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September 19, 2024 29 mins
Teamsters members support Trump 58-31% but no endorsement..why?

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
morning show live. Make us a part of your morning
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(00:21):
listen live, but are grateful you're here now for the podcast.
Enjoy Jeffrey. Guess what we get to do today? What
do we get to do? We get to be on
the radio.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Two three, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding well, because we're
in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
Mill is your morning show with Michael Bill John a radio,
the computer, the phone, wherever we are crazy, we will
be over a back backyard fence. Hey, it's seven minutes
after the hour, Rise and shine. Welcome to Thursday, the
nineteenth of September. I was just thinking today, there was

(01:00):
a time it was nine, nineteen nineteen and I didn't notice. No,
now it's nine nineteen twenty four and it's no big deal. No,
it's not a big deal. It could have been but wasn't.
But it will be nine twenty four, twenty four soon.
Remind me to make a big deal a lot of that.
Welcome to Thursday. Hey, here's what today boils down to.
No bail for p Diddy, He's still in jail. This

(01:21):
is Jeffrey Epstein stuff, and let's hope it doesn't have
the Jeffrey Epstein future. That's my worst worst fear. No
Teamster's endorsement. And you ought to scratch your head and
ask yourself why why? I mean, we've seen their internal survey.
Fifty eight percent of their members they're working members, support

(01:44):
Donald Trump, thirty one percent support Kamala Harris. Why wasn't
there a Teamsters endorsement of Donald Trump? And if there isn't,
do they really represent their workers? I'll do you want better?
As a Democrat party? Really still stand for the working
Americans trailing in that internal survey fifty eight to thirty one.

(02:09):
I can't stop right, don't wind me up today. How
do you think Joe Biden fared with the Teamsters? I'm
going to have to be a little direct, frank, or
some people would think maybe disrespectful or rude. That is
not my intention. I got to look, come on, Joe,

(02:33):
we all know you're not the same. Where it's the
dog talk dof dog facefolk. You know whatever that waiting
sleepy Joe does dog It doesn't matter, but it's the
tip you might want to put them near each other, see,
because I always like to do them both. No, so

(02:56):
everybody knows that Joe Biden was a shame of the
man he used to be. If not cognitively cognitively impaired
or in late stages of Parkinson's whatever you want to
call it, and impaired. Joe Biden was leading Donald Trump
forty four to thirty six percent among the teamsters.

Speaker 2 (03:16):
Oh look, you're a line dog faced pony soldier.

Speaker 1 (03:19):
No I'm not. You were winning. So Trump was winning
forty four to thirty six. They do the coup, They
get rid of Joe. They insert Kamala Kamala, who was
the only thing polling worse than Joe. Suddenly they create
this Hollywood theatrical sugar high with her, but it's not real.
The hyenas losing fifty eight to thirty one percent. So

(03:43):
they went from Biden up by eight to Harris down
by twenty seven. Serily a thirty five point swing. These narratives,
these platitudes, they're not not in the real world. But

(04:05):
it's amazing to me that some on the right are like, well,
we'll take that as your victory. Of the teachers are in
the doistry guard, I'm like, why aren't they? What is
a union if it doesn't represent its workers and members?
That's the question of the day. You know, Sometimes I
know the truth is, I'm the only one that hasn't changed, right,

(04:28):
So I think I'm the weirdo, I'm the nut. No,
I'm the one that hasn't changed. I'm the one that
hasn't become lazy. I'm the one that isn't narrative repeating.
But you know, at some point you just kind of
scratch your head and go, am I the only one
that gets this? When did common sense become menza? You
sound like Bill Maher. Well, Bill Maher says I haven't changed,

(04:50):
My party is changed, all right? Isn't that scary? I'm
becoming like and seriously, I've said that several times so,
but nobody's asking the right question. Okay, how do you
represent your members if they vote fifty eight to thirty
one and you still won't endorse who they voted for.
What are they paying dues for? By the way, if
they're being duped on this, how much are they being

(05:12):
duped down in the REDS representation all year long? They're
paying dup dues And you can platitude your way all
you want. Wait, we're the party of the working clan,
the back bone, the jacks hammerd that bone. I'm a
back bone the bat. All right. That was kind of
making fun of Joe. You should give me a stop
for that. Now you can't find stop, can you?

