All Episodes

June 24, 2024 34 mins
Illegals are flooding suburbs, Supreme Court rulings and parents are tracking kids…even when they’re not kids anymore!

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, It's Michael.

Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show airs live five to eight am Central,
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
but we're happier here now. Enjoy the podcast well.

Speaker 1 (00:14):
Two three, starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this degriffic This is your morning show
with Michael O'Dell.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
John see my old friend hour one and two. Can
you tell me where they've gone with this? Morning is
flying by seven minutes after the hour if you are
just waking up. Today marks the two year anniversary since
Roe v. Wade was sent back to the States and
overturned by the Supreme Court. The brutal heat wave continues

(00:50):
and Biden and Trump, especially Biden, he's preparing by just
standing up for ninetiest eight minutes, getting ready for Thursday nights.
Debates are the big stories. A big story is the border,
and let's face it, the top two issues poll after
poll that are concerning Americans most is the border and

(01:11):
the economy. So this is very significant for an upcoming
presidential election as well, and as hundreds of thousands are
crossing into the United States illegally, some are making their
way to the suburbs. Boy, think about how that could
have a different effect on the elections.

Speaker 1 (01:26):
Aaron Rayl is here with that story. Good morning erin.

Speaker 4 (01:29):
Good morning to you. Yes, so we know that the
cities have swelled in terms of their resources that are
available for this influx of migrants, and they're spreading out.
It's happening in counties across the country. Denton County outside
of Dallas, they say there are new pieces of migrants arriving,
ballooning sixteenfold. Same story in King County outside of Chicago,

(01:51):
it's jump seventeenfold. Rutherford County right outside of you guys
in Nashville twentyfold. You have Brandington County outside of and
into city outside of Tampa that's seeing their populations twelve
to fifty seven thousand. The list goes on and on.
It's happening all over. But what I think is the
most interesting part of this story here, Michael, is if
you look at a place likeah Utah, a conservative state,

(02:14):
it also has many members of the Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints. The Mormons, they have a
tradition of welcoming refugees, so they have a lot more
policies that are far more favorable towards migrants than you've
seen in a lot of other conservative states. But given
the sudden and pronounced rush of so many arrivals, it's

(02:35):
testing their even religious principles. It's one thing to be
compassionate and you know, help people who need it, and
many of these people are escaping poverty and violence, and
many people are bad, but there's a lot of people
who just need compassion, who just need housing. They're trying
to better their lives, like ancestors of many Americans here

(02:55):
who came over through Alis Island. But when you don't
have a system in place that's capable of sustaining them
or helping them succeed, everyone fails well.

Speaker 2 (03:04):
And there are three or four sides to that coin, right,
I mean, Catholic Charities is very forward in that movement,
just like the Church of Latter day Saints. And that's
a good thing. I mean, I mean, it's a bad
thing that we're not securing our border. It's a bad
thing that the leaguals are coming in. But it's a
good thing that people of faith are living their faith
and they're loving on people. But the problem has been

(03:26):
in terms of this issue. And I would say this,
and I'm not just picking on them, but like Catholic charities,
they're so open hearted about this.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
The problem is they were.

Speaker 2 (03:35):
Assisting them in getting here and then they were dispersing
them and losing track of them. So you know, that's
part of the problem at that point, right compassion, wrong
follow through.

Speaker 1 (03:46):
But what I find is interesting. I don't know if it.

Speaker 2 (03:48):
Began with like the governor in Texas doing it, which
was very smart, he just started, you know, making the
border issue a problem for all of America, not just
border states. Now they're all being disperse places on purpose.
They're arriving by plane, they're arriving by bus. Many old
hotels are being converted into places of mass housing. This

(04:09):
is going I mean, if this was the effect that
they were looking for, spread them all out, because let's
face the left loves the votes and the right loves
the cheap labor. Well, let's see, it may have backfired.
I don't know, that may impact voting in a lot
of these areas. Chicago is a great example You can
trace a lot of the loss of black support for
Joe Biden because of his failures at the border and

(04:32):
how these illegal immigrants are taking up the resources and
tools that were once going to them legal citizens. So
there's some backfiring here to boot there.

