Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
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(00:21):
starting your morning off right.
Speaker 2 (00:23):
A new way of talk, a new way of Hunter
Skid because we're in this togib This is your morning
show with Michael Dell Jean Well.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
The forty nine ers in the second half were a
cat fosh from thirty two to nineteen over the Jets.
Big Debate is tonight in Philadelphia, hosted by ABC, but
on all the major networks eighth Central, nine Eastern, and
Tropical storm Fran scene expected to intensify into a category
two before making landfall in Louisiana tonight. Welcome to Tuesday,
the tenth of September, Year of Our Lord, twenty twenty
(00:56):
four on the Aaron, streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
This is your morning show, Happy to serve you I'm
Michael del journo. Jeffrey Lyon has the controls, and tonight
I think more than just a pre debate is a
where do we stand twelve hours before the debate conversation?
And to help us understand that with all the dues
(01:17):
and don'ts for both candidates, is our senior contributor and
CEO of the American Policy Roundtable and host of The
Public Square, David Simnadi. Good morning, David, Good morning, Michael.
We're looking at the You know, I guess I'm the
stickler for this. Did Joe Biden lose his run for
the presidency based on a debate performance? I actually don't
(01:38):
think that's accurate recollection. I think he had lost based
on his failed policies, and that debate was forced and
used to get him out of the way in an
attempt to usher in a new, recreated, fictitious Kamala Harris.
The question is are they getting away with it and
hiding her in plain sight? And so for the Washington Post,
(01:58):
the headline is the key for for Kamala Harris, she
must define herself as something new and not more of
the same. And every piece of research I said, I've
been exciting today's shows. People perceive her flip flopping is
not real, and they certainly associate all the failed policies,
whether it's the border, the economy, or foreign policy on
(02:18):
her and Joe Biden. Looks like their plan didn't work.
And a lot of people will watch the debate tonight
and if she does poorly say well, that's where she lost.
I might suggest she lost before it started.
Speaker 3 (02:30):
Well, it's very difficult, Michael to give it on where
the population is on Kamala Harris. We pretty much know
where people feel about Donald Trump. He's not a new entity.
In fact, I was reflecting this morning, this is the
third presidential election you and I are working on that's
involved Donald Trump. So I's third run with this guy.
(02:51):
He's been in debates all over the place. He's been
in primaries all over the place. He's been in the
number of primaries he's been in twenty sixteen, in twenty
twenty twenty four is that about is maybe one hundred
and fifty primaries. He's a known entity. To have someone
this close to voting beginning, which begins in a week
(03:12):
and not yet defined is well in American politics. We
are in a disarres, we've exactly Look, yeah, that.
Speaker 1 (03:21):
Would normally be unwinnable. But think about the known they've
been trying to make him known as the twice impeached president,
the rapist, the felon with thirty two felony counts, you know,
the insurrectionist, the boogeyman. And yet here is the New
York Times see a Siena poll and it asks point
(03:43):
blank the question, does Kamala Harris represent change or more
of the same? Major change twenty five percent, minor change
fifteen percent, More of the same fifty five percent. Hiding
here asn't helped, and they haven't successfully distanced or even
through her flip flops from the Biden administration. And for
(04:03):
Donald Trump, who they were trying to make into a
rapist and insurrectionist and a felon, fifty three percent see
him as major change, only thirty four percent say more
of the same. And he leads on the economy, he
leads on immigration, and who would and how important is
the economy and how would you rate it? Two percent
said excellent, forty nine percent said poor. At all points
(04:26):
to Trump.
Speaker 3 (04:28):
Well, now, some of the problem with this polling is
how much of it is designed as pre fight hype
so that they can then write the stories they want
to write tomorrow and for the next several days after
the debate. That's a part of the manipulation that we're
seeing going on here, because most of the pot polls
that we're looking at right now are general polls among
registered voters, not likely voters in tetleground states. So this
(04:52):
is some of this is pre fight hype. But again,
we've been at this for a while. We know what
we're dealing with the question and you're asking and the
question that everyone's going to be asking tonight, is this,
Kamala Harris bring us something to the table that's worth
investing in? Is this real? Is this something we can
(05:12):
take a shot at? And all the burdens on her.
