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July 3, 2024 34 mins
Quickest narrative death in Presidential history!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern and great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast two.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
Three starting your morning off right, A new way of talking,
a new way of understanding.

Speaker 1 (00:23):
Well because we're in this stagrafic. This is your morning
show with Michael O'Dell jem Ah Tip top of the
morning to you. Welcome to Wednesday, July the third. You
have Our Lord twenty twenty four on the air and
streaming live on your iHeart app. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jorno. On the eve of our nation's birthday.

(00:45):
You know, I like to learn because I'm curious, and
I don't know if you ever do this, but you know,
fourth of July, fourth of July, fourth of July, or
is it Independence Day? And I thought this year I'm
going to go and search of some things about Independence
Day that I didn't know. It was a rabbit hole,

(01:09):
if you will, but I did stumble on three or
four that I completely didn't know. There would be oh
wow moments for you too. I'll be sharing a little
bit of our history things I did know already. Well,
there's a reason why either John Hancock had a really
big ego, or when you're the first to sign a document,

(01:31):
you didn't realize how many others are coming. Maybe you're
a little bit larger than others. That I kind of knew.
I knew he was first, and that may explain why
it was so big. The population. I mean, I guess
I knew it would be vastly different. In seventeen seventy six,
the population in the United States was two point five million,

(01:51):
as roughly the size of Nashville, compared to the three
hundred and fifty million we are today. Youngest signer of
the Declaration of Independence, Edward Rutledge, twenty six years old.
I didn't know that. But I'm talking four really big doozies.

(02:12):
I'll share one early with you. The fourth of July
could have been the second of July. Although the Declaration
document is dated July fourth, it was actually voted upon
July second. That would have ruined everything I make kru

(02:35):
Dandy bought on the second of July, and then everybody's
signature wasn't on the document till August second. Imagine if
we were celebrating the second of August, let alone the
second of July, let alone the fourth of July. And
then another interesting tidbit, three of the signers died on

(02:57):
the fourth of July, of them on the very same
fourth of July. I was not aware of that. John
Adams and Thomas Jefferson died in eighteen twenty six on
the fourth of July, the fiftieth anniversary of the document

(03:20):
they had signed and for Jefferson written. Then five years later,
James Monroe, in eighteen thirty one, died on the fourth
of July. Interesting little tid man. That's just a couple
of them. I'll be sprinkling them throughout the day. Things
about the fourth of July. Maybe you didn't even know.
Former President Donald trump sentencing in the hush money case

(03:44):
has been postponed at least, and I emphasize at least
until September eighteenth. Why well, Judge Marshawn said, if such
is still necessary an interesting choice of words. Oh absolutely,
we will delay the sentencing. So so much of the

(04:05):
Democrats and getting the sentencing right before the Republican convention.
That's not going to happen. Will the charges even hold up.
All the lawfare that has failed, this is the only
one that succeeded, and it ain't over yet thanks to

(04:27):
a Supreme Court ruling. Huge story today, a second Democratic
lawmaker openly declaring a lack of faith in President Joe Biden.
And for good reason. We have polls of plenty for
you this morning, and we would start with one that leaked.
So this is the quickest narrative death for the Dems

(04:47):
and the Biden administration, and they've had several, but this
is the quickest. So yesterday the narrative was well. Immediately
after the debate, the initial narrative was, yeah, Joe was awful.
He's awful, maybe shouldn't be president, but Donald Trump's a

(05:08):
liar and he should step out of the race today
for being a pathological liar. That was the original narrative.
Then after the weekend, the narrative was just a bad night.
By the way, Nancy Pelosi was the first to come
out on the weekend talk shows and say one bad
debate performance does not erase a presidency. Joe Biden was

(05:31):
similar narratives they were obviously given to them. Just a
bad night. Then it was he has a cold. Now
it's foreign travel. Now leaks from inside the White House,
and Axios really dug deep. Turns out you got a
president that's not very cognitively aware other than ten to four,

(05:54):
So you got a midday president. After that, you got
a memory care patient. Well that's a bad leak, but
not as bad as this leak. Remember the narrative yesterday
they did a little internal polling and they think it'll
hold up in regular polling. Well, guess what the memo leaked,

(06:20):
and it wasn't as they said it was. But they
were right about one thing. It is holding up because
I have Rasmuse and CNN, CBS, all these polls showing
a dramatic drop since the debate, and of course fifty
million watched, many more watched the clips, many more read

(06:40):
the coverage. It was alarming. Yesterday, in the midst of
a sea of narratives, we did have one truth right,
and it was the if it was Axios or Washington
Post headline, the tale of two presidents, and the people
finally saw the other one translation, they've been hiding the

(07:01):
president's cognitive capabilities and issues, but they couldn't hide him
on the debate night. Now they're gaslighting you. He wasn't bad,
he wasn't senile, that wasn't Alzheimer's drums, the liar, and
he just had a bad night. Now we get the leak.