Speaker 3 (05:29):
I got that?

Speaker 1 (05:30):
Yeah, there you go, And look I put this beside.

Speaker 2 (05:32):
It your line dog frace pony shore.

Speaker 1 (05:34):
There you go. Now you're learning, all right. And I
started the show with a minor league analogy. I didn't
know how right I was. Uh so, no bail for
p Diddy, no endorse them from the Teamsters, and then
not a quarter point but a half cut, a half
a point cut from the Fed in the interest rate aggregiv.
You know what, can we just talk behind his back

(05:56):
just for a second. I'm so happy. I'm so happy.
And here's the reason why, here's the reason why Rory said,
no way it's going to be over a quarter. Rory
O'Neil was wrong. Wow, there's two things that can say
to my platinum card listeners listening early. If you listen
very closely, we give you the word all every day.

(06:17):
They said in my sentences. It's just it's just what
we should It's just what we do when we're playing.
But today I'm going to should I be subtle or
should I come right out and lead with that? You know,
he's always so mean to me. First of all, I'm
the older brother, he's the younger brother. Yeah, Rory was wrong,
of course. Now all the college university professors are saying

(06:39):
this Cutch to sheep, this you sheep. So no bail
for p Diddy, no teamster's endorsement, and why half cut
from the Fed? And then you got Trump in New York.
You know we're gonna do the map because we've got
polls of plenty. Let me do this not as a disclaimer,
but just as a confession, Like all of you listening,

(07:00):
I don't know what to make of polls. Trust has
been broken for me with the presidency, with Congress, with CDC,
World Health Organization, a portion of America, and I'll demonstrate
why in a minute, I don't know who to trust,

(07:21):
and certainly not polls. Polls are supposed to show you
a snapshot of where the American people are at this moment.
In other words, here's what hopefully they're talking to likely
registered voters, sometimes y'or not, but whoever they're talking to,
this is how they would vote if the election were
held today, or this is how they feel today, not
necessarily on election day. That's something that's never changed. You

(07:43):
got to take it always with a grain of salt.
It's a snapshot. By the way, by the time you're
seeing it, it's pasted, all right. So some are more
accurate than others. Some are using polls to get answers
they want to get, not get the truth about where
people are. So it matters how the questions are. And
by and large, whatch you've grown suspicious of. Are these

(08:03):
poles designed to get us to behave a certain way
rather than to show us the way we're thinking right now?
I get all of that, but you know, at some
point it's all we got is all of the polls
state by state, and the wisdom to identify all states
are not going to elect the next president quite frankly,
it's not even seven swing states anymore. You got you
should have your eye on one or two. But when

(08:25):
you do this map, I don't think you have even
any idea of how crazy close this is. There is
a real legitimate scenario of two sixty nine, two sixty
nine and Congress picks the next president and vice president.
There is a real scenario one wins two seventy one,

(08:46):
and then there's a chance it could all be a blowoup.
But when you're looking at that map and you walk
away saying, well, if I'm Kamala Harris, I'm living in Georgia,
North Carolina and Pennsylvania, and she has been for the
most part. If you're Donald Trump's team, you're thinking, well,

(09:06):
we're kind of going back and forth. We're securing Arizona, Nevada,
so we're gonna make some trips there. We're gonna put
people like RFK Junior and Telsea Gabbard and JD. Vance
and just have them living in Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, and Michigan.
When the president isn't on the West Coast, he's just
kind of bopping around securing what he needs to secure,

(09:29):
And where's the president last night? New York Long Island.
Now your first question would be are they going to
the right places and Trump isn't or does Donald Trump
really think New York is in play? And by the way,
I don't think he's crazy either. They almost elected a
Republican governor in the midterm. It came razor close. How

(09:50):
bad Kamala is. It's how possible things are. But by
and large, the keys for Donald Trump are Arizona, Nevada, Georgia,
in North Carolina. Has to secure those that are leaning
heavily his way. And he still got to either take
a second district in Nebraska, or he's got to win

