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May 27, 2025 33 mins
Where's Biden's staff at? 
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Well as always, thanks for being here on a Tuesday
morning after a long weekend. Hope you enjoyed it. I
hope you had a chance to remember those who keep
us free and made the ultimate sacrifice so that could happen.
In the Big Three, Donald Trump is growing tired of
Vladimir Putin, who is talking piece all the time, but

(00:21):
his actions, well they say otherwise.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
I'm not happy with what Putin's doing. He's killing a
lot of people, and I don't know what the hell
happened to bouton. I've known him a long time, always
gotten along with him, but he's sending rockets into cities
and killing people, and I don't like it at all.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
Okay, Well, Trump's big beautiful bill made it through the
House fine, and now it's headed to the Senate, where
there are some Republicans who don't like the price tag.
I support spending cuts. I think the cuts current and
the bill are whimpy and anemak, but I still would
support the bill even with.

Speaker 3 (00:58):
Whimpy and anima cuts if they weren't going to explode
the debt.

Speaker 1 (01:03):
Well, the Lion of Lenox, once powerful New York City
Congressman Charlie Wrangele is dead at the age of ninety four.
He was brilliant, bold, funny, fearless all at once. The
list of his accomplishments could fill pages. At the Jersey Shore,
several shore communities, it was a wild and dangerous weekend,

(01:27):
seventy arrest in Seaside Heights alone, three stabbings there, with
police and politicians now searching for some kind of solution.
I don't know if there's a solution. When you have
that amount of people, how is there a solution, you know?

Speaker 4 (01:43):
I mean, you can only have so many policemen, so
much safety that you can try and have.

Speaker 1 (01:50):
And this is just horrible news. Billy Joel cancels his
tour for the summer after announcing he has a brain
disorder called NPH normal pressure hydrocephalus.

Speaker 5 (02:04):
This is a form of dimension It can be treatable,
potentially reversible, but national organizations suspect about eighty percent of
people with this condition go undiagnosed because it can't mimic
other conditions such as Alzheimer's or parkasses.

Speaker 1 (02:18):
And how about those Nicks.

Speaker 6 (02:21):
Were gonna.

Speaker 1 (02:23):
Ye stay alive by coming back from a twenty point
deficit in Boston excuse me, not in Boston in Indianapolis
to win one oh six to one hundred, but still
trail in the series two to one. I love the
Boston series so much I can't get it off my mind.

(02:43):
Now let's get to Rich Lowry, editor in chief of
the National Review. I loved your article, and I'm sure
you've written a couple about the cover up in the
White House. Rich, I know they're talking about hearings, but
I hope these heres are serious, because this Rich, I
think you agree, is a major scandal.

Speaker 7 (03:07):
Yeah, I think it's one of the worst frauds. It's
not the worst fraud that's been attempted upon the American
public in the modern era. And it's good that the
truth now can be told. At least we're learning much more.
But it's only because now Biden is inconvenient to them.
As long as he is useful. They're maintaining that we're
all making it up, and he was fine, he could
serve another eight years, which is completely caposterous, and the

(03:31):
public recognized.

Speaker 8 (03:32):
It as such.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
You know what's amazing all of these people and if
there's a cover up, you know who the people are
that would have been involved in that who were in
there the most, including the chief of staff, they're all gone.
They've disappeared normally after somebody leaves office. You see them
on TV all the time. You haven't seen anybody including KJP.

Speaker 7 (03:55):
Yeah, yeah, and now now Tapper in his book that
the press staff was kind of out of the loop.
But still, how in the loop do you need to
be like, we weren't in the loop. We were like
you know, in Pluto in terms of the loop, and
we knew right right exactly. She was watching them every day,
and she said that she had trouble keeping up with them.

(04:16):
She's extremely that she runs like four or five miles
a day and she's half his age, and really she
had trouble keeping up with them. It was just insane
lies for start to finish.

Speaker 1 (04:28):
No, and it was constant, and it was dangerous. You know,
this isn't this isn't funny. And so many people like
to make fun of them and call them the zombie
and chief and all of that, but this is really dangerous.
This is a national security issue. And I'm shocked that
it's taken so long to have hearings on this. I
know there's other things going on, but you know, some

(04:50):
people like James Comber, they can they can walk and
chew gum at the same time. These should have already started.

