Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
each weekday morning on great stations like thirteen sixty The
Patriot in San Diego, News Talk, one oh six point
three and AM eighteen eighty WM EQ oh Claire, Wisconsin
and one oh four nine The Patriot and Saint Louis, Missouri.
Would love to be a part of your morning routine.
But so glad you're here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Well two three starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding different, because
we're in this together.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
This is your.
Speaker 2 (00:32):
Morning show with Michael O'Dell John.
Speaker 3 (00:35):
President Trump is unveiling his twelve billion dollar Far Made package.
The feat is likely to announce interest rate cuts today.
Republican Senators have two different healthcare proposal solutions, and the
judge has had a solution. Four Interceptions twenty two nineteen
over the Eagles last night on Monday Night Football. Good morning,
(00:58):
and welcome to Tuesday Sday, December the ninth. You have
our Lord twenty twenty five on the ERRAN, streaming live
on your iHeartRadio app row the Eagles three in a row. Yeah, well,
I mean wow, everybody has sensed this changing of the
guard in the NFL. We saw on Sunday Night Football
the Chiefs virtually all but eliminated. I don't think that
(01:21):
Eagles are dead by any stretch, but that was a
tough loss on the road to the Chargers, and they
have only themselves to blame turnovers. Nobody could hang out
of the football. I had a conversation the other day
with someone. We were just talking about, you know, taking
an honest look at the surprises and who's the best.
I think the turnarounds that have taken place. The Bears
(01:43):
is probably the most breathtaking. Who else had an amazing turnaround?
Like the Patriots turnaround? Massive? The Titles turned around things
on Sunday. It's a little different turnaround. But I don't know.
When you boil it all down, you got to put
the Patriots there. I get that Houston's much better than
(02:05):
people think, and in the long run, they'll be much
better than Jacksonville. Well, Denver is a great turnaround story
and a dominant team. I'm sorry, I look at it.
The Seahawks and the Rams look like the two best
teams in football, and I boiled it down to I
don't thinknybody's beating the Rams. I think the Rams are
a about a fifteen head monster. We think they lose
(02:29):
to Carolina though.
Speaker 4 (02:31):
Yeah, no, they had a they had a really bad
loss somewhere along the way.
Speaker 3 (02:38):
Yeah, I know they're they're good. They got two great
running backs, they got four great receivers. They've got a
quarterback that can still tickle the ivory if you will,
the Heisman. You know, you wonder how much that Big
Ten Championship game is going to impact the Heisman that
you know, had to head two of the four finals.
(03:00):
We're in that game. Mandoza comes out on top? Does
he come out on top in the Heisman? Does Notre
Dame get snubbed again? We've got a lot of things
to kick around, but I'm want to go beyond just
the news and narratives. The biggest things. It appears as
though the Supreme Court is poised to side with President
(03:21):
Trump on firing members of the Federal Trade Commission. We're
going to talk more about that with our Supreme Court
bar attorney and White House correspondent John Decker. Jasmin Crockett
got districted right out of the United States House of Representatives,
so she's doing exactly what we thought she would do,
and we'll Rekhavoc or try to Rekavoc in the primary.
Now she's got to get through the primary. But she's
(03:42):
going to run for senator. The paperwork has been done,
the announcement has been made. Her primary opponent is going
to be James talla Rico, who has made news recently
because he's got like six point two million dollars raised.
So this ought to be a really contentious primary, and
then it's on to take on the incumbent if he
(04:03):
can survive his Republican primaries. So we talked about how
I always felt like, and again I can be wrong.
I'm just making the case if Bernie Sanders would have
been the presidential nominee for the Democrat Party, which is
really breathtaking when you think about it. He's not even
a Democrat, and he was going to win the nomination
(04:26):
in twenty sixteen over Hillary Clinton. The DNC fe enagled
that victory for Hillary and then lost the election. He
would have been right back there in twenty twenty, but
they cut a deal and rigged it for Old Joe.
Probably would have been there again in twenty twenty four,
but they hung out of Joe long enough to secure
the electoral vot votes and then just handed it to Kamala,
(04:47):
who they wanted in the first place. Back in twenty twenty,
the DNC has not given its own primary voters the
power to choose their nominee sidential cycles. And I suspect
a fourth is coming because Bernie has handed the torch
to AOC. So if he's handing the torch to AOC,
(05:09):
AOC is not thinking about running for senator. I'm guessing.