Speaker 1 (05:17):
David Sinatti joining us from the American Policy Roundtable and
host of the Public Square on the dos and don'ts
for candidates when it came to the convention, and we
were honest, she looked great, and she read that script great,
and they created the theatrics of that great. But then
we had to wait forever for an interview and that
wasn't great. And she'll be all alone in an empty
(05:39):
studio with no notes. There's nothing Hollywood can do to
create this tonight. She's going to have to stand on
her own and she better do better than she did
in that interview.
Speaker 3 (05:50):
Yeah, and Michael, they'll be certain tell tale signs according
to this what we've been told again, no one gets
to see behind the podium. What we've been told is
that the candidates bring nothing out there with them, that
the paper and pencil will be on the podium. Well,
the first thing to watch is do the shake hands.
That's actually one of the biggest issues in this entire debate.
(06:12):
When they walk out, do they shake hands number one?
Number two? Who starts writing first on that piece of paper?
Because in the debate training we have trained candidates, if
you're in a situation like that, you walk on that
stage with the last three things that your team told you.
You must absolutely communicate, and as soon as you get
to the stage, you write them down so that you
(06:34):
can hold them on your eyes so that you don't
get lost in the moment. Because, as Mike Tyson was
famous for saying, and Donald Trump recently quoted, everybody's got
a plan until they get punched in the face.
Speaker 1 (06:45):
Right, debates in general, you want to have a great moment.
It either happens or a doesn't, and it's not the
end of the world if it doesn't happen. I brought
up Lloyd Benson. That was one of the classic great moments.
Camera shot is what made first of all Lloyd Benson
look look dearie. I mean, he looked like a character
out of Poltergeist. And then you could see kind of
(07:08):
faded behind him was Dan Quayle. Everybody the hype was
dan Quayle's the next John F. Kennedy. And he walks
into it and Lloyd Benson delivers the line, I knew
Jack Kennedy. Jack Kennedy was a friend of mine. You
are no Jack Kennedy.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
You Senator, are not Jack Kennedy.
Speaker 1 (07:24):
Game over right, all right? So you want to have
a great moment. You want to avoid a bad moment.
For bad moments, looking at your watch, Nixon's sweating, or
how about see anything Joe Biden in the previous debate.
So you want to avoid a bad moment, you want
to create a good moment. That's just debate in general.
Let's go through the dos and don'ts. Do you believe
(07:47):
all this pre hype. Donald Trump needs to stick to
the issues. Look presidential address, we the American people and
not himself, and what they've broken and how he will
fix it and avoid personal attacks. You agree with that, well.
Speaker 3 (08:02):
All Donald Trump has to look is not flustered. If
he looks quiet and confident or even noisy but confident,
he'll be fine. Debates about how candidates look ninety percent
of the debate is what you see with your eyes,
not with you hear with your ears. And Trump is
pretty darn good at holding his composure. If he doesn't
lose it, he's going to be a big winner.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
This is a guy that can go three hours at
a rally and just vamp anything. I'll bet, I mean,
I really, I would bet. Donald Trump has spent zero
time preparing for this because he's living it for Kamala
Harris without a script. It takes a lot of preparation.
That's a disadvantage, isn't it. Can you be over prepared
but it's not real?
Speaker 3 (08:44):
Well you, yes, you can absolutely be wound too tight,
And especially when you know you're only going to do
one debate and it's your entire career in front of you.
That's the kind of pressure that I personally believe without
supernatural help you can't get through because your mind is
racing so far ahead of everything else. The pressure in
this situation is difficult to understand. And if you don't
(09:08):
feel the pressure, there's something a little unusual about you,
And I would say it's not a gift.
Speaker 1 (09:14):
Yeah, David, what are the dus for Kamala Harris?
Speaker 3 (09:18):
Well, the thing that she has to do is to
avoid the long tonal intonations where she gets on that
odd speech pattern where she lectures. She's got to keep
her hands on the podium and out of the air.