Speaker 4 (04:41):
You go like, I don't know how this plays out,
but I think a path to citizenship that is sustainable
is imperative. A lot of these people want that they're
here to make their lives better for their kids, and
it is creating a strain on hospitals, on schools, on
tight housing market that's getting tighter because you have more

(05:02):
people this. I don't want to say it's a zero
sum game, but it has to be. It has to
be more sustainable than what we have now.

Speaker 1 (05:09):
Well, there is a pathway to citizen arrive legally. That's
the pathway.

Speaker 2 (05:13):
I mean when people always ask that question, we need
a pathway, Well, there is a path.

Speaker 5 (05:17):
Now.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
We've got a lot of broken things in our immigration system.
I can tell you there was a person from England
who served in the United Kingdom Special Forces then came
to America. He was here on a visa, started a business,
a very successful restaurant that employed many, and I watched

(05:38):
our legal immigration system fail him and separate him from
his family. So, look, we got a lot to do
on the legal immigration front, but you can't just have
an open border. People enter illegally and then oh, we
got to find a way to make them citizens and
make it right. That's like if somebody broke into your
home tonight and said, suddenly, you're going to make them
your fifth child. I mean, there is a legal process

(06:01):
they're not following. It is the problem, and now it's
being dispersed throughout the country. And we're already short of
resources for America going through a tough time, and now
we're adding those from around the world.

Speaker 1 (06:13):
Going through a tough time.

Speaker 2 (06:15):
Look, I can tell you me and my brother tried
to take care of my mom for a while and
keep her in the lifestyle she was in, and we
watched it sink our two families, let alone hundreds or millions,
hundreds of thousands and millions coming in.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
It's just becoming a drain.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
It'll be interesting to see how this plays out, especially
in Chicago where the convention will be once again. But yes, suburbs,
we wouldn't have thought that it would be the problem
I wouldn't think that would be where they're all going,
but that's where they're being placed, I guess as the
bottom line.

Speaker 4 (06:41):
Right exactly, yeah, exactly, And you go where the resources are.
This is just human instinct. You know, you want to
help feed and shelter and protect you and yours and
if there is absolutely no more to be had in
the cities, they find their way out.

Speaker 2 (06:55):
Aaron, real great reporting. As always. We'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (06:58):
Thank you. All right, if you're just it's waking up.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
It is fourteen minutes after the hour, and the things
you need to know are this.

Speaker 1 (07:06):
President Biden's campaign.

Speaker 2 (07:08):
Decides to go all out highlighting President Trump's felony conviction.
This ahead of the first presidential debate. Is that a
winning topic. Seems to me. All the law fair has
made his party unite more, not less. Mark Mayfield fills
a sin.

Speaker 6 (07:26):
Biden campaign coach here Mitch Landrew, told NBC's Meet the
Press the conviction speaks to Trump's.

Speaker 1 (07:31):
Behavior and character.

Speaker 6 (07:33):
The campaign recently released new ads focusing on Trump's criminal
conviction in his a hush money case.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
I'm Mark Mayfield, North Dakota Governor Doug Bergham.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
A lot of people think will be Trump's deep choice
is defending his claim that the US has become a
dictatorship under Biden.

Speaker 1 (07:47):
Scott Carr has more, Bergham.

Speaker 7 (07:49):
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 1 (07:57):
This president, more like any other, has bypassed.

Speaker 8 (08:00):
He is bypassing the other two branches of government to
push an ideological view.

Speaker 7 (08:05):
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 and 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 1 (08:27):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
SpaceX is celebrating two more successful launches. Tammy Trihilo has more.

Speaker 5 (08:33):
The company successfully launched a Falcon nine rocket Sunday from
Cape Canaveral Space Force Station, carrying twenty two Starlink satellites
into low Earth orbit. SpaceX also launched another twenty Starling
satellites from Vandenburg Space Force Base in California. The satellites
are designed to help spread high speed internet around the world.
I'm Tammage RHEO.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Zach Bryan fans won't have to wait long for the
new music. Lisa Carden has details.

