Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
Your morning show has heard live from five to eight
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Speaker 1 (00:21):
But better late than never. Enjoyed the podcast two.
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Three Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this stigific.
Speaker 1 (00:35):
This is your.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Morning show with Michael O'Dell Schorn.
Speaker 2 (00:40):
Today during Discovery Energy bar Alida eight red Bulls. You
know this week has phoonn by, hasn't it? Well, it's
as if we only worked four days this week. Oh
did every time we do this, I get really excited
about a four day work week. It is I think
(01:01):
the perfect amount of time. Well, sure, but I love
my job. I don't want to miss it on Sunday.
I ought to be the standard. Yeah, well, I don't
want to sound like the Loos employee looking for another freebie.
Seven minutes after the hour, Good morning, Welcome to Friday.
We always say it just sounds better done it. Friday
(01:23):
rolls right off Friday, September sixth, on the air and
streaming live on your Heart radio web.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
This is your morning show. I'm Michael del Jarno.
Speaker 2 (01:30):
That's Jeffrey Lyons And if you're just waking up, a
couple of really biggies today.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
We talked about both of them yesterday.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
I should wait for Arry O'Neil to join us so
he can take part of the bow. We both kind
of came to the conclusion this particular shooting case in Georgia,
this one's on dad, yeah, and arrested. So we'll talk
more about that in just a minute. The other was
(02:01):
Hunter Biden. Remember Joe Biden said I will not pardon
my son when he was a candidate for president. Might
have still done it, but couldn't say it ahead of time.
He's no longer a candidate for president. And as I said,
this could have been part of his exit negotiation. And
(02:24):
trust me, Joe had the world on a string on
a rainboom.
Speaker 1 (02:33):
He's gonna have some cash.
Speaker 2 (02:34):
He could have named his terms they were dead meat.
If he stubbornly stayed in the race, and part of
the reason he's still in the White House. But you
really ought to be scratching your head and asking why
is he still in the White House.
Speaker 1 (02:48):
Let me get this straight.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
He is so cognitively impaired that he can't run for president,
but he can be president.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Well, yeah, Michael, because it's.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
Really a projection of how bad he'll be in four years,
you know, as you can expertly say after they hit
him for four years. But part of the reason he's
staying in the White House is too I believe pardon
his son, don't. Well, it's true. So here we are
what's changed. Joe's not in the race. What happens? Hunter
(03:20):
goes to Los Angeles trials getting ready to begin and suddenly,
I don't want to embarrass everybody, I'll plead guilty, or
just as we said, is he's doing it because he
knows he's going to get pardoned. And by the way,
from George Soros to John Podesta to whatever left in
the mind and body that once tells Joe Biden they
(03:42):
didn't want this trial to go forward either. This is
all the money he didn't pay taxes on cutting deals
with China, could involve the Big Guy, as he was
often referred to. So Hunter Biden pleads guilty in a
federal tax trial in Las at Angelus. Why now, the
(04:04):
father of the suspect in Wednesday's Georgia school shooting that
he bought his son the AR fifteen as a gift,
So that answers our first question, where'd this gun come from?
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Now?
Speaker 2 (04:18):
Remember this fourteen year old was on the FBI's radar
a year ago at thirteen for saying he's going to
do exactly what he did this week and being rather
graphic about it all online. But they couldn't get enough
to do anything or arrest him. But certainly mom and
(04:39):
dad knew their child had a problem and still chose
to surround the child at home and guns. Even bottom
one is at present, Well, the fifty four year old
father has been arrested in charge of a second degree murder,
something else we said was likely to happen. Jadi Van
says he's getting an unfair shake from the Associated Press.
I was lo I have to Associated Press because really,
(05:02):
when you think of we're so past bias, right, And
I remember thirty years ago I used to teach people
about how bias works. How frankly, we're all biased. We
all arrive at every scene or every news story with
our worldview, our values, our rules for those values and beliefs,
(05:23):
and they certainly shape how we see things. Question is,
in practice do we use it? If I did, I'd
be preaching sermons to you every day, because that's the
real solution. Everything else is a symptom. If you want
to get to the root cause, I'd be a daily evangelist.
(05:47):
But to whatever degree I try, for the purposes of
this job and what it requires, Oh, deep down the
back of my mind, I still I'm biased. But the
left would never admit it, even though it became obvious
and proven well come twenty twenty six they did twenty sixteen,
(06:09):
they didn't even care. I have often said the most
significant thing in twenty sixteen was not that Donald Trump
defeated Hillary Clinton. I can explain to you how that happened.