I mean she could and take out Chuckie. I think
she's gonna run for president. I don't think she can
ignore running for president because of the early polling number numbers,
because of the success Bernie Sanders had. So we said
(05:30):
a long time ago, Boy, it sure looks like Bernie's
handing the torch to AOC, and the new AOC is
Jasmine Crockett, and the iron will be Jasmine Crockett ends
up running for senator, AOC runs for president. We'll keep
an eye on that. But the first piece has fallen
into place. Jasmine Crockett announcing her run for the United
(05:50):
States Senate. Two Pew polls. You can go crazy with polls, right,
You could do them every day and they're fascinating. And polls,
don't you know, there's a snapshot and by the time
you're reading them, presumably the picture has changed. Whatever picture
I post today on Facebook, and I'm not a picture poster,
(06:12):
but for analogy's sake, by the time you see it,
it doesn't exist anymore. It's a moment in time that
has passed. I'm not still standing there in that same
place with those same people. Well, polls are like that,
(06:35):
so what you look at the numbers, yes, but you
also follow the trends. And I love that about this
particular poll because it's been followed since nineteen fifty eight.
Public trust in government? Do you know in nineteen fifty eight,
seventy three percent a trust in government? Today it's seventeen percent.
(07:09):
If I used a talk show host as an example,
how does a talk show host have any success when
only one and a half out of ten listeners trust them.
I mean, we're all frustrated the government never governs. We're
(07:30):
in a constant state of shirts and skins, verbal civil
war and fighting, and a constant state of election cycles.
But nobody ever does anything, solves anything, leads us anywhere.
If we're all going to sit down and try to
figure out how to fix healthcare. Who's it going to
(07:53):
be run by something only seventeen percent of us trust
this is a big problem. As David's not even say
red it's a big deal. The gen Z study is spectacular.
(08:15):
I mean they're struggling with basic math as freshmen in college.
This goes back to what we talked about several times.
I used the example of when I had to have
a hernia surgery, which back in nineteen seventy three was
a really big deal. You were in the hospital like
ten days, it took three months to recover, and I
(08:41):
said it happened in third grade. Looking back, if I
had any common sense, I should have said to my mother,
I'm going to take the rest of the year off,
holding me back because I never caught up. Are you serious?
You're being dramas How could three months? How can you
(09:02):
use an excuse of three months because you never catch up.
You're so far behind and everything. And by the time
I caught up with what I missed, the year was over,
and then I spent half of next year trying to
catch up for that half of the year, and the
first half I missed, and I warned everybody. Now, I
think it goes beyond just COVID. But something's up and
(09:27):
something through accelerant on it. And I believe the accelerant
was COVID. So you dumb everything. First of all, you
make things not about reading, writing, arithmetic. Heck, we don't
even teach civics anymore. History's been all revised. I mean,
even if you were taught well and you studied well,
(09:48):
it wasn't all accurate. But we don't even do that.
It's all about indoctrination, socialization, not education, and you're getting
the results used to be. And when I got to LSU,
it was a very, very embarrassing moment. We're all walking
to class, five of us from the same high school.
(10:11):
Can't find our building. I mean LSU's bigger than your
normal university. I mean it's not like it was one
quad find the building. Yeah, all five of us walking together,
laugh and talking. We're in college. We're in college. Finally
find the building, walk up the four or five steps,
walk through the door. They all start heading up the
stairs and I go, guys, I think I'm downstairs one
(10:33):
of those remedial classes. And I get in there and
there's the whole football team. That was I was remedial?
What was I remedial? Was it algebra or one of them?
And you know you're downstairs, Well, now this is pandemic.
(10:55):
They're virtually remedial in everything. What's causing it? We'll go
through the study. The other is the gen z struggle
to even make small talk at the office. But the
study goes well beyond that. This is why they're fixated
on remote and flexible work. You know, I can work
at home, great, but I don't have to interact with
the soul great. In other words, what advantage do you
(11:17):
have over AI? What advantage are you going to have
over a robot? You're going to communicate less than they do.
They are just not capable of functioning in social situations
by and large, and they want to they avoid common areas.
They don't want to work at work. This is again
the social dilemma coming of age. These are all very
(11:38):
very troubling trends. Now everything takes a backseat to national
security because that could cost us a life. Two things
on that front. One my favorite thing we'll do today
is Bill Maher talking to a liberal and he's just
you know, one of the things you got to love
about Bill Maher, And I mean, he's steadfast in his atheism,
(12:02):
but he is always going to look at things logically.
