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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael, and your morning show is heard on
great radio stations across the country like one oh five,
nine twelve fifty WHNZ and Tampa, Florida, News Radio five
seventy WKBN and Youngstown, Ohio and News Radio one thousand
KTOK in Oklahoma City. Love to have you listen to
us live in the morning, and of course we're so
grateful you came for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
Enjoy well two three, 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 Deltorno.

Speaker 3 (00:44):
And good morning to all of you on your morning show. JB.
Allman here filling in for the great Michael del George.

Speaker 4 (00:50):
I hope you all are having a peaceful wake up
this morning. Maybe it's the last day of work before
you have to well take a break, which is probably
what you need, right Or maybe it's the day that
you spend filling out everything else that you didn't do
for the past week. Or let's put it this way,

(01:12):
like me doing everything in one day. And sometimes it's
gift giving, sometimes it's this, sometimes it's that. Sometimes it
is stocking something all that stuff, it's the last minute rush,
and I hope you all are approaching and able to
approach the day with a level of peace about you
that isn't always easy to come by, especially around Christmas,

(01:35):
but this has been nice. I think a lot of
people are finally relaxed. Everybody's kind of on similar pages here,
and I'm not saying everybody was a Trump supporter, we
know that, but there is a certain level of peace
about the land. And it's odd in a way, because

(01:55):
as divisive as everyone claims that this country is, I
do believe that the election of Donald J. Trump and
the people who came out to vote for him indicate
to me that we're not so divided after all. I mean,
there's a segment of the country that is very unhappy.

(02:20):
I completely understand that, and certainly there is division among
Democrats and Republicans, but I'm not so sure that the
division among normal, average everyday people is all that significant.
I think to a certain degree, what the twenty twenty

(02:40):
four election told us was that there's a lot of people,
whether it be black, Hispanic, white, suburban women, legal immigrants, whatever,
we have the same desires and they're not that much
different from each other. Do you have, for instance, people

(03:02):
who want to take care of their families. They want
to be prosperous, they want to have great educations for
their children, they want safe communities. They don't want us
as a country involved in endless wars.

Speaker 3 (03:20):
They're not interested necessarily.

Speaker 4 (03:22):
In being the leader of the free world. And if
that means that we have to put blood and treasure
up to be the leaders of the free world. You
notice that President Trump has already announced, Hey, the minute
I take the oath of office, we're getting out of
the World Health Organization.

Speaker 3 (03:41):
That's freaking everybody out.

Speaker 4 (03:42):
But I guarantee you by the time it's all said
and done, and I'll have proof for you later on
the show, by the time it's all said and done,
I do believe that half the world is going to
be pulling out of the Paris Accords as well, because
this whole green real isn't helping any of them. There's

(04:02):
a sea change around the world, and Canada is a
great example, and I'll bring that to you.

Speaker 3 (04:07):
In the meantime.

Speaker 4 (04:07):
The people who probably have the most consternation might be
members of the Democrat Party who are trying to figure
out how to save themselves because if the Democrat Party
were a ship, it would be empty with all the
people who are jumping from it. Joe Manchin gave an

(04:28):
interview that was very very revealing. Obviously we all know
of his independence and beyond.

Speaker 3 (04:34):
But and it's not really.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
Necessarily my task to try to save the Democrat Party. Heck,
given my opinions and what I've done on the radio
and beyond, I've already worked really hard just to say
the Republican Party, even though sometimes it probably didn't deserve it.
But President Trump felt, hey, I'm not going to run
as an independent, even though he's not typical, your trip,

(04:59):
your traditional public and I'm not going to run as
an independent. I'm actually going to work with the structure
we already have and and just make it better, which
was probably, in the long run, the best decision, even
though some Republicans aren't grateful as.

Speaker 3 (05:14):
They should be.

Speaker 4 (05:15):
Joe Manchin, though, has different tasks. He's like, I got
to figure this out because this Democrat Party doesn't seem
like it's mine.

Speaker 3 (05:22):
For He said, you're not a Democrat. What caused Joe
Manchin to divorce himself.