Speaker 9 (09:00):
Zach Brian fans don'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. He also teased that he'll be
visiting a few on the list to have a drink

(09:20):
with fans. Brian is currently out on tour, with dates
scheduled through December.

Speaker 2 (09:25):
I'm Lisa Carton Inside Out Too continues to dominate at
the box office. The animated sequel added another one hundred
million dollars in its second weekend of release. It's now
the highest grossing North American release of the year. Bad
Boys Ride or Die will stay in second place, and
the new biker drama The Bike Riders is expected to

(09:45):
earn ten million dollars and come in third.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
Well, today is a day filled with imagination and a
dash to Pixie Dust.

Speaker 2 (09:53):
Three Tennis has more on this the International Ferry Day.

Speaker 10 (10:00):
Please celebrate all magical supernatural creatures. Today we take the
good with the bad taker Bill mostly good. Leprechaun's good.
Unless you try to take their goal, 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. Also
leave a treat. Legend has it they like chocolate and

(10:22):
maybe if you're lucky, they'll lead you to treasure. I'm
pre tennis.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Oh, We're going to be doing a lot of clicking
tonight because on ESPN you'll be watching Game three, the
deciding game of the NCAA College Baseball World Series, balls
in Aggie's Game three winner, take all seven o'clock on ESPN,
and the Lord Stanley Cup will be in the house
in South Florida only tonight it will make its way
to the ice a decisive game seven, tied, three games apiece.

(10:48):
Can Edmonton do what hasn't been done since Toronto in
nineteen forty two, down three to zero, come back and
win four straight to take the Cup. Panthers have something
to say. That'll be seven o'clock on ABC. Cardinal's one
Raise one on Guardians one. That's one, Rangers one, Mariners
and Dbacks lost. And birthdays Mick Fleetwood seventy seven and
soccer great Lionel Messi is thirty seven. And if it's

(11:09):
your birthday, Happy birthday. We're so glad you were born.

Speaker 1 (11:13):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chona.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
Whether you're listening on the iHeartRadio app or listening on
your favorite radio station, Welcome to your morning show on
Michael del Jorner. Welcome to Monday, June the twenty fourth
year of our Lord, twenty twenty four. We're about to
enter the Great Lull.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
So once the.

Speaker 2 (11:32):
NBA Finals are over, and they are, and then the
NHL Finals will be over tonight, and then the College
World Series will be over tonight, there's really nothing but golf,
which is really the Open, The British Open is all
that's really left, and the Lily World Series. Yeah, and
that's it. We're basically waiting on football season. I think
because of that, there's really nothing else going on this debate.

(11:56):
I just I asked the question, what do you think
the ratings are going to be like Thursday night? How
many people wanted to see if Joe Biden can stand
ninety minutes? How many want to see if he wanders
off stage or if he goes blank? How many want
to see if Donald Trump can focus on the economy
and the border and not look extreme in any way.

(12:20):
And whether you wanted this choice or not, this is
your choice, and you have to make your mind up.
Expectations are high. I suspect viewership could be record high
for this very unique CNN debate Thursday night, as both
Biden and Trump prepare for that brutal heat wave continues
in Today's a two year anniversary since Roe v. Wade

(12:41):
was overturned by the Supreme Court. And speaking of the
Supreme Court, a Supreme Court bar attorney who just so
happens to fly around on Air Force one as White
House correspondent for Your Morning show and others, John Decker
joins us. Several major rulings expected, we said within two weeks,
and now we're down to this week. So I would
imagine many of them, most of them are coming this week.