It was the death of the blatant death of journalism,
right for everyone to see. They took their gloves off,
and they'd never put them back on. There's no Walter
(06:30):
Cronkite stuff happening here. Nobody's hiding anything. We just play
matrix full speed. And by the way, you don't have
a place like CNN to go on the right. If
you'd think Fox is the conservative alternative, that's establishment republican.
(06:54):
So you don't have the conservative antidote to what the
far left is selling every day in newspapers every day,
in cartoons every day, in sitcoms every day, in dramas
every day, in movies every day, in magazines every day,
in newspapers every day, on ABCNBCCBS, every day, on CNN, MSNBC.
(07:18):
I mean, you want to talk about quantity and quality.
They literally told you they controlled the narrative four years ago,
and they controlled technocracy at the time, so they silenced
any opposing views. The question is four years later, can
they do it well? Four years later, they're trying to
hide Kamala and plain sight, just like they hit Joe
(07:40):
in a basement during COVID.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
Will it work? I'll let you know in sixty days.
Speaker 2 (07:47):
They're trying to control the narrative, and most days they're
successful in controlling the narrative. Their biggest advantages. Everybody plays
a narrative game. You tell me what's the biggest that
we don't have news anymore? We have narratives, or that
we don't have news consumers anymore, but narrative repeaters, because
(08:07):
both are equally guilty. If the consumers valued cherished the truth,
you'd have it. I will say this four years later,
(08:27):
they don't have Twitter. It's acts and owned by Elon
Musk that the president's former president, Donald Trump is saying
I have a future for By the way, did I
mention it's Friday? Oh yeah, yeah, Friday with forty five later?
Speaker 1 (08:40):
Yeats fo oh not that guy.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Trump has the weekend to prepare for his big debate.
Probably doesn't feel much like he's going to get a
fair debate. After all, EBC's playing games. We have the
leap that the moderators will be able to turn microphones
back on if it helps Kamala, I presume does he
really think he's gonna get a fair shake? Does he
have to prepare for ABC and Kamala Harris, We'll ask him.
(09:09):
It's Friday with forty five in the third hour. I
don't know why I digressed into that, but yeah, he's
got plans for Elon Musk, and Elon Musk.
Speaker 1 (09:17):
Owns X thanks to AX.
Speaker 2 (09:21):
Everybody knows what ALEXA was up to earlier this week,
which by the way, by the way, Amazon's blaming on AI.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
Oh are they really?
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Well, that makes me feel better because we're not gonna
have any future AI.
Speaker 1 (09:35):
By the way, if X is no longer Twitter, is
this still relevant? Well no, I don't think so.
Speaker 2 (09:42):
Okay, now i'd be more like the I don't know,
is that the X in.
Speaker 1 (09:47):
In family feud like that? Well exactly, I mean that's
the brand.
Speaker 2 (09:54):
Yeah, because Twitter was tweet right, Yeah, I don't want
to but I don't think they tweet anymore. Well they should,
how they act anyway, that's some of the differences. Bias
has always existed at the root of bias. Though I
live in Nashville, the Tennessee and is very biased. I
used to live in Tulsa. Oh, the Tulsa World was biased.
(10:17):
But something about the Washington Post of the New York
Times is at a much different level.
Speaker 1 (10:21):
But think even higher.
Speaker 2 (10:25):
Because the Associated Press and Axios, they're the ones that
really give ABCNBCCBSCN and MSNBC. They're talking points, so they're
always fun to keep your eye on. If you want
to go to the root of the ignition of the narrative,
that's a good place to peak every day and then
(10:46):
we joke about it. But it's true, including today. It's true.
Speaker 1 (10:50):
It's just not a big, huge story.
Speaker 2 (10:53):
But if you really want to know what's going on
in America, you got to go read the daily mail
in England. I don't know what's happening here because nobody
will report on it here. Bet we've got a great
Deally Mit story later. But this bias has always existed.
Were so beyond biased, its gloves off. So jd Vance
(11:13):
basically was making the case. Unfortunately, mental illness is here
and it's not going anywhere. Unfortunately evil is here and
it's not going anywhere. Why do we always focus on
the gun or the type of gun or gun laws.