(07:21):
So a confidential polling membo circulated among anxious Democrats. Unfortunately
it's been leaked, and unfortunately it confirms their worst fears.
President Biden's support has started to tumble, especially in key
electoral battlegrounds, in the wake of his disastrous debate performance.

(07:44):
But that's not the real story. Keep going forward with
this guy. I can't remember who it was I was
talking to, and they thought I was crazy. I said,
I saw the midterm elections. I saw a governor in
the state of New York barely squeak by. New York's

(08:06):
in play. Let alone Minnesota, Let alone Wisconsin, Let alone Michigan.
Let alone Virginia, where Trump is now leading. Now we
know New Hampshire, heck, Maine, Maine might be in play.

(08:27):
And one of their senators said, well, there's no chance
Biden can win, And I'm okay with that. He's not
even calling for anybody else to jump in for Joe.
So what you see is overall the lead for Trump

(08:49):
dramatically increased in days after the debate, but a lot
of states. I mean, if you are now sitting around
the conference table and you're trying to imogize the Biden campaign,
you don't have the luxury of spending a lot of
time in the swing states Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, Nevada, Arizona. Heck,

(09:20):
you better go firm up New Jersey, New York, Maine,
New Hampshire. So this is a damning pole. Now how
you can read this poll and convince yourself that you
can gaslight the American people into believing it was just

(09:43):
a bad night. I mean, I guess sometimes I try
to think, because usually the left is always four steps
ahead of us. May I remind you they got Biden
hiding in a basement telling Harry leg stories and corn
pops to elected the first time in twenty twenty. They're

(10:03):
usually pretty good, but they can't have them in abasement
this time. They can't change election laws with COVID this time,
and they had their first disaster. Is the plan to
dump them? Is the plan to go ahead and lose
with him, but focus on the House and the Senate.

(10:23):
Is the third plan to have a disaster debate, don't
give him any drugs, let them look see noile, and
then come back triumphantly and do better in the second debate.
And then what if Trump says no. In fact, if
you're Donald Trump, why would you debate him again? Especially
if these leads continue to grow. So this is a
big story waking up. Obviously, the Trump sentencing being delayed

(10:45):
till September if, as Judge Marshaun said, if it's necessary,
they may lose the whole case, let alone the sentencing.
That's a huge story. The other story is this leaked memo.
So they told you yesterday they did internal polling and
it looked fine. There was no damage from the debate,

(11:08):
and we suspect all the polls well, the other poles
are coming in. Then they don't look fine, and then
their poll got leaked and it doesn't look fine. The
poll was conducted online in the seventy two hours after
the debate, emailed to interested parties on Sunday. It found
that forty percent of Biden voters in twenty twenty that
were surveyed now believed the president should end his campaign.

(11:35):
That's nearly half of your base. That's a significant shift
from their survey in May, which was prior to the debate,
where only twenty five percent felt like he should consider
dropping out. Biden is also taking a major hit among

(11:55):
swing voters by a two to one margin. You lost
nearly half your You're losing swing voters two to one.
And now you've got all these places that weren't even
considered swing states in play. New Hampshire, Virginia, New Mexico.

(12:15):
They don't include it on the list of this story
and read it, but I got news for you. New
York and New Jersey are not far behind. The governor
of Michigan said, we don't think we can carry Michigan
any longer. Wisconsin, the president is leading, Virginia, the president
is leading, and it gets even worse when you put

(12:36):
Robert Kennedy and third party candidates in it. So that's
a pretty big splash. This morning, yesterday they told you
we did poling. There wasn't much change, and we expect
that to be the case. It was just a bad night.
It was just the cold, it was just foreign travel.
President does have Alzheimer's he's not senile. Well, that's the

(13:01):
quickest death of a debate by truth, the very leaked
polling they were talking about it, that they lied about
it yesterday. What else are they lying about today? That's
a bombshell. And that's what we're waking up to. Don't
you feel real independency? This is your morning show with