Speaker 5 (05:28):
Here's what I told them. I said, you got to
figure out how you lost somebody like me. I was
born as a Democrat because my grandfather's love of FDR.
I was a very strong Democrat because of my family's
lover of John Fitzgerald Kennedy. I came through the whole iteration,
and I was a Democrat in West Virginia. And it's

(05:51):
always been a seventy five eighty percent morality a Democrat Democrats,
but there was a split. I was never in the
liberal side of it.

Speaker 6 (05:59):
I was never in this.

Speaker 4 (06:00):
Yeah, well, so welcome to the independent side. Welcome to
the new frontier in political and cultural thought. Welcome to
our new place, which I believe is a place where

(06:20):
there are a lot of Democrats and Republicans on the
same page. There are a lot of people who voted
for Donald Trump who would never have imagined them voting
for a Republican ever, and yet that's exactly what they did.
And so going into Christmas in the new year, I'm

(06:42):
happy to say that we are really, I think less
of a divided country than people say we are. And
I think that's good news, that's positive news. And wait
till you hear what's happening all the way to the
north of US. In Canada as they are picking up
the seemingly Trumpian vibe. If you can believe that Canada

(07:04):
quite possibly going to be in a situation where they're
going to be picking up, in one way, shape or form,
the conservative but common sense conservative vibe that is sweeping
America right now, and that can only be good news
for the entirety of North America. Heck, even Mexico saying, hey,

(07:28):
you do all these deportations, will take them. Don't you
worry about a thing. I'll have all of that coming
up in this beautiful hour on your Morning Show with
Michael Del Giorno. I'm Jamie Allman, really happy to be
with you and happy to be filling in.

Speaker 3 (07:43):
Thank you for joining me.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Trono.

Speaker 4 (07:54):
All right, so let's go up to Canada. And we've
got this guy. This is so this is so great.

Speaker 3 (08:00):
This is a rapper.

Speaker 4 (08:04):
So he's a Canadian born rapper named Tom McDonald. And
if you look.

Speaker 3 (08:10):
At him, you know, he looks like post.

Speaker 4 (08:13):
Malone and he's got the tattoos everywhere, and you know,
in this day and age, it's so great, which I
think is so fascinating about the political culture that we
have right now, and it's actually so freeing because it's
so diverse and isn't interesting how the big rap against

(08:35):
conservatives or people who otherwise nationalistic, you know, who call
themselves patriotic whatever, those of us who are out there
waving the flag criticized it being fascist, nationalistic. The reality
is this particular grouping of people in America right now
all kind of moving towards the same not only political structure,

(08:58):
but also cultural structure. Sure where people are finally kind
of starting to say it's rolling off the tip of
their tongue. It's like, yeah, I don't think men should
be in women's sports, and that they used to be,
you know, five years ago, that would be an imprisonable offense.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
Or I don't think men can get pregnant. Oh come on,
there is all this stuff.

Speaker 4 (09:23):
So now suddenly just everybody seems to be so coalesced,
which is why I see these stories about us being
so divided and thinking, I don't see that. I see
myself as having a lot in common with that black
women women at the City Council meeting in Chicago who

(09:45):
was saying that she's a second class citizen now because
of the illegal aliens in her.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
Community, and it's like, yeah, I'm with you on that.

Speaker 4 (09:55):
I don't feel the second hand class citizenship as much
as as you might feel, but I definitely feel like
there is a level of displacement that's going on that's
just not something that is fair and it's not something
good for this country, and it's stopping a lot of
people from prosperity and beyond, and indeed also killing people,

(10:18):
which I'll get to it a little bit, but I
have more in common with this tatted up Canadian than
I do with Mitt Romney, sorry to say. And that's
really the beautiful place that we're in right now, is
that there is a huge diversity of individuals who are
kind of on the same page, which I like. And

(10:42):
it's kind of why you see the rise of people
and radio podcasting and all that kind of stuff who
are getting most of the people listening to them or
watching them, because there is a there's a pentaboron of sorts.
There's something going on in the political structure and the
media structure and beyond that people just see as being

(11:05):
really super foreign and they don't have anything in common
with these people. And Don Lemon found out on the
streets of the New York when he was trying to
interview some folks about what they called fake news.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
It was pretty pretty great stuff. I'll have that for you.

