Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael Del Johno, and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern on great stations like
six twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi, or Akrons, News Talk
six forty w HLO and Akron, Ohio and News Radio
five seventy WDAK and Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're glad you're
(00:21):
here now. Enjoy the podcast WAL two three starting your
morning off right.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
A new way of.
Speaker 1 (00:29):
Talk, a new way of understanding because we're in this stage.
This is your morning show with Michael del Johno. Ye
had a wonderful weekend. Welcome back. It's Monday, June the
twenty fourth. Yeah, of our Lord. You know, if we
had twenty four months, we could have had twenty four,
twenty four, twenty four today.
Speaker 2 (00:48):
Deep thoughts never heard of most.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
Hi am Michael del journal. This is your morning show
along with our Vader Dictator. Why do I like Dictator
of Fader better? Well, you have a tendency to switch things,
well said Beg.
Speaker 2 (01:06):
Well said, thank you.
Speaker 1 (01:07):
I don't know what I'm trying to do it's Monday
for crying out loud. Hey, everybody's just lucky. Minutes ago
I was singing as Bruce Springsteen and my chin got stuck.
Makes that seven minute thank you, Tucker's here seven minutes
after the hour A round two years we now mark
since Roe v. Wade was overturned by the Supreme Court.
A brutal heat wave. Remember we were kind of making
(01:29):
fun of the brutal I mean, because heat waves happened.
I'm serious, But everybody's trying to make it into like
you know, they don't. They want to do it without
saying it. But you know global warming, well right, hot
because of global warming, So then you feel a need
to counter that next thing. And know you're golfing with
your doctor on Friday and you nearly drop dead?
Speaker 2 (01:50):
Did you really?
Speaker 1 (01:51):
No? I didn't nearly drop dead. But it was awful.
I mean, I'm telling you I to I must have.
I drank at least one hundred and six ounces in
a single round of golf. I couldn't still couldn't get
enough to sweat. I had a headache, I was dizzy.
Speaker 3 (02:08):
I was like, wow, air conditioning has made us all
soft as we seek out the comfort.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Well. But having said that, I'm soft and that's it.
I'm not golfing now until September. Brutal, and I can
say that from first experience. Brutal heat wave continues. President
Biden and former President Donald Trump are preparing for their
first debate set for Thursday.
Speaker 2 (02:30):
And Atlanta. Probably said, why Atlanta because George is.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
A swing state. No, it's in Atlanta because that's where
the headquarters of CNN's in. Bloss We're hiding in a
television studio, and federal prosecutors are recommending criminal charges against
Boeing for violating twenty twenty one settlement related to two
fatal crashes. We have all your top stories throughout the morning.
We've got our team assembled to bring these to life
(02:53):
to you, and we're gonna start with Aaron Reale because
this is like a favorite subject of mine. At what
point does a summer side hustle that makes six figures
not become a pretty decent career move.
Speaker 4 (03:05):
Aaron, At the point that you know it's bringing in
more than most salaries side, that's.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
A Charlie hustle, right, Yeah, And so we are.
Speaker 4 (03:18):
Seeing this obviously the summer. You know, everyone had that job,
whether it's scooping ice cream or you know, being a lifeguard.
It was fine, but it wasn't a huge money maker.
But we are seeing truly six figure jobs. I'm going
to give you the four top ones, and by top
I mean the potential to be the most lucrative. It
always comes down to the individual.
Speaker 1 (03:36):
But number one Top four side hustles.
Speaker 4 (03:39):
Number one Number one resell clothes. I'm not talking about
your old T shirt or shoes. I'm talking about scouring
vintage shops for high end goods reselling them on Poshmark
or Mercari or eBay. This can bring in hundreds of
thousands of dollars.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Seriously, because I've got, like, I got a closet full
of NFL jerseys, I'll pop some tags.
Speaker 4 (03:59):
I mean people like that might be among them. To
be perfectly honest, this can bring in a lot of money.
