All Episodes

June 17, 2024 34 mins
Biden polling numbers…how low can they go?!

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael. We'd love to have you listen every
weekday morning to your Morning show live. Even take us
along with you on the drive to work. We can
be heard on great radio stations like one O, four
to nine, The Patriot in Saint Louis, Our Talk Radio
ninety eight point three and fifteen ten WLAC and Nashville
and News Talk five fifty k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona.
Love to be a part of your morning routine, but
we're always grateful you're here. Now. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 1 (00:26):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in listen together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael O'Dell John.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
President Biden criticizing the conservative majority of the Supreme Court
of the stars studded Hollywood fundraiser. Meanwhile President Trump recording
black voters. In the run up to the November election,
the leaders of hamas won all their victory rewards. I
don't think they realize they've lost the war at both
Biden and Trump campaigns agreed to the rules to the debate.

(01:01):
Welcome to Monday, June, the seventeenth year of Our Lord
twenty twenty four on the air and streaming live. This
is your morning show. I'm Michael del Jorno. Anybody watched
the US Open. It was one of the best in decades.
Back and forth between Bryce and d Chambeau and Rory McElroy.

(01:22):
In the end it's d Schambeau by one, his second
US Open at Pinehurst, number two. We have three. I said,
expect an epic NBA Finals. Do you remember me saying that,
I think that was a few weeks ago. Yes, you did, yes, now?
And then I go on vacation to hide my shame
as Boston wins the first three, but then the MAVs

(01:45):
pull out a Bejie's and stay it alive, force a
game five that'll be coming up tonight. In the NHL,
same thing, only with Florida getting off to a three
to zero lead, and then suddenly Edmonton wins eight to
one and forces a game five. But my predictions, again
always spot on politically, always spot off when it comes

(02:05):
to sports, which may explain why Bruno Mars always loses
when he takes my tips. He calls you for betting advice.
You know, somewhere between a week's vacation and six months
of a non compete. It's probably the perfect amount of
time away, but we chose to. I mean, we've talked

(02:26):
about this. We have so many great cities now on
the Your Morning Show list that we would pick different
places to go. So we paid tribute to Youngstown, Ohio, Cleveland,
and Akron, Ohio, and we had a Buckeye vacation. I
have never been to Cedar Point, which is considered one
of the top amusement parks in America. That's why they

(02:47):
got the co roller coasters, right. Oh, first of all,
it's about all they have. Okay. It is like for
those of you, those of you that go to the
rodeo and you know, there's everything else and you enjoy
a little roping here, a little bit of this and that,
but you're there for the bull riding, right Yeah. So
that's why I always like that PBR thing, because they
just do the bull riding. Just let's get right to

(03:08):
the stake, you know. And that's kind of how this is.
So if you go to amusement parks and your favorite
thing is the roller coaster, well, then Cedar Points for
you because it's all roller coasters. In fact, I think
it's I counted as best I could. Six of the
top thirty roller coasters in the world or at Cedar Point,
including the number one roller coaster in the world, which

(03:30):
is Steel Vengeance. It is visually so intimidating. These rides
are so large, Like a small ride is a two
hundred foot drop. Oh wow, it's twenty stories. You do realize, well,
I didn't do the math, but I'm glad you're here. Fortunately,
So they have one that turned out to be my favorite.
Now it's been a while since. Like when you're a kid,

(03:54):
you're scared to death to do it. You put it
off all day. Then you're in line, your palms are sweating.
Then you're you're getting in, you're strapped in, you want
to get out. Then you start up the and you're
really going out of your mind. That's how they all were.
So there was one that was ended up being my favorite,
the val Raven. This one takes you up. You immediately,

(04:17):
by the way, the minute you leave, all right, the
enjoy your ride. You just start going straight up right,
and I mean it just keeps going and going. And
Nick turned to me at one point and said, hey,
look dead, you can see Canada from here. And he
was right. So then you do like the little you
know who. You turn the corner and you know the

(04:38):
falls coming this ride because I guess they were all
in the boardroom and they thought, let's really be evil.
So you get right to where you're getting ready to fall,
and it stops you and you're hanging and it lets
you stare at the two hundred foot drop, which is
not even straight down, it's almost inverted. Oh wow, for
like four or five seconds, and then it drops you