Speaker 8 (13:02):
Yeah, that's right, final week of the Supreme Court term,
and so those remaining cases, as you know, Michael, will
come out at some point this week. Every day will
be around ten o'clock Eastern time, refreshing our browser to
see if these cases are coming forward. In terms of decisions,
the biggest case probably is the presidential immunity case. This

(13:24):
is where Donald Trump claims that his absolute immunity from
criminal prosecution. He's lost on this legal argument at both
the trial court level and at the appellate court level,
the DC Circuit Court of Appeals. Now it's up to
the Supreme Court to decide, and their decision could have
major implications in the twenty twenty four election. It is
implications for Jack Smith, special counsel, about whether and when

(13:47):
he can bring that election interference case against Donald Trump,
and whether he can do so before November the fifth.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
One of the things we often talk about has been
a long time since we've talked about it is you
can learn a lot watching the cases by the questions
the Supreme Court are asking, not that they completely tip
their hand, but you get a sense of where they're
coming from. It's been a while since we had that conversation,
So what are you expecting on the immunity decision.

Speaker 8 (14:15):
Well, that's right. You can tell that this last week
when we saw that decision as it relates to the
issue of abortion, a group of anti abortion medical doctors
challenging whether or not they should be forced to perform
medical abortions, and the questions really in that particular case
had to do with whether or not those particular petitioners,

(14:36):
those doctors had standing, and in fact, that was the
reason why you saw the Supreme Court say no, they
do not have standing, and that was a unanimous decision
by the court. Similarly, as it relates to the presidential
immunity case, I was in oral arguments set in for
oral arguments in the Supreme Court for that also at

(14:57):
the hearing at the DC Circuit Court of Appeals. But
the Supreme Court, I think, based upon the questions that
we're asked, they are likely to send this case all
the way back to the trial court level Federal District
Court Judge Tanya chuck In have her decide which acts
that Donald Trump took were official acts, which acts were
not official acts before this case ultimately potentially works its

(15:21):
way back up to the US Supreme Court. But if
that happens, if what I suspect happens, that means that
Jack Smith will not be able to bring that case
against Donald Trump before November the fifth.

Speaker 1 (15:32):
So there's victory.

Speaker 2 (15:33):
And then there's that kind of victory because if it's
got to go all the way back down to come
all the way back up. You're looking well into twenty
twenty five. What are other top two or three cases.
I should have these all memorized, but not like you
do that. We should be looking for results for Well, there's.

Speaker 8 (15:48):
Another abortion case. This has to do with what happens
when a pregnant woman goes into a hospital with a
medical emergency in a state that has strict aborder laws.
This particular case comes out of the state of Idaho.
We saw how the issue of abortion Michael really had
an influence in energizing Democratic voters in the midterm elections

(16:12):
of twenty twenty two. Depending upon how the Supreme Court
rules in this particular case, it could also have implications
for the November election. And then one other case has
to do with the issue of social media. Three cases
remain unresolved, and they all resolve social media and the
government two cases involved social media laws in the states

(16:34):
of Texas and Florida that would limit how Facebook, TikTok x, YouTube,
other social media platforms regulate content posted by their users.
So that's going to be an interesting case when that
comes out this week as well.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
Every day you're a great resource, but especially today. Thank
you so much. Great reporting.

Speaker 7 (16:53):
John.

Speaker 1 (16:53):
We'll talk to you very soon. Hi, It's Michael.

Speaker 2 (16:56):
Your morning show can be heard live weekday mornings five
to eight am six Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio,
and Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.

Speaker 1 (17:05):
We'd love to join you on the Drive to work live,
but we're glad you're here now. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (17:10):
It's Monday, June the twenty fourth year of Our Lord,
twenty twenty four on the Aaron streaming live on your
iHeart app.

Speaker 1 (17:15):
This is your morning show. I'm Michael del Jno.

Speaker 2 (17:19):
Brutal heat wave continues, protesters are to blame for the
delay at the PGA travelers and Biden and Trump both
prepare for their big debate on Thursday night. And if
you're just waking up in Saint Louis, good morning lou
and here in Nashville, a big event coming from Oracle
and net Suite. It's called Business Grows Here. So if
you're a small business or thinking about becoming a small

(17:41):
business owner, this event is absolutely free and it is
a must attend Tuesday in Nashville, Thursday in Saint Louis,
and executive vice president of Oracle, Jason Mayner joins us
to tell us more. Good morning, Jason, great to meet
you by phone.