She can't point at people. Her body language has to
not be what she projects so often, and I don't
(09:39):
think she's even aware of it. If she can hold
her in quiet composure and smile a lot, that's her
strongest weapon. And if she underplays herself and just ever
so slightly mocks the president, then she's got to chance
(10:01):
at getting people's attention and keeping it. But if she
starts lecturing, she's finished.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
You kind of did the don'ts with it any other don'ts.
Speaker 3 (10:10):
Well, here's a good idea. Don't run for president if
you're really not ready or qualified and you haven't run
through the primary process. Just a suggestion as a consultant, all.
Speaker 1 (10:20):
Right, and the dus for thought dues for Donald Trump?
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Oh, Donald Trump, Yeah, please shut up most of the time.
Just listen. If he sits there with that listening pose
that he does, which is so intriguing. And then and
then just basically it reminds people that he's already been
in the Whitehouse. This isn't an experiment for him. You
know what you get if I get there and I
don't apologize for the success that we had. That's it. Now.
(10:44):
If he really wanted to knock her out, he take
her on on COVID, if he really wanted to knock
her out. But I don't think they're going to have
the courage to do that.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
What about don'ts any don'ts for Donald Trump?
Speaker 3 (10:56):
Well, of course, if he loses his composure, he'll lose
the debate. And if he loses the debate, that he
once again grasps defeat from the jaws of victory, because,
as you've mentioned, right now, the momentum in the country
is not toward electing an unknown. That's the greatest difference
in this race. He just can't lose his composure.
Speaker 1 (11:18):
I'm going to end with this and I'll give you
a chance to either respond or end with something different.
I think the whichever candidate focuses on me the voter,
rather than themselves or each other wins.
Speaker 3 (11:30):
What about you, Yeah, I think so, But there's always
the risk, Michael, that you start looking like you're pandering.
I would at a flip side to that. I think
that could be the A side of the record. But
the B side, I might suggest would be the country.
Talk about the country and are standing in the world,
and the threats that we face and why I have
(11:52):
a way of dealing with that. I think that's a
very big issue. And then I think the sleeper on
all of this is going to be immigration. That might
be if Aby decides they want to make an issue
of immigration, that's going to play into Donald Trump's hand.
Speaker 1 (12:06):
David Saidai. You can hear him on the Public Square
two huner stations nationwide on demand anytime at the Public
Square dot com. He also hosts eighteen fifty main Street
at eighteen fifty main street dot com, and he's our
senior contributor with thedes and don'ts at the Big Debate tonight.
Thank you, David, we'll talk tomorrow.
Speaker 3 (12:20):
I hope, Michael.
Speaker 1 (12:22):
This is your morning show with Michael del Trono. Well,
unfortunately it never leaves the stage. But tonight politics takes
center stage. The big debate is here. Mark Mayfield has
our top story.
Speaker 4 (12:39):
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are getting ready for their
high stakes debate tonight. The event has heightened importance with
the new Sienna College New York Times poll showing the
race in the den heat. It's likely to be their
only debate before election Day in November. It's taking place
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the state that could determine who wins
the presidency. ABC News is the host, but every network
will carry it starting at nine pm Eastern, and it
(13:01):
won't have an audience, live microphones or written notes for
the candidates. And the senior senator from Texas is weighing
in onto night's presidential debate between former President Donald Trump
and Vice President Kamala Harris.
Speaker 5 (13:12):
Well, I think he needs to let Kamala Harris talk,
something she's been reluctant to do unless she's reading a teleprompter.
And I think you know, we've seen the polls very close,
but mainly she's coming off of this as James carter
Will called it a sugar high.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
Senator John Cornan told Fox New Sunday that he was
impressed with President Trump's debate performance against President Biden and
expects to see a similar performance against Harris.
Speaker 1 (13:37):
That's politics.
Speaker 4 (13:38):
I'm Markneyfield.
Speaker 1 (13:39):
Well, many of you know him as the voice of
Darth Vader, maybe the voice of CNN or that amazing
voice and field of Dreams. Bottom line is it was
all about that voice. Actor James Earl Jones has died
at the age of ninety three. Lisa Taylor reports that's
according to multiple sources.
