Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Brolly.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
I appreciate you spending time with us this morning. Hope
you're having a good morning. Try to stay dry. It
is going to rain a little bit, but it shouldn't
hurt your commute. The bad stuff's going to come down
in a couple of hours. In the Big three and
explosive hearing on Capitol Hill when senators, including Connecticut Senator
Richard Blumenthal, who did not know what he was getting into,
(00:22):
tried but failed to slime Attorney General Pam Bondi.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Senator Blumenthal, I cannot believe that you would accuse me
of impropriety when you lied about your military service.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
I am.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Lunch at you lie, But dare you. I'm a career prosecutor.
Don't you ever challenge my integrity. I have abided by
every ethics standard.
Speaker 2 (00:54):
Wow. Remember Senator Blumenthal did lie about serving in Vietnam
when he never went to Vietnam. And in the hearing,
Senator Josh Hawley calls for hearings, calls for an investigation
and prosecution of those in the Biden Justice Department who
were targeting Catholics, school parents, and US senators including Josh Hawley.
Speaker 5 (01:18):
We've got nothing but concerns today, but no concern at
all for a Justice Department that is tapping the phones
of sitting United States senators because who knows why they
don't like them. They're members of the opposition party, They're Republicans,
their conservatives.
Speaker 2 (01:38):
This all came out with memorandums found by John Radcliffe
in the Biden administration and released to the public tonight.
As you just heard by from Natalie Migliori the New
Jersey guber material debate. In a race between Republicans Jack
Chittarelli and Democrat Mikey Cheryl that polls show right now
(02:01):
is a dead heat.
Speaker 6 (02:02):
Both of these candidates really need to cater to that
median voter, those voters who are in the middle, independence, nonpartisan,
swing voters, whatever you want to call them. That's the
key really for either one of them to get over
the finish line.
Speaker 2 (02:15):
Democratic mayoral candidates Zoruin mom Donnie is rightfully facing backlash
after releasing a statement condemning Israel and its war on
Hamas and in Gaza on the anniversary of the October
seventh attack, But nothing seems to stop Teflon Zoran.
Speaker 7 (02:35):
I don't know if anything will affect Assembly minimum Donnie's campaign.
I think this is just one of many examples of
anti Jewish positions that are cloaked under the veil of
anti Zionism or anti Nanyahu.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
I'll have more on this in my final thoughts. In
the meantime, federalized National Guard troops are now in Chicago
after continued attacks on ICE officers and the ICE facility there.
Speaker 4 (03:01):
Yeah, well, it's been invoked before.
Speaker 8 (03:03):
As you know, Uh, if you look at Chicago, Chicago
is a great city where there's a lot of crime,
and if the governor can't do the job, we'll do
the job.
Speaker 9 (03:11):
It's all very simple.
Speaker 2 (03:13):
When he says that's been invoked before, he was talking
about the Insurrection Act. For more on exactly what that is,
let's talk to Sarah Isker, ABC News contributor in Washington.
She's with us every Wednesday at this very time. Good morning, Sarah.
Could you explain how are you doing? Can you explain
(03:36):
the Insurrection Act to us and why it's being used
right now?
Speaker 10 (03:42):
Yes.
Speaker 11 (03:42):
So, Congress, you know, has the power to raise militias,
and Congress delegated some of that power to the president
in the Insurrection Act and basically said if there's a rebellion.
If the president's unable to enforce federal law and states
aren't going to help him, you know, local police won't
do the job. The governor is part of the problem.
(04:03):
Let's say then the president can use military in this case,
the National Guard, to enforce federal law, to do civilian
police work that they normally would never be able to do.
That would be against the law and of the Posse
Comitatis Act for those who remember the show The West Wing.
This was the name of one of the shows. However,
(04:26):
the question is who gets to decide whether there's an
invasion and does it need to be decided in good faith?
