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May 5, 2025 • 33 mins
Newark airport issues.
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And good morning to you. Welcome to a new week
in the Big Three today. So much is going on today.
We have an extended Big Three because it's almost impossible
to get everything in that's going on today. Let's start
with a warning to those who may be going to
the Newark Airport today to catch a flight. The Newark

(00:21):
Airport is still canceling flights with problems that are expected
to continue, not only today, with up to four hour
delays on the flights that are going in and out,
and then those problems might last much longer.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
The system that we're using in air traffic control, it's
incredibly old. This system is twenty five thirty years old.
We use floppy discs, we use copper copper wires.

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Newark's problems with staffing and equipment are a cautionary tail
for what may happen across the country if we don't
immediately update the whole air traffic control system. DOGE cuts
are threatening the nine to eleven first responders Health and
Compensation fund.

Speaker 3 (01:08):
It is a disgrace, it's outrageous. It's an American and
we need Republicans to stand up to President Trump to
fight back.

Speaker 1 (01:17):
Well. President Trump reversed the cuts a couple of weeks
ago to the First Responders Fund. Critics say they're back again,
although these cuts seem to be to the Department of
Health and Human Services that oversees the fund. We'll see
what Donald Trump does now. Elon Musk may be getting
out of town just in time. He's going back to

(01:38):
Tesla and listen to this. Almost immediately, he's going to
launch the first commercially available driverless car in the future.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
I think it'll be unusual to see a manually driven car.
It'll be like seeing a horse.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
Sixty minutes used to be the pinnacle of long form
news programs, and now it's an arm of the Democratic Party.
Does another long form hit piece on Donald Trump.

Speaker 5 (02:05):
You're at the mercy of the government, and it really
it's like a protection racket.

Speaker 6 (02:10):
John Keckery is a prominent attorney and Democrat in San Francisco.
You're not suggesting that the president's running a protection racket.

Speaker 1 (02:19):
I am the whole piece, whole fifteen minute piece. Not
one Republican, not even one non biased person. Every single
person interviewed was a Democrat. We'll look back at some
of the recent work that sixty minutes has done on
behalf of the DNC and police in Brazil make a

(02:39):
rest and uncover a bomb attack plot at a free
Lady Gaga concert in Coco CABAA.

Speaker 7 (02:47):
A high profile person like Lady Gaga are an attractive target,
obviously by a number of groups or individuals.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
The free concert attracted two million people. One last thing,
Republican congresswoman, at least aphonic, in case you had any doubts,
is definitely running for governor.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
And Kathy Hokeel is the worst governor in America. I
dub that of Andrew Cuomo, not thinking anybody could make
it worse. Kathy Hokel makes the impossible possible. She is
the worst governor and it's showing in her poor abysmal
approval ratings.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Let's start with Let's start today with Newark Airport because
it has been a mess now since Wednesday. Wednesday is
when they had Remember that real problem where we first
heard about all the delays. Now apparently there's a whole
lot of things going on there at the exact same time.
Not only do we have this shortage of air traffic controllers,

(03:44):
but that's been around, that's been around for decades. It
just keeps getting worse and worse and worse and worse
and worse, and then if people get sick, it's you
can't replace them. It is a mess that has to
be fixed. But we also have, as you heard Sean Duffy,
the Transportation Secretary say a moment ago, we have this
outdated technology. This isn't it amazing that the Trump administration

(04:07):
just keeps inheriting all these problems, all these things that
Obama and Biden just kicked down the road, never wanted
to deal with, and then all of a sudden, we
have all these huge problems. Now everybody's paying attention because
Donald Trump's an office now, they can attack him when
he's saying to you, look, I would I inherit it.
All this mess, all of this stuff I inherited. I'm

(04:31):
trying to fix it, and they get upset with him
for trying to fix it. So they have this outdated technology,
They have a staffing shortage. They have runway construction at
Newark Airport that's been shutting down runways. You put that
all together, it is an enormous mess. They've had planes

(04:52):
turn around in the sky and go back. They've made
announcements in the cabin we're sorry that this is in US.
It's Newark International Airport. Forty million people travel out of
that every year. It's the second largest airport in our area.
And when that is affected, the country is affected, the

(05:16):
world is affected. So what they're saying today now, yesterday
there were flights canceled. United Airlines, by the way, has
canceled thirty five flights a day in and out of
Newark for the foreseeable future. That's how bad it is.
They don't even United Airlines, which by the way, Newark's
a major hub for them, has decided we can't deal

(05:38):
with this. We can't deal with this, we can't deal
with all of the people being affected by this, and
so they've canceled thirty five flights and there was four
hour delays again yesterday. The Newark airport is a complete mess.
But again this is just the first. There's been little

(05:59):
problems across the country. This is the first massive problem
at an airport, but it's not going to be the
last until this entire thing is fixed. One last thing
about Newark, though, there was a report yesterday. I don't
know if you have no Tom Costello, but Tom Costello
is probably the best aviation reporter on any of the networks.