Speaker 11 (17:55):
Likewise, it's a pleasure to be here on the show.

Speaker 2 (17:57):
All right, So first things first, I want to talk
about because this has worked out perfect for us. We
have something in common. Your morning show is on in Nashville.
In fact, I'm headquartered here in Nashville, and then one
of my favorite of many stations that I'm on is
in Saint Louis. So those are two markets that are
very important to me, and they are very important to
this So let's start with the basics. NetSuite as a

(18:19):
product and this business Grows Here event and exactly what
it is and why.

Speaker 1 (18:25):
People need to be a part of it in these
two cities.

Speaker 11 (18:28):
Well, I appreciate you could not find two better cities
than Nashville and Saint Louis. So I think we're in
firm agreement on that Netwite is the business applications for
fast growing businesses, and so we decided to launch a
nationwide event series called Business Grows Here and here is
the really important part, which is we're going to shine

(18:50):
a spotlight on the successful local businesses. Talk strategy, tool techniques,
everything you need for a small business to grow and
become much bigger.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
You know you always hear this, Oh it's all.

Speaker 2 (19:04):
This is about the one thing in a partisan political
environment you can get everybody to agree on small business
until small business succeeds and becomes big business, and then
they get demonized.

Speaker 1 (19:13):
But we all believe in small business.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
It's the heart and soul of our economy for all
of us that take the entrepreneurial risk and start a business,
and in tougher times, there are people succeeding and this
can make a big difference. Talk to us about what
somebody out there, either thinking about a small bit starting
a small business, or in the middle of the battle
and have launched a small business, what net Suite provides for.

Speaker 11 (19:37):
Them the next week a part of Oracle, and so
we provide a set of applications Financial Accounting HR sale,
e commerce, inventory management, everything you need all in one
place so that you can run your business more efficiently.

(19:58):
You can scale a lot of to our customers. And
next we've had thirty nine thousand businesses running on the system.
They can do more with left and when you're in
a tough economy, inflation, things like that, you always have
to do more with left. And that's one of the
biggest challenges for a small business, no pun intended, is

(20:18):
how do you stretch the dollar right? How do you
make sure that you protect margins because you're you're hiring
and building a local workforce in many cases, Well, and I.

Speaker 2 (20:27):
Would tell you too, as somebody who's thought about starting
a business, all the things that would scare the death
out of you. That way, you can just focus on
your gifting, your passion, your product, what you know the best,
which I love about that. All right, So that's net Suite.
Now we get to the net Suite events and business growth.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
Here.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
This is about getting a lot of minds in one place.
And I mean we could talk about you know leaders,
community leaders, company leaders, political leaders.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
Business leaders that are all going to be at this.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
So let's talk about this special event and what it's
intended and what I'm hoping is has many more cities
to come.

Speaker 11 (21:03):
Well, I can promise you we will definitely be hitting
more cities. We made an intentional decision to go to
what I'll call the middle of the country. We went
to the places where business is appreciated, respected, where it's
growing and we want to give an extra boost. How
can we help, And so what we decided to do

(21:23):
in both cities is bring a bunch of entrepreneurs, government leaders,
folks who are all in on that mission. How do
you grow your business? And so we have in Nashville,
we have Brooken Eye Hill, who's the CEO of the
Tennessee Titans. We have Stuart mcward who's the commissioner of
the Tennessee Department of Economic and Community Development. We have

(21:44):
Jamie Simonov, who is famous for founding Ring and being
on Shark Tank. He's going to be a Nashville and
Saint Louis and he has battle scars from fighting the
Sharks if you will on the show to selling his
business for a billion plug dollars. So we got all
sorts of those lots of experience.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
That turned out to be such a game changer when
I think of, you know, alarm companies and security companies
that I used to do endorsements for that I really
believed and that I had in my home, compared to
what I installed on my back door, my side door,
and my front door, I mean it has been it's
up there on a you know that. I guess the
big list would be the Internet than the smartphone, but

(22:23):
that one's right up there.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
It changed everything.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
So to have his mind and his experience and the
and the hard lessons he's learned, that's invaluable. What do
we have in terms of political leaders.