Speaker 6 (13:55):
He was born in rural Mississippi in nineteen thirty one
and was raised by his mother and grandparents, and as
a child, Jones developed a debilitating stutter.
Speaker 1 (14:03):
You'll never go really did you simply learn how to
work around it?
Speaker 7 (14:06):
You know.
Speaker 6 (14:07):
He debuted on Broadway in nineteen fifty seven in The
Great White Hope, which was turned into a movie.
Speaker 3 (14:11):
Because every time you pushed that pinched up face in
front of me, I see webbing.
Speaker 6 (14:15):
But it was a two and a half hour voiceover
role that changed everything.
Speaker 1 (14:19):
By and the father.
Speaker 6 (14:22):
He was most well known for being the voice of
Star Warsville and Darth Vader. He also starred in films
such as The Sandlot, The Hunt for Red October, and
Field of Dreams.
Speaker 1 (14:31):
People Will Come, Ray, Welcome to Iowa.
Speaker 5 (14:34):
Laris's Can't Even.
Speaker 6 (14:35):
Seven Jones passed away at his home in New York.
I'm Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (14:39):
Would have loved to have gone to a Red Sox
game with him. That had to be a thrill. I
bet it would be. I'd like to hear him read
the menu anything. The Biden administration is announcing a new
rule in an effort to bring mental health insurance benefits
up to the same level as those related to physical health.
We've got a mental health crisis in America, and we
have a crisis in that we can't get mental health care.
(15:00):
This may be one I actually agree with, Joe Michael
Kastner reports.
Speaker 8 (15:03):
President Biden said in a statement that mental health care
is healthcare, but added the critical care and treatments are
out of reach for too many Americans. The new rule
adds to the two thousand and eight Federal Mental Health
Parity and Addiction Equity Act. A White House Domestic Policy
advisor says around one hundred seventy five million Americans with
private insurance could benefit from the new rule.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
I'm Michael Cassner. Well, tonight may be about debating and fighting,
but tomorrow is about remembering and honoring. New York City
gets ready for the nine to eleven anniversary. Natalie Migliori
has more.
Speaker 9 (15:36):
The National September eleventh Memorial and Museum has invited family
members of victims of the two thousand and one and
nineteen ninety three World Trade Center attacks to participate in
this year's reading of the names.
Speaker 6 (15:48):
The museum will only be open to.
Speaker 9 (15:50):
Family members that day, but at night, anyone nearby will
be able to see the tribute in light where the
towers once stood. Meantime, President Biden and Vice President Harris
plan on visiting the World Trade Center site in Manhattan,
the Flight ninety three Memorial in Shanksville, and the Pentagon
in Virginia, all three locations of the two thousand and
one terrorist attacks.
Speaker 6 (16:10):
I'm Natalie Migliori.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
COVID Wan news radio, COVID lockdowns, school closures, canceled activities.
They've aged our teen's brains. Tammy Trihilo has more.
Speaker 10 (16:19):
That's according to new research out of the University of
Washington that looked at brain scans. What the researchers found
was that the cerebral cortex, the part of the brain
that controls reasoning and decision making, thenned out much more
than expected. Boys showed an average premature brain aging of
one point four years. The results were much more pronounced
than girls, for brains aged in average of four point
(16:41):
two years.
Speaker 6 (16:42):
I'm Tammy Trio.
Speaker 1 (16:44):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 11 (16:44):
Your morning show has heard live five to eight am Central,
six to nine am Eastern, three to six am Pacific
on great radio stations like News Radio eleven ninety k
EX in Portland, News Talk five fifty k FYI, and Phoenix,
Arizona Freedom one oh four seven in Washington, d C.
We'd love to have you join us live in the morning,
even take us along on the drive to work.