(04:59):
and you loops and you do it. The greatest ride
I've ever ridden in my life is gotta do it
in the front row if you ever do it. So
then there's the number one roller coaster in the world,
which is the the Steel Vengeance. Now, I gotta be
honest with you. I chickened out day one. No, I
chickened out most of day two. And then I had

(05:20):
done so many intense rides I was like, I'm going
for it now. I will tell you I was a
little nervous. Well, yeah, I cannot tell you. This one's
well over a three hundred foot drop. How many stories
is that over? Thirty? Oh wow? So then we're in
line Alsodden start going through metal detectors, What's what's up
with this? Then you have to take everything off, not

(05:43):
your clothes, nothing in your pocket, and they give you
a little locker and then you set up your combination.
I mean, you're like, what is going to happen on
this right? And I'm telling you everything happens on that ride.
My body has never been I think I'm NASA approved
at this point. Did you throw your hands in the
air like you just don't care this one? When I

(06:07):
tell you what is what makes any roller coaster extreme?
They take it to the ridiculous power. So you know,
there are times you're going sideways, there are times you
go upside down, there's times you're cork screwed. Then you're
in a tunnel, You're in the dark, and all of
a sudden you're sinking and the right there's a reason
it's the number one roller coaster in the world. Cedarport,

(06:29):
we had a great time in Ohio. Then we visited
Ohio State University, and then we went to Cincinnati and
did a Reds game. We had an all Buckeye vacation. Wow,
sounds nice, and then I got home to relax a
couple of days. But I do feel guilty that you
didn't get to get off. Well, it's okay, I was,
you know, working over there's no rest for the weary
right week long, helping the kids fill in our thanks

(06:50):
to the Gang FLA and Ryan Gorman and his team
for filling in while we were gone. We're part coming back,
you know. It is what in June? So what's next
on the horizon? Debates a vice presidential choice for Donald Trump,

(07:11):
the two conventions, and then you're, you know, kind of
like that roller coaster analogy. Then you're getting ready for
the ball. And there continues to be a little bit
of a drum beat and concern over President Biden's numbers,
and there should be. In fact, it was the Washington
Post that did an op ed piece Biden should be
assuming the polls are right and not wrong. If they

(07:33):
are right, there is this picture that is very clear
of a sitting president who can't win. And if they
continue forward with this, the inevitability that the map is
just not there for him. That didn't stop them from
having their star studded fundraiser. And I love this this story.
I got to read it to you almost a word

(07:54):
for word. To me, it was the the the joke
of the day. So former President Barack Obama says he
mostly watches sports now and what he calls a cynical
time stop right there, Does anybody believe that I'm mostly
sports now? I don't have anything to do with politics.

Speaker 3 (08:13):
That's why he just strolled up to the Prime Minister's
office a couple of months ago, or why he was
front and center on stage last night speaking of the
Biden campaign fundraiser on Saturday in Los Angeles.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
He told the audience that he watches sports mostly because
it feels like everything is slash and burn. This is typical,
you know, left versus right. Both sides do it, but
one side likes to do it and then be not
just the perpetrator but the victim. And there were you know,

(08:49):
more money raised, not nearly as much as Donald Trump
raised after being harassed in court. And the left kind
of finds itself in its own bubble, but in a
bubble that's on display for all to see. Now again,
I don't tell you how to think, and I don't
tell you how to vote. I can just tell you

(09:10):
that there is a bubble that they feel safe in,
that they feel like is a reality. And then there
are the numbers that suggest it's not real. I mean,
I cannot help but juxtaposition this. So they're in Hollywood again,
Jimmy Campbell, Barack Obama, you know, all the stars. Meanwhile,

(09:34):
Donald Trump is on the ground and specifically courting black
votes that this particular president is hemorrhaging and you don't
win them back in Los Angeles at an extraordinary price
with stars on stage. That looks bubblesque to me. So