Speaker 11 (22:36):
Well, in Saint Louis, we actually have Mike Keho, who's
the Lieutenant governor for the state of Missouri. He's obviously
going to have a lot to talk about what's going
on in the state. Interestingly, in Saint Louis we have
this one is not a political leader, but again it's
a bipartisan thing that everybody can get. Absolutely is chocolate
that we have Dan Abel who is the chief chocolate

(22:57):
officer at the Chocolate Chocolate, Chocolate cumpany sweet we can
talk politics and chocolate.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
We're talking with Jason Maynard, who is the executive vice
president of Oracle and NetSuite and the net Suitet event
that is going to be in Nashville on Tuesday, June
the twenty fifth, in Saint Louis on Thursday June the
twenty seventh. I know we have twenty five other cities,
but that's two of our big ones, and for you,
other cities may be coming there soon. You know, I
won't tell you how to do your business, but I

(23:27):
would think anybody out there even with an idea, and
there are some people that have been hanging on to
an idea and a desire for decades and it's scary
to do it because there's something about being an employee
that feels safe. But I would think not just people
who have a small business and can run it more
efficiently and get inspiring ideas. But if you've ever even

(23:48):
thought about it, it would be worth your time to
be at this event.

Speaker 11 (23:52):
We couldn't say it any better. And we're bringing along
in both cities folks who can help you raise capital,
so you can meet venture capitalists, you can understand and
how to actually financial business things like that, which obviously
is a big boost when you're getting going and as
you scale. So we're going to try and cover the
whole gamut, raised capital, acquiring customers, protecting the bottom line.

(24:13):
Really a kind of a three hundred and sixty degree
view of what it takes to succeed real quickly.

Speaker 2 (24:17):
Where's it going to be held in Nashville and where's
it going to be held in Saint Louis?

Speaker 11 (24:21):
All Right, Nashville is going to be June twenty fifth,
like you said, at the Conrad Nashville Hotel. Very swanky
place in Nashville. We love it. Saint Louis is going
to be June twenty seventh at the Saint Louis Union
Station Hotel.

Speaker 2 (24:35):
That's one of my favorite hotels, literally, one of my
favorite hotels in the entire country.

Speaker 11 (24:40):
It's fantastic. Now. The one thing we haven't mentioned is
the price is right for this event, no charge. You
just got to sign up and come, so there's no
reason you can't go. We're not trying to make money
on the event. We're just bringing everybody in. It's a
small way we can invest back into the communities and
share all of the lessons learned over the last last

(25:00):
twenty five years. We've been in business with some of
our friends who are happy to tell their story.

Speaker 1 (25:05):
So if they want to sign up, where do they go?

Speaker 11 (25:09):
They can go to the netsweet website. So netsweep dot
com and you will see registration links right there on
the website.

Speaker 2 (25:17):
All right, So netsweek dot com registration links for Saint Louis,
which will be June twenty seventh, and first up Nashville Tuesday,
June twenty fifth. Well, I got you on the phone.
Another thing is the big announcement here. Everybody's excited about
Oracle turning here for a home base in Nashville and
setting up a home campus.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
Some of us has seen the drawings.

Speaker 2 (25:38):
It's pretty exciting stuff and we are thrilled to have
you coming to town.

Speaker 1 (25:42):
Jason.

Speaker 11 (25:44):
Now, I'm thrilled that you know, we're thrilled that the
headquarters are coming. But you should know we actually have
over seven hundred people already in the state of Tennessee.
I'm here in Tennessee, I've been I've been in the
state now for three years or so. We've got more
folks coming in. But I want to make one very
important point. We're going to be growing that office to

(26:06):
eight nine thousand jobs over the next few years or so.
But we're hiring locally, So if anybody has backgrounds in
you know, computer science, engineering, there's going to be development jobs.
We're hiring a lot of folks for sales and services,
and we're really trying to target and plug into the
local community. We pick Tennessee. We think it's an amazing state,

(26:29):
it's an amazing city. But what makes Tennessee great is
the people and who want those people to come work
at Oracle.