Speaker 1 (17:05):
But better late than never. Enjoyed the podcast. It appears
as though tropical Storm fran Scene will be a Category
two hurricane when it makes landfall in Louisiana. Other news
waking up The big debate between Donald Trump and Vice
President Kamala Harris is set tonight in Philadelphia. ABC News
will be your host, but it'll be on all the
major networks, eighth, Central, nine Eastern. It was the forty
(17:25):
nine ers thirty two nineteen over the Jets. They pulled
away in the second half. If you fell asleep on
Monday night football last night, and if you're just waking up,
Congress is back after at summer break, with many Senate
and all Republican seats up for election. It looks like
there may be a threat of another government shut down,
and one way or another, Rory something tells me, whether
the left or the right wins, we all lose and
(17:47):
go deeper in debt. But what say you, good morning?
Speaker 12 (17:50):
Well that does seem to be the planned. But right now,
the House Speaker Johnson has put forward this continuing resolution
essentially keeping things as they are plus adding the Save Act,
and it would be a six month resolution. But even
members of his own party aren't biting. You know, Johnson
can only afford to lose four Republicans. At least a
(18:12):
half dozen have already said there are no votes on
this plan. So it is a rough start to this
final stretch before the election.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
On Capitol Hill, I used to always say, behind every
headline is a story, and behind every story there's so
much to talk about. What I'm really saying is behind
every news cycle story is an issue, an issue that
we have been battling or failing to solve for a
long time. This has become a new way of life,
continuing resolutions. The solution, of course, would be a zero
(18:43):
base prioritized budget like you live with at home and
I live with at home, and every business lives with.
We don't seemingly have that. And then the politics that
gets attached to it. So what is the proper size
and role of government? What is the role and responsibility
of the self governed? That's never at the table when
they're solving these differences. It's partisan fighting and jockeying and negotiating,
(19:06):
and it always.
Speaker 12 (19:07):
Gets further into death and also not looking past November
any November. And so that's one of the issues here.
You know, this is a six month continuing resolution. Some members,
the Moderates even they're saying, look, I don't want to
keep spending like this. We have to address some spending cuts.
We've already heard from the Pentagon those saying, look, you've
got promises in here to increase soldiers pay, and that's
(19:30):
part of this. So you can't just have a continuing resolution.
So there are lots of these squabbles going back and forth.
But you know, look, it was the first attempt to
try to avoid the shutdown yesterday that was floated.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
Let's see what happens.
Speaker 12 (19:43):
You know, mostly in the Senate they're just standing by
and letting the House members form a circular firing squad.
Speaker 1 (19:49):
Two consensuses seem to be being formed heading into tonight's debate. One,
and this is coming from the from the Washington Post,
presumably from the left, that Harris has to find herself
as something new and not more of the same. That's
going to be a big challenge. The other is seemingly
there's more for her to lose than Donald Trump tonight,
(20:10):
and so the pressures on her. I think I agree
with both.
Speaker 12 (20:14):
Yeah, especially with the ladder.
Speaker 1 (20:16):
By the way, this is my one.
Speaker 12 (20:17):
I got laughed at earlier today for making this point,
but I think it's important. I'm six foot six, so
I'm a tall guy, and Donald Trump is a few
inches shorter than I am. But Kamala Harris is five
foot four, and when you get the two of them
out on that stage together, I think there's going to
be a big, a little whoe in their chairs. And
I think we're going to process that subconsciously though, and
(20:39):
I think that's going to be a ding against her
as people go.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
I mean, sorry, it's.
Speaker 12 (20:43):
The sexist, misogynistic way that we do things and think
big strong leader, you know, must be bigger.
Speaker 1 (20:50):
And I don't know.
Speaker 3 (20:51):
I want to see if that's a factor, you.
Speaker 1 (20:53):
Know, I don't think everything falls under misogynistic. Look, David
Sinati made the point just last half hour. The debates
are very visual. We often play the sound bites and
remember famous quotes and flubs, but it's a lot visual.
If somebody looks, you know, untethered, or if somebody looks
like they're struggling to find the words, or they look
(21:14):
like they're stalling because they don't know the answer, if
their hands are up in the air, and so what
you're bringing up is the visual. I guess the reverse
of that would be some may say he might look
old compared to her, but yeah, he's definitely gonna look
he's definitely gonna look bigger than her, that's for sure. Right,
he's beating up on a little woman, you know.
