All Episodes

December 3, 2025 35 mins

 Even though it seems like mass killings are becoming more frequent, in reality the numbers are going down. National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will explain how much.

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

President Trump invited reporters into the cabinet meeting on Tuesday. White House Correspondent JON DECKER will run down the many topics discussed.

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, I'm Michael. I'd love to have you listen to
your morning show live. Every day We're heard on great
stations like News Talk five point fifty KFYI and Phoenix
News Radio, eleven ninety k EX in Portland and ten
ninety The Patriot in Seattle. Make us a part of
your morning routine. We'd love to have you listen live.
But in the meantime, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael Deel Trump and
good morning to you.

Speaker 1 (00:32):
Welcome to Wednesday, December the third year of our Lord,
twenty twenty five on the year, streaming live on your
iHeartRadio app. I'm Michael, honored to serve you. Jeffrey's got
the sound, Red's keeping an eye on the content. But
Moum's the word when I have brain fog. If you're
just waking up. Lawmakers, they are set to receive a
classified briefing on the Trump administration strike on Venezuelan boats.

(00:54):
They did meet, and they met for five hours, but
no breakthrough in the between US envoys and Vladimir Putin
in the march towards peace and away from war with
Russia and Ukraine. And it wasn't nearly as close as
everybody thought it was going to be. Van EPs the
easy winner by nine percent, and he increases the Republican's

(01:16):
lead in the House in majority. And even though it
seems like you hear about mass killings all the time,
you know, and you get the sense that, well, they
got to be more frequent, right wrong. National correspondent Roy
O'Neil is here to show how the numbers are actually
going down, which is good.

Speaker 3 (01:33):
This is but let's make sure we define the terms
the right way here right. USA Today and Northeastern University
categorize these mass killings as having four or more people
who were killed in a twenty four hour period, not
including the killer themselves. And when you measure it that way,
the number of mass killings is actually down to seventeen

(01:55):
so far this year. Let's hope that's enough. But seventeen
compared to forty six, I was just gonna say we
were just shy of fifty one a week. Yeah, almost
one a week back in twenty nineteen. So these numbers
have been tracked like this since two thousand and six. Now,
the Gun Violence Archive measures things a little bit differently.

Speaker 1 (02:16):
They include survivors, not just those killed.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
But that number is also down pretty significantly since COVID,
So these numbers are trending the right way.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
You know, we talked a lot about how much this
year reminded us of nineteen sixty eight, and it did.
And I think in nineteen sixty eight there were about
two or three things that were really big. One was
Nixon in the election after Bobby Kennedy was killed, started
talking to the Sensible Center in America, which kind of
addressed the polarizing divide and hate. I think television played

(02:51):
a role in people seeing the violence over and over again.
And then I think between you know, RFK and Martin
Luther King, that was just too much. And so we
saw a turn and a turn towards peace, only to
march right into Watergate. But that's a whole other story.
What do you think might be causing it? Because I
don't know that. Well, we certainly haven't changed any gun laws.

(03:11):
We certainly haven't gotten less divided as a nation. I mean,
I can't think of anything that's been done other than
America looking around. I mean, it's not like we're addressing
mental health issues any better. So what might have caused
it or what do they think caused it? Sadly?

Speaker 3 (03:25):
This is me talking now. My opinion here is sadly.
I think it's only that we've gotten better at responding
to these Again, these measure fatalities of for or more.
You know, you take that shooting that happened at the
Annunciation Catholic Church with the gunman had to shoot into
the building through the stained glass windows. Remember that had
to happen because they locked the doors now and they

(03:45):
prevent the shooters from getting in, and the kids they
all knew where to go and run to in the
event of these things happening. So I think our response
and the preparations that we've made to prepare for these
kinds of attacks have gotten better in order to minimize
the casualty. And you know, we're talking about these mass shootings.
That doesn't include again what happened at that church or
the shooting of the two National Guards members last week.