We need to focus on hardening the target. Crazy exists,
(11:37):
So let's protect our kids. You do it at the airport,
do it at the school. Well, the Associated Press comes
out with this big attack and a headline that was
so misleading. I mean, it's just beyond bias, it's gloves
(12:00):
off lying. A spokesperson for jd Vance blasted the Associated
Press for publishing a headline Thursday that implied the vice
presidential candidate dismissed school shootings simply as a factive life.
In other words, it's just a fact of life. Your
kids are gonna die. Get used to it. That's not
what he said. In fact, he said just the opposite.
But you watch today how that narrative will move forward.
(12:23):
It's just really a reminder of the epicenter of the
epicenter of all of this narrativization, socialization, and doctrination and manipulation.
It always begins with the associated press. Remember the old
days when we were in radio, you had two wires,
the UPI and the associated press YEP. And we used
to call it rip and read, because what did your
local newsman did got up in the morning, went to work,
(12:46):
ripped the wire, sorted it and decided what was the newscast,
and read a verbatim. You could control every radio station
in the country with that wire. And we think we've
evolved so much in this information age, like we're doing
anything any different today. Well, you're not ripping reading, but
you're scrolling and reading and repeating. Sometimes the problems we
(13:07):
have are bigger than the problems we're trying to solve,
and the problems, the real problems we have are never
explored the abandonment of absolute truth that has led not
just to moral relativism, but legal relativism.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
Can't fake someone who knows the truth.
Speaker 2 (13:31):
I used to ask my brother that all the time
I was fascinated not just with currency, but with collectible coins.
Speaker 1 (13:36):
Are there's so many fakes? How do you know? I
don't look at the fakes. I don't study the fakes.
Speaker 2 (13:43):
I study the real coin, and then when the fake
comes along, it's easy to see. Imagine if you applied
that to your walk with Christ. Imagine if you applied
that with your walk with this republic. Imagine if you
applied that to your consumption of news every day problem solve, target,
hardened and protected, which, by the way, to come full circle,
(14:05):
as all jd Vance was saying, let's not spin her
wheels and talk about this crazy kid and these incompetent parents.
Let's talk about protecting our kids in the future. Crazy
is out there. How do we keep it out of
the building. Whether you agree with that or disagree with that,
(14:26):
that is a legitimate thing to explore. Oh but it
doesn't fit the narrative. That's this opening monologue.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del TONO.
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Thanks for starting your day off right with your morning
show on the Aaron streaming live on your Heart radio app.
Good morning, I'm Michael. That's Jeffrey Hunter Biden. This was
a shocker. Right walks into the courtroom in Los Angeles.
No need to proceed.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
I'm guilty. Where do I sign?
Speaker 2 (14:57):
Dad's gonna pardon me, but I'm guilty. I don't want
to embarrass anybody. The father of the suspect of Wednesday's
Georgia school shooting says he bought the gun that was
used as a gift to his son, a son he
knew he had problems with, a son the FBI had
interviewed a year ago. It made threats of school shootings,
and you get him this weapon. Well, welcome to hot water.
(15:22):
This time the tree didn't fall far from the apple.
Colin Gray arrested, hit with multiple charges, including second degree murder,
and YouTube is taking down the channels linked to that
right wing influencer accused of having Russian connections. We have
all these stories throughout the morning, and all the smart
minds to help you understand them. You know, one of
the things I'm looking forward to is Chris Walker is
(15:42):
going to be joining us at six oh five, we're
going to look at the latest polling and really heading
into the debate, which I think is probably going to
be that and turnout or cheating the defining moment of
his very close selection. So where do we stand in
the heading into the debate? And you know, what we
(16:03):
saw coming out of the convention was definitely a bump
from Kamala Harris over Joe Biden.
Speaker 1 (16:08):
So they were right to punt out old Joe, but.
Speaker 2 (16:13):
Not really anything higher than Joe before he was perceived
is cognitively impaired. And I interrupt to say, look, anybody
that didn't know Joe Biden was cognitively impaired until that debate,
You weren't very honest with yourself and the media that
hid it from you until then when they were ready
(16:34):
to play out the political coup. They hadn't been honest
with you from the beginning, and they're still not being
honest with you. So we saw her kind of go
back to where Joe was prior to that.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
She sunk a little bit.
Speaker 2 (16:47):
Since Donald Trump really doesn't have to do anything at
this debate, there's no pressure whatsoever. He is where he is.
If he can make some gains great. I suspect his
real gains will come from turning Rfk Junior, Tulsea Gabbard,
Elon Musk and others loose online and in swing states.