Can the president just say, looks like a rebellion to me,
I don't think the Portland police are doing enough. Or
can a judge say, look, I'm looking at all these
facts and there's just not a rebellion. You're clearly able
to enforce federal law. So that's really the question for
(04:48):
these judges. Now. Of course, the first Portland judge, a
Trump appointee, said no, there is no rebellion. The president
is fully capable of enforcing federal law here in Portland.
This is not a good thing. Invocation of the Insurrection Act,
but we got a lot more layers of federal courts.
Speaker 2 (05:05):
To go, Yeah, this is going to head to the
Supreme Court, I would guess of have they ruled on
this in the past.
Speaker 11 (05:12):
So the President did this in Los Angeles, but it
was very different facts. There was violence on the ground.
It was pretty clear in fact that Immigration and Customs
Enforcement was not able to do their jobs in Los Angeles.
And so while the lower courts in that case also
tried to prevent Donald Trump from doing that, the first court,
the district Court, even the Ninth Circuit, which is considered
(05:34):
to be a very liberal court, said, this actually looks
like a correct invocation, or at least within the president's
discretion to say that he needs military here to protect
federal buildings and enforce federal law. Portland's a much harder case.
So it is the case that the Ice Office was
shut down for three weeks at the end of June
(05:56):
to the first week in July because of protests had
hurt the building basically and ruined the key card system
to get in. But that was several several months ago.
There have not been any large skilled protests or violence
in the last certainly not days, even weeks. You'd have
to go back a couple months to find that. And
(06:16):
so part of what the judge said was like, ugh,
you know, you have a lot of discretion, but it
needs to at least be in time relatively close to
when you're trying to do this, and June just isn't
close enough.
Speaker 2 (06:27):
So the courts may be taking this. I'm talking about
the Supreme Court at this point, not the local courts,
but the Supreme Court might be taking this as a
case by case basis if it makes it up to them,
because if the Portland case makes it way its way
up to them, what you're saying is they may rule
it's not an insurrection act. But in LA and certainly
now in Chicago where somebody was killed, ice officers were
(06:52):
attacked and they did come under attack that one maybe
called an insurrection. Is that what you're saying, it's to
be case by case.
Speaker 11 (07:02):
Except that the Supreme Court hates doing.
Speaker 12 (07:04):
Case by case.
Speaker 11 (07:05):
They like to set out a rule for all of
the lower courts to follow. But that's going to be
very hard to do here for exactly the reasons you said,
facts matter, and the case by case might actually matter
as well. But I would expect the Supreme Court. I
think you're right, it could get to them to say
something like, judges, only have you know this tiny bit
of discretion, and otherwise you have to defer to the president.
(07:28):
And if we don't want to defer to the president,
that's up to Congress to change the law, not up
to courts to say, well, we don't you know this
president's kind of nuts.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Oh that is fascinating because this Court has seemed to
rail against federal judges saying anything against the president to
take it the truth at this point, but certainly trying
to to enact law over the president of the United States.
Speaker 11 (07:56):
That's exactly right. I think John Roberts for twenty years.
I mean this is by away the twentieth anniversary of
the Roberts Court this week. John Roberts from the beginning
is that he thinks judges have a very particular and
narrow lane when it comes to their jobs. You don't
get to second guest the president. You don't get to
step into his shoes and say like, well, if I
(08:17):
were president, I would not think this is a rebellion.
And I think there has been frustration from the Court
that a lot of these judges seem to think the
lower court judges seem to think that they get to
substitute their wisdom for the presidents because they don't think
he's acting in good faith. And I think what the
Supreme Court has tried to say is, you know, for
(08:38):
the most part, that's not your job. Something can be
bad morally policy wise than anything else, and it doesn't
make it unconstitutional. Not every constitutional wrong has a judicial remedy.
Speaker 2 (08:51):
Right. This is fascinating because so if Portland really doesn't
qualifies an insurrection, as the law states, they may let
that go. Oh, because it's wrapped up with Chicago and
in La and other attacks on ice facilities because they
were insurrections, and they'll just say, you can't you can't
decide the president decides. Am I right on that?
