Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show could be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am, six to nine am
Eastern in great cities like Tampa, Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live. But we're glad you're here now.
Enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understo because we're in the STI this.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
Is your morning show with michael'dill John Well.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
I think there's a medical name for my disorder.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
Hey, if I'm talking to somebody. My wife had a
very dear friend and we miss her. She died, but
she had a very thick Hungarian accent, and I would
talk to her in a Hungarian accent. I never just
talked to her in my voice. I can't sing Barry
Manilow in my voice. I have to sing Barry Maneline,
Barry mantle'svoice. Same thing with the old Diamond. And whenever
I talk to Mike mccannon, have you noticed I talked
to Mike as Mike, you and I are stricken with
(00:56):
the disease world. Whatever we hear, I can't say thank
you Mike, Yeah, I have to go. Thank you Mike mcinn. Anyway,
good morning, Welcome to Tuesday, October the eighth, twenty twenty four.
It's pretty simple. Keep your eye on the ball, right.
Milton is our top story. Milton was a hurricane five
and gaining strength one hundred and sixty mile an hour.
(01:16):
Wins backed off now to a category four. Keep praying.
Could be a category three by the time it makes
landfall late Wednesday early Thursday, more likely a three or
a four. Vice President Kamala Harris is defending the Biden
administration of their border policies. In a sixty minute interview
gospel singer Sissy Houston, I already forgot the name the Inspirations.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
Yeah, and I've already gone past that web page.
Speaker 1 (01:44):
Surprise was it?
Speaker 3 (01:45):
So here we go again. It really wasn't worth interrupting
the show.
Speaker 1 (01:50):
The Sweet Sensations are sweet inspiration, sweet inspirations. They backed up.
They were the backup singers for Elvis Presley, of course,
probably most famous for being Whitney Houston's mother. Sissy died
at the age of ninety one, and the Chiefs One
Monday Night Football twenty six to thirteen. Last Night over
the New Orleans Saints. All right, Sounds of the day.
In a moment, I want to play an interesting clip
(02:12):
on if this election comes down to Pennsylvania, which isn't
you know it's kind of like pick a card at
a card. Well that assumes, of course North Carolina and
Georgia stay red, that at least Arizona stays red. Then
maybe it comes down to Pennsylvania. But it could be
Michigan instead of Pennsylvania, could be Nevada and North Carolina.
Speaker 4 (02:32):
You know that.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
Do it for Kamala Harris. You never really know, But
if you're focused on Pennsylvania, here's an interesting piece of sound.
And this may be why Kamala Harris has been doing
so many interviews. Sure, she leads nationwide by three, but
so did Hillary Steve break it down for us.
Speaker 5 (02:50):
Yeah, Christian, let's start big picture nationally here. We've been
tracking this week to week the average of all of
the major national polls. Kamala Harris continuing with that three
point advantage in the average over Donald Trump. But of course,
Donald Trump lost the popular vote in each of the
last two times he ran for president, and one of
those times, in twenty sixteen, he was still able to
(03:10):
win through the electoral college. So let's take a closer
look than at the states, at the seven.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Core battleground states.
Speaker 5 (03:16):
Again, you're looking at our poll averages in here. The
headline obviously continues to be it's very close everywhere. But
one thing to draw your attention to when you talk
about Trump being in Pennsylvania, Obama coming in there, all
of the attention from Trump's standpoint, in terms of an
efficient path to two hundred and seventy electoral votes, it
would look something like this. If Trump gets Georgia, okay,
(03:38):
where he leads in the poll average by a point
and a half. If he gets North Carolina, where is
literally tied in the polls right now, and where Trump one.
Speaker 1 (03:45):
In twenty twenty, the only one of these battleground.
Speaker 5 (03:48):
States Trump carried four years ago, then all Trump would
need on top of Georgia in North Carolina would be Pennsylvania,
where Harris does have a small lead in the averages now.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
But Trump getting those three.
Speaker 3 (04:00):
Wait, here's the significant point, would get into two seventy.
So that's the importance for him and for Democrats.
Speaker 5 (04:05):
The importance of blocking that path for Trump in Pennsylvania
taking a closer look than at the Keystone State. One
of the reasons, besides its size, that this is of
such an interest to Trump and the Republicans. There's a
trend here. You're looking at the Trump era. You're looking
at party registration in Pennsylvania, and look at this. When
Donald Trump first came on the scene back in twenty sixteen,
(04:25):
the Democratic advantage in party registration in Pennsylvania was over
nine hundred.