(09:56):
your hemorrhaging black vote, you've lost Hispanic vote, You've lost
the youth vote. The numbers in the polls suggest you
can't win and you're in your bubble. That could be
a problem for the left. For the right, you got
to be careful how you court and how you say it,

(10:17):
especially when you have a middleman that's not on your
side in a biased mainstream media. And so for Donald Trump,
he's often talking about what they've done, said they would
do for you, and done for you, how poor your
neighborhoods are, how poor your opportunities are, how high your
crime is. And then there are people that want to

(10:38):
turn that and make it racist, as if Donald Trump
is only saying that because what he really means is
wherever black people are, there's crime, which is in no way,
in any way anything he was suggesting. So what do
I suspect, Well, I suspect fact that this movement continues

(11:02):
to get fueled, and there is a kind of like
we often use this analogy, the the Tea Party movement
was dangerous because it was real. It wasn't created, it
was organic. There was a sudden awakening, a sudden groundswell,

(11:24):
a sudden movement. This debt is dangerous and it's time
to take our country back and get these politicians under control.
And it created a wave that lasted through about four
or five election cycles until the Republican Party did what
the Republican Party often does, absorbed the Tea Party, and

(11:45):
the Tea Party we never should have trusted the Republican Party.

Speaker 4 (11:49):
Now.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
I don't think trump Ism can be absorbed by the
Republican Party. And that's a problem for the Republicans in
the future. Shouldn't be. There's nothing Donald Trump stands for
that isn't in their platform. But you know, and there
is a real movement on the ground, and there is
an awakening with black voters and how they have been

(12:11):
taken for granted, how they've been pandered to and not delivered.
Donald Trump's on the ground with them all weekend, Joe
Biden stumbling around on stage of Barack Obama, Jimmy Kimmel
and others in Los Angeles. I think it's an amazing,
powerful juxtaposition. We're going to look at the Washington Post
opinion piece. We're going to look at some of the

(12:32):
latest polling numbers that would suggest, especially for the New
York piece, younger voters are leading Republican. Meanwhile, the Democrats
are trying to sell themselves as the cool thing because
it looks so cool. Now. I read a piece when
I was on vacation that was fascinating. This woman is
in charge in the Biden campaign and the Abiden administration

(12:55):
of attracting young votes, and she has to say, well,
my first biggest problem is our candidate is eighty one
years old. It's hard to really you knows that, like
you're you're courting around John F. Kennedy in his prime.
But these are the kind of political realities and I
think it's fascinating that we can't get our arms around

(13:18):
these realities because we're all living to some degree in
our matrix bubbles. But boy, the administration showed they're living
in a bubble this week. There's a song that somebody
made a weird to me that I want to play
to you. They sent it to me because I often
talk about the matrix, the extreme left the extreme right.

(13:38):
How we just only talk to people that think like us.
Read what we read, watch what we watch, so on
and so forth. So we don't have news, We don't
have news consumers. We just have narratives and narrative repeaters.
But what are these narratives doing while we're all busy
hating each other and fighting with each other? What does
that allow? Well, it allows administrative state and the intelligency

(14:04):
elite and the political ruling class to stay in power. Well,
you're busy fighting, they're in control. Now, if you got
busy uniting, they wouldn't be in control. In fact, they
would return to being servants of you. Well, somebody in
a rap song which may not be your style, with

(14:24):
some brilliant lyrics, will bring that to life for us.
In our journey of discovery. We've got Aaron Real and
John Decker keeping an eye on things for Decker, Biden
Trump are preparing for their first debate. They've agreed on
the rules. We'll go over those rules with you. Aaron
Reyl is going to be joining us because more homeowners
are putting their houses on the market. That would suggest
that the market is starting to move. Let's see if

(14:45):
those baby boomers are letting go of the most of
the inventory has been the problem and the stock market
continues to soar as the president's polling numbers to not
come up with it.