Speaker 4 (11:23):
But here's Tom McDonald's. He's got a new song, and
you know how these go. It's beautiful. Well, the tide
is finely turning and Cammala's speech is slurring.

Speaker 3 (11:38):
Thank God for saying, by the joe, screw the woke,
screw the woke, screw.

Speaker 4 (11:44):
The woe, and the mainstream media is dying, the viewers
shaving their heads and crying, what is a woman?

Speaker 3 (11:53):
Well they still don't know. Screw the woke, screw the woe,
screw the woe. How you get the point right?

Speaker 4 (12:00):
It's it's good, and these parody songs are great, But
this is coming from Canada all right.

Speaker 3 (12:07):
Now.

Speaker 4 (12:08):
Generally we were all thinking that we've got a Pierre
Trudeau on our hands, and.

Speaker 3 (12:15):
That's what Canada is. But it's not what Canada is.

Speaker 4 (12:19):
In fact, I think if you dip down to Mexico
and you see the current Mexican leader saying we'll take
your deportations for sure, no problem, I'm like.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
What really, yeah, oh no, we'll do.

Speaker 4 (12:30):
That and so up in Canada now not only is
the culture changing, but the political culture surely is going
to change. You have this brand new Canadian Prime Minister
of Canada, Pierre Pavue, and he told the story, and boy,
does this sound familiar about the people he's meeting in

(12:50):
Canada while he's on the campaign trail.

Speaker 6 (12:54):
I met a waitress at a restaurant not long ago,
and she came up to me and grabbed you by
the hand and she said, you have to win. And
I said, oh, thank you, I appreciate your support. She said, no, no,
it wasn't a compliment.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
You have to win. And then she told me her story.

Speaker 6 (13:14):
She told me that she was working one full time
job and two part time jobs just to pay her bills.
It's a single woman in her late fifties, and she
was tired of working all the time. So she cut
everything out of her budget, every creature, comfort, everything she
enjoyed about her life. She cut it out so that

(13:36):
she could drop one of those part time jobs. And
then one morning she woke up and she walked outside
and her car was gone. And she called her insurance
and they said they weren't going to cover the replacement.

Speaker 5 (13:50):
Value.

Speaker 6 (13:51):
So she had to take that job back because she
simply cannot live her life without a car. You can
bet your bottom dollar the guy who stole the car,
he was probably out on bail. This was not his
first job. Her taxes have gone up, her heating bill
has gone.

Speaker 3 (14:07):
Up, her wages have not gone up.

Speaker 6 (14:10):
She's scared to go out in the streets in places
where they didn't even lock the door not long ago.

Speaker 3 (14:16):
These are the people we're fighting for. This is Canada people.

Speaker 4 (14:21):
And again, you know, you think about the Great White
North and hockey games and Toronto and Pierre Trudeau, and
we're seeing the real Canada now through this politician's lens,
much the same way we saw parts of America through
Donald Trump's lens once he started to pay attention to

(14:43):
places and otherwise some politicians and some Republicans didn't pay
attention to Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, for instance, hardly ever saw a
Republican pop in in their neck of the woods. Certainly
the Bronx didn't either in terms of the Republicans.

Speaker 2 (15:04):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.

Speaker 4 (15:13):
Unfortunately Daniel Penny was not on this subway. A woman
is burned to death allegedly by a Guatemalan national who's
here illegally. And you saw that happen over in Germany
where even though the newsbeating described it as the car

(15:34):
hitting a bunch of people, well, actually no, there's a
person inside of that car and he's a Saudi immigrant.
And people have had enough of this pressure coming unnaturally
to them, whether it be with their high school kids,
girls having to play boys in swimming or tennis or

(15:55):
whatever happens to be, and it just people finally have
had enough. And so in a situation like this, you're
going to see the pendulum swing. And you are not
only with Canada, and this election isn't over yet. We
don't know what's going to be happening here. But he
really is Robinson. And then of course the person running

(16:17):
for Prime Minister is a really amazing individual in terms
of tapping into the vibe of the people who are
living in their country. People finally kind of stepping up,
and we're seeing that in Argentina. You know, the newly
elected President Argentina was invited to President Trump's inauguration.