(06:21):
He works for NBC, and he said this yesterday in
a report.

Speaker 8 (06:26):
One Newark controller tells NBC News they lost radars on
Monday radios on Wednesday and things need to change. It's
not a safe situation for the flying public.

Speaker 1 (06:37):
Then he was interviewed about it afterwards, and he said
that he couldn't believe what he heard from this air
traffic controller. He said, I would not fly in or
out of Newark Airport right now. That's how bad it is.
An air traffic controller says he wouldn't fly in or
out of Newark Airport because he didn't believe if it

(07:00):
was safe, that should be a cautionary tail. Now the
reason a lot of things were shut down on Wednesday,
that's actually a good sign. Did you know that the
air traffic control and much of the planes going in
and out in Newark are actually run by Philadelphia. That
happened years ago. But so in Philadelphia they said things

(07:24):
are so bad at Newark, we're gonna shut things down
for a little bit. And so while it's just this
is going to be happening all across the country. And again,
the Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy was there last week and
talked about the problem.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
I told them that help is on the way. I
told them the President Trump understands the equipment they're using
and is fully on board to have a brand new
system for them. We can't snap our fingers and make
it happen overnight.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
No, it's gonna take years. It's gonna take years and
years and years to fix all of the airport across
the country. Luckily for Newark. And it's funny to say
luckily in a situation like this, but Newark's going to
get a lot of the attention early on as they
try to fix the system all across the country. You
heard him in the Big Three, Sean Duffy say, they're

(08:16):
still using floppy discs. That's how bad the computer system
is right now at Newark International Airport. And the Great
John Nance, who works for ABC and is an aviation expert,
talks about the effects.

Speaker 7 (08:31):
Newark is incredibly important because flights go out and come
in from all over the world, and it has a
direct impact on the rest of the nation's flight control
situation when it begins to go down for whether or.

Speaker 5 (08:43):
For any other reason.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Right they saw delays all across the country all week
long because of what was happening at Newark International Airport.
And it's just going to keep getting worse if it's
not fixed.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
The system that we're using is not effective to control
all the traffic that we have in the airspace today.
And now someone will say, well, is it safe. Of
course it's safe, because what you saw here is when
we have problems with air traffic control, we actually shut
down the airspace.

Speaker 1 (09:13):
Think about this that the last four years, well actually
the last twelve years, this problem, this infection at air
traffic control and at our airports around the country was
allowed to just get worse and worse and worse. And
what did we care about. We cared about windmills, We
cared about DEEI, We cared about taking parental rights away

(09:36):
from the parents in schools. We cared about all the
wrong things when the stuff that was really important, like
the safety of our planes in airports, they were ignored.
And where was the media. Where were they screaming and
crying like they are right now. They were silent. This

(10:00):
It is an epidemic of ignorance by both the Democratic
Party and by the media that caused all of this
and we have to start waking up to it. We're
starting something new today. By the way, when you go
to the iHeartRadio app and leave us a talk back
about this topic, you could win a limited edition Mintie
in the Morning t shirt. Will award one every day

(10:20):
to our favorite talkback in the morning. And while you're
there on the free our Heart Radio app, be sure
to set a preset for seven to ten WOR and
Upset at Churchill Downs. You'll hear it next. You know,
I want to talk more about this new Talkback of
the Morning feature because it's going to be the most
prestigious award you can win at WOR. Don't laugh at that, No,

(10:44):
that's not funny. It is the stop. It is by
far the most prestigious award you can win with the
best prize ever, the best prize ever. Did you have
you seen the T shirts I have, and they're very exclusive,
very exclusive. It's very tough to get. Crash, you can't

(11:06):
have one. I just said, they're very very exclusive, and
but you can win one starting new today if you
are the best talkback and we get to determine what
the best talkback is, it can be a lot of things.
By the way, it could be a really poignant talkback,
it could be an emotional talkback, it could be a

(11:29):
funny talkback. We get to decide. We have a whole there.
There are canal of judges. Yeah, there's an academy. Yeah,
that that determines who wins the Talkback of the Morning.
They sit in that office back there right very they're
listening to some right now. We don't get them until
they listen to them. So they're listening to them right now.
Then they're going to give it to us, and they

(11:50):
give it to us in a sealed envelope, and we'll
open the envelope at the end of the day and
then we will announce who wins the most Prestigious war
or the Mente in the Morning talk Back of the
Day award.