Speaker 2 (14:57):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Deltono.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
I am Michael del Jono. The Outsiders was the best
musical Stereophonic was named the year's best play at the
twenty twenty four Tony Awards. For those of you that
still go to theaters, I'm not one of them. The
big movie was Inside Out, too atop the box office
or Pixar. The sequel scored one hundred, one hundred and
fifty five million dollars in its opening weekend. It'll be

(15:24):
the first release to earn nine figures domestically in over
a year. Bad Boys Rider Die came in second, and
I Believe Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes came
in third. What are we on now? That's got to
be like I go back to the very first one
Ronnie McDowell. But I'm much fixing to say I only
remember the ones when I was a kid. I'll bet

(15:45):
with AI that works out really good nowadays. In sports,
you remember what I always tell you, if I say
something about, you know, the way things are going politically,
you know, take it with a grain of salt. You
know there's probably some accuracy too. If I tell you
something's gonna happen in sports, the opposite count on the
opposite happening. I really thought, hey, look it could still
turn out to be. But what I thought would be

(16:07):
an epic NBA Finals turned out to be a quick
three to zero lead for the Celtics, but then the
MAVs won by thirty eight. Friday night, they forced a
Game five. That's tonight at seven thirty on ABC. Stanley
Cup Finals, same thing happened. Florida got off to a
three to zero lead, but then an eight to one
win for Edmonton sends it back to sunset. Florida Panthers
up three games to one. That'll be tomorrow night at

(16:28):
seven o'clock. Game five. And the US Open was amazing
and really coming down the stretch between Bryce and d
Chambeau and Rory McElroy. In the end, it was d
Chambeau winning by one his second US Open at Pinehurst
Number two. In our Baseball Cities, Cardinals won two to
one over the Cubs. At Wrigley, NAT's won three to
one over the Marlins, Raise one eight to six over

(16:50):
the Braves. Dbacks won twelve to five, where the White
Sox Mariners won five zip over the Rangers. Is everybody
gonna win? Well? Obviously no if the Rangers lost to
the Mariners and the Guardians also lost seven six to
the Blue Jayson Hi, It's me and Michael. Your morning
show can be heard on great stations across the country
like Talk Radio eleven ninety in Dallas, Sport Worth, Freedom
one oh four point seven in Washington, d C. And

(17:10):
by point fifty k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona. We'd
love to be a part of your morning routine. Take
us along on the drive to work, but as we
always say, better late than that. Enjoy the podcast. President
Biden has dipped to new lows. We play the limbo
with polling numbers. As you know, you know, does anybody
even trust There's such a lack of trust in America today,

(17:34):
in everything, in the court, in law enforcement, in politicians,
in polls. But if you believe polls, and they have
been reasonably accurate recently, they would suggest that this is
a president that is about to be fired. But we'll
go through it. How low these numbers are and what's

(17:54):
causing these numbers to be low, and what areas are
of greatest concern Because we go by a electoral college map.
You start looking at Michigan and Wisconsin and Pennsylvania and
other key swing states, and then you start going inside
those states two key areas, districts and precincts, and that's

(18:15):
where youth vote and campus turnout vote becomes important, or
black vote becomes important, or Hispanic vote becomes important. And
that's what made Desanti's victory in Miami Dade County so significant.
He had the majority of Hispanics voting for him in
Miami Dade in the off year elections. So these are

(18:35):
real numbers, real deteriorations from certain certain voting blocks that
the Democrats have been able to count on in the past,
and it would indicate they may not be able to
count on them in the future. So that's got them
in Hollywood doing fundraisers. Former President Barack Obama was there
to help out President Biden, along with all the Hollywood

(18:57):
elites on stage, and it created what I like to
call a demonstration of bubble. Meanwhile, Donald Trump's on the
ground courting black votes in black churches. I think it's
very interesting and worthy of note. Other big stories that
are going on. The governor in Maryland is going to
issue pardons for over one hundred and seventy five thousand

(19:17):
marijuana convictions today. Look, once you play the game of
moral relativism, I mean, once you play that game with
God and eternity, it is a very short leap to
play legal relativism. All of these individuals, of course broke

(19:38):
the law that should be what's relevant. But now suddenly
culture goes you know what, Cigarettes are still terrible, but
marijuana is great. So anybody that's in prison for marijuana
or breaking marijuana laws. And by the way, of these
hundred and seventy five thousand, only one hundred would even
be loosely called minor. There were other things involved, and

(20:01):
they're still getting pardoned. But the point is you should
probably look at the mirror and go, wait a minute,
it was the law when they broke it isn't that
what matters? No, Suddenly culture has changed the rules. Culture
has said marijuana is no longer bad. If tomorrow, thank you,
Jach and Shanger in the background, wolfing on a bong.