Speaker 1 (04:29):
Thousand votes twenty twenty.
Speaker 5 (04:31):
Look now in twenty twenty four, that's been cut almost
in two thirds there down to about three hundred and
thirty thousand.
Speaker 1 (04:38):
There's been a loss of six hundred thousand registered votes
for dek Why is this so key There are more
Democrats than Republicans. So if everybody votes equal, if turnout
is equal, Democrats won every time. Is there the kind
of energy for Kamala Harris that there is for Donald
Trump in his party to draw I've equal turnout because
(05:04):
you don't have a nine hundred thousand registered voter differential anymore.
Speaker 3 (05:10):
You have just a three hundred thousand. That tightens things up.
These numbers, along with some other numbers.
Speaker 1 (05:16):
There was a Yahoo News poll that showed it actually
tied nationwide forty seven to forty seven, but pursuing she
leads by three nationwide. Where does she lead in the
swing states? And I think it's too close to call.
North Carolina of a lot of Republicans believe that will
stay strong along with Georgia. The question is, could you
lose both Nevada and Arizona. Maybe take Arizona if you're
(05:39):
Donald Trump, but lose Nevada, that's okay, But then you
still need Michigan, Wisconsin, or Pennsylvania. And the Pennsylvania story is,
in twenty sixteen, with Donald Trump took Pennsylvania, the Democrats
had nine hundred plus thousand more registered voters. Now it's
down to three hundred thousand. And that may be why
our bookie has an update from the Your Morning Show
(05:59):
sports book.
Speaker 6 (06:00):
There was no easy ride with the betting lines. Trump
is now a clear cut favorite at minus one oh four.
Mamala Kamala is now at plus one oh six. Tremendous
turnaround like I predicted. Also DJT going through the roof.
Speaker 1 (06:19):
That's the Donald Trump social media stock, all right, So
there is something in the air, right If they hid
Biden in twenty twenty and got away with it. They've
been trying to hide Kamala in plain sight after the
big switch. Now, all of a sudden, Howard Stern the view,
Stephen Colbert sixty minutes and we knew the roughest ride
(06:40):
would be sixty minutes, which, by the way, in our
Sounds of the day, they got a hold of knucklehead too.
Speaker 3 (06:46):
Here's how that went.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
In your debate with JD.
Speaker 7 (06:49):
Vance, you said I'm a knucklehead at times, and I
think you were referring to the time that you said
that you were in Hong Kong during the ten and
then square and rest when you were not.
Speaker 1 (07:01):
You mean, like the time he said he was carrying
a rifle in battle when he wasn't, or what his
rank was, or that he was a coach that won
a state championship when he was a volunteer. Was he
the linebacker assistant?
Speaker 7 (07:16):
Is that kind of misrepresentation? Isn't that more than just
being a knucklehead.
Speaker 8 (07:23):
I think folks know who I am, and I think
they know the difference between someone expressing motion telling your
story getting a date wrong by a rather than a
pathological liar like Donald Trump.
Speaker 7 (07:34):
But I think it comes down to the question of
whether whether you can be trusted to tell the truth. Yeah,
well I can't.
Speaker 1 (07:44):
I think I can.
Speaker 8 (07:45):
I will own up to being a knucklehead at times,
but the folks closest to me know that I keep
my word.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
So somewhere in a conference room, the Democrat strategists are
sitting around going, we got ourselves a knucklehead, a heart
beat away from the presidency, a strong message heading down
the stretch. Liar or knucklehead. Either way, I think it's
not a good sign. Meanwhile, Kama didn't get any softballs either.
(08:14):
The first one probably would be the border. Now watch
how strongly he makes the point. First of all, Democrats
have been in the lead for leadership for twelve of
sixteen years, so there's a border problem. They kind of
own it, but in particular the last four years, because
(08:39):
in three years the poorest border quadrupled into an invasion
and a crisis. Sixty minutes pose the question, reposed the question,
and kept reposing the question.
Speaker 7 (08:55):
I've been covering the border for years, and so I
know this is not a problem that started with your administration,
But there was an historic flood of undocumented immigrants coming
across the border.