Speaker 7 (04:57):
Yeah, it's it's terrible and a sense against the public
in a couple of different ways. One they're deceiving the
public about the choice they wanted them to make for president.
And two, you elect a president of the United States,
is the American public. You don't elect some secretive committee
to act as president of the United States. And the
time went on, that's more and more what we would

(05:19):
have had, and certainly what we would have had in
Biden's second term got forbidded.

Speaker 1 (05:23):
Yeah, and that's exactly why there needs to be hearings,
because there needs to be accountability. People at least have
to be shamed, if not charged, so that future presidents
because if this can happen now, you know, just get
some puppet that you're going to run and have some
other people running the government. That's not the way this
country is supposed to work. And if we don't say

(05:46):
no to it now, it could happen again.

Speaker 7 (05:49):
Yeah, I mean there's some comfort in that it didn't work, right,
the large majorities of the public that he wasn't suited
to run to the president or second term majorities towards
the ends thought he was going to die in office,
so they didn't get away with us. So I think
the incentives are to not attempt this again. But the
sad truth is usually high level politics, they don't tell

(06:12):
you the truth about the prime minister or the president's health.
And we've seen it again and again in this country.
Woodrow Wilson FDR in nineteen forty four. JFKO was desperately
ill despite the image of youthful vigor and now Joe Biden.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
But all the people you mentioned that wasn't mental incapabilities,
you know, they they were physical and that you're right,
they were all hidden. But that's a lot different.

Speaker 7 (06:38):
Yeah, JFK reading three books to day. Yeah, that's that's true.
And FDR was going to die and they did keep
that from the public, So that was that was not
good in nineteen forty four. But even the statesman in
American history, and no one's ever going to say that, Agadblife.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
There's another part of this story, and that's the media
and the hypocrisy of Jake Tapper of being out in
front of this right now, somebody had a great line
the other day that I hadn't thought of. He said,
you know, we all knew, everybody in the country knew
what was going on. And and that's what it's why
it's so bad to cover what was so bad. It's
a horrible cover up because they had to put him

(07:14):
out there. But they said they needed one thing from
Jake Tapper's book, just one thing, and it was the
one thing he didn't provide. The names.

Speaker 7 (07:25):
Yeah, and look, he wasn't the worst offender, but but
but he poured scorn on the idea that that Biden
wasn't it to run again, and people on his network
were terrible and gave previce the idea of the cheap
fake Dana Dash. When that same video came out of
Biden freezing up at the fundraiser, said the sting distorted

(07:51):
about it at all and he didn't recognize George Plenty and.

Speaker 6 (07:54):
It went.

Speaker 1 (07:58):
She went, Hey, Rich, Rich, we just have a horrible
phone line right now, and I think once you call back,
I think we gotta we gotta let you go for
one second. I will tell you this. You know, Rich
just said a moment ago, Jake Tapper wasn't the worst
and that's true. He wasn't the worst, but he was
pretty bad. He was pretty bad, and anybody that was

(08:19):
involved in it in the media. I hope that there
is some accountability for them too. That can't come from
a hearing, of course, because freedom of the press, but
it should come internally and it should come from the bosses.
I mean, whatever happened to the guy from CNN who
came in and lectured the newsroom, lectured the newsroom on

(08:42):
you know, we have to be less biased. Remember right
before the inaugural no bringing up any of the chargers.
We're past that now he is president of the United States.
There was an edict then, there was an edict not
to be who you were, not to be as biased
as you were, not to be in the tank for

(09:06):
the Democrats. Okay, now Rich Lowry's back. Rich, we don't
have a lot of time. Do you want to just
sum this up?

Speaker 9 (09:14):
It was terrible.

Speaker 7 (09:15):
It was terrible when they got caught and I was
slowly learning the truth.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Yeah, it was terrible. It was terrible, But I guess
maybe we should have seen it coming. I mean, the
way that the campaign was handled, the way they handled
presidents in the past, the way they have been so
biased when it comes to the Democrats. Not only was
there a cover up in the White House, but they
knew they could get away with it because of the media,

(09:40):
don't you think.

Speaker 7 (09:42):
Yeah, the media was an enabler. And by the way,
we all saw this in twenty nineteen the Democratic primary debates.
Biden was not good then and lapsed into passages of
incoherence when he was speaking. So the public got this
all along. And as the Democrats in the media, what
they really did was they delude it themselves. The public
didn't buy it.