Speaker 1 (04:08):
Yeah, no, and I would I don't know that I
would use the word sadly. I mean, I understand the
point you're trying to make, but wisely might be why
the better word. I mean, we got to harden these targets.
That is one of the top three solutions to all
of this. Then I think you got to get onto
mental health. But yeah, it's a step in the right
It's kind of like the Putin thing, right, you know,

(04:29):
everybody's like, well he'll break through. Well, they met, We
couldn't get them to meet not long ago, and they
met for five hours. I would say it's progress. It's
just not done yet. This is a step in the
right direction, or we hope our steps in a real
right direction. You're going to be back with the president's
plan to provide money. I love this. I mean, can
you imagine starting kids off with something? I mean, if

(04:52):
somebody would have started me off with this in nineteen
sixty four, I wonder what that would account even if
I didn't make any other contribute, or my parents didn't
make any other contributions, what might that have turned into
compared to what so security has not turned into. And
that was taking a mandatory more and more amount over
the course of my entire life. You learn all about

(05:14):
Trump accounts coming up with roy O'Neal in the third hour.
All right, do we have Roger can't have your morning
show without your voice. Use a talkback button. It's a
microphone on your iHeartRadio app. No more rotting on hold
and talk radio. You press the button. You got thirty seconds,
make your comment, ask your question. You take your place
at a table that belongs to you. That your morning

(05:35):
show kitchen table. Please go to Roger Morning. Michael Kaprin
read first.

Speaker 4 (05:38):
I'm really thankful for the other listener that answered my
question about interpretation. I think her name was Renee, but
I could have it wrong because I'm sixty six and
in a constant day of brain fog. But I don't
think there's a question. They can be answered collectively by
the listeners. It's a pretty smart group that listens and
gives in put.

Speaker 1 (05:59):
Well, We're very proud of our audience. I have said
this anecdotally many times. I worked somewhere for sixteen years.
Didn't really care for the company at all. Had some
good years where I cared about the people I worked with,
then some not so good years. But one thing I

(06:19):
did love was the listeners. And as much as I
loved the two audiences, I've loved the most prior to
this job was my KFAQ audience in Tulsa, Oklahoma some
of the greatest listeners I ever had, and boy, we
had some fun and made some history together. And then
wtn's audience. None of them compared to this audience. But

(06:42):
in general, even if I didn't feel that way, that's
the power of being in it together. That's what we're
missing in Washington when two sides can't collectively talk. Look,
I could be the smartest guy on the face of
the earth, and I'm smarter having ten of you with me.

(07:02):
Someone says something, and someone else says something. Someone else
says something, and that makes you think of this, and
then that makes you think of that, and that's how
you arrive at the full understanding. I love the Biblical
analogy that the body of Christ is a body. Some
are toes, some our fingers, some are hands, some our
feet work together as a body. We're all in this together,

(07:23):
and we're better off together. You're right, Roger, She's gonna
get smoked. He's got to stop.

Speaker 5 (07:29):
I really don't know what he said at the end
of this, and I don't think he knows what he
said that he doesn't.

Speaker 6 (07:34):
It's got to be a big bits understanding.

Speaker 7 (07:38):
I'm when why do you like.

Speaker 1 (07:41):
My love your garbage truck? Always revealing, often entertaining time
for the sounds of the day. This was Marco Rubio
at the Cabinet meeting, and he really impresses me.

Speaker 8 (07:55):
That's an honor to be involved in and be a
witness to what I believe is the most transformational year
in American foreign policy since the end of the Second
World War at least. And it's transformational because for the
first time in a long time, we have a president
who basically puts America at the forefront of every decision
we make in our in relations with the world. And
that may sound weird to people like, of course you

(08:16):
always do. No, that hasn't always been the case until
about a year ago. And I think we've all witnessed
in our own respective space, is how in every interaction
the president has with the world, the goal he has
in mind is very simple, because what you want us
to do or is it what we're going or is
it going to make us stronger? Is it going to
make us richer? Is it going to make us safer?
If it is, he's for it. If it's not, he's

(08:38):
against it. If something's going to make America weaker or
poorer or less safe. The President's going to be against it.
And every single thing he has done in our foreign
policy has been driven.