(20:22):
I guess if somewhere down the line we decide cocaine
is cool, heroin is cool, meth is cool, we'll let
all them go. But for right now, it's marijuana in Maryland.
And the leader of a moss says the group may
be ready for a comprehensive deal. Of course, what they
don't realize is they lost and they're wanting everything. This

(20:42):
is how they play, and that brings us to our
journey of discovery. These are always difficult conversations to have.
We live in a world that likes things very simple,
very us versus them, And this is not a simple
topic and it's got almost fifteen hundred years of history

(21:03):
to it. Questions I would ask you to start the conversation.
Why don't we call them Mohammedans anymore? Why do we
call them Muslims? What is Islam? What is an Islamist?
Does a Muslim in islamis the same? These are things
Wikipedia could even help you out with for me the

(21:25):
best way to explain it, and I would explain it
this way with Muslims in the room. Mohammad lived an
interesting life, and so because there were three phases of
his life that were distinctly different. Early he was one
of three hundred and sixty five religions in Mecca and
peace loving, and then things got not so peaceful. Then

(21:47):
he got very political, and then in the end he
was a great warrior. So today you might have a
Muslim that follows the early Mohammed and they're very peaceful,
very peace loving, and they think terrorists are terrorists. Meanwhile,

(22:08):
the terrorists will tell you no, we're the true form
of worship a because theologically we came last. That was
last in Mohammad's life, So we're doing the most accurate
Mohammed will Now here's the difficult part for everyone else.
What are you dealing with? Are you dealing with a
religious Muslim? Are you dealing with a political Muslim, meaning
they're going to populate, infiltrate, agitate, and then eventually take over.

(22:33):
And when they take over, they have a different way
of doing things, or they a jihadis that might mean
you harm immediately and in order to strike fear into
your hearts, will do terrible things and take many lives. Well,
here's the bottom line, and here's the problem. You don't
know what you're dealing with until they act. In the

(22:54):
case of terrorism, that's too late. But if you would
make any assumption, you would be presumed to be a hatemonger,
an islamophobe. So it becomes politically incorrect for you to
do anything to discern. Now, if they're an Islamist, they

(23:15):
don't believe in separation of church and state. They don't
believe in freedom of religion, they don't believe in freedom
of speech, they don't believe in equality. Islam is not
like you know. You say, well, I don't care what
Jews believe. I'm not a Jew. Fair, I don't care

(23:35):
what Christians believe. I'm not a Christian. Fair, I don't
care what an Islamist believes because I'm not Islamist. Uh,
that's not how it works Islamist for the non believer
as well, So that brings us to assimilation. You want
to welcome them in as another religion. Well, that worked

(23:56):
for Muhammad in the early days, not the Medania years.
So what are you welcoming in. That's why when a
Muslims in America, if they're an Islamist, they're anathetical to
every way of life we have. Why would they even
want to be here? You don't see you don't see
a lot of born again They should be, they're desperately needed.

(24:18):
But it would not make sense for a spirit filled
vortig and Christian to want to live in Tehran. You
can't practice your religion there, you can't be a Christian there.
If you're identified, you'll be killed. So why would they
want to come here? What does that say about their

(24:39):
ultimate motive? And you say, well, how can you say this?
And this is awful deep the first thing in the morning,
because this is our journey of discovery. Here's a Muslim
student and it'll be all over the internet because he's
calling America a cancer during a speech at U SEE
in Chicago. But it's not the outrageous statement that America's cancer.

(25:02):
It's how profoundly accurate and eloquent he states the ultimate
Islamist vision and goal. They're not here to be one
of many religions.

Speaker 5 (25:19):
Listen, America is the cancer America, the American government, secularism, democracy, capitalism.
These are cancers that have spread their illness all over
the world, in America and in the Middle East, in America.