Speaker 1 (10:03):
Oh that's a tremendous point. Thanks so much, Rich Lowry,
editor in chief of the National Review. We'll talk to
you next week on a better phone line.

Speaker 7 (10:10):
All right, thanks so much.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
TA with you then. Who knew legendary NFL coach Bill
Belichick was such a chick magnet. His ex gets into
a spat at h and the coach's current girlfriend at
an exclusive party. The two of them were fighting, and
now a promoter wants them both to settle this in
the ring. We'll talk to him next and please keep

(10:32):
leaving the talkbacks for your chance to win a mentee
in the morning T shirt. Well, thanks so much for
your talkbacks. You do make the show and you could
win talk Back of the Morning.

Speaker 10 (10:45):
You are one right, Latitia James is guilty as sin.
The first clip is her speaking the way she likes
to speak, all adam it and the second clip is
her getting advice from her lawyers or pr.

Speaker 1 (11:01):
So that's one another talkback.

Speaker 11 (11:03):
Oh, Larry, Larry, Larry. Congestion pricing isn't about congestion. It's
about money, money, money, money for the MTA, not about congestion. Think,
the Inflation Reduction Act wasn't about reducing inflation. It was
about the Green New Deal. So it's all about how

(11:23):
they phrase it.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Yeah, that was about money, money, money too. Anyway, man,
it's gonna be tough to pick the talk back of
the day. Let's talk about what happened a few weeks
ago that's just getting out now. At a party where
Bill Belichick's current girlfriend and his ex met. It was

(11:47):
Jordan Hudson current girlfriend, past girlfriend, Linda Holliday, who is
you know, has some power in celebrity circles, and she
saw Jordan Hudson the party with a friend who, by
the way, was Miss Massachusetts, and she told her she
had to leave. It was a big fight in front
of everybody. She said to her friend, who is the

(12:09):
current Miss Massachusetts. I know, people, I'm going to have
your crown pulled from you. And it was a big
to do. They finally left. But here's the thing. You know,
there's some bad blood here, some really bad blood. And
so there's an offer on the table now for Jordan
Hudson and Linda Holliday to meet in the ring and

(12:33):
fight it out. And that offer has come from a
guy I know very well, Damon Feldman. Damon Feldman is
the founder and the owner of Celebrity Boxing. Damon, Hi,
I'm doing really well. Talk about this offer?

Speaker 9 (12:54):
Yeah, man, I heard it went down and my man
from TMZ, Mike Babcock, reached out out and he said,
did you hear about this? I didn't hear about it,
but then you know, he told me a little more
about it. I was like, I just has to happen,
come on, and then we put it. You know, they
did a story and you know, it just makes sense,
you know, to battle it out. Then, you know, and

(13:16):
Bill Belichick, you know, I guess you know he's gonna
have to pick, you know, who he really wants here.

Speaker 1 (13:22):
Now, have you heard from them at all since the.

Speaker 9 (13:24):
Offer I would get. I mean, we always get flooded
with emails after this, but we have a lot of
message I didn't check through all of them, so I
haven't heard from anyone direct. But it's probably, you know,
a good possibility things like this could happen.

Speaker 1 (13:40):
You never know in this business, a good possibility. I
would think this this, well, mate, you know more about
this than I do, but I would think there's no
shot in hell those two we're going to get in
a ring?

Speaker 9 (13:53):
You never know. Well, listen, that's the whole thing with this.
So if they were about to go to blows in this,
I heard that or heard they were the massive argument,
you know, then settle in the ring, three women around.
That's what that's what this is about.

Speaker 1 (14:09):
You know, people should know this isn't You're not a
fly by night organization. You've made money off of this.
You've been doing this for a long time? How long?

Speaker 9 (14:17):
No? Yeah, man, it's been twenty three years. Wow, So
you know that would Dick Card Production's Foxes. My first
ever one was two local Philadelphia guys. I don't know.
I might have tried to get you in it. At
some time, at some point you or you're always my man.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Now yeah, no, I you know, so if it happens,
you're gonna call us right if you if this fight
were to happen, you're going to break it here on
w R.

Speaker 9 (14:49):
Yeah my word for you, Larry, I'm gonna do that.

Speaker 1 (14:51):
Yes, perfect, Damon Feldman. Good luck to you. Uh, you've
You've had a long career doing this, so if anybody
can pull it off, you Ken.