Speaker 4 (12:06):
Lee.

Speaker 1 (12:06):
You might want to turn your radio down. There's gonna
be lots of applause, and then we will and then
you will send it to you will send you the awards.
So all you have to do is leave it talkback.
You go to the iHeartRadio app, you look for Menty
in the morning, and you hit the talkback feature and
then you leave a talkback.

Speaker 9 (12:24):
That's that's all you have to do, but you do
have to put us on the preset when you're there.
Just put seven ten wor on the presets while you're
there too.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
I didn't even know that you can't win. You can't
win talkback in the morning unless you put us.

Speaker 9 (12:37):
On the precepts and just giving some good advice while
you're there.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Not a requirement though, just.

Speaker 9 (12:43):
Saying while you're there, put us on the preset.

Speaker 1 (12:47):
Well, we should make it a required. Although I got
to tell you, the presets are really cool.

Speaker 9 (12:50):
I know what we've been talking about and people saying,
all right, presets. Well, you know when I put my
phone onto my car, you know, and everybody has Apple
Play and Airplay and all, you know whatever, the Precepts
came up on my screen in my car, just like
your your regular presets in your car, and I can
hit around on all my favorite iHeart app, you know,
presets right on my car and not even on my phone.

Speaker 1 (13:13):
It was awesome. Wow, it was great.

Speaker 10 (13:15):
It really is.

Speaker 1 (13:17):
You were you were very excited about that.

Speaker 3 (13:19):
I was. It's on my car.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
You can be just as excited as Natalie by putting
us into your presets, and then you can wonder at
the absolute new technology that's been invented. Let's talk about
the Kentucky Derby. By the way, we all picked horses.
None of us picked the horse. We did not know.
I came close. Did I think journalism or you wanted it?
But yeah, first, that's right. So I just picked that.

Speaker 10 (13:45):
And that's when you confess that that was your secret desire. Yes,
I saw the I saw the list, so I had
to pick another horse. I don't remember what I picked,
but I didn't pick this one.

Speaker 1 (13:54):
I would love to be able to say I picked sovereignty,
but here is the call. It was an exciting race,
and your horse Backlan almost won. It was the far
and away favorite, but a six to one horse Sovereignty.

Speaker 11 (14:09):
Journalism is on the move as they turned for home,
and Sovereignty is coming with him on the outside.

Speaker 1 (14:16):
The two of them go right by.

Speaker 11 (14:18):
With um furlong or on the Journalism and Sovereignty nose
to nose down to the last sixteenth of a mile.
Sovereignty has taken the lead. Journalism is second toward the
good side, but.

Speaker 8 (14:30):
He's his third.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
But it will be Sovereignty to rule the ducky day.
That guy is great. Annou has been there for years.
Is just great. Eric Red is the horse trainer of Sovereignty.

Speaker 12 (14:45):
I don't know how I fell down the paddic when
he hit to wire. I'm about passed out. I'm so happy.
I explained that this is something that you know is
the reason everybody does this because we're not supposed to
be here. But I knew this horse love the track
and he've been training so good all year.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
Now you see these guys all the time, right, You
see them because they are the Kentucky Derby. You see
the owners, you see the trainers. You never see a
guy like Ramiro Palacios who has to handle the poop
of fourteen hundred horses. Well, you got fourteen hundred horses
here pooping every day, so you got you gotta pick

(15:22):
it up every day. They have seven truckloads seven count them,
truckloads of poop they have to take out every day,
and this guy is in charge of all of it.
With that many horses in the stables, that's a lot
of horse craft to clean up. So the people in
the stables they take them to pits like these, and
that equates to about seven truckloads a day, or twelve

(15:42):
hundred yards of crap.

Speaker 9 (15:45):
By the way, that was the reporter, which just cracked
me up, because everybody else says.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
He used the word crap in his report twice. It
could have said fertilizer. There's a million things he could
have said. What about poop? How come poop is better?

Speaker 11 (16:02):
Best?

Speaker 1 (16:02):
Poop sounds like a kid. It sounds like you're four
years old and you say poop. That's why. That's okay. Now,
let's get the latest poop from Jacqueline Carl at six
point thirty. Good morning.

