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July 18, 2024 34 mins
Three big stories at once make it hard to process.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven
ninety Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one oh four seven
in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you listen
live every day. Make us a part of your morning routine,
but better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Two three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding.
Because we're in this stage. This is your morning show
with Michael Dell Chemo. Good morning, and welcome to Thursday
July the eighteenth Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty four.
So much for the best laid plans. I can't get

(00:44):
Darin to come up. I don't know where she went to.
It's coming up on a computer screen. Teams no, so
you're gonna this is uncomfortable. Hopefully she'll figure it out
and call you. Okay, Welcome to Thursday, July the eighteenth,
The Fear of Our Lord, twenty twenty four, The night
after Senator from Ohio JD. Vance accepted formally the nomination

(01:06):
for Vice President of the United States. You know, an
extraordinary life. He spent some time telling that story. What's
at stake for America? He spent a lot of time.
It could be just me, but two quick points. One
last night felt like to me a typical convention night.

(01:29):
That's how that's not to slam last night, I want
to make that clear, But that's how extraordinary Monday and
Tuesday was. Now that could have been by design, just
to leave everything in the spotlight on jd Vance and I.
A lot of the reaction from the floor was great.
I don't know what the reaction from America was. He's
a good guy. I think that came through. The other

(01:53):
observation that I had was the whole evening kind of
got overshadowed by all the Biden drama. I don't know
if that was by design because things are going so
bad for them. So then there was the altercation with
Secret Service. Then there was the Shumer and Pelosi telling
him to step aside polls, that's a jest, he can't win.
Then unsolved that he's got COVID. Uh So that kind

(02:14):
of had a funny feel. But we'll break down the
convention last night, the latest on Secret Service, and the
latest on the President. I asked me to as you know,
to make a bet. I think I think Joe Biden
left last night, not in COVID, but in and final
throws of his decision. I don't think Joe Biden's going

(02:35):
to be the nomination. But we'll go through all of that.
Aaron Rayali is joining us. Aaron, I couldn't get your
thing to come up on my computer. Yeah, this is
not We met on the phone. We returned to the phone. Yeah,
I gotta figure that out.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Hopefully not permanently, but yeah, what happens. But I'm happy
to talk to you.

Speaker 1 (02:55):
I know, and I was talking. So one of the
stories that you're taking a look at is as baby
boomers pass down their wealth to the next generation, my
kids will be interested in this where is the money
being invested?

Speaker 4 (03:10):
So what they're looking to is TikTok, believe it or not.
It's basically just this.

Speaker 3 (03:14):
New form of influencer, financial influencer. According to the World
Economic Forum, that's the folks behind Davos seventy three.

Speaker 4 (03:24):
Trillion dollars And to repeat that, seventy three.

Speaker 3 (03:26):
Trillion dollars is going to transfer to younger generations. And
this comes at a time where there's this rise of
social media as a financial tool and financial advice for
gen Z for millennials, and so what World Economic Forum.

Speaker 4 (03:40):
Has looked at is how do you reach these people?

Speaker 3 (03:43):
As you have these young folks entering the financial markets
earlier than other generations.

Speaker 4 (03:48):
The financial services industry.

Speaker 3 (03:50):
As a whole is going to have to innovate and
adjust how it delivers advice. This democracy democratizes a lot
of information, and it used to be you know, these
venerated walls that would hold it at JP Morgan and
you didn't know what you were doing. You weren't capable
of doing this turns on not so And I keep
going back to Game Stop. I think Game Stop is

(04:12):
like truly a moment culturally where we saw young people
via a memes stock just you know, the power.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
Of the masses in spite of all.

Speaker 3 (04:21):
The technology we have, all the understanding, all the reason,
all the algorithms, all the training advancements.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
Nope, people can still do this.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
And it really had a profound impact on the markets
and the richest of the richest.

Speaker 1 (04:32):
With one of them all right, one the first thing
that strikes me seventy three trillion dollars that just hasn't
been my experience from my of course, I don't remember.
Are my parents baby boomers? No, they were born in
the forties, early generation.