(17:08):
It's to campaign for him, but for Kamala Harris one,
Jane's a good performance. Just to tread water. Any hiccups
and this could cost her the race. Ah, debate can't
cast you well. Debate can't win you an election, but
it can lose you one. Why see Joe Biden in June.
(17:31):
So where do things stand heading into this debate? That's
gonna be our journey of discovery. At six oh five,
what you're going to find in the latest national poll
from Emerson Harris Again, nobody cares about national right. It's
really the swing states that are going to decide this race.
And the electoral College map is our founding father's design.
But nationwide Harris leads forty nine to forty two. That's
(17:51):
by two points, well within the margin of air. The
latest Rasmussen report has Harris losing by one to Trump
forty seven to forty six. By the way, all polls
are not the same, some of a history being far
more accurate.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
Rasmusen is one of them.
Speaker 2 (18:07):
Then we're going to kind of take a look at
how this affects the map as we head into the
first debate, if nothing else. So we have it as
a you know, we know where we were heading into
the conventions.
Speaker 1 (18:18):
Well wait, I gotta rephrase that, right.
Speaker 2 (18:20):
We knew where we were with Joe and the race,
Then we knew where we were with Joe out of
the race. We knew where we were heading into the conventions.
Now we're going to kind of just as a marker
see where we are heading into the debates, so we
can compare it after the debate. We're gonna do that
with Chris Walker. Of course it's Friday, so we'll have
Friday with forty five and Rory's gonna be long not
so long from now to talk about the arrest of
(18:40):
the father and the shooting. There's three ways for you
to have your voice heard during the show. One of
them is our talkback button, which if you're listening on
the iHeartRadio app'll see a little microphone. If you press that,
it'll give you a three second countdown. You can talk
to us like you're on the air, and then when
you hit send, it comes to us. We can share
it with the class, or we will hear it. A
lot of people like to record their I'm so and
(19:02):
so from such and such and my morning show as
your morning show. That's our way of all introducing ourselves
to each other at America's kitchen table. You can do
all that with the iHeart Radio app using the talkback button,
and then of course there's toll free eight hundred six
eight eight ninety five to twenty two, and the old
fashioned way email Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com, which
is where Jim is writing from.
Speaker 4 (19:22):
Hey.
Speaker 2 (19:22):
Michael Breitbart famously said politics is downstream from culture. But
when kids are marketed addictive video shooting games to play,
and every Hollywood movie has at least one good shoot
them up gun scene, it's not simply culture. It's a
purposeful cultural war, a culture comp respectfully. Jim, Well, you
(19:46):
know I wrote my book My Goodness Now that's about
twenty two years ago. There are three simultaneous wars. There's
a cultural war, the abandonment of absolute truth and God
for all gods or no God. They're all the same
of any relevance in favor of moral relativism, which is
all that matters is what you think is right in
your mind. So even though you were born a male
(20:09):
with a male genitalia, you now think you're a female.
You're a female. That's the root of all of this craziness.
And it has spread to legal relativism. There's no sense
of right or wrong, no wonder wrong is right now.
(20:30):
So the abandonment of absolute truth, the replacing of moral
relativism chaos. Then you have economic wars, socialism, government solutions
for everything, government control of everything, government telling you what
is yours?
Speaker 1 (20:46):
What is in yours? Oh my gosh, think about COVID.
Speaker 2 (20:50):
Stay home, your business is closed. Okay, you can open
your business, but here's how you're going to run it.
Speaker 1 (20:55):
Now.
Speaker 2 (20:57):
We've been as socialist capitalist hybrid for years, but right
now we're at the fork in the road in the
war of capitalism versus socialism communism. In a lifetime, we
used to fight it. Now we're embracing it. And the
(21:18):
third war military wars, and boy, we got a lot
to look at right an ongoing holy war that's playing
out with Israel and Hamas, which is really just Israel
and Iran. But as I said in my book, the
outcome of the cultural war. That's what we'll play the
defining role in the outcome of the military wars. And boy,
aren't we seeing that? Great email Jim, This one comes
(21:42):
from Catherine. Well, we did this story yesterday. The genetic test.
In a simple blood test, we can get the markers
for autism. And she brings up a frightening question, will
this genetic test for autism lead to potentially autistic children
being aborted before the even board to the selective abortion.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
I'm not a doctor. I don't know. If you can
get the baby's blood.
Speaker 2 (22:12):
To do that test, it wouldn't necessarily be in the
mother's A scary thought.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
And then this is probably the best of the day.