Speaker 7 (08:47):
By the American people in mind. And I can go
down the list. Why has he focused on mass migration.

Speaker 8 (08:52):
It's very simple, because no country is safe if you
can just walk in without us knowing who you are
into your country.

Speaker 7 (08:58):
We seem to destruct that.

Speaker 8 (09:00):
That's reading not just in our own country, but the
impact that it's having.

Speaker 7 (09:03):
In Europe and in many other parts of the world.

Speaker 8 (09:05):
You talk about the trade deals, and the trade situation
has been involved in people, you know, all this reporting
on it.

Speaker 7 (09:10):
It's very simple. The President views the last forty years.

Speaker 8 (09:13):
As an era of which American and American workers and
American farmers have been ripped off.

Speaker 7 (09:18):
They've been ripped off.

Speaker 8 (09:19):
And what he's saying is we want to have a
trade with the world, but it has to be a
trade in which American businesses and American workers and the
products they make and what American farmers grow and produce
has a fair shot to be sold around the world.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
I have a little sign in front of me, and
it's just to remind me to make sure every day
is about you and not me. And it says talk
with them as equals and make them think and ask questions.
So I'm going to make it think and I'm going
to ask you a question. Everything Donald Trump does that's

(09:54):
so smart. What if he explained it like that as
he was doing it, then what do you have? But
I hope is the next president of the United States
Marco Rubio. It's gonna be a tough call because at
the same time, here's JD. Vance addressing this ridiculous unaffordability
issue that the Democrats have created. And when I say

(10:15):
they've created it, they've created the narrative and they've created
the unaffordability Listen. Very clearly is that we.

Speaker 9 (10:21):
Are fixing the problem that Joe Biden and the Democrats
created in the last administration. If you look at every
affordability crisis that's confronting the American people today, it is
traceable directly to a problem caused by Joe Biden and
congressional Democrats. Why did holmes get so unaffordable because we
had twenty million illegal aliens in this country taking homes

(10:43):
that ought by right to go to American citizens.

Speaker 1 (10:46):
Why did tax bills.

Speaker 9 (10:47):
Get so unaffordable because Democrats were raising taxes while Congressional Republicans,
under the President's leadership, we're now cutting taxes.

Speaker 1 (10:55):
Why did food get.

Speaker 9 (10:57):
So expensive because we printed trillion dollars and through it
into green scams that made our agricultural economy suffer while
Americans were paying higher prices for food.

Speaker 1 (11:07):
On every single one.

Speaker 9 (11:08):
Of those issues, mister President, I think we've made incredible progress,
but it would be preposterous to fix every problem caused
over the last four years in just ten months. I
think that we've done incredibly good. But what I see
over the next year, and you've heard Brooke talk about
joy and gratitude, what I really think this season represents

(11:31):
for me and I think for the entire administration is
that we have now done incredible work to fix what
Joe Briden broke, and I think that next year and
American growth and American prosperity could be the best year
that we've had in the United States of America. It's
going to happen because we're all working hard. It's going
to happen because we have the greatest country in the world.
But I think for Congressional Democrats in particular, if they

(11:53):
want to talk about affordability, they ought to look in
the mirror.

Speaker 1 (11:57):
It's going to be a tough call between those two.
Those are two strong candidates who are taking their actions
role modeling from a pretty good doer, not necessarily Sayer,
although he had a way of handling it himself, this false,
fake narrative of affordability. Here's the President himself at his

(12:19):
own cabinet meeting that the New York Washington Post would
say he was sleepy, nearly nodding off. I watched it.
He didn't look sleepy. I never saw him. No off,
Ask yourself, does he sound sleepy?

Speaker 5 (12:35):
To use this fake narrative that the Democrats talk about affordability,
they just say the word. It doesn't mean anything to anybody.
You just say it affordability. I inherited the worst inflation
in history. There was no affordability. Nobody could afford anything.
The prices were massively high. You remember we took over eggs.

(12:55):
You did a great job in that.

Speaker 7 (12:57):
Madam Secretary Agriculture.