Speaker 1 (09:11):
The first three years of your administration.
Speaker 7 (09:14):
As a matter of fact, arrivals quadrupled from the last
year of President Trump. Was it a mistake solusen the
immigration policies as much as you did.
Speaker 9 (09:28):
It's a long standing problem and solutions are at hand,
and from day one, literally we have been offering solutions.
Speaker 7 (09:38):
What I was asking was, was it a mistake to
kind of allow that flood to happen in.
Speaker 10 (09:45):
The first place.
Speaker 9 (09:47):
The policies that we have been proposing are about fixing
a problem, not promoting a problem.
Speaker 1 (09:53):
Okay, but the numbers did quadruple.
Speaker 9 (09:56):
And the numbers today because of what we have done.
Speaker 1 (09:59):
We have cut. But that's why we.
Speaker 9 (10:04):
Have them by half. But we need Congress to be
able to act to actually fix the problem.
Speaker 1 (10:14):
You know, we do have a problem with death of journalism,
but I think we have a bigger problem that's kind
of surfacing now, and that is the inability to speak
the truth in a matter, whether it's Tim Wall's a
pathological liar or a knucklehead, or her refusing to answer
a direct question. She just simply won't. Now that's acceptable.
We got a voter problem, well, you definitely got a
(10:36):
candidate problem. You got a pathological hider and can't answer
a direct question and you got a knucklehead. But I mean,
I don't even know what they would consider.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
A good moment.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
This was the softball anyway. It seems like you're still
in a using yourself to people. I would have probably
worried a little bit more directly. Still seems like you're
having a hard time getting people to like you. But
here's how I went on sixty minutes. A quarter of
registered voters still say they don't know you. They don't
(11:19):
know what makes you tick. And why do you think
that is what's the disconnect.
Speaker 9 (11:25):
It's an election bill, and I take it seriously that
I have to earn everyone's vote. This is an election
for president of the United States. No one should be
able to take for granted that they can just declare
themselves a candidate and automatically receive support.
Speaker 3 (11:44):
You have to earn it.
Speaker 1 (11:45):
Well, Hillary did, and it didn't work out for Kamalin
was a failure the first time around. In twenty twenty,
that can't go unnoticed. She attacked Joe Biden for being
a racist, and it just came across this nasty and
mean and bullyish. That was when we got prosecuted. I'm
every debate and then finally a Lieutenant Colonel Telsea Gabbert
(12:05):
slapped her right off the stage, and she was the
first one out in the primary with the last one
in as a VP after they hit Joe in a
basement and pulled off the shadow campaign to save the
Democracy and uniting the Biden and Kamala apparatus or the
Biden or the Obama Clinton apparatus with Biden and Harris.
(12:28):
But she wasn't very likable the first time, so I
don't know if it's they don't know her. There's nothing
very transparent about her. I mean, if you held the
got into my head right now, I'd say she's pretty
passionate about cooking. Yeah, it's all I got. But I
don't think her problem is that here you are a
(12:51):
month away from a presidential election and a quarter of
Americans don't feel like they get you and know you.
I think that's the ones that are trying so hard
to vote Democrat no matter what, against their obvious common
sense and judgment. That's the conflict.
Speaker 3 (13:05):
It's not that they don't know her than a liker.
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Chona.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
Hurricane Milton may have lost some of its punch, but
it continues on its trajectory towards Tampa with very extremely
dangerous winds and storm search Roory O'Neil has the latest just.
Speaker 11 (13:26):
Barely down from a Cat five now to a Cat four.
The message to residence along much of Florida's Gulf Coast
is unchanged.
Speaker 1 (13:33):
Get to higher ground.
Speaker 11 (13:35):
Tuesday is the last full day for evacuations ahead of
Milton's landfall on Monday. Fleeing residents jammed highways, causing gridlock
along evacuation routes. This could be the first major hurricane
to hit Tampa Bay directly in more than a century.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
Rory O'Neil Miami. Kamala Harris again claims the government can
spend recklessly. The rich will pick up the tab Brian
Shook as our sixty Minute Road to the White House.
Speaker 12 (14:00):
The White House twenty twenty four, Kamala Harris is again
saying she'll pay for her economic plan by taxing the rich.