Speaker 2 (22:17):
Trevor writes, By the way, can I just do this
again shamelessly, just for me? I mean, we're in Sacramento, Memphis, Tulsa, Seattle, Tampa,
Oklahoma City, Portland, Saint Louis, Cleveland, Akron, Phoenix, Washington, d C.
Speaker 1 (22:31):
Dalla.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
I don't know where you're from. When you sign your name,
also sign where you're from. I don't know why. I
just yeah, we like to know. We well, it makes
me feel like I know you're better anyway you all
know me I'd like that chance to know you.
Speaker 1 (22:41):
But this is our emal of the day.
Speaker 2 (22:43):
Good morning, listening this morning in Nashville to your report
on hostage situation in Israel. Listen to how Nixon summed
it up in just a few seconds during the hostage
crisis with Iran, because I still believe it applies today.
Speaker 5 (22:58):
All right, let's let's I don't say this and criticism
of President Carter, because he certainly went through a lot
on the hostage situation. But as far as the hostage
situation was concerned, American foreign policy can never be made
hostage to hostages. That's why hostages are taken for purposes
of blackmail, and we mustn't let that happen. And for example,
(23:21):
when President Carter was asked about the hostage situation, he
went overboard and saying that our first and then only
concern was a safety of the hostages.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
Now that is a.
Speaker 6 (23:30):
Concern, but our major concern is what happens to Iran,
what happens to the relations between the United States and Iran.
And in this respect, I would never have said, as
President Carter did, that I rule out the use of
force in order to get the hostages back. All that
did was to encourage those that had captured them and
(23:52):
were holding them in captivity not to give them up.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
I'd be was that recorded yesterday? Are there any Richard
Nixon's out there today? Trevor great, great suggestion. Yeah, that's eerie.
First of all, acknowledge. Well, I don't if Joe Biden's capable, but.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
Somebody in the United States acknowledges.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Is really Iran and not Hamas stop pressuring Israel, the
one that was invaded and attacked to release their hostages
to bring peace. First of all, Hamas doesn't even recognize
Israel's right to exist, let alone. They're killing the hostages
as you're about to get them exchanged.
Speaker 1 (24:39):
Go in and get them by force. And if it's
too late, make sure.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
There's not a living, breathing Hamas leader left as you're
making your way to Iran. That's how you prevent it
from happening again. What you're suggesting they do is exactly
why it happened in the first place. By the way,
I have to chime in, there was something about remember
how we always say watch when politicians are leaving. Joe
(25:07):
Biden is the exception. But I don't think he was
cognitively capable.
Speaker 4 (25:10):
Right.
Speaker 2 (25:10):
Usually when they leave, you see the best version of them,
to the point where you look at the television you go,
why didn't you act this one all the time? It
was just something about it. Once Richard Nixon, with all
of his lifetime of paranoia, thought he was gonna be
president after being vice president?
Speaker 1 (25:27):
Ike was? I mean?
Speaker 2 (25:29):
He and Kennedy worked side by side against the Soviets
in the Senate. They were the two finest minds on
different sides of the aisle, though the isisle wasn't that
far apart.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
Then, all how that paranoia got the best of them
after he lost to Nixon, and then he gets in
the White House and then Watergate. You don't have me
to kick her out anymore. I'm not all that crazy.
Speaker 2 (25:50):
Look how he was after It's a brilliant mind under
all those personal shortcomings. One of the most brilliant minds
we ever had. There's Richard Nixon fifty years ago telling
exactly what's wrong with today. Email of the Day, Trevor,
thank you so much for your contribution. I'm Jeff Eddie
(26:13):
with Efficient Hating Twoing and my morning show is your
Morning Show with Michael Bill John Your Morning Show. I'm
Michael Deltorno. Jeffrey Lyon has the controls. If you're just
waking up. Hunter Biden pled guilty in a federal tax
trial in Los Angeles court room. What a despare further
embarrassment for his family? Or is it because he knows
(26:33):
his father is going to pardon him? And speaking of fathers,
the father of the suspect in Wednesday's Georgia's school shooting
says he bought that gun and is a gift for
his son, a son who was interviewed by the FBI
a year ago, a son who was threatening online a
school shooting. You think the good it's a good idea
to give him a gun. While Colin Gray was arrested
and hit with multiple charges, including second degree murder, and
(26:54):
former President Trump says his economic plan would bring down
inflation and he thinks the key to it is bringing
down fuel price. Aaron Rayel is here to talk about
something completely different. But Aaron, you know, everything gets to
the store by truck that uses fuel.