Speaker 9 (14:59):
Thanks a lot, absolutely, thank you, miss boy.

Speaker 1 (15:02):
It was great to talk to him. He's had some
he's had some names, not not huge names, but he's
had some big names. But look, Damon knows how to promote.
He's a boxing promoter first and foremost more than anything else.
And he has gotten a lot of publicity on this.
I'm sure the Post had it. Johnny Olazinski's here, I'm
sure the Post had it in there as well. Now

(15:23):
let's get the news at nine to thirty with Jacqueline
Carl Jacklin.

Speaker 12 (15:26):
Good Morning, US Special Envoy Steve Whitkoff says Hamas needs
to accept a ceasefire deal with Israel. In comments made
to CNN, Witcoff said the deal would see the release
of half of the living hostages and half of those
who died in exchange for a ceasefire that would lead
to talks and the war in Gaza. And a second
suspect accused of torturing an Italian man and a New

(15:48):
York City apartment, has turned himself into authorities.

Speaker 13 (15:51):
William Duplessi was with his lawyers when he's surrendered to
the NYPD's Major K Squad Detectives Unit. Duplessi is business
partners with thirty seven years old John Waltz, known as
the Crypto King of Kentucky, who allegedly held the Italian
man in former business partner captive inside his sixth story
townhouse for more than two weeks, torturing him for a
crypto account password. Waltz was arraigned and held without bail Saturday,

(16:14):
and he's charged with kidnapping, unlawful imprisonment, and assault. Natalie
mcgliori War News, So when do you.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
Hear this next story?

Speaker 12 (16:22):
According to The Daily Mail in Russia, a mother known
only by the first name of Svetlana, which is by
the way, my spine name, has been detained by authorities
after she allegedly hired a contract killer to take out.

Speaker 1 (16:37):
Her twelve year old daughter.

Speaker 12 (16:38):
Reports say Setlana paid the hit man around twelve hundred dollars.
I guess it's pretty common there. If that's all it
costs to have her drowned because she was fed up
with the constant arguing between them.

Speaker 1 (16:51):
Well, now it all makes sense.

Speaker 12 (16:53):
The daughter is said to have overheard her mom's plan,
but things backfired with the man paid to do the job,
promised to project protect the girl, and went to the
police instead, which is a hard sell because what does
he do? Goes and says, Okay, yeah, I am a
hired contract killer, but I draw the line at twelve
year olds, so please take her, and I'm just gonna
go out and keep killing adults for money.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
At least he has morals.

Speaker 12 (17:17):
Thank god. I mean, I guess everyone's redeemable in some way,
shape or form. Anyway, let's head over to Wall Street
at the opening bell. All right, so the Dow has
opened three hundred ninety four points, SNP opened up seventy points,
and the Nasdaq opened up two hundred and ninety five points,
so they're all up right now.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Great, thanks so much, Jacqueline carl And guess what the
American Music Awards are back, So how were they received? Well,
Johnny Oldaczinski will tell us New York Post entertainment critic
he's next time for Johnny Olazinsky from the New York Post,
the entertainment critic. Good morning, Johnny, how are you? Oh?

Speaker 14 (17:53):
You know, it's Tuesday after Memorial Day. I'm great. I
can barely lift my head off this table.

Speaker 1 (18:00):
His head is actually on the table right now. There's
a little bit of drool. Hey, last night was the
American Music Awards. That's great. They haven't been around for
a couple of years.

Speaker 14 (18:10):
How were they So a lot of big stars skipped
it and one small star skipped it, and that's me.
But I was looking at the responses today and the
big winner, Billie Eilish, she didn't go. She was touring
in Europe. Taylor Swift, who people wanted to make a
big announcement about some song, didn't go. Beyonce didn't go,

(18:32):
eminem One didn't go. So what you're left with is
a bunch of trashy people from Instagram who you know,
a few people have heard of that are you know,
wearing scantily clad dresses propping up what a wordchi? They
probably shouldn't exist.

Speaker 1 (18:47):
Yeah, I was wondering, like Gloria Stefan was the big finale, right,
I mean, I love her, she's great, but she hasn't
had a hit in decades.

