):
Take me with you. Where are we going to get
ready for the week after?
Speaker 1 (29:28):
Well, yeah, there's that.
Speaker 8 (29:31):
No.
Speaker 3 (29:31):
I was just gonna say, I'll remind everybody that Barack
Obama was what a US senator about sixty days when
he announced his run for the presidency. I mean, could
Laura Trump be on a ticket in four years, that'd
be one way to keep trump Ism alive. Jd Vance
and Laura Trump, that's not a bad ticket. And then,
of course the president's been very busy completing his cabinet.
In the kitchen. We've had a lot of appointments. The
(29:54):
latest RFK Junior to lead the Department of Health and
Human Services, North Dakota Governor Doug Bergham, which I think
we're You were probably with me thinking he'd be energy
he turns out right in terror. Or Telsey Gabbard I
thought would be homeland security, she ends up being national Intelligence.
And what do you make of all these cabinet We
kind of came up to gates I think is going
(30:14):
to be the toughest to actually get through. But we
came up with our theory. I'm wondering what your what's
your take on just the collective bunch of them and
what it says.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
What do we call a collective bunch of cabinet members?
Careful you're going on vacation. I got to be here Monday.
Speaker 8 (30:31):
Like a murder of crow one of a flamboyants of flamingos.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
All right, now, by the way, for.
Speaker 3 (30:36):
Those who want to email me, is he really a
closet Democrat?
Speaker 1 (30:39):
Michael d At iHeartMedia Doday.
Speaker 8 (30:41):
By the way, you had me thinking about Laura Trump
as the senator? But would Desanta's do that if it
hurts his own chance at running?
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Well?
Speaker 3 (30:50):
Yeah, because it really doesn't matter what Rick Scott thinks.
I mean, he is one of the senators, but it's
DeSantis who will have to say and DeSantis who probably right.
Speaker 8 (30:59):
So would he want to pick someone that would make
it harder for him DeSantis to run for the White House?
Speaker 3 (31:04):
What if DeSantis appoints himself, he's got to go park
somewhere for a few yearss.
Speaker 1 (31:08):
But he doesn't. Yeah, yeah, the rule is yeah, we'll see,
well you live there.
Speaker 3 (31:12):
I mean, what do you who do you think would
get the most support for that seat? Marco Rubio's seat
is going to be vacated and Governor DeSantis is going
to make the call.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
Who might he be leaning towards me?
Speaker 8 (31:20):
I would have said it was Byron Donald's But now
we've tapped into this House conference so many times there.
Speaker 1 (31:25):
You know, Johnson doesn't have a majority much anymore.
Speaker 8 (31:27):
Right, all right, But yeah, Matt Gates, as you said,
toughest one to get through, I think because he just has.
Speaker 1 (31:34):
Splat out enemies on the hill.
Speaker 4 (31:36):
You know, r F. K.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
Junior. I think a lot of it's going to say, wait,
what does he think about that? What are his opinions?
I don't know.
Speaker 8 (31:41):
I know he's controversial, but you know, the president should
have the cabinet that he wants, and R.
Speaker 4 (31:47):
FK.
Speaker 8 (31:48):
Junior is not my enemy, whereas Gates has ruffled enough
feathers right.
Speaker 1 (31:53):
That he just doesn't have enough. Know, we're down to
one minute.
Speaker 3 (31:55):
But we said yesterday that that pick is so controversial
it's as if it's like chum in the world to
get the shark to go get that so everybody else
gets through. That's how much that one's going to be challenged.
It's almost like a bait.
Speaker 1 (32:08):
Yeah. So, I mean, I've already seen speculation. It won't
even get to a confirmation. Hearing wow, will drop out
before them.
Speaker 3 (32:15):
My take on all of it is seventy percent of
America thought we were heading in the wrong direction. These
are all change agents for a course correction, and they're
all America firsters. In some cases, had he done Telsey
Gabbert Homeland Security, they put her on a terrorist watch list.
That would look like revenge. I guess Health and Human
Services RFK could be perceived that way. But you ask
(32:36):
for change, and this cabinet looks like it's going to deliver.
Speaker 1 (32:41):
Certainly if it can get approved through the Senate.
Speaker 8 (32:43):
And because then that's the other thing now you're putting
Donald Trump is putting pressure on the Senate to follow
his lead.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
Vacation starts after the weekend dive before. I guess, technically, OT,
we're all in this together. This is Your Morning with
Michael Mintel. Join now, m