Speaker 5 (13:01):
Eggs were four or five times higher than they had
ever been.

Speaker 7 (13:04):
They said, don't order.

Speaker 5 (13:05):
Eggs for Easter at the White House, and we ended
up doing it, and we got the egg prices way
down lower than what they were before. But the word
affordability as a conjob by the Democrats.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Again, I go back. I mean, that's the takeaway of
the sounds of the day today. Can you imagine if
a president like Trump, taking all the right actions could
explain it the way Mark or Rubio did, or some
might think Jade Vance explained, Well, that'd be a different presidency,
wouldn't it. Of everything that he said, this got the

(13:40):
most attention.

Speaker 5 (13:42):
We could go one way or the other, and we're
going to go the wrong way if we keep taking
in garbage into our country. Elan Omar is garbage. She's garbage,
Her friends are garbage. These are people that work. These
aren't people that say, let's go, come on, let's make
this place great. The people that do nothing but complain.

(14:02):
They complain and from where they came from they got nothing.
You know, they came from paradise, and they said, isn't paradise.
But when they come from hell and they complain and
do nothing but bitch, we don't want them in our contract.

Speaker 1 (14:22):
Again, a lack of support the action. I don't support
the explanation. She's dangerous because she has no allegiance to
this country. She's not a proponent of freedom of liberty.
She's a part of a movement to change and take

(14:45):
over and will never assimilate. The gods are different, the
worship is different, the service is different. She's destructive because
they're here to destroy.

Speaker 6 (15:02):
Now.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
I know that takes a lot of research into the
life of Mohammed versus the life of Christ, the teachings
of the Quran and the Hideth and the teachings of
the Bible. But somebody better do it or learn how
to explain it, because there's got to be something better
than She's garbage and she's a beat.

Speaker 10 (15:19):
Unfortunately majored in online activision with a minor and puberty
bought were a little bit.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
Any of you in the media clearly missed the art
of the deal. Just before it's going to work out.

Speaker 2 (15:32):
This is your morning show with Michael dell Chna.

Speaker 1 (15:36):
We're just having a great conversation off the are Go
ahead and bring it on to the air in case
anybody sensitively thought I was too hard on the president.
Going back to the Chicago Bears analogy, what the coach
is always preaching is you can't have better, you have
good you can't have best until you have better. It's

(15:57):
a progression good, better and best. And there are things
about Donald Trump, the great disruptor, the giving of spine,
and the standing up. You have to take out the
media the way he did. You have to survive the
attacks and the lawfair like he did. You have to
have that good that makes better and best happen. Better

(16:21):
and best can be on the way, both with Vance
and Rubio together or in succession. That was the point
I was trying to make. But yeah, can you imagine
if a president would act like Trump and speak like Rubio,
you'd be onto something and we may be. This is
James from Greenwood, South Carolina, and my morning show is

(16:43):
your Morning Show with Michael Dojorno. Hi, I'm Michael. We'd
love to have you listen every weekday morning to your
Morning Show live, even take us along with you on
the drive to work. We can be heard on great
radio stations like one O four to nine The Patriot
in Saint Louis or Talk Radio ninety eight point three
and fifteen ten WLAC and Nashville and News Talk five

(17:04):
point fifty k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona. Love to
be a part of your morning routine. But we're always
grateful you're here now, enjoyed the podcast. Just got a
picture of Jimmy Suits wearing his Christmas suit. You want
to see his Christmas No? Please? No, Look look this
is has Jimmy Suits. He's wearing his Christmas suit. Oh
my God, is here Riah? That is festive. We used

(17:27):
to have a liner. You should dig it up and
put it back in rotation, some of our original liners,
because we've become exactly what we intended to be and
I think it'd be encouraging to hear it. But we
used to have a liner. Don't you think it's time
talk radio became a conversation again. I mean, for decades
now it's been people on the air just pontificating. And look,

(17:48):
even if you're the smartest person in the world, nobody
has all the answers, and collectively, we're more dangerous than
alone if it's about pursuing truth and understanding. So it's
never about us, it's always about you. The two best
ways to participate, because we can't have your morning show