Speaker 1 (27:08):
It's probably not a bad place to.
Speaker 4 (27:10):
Start, probably not a bad place to start it all.
So one of the things that we know, if we're
looking at you know, this diversity equi inclusion push that
we have seen. These initiatives have been going on for
so long. But Ford, Harley, Davidson, Lowe's Tractors, Supply Brown Foreman,
those of the guys who make Jack Daniels most and Cores,
(27:32):
all of them, all of them have said they're going
to stop providing workplace data to the Human Rights Campaign.
The Human Rights Campaign is a very powerful, powerful gay
right floppying group, and what they do is they have
this scorecard, essentially the score companies based on their LGBTQ
friendliness policies. It's kind of brilliant because they were able
(27:53):
to essentially embed their discriminatory protections within companies without getting
a law. So it's like real power this index. But
these companies said they're no longer going to share. What's curious, Michael,
is they're no longer going to share their data in
spite of the fact that they had very, very very
high ratings almost all of them.
Speaker 2 (28:12):
Well, I once that I mentioned, you know, there's a
lot of people that are going to be pointing to this.
I think, you know, potentially one of the many things
we're going to take away from the assassination attempt of
Donald Trump, and the competence of the Secret Service may
point at this as well. We need the best people
for the jobs, no matter what, and this has played
against that. So companies, of course want to get back
(28:35):
to that, and this is the first step towards it.
Don't you just sense in a big sense that we're
winding away from political correctness, We're winding away from all
these divisional things. And perhaps it has a shelf life.
Who knows, maybe even Kevin spacey'll come back.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
Maybe I wouldn't doubt it.
Speaker 2 (28:53):
It seems to be the only one by the way,
you know, because they make these rules and they turn
them into a weapon, a weapon they can use on one,
not use on another, use on their opponents, not use
on themselves. But it's amazing how some people can still
get away with stuff, and.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
Then others don't.
Speaker 2 (29:07):
I think of Tom Brenneman, who is one of the
best football and baseball announcers in America, who somebody left
his microphone on he said something derogatory about San Francisco.
He hasn't worked again. Kevin Spacey hasn't worked again. Others
were penalized and they're back already. I'm trying to think
of the comedian I can't remember his name, but you
(29:27):
know he was canceled. The other one will no the
I never thought he was that funny, but he did
something with harassing women.
Speaker 1 (29:40):
He liked to just show his private part. I can't
remember his name.
Speaker 4 (29:43):
Oh, yes, the guy the Pets movie.
Speaker 1 (29:48):
Yeah, but what was his name?
Speaker 2 (29:49):
Louis c Kate, tell Aaron what she won, Jeffrey, as
we play Senile Morning Show, you love how I'm like, the.
Speaker 1 (30:00):
Older I get, the more I my head.
Speaker 2 (30:02):
But the older I get, the more I'm playing password
with myself. I give it my wife the Blues, Yeah,
Luisi k but no, this this overall sense that maybe
political correctness is about reaching its life expectancy.
Speaker 4 (30:16):
Yeah, and listen. I also think that we here in
the States, we have a tendency to course correct. When
we do, we overcorrect very very often. It's just like
a part of what we do. You can see this
in presidential elections, like it very very infrequently do we
get after eight years of one party the same party
oftentimes not after four. But the point that I'm trying
to make here is that this course correction, it was
(30:38):
the DEI initiative, was so intense and so long that
you're like, you know, this isn't going to last, Like
this isn't who we are. And the zeitgeist has kind
of moved away from that, and companies have realized that, like, okay,
if my fiducier responsibility is to my shareholders and this
this particular initiative.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
And to my employees and my customers.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
Yes, yes there's a lot.
Speaker 2 (31:00):
You've changed the scoreboard, you change the actions. I don't
mean to interrupert. We're down to our last three seconds.
We were just talking last half hour that. You know,
how do you get away with media bias? Well, if
the consumers value truth, you wouldn't. And when they get
caught in these lies, they'd be discredited forever. And therefore
nobody be watching when you don't, So you can blame
(31:20):
the consumer as much as the producer. And in this case,
the law be listed is not filing this information. I'm
sure that'll get him a bad grade. But if we
the consumers just want the best people fly in the planes,
the best people protecting presidents, it's not going to matter what.
Speaker 1 (31:36):
That grade is anymore.
Speaker 3 (31:37):
We're all in this together.
Speaker 1 (31:38):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Hill. Shown up,