While appearing on sixty Minutes, the VP was pressed about
how she'll get the money from Congress to invest in
small businesses.
Speaker 9 (14:14):
Well, one of the things I'm going to make sure
that the richest among us who can afford it, pay
their fair.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Share in taxes.
Speaker 12 (14:23):
Republican critics point out that the top one percent of
income earners in the US earned twenty six percent of
all income and pay forty six percent of all federal
income taxes. Trump has consistently polled better than Harris on
the question of which candidate would be better at handling
the economy in Washington. I'm Brian Shuck.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
You know what's really the question of the hour is
is the United States of America and its government have
a spending problem or a revenue problem? Beyond a spending problem,
does it have an identity problem? What is the proper
size and role of the federal government. It's never even asked.
(15:05):
What is the role and the responsibility of each of
us to self governed. It's never even discussed.
Speaker 3 (15:12):
Oh, we don't have God anymore.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
We have government, and the government shall supply all your
needs according to its riches and glory is you give.
Speaker 3 (15:23):
It your vote? And how's that working?
Speaker 1 (15:26):
You're thirty five trillion dollars in debt, and no matter
who wins this election, you're going to be at least
forty trillion. I think it's a spending problem and not
a redistribution of wealth and the rich paying more solution.
Gospel singer mother of Whitney Houston, Sissy Houston, has passed
away at the age of ninety one.
Speaker 3 (15:47):
Kristen Marx reports.
Speaker 13 (15:50):
Sissy Houston's family says she died at her home in
New Jersey on Monday while in hospice care for Alzheimer's.
In a statement, daughter in law Pat Houston says their
hearts are with pain and sadness following the loss of
the family matriarch. Houston, a Newerk native, had a successful
solo career herself, winning two Grammy Awards. She also performed
with Elvis Presley and Aretha Franklin and was in the
(16:12):
girl group Sweet Inspirations with niece d d Warwick. The
vocal group sang backup for many artists, including niece Dion Warwick.
Speaker 3 (16:20):
Kristin Marks NBC News Radio.
Speaker 1 (16:22):
Saints passed away just before halftime against the Chiefs in
Kansas City last night, went on to lose twenty six
to thirteen. Tiger's three nothing win in Cleveland over the Guardians,
that series now tied to one game each.
Speaker 3 (16:33):
Yankees lost to the Royals four to two last night.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
They're tied to one game apiece, as are the Phillies, Mets,
and Padres and Dodgers both playing today Phillies and Mets
at four and the Queens and the Padres and the
Dodgers tonight at eight. From San Diego, Hi, It's Michael.
Your Morning show airs live five to eight AM Central,
six to nine Eastern and great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
(16:57):
but we're happy you're here now. Enjoyed the podcast. You
can't have your morning show without your voice. You can
always email Michael D at iHeartMedia dot com, toll free
one eight hundred and six eight eight ninety five twenty two,
eight hundred and six eight eight ninety five twenty two,
or on your iHeart app you if you're listening. You
know this a little microphone that's a talkback button. Could
ask a question, comment anything we're talking about, and then
(17:17):
we can share it with the entire class, like this
one from Vince, Like this one from Vinc Vince down
in Florida waiting for that hurricane A whip across our state.
Speaker 6 (17:29):
I did not watch the Sixty Minutes interview, but.
Speaker 14 (17:32):
I wish I had.
Speaker 8 (17:33):
It sounds like they did a really nice job of
raising a lot of the concerns about this clown circus.
Speaker 1 (17:41):
Harrison Walls, well, I think they'll get I think Kamalo
will get a free ride with Howard Stern and the
View and Steven Colbert. She did not, nor did Timmy
get a free ride with sixty minutes. Welcome to Tuesday,
October the eighth, twenty twenty four. As you heard Vince mentioned,
in Florida, they're bracing for Hurricane Milton. We braced RORYO
Neil a way down in Miami, hoping he'll be safe there. Rory,
(18:03):
it was scaring the snot out of me yesterday a
Cat five in the middle of the day and growing
stronger and then lessens to a Cat four, and it
still hopes it could be a Cat three at landfall.
Why is it lessening in the golf waters and not intensifying.
Speaker 11 (18:17):
I'm glad it is, because, yeah, well you're focused on
the water, but you got to go a little higher
and to the bit to the north well where you are.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
Did it suddenly get cooler in the past forty eight
hours where you watch absolutely to Lifelin might have but cooler,
but cooler, right, Yeah, that's what's sucking the energy.