(18:09):
without your voice, is use that talkback button on your
iHeartRadio app or email me Michael d At iHeartMedia dot com.
And if you can top Jimmy Suits and his suit,
that would make you the listener of the day. All right,
if you're just waking up, it was not nearly as
close as everyone thought. In the end, Van Apps wins
by nine oh. But there's still a lot to learn,

(18:30):
and even though America had one house race and a
special election, there is much to dissect from the results
and take into next year's midterms and learn from. And
we'll do that with David Sanadi in exactly one hour
from now. And there's gonna be a lot of people.
There can be a lot of people saying, you know, well,

(18:50):
that didn't work out very well with Russia. No, you
know what they met, that's progress. That's progress we couldn't
make a month or so ago. And they didn't just meet.
They met for five hours. Now, was there a breakthrough? No. Meanwhile,
the President had his cabinet meeting that the Washington Post
is saying the President nearly nodded off. John Decker, our
White House correspondent, is joining us. The President invited reporters

(19:13):
into the cabinet meeting, and I think it kind of
just turned into a year in review, didn't it. It did.

Speaker 6 (19:19):
It was the final cabinet meeting of the year, the
ninth cabinet meeting for President Trump, and it was long.
It was over two hours. The president allowed every member
of his cabinet to essentially talk about what they accomplished
during the past nine ten months during the president's second term.
And the President also took a few questions as well

(19:41):
from reporters during this cabinet meeting in the cabinet room,
the final one of the year.

Speaker 1 (19:48):
I just highlighted in Sounds of the day the eloquence
of Marco Rubio, and I thought there was a really
good section with Jade Vance as well, and if that's
the future of the Republican Party, and I use the
analogy of the Chicago Bears, where I lived until I
was fourteen years old. They're building, I believe, a super
Bowl team on the concept of good, better, and best.

(20:10):
And I just asked the listeners playing the clips of
Donald Trump talking about garbage and other things, and then
the Marco Rubio explaining who we are on the world
stage today or jd Vance talking about this farce of
an affordability narrative, and if there's any in affordability in
America was created by the previous administration, and how much

(20:31):
could we get done in one year? And I was
just thinking to myself, imagine if you had all the
right actions with the kind of teachable, explainable eloquence of
the other two. And I can see good, better and
best on the horizon. For the Republicans, that's for sure,
because they'll continue the right actions. But I think there's
better rhetoric to come. Anybody else have that takeaway or

(20:51):
is it just me?

Speaker 6 (20:53):
Well, I mean, it depends how you viewed these two individuals,
for sure.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
Michael.

Speaker 6 (20:57):
As it relates to the Vice president's comments, he really
laid down the market for next year. He essentially said,
we're going to get prices down and there will be
a test, and that test is the midterm elections, and
that's where the voters get an opportunity to say whether
or not the Trump administration. By then they own the economy,
whether the Trump administration is doing a good job on

(21:18):
that issue of affordability.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
Well, now you said it, I got a chime in, Okay,
that's the one problem I had. If you're going to
talk about a cause of inflation being money dumped into
the market, unearned. The biggest culprit of that was COVID
and the one who shut down the government was Trump
and now Biden certainly put everything on steroids and gave

(21:42):
out more and kept them going for too long. But
this concept of shutting down the economy, shutting down and
putting everybody in place and then paying them to stay there,
that was them, and that was very inflationary. They don't
remember that in the causes of inflation.

Speaker 6 (21:59):
Yes, so twenty twenty six will be five years past
the pandemic, So enough time, certainly for the economy to recover, certainly,
enough time for prices to reflect what they were before
the pandemic. And that's why I say that will be
the real test. And look, both parties recognize that. And
we even saw in that special election happening in your

(22:21):
neck of the woods, both candidates spoke about the issue
of affordability. They recognize that is the most important thing
for any voter right now.

Speaker 1 (22:31):
It's always the economy.