Speaker 4 (04:46):
Yeah, twenty to forty five was the silent generation.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
All right, So well, maybe the boomers are doing better. Well,
my kids will do well, but they're gonna have to
wait a while. Daddy's still fine. But seventy three trains.
It's hard to get your arms around that level of
transference of wealth, and it really matters how it's handled.

Speaker 4 (05:04):
It profoundly matters.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
And let's be clear, it's important to distinguish from individually
tailored financial advice that's provided by a regulated.

Speaker 4 (05:14):
Professional and that really compelling person.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
On TikTok and know that oftentimes it's influencer's motivation is
driven by someone paying them, and that's.

Speaker 4 (05:26):
An important thing too.

Speaker 3 (05:27):
But I've watched many of these and I am often
very impressed by just the general knowledge when you're just
in party knowledge, and if this is a way to
do it, I think that is a good thing. I
think I've said this before, and I'll date again. I
am a proponent of gen Z. I think they are great.
I think they're taking all the mistakes that my generation,
the millennials made and doing right by them. They're much

(05:50):
more observant. They've been through a lot already, but they
seem to have somewhat of a level head. Yes, they
have an extraordinarily difficult time making eye contact with you
for the most.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
Part, and don't really know how to talk to people.
That has to do with the fact that they're so
Internet native. But outside of that, I have seen.

Speaker 1 (06:07):
I can concur that Aaron, I have seen it in
my kids, you know, like last night, I'll give an
example of how they kind of get it. So they
were attacking Joe Biden over the economy, and I don't
know how it came up, but you know, Nick brought
up a question and the question was very specific to
inflation and how it impacts people's and so he goes, so,

(06:29):
what exactly I mean just to ask the question, because
you know, the previous generations have known we got to
spend more time understanding how to manage money, and we
just don't teach it in school, and then parents were
just too busy. Your kids didn't ask this generation asked.
So he goes, what exactly is paycheck to paycheck?

Speaker 4 (06:44):
Me?

Speaker 1 (06:44):
So I was explained to mean it means your paycheck
is gone. It pays for everything, and if you ever
lost your job, your one paycheck away from everything crumbling,
you know. And he says, and he looks at me,
and he goes, and that's Joe Biden's fault. I said, well,
policies have led to consettum once his consequences, you know,
just energy policies alone affect everything. Food gets by truck.
I mean, we start talking about things. But his conclusion

(07:07):
was classic. It looks to me, he goes, So, how
much of it is Joe Biden's fault and how much
of it is you spend too much fault? But they nobody.
I looked at me. I said a little bit of both, Nick,
but no. But the point is there is something about
this generation. They get more than we think. They may
not look us in the eye. They may not say
shake your hand, squeeze it tight, say nice to meet you.

(07:29):
But I'm telling you there is something different about this generation.
And I don't get it because you know, my kids
were not raised in want and need, but they they're very,
very conscious of these things. And that tells me, well,
there are two things. They're very trainable in their curiosity
they'll go find answers. Hopefully they're the right ones, because

(07:50):
they could also get the wrong ones. So in seventy
seventy three trillion dollars is in the air waiting on
who advises them. So that's what I may I think
makes this story so import And I.

Speaker 4 (08:01):
Love what you said about your son.

Speaker 3 (08:03):
And those are such a stupid questions and great time
to be asking them. But like you said, the curiosity,
and I think that that's been said. If you you know,
TikTok does provide some interesting information and a lot of
garbage too, but that that desire to have your questions answered.
I always think back to and I'm not picking on
on exers, but my cousins were exers, and they were older,

(08:25):
and they were cooler, and I remember I always thought
of that they know everything, but they never seem to
like dig into the details, or maybe in an they're
known for apathy or like whatever. It's the exact opposite
of apathy that I have observed with this younger generation.
And and and that's a good thing.