And even if you don't want to sell your own things,
like if you can scour for the other things and
some people like shopping, I personally do not, but for
those who do, this can absolutely bring in the.
Speaker 2 (04:14):
Not a big market for petite sized twos.
Speaker 4 (04:17):
No, nope, I know it.
Speaker 1 (04:19):
Go with the bags.
Speaker 4 (04:21):
Everyone can hold a bag and there's a good ROI there.
Speaker 1 (04:23):
But resale clothes but not just yours, you know, buying
and selling of lightly reared clothing exactly.
Speaker 4 (04:32):
The next one out renting your pool. This one's incredible.
There's an app called swimply and the one guy reported,
you know, so you put in one hundred thousand dollars pool,
that's very expensive, but he recouped the whole investment and
then made another hundred g's on top of it with
only within only two years.
Speaker 1 (04:48):
So like, do you like strangers in your backyard? And yes,
just the pool? Or do I have to come out
and serve drinks, maybe a couple of apps during breaks?
Just the pool?
Speaker 4 (04:58):
You rent it by the hour, and obviously like the
quality of that experience is what will get you a
good reputation and bring people back, like Airbnb or anything else.
But yeah, just your pool.
Speaker 1 (05:08):
Well you can't call it air pe because p and that
would have been no. I was gonna say, there's a
concept there. I think there's somebody there.
Speaker 2 (05:18):
That's what I'm playing.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
Girl, brilliant girl.
Speaker 4 (05:21):
Yeah, that one. And then obviously content creation. You can
make millions doing this, but if you have it doesn't
matter what your job is. You can have a completely
boring job. But if you are an interesting person, yeah,
this will bring in the goods.
Speaker 2 (05:34):
That's a long shot.
Speaker 4 (05:35):
Come on, I know, I have to be honest.
Speaker 1 (05:37):
This was more content creators, and we're not making millions.
I have to be honest.
Speaker 4 (05:41):
This was This one was like, come on, that's and
and I do believe that if you are a dynamic
person and like a really good storyteller, and you have
the time and this interest you, for sure, this is
a possible avenue. But it's like it's being like, so
is playing in the NFL? Like, yeah, but do you
have all the things that make that possible?
Speaker 1 (05:59):
So that that's another one. Wait a minute, let me
look in the mirror. Let me look in the mirror. No,
I don't have the things to be in the NFL.
Speaker 4 (06:04):
Go ahead, yeah, next run, next run. And then finally,
this one is kind of interesting. Renting out your car.
People take a lot of summer road trips. There's an
app called Touro. You can easily if you have more
than one car and you're not using it every day
or you don't need it certain days. What's interesting about
this is that you can undercut the market because you
set your own price. So let's say you live relatively
(06:26):
close to an airport and you don't need your car
for a weekend. This could this could seriously juice your
income easily tens ten thousand bucks a month.
Speaker 1 (06:35):
Now that one's interesting.
Speaker 5 (06:37):
Yeah, Now what I.
Speaker 1 (06:38):
Would imagine you need different insurance policy though right you can't.
Speaker 4 (06:42):
So insurance is a big part of this as well.
And then obviously the wear and tear on a car,
and you have to you have to be comfortable with this.
But like, there's actually one I was reading, so a
lot of this.
Speaker 1 (06:53):
Is compiled by CNBC.
Speaker 4 (06:55):
They do a lot of these side hustle things, and
there was one individual who purchased six cars, like leads
the six cards. He brings in roughly fourteen thousand a year.
But there's you know, there's economies of scale. So when
it comes to maintenance, creating those relationships with different mechanics
(07:15):
and everything you would need and getting cars that are
good for wear and tear, and yes, that again, this
could also bring in a couple one hundred bucks if
you just have your individual car you want to let out,
or you could make a proper job out of it.
It's whatever works for you.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Wow, come on, car leaser. All right, Aaron Riette with
our top four side housts. What were your side hustles
when you were young.