Speaker 12 (21:35):
Is that the other criticism that we're going to get tomorrow.
By the way, do you think they shake hands.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
Well, that's the other thing David brought up, shaking hands
being a first key sign. And who starts writing on
their piece of paper immediately, that will tell you who
has overly been coached and needs to put their top
three things so it's right in front of their eyes.
We'll keep an eye on all that, we'll listen to
all of it, and we'll talk about it tomorrow. Rory,
go have a great day.
Speaker 3 (21:58):
Thanks Michael.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
By now I know I got a six foot six
irishman that doesn't like me, that starts to get a.
Speaker 3 (22:02):
Really gunn me to vote forty minutes after the hour,
twenty minutes to be to work on time.
Speaker 1 (22:10):
Here are your top five stories of the day. The
American people are preparing for a debate tonight. After all,
it really is about them. Mark Mayfield has our Road
to the White House.
Speaker 4 (22:21):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four. Kamala Harris
and Donald Trump are prepping for their high stakes debate tonight.
This Trump supporter has some advice for the former president.
Speaker 10 (22:30):
Don't call her names, just stick to the issues.
Speaker 4 (22:32):
This Pennsylvania voter wants to learn more about Kamala Harris
during the debate.
Speaker 2 (22:36):
I hope to learn a lot of good things about
her and what her plans are to help us.
Speaker 4 (22:41):
The event has heightened importance with the new Sienna College
at New York Times poll showing.
Speaker 1 (22:46):
The race and a dan heat.
Speaker 4 (22:47):
It's likely to be their only debate before election day
in November. It's taking place in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, a state
that could determine who wins the presidency. ABC News is
the host, but every network will carry it starting at
nine pm Eastern, and it won't have an audience, live
microphones or written notes for the candidates.
Speaker 1 (23:04):
I'm Mark Mayfield. One of the most powerful voices of
our lifetime has been silenced. Lisa Taylor has more.
Speaker 6 (23:09):
That's according to multiple sources. He was born in rural
Mississippi in nineteen thirty one and was raised by his
mother and grandparents. As a child, Jones developed a debilitating stutter.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
You never go really did. You simply learn how to
work around it, you know.
Speaker 6 (23:23):
He debuted on Broadway in nineteen fifty seven in The
Great White Hope, which was turned into a movie.
Speaker 3 (23:27):
Because every time you pushed a pinched up face in
front of me, I see Webb and Done.
Speaker 6 (23:31):
But it was a two and a half hour voiceover
role that changed everything.
Speaker 1 (23:35):
Bye and the Father.
Speaker 6 (23:38):
He was most well known for being the voice of
Star Warsville and Darth Vader. He also starred in films
such as The Sandlot, The Hunt for Red October, and
Field of Dreams.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
People Will Come, Ray, Welcome to Iowa, Paris's The Can't
Even Seventh.
Speaker 6 (23:52):
Jones passed away at his home in New York. I'm
Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (23:56):
Well, the Biden administration might be doing something I actually
while I have to see the particulars to see if
I actually agree with Joe, but in big idea form,
I think I do. A new rule a new effort
to bring mental health insurance benefits up to the same
level as those for physical health. Michael Casser has the details.
Speaker 8 (24:13):
President Biden said in a statement that mental health care
is healthcare, but added that critical care and treatments are
out of reach for too many Americans. The new rule
adds to the two thousand and eight Federal Mental Health
Parity and Addiction Equity Act. White House Domestic Policy Advisor
says around one hundred seventy five million Americans with private
(24:34):
insurance could benefit from the new rule.
Speaker 1 (24:37):
I'm Michael cass. Now it's going to be very interesting.
The debate is tonight and tomorrow is the nine to
eleven anniversary. How much will the analysis and debate over
the debate performance be silenced by and superseded by something
much bigger? The honoring and the remembering of nine to
(24:57):
eleven Big plans for New York City tomorrow. Natalie Glory
has the story.