Speaker 4 (08:42):
A really really good thing.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
Apathetic at the end of the day, I was just
gonna say, at the end of the day, we don't
know what they're thinking, right, because we're not them raised
like them, you know, so we were raised in our generation,
and so I think they look at things a little differently,
a little more suspiciously. I mean, they are a generation's
been raised and a lack of trust. I mean they
must be hearing it from their parents walking around the house,

(09:06):
so they don't take anybody's word for anything. You know,
I'll talk about death of journalism, and in my generation,
that's tough for them to accept. This generation, they grew
up in it. They don't trust anybody, so they go searching.
But there's a lot more wise than just you know,
I don't We've always said we want a generation that
takes responsibility. I'm with you. I can't prove it right now,
and it's anecdotal in my house, but I think you're

(09:28):
right non to them. There's something about this Gen Z
generation that may be socially awkward, but that's where it ends,
and they're a lot more savvy than previous generations. I
can see it coming. You're one of the only people
I've ever heard say it too.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
Oh and yeah, I'm glad that we're on the same
page as this, and I don't knowing your experience. Yes,
antidotal experiences are just that anecdotal. But I think if
you have enough of them, then you get a trend.
It's why you know, stereotypes exists for a reason, and
not saying stereotypes are good, but they exist for a reason.
That's why jokes are funny, any sort of commentary. But
people get it and they're like, oh, yeah, that is true.

(10:04):
So we'll see how this one shakes up.

Speaker 1 (10:06):
All right, I will lend with this. I don't know
if I like I'm getting all their information from TikTok
as surprising as I know. Now, Yeah, and seillion dollars
going China.

Speaker 4 (10:15):
We're getting it, but they're getting it.

Speaker 1 (10:17):
They're getting it. I will have Aaron back with us
in the third hour. We're going to talk about are
we all really truly better off four years later? Well
that's a question everybody's going to answer November fifth, for sure,
and we took a step towards that. Your Top five
stories of the day. Trump has Vance, Biden has COVID,
Brian Shook has Our Road to the White House.

Speaker 5 (10:38):
Road to the White House. Twenty twenty four. Ohio Senator JD.
Vance officially accepted the nomination for Vice president Wednesday night
at the Republican National Convention in Milwaukee, and I'm overwhelmed.

Speaker 6 (10:51):
With gratitude to say I officially accept your nomination to
be Vice President of the United States of America.

Speaker 5 (11:00):
The nation's first millennial Party nominee formally introduced himself to
the voting public, touching on his humble beginnings, his journey
to become an Ohio senator and now VP nominee. Meantime,
President Biden has tested positive for COVID nineteen. The White
House says Biden tested positive following an event in Las Vegas.

Speaker 1 (11:21):
In Washington. I'm Brian Shook. I have been very positive
and praiseworthy of a flawless convention last night. Not so
much like Donald Trump Junior. For example, it was my
understanding it was Donald It is my inclination that is
Donald Trump Junior that brings us JD Vance. I'll go

(11:43):
to my grave believing Donald Trump wanted Marco Rubia without
the court hassles. And so my impression was it was
Donald J. Trump that was going to introduce JD Vance. Instead,
Donald J. Trump comes out, brings out his daughter. She
did a wonderful job. Those are all risky things. I
think of the Bush Twins and how it failed. But

(12:04):
then he comes back and delivers the speech, and again
maybe the first night, of course, the second night, of course,
I think it's time to get away from the assassination
and get back to the American people. And then he
never really did it introduce JD. Then a video comes
on and it really ended up being more of a
Donald Trump junior and his daughter's speech. I don't know

(12:27):
how that played with other people, but he did make
the case for his father's reelection. Is the point where.

Speaker 7 (12:33):
Like that man who stood on that platform and felt
the bullet pierce his flesh just days ago in Pennsylvania,
he may have moved to the ground, but he stood
back up.

Speaker 1 (12:48):
More reports about Secret Service protection at Donald Trump's Pennsylvania
rally are coming out, and during a closed doors Senate
briefing on Wednesday, Republican Senator John Barrosso of Wyoming says
the FBI Director Christopher Ray had some pretty troubling things
in his report.

Speaker 8 (13:03):
The shooter has been identified an hour before the shooting
occurred as a suspicious person.

Speaker 1 (13:10):
And somehow they lost track of him, They lost sight
of him. He had a range finder, he had a backpack,
the kind.

Speaker 5 (13:16):
Of things that would be suspicious to anyone.