Speaker 4 (07:37):
I was a babysitter. I loved babysitting. I did it
all the time. And I don't know if that was
like a side hustle. That was just my job.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
Oh that was that was That was prep prep for
your life.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
And honestly, I have to be honest, it was prep
like and I didn't realize how much I was. I
was absorbing then. But it's like you learn how to
change diapers on someone else's kid, your own kids, it's
no problem at all.
Speaker 1 (08:00):
And I had to do it on the NBC Today Show,
which was very embarrassing. That's cool. Yeah, I'll have to share.
Speaker 2 (08:07):
That video with you. We were featured.
Speaker 1 (08:09):
In fact, we were one of Angelina, Joe Lee, and
Andrea and my wife and I were the final guests
for Katie.
Speaker 2 (08:14):
Kirk before she left.
Speaker 1 (08:15):
That's very in a trading place. I'll send you that video.
But anyway, make a long story shirt. Mine was the traditional.
I had the lawn business in the neighborhood. That was
when I was really young. And then I had the
best side hustle. While all my friends were doing long jobs,
I was serving subpoenas for a law firm and making
really good money.
Speaker 4 (08:34):
I love that that was your job because you're such
a friendly like, oh, a bungular guy. And then you're like,
and here you go, and.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
You have been served. That was how I did it.
And you have been served by Aaron Rayal, although not completely.
She'll be back in the third hour. As hundreds of
thousands are crossing into the US illegally, some suburbs are
finding they're overwhelmed with migrants.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
Is yours? Aaron will be back with that.
Speaker 1 (08:57):
Aaron, we'll talk to them all right fifteen after the
hour if you're just waking up. As always, we have
your top five stories coming up. I think, you know,
in terms of the debate prep, there was a can
you believe I'm saying this out loud?
Speaker 2 (09:12):
I might I might fall over, and not from heat exhaustion.
Speaker 1 (09:16):
But the Washington Post with a really good piece today,
and again, you know, we often talk about how there
is no reality left. All that's left is perception. We
live in a death of journalism. We're not even news consumers.
We have narratives, and we're narrative repeaters, and then perceptions
just get set and you can't get them turned once
(09:37):
they're set.
Speaker 2 (09:38):
So I like that.
Speaker 1 (09:39):
In the Washington Post piece, they start with the perception
Donald Trump's campaign argues that Joe Biden is feeble incompetent. Now,
I don't think it stops there. I mean, I think
there is a good bit of discussion about not just
Biden policies or whoever's really running the White House, but
the progressive slash slo socialist, slash anti Americans, slash anti
(10:03):
Israel policies that have been failing. It goes a little
bit beyond that, but I think we would all look
at the Washington Post and go, Yeah. Primarily, I think
the perception of most Americans is that Joe Biden, for
whatever he stands for, is clearly cognitively impaired and clearly
too old for the job and disconnected from reality.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
It's got a weekend at Bernie's field.
Speaker 1 (10:28):
They're just following them up and downstairs, putting them on
planes and taking places. Meanwhile, you got Biden's campaign playing
what we call the paboch. The pabauch is simply the
boogeyman in Italian. He's unhinged, he's an extremist, he's a dictator.
He's the great whistleblower to all the insurrectionists. He is
(10:51):
a threat to democracy. Now, this is the part where
the Washington Post kind of leaves it these two caricatures.
And I'm not saying they're inaccurate, and I'm not saying
they're not the primary things and the or the primary
perceptions that will drive the election. But if that's true,
(11:13):
then isn't the goal of the debate whenever we're doing Trump,
you know, in other words, wouldn't the best advice to
Donald Trump don't look unhinged, don't look don't say things
that could be perceived as being a dictator. He's got
to be stopped.
Speaker 2 (11:30):
Yeah, that whole thing.
Speaker 1 (11:32):
Yeah, stay on the issues, Stay on the failed policies,
the policies have succeeded. Speak you know, from the perspective
of the American people. Obviously, if you're Joe Biden, you
would say, hey, Joe, try not to look old. But
let me give you one little reality because we have
to break and I had to spend most most of
our opening segment on side hustles yeah, this is legitimately
(11:57):
part of Joe Biden's debate prep. All right, So, using
the precept of the Washington Post, if you're Joe Biden,
don't look old, don't look cognitively impaired. And yet here
is ABC News covering Joe Biden's debate prep.