Speaker 1 (26:36):
Well, I came seventeen years ago. You haven't seen me leave.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
Hey, maybe I can apply for on hold voice.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
You've reached orical nextweing.

Speaker 11 (26:45):
You've got a great you have a great voice for radio.
It could work well, it'd be fantastic.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
It's worked out for forty three years anyway. But if
anything changes, I'll give you a call, all right. Jason May,
executive vice president of Oracle and net Suite. The Next
Suite event is coming up Nashville, Tuesday, June to twenty fifth.

Speaker 1 (27:03):
Business Grows Here.

Speaker 2 (27:05):
That'll be at the Conrad Hotel, Nashville, Tuesday, June twenty fifth.
Saint Louis Union Station, Thursday, June twenty seventh. I couldn't
say it better than Jason said it. And the price
is right. So you've been thinking, you've been putting off
for years, you've wanted to start a business, or maybe
you did start one, or maybe you're an established small business.
But these these kinds of ideas and inspiration and products

(27:27):
can really make the difference, especially in tough times, between
success and even greater success.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
We want you to be there. It's absolutely free.

Speaker 2 (27:34):
All you have to do is preregister, go to NetSuite
dot com and Jason so great to meet you. I
hope to meet you in person and I can do
a try out for the on hold voice.

Speaker 1 (27:44):
Just let me know where and when I love.

Speaker 11 (27:47):
It, We're going to sign you up. And thanks everybody,
come on down and see us and say hi.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
All right, starting tomorrow here in Nashville, Great and Frank
in Tennessee.

Speaker 12 (27:56):
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Dell.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
Welcome to Monday, June the twenty fourth year of Outruled
twenty twenty four. Today's the two year anniversary since Roe v.
Wade was overturned and sent back to the States. The
brutal heat wave continues in the US and Biden and
Trump that's the big story. Preparing for the big debate
Thursday night, and I would never bring up protesters delaying
the PGA Travelers Championship on Sunday. After all, I'm far

(28:23):
too wise to do such a thing and promote such nonsense.
Ry O'Neil is here, Rory. I want to tell you
this is an anecdotal story. This will be a much
better setup than the more newsy setup. When my daughters
they went to college in city, but they decided to
live on campus, and the night they left was a

(28:44):
real reality check. You know, you move them into the
dorm and then you leave. And for us, anyway, that's
the first time I went home and went to bed
without my children.

Speaker 1 (28:52):
And you know, my daughter's in my home. That's a
bad night, all right.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
And I wake up the next morning and I'm sitting
and it's, you know, all the reality Just yesterday they
were bouncing around in my arms. Where did childhood go?
And I'm crying, tears are coming down my eyes and
the door opens and they're both back. I see, but
this is a laundry, right.

Speaker 1 (29:12):
Exactly, laundry. Yet they were just back for breakfast that more.
But here's the point. Life three sixty five.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
I think it's called whatever the app is sixty three
sex just three six, So all right, So I went
to bed and at least I can see them and
the little dot in their dorm and closed my eyes.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
I mean, it was very very assuring for me.

Speaker 2 (29:33):
Now I don't know what it's like to be them,
because I needed privacy when I was young. I was
always up to no good Thank goodness, they're not. But
you know, they don't have privacy anymore. And we do
get addicted to this, and if somebody turns their phone off,
we call them, why's your phone off?

Speaker 1 (29:47):
Where are you?

Speaker 2 (29:48):
And this is becoming something new for parents. It went
from keeping an eye on.

Speaker 1 (29:54):
Our kids to pretty much just stalking them day and night.
Oh it is a different time, right, And it's one thing.