Speaker 11 (09:14):
And what you're saying, right, maybe it's not a rebellion,
but the person who gets to decide whether it's a
rebellion is totally up to the president, and there's no
judicial review of that. That is one of the possibilities
to come out of this.
Speaker 2 (09:25):
That's fascinating. Sarah Esker, ABC News contributor Washington is with
us every Wednesday at exactly this time, nine oh five.
Thank you so much, Sarah. We may now know who
Keith Urbin left Nicole Kidman for. And you're probably not
going to like the New News at all for a
whole lot of reasons. We'll tell you who it's rumored
(09:48):
to be next. Well, thanks so much for your talkbacks.
It's going to be a tough competition for the talkback
of the morning.
Speaker 13 (09:57):
This air traffic ConTroll of stuff is really something. I
guess when the tough get going, the tough get going,
I guess calling out sick, that's really something maybe they
should pull like a Ronald Reagan. You don't show up
for work, you're fired. Okay, it's really ridiculous to these people.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Right remember when he did that when they were going
to strike when they weren't allowed to strike, and he
fired everybody. Yeah, this Donald Trump, you know, you better
be careful because he's that kind of guy that would
do the exact same thing.
Speaker 14 (10:36):
So one of the big problems with the shutdown when
it comes to air traffic controllers, and just like my job,
which is an essential employee of the government, is.
Speaker 10 (10:45):
We're expected to come in do high stress jobs.
Speaker 14 (10:49):
Everybody got paid today and looked at their net pay
and we only got about sixty percent of our paycheck.
That's gonna last us two weeks and then there's no
more paychecks coming in sight.
Speaker 10 (11:00):
So people are going to just call out to save
on gas, to save for food, and to preserve for
their families.
Speaker 2 (11:06):
How about that we have both sides of the issue
right there, because a lot of times isn't that great?
Because it's perfect. A lot of times you can look
at this stuff from a couple miles away. You know,
you're up mile, you're over you're overhead of it, and
you're looking down and you're saying, oh, it should be
this way, it should be that way. When but when
somebody personalizes it and says, wait a second, how would
(11:27):
you feel if you only got sixty percent of your paycheck?
How would you feel if you missed your paycheck? It
makes you look at it a little bit differently.
Speaker 15 (11:35):
Fought for the day Reagan fired, all the air traffic controllers,
had the Air Force fill in and everything was fine.
Speaker 12 (11:43):
Why is this a problem?
Speaker 16 (11:45):
Now?
Speaker 2 (11:46):
That's the question?
Speaker 12 (11:47):
Pass it up the line.
Speaker 2 (11:50):
Yeah, it was brought the Reagan firing. Everybody was brought
up a moment ago that was a little bit different
than this situation because most the vast majority of the
air traffic controllers are not calling out sick. They know
their job is important, they know it's essential, and they're
showing up to work.
Speaker 4 (12:07):
So let me get this straight. If you're buying a
house and you have closing you don't like something, do
you say, Okay, you know what, let's just sign something
and let's finish this and we'll just negotiate later on
regarding the problem. No, you fix the problem right there,
(12:27):
and then you don't sign a dan thing.
Speaker 16 (12:29):
You know this.
Speaker 17 (12:30):
I know this.
Speaker 4 (12:31):
Stop playing games, Larry.
Speaker 8 (12:33):
No, I don't know that. This happens all the time.
It happens almost every year. They get to the end,
they have a continuing resolution to keep the government open,
and then they negotiate. I don't get what you don't
understand about that. This is what happens. This is the
(12:54):
way it's work. Democrats do it and Republicans do it.
You're they're saying, like, just fix the problem, just have
a budget that you can use for the next two years.
I agree with you, But neither side is willing to
do that or can do that. So this is what
we have. But it happens all the time.