And those that loved and worshiped him for being their spokesperson,
they're not feeling the same way. They've gone so far left,
they've left logic. And now he's probably the most effective
fighter in exposing him. So here's a woman trying to
(12:25):
talk about how evil Israel is and he just starts
talking about her dress and where she'd live in the
Middle East. And it's not so much the ignorance of Islam,
which Bill Maher does not have. And now all while
you're listening to is this the product of narrative over
(12:48):
true reading, true study, true understanding, real knowledge. Is this
just narrative repeating? Where these people in doc all the
way up through education, with no natural curiosity to have
set it outside the classroom, and this is what was produced.
It's fascinating. But watching him slowly make a fool of her,
(13:17):
not for the sake of shirts and skins, and enjoying
the misfortune of another, I want you to see how
dangerous ignorance is. Twy in the Old Testament, it says
my people will perish for a lack of knowledge. What
it's saying is you'll be overtaken something. Will you get
(13:37):
duped by a grifter, killed by a jihada? I mean,
something's gonna get you. You're so foolish. It's a great exchange.
The other is Zelensky. And we knew this was going
to be the tough part. I don't you know we
usually talk about what Putin's got to deal with. You know,
you can't win this war. You're not gonna leave with
all of Ukraine. You're certainly not gonna move on to Poland.
(13:59):
I mean, why keep going? Give him an off remptant
saves face and he'll take it. President took twenty one
points to do it, or twenty seven. I think it
ended up being. But maybe now he has his offer. Well, now,
you guys, Lenski saying, well, I don't want concede any land.
That's why we're at war. So I don't think there's
anything more important today that we're going to talk about
(14:22):
than with Steven Bouci. Peace talks, Let's be honest, appear
to have stalled. Bombing has resumed, and now Trump Junior
is saying his dad's are ready to abandon Ukraine. How
do we get this thing back on a trajectory of peace.
We got a lot to cover today. I promise we'll
do it all in very sizable bites, with some fun
(14:42):
mixed in between it and a sugar on top.
Speaker 2 (14:46):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Dealchruana.
Speaker 3 (14:50):
The Supreme Court is weighing whether President Trump can fire
members of an independent agency, and it looks like they're
leaning towards allowing it. Mark Mayfield reports the.
Speaker 5 (14:59):
High Court heard a documents on the matter of Monday.
It's related to Trump's firing of Rebecca Kelly Slaughter, a
member of the Federal Trained Commission. Federal law allows for
firings like this only in cases of inefficiency, neglect of duty,
or malfeasance in office. The High Court will designed whether
in nineteen thirty five ruling that upheld those restrictions should
be overturned. Slaughter was one of two Democratic commissioners fired by.
Speaker 3 (15:20):
Trump earlier this year. I'm Mark Neefhew. Cheryl Hines, the
wife of Robert F. Kennedy Junior, said her husband's not
running for president. In twenty twenty eight.
Speaker 4 (15:29):
Hines was asked on News Nation if Kennedy had plans
to run, and she said he did not. Blod Hines
also said when the two met, RFK Junior, then an
environmental attorney, said he had no desire to go into politics,
but he did. He ran for president as a Democrat
and later an independent for the twenty twenty four race,
and then he backed President Trump in that election, later
(15:50):
becoming Trump's Health and Human Service as Secretary. But she
still says he has no plans to run at twenty
twenty eight.
Speaker 3 (15:58):
I'm Jim Roope. You forget the betray of his own party.
His father wasn't running either until he was running.
Speaker 6 (16:07):
Hi, this is so and so from such and such,
And my morning show is your Morning Show with Michael
del Journa.
Speaker 1 (16:18):
Hey, gang, it's Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard
live each weekday morning on great radio stations like k
EIB and Los Angeles, WFDF nine ten AM Detroit, Michigan,
the Superstation, and the Rock of Talk sixteen hundred AM
KIVA and Albuquerque, New Mexico. We'd love to have you
listen live every morning. But glad you're here now for
the podcast Enjoy.
Speaker 3 (16:38):
Early Bird Gets the Worm, Rise and Shine Embrace this Tuesday,
December ninth, twenty twenty five, like it's a day you'll
never get to live again, because it is. We're in
the pursuit of understanding together. This is your morning show
on the Aaron streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. I'm Michael.
I'm here to serve you in a sense. Jeffrey and
Red are serving you as well, but they're mainly here
to help me and serve me me. Lord can't have
(17:02):
your morning show, would never have your morning show without
your voice. I can take a week off, and we've
got a nice surprise for you. I spent two hours
with Kelly Nash yesterday. He'll be doing some fill in
over the holidays. I don't know that I've ever loved
anybody this much. You guys are gonna really love Kelly.