Speaker 12 (30:00):
To sort of casually check on them, but it's another
when it is, oh gosh, it's eight thirty and they're
still in their dorm room and they have a biology
test at nine o'clock, I should call it. Make sure
they're awake this morning, and you know, and micro managing
them from afar based on some of these locator apps,
which how we wean them off this and is a

(30:22):
new question essentially that's emerging because look, if they're thirteen fourteen,
they have a smartphone, you want to know where they
are after soccer practice? Fine, But like your daughters, if
they're off at college somewhere, do you really need to
track where they were Saturday night at one thirty in
the morning.

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Well, why, because that's a part at the end of
the day. At the end of the day, what is
really common education about? Just teaching us how to learn?
I think if a teacher can get you to love
to learn or get you to be curious, that's far
more important than any class they're teaching, right, that's them portant.
But a big part of college is that transition to

(30:59):
being on your own. Now you go eat or you
don't eat. Now you do your launder, you wear filthy clothes.
I mean, that's a part of growing up that I
think gets lost if it just continues by way of
app rather than being in the home.

Speaker 12 (31:12):
Right, someone the one therapist said, it's time for parents
to take off the training wheels.

Speaker 1 (31:17):
Right, So.

Speaker 12 (31:18):
You think you should have gotten them ready for this
point in their lives right now, So let them make
their mistakes, let them sleep through that biology class and
learn their less.

Speaker 1 (31:26):
In the hard way. You know, the failing is a
big part of learning and growing up.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Right, because eventually you'll sleep through your morning meeting. You
know better better you miss a class at eighteen than
a meeting and lose your job at twenty two. I
think another way of looking at it is this generation
more than ever because when we were young, and I'm
not I hate playing that game. When we were young,
my mom didn't know where I was. Ever, my mom
wasn't up when I got up for school in the morning.

(31:52):
I watch, you know, I'll never forget one morning I
got up early and it was like six o'clock in
the morning. This is when the kids were in elementary school.
And I walk in the kitchen me nobody ever pours
me a cup of coffee. Let alone makes me breakfast,
and they're.

Speaker 1 (32:05):
All sitting down. Andrew's making him breakfast.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Alex is like ten years old, grabs her coffee and
takes a sip and goes cold as usual, and I'm like,
what's going on here?

Speaker 1 (32:16):
My mom was still asleep.

Speaker 2 (32:18):
We would go out and play as long as you
were home by dark, right, that was the only rule.
Now kids are watched every second, and I think they're
less independent than ever. And if we're going to continue
to micromanage them even at college, I mean, what.

Speaker 1 (32:32):
Next we go on job interviews with him. Well that's
been anecdotally. We've been hearing stories about that as well.

Speaker 12 (32:38):
But you know, when I was a kid growing up,
there were four of us as kids that we had
oh gosh, no joke, twenty neighborhood kids all around, all the.

Speaker 1 (32:45):
Same rough age.

Speaker 12 (32:46):
And mom actually used a cow bell that she would
ring that's meant back here for dinner. And then the
other neighbors got a school bell. So if it was
clunk clunk, clunk, clunk, that was the o'deel kids, and
client clink clank with the other neighbor kids, that was
our page or our our text message.

Speaker 2 (33:04):
Yeah that are Italian mother screaming gets your blank home. Yeah,
either way, but that was it. And I'll tell you
roy I, you know all of the fights we had,
all of the disagreements we had, all of the games
we won, whether it was will Fleball or four on
for whatever, that all. I wouldn't trade any of that

(33:25):
for a video game, not for all the tea and child.

Speaker 12 (33:27):
When do you think you're going to turn off the
phone connection with the daughters is the question.

Speaker 1 (33:32):
Well, that's that I was going to end with that,
and that is okay.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
So now our parents are addicted and it gives them
a vehicle to not let go uh and they really
need to.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
They're addicted to monitoring and micromanaging.

Speaker 2 (33:43):
And I would acknowledge to you that that is true,
and I will also acknowledge.

Speaker 1 (33:47):
To you I'm not ready yet. Some polling found though,
that the kids like it.

Speaker 12 (33:55):
In many cases, you don't assume the kids are trying
to ditch that.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Rory with our final story of the day, and boy
did that hit close to home. Great reporting. We'll talk
again in the morning. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael Mill Joano
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

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.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

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

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.