Speaker 10 (16:14):
You are going to need a real ID starting Wednesday
to board a domestic flight. The Trump administration says all
states will need to comply by the May seventh deadline.
Real ID is an enhanced security driver's license. And speaking
of flying, Newark Airport is now ranked number one in
the world in flight delays and cancelations.

Speaker 13 (16:33):
That's according to flight Aware, which said as of Sunday,
the New Jersey airport had the highest percentage of delays
and cancelations in the world. More than one hundred flights
canceled Sunday, well more than three hundred were delayed chaos
six days in a row at Newark, one of the
busiest airports in the nation. A shortage of air traffic controllers,

(16:54):
airport runway construction, and equipment problems at the FAA's Philly
Flight Center played major roles. United Airlines responded Friday by
cutting thirty five daily flights. Sarah Lee Kessler wor News.

Speaker 1 (17:09):
So this guy's kind of interesting. I don't know why
anyone would do this, but he is.

Speaker 10 (17:13):
According to Oddity Central, a nineteen year old TikToker known
as the Crooked mond Ten is making waves by intentionally
training only one side of his body to challenge conventional
beauty standards. Dubbed Trapman by his followers, he spent over
five months focusing solely on his left trapezius muscle. This

(17:35):
unconventional approach is part of his self coined hashtag looks
Minimizing movement, a satirical response to the popular looks maximizing trend.
I sometimes do that by just using my right hand
to bring the food to my mouth. I work on
my right bict But no, this is kind of like intense.

Speaker 5 (17:57):
There was a.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
Movie where a guy did this, This Lady in the
Water by m Night Shamalan. Remember that his one arm
was real muskin or his other arm was regular.

Speaker 10 (18:07):
I feel like I have like a vague recollection because
I love m Night Shamalan movies.

Speaker 1 (18:12):
Yeah, so do I most of them. Oh right, like everybody,
He's had a couple of duds, but yeah, most of them.
I really like. That's interesting. It's amazing these influence I'd
love to be an influencer. I just don't have anything
interesting to do what everybody comes. Everybody has, well not

(18:32):
not on TikTok, you know where you actually just get
on there with you Larry meant shirt with a lot
of money. That's right, I could do the contest on
there on the on TikTok. That's what you should do.
Great idea. See you're an idea person. Okay, thanks a lot.
Jacqueline carl And upset at Churchill Downs. We just played
for you. Did you watch sixty Minutes last night? They

(18:54):
let go of their executive producer to get rid of
Trump bias. Apparently that didn't work at all. We've got
the details next sixty minutes. I'm so sad about this.
Sixty Minutes used to be the mount Olympus of journalism.
Everybody that went to journalism school, everybody worked in the business,

(19:17):
especially in TV, journalism wanted to go to sixty minutes
because they were important. Everybody watched them every week. They
could change the world. They could certainly change opinion, and
something happened to them. I think it's when the rest
of the country became so political. Sixty minutes also became

(19:37):
purely political, and in the last few years there'd been
nothing but an arm for the Democratic Party. And last
week and then'll set up what happened last night to
tell you what happened last week. Bill Owens, longtime executive
producer of sixty minutes, resigned because he felt like it

(19:57):
was unfair that the current company was telling sixty minutes
to be non biased. Don't just do pieces on the Democrats.
We need to be non biased. And so Scott Pelley
did something extraordinary. He did at the end of sixty minutes.
He did a one minute owed to Bill Owens, basically

(20:23):
ripping his own company.

Speaker 14 (20:24):
Stories we pursued for fifty seven years are often controversial
lately the Israel Gazo war and the Trump administration. Bill
made sure they were accurate and fair. He was tough
that way. But our parent company, Paramount, is trying to
complete a merger. The Trump administration must approve it. Paramount

(20:46):
began to supervise our content in new ways. None of
our stories has been blocked, but Bill felt he lost
the independence that honest journalism requires.

Speaker 1 (20:59):
That honest journalism requires, so they only did honest journalism,
and Paramount was saying, look, you can't continue to praise
the Democratic Party on everything and slam the Trump administration
when we need the Trump administration not just for the
merger but for everything. Why and by the way, forget

(21:21):
all that, Forget all of that for a second. You
want to be an honest broker of the news. That's
what sixty Minutes used to be. They wanted to get
back to that, which brings us to this week, which
brings us to this week. First piece a hit piece
on Donald Trump because of executive orders he signed, saying

(21:41):
that law firms have to be much fairer in what
they do when they go after political opponents. And Scott
Pelly right off the bat was the introduct did the
introduction to this piece.