But I can take off and I can get a
(17:23):
fill in. You can't take off. There's no one to
fill in for you on your morning show. I'm supposed
to be getting off. We're supposed to be getting off
on Christmas. Are we're not gonna getting off on Christmas? Yeah?
You guys are too oh oh cool. No, talk about
the listeners. They can't take a day as I thought,
we are the irreplaceable voice of your morning show, and
you have an early one on voters trust lack of
(17:46):
trust in government, and yet they keep keeping the government
in place.
Speaker 7 (17:49):
In voting, only seventeen percent of people say these trust government. However,
the overwhelming majority of voters actions. How dradict that because
the majority of people end up voting for bigger government,
wanting government to solve.
Speaker 3 (18:08):
All their problems.
Speaker 7 (18:11):
I don't trust the polls at all.
Speaker 3 (18:13):
It's what people say, not what people knew. Joey, I
respect completely where you're coming from. The doing thing I
would throw out to you is the lack of trust
in government might be most evident in low turnout. You
do realize that less than half of America engages in voting.
That's the true apathetic killer. I think the two party
(18:36):
system plays a huge role in this as well, keeping
everybody engaged with our team, even though everybody in our
team stinks to high Heaven and they're not worthy of
our ticket price, let alone support and merchandising. But here's
what the poll says. You can take it, leave it.
And again, as I was explaining what I love about polls,
(18:59):
are there a snap shot and a snapshot that's gone
by the time you're reading it. The poll is obsolete.
And that's why trends become even more important than actual numbers.
But that's just in how to study and read polls.
Another real important trick is you know, when you ask
people four or five part questions, you've got to know
that all the in between doesn't matter. This is going
(19:22):
to sound disrespectful, but we had a talk talent one time.
He was like the permanent fill in for everybody, and
when you think about it, that's a gifting and a
talent of itself. Now, was he the most noveledgeable?
Speaker 7 (19:34):
No?
Speaker 3 (19:34):
Was he the most interesting? No? Was he the most entertaining. No.
But he was like a utility infielder and when you
needed him, he could do mornings, he could do middays,
he could do afternoons. It was as a program director,
I can tell you it was a great thing to have.
Now we would do annual research because, by the way,
when you have people that have been at a station
a long time, and that's back when radio was live
all day, there's somebody on vacation almost every week because
(19:58):
if they have three four weeks vacation and three or
four of them have that. This guy, it's almost a
full time job just doing this. So he had a
lot of presents on the radio station. So when we
would do the research, you would see what you should see.
The morning man, me, the afternoon man in Rush Limbaugh
very polarized. They either think you're funny or they don't.
(20:24):
They think you're hilarious or they don't. You know, there's
not like a whole lot of in between the kinds
of issues that we talk about and bringing faith into it.
I mean, the two things you're never supposed to talk about,
faith in politics. That's all we virtually do because that's
all that's really relevant. But what's going on? I mean,
if you're interested in solving this stuff. Glenn back tod
(20:45):
a new interview with George and he's creating at George
Washington AI that he can talk to and he asks it,
what's your advice to America? How do we save this republic?
You ought to hear the answer. It's unbelievable. Maybe i'll
share it tomorrow with David Sonati and you can hear it.
But it's dead on. It's what we talk about all
(21:05):
the time. This is a republic not a democracy, and
it depends on personal responsibility, not entitlement. It depends on
a moral faith, self governing people. John Quincy Adams said,
this republic altogether wrong for an immoral people. You'll drive
(21:27):
it right off the cliff. You can't have liberty. You
can't have freedom without self governance, and you can't have
self governance without faith, self control, and responsibility. By the way,
that's roughly what George said, and that's why Benjamin Franklin said,
Madam Secretary, for you, we have a republic if you
(21:50):
can keep it. Look, getting back to the research, what
you would find is there were those which you're looking
for really really like and really really hate. That makes
a great talk shows, and you would like to see
(22:13):
twice as many really really love as really really hate,
and very little they're okay. The in between stuff that's vanilla.