Speaker 11 (18:35):
Yes, and that's what's going to mingle even more with
Milton as it moves closer to Florida's Gulf coast, and that's.
Speaker 1 (18:43):
Energy out of the storm.
Speaker 11 (18:45):
Mercifully Still, it is expected to be a major hurricane
when it does make landfall, starting tomorrow. The Eye is
expected to come ashore around maybe Tampa Bay, Sarasota, Fort Myers,
somewhere in the mix there.
Speaker 1 (19:00):
That's probably going to happen around one o'clock.
Speaker 11 (19:01):
On Thursday morning for the Eye to make landfall, and
where it makes landfall makes all the difference, because if
it goes closer to Tampa Bay, it could be catastrophic,
sending a storm surge of eight, ten, fifteen feet up
into the bay. There's nowhere for that water to go,
so it goes into the city and that's when it
becomes extremely destructive.
Speaker 1 (19:21):
Yeah, just to make it crystal clear, we had a
twenty foot storm surge. I mean, Helene was a storm
surge story for Florida and the Bend. It was an
inland flooding disaster for Tennessee and North Carolina. This half
the storm surge ten feet, but with the right trajectory
into the bay could still be a big problem.
Speaker 11 (19:41):
Right and where it came ashore in the big Bend
in Perry not anywhere near as densely populated as Tampa Bay.
You've got Tampa, Saint Petersburg, clear Water, all of them
could face real destruction if you do get that massive
surge going right up the bay. Tampa Bay has not
taken a direct hit from a MA hurricane that twenties
(20:01):
category three or higher in more than one hundred years.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
In nineteen twenty one. Yeah, yeah, well I came across
that when I was doing research. Sometimes you guys come
up with stories and they're usually always terrific, But this
one I got to commend you. You know, everybody paranoid
about artificial intelligence. I mean, let's face it, ory if
they wanted to, they could do an artificial intelligence newscast
and you could pick the gender, you could pick the voice,
(20:26):
you could pick the accent, and it would sound like
a great newscast. I mean, it could happen somedays. But
for everybody that's afraid of artificial intelligence are placing their job.
Here's one that I would have if we brainstormed for hours,
I wouldn't have come up with as home prices are
through the roof, just like a restaurant's menu is high priced.
The tip comes up with it, so the commission comes
(20:46):
up with it. It's been a crisis. AI to the rescue.
We won't have realtors anymore. We'll just buy from an
AAR and maybe the pictures more accurate of the AI
of the chatbot.
Speaker 3 (20:58):
Yeah yeah, Could I mean, could he I really replace
a realtor?
Speaker 1 (21:03):
It's an interesting story we've had. US.
Speaker 11 (21:05):
I can't take credit for USA today brought up the
question and did some research in this, but there are
already real estate companies out there that are AI focused
and AI based, and they're saying, look, you know this
is going to happen sooner rather than later. We're talking
five to ten years, not fifty to one hundred. That
people just interact more, especially young people just are used
(21:27):
to interacting with this stuff, and expect now AI to
start answering a lot of the questions that your agent
would say, oh, this is the better school district, and
let's mix this where well, you know those high tension
power lines are you know, write one block over, maybe
not there, or well this was a super fun site
around the court, and so it can bring in all
(21:48):
that information and data points to find let me, let
me be the perfect home.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
I have a lot of friends who are realtors, let
me stick up for them. Oftentimes consumers don't know the
right questions to ask. Listen, you and I do this
job for a living. Every day the media is asking
the wrong questions, let alone not getting straight answers. But
you know, so they wouldn't have the knowledge to ask
the right questions. But even that could be programmed on
that right and.
Speaker 11 (22:12):
It's going to get smarter and smarter and look for
a straight up and down transaction, it may be viable.
But look, you know, real estate agents have to navigate
a lot of minefields, and some pretty complicated ones at that.
Speaker 1 (22:24):
So when there are these more.
Speaker 11 (22:25):
Complex transactions and you have estates involved in who's selling what,
and you know complicated mortgage setups, yeah maybe you might
need that expert personal help to come in there. But
for a lot of these straightforward exchanges, you know, sort
of that buy owner kind of home sale that was
really big in the nineties.