(13:21):
Michael del Trono. I'm Michael del Jona. If you're just
waking up, here's what you need to know. Five stories
on the day. Well, I think new Moroluno is former
President Trump's sentencing in his New York rush money base
is being postponed until September the eighteenth, at least. I

(13:45):
just need say, God bless me. Judge Marshawn went on
to say, and that's if it's necessary. This comes after
Trump's lawyers filled the letter with the judge looking to
set aside a recent guilty verdict. The sentence single now
place September eighteenth, if necessary. Meanwhile, the DNC tels donors

(14:07):
Biden's not going anywhere. Here's Mark Mayfield. Was your road
to the White House? Ruin to the White House?

Speaker 3 (14:13):
Twenty twenty four. Biden campaign officials are trying to ease
fears among top donors following President Biden's forward to Bank performance.
During a Zoom call with Mega donors on Monday, DNC
finance director Chris Corn said that replacing the president on
the ticket is out of the question.

Speaker 4 (14:29):
Everyone thinks that it's really easy to just, you know,
listen to what the media.

Speaker 1 (14:35):
Is saying and just all of a sudden, you know,
Biden just society.

Speaker 5 (14:38):
He's not going to run, and we can just create
a whole new scenario with someone else that we get behind.

Speaker 3 (14:45):
He added, an easy replacement scenario is far from the
truth based on his thirty years of political experience. He
then said Biden won the nomination through a primary process
where the people chose him.

Speaker 1 (14:56):
I'm Mark Mayfield. Meanwhile, President Biden's blaming foreign travel for
his debate performance last week. Wait, I thought it was
a cold Chris Garagio has the story.

Speaker 6 (15:06):
The president spoke with donors at a fundraiser Tuesday in
Virginia where he said it wasn't very smart when he
decided to travel around the world a couple of times.
Shortly before the debate. He added, I didn't listen to
my staff, and then I almost fell asleep on stage.
Biden apologized to the crowd of donors, saying it's not
an excuse but an explanation.

Speaker 1 (15:26):
I'm Chris carncio. Well, it's time to celebrate our independence. Well,
not everyone, it's proud me an American. In fact, pride
in America remains near a record low. Roy O'Neil has
that story.

Speaker 5 (15:39):
Two out of five Americans say they're extremely proud to
be an American. Another one in four say they're very proud.
These numbers, by Gallup roughly match where we were back
in twenty eighteen, but aren't as bad as the record
lows measured in twenty twenty. Pride in America was at
its highest after the attacks of nine to eleven and

(15:59):
has been on a downward trajectory since twenty fifteen.

Speaker 1 (16:02):
I'm Rory O'Neil. Well see how many millions are proud
to be travelers. Millions of travelers are out and about
ahead of the Fourth of July holiday. NBC News is
Tom Costello has more details on the record number of
Americans taking to the air for trips.

Speaker 2 (16:16):
A record thirty two million passengers nearly three million a day,
are flooding through TSA checkpoints over the extended July fourth stretch,
average wait times thirty minutes for standard screenings, under ten
minutes for pre check.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
We got some new rules unveiled today by the Biden
administration aimed at protecting workers from extreme heat. Michael Kastner
has the details.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
The proposed Occupational Safety and Health Administration standard would require
new workers to gradually adjust to working in high temperatures
and require companies to have an emergency heat response plan.
Regularly scheduled safety training would also be implemented. There would
be different safeguards for different temperatures, like increased access to
water at eighty degrees and pade fifteen minutes it breaks

(17:00):
at ninety degrees.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
I'm Michael Kassner, and that's your top five stories of
the day. Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show can
be heard live five to eight am Central, six to
nine Eastern and great cities like Jackson, Mississippi, Akron, Ohio,
or Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and we're grateful you're here. Now. Enjoy
the podcast. What's the next play for the Left lawfairs failed,

(17:24):
We'll get some analysis with GOP consultant Chris Walker, and
later in the third hour of your morning show. By
the way, if you're not available for the third hour,
don't forget the podcast. Just go on your iHeartRadio app
in the podcast section search your Morning show or Michael
del Jornam. It'll pop right up. Don't forget to hit subscribe.
That way, all three hours commercial free are waiting for
you every morning by nine thirty Central, ten thirty Eastern,