Speaker 14 (18:57):
Yeah, it was all very nineteen ninety five. So j
Loo hosted and at the beginning she did a twenty
six song medley of the nominees' hits, sort of emphasizing
the fact that, hey, none of the nominees came, so
you're left with me. And a lot of people were
I won't say outrage, but a lot of them were
saddened that during a big number, Jlo started making out

(19:19):
with her background dancers of all genders, and it kind
of hearkening back to Madonna. And they say, oh, it's
so sad, so pathetic, this ploy at relevance from j Loo.
But you're right, we had Janet Jackson, Gloria Stefan, Gwen Stefani.
It was really a time machine, not necessarily a time machine.
I want to board.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
You know what's funny about it? I guess not funny,
but they I heard today, I heard it back. After
two years. It was back and they were toweling it
on their network. Of course, how much fun it was,
but I didn't miss it. I didn't know it was
going for two years.

Speaker 14 (19:55):
They always do this, So when the Golden Globes were canceled,
somewhat egregiously came ansel. But when they were canceled, I
was really happy because I thought, oh gosh, there's another
weekend in January for me to sleep in, relax. People
don't really want to watch these I think we all
think that we're oversaturated with award shows. We're watching celebrities
behinded prizes all the time constantly. That's all they do.

(20:17):
They do that more than they make things.

Speaker 1 (20:19):
Yeah, that's true, and they usually show up, especially if
they think they're gonna win, they usually are there. This
is really an indictment of the American Music Awards that
they think of it so little. They're not even showing up,
and they love this kind of stuff.

Speaker 14 (20:35):
Yeah, I now am okay with the Grammys. I think
they've gotten their act together. I usually enjoy watching that.
The MTV Awards, who cares vm as, there's just a
million of them. The Country Music Awards, there's an award
show for every single thing.

Speaker 1 (20:51):
Yeah, you know, you're right, you know it's funny obvious.
Just looking at one of your notes here and the
words scorched Earth always get me. I go right to that.
Patty Lapone, scorched Earth, she's unleashed on Broadway.

Speaker 14 (21:04):
Yeah, I love her because I don't love a phony.
I don't like people that pretend to be something else.
I only would someone acts classy and then you go
to the bar with them and they say the nastiest
things you've ever heard. I don't like that. But Patti
Lapone just says it like it is, at least as
far as she's concerned, and a lot of people. She
did this interview in The New Yorker very long. It

(21:24):
will take you forty five minutes to read it, but
you should because it's dishy and oh, she says Audrey McDonald,
who's in Gypsy and is nominated for the Tony. She
says she is not a friend. She went after Glenn Close,
called Glenn Close the B word because of their old
scuttle of Sunset Boulevard in the nineties.

Speaker 1 (21:43):
It's just Oh.

Speaker 14 (21:44):
She dated Kevin Klein, and she called him a lethario
who mistreated her. It's one thing mistreated in the sense
that he when they were Juilliard, he kept going with
other women and dangling her along. But she just says
it in the most vitriolic, venomous possible way, which I
find delicious. Will she ever work again?

Speaker 1 (22:05):
That's the luck?

Speaker 2 (22:07):
No.

Speaker 1 (22:07):
I love a great scorched Darth interview, but you're saying
this is normal for her.

Speaker 14 (22:13):
It is and what I miss I missed these kind
of people, and I'm sure you have encountered plenty of them,
the old school celebrity that really felt like they had
nothing to lose, someone like a Betty Davis, not that
you ever encountered Betty Davis, but they'd give these interviews
where they were just kind of say the worst possible
thing about their co stars. Now, because of public relations

(22:36):
and marketing and social media, young celebrities are so buttoned up,
so perfect, so boring, and that's why we don't like them,
and they're they're just kind of waste, pretty wastes of time.

Speaker 1 (22:48):
Yeah, well they all went through PR training now, Yeah,
and that's the first one of the first things they
go through. In the past, nobody cared about.

Speaker 14 (22:54):
They're just vapid, vacuous chipmunks. Whereas people like Patty you know,
she tells it like it as goes from the.

Speaker 1 (23:01):
Gut that bid vacuous chipmunks. I like that a lot.
So you told me that Leelo Stitch wasn't very good,
and yet everybody I know that saw it loved it.

Speaker 14 (23:14):
Okay, these Disney live action things. Has there ever been
a Disney live action remake that is as good as
the original cartoon?

Speaker 1 (23:24):
No? Apparently and Stitch. No.