Speaker 2 (13:19):
What you have to understand is the Democrats are doing
this just for politics this time. They want to throw
this babyfit, specifically for Chuck Schumer so he doesn't get
the left rallying against him and going for AOC when
he runs for Senate. All right, let's get to this story.
So you know about Keith Urbin and Nicole Kidman and
(13:42):
they were having problems for a while. Keith Urbin was
living away and now she's filed for divorce. Keith Aurbin
is fifty seven years old. It is rumored he's now
shacking up with a former guitarist in his group who
is twenty five.
Speaker 12 (14:00):
I told you it wasn't Nicole.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
Yep. Well here she is from years ago. This is
a podcast she was on years ago when she had
just left Keith Urban and she got a recording contract
and she's out on her own. Her name is Maggie Baugh.
Speaker 12 (14:16):
There's always been a rule you can't date the band
members because like what happens if we break up and
then true, I lost.
Speaker 18 (14:21):
The drummer, Like I can't do it.
Speaker 11 (14:23):
So the drummer's cue, I mean, they're all cue.
Speaker 2 (14:25):
Like, don't get me wrong, she's talking about back when
she was sixteen, about dating the drummer and being in
this group with Keith Urban's group. She was sixteen at
that time, and she went on to say, you know boys,
I've loved boys at that point, and everybody was trying
to date me, and everybody wanted to go out with
(14:47):
me at that time. Well, I guess Keith Urban wanted
to back then because now the rumor is hasn't been confirmed.
He is now living with Maggie Baw. His former guitarist,
Jacqueline Carl told us that was going to happen.
Speaker 12 (15:02):
Now, you should say Jacqueline Carl was right.
Speaker 2 (15:04):
Okay, Jacqueline Carl was right. Now let's get the news
at nine thirty with Jacqueline Carl Larry.
Speaker 18 (15:11):
The Senate will vote today on two measures aimed at
bringing the shutdown to an end on Monday. Both measures
fell short of the sixty votes needed, but Senate Majority
Leader John Thune said the Chamber will keep voting on
the bills. About seven hundred and fifty thousand federal workers
have been furloughed because of the shutdown. The candidates and
the race for New Jersey governor will go at it
(15:31):
in their final debate tonight, with less than a month
to go until election day.
Speaker 9 (15:36):
Republican Jack Chitderelli and Democrat Mikey Cheryl will square off
at the New Brunswick Performing Arts Center from seven until eight.
Topics that could come up include rising electric bills, taxes,
affordability in housing. In the first debate, Cheryl blamed the
Trump Administration's tariffs and Trump's Big Beautiful Bill for rising
costs in New Jersey. Chitdarelli says Democrats who have been
in control of New Jersey in recent years have led
(15:58):
to a higher cost of living in the state. I'm
Scottpringle wr.
Speaker 12 (16:01):
News, so wait till you hear how this robber was caught.
Speaker 18 (16:04):
According to Yahoo News and East Saint Louis Mann has
been arrested after being identified by his underwear. Police alleged
that Lasain Whitney robbed a Dave's Hot Chicken location in Chesterfield, Missouri. Allegedly,
Whitney entered the office of the restaurant with a pistol
and tried to make off with the bank bag filled
with cash. After getting a statement and description from the
(16:26):
restaurant manager, police were able to catch up with their suspect,
who they say was wearing the exact same true religion
undies that were seen earlier in surveillance video.
Speaker 12 (16:37):
You know, these guys show their underwear like they have
their pants real.
Speaker 18 (16:41):
If only he followed the number one rule after a heist,
change your underpants.
Speaker 12 (16:46):
Didn't your mother tell you that?
Speaker 2 (16:49):
No, of all the things she told me, I didn't
get that.
Speaker 18 (16:52):
Run Well, anyway, let's head over to Wall Street at
the opening bell. The opening bell is sponsored by Dime
Community Bank. We've got your bank, coming to Lakewood, New
Jersey in twenty twenty six, but serving New York for
over one hundred and sixty years. The Dow opened up
sixty five points, the SNP opened up eleven points, and
the Nasdaq opened up seventy four points.