(17:48):
thirty six minutes after the hour. Thanks for waking up
with your morning show, and welcome to Wednesday, the third
of July, Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty four. We've
been looking at some of the findings of my fourth
of July independence research. Did you know the liberty bell
rings thirteen times tomorrow? And it rings thirteen times every

(18:11):
fourth of July? Why independence date? And the original thirteen
colonies crack and all? It'll be ringing thirteen times tomorrow.
We're just waking up former President Trumps sentencing in the
New York hush money case. Their only lawfare of victory
has been postponed. Can't sentence them right before the RNC convention.
In fact, you may not be able to call them
a fellon very much longer. Judge Marshawn said, yes, the

(18:34):
sentencing has been delayed until September eighteenth, if such is
still necessary, meaning even the judge in the case SES
case may not hold up now after that Supreme Court
ruling on immunity, a second Democratic lawmaker has openly declared
a lack of faith in President Biden, and the scramble
is on. We talked last half hour. The narrative yesterday

(18:56):
was we did internal polling and it shows no lass
since the debate, and we suspect all polling will show
the same. That is the quickest narrative death in Biden
administration history. Why somebody leaked the memo. And there were
huge losses in the post debate polling. Our segment ended

(19:20):
before I could share with you some of them. We
gave you the gist of it, which was, oh, there
are massive losses everywhere, especially in swing states. And then
there's a lot of new swing states that now are
on the table. New Mexico, Virginia, New Hampshire. They don't
list them, but New York, New Jersey, Maine, they're all

(19:43):
on the table now. Never mind Michigan, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Arizona,
nevad You know the actual swing states going inside the numbers.
Could Colorado be in play? According to the internal polling
that was done that they said looked fine pre debate,

(20:05):
Biden was leading by three point seven points in Colorado.
That lead is now just one point nine It dropped
in half. Minnesota, Biden was leading by two point four
percent before the debate. Now he leads by zero point

(20:26):
four percent. I brought up Maine. Biden was leading by
two point two percent. That's pretty scary close for Maine.
Now the lead is zero point two percent. Or how
about New Mexico. In New Mexico pre debate, Biden was
leading by one point nine percent. He's now trailing by

(20:51):
zero point five percent. In Virginia, he was leading by
one point five percent, although there were some poles that
had Trump up a point now post debate, their poll
even has Trump leading by zero point six percent. New Hampshire.

(21:11):
Before the debate, Trump was up by half a point.
Now he's up by two point eight. Wisconsin, Trump was
up by two point two. Now he's up by four
point two nearly doubled. Nebraska. The lead for Trump went
from two point six to four point three. Michigan the

(21:33):
lead went from five to six point nine. Pennsylvania the
lead went from five to seven point three. Yeah, they
may want to consider running the Pennsylvania governor. Remember the
old swing states. Okay, I don't if there's that swing anymore.
Nevada Trump was leading by nearly seven. Now he leads
by nearly nine. Arizona he was leading by seven point six.

(21:53):
Now he leads by nearly ten. Georgia he does lead
by ten. Now in North Carolina he leads by ten.
Let me tell you clearly, yesterday they were lying to you.
Yesterday the administration said that they did internal polling and
it showed no losses post debate, and we suspect that

(22:16):
they will hold up. They were lying to you. These
are impossible to overcome losses unless you think a sit
down with George Stepanophilis can fix things. And I'm sure
they'll do it. Between ten and four those are the
hours in which the president can operate. But this says

(22:37):
a lot of people feeling a little bit differently. Now.
I don't know if Nancy Pelosi saw these numbers and
that explains it, but there's been a massive flip immediately
after the debate on the Sunday Morning shows, Nancy Pelosi says,
it was a bad debate, a bad night. It doesn't
race a presidency or a great man. Maybe she just

(22:57):
saw the numbers that leaked that I just shared with
deals with Andrea Mitchell. She's certainly changed her mind on
MSNBC listen.

Speaker 7 (23:08):
So I guess the first question. We understand from our
reporting four different sources that top leaders on the Hill
have not yet had a call from the president. Have
you spoken to President Biden since the debate?

Speaker 8 (23:21):
No, I haven't spoken to him since the debate, but
I have spoken to him regularly and every time he
has been on the top of his game in terms
of knowing the issues and what is at stake. But
we all have been in touch with people close to
the president. So it's not a question of not having
an opportunity to make our concerns known or have some

(23:44):
questions answered. But what is I think we have to
spend a little more time for viewing what is at
stake in this election. Today is the sixtieth anniversary of
the Civil Rights Act and what the Republicans are trying
to do. The amiens and the Court is to undermine
our democracy. Their project twenty twenty five would undo much

(24:08):
of what is in the Civil Rights Act. But the
Court did.