Speaker 3 (16:42):
El Salvador, by.

Speaker 4 (16:45):
The way, is a hotspot for a lot of people
who like to surf if you can believe that, and
El Salvador is remember back in the day, my goodest, gracious,
you'd never want to go near the place.

Speaker 3 (16:57):
And then you move on over to Hungary.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
You saw what happened with Macrone in France, and I
thought for sure once Notre Dame burned, I thought for
sure that it would come back as some kind of
ecumenical five religion church, and instead it came back as
a Catholic church. And that says something about the pride

(17:21):
of some of the folks in France.

Speaker 3 (17:23):
You know.

Speaker 4 (17:23):
Unfortunately for a lot of people, I think when you
go to Germany, nationalism was really kind of a bad word.
Nationalism is not a bad word anymore in a variety
of countries. In Canada is no exception. Certainly the United
States is no exception. Mexico might be getting there, if you.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
Can believe that.

Speaker 4 (17:45):
But yes, all across South America and all across Europe,
Eastern Europe, Western Europe, and beyond, nationalism is back.

Speaker 3 (17:54):
And as long as it's not in a way that
is discriminatory or it's the people.

Speaker 4 (17:59):
The reason they don't like the word nationalism is because
of the Nazis. It's like, well, we're not bordering on
the Third Reich simply by trying to secure our border
and make things work for communities and for people in
the inner cities and beyond.

Speaker 3 (18:14):
We want Detroit to be back.

Speaker 4 (18:16):
We went Chicago to be a great living city, and
that's how it operates.

Speaker 3 (18:23):
John Fetterman, who is.

Speaker 4 (18:26):
One of the well not really newly, but he's kind
of new as elected senator, and of course got haze
for being this left wing, was made fun.

Speaker 3 (18:35):
Of a lot. But he's become quite the spokesman for
common sense on the Democrat side, and we're seeing a
lot of that too. It's a happy time to be
alive in America.

Speaker 7 (18:47):
And after you survived an assassination, you literally were shot
in your head and had the presence of mind to respond,
you know, fight, fight, fight, I mean, that's a political talent, undeniable.
And also I never believed that it was about fascism,
and for me, that made it difficult. For Cayle Harris

(19:08):
said that he was a fascist, Well, it's like that's
her prerogative, I mean, but it's not a word that
I would use because you put a lot of Democrats,
especially in my state that I know and I happen
to love people that are going to vote for Trump
and they are not fascists.

Speaker 3 (19:24):
Yeah, I mean, that's that simple.

Speaker 4 (19:28):
But these folks are right people off as fascist Nazis.
Why because we love America would because we want people
to stand for the national anthem.

Speaker 3 (19:36):
We would prefer that, and do we is it?

Speaker 4 (19:40):
Because we want to secure our border all that kind
of stuff. And it's really a great time for America
right now, as I do believe there's a variety of
people who are coalescing and it really is beautiful to see.

Speaker 3 (19:55):
It's even happening at the football games, the national football games.
You see this.

Speaker 4 (20:03):
So this civilian kicker, he's a guy who was wearing
an Evan McPherson. He's the Bengals kicker jersey.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
He won every member of the WHUDEI faithful of free
pizza because he kicked a forty yard field goal.

Speaker 4 (20:28):
So there's this pizza place as Stnado's, And if you
slice the uprights, it's called and the kicker sends the
ball to the ten yard line, that fan wins a
free pizza for a year. And then if he makes
it from the thirty yard line or even back Further,

(20:51):
everyone in the.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
Stadium gets a free pizza.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
Now that is love, ladies and gentlemen, the giving spirit
also among our kids.

Speaker 3 (21:00):
I love this.

Speaker 2 (21:01):
A group of kids in Phoenix share some holiday kindness.
Here's CBS is Steve Hartman on the road.

Speaker 8 (21:09):
The red caps were the only clue, the only hint
that something Christmas was afoot. Here we go, something that
would soon strike straight to the heart.

Speaker 3 (21:19):
Are you guys serious?