Speaker 9 (25:01):
The National September eleventh Memorial and Museum has invited family
members of victims of the two thousand and one and
nineteen ninety three World Trade Center attacks to participate in
this year's reading of the names.
Speaker 6 (25:13):
The museum will only be open to.
Speaker 9 (25:14):
Family members that day, but at night, anyone nearby will
be able to see the tribute in light where the
towers once stood. Meantime, President Biden and Vice President Harris
plan on visiting the World Trade Center site in Manhattan,
the Flight ninety three Memorial in Shanksville, and the Pentagon
in Virginia, all three locations of the two thousand and.
Speaker 6 (25:33):
One terrorist attacks.
Speaker 9 (25:34):
I'm Natalie mcgleori, NBC News Radio.
Speaker 1 (25:37):
And at twelve it is Tom ll not care it
wouldn't it be funny if Apple introduced their new lineup
that way, right? Apple introduced a lineup of new products,
including the iPhone sixteen and the iPhone sixteen Plus at
their event yesterday, The tech Giant announced the iPhone sixteen
starts at seven hundred ninety nine dollars the iPhone sixteen
Plus starts at eight hundred and ninety nine dollars. Company
(26:00):
he also introduced its new Apple Watch Series ten with
an updated sleek design, and the AirPod four along with
the updated AirPod maxes in new colors in USBC charging
and finally, it took me a while to find it.
Here it is play Reality. Eminem will make his return
(26:22):
to MTV VMAs tomorrow night when he opens the show.
Rapper is tied with Peter Gabriel for the most wins
by a solo male artist in the history of the
award show. He's nominated eight different times this year, including
Video of the Year and Song of the Summer. The
VMAs take place in New York City and If You
Fell Asleep, It was all forty nine ers in the
second half thirty two to nineteen over the Jets with
(26:46):
McCaffrey out oh, they found something in Jordan Mason one
hundred and forty seven yards, including a touchdown.
Speaker 3 (26:53):
I'm executive chef George Harvell. My morning show is your Morning.
Speaker 1 (26:57):
Show with Michael doll JORNA. This is your morning show.
I'm Michael del Jorno along with Jeffrey Lyons at the controls.
I'm just looking over the email blast from the Washington Post.
Kamala Harrison Donald Trump will debate in Philadelphia tonight. You're
first and possibly only chance to see the presidential candidate
side by side. Well, if it's a disaster, do you
(27:18):
think Kamala Harris will want a second debate? And if
she does, Donald Trump would never grant it. He'll take
her loss and his win and go home. And if
she does, well, I assure you she won't take a
second chance and failure. Oh, I assure you. This is
your only chance to see these two candidates debate. We
went through a lot of polling that would suggest Donald
(27:40):
Trump is very known and not for what Democrats would
like him to be known for. It's not twice impeached,
it's not rapist, it's not thirty two count felon, it's
not assassination survivor. It's as a president who knew how
to run the account to be before and can do
(28:01):
it again. And as the Washington Post asked the question
answered their question, which is the key to Harris tonight
is to divine herself as something new and not more
of the same. All the polling suggests the link to
her in this administration and to the economy, and to
the border and to the foreign policy is locked. Fifty
(28:22):
five percent see her as more of the same. So
this hiding her in plain sight and distancing her from
an administration that she's half of clearly hasn't worked. That
means the work is going to be heavy lifting for
Kamala Harris tonight. She has the most to lose, and
whoever goes on to win this election, of course, will
be who John Decker is forced to follow every day.
(28:43):
He is the White House correspondent. He's also a Supreme
Court attorney bar attorney, and he joins us from Philadelphia,
where the debate will be tonight hosted by ABC. But
on all the major networks, that seems to be the
consensus that the most is on the line for Kamala Harris.
Would you agree, I.
Speaker 7 (29:00):
Would agree, I would agree completely because she has the
most to prove two undecided voters who may not even
though she's been vice president for four years, they may
not be familiar with everything about her. So now it's
an opportunity for her, Michael, to go toe to toe
with Donald Trump, to show she has the wherewithal to
(29:21):
be the next president, to be the next commander in chief,
that she has a vision for the country. Those are
the goals that she has for this evening's debate.