Speaker 3 (24:11):
With Roe v.

Speaker 8 (24:12):
Wade is very clear to people in terms of liberty
and freedom for women or what they did, what they
did this week was so undermining of the democracy, so
dangerous in terms of.

Speaker 1 (24:28):
All right, So at this point she's stalling. She doesn't
want to comment on whether the president had a bad
night or he's cognitively impaired and it's a good night.
She's rambling the history of the civil rights movement, kind
of like abolition of slavery belongs mostly to the leadership

(24:50):
of Republicans, will eventually put into law when LBJ was president.
There are no plans to dismantle that. Let's see how
long she can tap dance and get around it.

Speaker 8 (25:05):
A particularly dangerous part of it is they said that
official acts cannot be used as testimony in unofficial investigations
for our trials. This is very dangerous. This is the
week of the fourth of July. I always like to
use temporal marketers, so it write back today fourth of July,

(25:25):
this week a time when our founders, our visionaris had
some question wise vision for the funeral that was about
a democracy, and what they did this week was to
make it an imperial presidency, an imperial presidency, and the
beat goes on with their Project twenty five. So let's

(25:46):
keep an eye on what is at stake and how
important this election is in elections. Look, I've had every role,
I've been the chair of the Democratity Record strategy.

Speaker 7 (25:58):
Given your perspective and many differgrats perspective of what is
at stake, that it's an existential moment for the country.
According to your perspective, if Donald Trump is elected, that
would posit that you have to have the most important
campaign led by the most important nominee. And do you

(26:18):
have questions as to whether this was a one bad
night or whether there is something more serious involved, and
whether he needs to be more open, more open about
his if he does have a medical condition, if he
is slipping. You know, everybody knows there's an age issue.
And he certainly did the opposite of reassuring people with

(26:41):
that high risk, potentially high rewards plan that they came
up with a backfire.

Speaker 8 (26:49):
Well, you asked me to speak from my experience and
my experience with Joe Biden is that in all the
legislation that we passed to save the country with the rescue,
pagagege money and people's packed adge to honor the vision
he has, knowledge he has And so when people ask
that question, it's legitimate of both candidates because what we

(27:11):
saw on the other side was a line of justin
you know, I tore up this speech when he lied
to the Congress thing. But so are you agreeing both candidates?
Both candidates, whatever uh tests you want to put them
to in terms of their mental acuity and their health,
both of them.

Speaker 7 (27:31):
Well, arguably the President Biden should have been prepared for
the kinds of lies that he says and that we've
we've also reported that Donald Trump says, and all the
fact checking is that they were at least thirty lies
and not answering questions and pivoting back to immigration whenever
he could.

Speaker 1 (27:50):
So there's no question about that.

Speaker 8 (27:51):
I'm going to you know, but there's no facts, no time,
there's no time time.

Speaker 1 (27:58):
Have cognitive abilities, you can and be aware of the issues.
This is what they're left with. That's why I asked
the question today. There's no more relevant question. Where are
we Where are we headed? What's their next play? That's
your proof. They don't know their next play yet, but

(28:22):
I can tell you on Sunday, in the midst of
all that tap dancing, Nancy Pelosi stood by the President
one hundred percent. It was just a bad debate. It
doesn't erase a great presidency. Now they both should take tests.
Well Trump has he brought that up in the debate
and that wasn't one of your lies. Will Joe Biden.

(28:44):
Yesterday in a news conference crying, Jean Pierre says, Oh,
he has no Alzheimer's, he has no dementia. I hope
you asked that same question of Donald Trump. Donald Trump
shows no signs of it. Nobody thinks he has it.
Yours nothing but sides of it. This is Andy Hickson,

(29:05):
formerly of Nashville, now living in Detroit, Michigan. Thanks to iHeartRadio,
My morning show is your morning show. Thanks for waking
up with your morning show on the air and on
your iHeartRadio app on Michael del Jornal. Here's your top
five stories of the day.

Speaker 6 (29:21):
No all off.

Speaker 1 (29:23):
Former President trumps sentencing in his New York hush money
case is being postponed until September the eighteenth, if if
it's still necessary on September the eighteenth. Is how Judge
Marshawn worried. It mean this whole thing may be thrown out. Meanwhile,
the White House says Biden has no medical issues. Mark

(29:45):
Mayfield has our today in politics, The.