Speaker 8 (21:23):
As we first reported last year, the kids responsible for
these moments of joy are students and former students of
Derek Brown, a Phoenix elementary teacher who uses our on
the road stories to teach kindness and character. A perennial
favorite Secret Santa, that wealthy business man who every year

(21:43):
gives out hundreds of hundred dollars bills to random strangers.

Speaker 3 (21:47):
I was like shocked, because, well, who does that.

Speaker 8 (21:50):
I've never seen anyone like give just give money away
like that.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
Could you imagine that someday would be you?

Speaker 5 (21:57):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (21:58):
Not ever? And so with guidance from mister Brown, I
send everybody an itinerary, the kids.

Speaker 8 (22:05):
Started a Secret Santa club and began fundraising, calling friends, family,
and businesses. They raised eight thousand dollars without any help
from their school or district, just so they could turn around.

Speaker 3 (22:18):
And give it all away.

Speaker 8 (22:19):
It's okay to people like rose Marie Hernandez. Rose Marie
had been out of work.

Speaker 3 (22:27):
For a week.

Speaker 6 (22:28):
Give a lot of really thank you, thank you, thank you.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
You get so many feelings in your body that just
makes you want to do it again.

Speaker 4 (22:38):
Yeah, isn't it beautiful that we have young kids? And
you know what, I think what happens when you make
a country and people more prosperous is that people naturally
will start spreading the wealth on their own. They don't
need the government to steal their money and then launder
it in welfare check. So whatever, we're really good when

(23:02):
we're left up to our own devices and we're allowed
to prosper in the way that we should in the
formulation of true freedom. And to me, if you look
at this lesson that these kids are learning here through
this school, through this operation, they're learning that if they

(23:22):
are prosperous, and if they can raise money from people
who are feeling prosperous, they can help a ton of people.
And guess what, the government is not involved in any way,
shape or form, And that is a beautiful thing. So
there's not only hope for twenty twenty five in the country,

(23:45):
but there is also hope for our beautiful future in
other formulations as well, and that is among our youth.
Pretty amazing, great stories coming out, not only of the
political world, but also of the world of young people.
All Right, Don Lemon, got an earful. You've got to

(24:05):
hear this. You talk about a wised up America, You'll
hear all about it.

Speaker 3 (24:09):
Coming up.

Speaker 4 (24:10):
This is your Morning show with Michael Del Jorno. I'm
Jamie Allman. Pleased to be filling in. Thank you.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning show
with Michael vindel Joano.

Speaker 4 (24:27):
Jamie Allman here, pleased and privileged to be filling.

Speaker 3 (24:30):
In, and I hope you all are. Just I don't know.
There are two kinds of us on December twenty third.
There are those of us who have to get everything
done today or we turn into a pumpkin. Sorry to
mix seasons, but you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 4 (24:48):
And others who spent all day yesterday telling everybody how
they have everything done and they're all prepared and they're
looking forward to December twenty three not having to do
anything at all. And I admire those people, I really do.
I do think a lot of it is procrastination. I know,
we all come up with excuses about how we're not

(25:11):
going to do this and how we're not going to
do that, and we'll get to it. We'll get to it,
and then we're the ones on the twenty third who
basically are doing everything and we're standing in the line
at Walgreens because we still need that bag of Mini Snickers,
you know, the Christmas kind that we have to put
into the stockings.

Speaker 3 (25:30):
I mean, that's that's going to be me.

Speaker 4 (25:32):
One thing I did do, though, and I'm really happy
about this and I really feel proud of it.

Speaker 3 (25:38):
So I happen to own.

Speaker 4 (25:41):
Every plastic lighted blow mold Christmas figure ever made in
the fifties.

Speaker 3 (25:47):
And the sixties.

Speaker 4 (25:48):
And I made it my point a long time ago
and kind of a story from my childhood. And actually
one of the one of my prize possessions would be
the plastic lighted major scene because after all, the reason
for the season and the plastic lighted Baby Jesus and
everything else, and this is all comes from.