Speaker 1 (22:43):
AI might be able to maybe up to the challenge.
Do we have thirty seconds?
Speaker 4 (22:47):
We do?
Speaker 1 (22:48):
Okay, so my wife would confirm this. I have a
problem with shoes and I have a problem with cars.
All right, I just can't stop. I don't know when
the last time you boy, if the shoe under the break,
that could be riding. No, but I the days that
you go to a lot and you just start walking
around talking to a salesman. I mean I'm done by
(23:10):
the time I arrive and we're talking about you know,
vehicles in many cases not me. I don't go that high.
But vehicles can be seventy to one hundred grand easy.
Now that used to be the price of a home.
We're used to buying that without a car salesman. It's
not a giant leap.
Speaker 11 (23:24):
To go to a home well right, especially now when
you're going to say, well, it's a six hundred thousand
dollars house, and I can save you three percent, you know, suddenly,
hey wait.
Speaker 1 (23:33):
A minute, now, that's that's a good car payment.
Speaker 11 (23:35):
So yeah, that's the issue is that there's real dollars
and cents involved here, not just some you know.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
Existential experiment. I think it was. I think it was
gen Krantz at one point during the Apollo thirteen crisis.
As all right, let's start over here. From an operational standpoint,
what on the spacecraft is still working?
Speaker 4 (23:53):
You know?
Speaker 1 (23:54):
At some point? What won't AI take over?
Speaker 10 (23:57):
Right? Yeah?
Speaker 1 (23:59):
Oh, drip clubs.
Speaker 3 (24:02):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (24:02):
You can teach a to say, get those tips out
of those hips and who knows. We'll put our little
quest goggles on and there's nobody even really there while
playing Black Velvet Boy, were you know an awful lot about.
Speaker 3 (24:14):
Struc Orr up back Later we'll talk more about Milton.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
A Cat five turns Cat four but still churning towards
Tampa when your morning show continues. Sorry if you're just
waking up. These are the top stories. Obviously, Hurricane Milton
a big story, and with the very latest year's Mark Mayfield.
Speaker 15 (24:34):
In the latest update from the National Hurricane Center, Milton
was classified as a Category four storm with maximum winds
of one.
Speaker 1 (24:41):
Hundred and fifty five miles per hour.
Speaker 15 (24:43):
That's just shy of being a Category five, which it
was earlier Monday, with winds clocked at one hundred and
eighty miles per hour. Counties long Florida's west coast have
been ordered to evacuate, with dozens under a state of emergency.
Milton is not expected to have any major impacts on
already storm ravaged western North as it struggles to recover
in the aftermath of Helene.
Speaker 1 (25:03):
I'm Mark Mayfield. Elon Musk says he's going to jump
around more on stage for Donald Trump.
Speaker 3 (25:08):
Brian Shuk report.
Speaker 12 (25:09):
Musk spoke in favor of the GOP nominee during a
rally in Butler on Saturday, with Politico reporting that he
plans to attend more events in the swing state in
the upcoming month before the election. He will be backed
by America Pack, the pro Trump super pack Musk helped found.
I'm Brian Schuck.
Speaker 3 (25:29):
Well, it's soon going to cost us more money to
play the Mega Millions.
Speaker 4 (25:32):
Well not me.
Speaker 3 (25:33):
I never played The Mega Millions, but if you do.
Tammy Trihilo reports.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Starting in April, Mega Million's tickets will cost a five
dollars each. Other changes to the game include a prize
multiplier being built in and randomly generated on every ticket.
Sault Mega Million says they'll be larger starting jackpots with
the top prize growing faster. That will lead to bigger
jackpots more frequently. The game will also no longer have
break even prizes. That means now that when a player
(25:57):
wins a prize, it will be for more than the
cost of the ten I'm tammy truho.
Speaker 1 (26:01):
Mark your calendar. The DEA is holding a drug take
back day this month. Pre tennis with the tails on
this nationwide event.
Speaker 16 (26:09):
The Drug Enforcement Administration is holding a drug take back
Day October twenty six, So open your medicine cabinet and
get rid of those last bits of cough syrup, the
container without the label, old vitamins, or that medication that
just didn't work. The agency says they hold two collections
a year. Last April they took in more than six
hundred and seventy thousand pounds of drugs nationwide. No questions asked,
(26:32):
they say, most police and sheriff's offices or drop off locations.