Speaker 2 (17:15):
Thanks a lot, Jacqueline. Today's tough job market is real.
What really can set you apart in your resume right now?
Is it your resume or is something else setting you back?
Career expert Greg g and Grande breaks it all down next,
and now let's talk about my favorite radio, the CC
three radio. It is amazing. It has an exceptional by
(17:38):
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at the kitchen table there with you. It has AMFM.
(17:58):
It also has a Noah weather band that has a
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It's it would have come in handy when I had
(18:20):
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(18:46):
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call Sea Crane at eight hundred five two to two
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(19:07):
two two eight eight sixty three. This is also available
on Amazon dot com. You know, we talked with Greg
Gangrande last week about resumes. But it is such an
important topic and I've heard from so many people. Why
is my resume failing? I keep sending it out and
(19:28):
I'm not getting any bites whatsoever. It was such an
important topic. We're going to continue the conversation this week.
Greg Giangrande is career advice expert with us every Wednesday
at this time. You can check them out on go
to Greg dot com. And I just want to make
sure Greg that people that weren't listening last week don't
(19:49):
get the information that we said last week. So one
of the most important things you said, if we can
summarize some of that from last week, is that resumes.
I thought this was a great line. Are like fishing bait.
Speaker 10 (20:04):
Yes, there's nothing wrong. And I have another analogy, another metaphor.
It's like a golf club, right, it's a tool. I
am a hacker, and every time I mishit a ball,
I keep looking at the club saying what's wrong with
this club? Because I never ever hit the ball well?
And then my friend picks up my club and hits
(20:25):
a shot three hundred yards straight down the fairway with
the same club. It's not the tool, it's the person
and how they're using it. A resume is just a tool,
and it all it can do is clarify for a
reviewer what you have done in your career. So it's
(20:47):
a resume, and how you put one together may not
you may not be doing it in a way that
puts your best foot forward. But at the end of
the day, right, what you have done in your career
is the only thing that matters to an employer, and
the resume is just a tool that helps tell that
story in a very succinct way. So it's how you
(21:12):
use it and where you send it, and that determines
how effective it can be, whether you use a bait
analogy or a golf club analogy.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
Right, And maybe we could summarize this for people to
make it very simple, because I know so many people
who are frustrated they keep sending their resumes out, that
keep going to the job sites and putting their resume
up there and they get nothing, nothing at all. And
you can imagine how you feel when that happens month
after month after month. So maybe there's just one or
(21:45):
two things that you could tell people that will make
their resume stand out.
Speaker 10 (21:52):
Yes, so there are a few things. First, it is
not uncommon to send your resume to a job and
not hear anything, and many job postings because the volume
that employers are receiving the amount of competition just makes
that method of looking for a job the least effective.
(22:16):
You should do it, but don't get demoralized by not
getting good responses because very few people get really good
responses just because of the volume of resumes that are
going across the transom, So don't be discouraged by the
lack of response.
Speaker 1 (22:36):
It's not unusual.
Speaker 10 (22:37):
However, the things you can do to make your resume
have a better chance in that method of getting reviewed
and you getting a callback are really very simple. One is,
you can't have one resume for every job you're applying
for unless you have created a resume that is specifically
(23:00):
targeted to that job, and you are applying to the
same type of job everywhere. You must tailor the content
on your resume to the specific job, and that means
putting the most relevant experience that you have in your career,
the most relevant accomplishments at the top of the resume.
(23:22):
So even if it's a job that was two or
three jobs ago, you don't have to follow a chronological
order if your current job isn't most directly related to
what you're applying for versus the job you had two
jobs ago. Yes, it's the most relevant information first, and
using the keywords from the job description in your resume
(23:47):
to describe what you did.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
You know, it's funny. I talked to some people who
have been searching for jobs and I told them, you
said that, And I said to them, you have to
put the keywords from the job description in there. You've
got to make sure you don't send at the same
resume each time. And they went, I did that. I
did that. I just don't think that this is the
best way to find a job. So you're an expert
on this. If it's not sending out a resume, what
(24:11):
is the best way. How do you get the attention
of someone like you that you can make the list
of potential candidates.