Speaker 3 (29:48):
White House says President Biden does not have Alzheimer's disease
or any other form of dementia. Press Secretary Karein Jean
Pierre was asked if Biden suffers from any degenerative illness
following last week's depay against Donald Trump.

Speaker 6 (30:01):
That's your answers for you? Are you ready for it?

Speaker 8 (30:03):
It's a note, and I hope you're asking the other
guy the same exact question.

Speaker 3 (30:06):
The White House is trying to ease concerns over Biden's
fitness to serve, claiming he simply had a bad night
and suffered from a cold. This comes after Biden's struggled
at times to make clear statements on his positions during
the debate against Trump. Former President Trump's sentencing in his
New York hush money cases being postponed until September. This
comes after Trump's lawyers fouled a letter with the judge
looking to set aside the recent guilty verdict. The sentencing

(30:29):
will now be delayed until September the eighteenth, at the earliest.
The lawyers asked for more time to go over any
potential impact from the Supreme Court's immunity decision, which gave
Trump immunity for official acts in office, and a New
York State appeals court has ruled to dismar former New
York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani. That's politics, Mark Nyfield, NBC
News Radio.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Where's the circus music when you need it? Oh, it
was just a cold right, No. President Biden's actually blaming
foreign travel. Chris Caragio has the details.

Speaker 6 (30:58):
The president spoke with Don't at a fundraiser Tuesday in Virginia,
where he said it wasn't very smart when he decided
to travel around the world a couple of times. Shortly
before the debate. He added, I didn't listen to my staff,
and then I almost fell asleep on stage. Biden apologized
to the crowd of donors, saying it's not an excuse
but an explanation.

Speaker 1 (31:19):
I'm Chris Carncio. Good luck with that time to celebrate
our independence, but not everyone. Things aren't like they used
to be with George M. Cohen and Yankee Doodle Dandy. Oh,
we're a long way from post World War Two. Pride
in America reigns near a record low. Roy O'Neil reports.

Speaker 5 (31:37):
Two out of five Americans say they're extremely proud to
be an American. Another one in four say they're very proud.
These numbers, by Gallup roughly match where we were back
in twenty eighteen, but aren't as bad as the record
lows measured in twenty twenty. Pride in America was at
its highest after the attacks of nine to eleven and

(31:57):
has been on a downward trajectory since twenty five.

Speaker 1 (32:00):
I'm Rory O'Neill. Funny thing about you humans, you're at
your best when things are worse. Maybe there's our hope
for the day. Millions of travelers are out and about
ahead of the fourth of July. Maybe they're not proud
to be Americans. They're celebrated independence, but they'll take the
four day weekend to travel. Tom Costello of NBC has
more details on the record number of Americans taking.

Speaker 2 (32:19):
To the air to record thirty two million passengers, nearly
three million a day are flooding through TSA checkpoints over
the extended July fourth stretch, average wait times thirty minutes
for standard screenings, under ten minutes for pre check.

Speaker 1 (32:33):
So you don't like the jab eh? How do you
feel about a snort? A University of Georgia based startup
will launch a nasal COVID vaccine trial this fall. Sarah
Lee Kesler reports.

Speaker 9 (32:45):
Sion Vac LLC has received funding from Project next Gen,
a federal initiative based in the US Department of Health
and Human Services. The new vaccine well that's based on
a viral delivery platform containing modified strains of can I influenza.

Speaker 1 (33:01):
Which causes kennel cough in dogs.

Speaker 9 (33:03):
The clinical trial will evaluate the effectiveness and safety of
its new vaccine compared to an FDA approved mRNA vaccine
currently used to protect against serious COVID nineteen illness. Sara
Lee Kessler, NBC News Radio.

Speaker 1 (33:19):
Ours and restaurants. They can now air NFL Sunday ticket
games without a satellite dish, pretty much the way we
do it at home, I suspect anyway. This comes after
a joint venture between the league and a private equity
firm called ever Pass Media, after they bought up Show
that's a platform which the technology has the capability to

(33:41):
allow commercial establishments to stream live sports. Previously, businesses had
to do that only through direct TV subscriptions, and I
suspect for Tennessee Titan fans, we may need a few
drinks while we're watching. We're all in this together. This
is your morning Show with Michaelton Hill Truno by the
Art
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