Speaker 6 (12:19):
Now part two of that phil of that debate prep,
it's going to be actually putting that into action with
these mock debates. This is going to include a ninety
minute formal debate where the president is standing up on
his feet the entire time, trying to mirror what he's
going to have to do.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
In real time next week. The question mark that they're
working on the most is can he stay standing for
ninety straight minutes? Well he wandering off? You cannot make
this up? Now, well never mind, wander off, Yeah, wander off,
gaze off, go blank. Those are other bad things. There's
(12:55):
questions in their mind. He's training today to be able
to stand up for ninety straight minute, not that you
have to stand to be president, right Roosevelts, You know
he sat fine through a world war. But yeah, that
I mean, but if the Washington Post is accurate, can
(13:15):
he stand for ninety minutes. Could he not gaff for
ninety minutes? Could he not wander in thought? Lose his
place of thought? Isn't it interesting? Debates? In general? You
want to have a really good moment, a memorable moment,
but you want to avoid, like the plague, having a
really bad moment. You don't ever want Lloyd Benson looking
(13:37):
over at you and saying, I knew Jack Kennedy. Jack
Kennedy was a friend of mine. You're no Jack Kennedy.
That's bad. That's normally how debates are. In this case,
we're just hoping he can stand up for ninety straight minutes.
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chona My
(13:58):
twenty seven minutes after the offerre just wait looking up,
he said the top five thingies for beauty to know
President Biden former President Donald Trumper. Gearing up for the
first debate. It's Thursday night, and Mark Mayfield has this story.
Speaker 7 (14:13):
Biden has been meeting with advisors at Camp David. Trump
meanwhile held a rally in Philadelphia on Saturday and spoke
to a gathering of Christian conservatives in the nation's capital
that was organized by the Faith and Freedom Coalition. He
made a point of stressing his position on abortion, saying
he believes that states should set their own rules. Trump
also teas over the weekend that he's settled on a
running mate, but made no official announcement.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
I'm Mark Mayfield, North Dakota Governor Doug Bergham, many believe
will be the vice presidential choices. Defending his claim that
the US has become a dictatorship under President Biden, Scott
Carr has more, Bergham.
Speaker 8 (14:45):
Tell CNN State of the Union, President Biden has bypassed
Congress dozens of times to push his agenda through the
signing of executive orders.
Speaker 9 (14:54):
This president, more like any other, has bypassed Congress. He
is bypassing the other two branches of government.
Speaker 8 (14:59):
To an ideological view, Bergham has been comparing Biden's tenure
to a dictatorship as he campaigns on behalf of former
President Trump. The Republican is considered to be on Trump's
shortlist for vice president. To date, records from the Federal
Register than the National Archives show President Biden has issued
one hundred and thirty nine executive orders, and the President Trump,
(15:20):
during his four years in office, signed two hundred and twenty.
Speaker 1 (15:23):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington. That's the North Dakota governor. Meanwhile,
the South Dakota Governor, Christy Noam says, yeah, I shot
that puppy, and I'd shoot it again. Tight made that up.
That was completely SpaceX is celebrating two more successful launches.
Speaker 2 (15:39):
Tammy Trihilo reports the.
Speaker 10 (15:41):
Company successfully launched a Falcon nine rocket Sunday from Cape
Canaveral Space Force Station, carrying twenty two STARLINGK satellites into
low Earth orbit. SpaceX also launched another twenty Starling satellites
from Vandenburg Space Force Space in California. The satellites are
designed to help spread high speed Internet around the world.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Tammage We're Here Inside Out two continues to dominate the
box office. The animated sequel took a one hundred million
dollars over the weekend. That's number one. I think it
becomes now the highest grossing North American release of the year.