Speaker 10 (24:21):
Yes, so great question. First of all, it is not
the best way, So we're establishing that. So that's why
people shouldn't over index when they're job searching just sending
out resumes, But you should do it because you never know.
What is most effective is targeting a specific company and
(24:41):
trying to find someone in your network who knows someone
at that company. It comes back to the age old thing,
and that's networking somehow, some way in your network. Try
to find someone who knows someone at the company you
want to work for, and send a letter and a
resume to that person and be specific, specific about not
(25:06):
that you're just looking for a job. You want to
get my attention. Tell me why you want to work
You sought me out, Tell me why you want to
work for my company, and why you want to work
for me. That will get my attention versus a random
resume that comes over the internet from someone who is
(25:29):
looking for a job. That's how you stand out.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
Of all the people you've hired in the past, how
many of you hired just from a resume.
Speaker 10 (25:38):
You got rarely?
Speaker 2 (25:41):
And how many have you hired from somebody telling you
about them that they they rave about this person, someone
that works at your company and comes and gives a recommendation.
Speaker 10 (25:52):
Or someone from my network not necessarily at the company. Okay,
mostly it is is hiring is such a difficult process,
and the vetting of people you don't know or don't
have any background, Like even the best vetting at best
(26:13):
companies get it right fifty percent of the time. That
increases dramatically, which is why so many companies have employee
referral programs where they will pay people a bonus if
they refer someone. Because rather than sifting through thousands of
anonymous resumes, someone who works at the company, who knows
(26:35):
what it's like to work at the company, what it
takes to be successful at the company, sending someone that
they recommend goes to the very top of the list.
Those are the people every company is looking for.
Speaker 2 (26:47):
First, Greg, this is tremendous information because I know a
lot of people are out there because I know some
of them personally. I know a lot of people that
are out there are getting very frustrated and you may
have just ended their frustration. Appreciate it. Greg g and
Grande Career advice expert with us every Wednesday at this time.
By the way, you can check them out and ask
(27:08):
him your own questions at go to Greg dot com.
Talk to you again next week. Greg, Thanks a lot,
Thank you, Larry. When we come back my final thoughts,
We're gonna have a recap of today's show and of
course the talk back of the morning as.
Speaker 18 (27:23):
We wind up another Minti in the morning on wor
Let's get some final thoughts from Larry.
Speaker 2 (27:31):
For all of the Jewish New Yorkers who are telling
the pollsters that they're going to vote for the anti
Semites or in Mamdannie and there's a lot of them.
A Muslim candidate from Uganda who has called in the
past for the destruction of Israel and says now I
was only kidding. And there's a lot of those Jewish
New Yorkers who are voting for Mom Donnie almost half
(27:53):
according to the polls. How could they talk about talk
about self hating Jews. Maybe what he did yesterday will
be so repulsive to them that they'll change their mind.
On October seventh, when all of our thoughts go to
(28:14):
the memory of two years ago when Hamas unleashed horror
in Israel, killing children, raping and mutilating women, brutally killing
one hundred and ninety five Israelis and taking two hundred
and fifty one hostages, causing enduring pain and horror for
their families. Ninety five of those hostages died in captivity,
(28:39):
forty eight are still being held, only twenty are believed
to be alive. I'm reminding you all about this so
you can be revolted just like me by this statement
put out yesterday on the anniversary of the Hamas terror
attack by zorin Mamdani, where he ignored what happened on
(29:01):
October seventh and instead he mourned for the lives lost
of those in Gaza and wrote, quote, the occupation and
apartheid must end. That's who you want, is Mayor, someone
with so much hate in their heart that he can't
(29:21):
even acknowledge the terror attack of October seventh. On October seventh,
it revolts me, and I'm not Jewish. If you are
in New York jew and you're supporting mom Donnie, it's
time for you to do some serious soul searching and
take a long look in the mirror. Coming up next,
(29:45):
Mark Simone welcomes Boston radio host Howie car and best
selling author and Coulter. Plus listen for the keyword after
the ten o'clock news, Then head to seven to ten
WR dot com for your chance at a thousand dollars
now a recap of today's show. ABC News correspondent Jordana
Miller in Jerusalem shared the latest on the ongoing peace
(30:09):
talks in the Middle East.