Speaker 6 (25:39):
Over here people have the freedom too. Again, like I
said before, committed is it a du oh is fahisha.
But when you speak up, it's a problem. Non listens
are tired of this cancer. They're tired of the American government,
they're tired of democracy. They want to see a new
way of life. And as listens, we have to understand
that we have that new way of life. Rosa loss

(26:01):
of law was sent them, was sent as a mercy
for all of mankind. He was sent as a mercy.
Why because the way of life he brought. We'll bring
that mercy, the way of life he brought. We'll bring
that tranquility to Muslims and non Muslims. Non Muslims will
have to worry about these issues they worry about now

(26:23):
they don't have to, because Islam is a just religion
that has come to be implemented up on society.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
They're here to implement their religion, not be one of many. Now,
Islam means submission, he later articulately, you have to submit
to theirs, but you will welcome it, and the peace
and tranquility will come when you do. I just I
was fascinating watching this go viral and then reading all

(26:50):
the comments. Well, his scholarship and his student vis ought
to be revoked, he ought to be sent back to
his original country. You're missing the whole point. So we'll
end our journey discovery with our question why don't we
call them Mohammedans anymore? Why is that so politically incorrect?
Is it not specific enough? Because we don't know which
example of Muhammad they're following. Is a Muslim the same

(27:13):
as an Islamist, the Islam of which that student is
speaking of, that hates Jews, hates Christians. Rue's the little Satan,
run's the great Satan. Would view freedom, would view your culture,
would view your legal system as a cancer, democracy itself

(27:34):
a cancer. How well does that ultimately assimilate in this country?
Because if Islam is as your studies may lead you
to see a system of life, not just a way
of life, a system of life that is completely anathetical

(27:55):
to your current I would say boldly, this could be
the real threat to democracy. It's the only example verbally
of real insurrection and threat to democracy that I have

(28:18):
heard in the last decade that would Nancy Pelosi, Joe Biden,
or Barack Obama or anybody else would tell you as
a threat to democracy. And I didn't notice any of
their names on the comment lest either. I'm a and
no bother in Smyrna, Tennessee. And my morning show is

(28:41):
your morning show, Michael Dale Journal, thanks for waking up
with your morning show on the Aaron streaming live on
your iHeart app. I am Michael del Jorno. And this
is Monday, June the seventeenth year of Our Lord, twenty
twenty four. Indeed, how are your top five stories of
the day. President Biden is leveling some of his harshest

(29:02):
criticism yet about the Supreme Court. Mark Mayfield has that.

Speaker 7 (29:06):
Story and a fundraiser in Los Angeles Saturday, the president
called the conservative majority court out of step with the
rest of the nation. Biden also warned that a former
President Trump is elected, he would appoint more justices flying
flags upside down, a reference to conservative Justice Samuel Alito,
who's been embroiled in controversy over political flags.

Speaker 1 (29:26):
Flown at his home.

Speaker 7 (29:27):
The comments were made at a star studded fundraiser featuring
former President Obama and various A list celebrities. Biden's campaign
says the event raised a record breaking thirty million dollars
from Democratic donors. I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
You get a lot more when you get harassed in court.
The United States is setting an additional one point five
b billion dollars of aid to Ukraine. Lisa Carton has details.

Speaker 8 (29:49):
Vice President Kamala Harris made the announcement Saturday at a
global summit in Switzerland. Of that money, five hundred million
dollars will go towards repairing and protecting energy infrastruction ructured
damage during the Russian invasion. About three hundred and eighty
million dollars will be used to provide humanitarian assistance for
refugees and communities impacted by the war. I'm Lisa Carton.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
Well is a guy I think should have been. You know,
if I think if the door is open at this
point and there's a change made with Biden, it would
have to be Gavin Newsome, it would have to be
Kamala Harris, or it would have to be Michelle Obama.
It couldn't be this. But there's a lot writing on
the future of wes Moore. The governor of Maryland for

(30:33):
the Democrat Party, and he's planning to issue pardons today
for over one hundred and seventy five thousand marijuana convicted felons.
Tammy Trihilo has the details.