Speaker 14 (23:28):
If someone driving thinks that that they are wrong, send
one of those talkbacks. I hear so much about.

Speaker 1 (23:35):
What.

Speaker 9 (23:35):
You know.

Speaker 14 (23:35):
What they've done is they take a very colorful, fun
eighty minutes and they turn it into a kind of
sad docu drama where they drain it of color. They
you know what happens in Leelo and Stitch. There's a
little Hawaiian girl and she's raised by her eighteen year
old sister after their parents die. In the live action
movie that they're told that they have to go get

(23:56):
health insurance way to ruin childhood. Why are we giving
kids harsh lessons, you know, when they're six years old.
I don't think we need to do that. I think
we can just go watch a cartoon girl hang out
with an alien and that'll be cute. The reason it's
doing so well, by the way, is because Stitch is
like a walking, talking toy. Little kids love that thing.

(24:17):
When I saw it, a little kid yelled by Stitch.
So it's a mix of little kids who love it
and then sad, sad millennials.

Speaker 1 (24:24):
Oh, that's adorable by Stitch. They said, I'm sure you
thought that was adorable at the time.

Speaker 14 (24:29):
Yeah, there's nothing I love more than little kids talking
during Movies' so cute. But then sad millennials who are
nostalgic for the days. The millennials love to and fanalize themselves,
so they go see movies that are meant for ten
year olds. So that's why people like Leelo and Stack.

Speaker 1 (24:45):
Most of the people take their kids. To be fair,
there's no did you see adults going to see Lelo
and Stitch without kids?

Speaker 14 (24:52):
The demographics that they published and Variety today say a
lot of single adult millennials went to see that movie.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Isn't that no? I agree with you, see a therapist.
It made three hundred and forty million dollars.

Speaker 14 (25:05):
Congratulations, that's that's that's great for Disney.

Speaker 1 (25:09):
So you're gonna have Alilo and Stitch two and Alilo
and Stitch three and a Liedo and Stitch ad nauseum.

Speaker 14 (25:15):
Oh my god. And I'm about to tender my resignation
and you have to go see them all. I see
every you know, there's nothing weirder by the way. Then,
So I'm I am a thirty five year old male,
single male, and when I go to these kid movies
and they're yes, they're press performances, but everyone else is invited,
you know, they bring their kids, and oh the way,

(25:37):
I I have my notebook out as big as possible
to know it. I'm I am not a creep. I'm
Richard Nixon. I am not a creep. I am just
doing my job seeing this stupid kids movie.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
Okay, I'd love to see the reaction you get. People
are like pulling their child on the other side of
them to stay away from you.

Speaker 14 (25:55):
That's how That's how it feels. Absolutely, So I just
make sure I take the biggest note Bad Possible.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
Mission Impossible. I feel bad about Mission Impossible because I
like Tom Cruise. I think he saved Hollywood with Top
Gun two, and now he comes out with Mission Impossible.
He announces this is going to be the last one
he does all these stunts. I was told that the
last half hour is tremendous and it gets beat badly
by Lelo and Stitch.

Speaker 14 (26:21):
It got beaten badly by Lelo and Stitch. But it's
the best franchise performance ever from a Mission Impossible movie.
Seventy seven million domestic, I think one ninety one globally, it's.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
The best ever. Yeah.

Speaker 14 (26:33):
The thing about Mission Impossible, and it makes sense when
you think about it, is that it's the audience skews
to men over fifty because of the TV show, even
though it's now this long running actions so Mission Impossible.
I think it will do well. It probably won't make
the billion it needs to, but they're happy with it
at bear amount.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Anything coming up on Broadway we should know about.

Speaker 14 (26:53):
Well, the Tony Awards were two weeks away, and people
are pummeling each other. I'm going to five parties this week.

Speaker 1 (26:59):
No, when you say pummeling each other, is there of
a competition you can notice?

Speaker 14 (27:05):
Yeah, everyone is trying to out party each other. Every
voters are invited to them. They're trying to woo and
sway every last vote. A person that work on a
show told me, we go through the voter rolls every
single day and try to figure out where people stand.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
Wow. Thanks a lot, Johnny Oleczinski. You can read his
stuff in the New York Post. Appreciated Johnny. When we
come back, we'll have a recap of today's show and
my final thoughts. It's Mentee in the morning on seven ten.
Wore now with some final thoughts. Here's Larry So, where
are all the White House staffers from the Biden administration.