Speaker 6 (22:32):
It's always about jobs in the economy, and that will
be no different Michael, as you know for twenty twenty six.
It will be no different for twenty twenty eight as well. No,
and the President is going to have to spend it.

Speaker 1 (22:42):
Look, there was a lot of talk yesterday that nobody
directly talked about next year's choice for America in the
midterm of elections, and that is really what they're all
talking about. The number one agenda for next year is
to maintain control of the House and Senate and keep
the direction of the country moving forward. That's going to
be a pretty big task, and these other things are

(23:03):
just I don't know ingredients in that recipe of drama.
That will really be much of next year, although we
should have some unfinished business at least with Russia and Ukraine,
unless that can get accomplished by the end of the year. Look,
you can hear more from Johnny does the White House
Briefing Room a podcast. It's up every morning by nine
eastern eighth Central, and he gives you all the scoop
and nothing but the scoop. So help him, John Decker,

(23:24):
thank you for joining us. Thanks a lot. Michael By
all right on that race, and we're going to talk
more about this in thirty minutes with David Soonaddy. The narrative,
the build up was the runaway socialist train. Now everybody
that comes forward, you know, using affordability as the code
word for socialism. This is a spirit of envy, not liberty,

(23:50):
Envy not freedom, Envy not pursuit of happiness. And we
often talk about the difference between jealousy and envy. Envy
jealous I wish I had what you had. Envy you
have something and it belongs to me, and if I
can't have it, you can't have it either. It's destructive
and that's what socialism is. You could make a case

(24:13):
that the number one reason for the foundation of the
federal government was to protect your property rights no matter
where you live. Socialism sees his ownership of that immediately
and maybe even more strategic or what we used to
call in the radio business. Does anybody remember this one
tactgic Oh, I worked for one company when you were

(24:37):
tactgic look out. That meant you were strategic and tactical
at the same time you were tactgic. Gorilla warfare, Well,
I love that was my favorite posture, guerrilla warfare. I
love gorilla warfare more.

Speaker 6 (24:49):
Well.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
You know there's something saying about a nice flank on
a leader. I used to love that too. I pretty
much enjoyed beating anybody and I would always either out
or out think them, but I'd always make their life
miserable and eventually when but no tacticic that could be
what you would describe this long slow play starting with Obama,

(25:10):
You're not a republic, You're a democracy or a democracy
or democracy, and the democracy became the Democrat Party, and
anybody that stood against their platform or candidates was anti American,
anti democracy, a threat to democracy, an insurrectionist. Now you've
gone from a republic to a democracy, to a Democrat
party to socialism and the plan is to do it

(25:32):
in inner cities, bankrupt the country from its bluest, biggest
inner cities. And I think that's the number one takeaway
from yesterday. With the most flawed of candidates, most Blues
still voted blue. Didn't matter what this woman looked like
or said, or the utter lack of qualifications, she still got.

(25:57):
What was it? In the end? I had the number,
he got ninety one thousand. Where's my photographic graphic memory
when I need it? Um he got ninety six thousand,
she got eighty one thousand. But she still got eighty
one thousand. Now where she lost was outside the city,

(26:17):
and that's a big takeaway because this tactgic strategy of
the envy left trying to destroy our country is playing
for the inner cities. It doesn't play outside that city.
And that's what did Afton been in Oh she had
the blind blue vote. No matter what, Republicans, they're still
showing they're not early voters. They'd like to show up

(26:38):
on election day. But if anything ever happens and they
can't get there, they'll be in trouble. It was a
special election turnout following a scandal and a resignation. But
what can we really learn even from this that applies

(26:59):
to next year? A lot the Republicans still have some
bad habits. They're still not getting how to reach people.
They're still not playing smart. Let me end this whole
conversation the way redwould want it ended. Unless Donald Trump

(27:23):
goes to every one of these battleground house races next
year personally and stands with the candidates, if not grabbing
voters by the hand and taking them himself. If this
bad candidate in this badly drawn district for Democrats can
come within nine percent, you better get to the table. Heck,