Speaker 19 (30:11):
We haven't been this close to a deal since last January,
and all the main players are now in Charmelzek in
that coastal town on the Egyptian Red Sea.
Speaker 2 (30:27):
High profile criminal defense attorney Jeffrey Lickman believes Zorin Mamdani
was fully aware of the reaction to his comments about
Israel and what they would provoke especial reason on the
anniversary of October seven.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Well, the reason he's doing it is obvious because he
knows that he'll get him more votes. I mean, he
could have kept his mouth shut is to try to
protect him if he felt that it would cost them votes.
But he knows that New York City is far left,
is very antisemitic, so he knows that the more jew
hate that he spoos, the more votes he's gonna kids.
Speaker 2 (31:02):
ABC News Transportation reporter Clara McMichael broke down how the
government shutdown is disrupting air travel.
Speaker 17 (31:10):
We saw the start Monday when Burbank Airport in California
had no air traffic controllers, and then yesterday we saw
thousands more delays and staffing issues. But experts say that
the longer the shutdown goes, the worst these issues could become.
Now again, there are over ten thousand controllers that are
still working, but even these few exacerbate the issue, and
that's what we're starting to see unfold.
Speaker 2 (31:32):
Political analyst J. C. Polonko swapped politics for baseball, sharing
a few nostalgic memories from his days as a Yankees
bat boy in the nineties.
Speaker 16 (31:44):
I was a former Yankee bat boy. Do you believe
that or not? There were great guys. We had Derek
Jeter's first year, who Hipposada's first year. We had Darryl
Strawberry on the team. But you know, very few guys
will ever be as nice as Di Mattingly. That guy
was just amazing. You've ever heard about Wade bogs being
a scary guy is absolutely true.
Speaker 2 (32:06):
Now, he went on to tell us that Wade Boggs,
remember he was a batboy, and he was a bat
boy for both sides. He would, you know, he'd switch
back and forth when Wade Boggs was playing against the Yankees.
Boggs accused him of stealing his chicken.
Speaker 12 (32:22):
Like not a chicken, it was a pet, like a lunch.
Speaker 2 (32:25):
Yes, of eating his chicken. He never told us, however,
if he really did steal the chicken.
Speaker 12 (32:33):
He said he didn't, So we're gonna believe him.
Speaker 2 (32:35):
We're gonna have to ask him. We'll press him next time.
This morning, I shared that I am not a believer
in ghosts. This listener tried to convince me I was wrong.
He's our talk Back in the Morning and winner of
the Mentee and the Morning t shirt.
Speaker 15 (32:52):
I been on a ghost tour in cal Galveston, Texas,
and we actually tied the record for the most ghost
scene on a tour, not only there, anywhere in the
world with zero.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
I still think that's funny. And don't forget the best
talk back of the week takes Alm the Sea Crane Radio.
Sea Crane Radios deliver the reception and clarity you deserve.
Make sure you check out our podcast and catch up
on all the things you might have missed. All four
hours of the show are there. Just go to seven
to ten war dot com and click the podcast. Habits
That Easy Tomorrow and Menti in the Morning. Can the
(33:26):
Yankee stay alive. We'll also break down the New Jersey
governor's debate here from wor's White House correspondent John Decker,
and get expert tech advice from Rich DeMuro. And don't
miss your shot at tickets for the New York Wine
and Food Festival at A twenty five. Here's the news.
(33:46):
It's ten o'clock.