Speaker 1 (29:30):
I think we would all agree that Donald Trump has
probably prepared very little. After all, he's been president. After all,
he does three hour rallies, deep dives into all of
these issues. Whereas we know Kamala Harris has been preparing
very hard in Western Pennsylvania.
Speaker 7 (29:46):
Can you over prepare, John, You can over prepare. Ask
Joe Biden about that he prepared for almost a full
week at Camp David. You remember that right before that
debate that happened in late June, and look what happened
a month later after that debate, drops out of the race.
So over preparation is a real thing. We learned that
with Joe Biden. There's been four days of prep with
(30:08):
the Vice president but look, she's younger, she's skilled in
the sense of she's been a prosecutor, so presenting arguments
to a jury she's done countless times in her life.
So it's not far afield a debate versus making a
closing statement to a jeres who are deciding the fate
(30:32):
of an individual.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
Yeah, but you're an attorney. You know you can prepare
your opening statement, you can prepare your closing statement. It's
the stuff that happens on the fly and cross examination
that makes all the difference in the world.
Speaker 7 (30:45):
Which thinking on your feet you're right, well, absolutely, and
that's what debates are all about. You can do all
kinds of preparation, but are you good in terms of
thinking on your feet going with the flow? What happens
if there's a personal attack level that you bought the
former president, What happens if you're questions for more stetisticity
(31:05):
from the debate moderators. All of those things certainly impact
the way of voters. For see the candidate during the
course of a debate.
Speaker 1 (31:14):
Closing once with John Decker, White House correspondent. He's in
Philadelphia for the big debate tonight. If we take our
cues from the Washington Post, and they're pretty good to
take your cues from. They're saying, goal number one is
to present yourself as something new and not more of
the same. I went through a litany of polls that
suggests America have tied her to the Biden Harris administration
(31:34):
because he's Heros. So she owns half of the economy,
she owns half of the border, and she owns half
of the foreign policy. How do you turn that around?
Because perception tends to be reality for viewers.
Speaker 7 (31:47):
Well, that's right, you do you own some of that?
You know. I think that if you're a skilled politician,
you own the good and you try to distance yourself
from the bad. And that's something that you know candidates
who are running to succeed their boss have learned from,
some successfully like George hw Bush, some not so successfully,
(32:08):
like Al Gore. It really depends. This is an interesting
election and I have to tell you, Michael two things.
It's electric being here in Philadelphia for this debate because
this city, this state will decide who wins in the
November twenty twenty four election. The other thing that's pretty
interesting is last night went out to dinner. Who's at
the table literally right next to me at the restaurant
(32:31):
I'm at. It's the entire debate prep team. Poor Kamala Harris,
she wasn't there, but it's everybody else, and they had
this air of confidence that I noticed. Try to listen
in on our conversation. Didn't make out much, but that
was a pretty interesting event that happened last night.
Speaker 1 (32:47):
Oh we had a mole and you couldn't hear anything.
Don Decker enjoyed the debate tonight, will analyze it tomorrow.
John brings up a great point about being in Philadelphia
in the role of Pennsylvania. You know, we went through
the electoral College map with the way things stand now
and again polls suggest where the American people are now.
The election is not now, although voting will begin rather shortly.
(33:12):
It's funny, you know, I gave Pennsylvania to Kamala Harris.
I gave Michigan in Wisconsin to Kamala Harris, and I
still got to two sixty nine versus two sixty nine.
So it might be equally interesting what everybody in Nebraska
is thinking tonight after the debate. The two different districts
(33:32):
may decide this election in Nebraska more so than Pennsylvania
Kamala Harris having to present herself as something new. Well,
that would be avoid a word salad, avoid the cackling,
avoid looking nasty, and avoid getting flustered. The bottom line is, though,
can she flip flop in a debate the way she's
(33:53):
flip flopped in her campaign and convince anybody that she
really has changed her stripe from the leadership she's already
been involved with for four years. We're all in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael Ndel Joano