Not a lot of people order vanilla. And that's kind
of what this poll addresses. When you look at the extremes,
(22:37):
when you look at a snapshot that is gone, when
you look at the trend, it's all there, which I
think makes it a fascinating pole. So we have been
testing public trust in government since nineteen fifty eight. As
polls go, that's a nice trend. You have sixty seven
(23:00):
years to look at. You can paint a picture that
is not gone in a moment. And I beat that
point in the ground. Just seventeen percent of Americans now
say they trust government. Even when I read that, I
was thinking to myself, Yeah, and is that the same
seventeen is two years ago? I want if there's some
(23:23):
flip floppage in there. Oh, when you have your president,
you trust it. Oh, now you have your president back,
Now you trust it and you don't trust it. We
have no way of knowing, but that's a bad number.
I am not talking to you right now. If research
showed nobody trusted me, airplanes would be empty, if no
(23:47):
one trust their ability to a get you there alive
and be on time. We want the federal government to
solve things and be all things for all people. Why
would you want something you don't trust to have more
and more control of your life? Why would you abandon
(24:09):
God for man and government? And none of you clearly trusted? Now,
compare this to nineteen fifty eight when seventy three percent did.
And what we can't find out in this poll is
and how much more trustworthy was government in nineteen fifty eight,
and that speaks to how we lost our trust. But
(24:35):
seventeen percent of Americans now say they trust government. And
the way they ask the question is do you trust
government to do the right thing?
Speaker 4 (24:46):
Do you know?
Speaker 3 (24:46):
Only two percent said just about always, fifteen percent said
most of the time. So what you're really looking at about
you know, somebody is trust just about always. I mean,
nobody's perfect. But that means we're losing Only two out
of one hundred people trust this government to do the
right thing always. While trusting government has been low for decades,
(25:10):
the current measure is one of the lowest in nearly
seven decades. We've reached to boiling point. A timeline of
trust in the federal government. Nineteen fifty eight, seventy three
percent of Americans trusted the federal government to do it
(25:30):
was right almost always. Seventy three percent. By the way,
almost always is down to two percent, So from seventy
three percent nineteen fifty eight to two percent today. In
the sixties and seventies, trusting government began eroding amid the
escalation of the Vietnam War. In the eighties, I imagine
(25:51):
Iran Auran Contra the nineties. You get Clinton in the
two thousands, nine to eleven, and how flipped that And
it was all about our government did it and not
radical terrorists? And then we went to war with a
rock for no reason, for weapons of mass destruction. We
never found. See the cumulative exposure of all these things.
(26:12):
So when you play a matrix game, when you play
a narrative game, the media's against the government, educations against
the government. They're rewriting history. The media's rewriting reality. Everything
shirts and skins, everything's we suck. Everybody else is great, Well, congratulations,
you achieved your goal. They're all in remedial math, and
(26:35):
they all think America stinks and they don't trust their government,
and some for good reason. The share is saying they
can trust government always or most of the time has
never been higher than three thirty percent. Trusting government has
never been lower, at just nine percent trusting the federal government.
A year ago, during the Biden administration, only eleven percent
(26:57):
of Republicans reported trusting the federal government just about always
or most of the time. Democrats trust was higher at
thirty five percent. So there you see that. Well, our
guys in office so now we trust it. This is matrix,
this is partisan politics, this is two party system, and
it's not working. And as much as you would like
(27:17):
to see the government solve all things, how can it
when no one trusts it. There's an equally shocking gen
Z poll about freshmen who can't even do basic math.
Great inflation might make graduations rates rise, but it doesn't
(27:38):
do anything about preparing a generation for citizen rate, the workforce,
or higher education. And then you add COVID and it's
part of the problem, not all of it. You have
the elimination of standardized tests. What about the lack of
focus on education and the push more for indoctrination and socialization.
How do these kids make it out of high school
(28:00):
without the ability to do common math? And of course
someone they get to college. Oh, they got to be
thousands upon thousands of dollars, and some of it you're
just paying a college to get what you didn't get
in high school. The number of gen Z college freshmen
(28:21):
who are entering universities without high school math skills as
skyrocketing SAT scores are plummeting, according to a stunning new report.
Even more shocking, many students can't even do middle school
level math, meaning their skills are fifth grade or below.
I wonder you don't trust government. They failed generations. Experts
(28:46):
say the phenomenon, combined with the steadily rising high school
graduation rates, shows the country is suffering from a massive
grade inflation problem. And by the way, if you do
this at the university level, whatever, we'll get you out
of there with the diploma, you have a depleted and
diminished workforce in the future, the expertise won't be there
(29:09):
to compete with the world, the creativity, innovation won't be there.
It's a crisis. It is no longer just partisan politics.