Speaker 4 (30:43):
More set in an interview with The Washington Post, that
it would be a step to heal decades of social
and economic injustice that disproportionately harmed people of color. The
pardons will mark one of the country's largest clemency acts
involving marijuana. I'm Tammy Trichello.

Speaker 1 (30:57):
Former President Barack Obama says, almost watch sports now. Politics
are too cynical. So I watch sports, but I'm not
in the White House really running the country, or I'm
at ten Downey in England meeting with the Prime Minister. Yeah,
we're buying that, Brock. You were front and center at

(31:18):
the campaign frond raiser in Los Angeles on Saturday. Went
on to add to the room, which was mostly made
up of social media creators, that he feels a lot
of people who watch their content feel turned off by
the political discourse in this country now. As to whether
or not any of them on stage, from Jack Black
to other comedians, added to that my guess is of course,

(31:40):
they never find what they do as negative discourse. The
Outsiders was Best Musical. Stereophonic was named the Best Play
of the Year at the twenty twenty four Tony Awards.
Almost didn't happen.

Speaker 9 (31:53):
This play took me eleven years to manifest in a production,
and it wouldn't have happened. And if it weren't for
Adam Greenfield and playwrights Horizons.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
Stereophonic wracked up thirteen nominations, becoming the most nominated play
in the history of the Tony's. Last time I was
on Broadway Phantom of the Opera. So it's been a while.
Last time I was in a movie theater. I'm trying
to think it was the last movie. I can't even
remember the last time I sat in a movie theater.
I can't either. You know, COVID happened and then I
never went back, and you know what, I realized, I

(32:26):
never missed it. But Inside Out Too got a lot
of people's money This weekend tops at the box office.
The Pixar sequel scored one hundred and fifty five million
dollars in its opening weekend. It'll be the first release
to earn nine figures domestically in over eleven months. Bad
boys ride or dies at the will Smith one. Yeah
he thinks, so yeah, yeah, yeah, I can't do him

(32:46):
any Martin Lawrence. He's right up there with Robert de
Niro on movies. I won't be going to anytime soon.
Fell to second place. Kingdom of the Planet of the
Apes is making its way back with five point two
million dollars over the weekend to come in third. More
than nine out of ten Americans. And I thought it'd
be ten out of ten, but nine out of ten.

(33:07):
The drive in the US, here's the list of the
most annoying things you're doing on the road. That's right,
when Barack Obama les politics, you watch the sports, Well,
we need to break from the discourse of America. We
turned to pre tennis.

Speaker 10 (33:27):
The Society of Automotive Engineers has listed the three most
annoying habits behind the wheel, and you're probably doing them.

Speaker 1 (33:33):
They say.

Speaker 10 (33:34):
Forty eight percent of drivers don't use their turn signal,
and that's the most annoying trait. Eighty percent tailgate, another
eighty percent use their phone, all while driving a four
thousand pound vehicle, probably over the posted speed limit too.
On the plus side. They say, ninety one point nine
percent of us use the seatbelt. I'm pre tennis, so
we got you going for it.

Speaker 1 (33:56):
Weally Holly has won by thirty eight points. They did,
and they forced a Game five tonight. Celtics still up
three games to one, but Game five seven thirty on
ABC tonight, Boston with a win, can close it out.
Stanley Cup Finals has head into a Game five after
an eight to one win by Edmonton. They're back in Sunset, Florida.
Panthers up three games to one. They can hoist the

(34:17):
cup with a win. That'll be tomorrow night at seven
on ABC. And the US Open went to Bryson D. Chambeau,
his second US Open at the site where Payne Stewart
won some twenty five years ago. And Baseball cards won
NATS one, Raise one, D Backs one, Mariners won, but
the Rangers and the Guardians both lost.

Speaker 2 (34:36):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michaelville Juno
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Las Culturistas with Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang

Ding dong! Join your culture consultants, Matt Rogers and Bowen Yang, on an unforgettable journey into the beating heart of CULTURE. Alongside sizzling special guests, they GET INTO the hottest pop-culture moments of the day and the formative cultural experiences that turned them into Culturistas. Produced by the Big Money Players Network and iHeartRadio.

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.