(27:46):
you better get tactgic and in a hurry by the way.
Guess what I found out. Brick House Nutrition has extended
their biggest sale of the year, their Black Ariety Sale
all the Way for a week, so it goes through
Thursday of this week. Everything thirty percent off. Biggest sale

(28:09):
of the year, the time to stock up, and if
you missed it, you didn't It's still alive. The most
impressive health and nutrition products in the industry today all
thirty percent off at Brickhouse sale dot com. Products like
Lean Doctor Formulated Weight Loss Supplement Slow Steady weight Loss.
You feel great because it's converting fat into energy. No injections,

(28:31):
Slow steady weight that stays off thirty percent off Creotone.
This is creating designed just for women to help you
look leaner, in shape and tone thirty percent off. Field
of Greens my favorite, the only superfruit and vegetable drink
shown in university study to allow to slow down aging
and allow you to remain young and vibrant. And it
promises your doctors will notice the results, so you get

(28:53):
your money back. Every brick House product from Better Sleep
to Superior Collegen all thirty percent off. It's the Brickhouse
big sailed the year and it continues through Thursday of
this week. Go to brickhouse sale dot com. That's brickhouse
sale dot com. But hurry, they all these deals don't
last for long. Take advantage of it before Thursday. Brick
house sale dot com.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Churno.

Speaker 1 (29:17):
These are your top five stories of to day. Well,
the President says the first year of his return to
office has been probably one of the most highly respected
consequential in US history. Mark Mayfield has our top story.

Speaker 11 (29:32):
During his final Cabinet meeting of twenty twenty five at
the White House, Trump listed the work that he's done
for the American people.

Speaker 5 (29:39):
It's a tremendous thingness sacond place.

Speaker 7 (29:41):
We have.

Speaker 5 (29:44):
Companies moving in from all over the world, from Mexico,
from Canada, from Europe, from China.

Speaker 11 (29:50):
And the President focused on economic achievements and once again
said he's made things more affordable. Listening the higher price
of eggs and a gas before he got back into office,
Trump said that more amer Ericans.

Speaker 1 (30:00):
Are working now that he's back. I'm Marknefield. Well, a
lot of us have been hoping for a pope who
spiritual liss We got one that's political pope. Leo, urging
the President not to attempt to overthrow the Venezuelan president.

Speaker 12 (30:11):
Pope Leo says it would be better to try dialogue
or economic pressure if the Trump administration wants changed in
the South American country. This has tensions are rising between
the US and Venezuela, with Trump declaring over the weekend
that the airspace above and surrounding the nation is closed
because quote Venezuela is not a very friendly country end quote.

(30:31):
The Pope made the comments on a flight back from
his first overseas trip since being elected pontif where he
visited Turkey and Libanon.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
I'm Jim Rope Republican Matt Van Epps, the winner of
a special election in Tennessee. Speaking Tuesday night, he gave
a lot of credit to the president.

Speaker 7 (30:45):
The President Donald J.

Speaker 1 (30:46):
Trump, Thank you, sir.

Speaker 6 (30:49):
Your endorsement made the difference and I will never forget it.

Speaker 1 (30:53):
In the end, he beats often been fifty three point
nine percent to forty five percent. We said yesterday morning
under over on this was between eight and ten percent.
Came right in the middle at nine percent victory, so
not the one percent. The narrative was trying to sell
you things to take away. Early voting was heavily leaning
towards the Democrat. Election day heavily leaning towards the Republican.

(31:17):
Republicans still like to vote on election day. It shows
this socialist messaging and movement doesn't really play well outside
of large urban inner cities. Even there though, in the
case of Afton Beam, she only got fifty six percent,
but she was a very flawed candidate. In the end,
this will boost the GOP majority in the House two

(31:39):
hundred and twenty to two thirteen. YouTube says the upcoming
social media ban in Australia will actually make children less
safe as used YouTube is to actually trying to make
them more safe. Tabby Trichillo explains.