Boy Bad Boys, Ride or Die stayed in second place,
and Bike Riders came in third. How about those Tennessee valls.
I never thought they were coming out of that game
(16:21):
alive yesterday. And then the Bats came alive in the
eighth and the nine nine. Few home runs later, they
went four to one, forcing a third game in the
College Men's World Series. Hey gang, it's me Michael. You
can listen to your morning show live. Make us a
part of your morning routine or your drive to work
companion on great stations like Talk Radio ninety eight point
(16:43):
three and fifteen ten WLAC in Nashville, Tupelo's News and
Talk one to one point one and ten sixty WKMQ,
and how about Talk six to fifty KSTE and Sacramento, California.
Love to have you listen live, but are grateful you're
here now for the podcast enjoyed. Thanks for waking up
with your morning show on the air and streaming live
on your iHeartRadio app. I'm Michael Delcha or your humble
(17:06):
host along with Jeffrey Lyon this morning.
Speaker 2 (17:08):
We're kind of in a silly mood.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
People don't realize this, but I've broadcast from a studio
not far from my bedroom, not far at all, to
which I got this text from my wife, who is
still in our bed.
Speaker 2 (17:23):
What are you doing?
Speaker 1 (17:24):
Are you singing to Jeffrey? Oh? Yes, yes it was.
Speaker 3 (17:29):
Sometimes what you hear off the air is really fun
air and it doesn't compare to one.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
Of these days when we're really serious about being the
number one rated morning show in America. Right, we'll do
what we do off the air on the air, and
do what we do on the air off the air.
That's a podcast just to show you how great of
a hockey fan I am, and what a good memory
I had. It was the Toronto maple Leaves nineteen forty two,
the last time a team was down three games to
nothing in their case, it was to the Red Wings
(17:56):
and came back to win four straight to get the
Stanley Cup over Detroit. That was nineteen forty two. It
could happen tonight if Edmonton wins. And yes, for those
of us in Tennessee or for those of you that
are Aggie fans, will be doing a little back and
forth right because the balls forced a Game three in
the College World Series, Which.
Speaker 2 (18:13):
That's gotta be so odd for them.
Speaker 1 (18:16):
How's that? Well, I mean, think about when their baseball
season began. I mean they are students, right, so they're
in class when the season starts, and I don't even
know how they did exams during all the regionals and
super regionals and conference playoffs. But these guys are still
playing in Omaha, and they'll get home, and they got
(18:38):
a couple of weeks before they got to.
Speaker 2 (18:39):
Get to camp at the next skype in the zoom.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
You think I couldn't have handled that kind of of course,
as you know. And somewhere maybe in Mobile, alabamaf he's
up this early, Keith Andrews is listening. I kind of
viewed myself as a professional baseball player. I would skip
school all day and still pull in in my Mustang
at three o'clock, had the locker room, like you know,
like I was a professional athlete, showing up at the stadium,
(19:03):
sliding in, show up just for the sports. But these guys,
you forget, there's student athletes to boot. That pitcher that
came in in the second inning who they had to
use to secure Game one. I think it was Cortez
or something like that for Texas, A and M. That's
a major league pitcher. Everybody that's that's a guy that throws,
you know, ninety eight, one hundred miles an hour, one
(19:25):
hundred pitches in he was throwing one hundred. For those
that don't play baseball, we call that smoke. That smoke
that's like Seaball hit ball that leaves his hand and
it's in the glove all right, so you don't have
any time to make a decision. And he had major
League Baseball command, so he was he was putting it
(19:48):
at one hundred miles an hour where he wants it
high and in low and away inside, outside. He was unhittable.
They managed to get a home run. Then they brought
in the relief pitching. They got another few and the Valls,
the number one seed, forced to Game three tonight. So
we'll be going back and forth between that and the
NHL Stanley Cup Finals Game seven tonight, and Edmonton has.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
Won three straight.
Speaker 1 (20:10):
They'll have to do one on the road in South
Florida against the Panthers tonight to pull off what Toronto
did in nineteen forty two. But how's that from my memory?