(10:11):
one Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania. One of those three he's got
to win or he can't get there. If he just
lived in Pennsylvania and stole Pennsylvania, what do I worry about.
I know so many people out there are not going
to cheat anyway. Well, I don't know. I'll call it cheating.
But whatever Shenanigans they like to pull. They like to

(10:33):
pull them in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, they like to pull them
in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and like to pull them in Atlanta, Georgia.
Some of those laws have been tightened up, It's going
to be a lot more difficult this time. That's why
I get uneasy, get uneasy about Georgia. But this thing
could go either way. And every second they're spending somewhere

(10:54):
and every word they're saying somewhere makes all the difference
in the world. Are they in the right place saying
the right things? And then big picture, when we look
at the polls of plenty, platitudes aren't selling people, especially
the independence, working class and independence. If I was Kamala Harris,

(11:14):
I'd be very worried that and the loss of black vote.
If she really is in the fifty percent range when
Obama was in the ninety percent range, she's got real troubles.
And then the big question, where is abortion playing and
where is it getting pardoned? This pun trumped by the economy,

(11:36):
perceptions and the border crisis or less than fifty days out.
This is where we stand. This is how could go
either way. And then I'm always quick to remind people
energy is everything. If people are energized. You know, Trump's
got that solid thirty five percent, it's not going anywhere,

(11:57):
But whether he wins New York or not, there was
a lot of energy in that crowd last night, and
I'm wondering if the platitudes are creating any kind of
real high that will lead to high turnout for the Democrats.
If they get turnout, they win. I don't see anything

(12:17):
that screams true passion behind that party. There's true hate
for Donald Trump. In fact, my feature poll of the
day coming up in just a few minutes. I can't
believe someone had the soul lissness to ask the question, Hey,

(12:38):
you're sorry that Trump didn't get shot? Do you think
America would be better off if Trump had been killed? Oh?
Somebody asked it, and wait till you hear the answers.
This is your morning show with Michael del China. No
time for snooze and get up, rise and shine. Early
bird gets the warm and Welcome to Thursday, nineteenth of September,

(12:58):
and listen. We can't I have your morning show without
your voice. To Scott One from a I don't have
AM five forty. There's five fifty KSTE I'm looking it up,
but it did say a news Talk five. Well, what
if somebody stealing the show? Could be? No. Five to
fifty is KFYI in Phoenix. Yeah, six fifty is KST,
but I don't have any five forty anyway. The point

(13:21):
is we get talkbacks. If you're listening on the iHeartRadio app,
there's a talkback button. It's a microphone. You press it,
it'll count you down three two one. You can ask
a question, you can make a statement, you can comment
on something we're talking about. A lot of people like
to record there while they're there. Hey, I'm Joe Schmoe
from Sacramento, California, and my morning show is your Morning
Show with Georgia, Columbus, Georgia. Yep is AM five forty.

(13:45):
That's what says here on the interwebs. You can't do
this to somebody with ad D because I won't be
able to move on now till I confirm this. You
are correct News Radiodak Columbus, Georgia. Like I said, did
I mention that Rory was wrong about the rad quot

(14:06):
rate cut? You did? Okay, we got that going for us,
all right. If you're just waking up thirty six minutes
after the hour, Rise and Shine, be a part of
your morning show with your voice. Using the talkback button
on the iHeart app, you can call toll free eight
hundred and six, eight, eight, ninety five, twenty two, and there's
always good old fashioned email Michael d at iHeartMedia dot com.
The day's pretty simple to understand. P. Diddy is like,
this is dark, dark stuff. This is like Jeffrey Epstein dark.

(14:30):
The primary difference is he wasn't paying people, but he
was forcing and threatening. He was denied bail again in appeal,
so he is going to be hanging out in jail indefinitely.
No Teamster's endorsement. But we asked the question why when
you look at the polls of plenty here in a moment,
you'll be asking why it wasn't a quarter rate quote

(14:50):
cut for the Fed it was a half? What does
that mean? We'll visit with Rory O'Neil about that and
Aaron Rayel, and then the polls of plenty in the
picture they paint well, I'm gonna kind of like do
this kind of old school literally, I'm gonna give the thesis
and then we're gonna look at the evidence. The thesis is,