Speaker 1 (13:19):
Then to GOP senators confront the director of the Secret
Service at the RNC convention last night. Marcia Blackburn and
Barasso find her on the floor, start asking her questions.
This is how it sounded from a distance. You are answer,

(13:45):
I recognize that voice anywhere. The confrontation started on the
RNC floor, it made its way all the way upstairs,
up and escalator. She listened, she listened, but all she
ever said was, this is not the appropriate place. All right.
When we last saw Joe Biden, it was the news conference.
Maybe we'll get some audio and refresh everybody. I only

(14:06):
brought it up when it happened to make two points.
One it's already begune and two, what's with this whispering?
Gets odd? But you might remember during the UN news conference,
Joe Biden was like, you know, well, if I get sick,
I'll go away. But I'm not. If Nancy Pelosi and

(14:29):
Chucky Schumer come to me and say I can't win,
and they prove I can't win, then I will step aside.
But they won't. I mean, you guys, remember the whole long.
It kept coming back to the whisper. I'm not making fun.
I'm just trying to remind everybody, well, if that's true,
it's official Schumer, his friend Pelosi beyond friend, I mean,

(14:54):
I think it's who he holds in the highest regard.
Both came to and said Joe, you can't win. They
couldn't have said it more clearer. According to see Ena,
you can't win. You're going to ruin the Democrats' chances
of winning the House. You have to step aside. And
ha gem Jeffries representing the House saying the same thing.
And I've got the polls I'll be sharing with you

(15:14):
that prove Joe can't win. And now these people have
all done it. So now what does Joe do? He
gets COVID and goes home, which probably led to the
only sound of the day, which I've got a gift
to of all people, CNN and Van Jones.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
A bullet couldn't stop Trump, A virus just stopped biting.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
That'd be pretty much where we're at. This is your
Morning Show with Michael del Chona. This is your morning show.
I am Michael del Jerna. We love to hear from you.
If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app, there's a microphone
that's a talkback button. I'd love to hear from you today.
What did you think of the convention last night? Would
you think of jd Vance as he introduced himself, And

(16:00):
I know a lot of people are familiar with his
book and his movie, but that was him accepting the
nomination as vice president. I think for me, there is
no drama. Normally we would be talking about, hey, would
you think of the vice president's speech? Do you think
they can win? You know, all indications are they're going
to win, So there's no drama there. Where the real
drama lies is Biden refusing to go like Toto's pulled

(16:23):
back the curtain and we can all see, you know,
the frail edds nothing to see. The DNC is trying
to push for that early nomination before the convention, the
party elites Schumer and Jeffries and Nancy Pelosi and the
media in Hollywood all trying to push him out. Quite frankly,
that got more and then the COVID to boot that

(16:43):
got more dramatic than the convention. I think that's part
of what happened. And then I think technically, if I'm
honest and look back, I would say you couldn't. They
did not match the speakers and the impact of Monday
and Tuesday on Wednesday. Hi, I'm Michael. I'd love to
have you listen to your morning show live every day.

(17:03):
We're heard on great stations like News Talk five point
fifty k f YI and Phoenix News Radio eleven ninety
k EX in Portland and ten ninety The Patriot in Seattle.
Make us a part of your morning routine. We'd love
to have you listen love, but in the meantime, enjoy
the podcast Waking up this morning. I kind of want
to do it this way. You don't pay a lot
of money to have a staff meteorologist for the sunny

(17:26):
high of seventy two days. You're paying that meteorologist for
the three days a year. Everything you know goes you
nowhere in a hand in a handbag. Talk radio, for example,
people's impression of news sources or talk hosts are not

(17:48):
formed on the average days. They're formed on the big
stories when everybody tunes in and do you deliver. I
say that to kind of give you a sense of
where I think we all are at and somebody needs
to say it out loud so we understand it. You
had almost three of those stories, and they're happening simultaneously.