I said, nineteen forty good? Yeah? I mean what am I?
How photographic do I have to be? To him? Press you?
Jeffrey gone good. We talk a lot about these are
my top three most interesting stories of the day segment,
and then we'll do Sounds of the Day coming up
(20:31):
next hour. Nearly a quarter of those who got vaccinated
against the COVID nineteen virus regret it. That's a significant number. Now,
I want to share with you just a little bit
of a background. I want to turn this into a
big formal journey of discovery. But RNA technology is what
(20:52):
really this is all about. The notion that you can
map vaccinations for viruses. It would allow them to be
so specific and released so fast.
Speaker 2 (21:08):
That's what they were all working on.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
Now. If you go back to a Milken Institute video,
this is weeks before the leaking of the coronavirus. You
see Fauci and other scientists all talking about this and
they're like, well, yeah, it's very promising. Unfortunately, it'll take
us millions and millions and millions and millions of dollars
(21:32):
and probably ten years of trials before we can get
this thing out and approved. And another scientist, and forgive me,
I don't remember his name, he chimes in. He says, well,
in theory, that's true, but what if let's say we
had an emergency, you know, like an outbreak of a virus.
He even says this, I'm not making this up a
virus from let's say China, And then we were forced
(21:55):
to do this in an emergency situation. That way we
don't have to spend the millions and millions and millions
and millions of dollars and take a decade of trials.
Now I can tell you for the top scientists and
cooling Fauci, who you took all your cues and our
presidents took their cues from. This is what it was
really about, because they know viruses or viruses. Now, the
(22:19):
biggest question of all is why were they doing gain
a function research? And how did they get out of
that lab? And why did they protect China? And why
were they so reckless in not protecting the world. And
nobody seemingly cares about getting those answers. Fauci's already perjured
himself on that topic. But if it really was about
the mRNA technology, this is a big story because their
(22:44):
ultimate goal was to get you to trust these vaccines,
and in the end, in their attempt to use this
crisis to do it, they really lost you forever. I mean,
if in fact it was a scheme for this technology
of vaccines, they failed. A third who got the vaccine regretted.
(23:12):
A third agree with the medical expert's condemnation that the
vaccine itself is deadly. Now again, we live in a
very polarized nation. You're either a mask or your anti mask.
You ease a pro vax are your anti VAXX? Don't
stick me? I mean, everything's extreme, but there are sensible
conversations to have. Viruses are viruses. You don't defeat them.
(23:35):
You get them and die. You really die of life.
You have col morbidities and vulnerabilities from having lived and
all the choices you made in that life. That virus
comes along and could be a flu, could be corona,
but it can take you out, or you get it
and you get hurt immunity, and you live.
Speaker 2 (23:52):
You live with viruses, you don't defeat them.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
So when you get a vaccine, that's not intend to
keep you from getting whatever it is. You don't get
a flu vaccine and say well I won't get the
flu now because I've been vaccinated. No, you get the
vaccine for if you get the flu, you have very
minor symptoms because your immune system is up on it
before you get it. But then when it came to COVID,
they tried to lie to you or mislead you get
(24:18):
the vaccine and you won't get it, and you'll save
the world, but not giving it to others. No, you'll
still get it and you'll still spread it. Same thing
with masks. But everybody wanted to dumb everything down because
everything's about shirts and skins and taking a side. You
wear a mask or you hate others and you're trying
to get them all killed and you're reckless. Well, it
depends on what kind of mask, how it fits. By
(24:41):
the way, I just kind of know from Keith Andrews
and Mobile Alabama he's listening.
Speaker 2 (24:45):
It gave me the thumbs up.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
Yes. Now, Keith, of course excelled in all sports and
excelled in class and look where it got you. Keith
doct really. Meanwhile, Michael felt a need to entertain the glass.