Speaker 14 (21:55):
It was nearly impossible to get anyone on camera for
this story because of the fear now running through our
system of justice. In recent weeks, President Trump has signed
orders against several law firms orders with the power to
destroy them. That matters because lawsuits have been a check

(22:15):
on the president's power.

Speaker 1 (22:17):
See, and that was all opinion? Did he tell you
it all was what was in the executive order because
it doesn't say any of that, none of that. But
they have the power. They're going after only certain law
firms with the power to destroy them. And yet they
were able to get people from those law firms to speak,

(22:37):
including Mark Elias. Mark Elias works for a law firm
that worked for the Clintons, worked for Obama, and work
for Biden.

Speaker 15 (22:49):
Donald Trump is the walking embodiment of everything that is
wrong with the American political system. And so when Donald
Trump says that I am an ethical or that I
am undermining his vision of America, I say, boy, I
must be doing something right.

Speaker 1 (23:04):
Oh, that guy's non biased. Well I'm sure they did
somebody else to balance it out. They had three interviews,
all of them democratic operatives.

Speaker 5 (23:13):
You're at the mercy of the government, and it really
it's like a protection racket.

Speaker 6 (23:18):
John Keckery is a prominent attorney and Democrat in San Francisco.
You're not suggesting that the president's running a protection racket.

Speaker 1 (23:27):
I am oh, of course that must be it. It
must be it. He's a mob boss. That's what the
entire piece was about. It was and sixty minutes is
now embarrassing because let's go back a little bit. They've
just had this problem. They're being sued over an interview
with Kamala Harris and the editing they did with that.

(23:49):
Just to give you a reminder of how bad that was.
And this was during the campaign where they could have
an effect on the campaign. Every mistake, all the bumbling
answers she gives, could have an effect on the campaign.
Here is the unedited version of an answer.

Speaker 16 (24:05):
But it seems that Prime Minister Netanyah, who is not
listening well, Bill, the work that we have done has
resulted in a number of.

Speaker 17 (24:18):
Movements in that region by Israel that were very much
prompted by or a result of many things, including our
advocacy for what needs to happen in the region.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
That's gobly group. She made no sense. That answer made
no sense, and the American people deserve to see that,
especially when she could be the next president of the
United States. This is what aired. But it seems that
Prime Minister net Yah, who is not listening.

Speaker 17 (24:50):
We're not going to stop pursuing what is necessary for
the United States to be clear about where we stand
on the need for this.

Speaker 12 (24:57):
War to end.

Speaker 1 (24:58):
They pulled an answer from so somewhere else and put
it in instead of the answer she gave to make
her sound sane, to make her sound literate. That was
influence in the election. And if you'll remember back when
he was first in nineteen in twenty twenty, when he

(25:18):
was first running against Joe Biden, Trump was on the
show and when he brought up the Hunter Biden laptop,
and this is long after it was verified, Leslie Stahl said, no,
we can't talk about that now. Donald Trump and his
people were smart enough to get their own recording of it.
They brought their own camera and recorded the whole interview,

(25:40):
so we got to see what that conversation was like.
When they shut down the interview because Donald Trump wanted
to talk about the Hunter Biden laptop, which was incredibly
credible and relevant.

Speaker 18 (25:54):
He accepted his families from Russian, from Ukraine, from Giant
and from other places. His brother, who didn't have experience,
became a big builder in Iraq without experience. Take a
look at what's going on lastie, and then you say
that shouldn't be discussed. I'm saying it's the biggest scandal

(26:16):
out there, leslie.

Speaker 1 (26:17):
All of that ended up being true, all of it,
and the Hunter Biden laptop was verified by the FBI,
and they knew it was true because they already had
it and they had verified it. What I'm telling you
is that sixty Minutes for a long time has just
been an arm of the Democratic Party. They influence elections.

(26:39):
The Donald Trump thing was embarrassing. The Harris interview, the
way they edited that was embarrassing. The piece last night
was embarrassing. I don't say this with any glee. Again,
I wish sixty Minutes was what it you to be,

(27:00):
where it took on all comers. The real sixty Minutes,
the one that started and had such journalistic integrity, they
would have uncovered. They absolutely would have uncovered the problems
with Joe Biden, the mental capacity that was failing him
during his administration. They would have uncovered that because they

(27:21):
had no fear or favor. Now they are just a
talking piece for the Democratic Party. They're not worth watching.
Here's a story they would have covered if there is
evidence that the Sudis played a part in the nine
to eleven attacks. Let me ask you this, why is
Governor Murphy traveling to Saudi Arabia to do business with them?