(27:43):
It's normal this time of year, right after they leave office,
for them to be on TV all the time, for
them to be writing books talk about what a great
job they did and how bad, of course Donald Trump is.
But for some reason they've all gone into Maybe they're
embarrassed because of what they did to the country, you know,

(28:04):
the economy, the border crime, two wars. It was a disaster,
but they have no shame about that. They claim it
was great. They are micetros at defending bad policy because
they have had to do it so much. So it's
not that no, no, no, it's even worse. It is

(28:24):
one of the worst scandals in American history. They covered
for President Biden's mental decline. They lied about it, which
leads to the question who was running the country that
we need to know. This is not political no matter
what party, this can never happen again. We deserve to

(28:45):
know who was responsible for the disasters of the last
four years, and we need to have them charged or
at least embarrassed for propping up a puppet who had
a difficult old time putting a coherent thought together as
they collectively ran and ruined the country. They must be exposed,

(29:10):
and if they're not, the Republicans in charge now are
just as bad. Please call your representative and let them
know you demand an investigation of the cover up of
Biden's mental decline so this never happens again. Remember they

(29:30):
work for you. Coming up next, Mark Simone welcomes Boston
radio host Howie Carr and TV personality Ronda Shear. Plus
listen for the keyword right after the ten o'clock news.
Then head to seven to ten wr dot com for
your chance at one thousand dollars. Now, let's get a
recap of today's show. Former Minority leader of the New

(29:53):
York City Council Joe Borelli sees a chance for Curtis
Leewa to win the may or o race, but he
has to change his strategy from the previous run.

Speaker 8 (30:04):
There is no one else where Adams pulls from other
than Andrew follow that does, as you point out, really
give Curtis Lee what an opportunity. And he can't run
the same campaign he ran in twenty nineteen. He has
to run a very different twenty twenty one brother. He
has to run a very different campaign. He has to
run a campaign that actually expands the base.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
WLR national correspondent Rory O'Neil said the recent developments in
the Russia Ukraine War have led to a war of
words between Trump and.

Speaker 4 (30:34):
Putin on truth Social He said that President Putin is
absolutely crazy for launching these unprecedented attacks into Ukraine. The
Kremlin responded by saying that Donald Trump is becoming too
emotional over all this and not thinking clearly. So a
lot of back and forth going on there.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
Award winning columnist for North Jersey dot Com, Mike Kelly
believe is that New Jersey Democrats are still missing the
mark on the issues that voters care about.

Speaker 6 (31:06):
What the Democrats are missing is what I think is
the heart of the conversation with New Jersey voters today,
be they Republicans or Democrats, it's all about kitchen table issues.
And it's not just about taxes. It's about the roads
we drive on. They're horrible. It's about the transit system
that continues to break down and looks like a rustbucket.

(31:27):
I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (31:28):
Legendary sportscaster water Wolf has a message for the teams
that voted to ban the tush Push Thuge number three.

Speaker 3 (31:36):
All the jealous NFL teams who voted against the tush Push,
envious of the Eagles and Bills. For all you other
twenty two teams who voted against it, go out and
get some big ass quarterbacks and line them.

Speaker 1 (31:52):
I love that, and just like me, our winner of
Talkback of the Morning isn't by the excuses being given
by Letitia James for all of her fraud.

Speaker 10 (32:06):
You are one hundred percent right, Latsia James is guilty
as sin. The first clip is her speaking the way
she likes to speak, all adam it, and the second
clip is her getting advice from her lawyers or pr.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Very good talk Back of the Morning. Don't forget to
check out our podcast and catch up on all the
things you missed. All four hours of the show are there.
Just go to seven ten WR dot com and click
the podcast tab. It's that Easy coming up tomorrow and
Minty in the Morning. High profile criminal defense attorney Jeffrey
Lichtman at seven oh five. He's always great. New York
City Councilwoman Vicki Palladino at age vight oh five. Also

(32:44):
always great. Tickets to see Cindy Lauper at a twenty five.
ABC News contributor, Sarah Isker at nine oh five, and
career advice expert Greg gm Grande at nine to thirty five.
Thanks so much for listening today. Hope you had a
great holiday weekend. Hope you have a great week ahead.

(33:05):
Now the news. It's ten o'clock
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