Speaker 13 (31:54):
On December tenth, Australia will become the first country in
the world to ban children under the age of sixteen
from using platforms including YouTube, TikTok, Instagram and Facebook. The
Australian government says it's protecting children from predatory algorithms. Under
the band, Australian children will still be able to visit YouTube,
but without an account. A YouTube spokesperson says users without

(32:14):
an account will lose access to the platform. Safety filters
and well being settings making Australian kids less safe. I'm
Tammy Trihio.

Speaker 1 (32:21):
Wedding bells will be ringing for Miley Cyrus after the
pop stars soft launched her engagement to her drummer boyfriend
Max Mirando.

Speaker 10 (32:32):
The couple was first linked romantically in December twenty twenty
one after they were spotted backstage during Cyrus's NBC Holiday special,
and they went public with their relationship in April twenty
twenty two. News of their engagement was fueled after they
attended the Avatar Fire and Ash World premiere in Los
Angeles on Monday, and she was seen sporting a diamond

(32:52):
ring on her left hand ring finger. Cyrus was previously
married to actor Liam Hemsworth. I'm Lisa Carton.

Speaker 1 (32:59):
A medical break through from scientists in Australia that will
help everyone who hates needles. Are you one of them?

Speaker 14 (33:05):
Scientists say they've discovered sweat can detect everything from diabetes
to Parkinson's disease just as well as a blood test.
Medical researchers say droplets of sweat collected on wearable patches
contain markers for multiple diseases, drug use, cancer, and even
toxic metal exposure and They say it's easier to work
with than blood, and the best part, no needles don't

(33:27):
ask for it just yet. They say further research is
needed to bring it to market.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
I'm bre Tennis, So if you sweat the needles, just
keep sweating, I guess is the moral of the story.
Hey on the Heartwood. Last night, Trailblazers lost by three
in Toronto to the Raptors. The Grizz lost by seven
to the Spurs. Thunder Now twenty one and one are
only your morning show city that wins and wins often.
One twenty four, one twelve over the Warriors on the ice,

(33:51):
Red Wings one five to four over the Bruins. Lightning
lost two to one of the Islanders preads they're skating
their way out of the basement. Five to one over
the Flames. Last night night King's lost at home to
the Caps three to one. Birthdays today, got some good ones.
My brother used to and let me tell you something.
Some of the substances that were being consumed while operating

(34:13):
the vehicle were always very concerning. And then my brother
would also say, I'm Vic Muirs, and he'd starts swerving
and going real fast. Rick Meure's four Time, indy five hundred,
Champ seventy four years old. Today actress Julianna Moore looking
pretty darn good for sixty five splash actress Daryl Hannah
sixty five and shut up, Ben dan th me Andy

(34:34):
Grammer forty two. If it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We're
so glad you were born and thanks for making your
morning show a part of your big day. Next week,
Marlo Thomas will be here Lannie from the band War
on the fiftieth anniversary of Why Can't We Be Friends?
And next hour, David Zanatti will analyze the numbers of
the special election that took place in Tennessee last night,
one by Trump endorsed Matt Van Epps. What's inside the numbers?

(34:58):
To learn from this, and we better learn it before
or next year's midterms. David'll break it down for us,
and then President Trump has a plan to provide money
for newborns. You have a checking account, savings account, A
four A one a K one K account, but does
your kids have a Trump account? They could soon where
he will tell you how to apply. Next hour, so
stay with us fifty eight after the hour, this is

(35:19):
your morning show.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with michael Vinheld journo
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Are You A Charlotte?

Are You A Charlotte?

In 1997, actress Kristin Davis’ life was forever changed when she took on the role of Charlotte York in Sex and the City. As we watched Carrie, Samantha, Miranda and Charlotte navigate relationships in NYC, the show helped push once unacceptable conversation topics out of the shadows and altered the narrative around women and sex. We all saw ourselves in them as they searched for fulfillment in life, sex and friendships. Now, Kristin Davis wants to connect with you, the fans, and share untold stories and all the behind the scenes. Together, with Kristin and special guests, what will begin with Sex and the City will evolve into talks about themes that are still so relevant today. "Are you a Charlotte?" is much more than just rewatching this beloved show, it brings the past and the present together as we talk with heart, humor and of course some optimism.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.