(27:45):
We'll ask award winning North Jersey columnist Mike Kelly coming
up after the seven o'clock news. Let's talk more about
the media for a second. Because of all of the
awful things that had done over the last several years,
including ignort ndoring the declining mental capacity of Joe Biden,
which I think is a huge scandal, and ignoring his

(28:06):
family profiting from his time in office. One of the
things that really hurts me, and I don't understand it completely,
is the sliming of Elon Musk. Elon Musk did not
have to volunteer his time to try to make the

(28:27):
government more efficient. If you hear him talk about it,
he said, look, I didn't have a choice. This country
was headed towards bankruptcy. People were profiting off this government
by just adding jobs to get favors and giving money
to non government organizations, non governmental organizations just so they

(28:48):
could send the money overseas and make its way back
back to them. It was a money laundering operation and
so he is putting an end.

Speaker 4 (28:57):
At all that.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
And of course mostly Democrats. It wasn't all democrats. There
were Republicans involved too, but mostly Democrats were screaming oh
and attacking him and trying to slime his reputation only
because he tried to get rid of scams. He tried
to get rid of fraud, He tried to make the

(29:19):
government more efficient, and for that his company hurt. They
were attacks on his company, there were fires set against
his company. People that drove Tesla's were attacked, and Tesla
was saying, look, we gotta get you back here. And
he had a limited time anyway with the government. He couldn't.
He has so many other things he's dealing with. And

(29:40):
so now he's headed back and he did an interview
on Fox which I thought was with Laura Trump, which
was a tremendous interview, and she asked a great question,
she said, did did anybody ever say thank you?

Speaker 4 (29:55):
Some people have said thank you, so in fact, a
lot of people have said thank you. So there's like,
I don't know, maybe twenty twenty or twenty five percent
that are that really don't like don't like me, And
that is obvious because they're hanging me in effigy at
the at these sort of protest rallies, and they're being

(30:17):
very violent about it.

Speaker 1 (30:18):
Yeah, they have been very violent about it. That's their way,
that's how they approach this. Of course, all of the
investigations have to be into the Republicans doing that, but
the Democrats get to burn down cities and nothing. That's fine,
that's all peaceful. Remember that they told us it was
all peaceful while we watch fires happening and people being killed.

(30:39):
Just to give you an idea of who Elon Musk is,
let's go through some of the things he's going to
do in June. He's coming out with a completely driverless car.
It's going to happen in June.

Speaker 4 (30:51):
In a few months, will release unsupervised full self driving.
So the cars, the cars that people are driving right now,
the cars that you can buy from the factory, we'll
be driving around by themselves with the people in them.

Speaker 18 (31:05):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (31:06):
That we will call unsupervised full self driving, so it's
literally no one in the car on public roads. That
we'll start that in Austin in a few months in
jer and then we'll rapidly expand that.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
To the rest of the country right, so you can
go out to dinner if it's close by, and leave
your car at home and then have your car come
and pick you up. He also has a robot coming
out that looks like a human that he says is
going to be very popular. SpaceX is, of course exploring,
is going to explore the galaxy to try to make
it so life is sustainable in other planets. And then

(31:41):
he's going to help the blind see.

Speaker 4 (31:43):
And then there's a second new like device very similar
to the first one called blind Sight, which will enable
people who are blind to see, including people who have
been blind from birth.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
Wow.

Speaker 4 (31:56):
It'll interface directly with the visual cortex in the brain,
and hopefully we'll be able to do the first Blindsight
implant in a human later this year.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
And those with for instance, cerebral palsy or some type
of paralysis. He's also using noralink to help them walk,
and he said they're further ahead in that advancement than
he thought there would be. And when he was asked
at the end what he hoped his legacy would be,
of course, he had a brilliant answer that I.

Speaker 4 (32:27):
Was useful in the furtherance of civilization. I helped move
civilization forward, added to the store of knowledge and capability
that I helped understand the universe.

Speaker 1 (32:44):
And he's doing all of that, and for some reason
he is a villain. It's criminal. What's also criminal is
New Jersey Governor Phil Murphy going to Saudi Arabia to
woo them to do business with the state. You know,
Saudi Arabia, the evidence showed played a role in the
nine to eleven attacks. That's who he wants to do

(33:04):
business with. Award winning North Jersey columnist Mike Kelly has
a problem with that. He's after the seven o'clock News
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