So anyway, all this is going on, right, and then
all when it's all said done. In January of twenty
twenty three, cardiologist Peter McCollum, so the vaccine is killing people,
(25:11):
and it is killing large numbers of people. Thirty three
percent of the American adults agreed with that statement, including
sixteen percent who strongly agreed. Fifty seven percent disagreed. See,
everything's had to go through the silos of extremes. Yes,
in some cases treatment. First of all, the way we
(25:32):
counted the deaths of COVID, you probably died of the
cancer you were fighting, or died of the heart failure
you were experiencing, or the obesity and diabetes or organ failure.
But if you happen to test positive for COVID while
you were dying, you were listed as a COVID death.
(25:52):
So when it's all said and done, we're never going
to know how many people died of COVID. We do
know how many people died of complications from the vaccine,
and by and large, on your comorbidities, it may have
made sense to get the vaccine if you had COPD
or emphysema, or heart disease or heart failure, or as
we'd later learned this was probably the only surprise of
(26:13):
COVID obesity and diabetes and its proclivity to have severe outcomes,
you probably were better off taking the vaccine without the
small chance. But some people who had no business and
no core morbidities that would really require them to take
the vaccine developed some heart issues and died.
Speaker 2 (26:34):
Both are true.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
I just thought the most interesting part about this during
We have two more coming up later in the show
is if this all boils down to mRNA technology and
what Fauci and the other scientists wanted to skip ten
years and millions of dollars to get mainstream. Well, they
forced it with the crisis that they coincidentally predicted. And
(26:57):
in the end, let me ask you, do you think
there's more or less resistance and suspicion of all vaccines
today because of COVID Think for at least a third
of you, you know the answer?
Speaker 4 (27:16):
Tell you.
Speaker 9 (27:16):
This is Mike the Baptist in Cottontown, Tennessee, My Morning Shows,
your Morning Show with Michael Wilf Jorno.
Speaker 1 (27:23):
These are your top five stories of the day waking up. Well,
let's talk about old show. The Biden campaign is highlighting
former President Trump's felony conviction ahead of the first presidential
debate scheduled for Thursday. Mark Mayfield this year to fill
us in. Mark Mayfield is here to fill us in.
Speaker 7 (27:44):
Biden campaign coach here Mitch Landrew told NBC's Meet the
Press the conviction speaks to Trump's behavior and character. A
campaign recently released new ads focusing on Trump's criminal conviction
in his hush money case.
Speaker 1 (27:57):
I'm Mark Mayfield, North Dakota Governor Doug Bergham defending his
claim that the US has become a dictatorship under president
of President Joe Biden. Scott Carr has the details, Bergham
tell CNN State of the Union.
Speaker 8 (28:09):
President Biden has bypassed Congress dozens of times to push
his agenda through the signing of executive orders.
Speaker 9 (28:16):
This president, more like any other, has bypassed Congress. He
is bypassing the other two branches of government to push
an ideological view.
Speaker 8 (28:23):
Bergham has been comparing Biden's tenure to a dictatorship as
he campaigns on behalf of former President Trump. The Republican
is considered to be on Trump's shortlist for vice president.
To date, records from the Federal Register than the National
Archives show President Biden has issued one hundred and thirty
nine executive orders and that President Trump, during his four
years in office, signed two hundred and twenty.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.
Speaker 1 (28:47):
Game seven of the NHL Stanley Cup Finals is tonight,
and like every night, the Stanley Cup itself will be present.
Only tonight it will make its way to the ice.
Tammy Trehuilo has more.
Speaker 10 (28:57):
The NHL championship as one went away for either the
Oilers or the Panthers, and Benton forced a decisive Game
seven on Friday night with a five to one blowout
of the Panthers, tying the best of seven hockey series
at three games apiece. The teams are back and Florida
tonight to see who wins the Cup. The Oilers are
only the third team in Stanley Cup history to force
a Game seven in the final. I'm Tammy Trihio.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
Zach Bryan fans, I guess that includes my two kids
that I wren't aware with Zach Brian frans, everybody's a Sagbrian.
Speaker 2 (29:25):
Faned the great prices.