(18:09):
I don't want to have a broadcasting discussion because you're
not broadcast majors. You don't you don't want to understand
the industry. But I mean, these are monumental stories. People
still play clips of LBJ. I will not and will
not accept the nomination for president because that was a
once in a decade kind of a story. That's going

(18:32):
on right now. John F. Kennedy was assassinated. To this day,
people are debating conspiracy theories. That's a once in a
lifetime story. And we've got that going on, and you
have a convention that happens only once every four years
with America at an inflection point. That's I mean, so

(18:53):
you have three simultaneous I cannot stress enough monster stories.
And normally you would have the opportunity to just when
you have a story this big, it's usually the only
thing anybody's talking about. So it's very very odd and
very very difficult for everyone to a present these stories
fairly and everybody to consume them fairly. Jeffrey's in front

(19:19):
of me, is this making sense to you? Absolutely? Okay,
So yesterday I'm trying to follow all three. The Secret
Service is a huge story. A former president and a
pole leading next president was nearly assassinated, and we're finding
I'll try to figure out this twenty year old kid

(19:39):
calls into work, says I can't come in. Then his
parents are calling the police. They can't find him. Where
is he? He's an hour away at a rally walking
around for an hour. He was photographed sixty two minutes
before the shooting. Then you have all the private meetings yesterday,
and Congress is not said, wait a minute. You flagged

(20:03):
him because he had a range finder, which you know,
if it was a golf course, good for him, but
an event like this, rangefinders would probably be more affiliated
with a rifle. Then you lose track of him. Then
he reappears with a gun, he's got a car, he's
got a van. I mean, everything has just gotten so

(20:24):
we could do a whole show today just on the
latest with Secret Service, and nobody wants to rush to
any conclusions. Everybody has a difficult time talking about Hey,
the agents themselves are great, but there are planning questions
and with good reason because from the very beginning, was
this a planning failure? Was this a personnel failure? Was

(20:48):
this a duty failure and execution? And then you learn, well,
the first lady was in Pennsylvania who had at some
coverage to that. Then we had the vice president there,
We did avert some coverage to that local law enforcement

(21:08):
was handling that area. Local lawenforces. No, we were taking
our cues from Secret Service. Course, Secret Service ultimately is
in the planning business. So at the end of the day,
we have not got an answer for why no one
was on that building and the steepness of the roof
is not a bible answer, and why the agents were
under inside the building instead of on the roof while
this guy's climbing up with a rifle. And then the

(21:28):
bottom line is, you know it wasn't seconds. There was
more than enough ample time and communication that there was
a suspect of suspicion. Why was Donald Trump allowed to
go on that stage? These are pretty impossible to answer questions.

(21:48):
To add to that drama, you got two United States
Senators chasing around the Secret Service director and ran her
off the RNC floor last night demanding answers. That's a
huge story in and of itself. Then on top of that,

(22:09):
you've got a president who was collapsing. I don't play
this to remind you of the weird, awkward whisper and
make fun of him. But three times in the UN
press conference, Joe Biden laid out what would get him
to drop out of the race, and every one of
those scenarios ended with but they won't or but it won't.

(22:37):
Let's talk about a big story. Let me remind you.
This would be Joe Biden on polling numbers.

Speaker 9 (22:44):
Yes, you earlier explained confidence in your vice president. If
your team came back and showed you data that she
would fare better against former President Donald Trump, would you
reconsider your decision to stay in the race.

Speaker 1 (23:02):
No, let's think came back and said there's no way
you can win.

Speaker 4 (23:08):
Me.

Speaker 1 (23:10):
Don't say that. No poll says that. Yeah, well all
all the poles say it. Now. Then yesterday's I would
be et and he says, you know, well, if doctors
told me, and I presume he means cancer, uh, you know,
something really debilitating. But if I'm ill, yeah, I would
step down. And then we get the announcement he has COVID,

(23:32):
he's ill. Then you get Van Jones making this kind
of an obvious statement. Of course, this falls under the
party elites. The media elites are all trying to push
him out. The party itself is trying to move forward
with the early nomination process to protect him. So I

(23:52):
expect this from MSMB or from CNN, and I expect
this from Van Jones. But it may have been the
look good news and bad news. Bad news is the
sound of the day, isn't, Jade Vance. This is the
sound of the day.