Speaker 3 (26:11):
The world of vintage.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
So the reason why I got into this, and now
of course it's become a thing. So I have every
extension cord known to man. I believe I have every
extension cord you could possibly have, every kind whatever, to
the point where I'm not all that sure whether some

(26:33):
of my extension cords are indoor ones or what have you.
I don't care unless it rains, and then of course
everything shorts out.

Speaker 3 (26:41):
I have to wait till it dries.

Speaker 4 (26:43):
Then I turn it back on again because the thing
trip that just push the button back in, it comes.

Speaker 3 (26:47):
Back on miraculously.

Speaker 4 (26:48):
So anyway, when I was a kid, my mom and
dad they didn't do it up. On Christmas, we had
a Christmas tree that my dad wired to the wall
so it wouldn't fall. He got tired of that hole.
I'm not going to screw this into that little thing.
You got to screwed into that hole and then screw
this in there and hope the tree stands up. He

(27:09):
just wired the thing right to the wall that way
it never fell down, which was I think admirable of him.

Speaker 3 (27:16):
And they threw a couple of the big gigantic.

Speaker 4 (27:22):
Bulbs up onto the bushes outside, and that was pretty
much it. And so we would go out to my
grandmother's house on Christmas Eve. And on the way out there,
my grandmother lived in a part of town that was
I would say, middle class, what have you, you know,
a little smaller homes when I was in but nonetheless

(27:43):
the people in Overland of Missouri is where it was.
I would drive to my grandma's house, a little house
there on avenue called Tudor Avenue, and that's where we
would gather on Christmas Eve. On the way out, I
would look out of the window of the car station wagon.
We're all piled in there, and I would be mesmerized

(28:05):
by these lawn decorations that people had in this particular
part of town. I don't know why that was a
thing in this particular part of town, but it was.
And I remember seeing also a never forget this, seeing
a plastic lighted Santa and like three or four reindeer

(28:26):
who were.

Speaker 3 (28:27):
On a rooftop.

Speaker 4 (28:29):
And I was saying, to myself, Someday, someday that's gonna
be me.

Speaker 3 (28:33):
Someday I'm going to have a house just like that,
and lo and behold.

Speaker 4 (28:38):
Over the years, I think it was starting like in
nineteen ninety or whatever, when I kind of got my
first house. I started collecting these plastic lighted Santas and
things like that, and figures.

Speaker 3 (28:51):
And Noel choir boys and all this kind of stuff.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
And gradually, over the years I went to actually have
every single plastic lighted sand everybody. So these people always
send me pictures.

Speaker 3 (29:05):
Hey do you have this? Do you have this?

Speaker 8 (29:06):
Ago?

Speaker 3 (29:07):
I already had it. I already had it.

Speaker 4 (29:08):
And what I do is I light them all up
so there's a Santa chorus on my front lawn. And
what I do. I learned this after a while. I
used to sweat having to plug everything in and do
all this kind of stuff. I figured I just put
everything where I need to put it, and then what
I would do is I would take all the extension
chords and just make it work that way. It used

(29:29):
to be I like particulously plan this and put that
in there, and try to do this and try to
do that, and it didn't work and it was frustrating
and everything else. And now I just just put it
where you want to put it al and then fast
it all together. And if you run out of extension cords,
go to home depot and get a couple more extension cords.

(29:51):
That's all you got to do dollar ninety eight whatever
happens to be. And so that is the beautiful I'm
gonna put these up on my Facebook page. If you
go to Jamie Almon and it's the Radio Free Almen
Facebook page, you'll be able to see all of what
I have littered my lawn with in living color. As

(30:12):
long as it doesn't rain between now and the time
we'll be able to put it back up on Facebook.
Then it'll be dark, but just for a while, I'll
put it back up or windy or whatever. I know
everything there is to know about December weather, that is
for sure. So yeah, that's my story about Christmas, and
that's why I'm so excited. And guess what, people, I
leave it up on through Epiphany because Christmas doesn't start

(30:38):
until Christmas Day. So yeah, there are going to be
a few people who will put their Christmas trees in
the medium the Highway on December twenty sixth. But you're
missing out because the Epiphany is still only. The kings
have not come yet, so don't get rid of your
tree before the kings come.

Speaker 2 (31:04):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael del Joano
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