Speaker 1 (29:28):
It's only three hundred dollars for both tickets. Since why
do you like Zach Bryan. I love Zackbrian. I'm out
three hundred dollars. Meanwhile, fans won't have to wait long
to hear his new music. Lisa Cardon has more pay.
Speaker 11 (29:43):
Zach Bryan fans won't have to wait long for new music.
The singer songwriter announced he will release his new album,
The Great American Bar Scene on the fourth of July.
Ahead of the album's release, Brian will be giving twenty
three bars across the US and Canada. Early access to
some of the tracks, so tease that he'll be visiting
a few on the list to have a drink with fans.
(30:04):
Brian is currently out on tour with dates scheduled through December.
I'm Lisa Carton.
Speaker 1 (30:10):
Today is a day filled with imagination and a dash
of pixie dust. It's got to be a pre Tennis story, right,
she's here. On International Fairy Day.
Speaker 5 (30:23):
We celebrate all magical supernatural creatures.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
Today.
Speaker 5 (30:26):
We take the good with the bad. Tinker Bell mostly good.
Leprechaun's good unless you try to take their gold, then
not so much. Also in the mixed goblins and gnomes,
they can go either way. Today to honor and celebrate
the myths and legends, you can build a fairy house
to welcome them.
Speaker 1 (30:42):
Also leave a treat.
Speaker 5 (30:43):
Legend has it they like chocolate and maybe if you're lucky,
they'll lead you to treasure.
Speaker 1 (30:48):
I'm pre Tennis. And there's an old joke my brother
used to do all the time when I was a kid.
Speaker 2 (30:52):
While Disney was on the phone. Yeah, tinker Bell died anyway,
I'll get to that later, all.
Speaker 1 (30:58):
Right, So you had a favorite must in the college
World Series and it's it's in the finals, Kirby Kanell Connell.
Connell Connell.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
I think it's canal Hamana.
Speaker 3 (31:07):
He's got the rolly fingers going right, man, that is
the greatest mustache since Raleigh Fingers.
Speaker 2 (31:13):
Right.
Speaker 1 (31:13):
Well, I'm gonna go. There was somebody for the Kentucky
Wildcats who had dyed his mustache blue. Why would you
do that? That was my favorite mustache. One of his
teammates didn't like it because his girlfriend suddenly had blue.
All oh, now he was warming up in the bullpen. Anyway,
it is NCAA College Men's Baseball Game three tonight. We
(31:36):
will have a World Series champion. The Balls forced to
Game three with a four to one win yesterday. That
will be I believe on ESPN tonight because ABC will
be the NHL. That Game seven is yeah, I think
I'm right. Eilers down three, nothing pull the Begi's stayed alive,
stayed alive, stayed alive. Series tied at three. They forced
(32:00):
a Game seven in South Florida tonight, seven o'clock on ABC.
Major League Baseball in cities of your morning interest. As
we say, Cardinals with a big win five to three
over the Giants, raised one three to one over the Pirates.
Guardians won six ' five over the Blue Jays, Nats
one two to one over the Rockies in Colorado, and
the Rangers won shut out the Royals.
Speaker 2 (32:20):
For Zip. We did have two losses.
Speaker 1 (32:21):
Mariners lost six to four to the Marlins and the
d Backs lost four to one to the Phillies. Birthdays Today.
Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Mac. Whenever we have these discussions'
greatest albums Ever, you gotta have rumors in that mix.
Gotta have because of the hits, and I love to
watch it. He looks like a giant muppet playing the drums.
Mick Fleetwood of Fleetwood Max seventy seven years old today.
(32:44):
Soccer great Lionel Messi who never had a blue mustache,
thirty seven years old today. And Little Leaguer World Series
pitcher Money Davis twenty three Or is what We Really Know?
Twenty six Today? Top five Stories of the Day Up
on this Monday, the twenty fourth of your year, twenty
twenty four.
Speaker 2 (33:04):
We're all in this together.
Speaker 1 (33:05):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Tell Joino