Speaker 2 (24:08):
A bullet couldn't stop Trump. A virus just stopped Biden.
You've got the nominees of this party getting their butts kissed.
Biden's getting his butt kicked by his own party.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
I mean, and he's right. That's the political reality that
we're all waking up with this morning. And I say
all that to say this. I think it's the compelling
nature of the Secret Service, the investigation of the Secret
Service failures, the fall of Joe Biden. Yes, mixed in

(24:42):
that is the rise of Donald Trump. Jd Vance. Monday
and Tuesday what has been two of the best convention
nights I've ever seen in my life. Last night wasn't.
But what I'm grappling with is was last night a
bad convention night? Or did it get overshadowed by two
bigger stories? In a sense, won a story of a decade,

(25:04):
potentially a story of a lifetime. So I get a
sense this morning, and I'm wondering if I'm the only one.
This is just me being curious, and we're a family,
and I don't tell people how to think. I'm wondering
where you're at this morning. Did you think the convention
last night met the same level of memorableness, emotionalness and

(25:27):
effectiveness as Monday and Tuesday. It didn't feel that way
to me, And I can't figure out if it's because
it wasn't a bad convention night. It was just a
typical convention night. If anything, it just clarifies my praise
of Monday and Tuesday. Now technically we look and say,
maybe you should have saved Rubio DeSantis or somebody else

(25:47):
for that night, I thought the everyday American people thing
was kind of lost. Although the gold Star parents were
certainly very effective. A ninety eight year old World War
Two veteran was certainly adorable, you know, that was the
response I kept seeing people say. But nothing really powerful

(26:09):
and energizing. And I don't know if it was just
overshadowed by the other two stories or by design a
night that was supposed to be all about Vance and
then your take on how you thought Vance did. I'll
have some sounds of that in our top stories next
as well. So it's one of those days where we're
all in this together and I'm just saying I'm still processing,
and I'm wondering how you're processing. And if I had
to make my astute guess, I would say, well, there

(26:32):
were just times I was more interested in the latest
on Secret Service than I was what was happening on
that floor. That's the truth. I mean, I can't say
it any more truthful in that where I was just
a heck of a lot more interested in the car
accident than where I'm going and looking out the side
and rubbernecking at the car accident. It's Joe Biden falling

(26:53):
because he's kind and they are in such a bad place. Democracy, democracy, democracy,
and yet what's been revealed, they've covered and hid for
this man, and now it's so late that if you
remove him without a twenty fifth amendment, what is the

(27:17):
statement you're saying about democracy. People voted all year long,
he won those delegates. They're his, they're his for only
him to let go of. And if he won't let go,
you're probably going to lose. But quite frankly, it's his
to loose. And if you take it away from him,
would you just do in the name of democracy, erased

(27:38):
all those votes all year long for a few party
elite's opinion. And then he's put himself in a bad
place because he gave the parameters for which he would
walk away, and he's off the campaign trail with COVID.
The pole suggests he can't win. I will give him
this one little thread. The Poles also suggest Kamala wouldn't

(28:01):
do that much better. That has a lot to process, right. Oh,
and don't forget we're all in this together. This is
Paul David Patterson down in Toledo District believes in my
morning show with your morning show, like Michael Dale, join
me fifty one minutes after the hour. Thanks for waking

(28:21):
up with your morning show. And if you're just waking up,
here's what you need to know. The senator from Ohio
jd Vance. He made it official last night. He said
the magic words, and I'm overwhelmed with gratitude to say.

Speaker 6 (28:34):
I officially accept your nomination to be Vice president of
the United States.

Speaker 8 (28:38):
Of America's first Millennial Party nominee formally introduced himself to
the voting public, touching on his long journey from poverty,
to the Marines.

Speaker 1 (28:49):
To the Ohio United States Senate and now a vice
presidential nominee. He also touched a little bit on the
tickets visions.

Speaker 10 (29:00):
Tonight is a night of hope, a celebration of what
America once was and with God's grace, what it will
soon be again.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
And of course his big job will be to sell
the top of the ticket. His running mate he had
much praise there. He is tough, and he is but
he cares about people. He can stand.

Speaker 10 (29:20):
Defiant against an assassin one moment and call for national
healing the next. He is a beloved father and grandfather,
and of course a once in a generation business leader.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
You know, strategically, it's tough. You plan these messages, you
write these speeches, but you got to stay in real time.
I thought Night one and two Republicans did a great
job of talking about the consequences that failed policies failed worldview.
Last night, the tone got more on Joe Biden. First
of all, don't let him off the hook, because that's

(29:55):
setting up well, then I'll just switch the face. You
got to keep the pressure on the issue. Vance kind
of walked that line talking about how Biden has hurt
the US economy. I would have staged it as the
as the left's worldview and policy views have failed and
hurt the economy. But here's Advance I had to say
about Joe Biden.