(15:13):
can you bait and switch? Can you just take Joe
out of the race? Hand all his delegates to somebody
who didn't earn them? Put on a theatrical show at
a convention and then just hide her in plain sight,
because that's really what they're doing now. Twenty twenty, our
heads were all spinning from COVID and they hid Joe

(15:34):
in a basement and they got away with it. But
how do you, four years later without COVID hide Kamala
in plain sight? And whenever she does interviews on her
own looks shaky. Even when she's on teleprompter, it's just
platitudes and stories about her and it's not cutting through,

(15:56):
it's not converting voters. Then the big issues abortion and
I will say this, they're playing abortion well, very clever.
They have made the abortion argument an argument for life.
First of all, it's not even abortion anymore. I guess
the baby doesn't die anymore. It's reproductive rights. And the

(16:20):
only stories they tell is the one in a billion
where something goes wrong. This week, Kamala Harris was doing,
Oh maybe we'll kick this around with David Soonaudi. It's
not an easy story to tell them just a couple
of minutes. But the laws are already in the books.
If some woman bled out at a hospital, somebody sue
the hospital because she should have been cared for. But

(16:40):
they're trying to scare people, and they're not being particularly
honest and doing it. But where is it working and
where is it not working? That's all they got. They're
going after suburban women and women in general to try
to steal the election in certain key states. The problem
is that's playing best in states they already have. And
as we saw earlier this week, the CBS, CBS sent

(17:02):
their morning roving reporter to Arizona, Nevada, just to talk
to everyday women at the breakfast table, and they were
hoping to hear how you know they're all in Kamala land,
and they're all saying, no, it's all about the border
and these people need to be deported. It's all about
the economy, home ownership. So there's this balance. Can abortion

(17:25):
steal a state or two or is it simply in
part in the pond being trumped by it's the economy, stupid,
and the border which is a real crisis. And then
you go to the map, and then you go to
the polls. Now, the polls are plenty of these are fascinating.
I want to start with this one. I should end
with it. This in the old radio terms, this is
the one you would normally jingle out of I don't

(17:46):
know how dark culture has to be to even ask
this question. You know, that's the thing. When you abandon
absolute truth for moral relativism, chaos, when you abandon a
Judeo Christian norm and system of value, this doesn't happen,

(18:10):
but when anything goes, it can happen. When it comes
to the assassination issue, this is where America is right now. Well,
they don't have enough resources in secret service. You know,
we're a very divided country and things are very very
volatile right now. They need more resources. Okay, So it's

(18:31):
a resource issue, right, Okay, make a report's going to
show it's an incompetence issue. In fact, they're only incompetent
when it comes to protecting one side. That's a whole
other topic, isn't it. No, No, we got a mental
illness issue. Maybe from that perspective, I'm almost glad someone

(18:55):
was sick enough to ask this question. But I can't
stress enough how how sick it is to ask this question,
let alone how nauseating the answers will be. So from
the Party of Joy comes this dark souled reality. The
Politan News Service asked in a survey. While it's always

(19:20):
difficult to wish ill of another human being, would America
be better off if Donald Trump had been killed? Last weekend?
Can you believe somebody asked that question in a poll?
And can you believe when you break out the Democrat respondents,
for twenty five percent of them, they answered not sure.

(19:46):
You see, sometimes I bring up this, this is a
nineteen sixty eight gag. This is eighteen fifty stuff. You're
playing with civil war fire here, and people think, oh,
he's dramatic. Well, somebody legitimately was dark enough to ask
the question, hey, do you think we'd be better off
if Donald had been assassinated? And one side the other side,

(20:09):
you know, the gray side. Twenty five percent of them
said no, I don't know. I'm not sure. Are you
ready for this? Twenty eight percent of Democrats said yes,
we'd be better off if he was killed. It's this
Trump derangement still? Or is this something even darker? Does

(20:32):
this explain the difference in coverage, the difference in how
everyone's talking after the second attempt versus the first. After
the first attempt, everybody's like, hey, we can't have this
kind of stuff, and everybody laid low for like three days.
This time, no, they doubled down. I played a clip
from Hillary yesterday. She all but said, I'm sorry they missed,