And I remind everybody we didn't have any federal government
over education until nineteen seventy nine, not that what has
become was what is even intended to have become. The
(29:30):
final one is my favorite. I'm watching mad Men. I've
wanted to watch mad Men forever. Huge John hamfam fan,
the woman who played the dominatrix wife in Billions. And
it is a great cast and it was a great
show and I could see that, but I never watched it.
And then when I would try to go, you know,
to binge it or something, it was ridiculous, unlike anything
(29:53):
else A it was hard to find. You can only
find one season or two seasons, and it was like
forty five bucks to buy the season, or like six
dollars an episode. It was just priced to where it
was ridiculous. Finally HBO Max is airing it, so I
binge like five, six of them. They're just so good.
Oh to go back to the six? I mean, but
then to compare to today, you know, we all talk
(30:15):
about wokeness and political correctness, but aren't you glad men
don't behave like that with our daughters at work anymore?
Drinking in the office. Smoking. In fact, if you're trying
to quit smoking, you need to watch mad Men. It
will make you want to quit smoking. It wasn't making
me want to have a cigarette. That's true, That's very true. Yeah,
because Jeffrey and I are reformed smokers, but we would
(30:36):
suck the smoke right out of your mouth a stranger
walking down the street. That's how tempted we are. But
this one was so it's like, you know, too much, right,
it's just disgusting. But I mean, the smoking, the womanizing,
the political incorrectness, it's all there, and you'll have a
different view of the progress we've made. Not all of
it is wokeness, some of it is decency. But anyway,
(30:57):
make a long story short. Compare what was going on
that office. It was all about socialism. It's the opposite
of me. It's all about being away from home, those
moments on the train with your cigarette and Chris paper,
your personal secretaries, offices with bars and ash trays, and
(31:21):
everybody's smoking and drinking in the middle of the day.
Can't you long lunches stinch though? In those offices, Oh yeah,
I would be discussed. Oh god, that's what I'm saying.
I was like, Oh, I have no temptation to smoke.
I mean watching mad Men will give you a good,
nice temptation for a year, for those of you that
have quit smoking like us. But anyway, make a long
story short. It's the opposite of what we're seeing now.
(31:42):
Now you have gen zers that can't make eye contact.
I saw this at junior high graduation. That was the
first time that people of my children's age were forced
to all sit in the middle of the gym floor
with everybody looking at them, and they'd have to get
up and walk all the way up to get their diploma,
and you could see that it looks like things were
hitting them. They were like flinching and squinting, and it
(32:04):
was because they couldn't stand people looking at them. And
because of this lack of socialization and this internet social
net dilemma, they don't have the childhood experiences we had.
They didn't interact in dugouts, they didn't interact on sidelines,
(32:24):
they didn't interact in the band or whatever you did.
And then we move them along in this fashion and
they get to the workforce and they don't even want
to be there. They just want to be home and alone,
talk to no one. It's a fascinating poll. I can't
wait to share it with you.
Speaker 2 (32:44):
Next hour, it's your Morning Show with Michael del Chano.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
You know, I feel like having a little bit of
an Iowa caucus. Give me somebody from Awa, Iowa. Blake
on the talk back line.
Speaker 6 (32:57):
Your take on mad Ben reminds me of the company
to work for at the well. It's called tech h Anyway,
it's down in Texas, a very large computer company at
one time. Then they started building weapons of mass accuracy.
Speaker 7 (33:10):
Uh.
Speaker 6 (33:11):
Driving through or taking a train to Kalamazoo to get
go up north to visit the family. I'd stop at
the little uh stand up bars in there and they
have new shots and roll like crazy to the next trend.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
Yeah, it's funny watching it. You know, every generation has
its blind spots, right, and this one. In fact, the
first client in the first episode of this first season
is Lucky Strike and they're trying to figure out how
to sell cigarettes while all the reports are coming out
they'll kill you and they're linked to cancer. And at
(33:45):
first the advertising was trying to say, oh, ours is smoother,
and we use a new filter that'll make it healthy
and all this stuff, and then they all got sued.
But every generation has that. I mean we do to
this day. You know, there are those that don't think
obesities big deal. Remember when just three years ago we
were celebrating obesity, fat people all on television. It's great
(34:06):
to be fat, it's great. You know, No, it's not diabetes,
it's disease, it's death. But yeah, you go back and
watch that. The workplace is more unrecognizable than ever when
you watch mad Men, compare it to gen Z. In
the workforce today.
Speaker 2 (34:26):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with michael Nhild Joano,