Speaker 10 (30:14):
Joe Biden's inflation crisis, my friends, is really an affordability crisis.
And many of the people that I grew up with
can't afford to pay more for groceries, more for gas,
more for rent, And that's exactly what Joe Biden's economy
has given them.

Speaker 1 (30:29):
And he expressed his gratitude to his president.

Speaker 10 (30:32):
Mister President, I will never take for granted the trusts
you have put in me, and what an honor it
is to help achieve the extraordinary vision that you have
for this country.

Speaker 1 (30:44):
Meanwhile, House Speaker Mike Johnson wants the director of the
Secret Service to resign immediately following attempted assassination of former
President Trump. Brian Shook kicks off our coverage.

Speaker 5 (30:53):
Johnson told Fox News Wednesday that the security lapses at
the Pennsylvania rally were inexcusable. Joins a growing list of
lawmakers calling on the Protective Services leader to step down.
The Speaker is also creating a special task force to
investigate the shooting. When lawmakers returned to Washington on Monday,

(31:13):
I'm Brian Shook.

Speaker 1 (31:15):
I guess frustrated for not getting any answers in closed
door meetings, Things got right out in public on the
convention floor. Two GOP senators confront the Secret Service Director,
Kimberly Cheetle and on the reported failures of her agency
and lack of transparency. You are That's a lot for

(31:44):
anybody to go through. Marsha Blackburn's screaming and the confrontation
started on the RNC floor made its way up the escalator.
She later with agents, returned to a suite box. Donald
Trump is off to a massive lead. You can see
it in all the songs, stay polls. It's been a
flawless convention and he survives assassination. It looks like the

(32:04):
writing's on the wall, but really this goes back to
an impeachment twice that failed an insurrection campaign that failed
law fair three different cases. Hey, they even got thirty
four convictions in one of the cases, but none of it,
including Assassin's bullet, has stopped Donald Trump. Add to that

(32:29):
that Joe Biden debate performance that he tried to do
a make good with Stephanopoulos that was a bomb, then
with Lester Holt that was a bomb. Didn't get much
better with beet yesterday, and the UN news conference was
hardly a stellar performance either. But Joe set the stage
by saying, well, if the pole say I can't win,

(32:51):
or if Nancy comes to me or Chucky comes to me,
well they have. Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's reportedly told
President Biden in private, the polling shows he cannot win.
CNN is reporting that during and of course notice it's leaked.
CNN is reporting that during the recent conversation, Pelosi told
Biden that the numbers show he will lose and he
will ruin the Democrats' chances of winning the House if

(33:13):
he continues. This follows calls from prominent Democrats, I keep
Jeffries in the House and Chucky Schumer in the Senate,
both think Both people mentioned by name by Joe Biden
is what it would take to get him to consider
to leave the place. And then, of course, if there
wasn't enough stories. Last night, Joe Biden leaves the campaign

(33:33):
trail after testing positive for COVID nineteen the White House
is Biden tested positive in Vegas, did a lot of
meeting greetings and selfies with no masco on. I might
add he was forced to cancel his afternoon speech before
Latino's Civil Rights Advocacy Group President Experience is experiencing mild
symptoms but returning with malaise and a running nose to Delaware.

(33:56):
And that's your top five stories of the day. There
is going to be a film adaptation a Key for
Sutherland series twenty four. It's in early development. Variety of
reports that there are currently no details about the plot
or if Sutherland himself will return as Jack Bauer in
twenty four. And Brian Harmon is looking to defend his
crown in the British Open. As a tease off today birthdays,

(34:18):
we have Hall of Fame manager Joe Tory eighty four
years old, Sir Nick Faldo sixty seven, actor Vin Diesel
fifty seven, an actress Kristen bell Is forty four, and
if it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We're so glad you
were born. And thanks for waking up with your morning show.
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael nhel Choano
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