(20:53):
and come on, we gotta this is an object. We
got to stay focused on the objects. Who's next? I mean, wow?
Ninety two percent of Republicans. Ninety two percent of Republicans
said no, it would not be better off if Donald

(21:14):
Trump were killed. Less than one percent were unsure. This
is shocking. Seven percent said yes. I mean, that's a
whole other conversation, right. Seven percent of Republicans talk about
never Trumper's these are offers, these are Trump offers. But
among the Democrats, less than half forty seven percent said no,

(21:37):
we would not be better off if he was killed,
and I hope they hung up. What a sick question?
Twenty five percent hung up scratching their head. I'm just
not sure. Do you realize the majority of Democrats are
either unsure or sure we'd be better off if Donald
Trump was killed. They don't want to win elections anymore.
They want to kill anybody that opposes him. Am I

(21:59):
the only one that sees how? I mean? I thought
it was sick and dark to even ask the question.
The answer is even darker. Twenty eight percent of Democrats
are sorry he didn't get the shot off. Sorry the

(22:21):
Pennsylvania sniper only hit his ear. Well, I think we
can agree. This isn't politics as usual. This doesn't look
anything like one nation under God, indivisible with liberty and
justice for all. It's a matrix, and we need to

(22:44):
pill bad. Maybe disease only felt like doing one poll.
We'll get to the plenty later. Hey, if you're just
waking up. A trio of new polls show Vice President
Kamala Harris aheadn't two bad battle ground states, with a
third still up for grabs and the race for the
White House. Brian Shook has more.

Speaker 4 (23:05):
Quinnipiac University surveys of likely voters in Pennsylvania and Michigan
both show Harris receiving fifty one percent support, with former
President Trump getting forty six percent support in a hypothetical
two way race. Meanwhile, a third poll conducted in Wisconsin
is too close to call, with Harris garnering forty nine
percent support and Trump receiving forty eight percent. I'm Brian

(23:29):
shuck Well.

Speaker 1 (23:31):
Is New York in play? Trump thinks? So? Mark Mayfield
has today in politics.

Speaker 5 (23:35):
Former President Trump says the state of New York will
vote for him in November.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
It hasn't been done for a long time, but we
are going to win New York.

Speaker 5 (23:49):
Security was very tight at the rally in Uniondale on Wednesday,
the first since an apparent assassination attempted this past weekend
in Florida. New York officials said earlier reports about explosives
being found near the site were false. The state's voted
Democratic in the last nine elections. Trump also said during
the rally he felt God saved his life so he
can make America great again. And a trio of new
polls show Vice President Kamala Harris a hand in two

(24:11):
key battleground states, with the third state up for grabs
in the race for the White House. Quinnipiac University surveys
of likely voters in Pennsylvania and Michigan both show Harris
receiving fifty one percent support, with former President Trump getting
forty six percent support in a hypothetical two way race.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
Meanwhile, a third pole.

Speaker 5 (24:27):
Conducted in Wisconsin is too close to call, with Harris
garnering forty nine percent support and Trump receiving forty eight
percent support.

Speaker 1 (24:33):
That's politics. I'm Mark Nyfield. Well, the COVID abuses the
gift that keeps giving. Federal officials are warning that a
drop in vaccinations in the US may have led to
an increase in fluid deaths among children. Tammy Trijuiel has
more the CDs.

Speaker 3 (24:48):
He said Wednesday that nearly two hundred children died from
influenza related illnesses during the most recent flu season. That
most of the children who died were eligible for a
vaccine but didn't receive one. It said the death inside
with overall drops and vaccinations among children. As of May,
the CDC said only fifty three percent of children in
the US were vaccinated for the flu this season. That's

(25:09):
down from the previous year. I'm Tammy Tricky, O.

Speaker 1 (25:12):
Have Boy Carter, Donny Pardon say good, nubbed Divide. The
CMA Country Music Association announced its nominations earlier this month.
Beyonce's hit country album Cowboy Carter was shut out. When
Dolly was asked about the supposed snub in an interview
publishing Variety magazine, she said, Beyonce, it was a country

(25:33):
girl who made a wonderful album. But the CMAS can't
leave out country artists, in her words, who spend their
whole time doing just that. So they did s number sports,
Thursday Night Football, Patriots and Jets, Baseball, Rangers, Cardinals, Guardians,
d Backs, All one, Nats, Raisin Mariners, lost birthdays. Actor

(25:53):
Jeremy Irons is seventy six years old, Pretty good with
her Irons LPGA star Britney Linscoma is thirty nine. Singer
Trisha Ritt Year would be disrespectfless ay Gar's wife. Right,
well you're Herewood is sixty. Do I remember when Trish
Yearwood was big? Today's hot new country where all the
country DJs talk in syllables. Here's Trish Yearwood fifty minutes

(26:15):
of NonStop music. Why do they talk like that you
were one of them? Oh well, I'm trying to break
the trend. Yeah, you were a little too mellow for country.
Oh well, I guess some loudness. I can't believe I
gotta do this. Tonight Show host not Jack Barr, It's
not Johnny Carson. Tonight's show host Jimmy Fallon, Great Guy,

(26:36):
so so hosts fifty years old today and if your birthday,
Happy birthday, So glad you were born. Thanks for waking
up with your morning show.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Hey, this is John wattson my morning show. Is your
Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
The national Teamster's leadership declined to endorse a candidate. Very
interesting when you consider Donald Trump had fifty eight percent
of the Teamster support. Harris said, thirty one, but still
no endorsement. Do they really represent their members and workers?
And is it Democrat party still the party of the
working class? Doesn't look like it. Meanwhile, the Fed met,

(27:07):
everybody was sure and I can't wait to rub it
in Rory's face. Rory said, oh, it'll be a quarter.
They'll never do a half. They did a half. Aaron
Ray else here with that good news, And I can
tell you right now the professors are lining up already
for the networks to say that's too deep. Those cuts
are too deep. Yeah right, I know.

Speaker 6 (27:24):
Here's the thing. I was surprised by the half of
this for the simple reason that they almost always start
off with the quarter, and the only time they do
a half is usually like in a time of serious
issues going on, like a pandemic or like a great
financial recession.

Speaker 1 (27:38):
The way Kamala Harris's poll numbers are looking, I'm kidding going.

Speaker 6 (27:43):
I'm going to say this, and I know it might
be unpopular to listeners. The FED is an independent body
that serves a public need and truly, truly, truly is
I don't believe this to be politically motivated. Jerome Powell
was appointed by Trump. Yes, he said he'd replace him,
but like they often carry over from he replaced Jenny Yellen,

(28:03):
so like they often carry from one administration to the next.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
And I'm not going to fight with you about that.
I mean, so they went a half. Obviously they're a
little bit more concerned about the economy than we thought
they were.

Speaker 6 (28:13):
Yes, and I think it's the job dummers. Four point
two percent, that's how much the unemployment rate has ticked up.
The FED has a dual mandate maximize employment and keep
inflation at two percent. It's done a great job at
the latter part of that. We're down to two point
five percent inflation. What has stuck around our high prices,
not inflation. But what we do know is that the
unemployment number could be a problem, could be a real problem,

(28:33):
because once unemployment begins to tick up, it doesn't really.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
Stop taking up. So it's not off a cliff yet.

Speaker 6 (28:40):
It's not an historically terrible number, but they're scared about
what will come next, and that's why I think we
saw such a big rate cut. And then also eleven
of the twelve FED voters, the FED officials, they back
this size cut, so it shows you kind of where
they are. And then the narrow majority of officials actually
have penciled in cuts that would lower rates at least

(29:00):
a quarter point at the next two meetings this year
in November and December, so.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
It could be another half by the end of the year. Indeed. Yeah,
so that puts us at about four and three quarters
five percent now maybe four and a half. That should
get what the mortgage rate down towards.

Speaker 6 (29:17):
Six It should, yeah, because what's interesting about the mortgage
rate is the thirty year fixed It generally tied more
to the tenure Treasury like more than other things for
the simple reason that it's a long term instrument. And
then if you look at things like car loans, like
car loans are actually tried to be very closely tied

(29:37):
to the five year denote.

Speaker 1 (29:39):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael hild Chowno
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Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

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Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

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

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