Speaker 15 (26:35):
I'm pre tennis.
Speaker 17 (26:36):
And now on with the countdown to our number one
piece of sound in the day, Do you have our
number one jingle?
Speaker 1 (26:44):
Where'd that go? All?
Speaker 15 (26:48):
Right?
Speaker 1 (26:48):
There was a lot of great mamaa Kamala moments on
sixty minutes, but none like king knucklehead Tim Walls with
sixty minutes during the Mama La Kamala Traveling Salvation Show.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
Here's how it went.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
In your debate with JD.
Speaker 7 (27:05):
Vance, you said I'm a knucklehead at times, and I
think you were referring to the time that you said
that you were in Hong Kong during the Tiananman Square
and rest when you were not. Is that kind of misrepresentation.
Isn't that more than just being a knucklehead.
Speaker 8 (27:24):
I think folks know who I am, and I think
they know the difference between someone expressing motion, telling your
story getting a date wrong by a rather than a
pathological liar.
Speaker 1 (27:34):
Like Donald Trumpet. But okay, my wife has a little
pet peeve, and that is people that can't say fetanyl.
It's not fetanyl, it's fentanyl. That's misspeaking. What this man
is constantly caught, whether it was his rank, whether or
not he implied and tried to imply he was in
(27:55):
battle when he purposely avoided battle, whether it's Tieman Square,
What are these are lies? They're not even exaggerations. But
in some cases maybe you could say he's trying to
say exaggeration misspeak, knucklehead, but they're lies. But the notion
the Democrat strategists in her room and the best way
(28:17):
out with Kamala Harris. And this is the only thing
she's done presidential so far. Her pick to be a
heartbeat away is either a pathological liar or a knucklehead
that can't be what they wanted the sixty Minutes impression
to be.
Speaker 7 (28:31):
I think it comes down to the question of whether
whether you can be trusted to tell the truth. Yeah,
well I can't.
Speaker 1 (28:41):
I think I can.
Speaker 8 (28:42):
I will own up to being a knucklehead at times,
but the folks closest do mean know.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
That I keep my word in your debate? I mean,
I've never seen like sarahennt Live what they did with
Sarah Palin. Sarah Live may have won that presidency, although
I think Obama's gonna go on to win anyway. But
I mean, serpain was ruined forever because she resembled the caricature.
(29:09):
I think this guy is as dumb as the character
can live can lay by gaffigant.
Speaker 17 (29:17):
I mean, there you have it, number one gaff of
the election season. The knucklehead moving up three big notchs.
Keep your feet in the ground and keep reaching for
a candidate.
Speaker 14 (29:31):
I'm Daniel Calsey and Tampa and my morning show is
your Morning Show with Michael Bill Joram.
Speaker 1 (29:37):
If you're just waking up, our eyes are on Milton.
He was a cat five, now a cat four, still
headed towards Tampa and Vice President Kamala Harris defending the
Biden administration's border policies in sixty minutes and the puck
drops officially, the NHL regular season starts today as baseball
playoffs continue, and the Saints lost to the Chiefs.
Speaker 3 (29:55):
Last night on Monday Night Football.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
So it was about this time yesterday I got shanked
in the yard by a fellow inmate, a White House
correspond to John Decker, And I was talking about you
behind your back, John.
Speaker 4 (30:06):
Because you already say what do you say film me
in please?
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Well, first of all, you are a little hard on me,
but you always are, and I actually enjoy aggravating you.
But no, I said, you know they're going to finally
Paradekomalo with interviews, but come on, Howard Stern, the view,
Stephen Colbert, But you were right, no free ride with
sixty minutes.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
That was a rough one.
Speaker 4 (30:26):
Yeah, yeah, I.
Speaker 14 (30:27):
Mean, look, sixty minutes is not a softball interview.
Speaker 10 (30:30):
When you sign up to do.
Speaker 14 (30:31):
An interview with them, you got to get prepared, prepare
for the tough questions. And what Bill Whitaker does a
good job. He's a solid journalist. Everybody on tixty minutes is.
And you know, I think that it was good that
you stepped up because you know, then you have the
softball interviews today, you know, so it balances it out
in terms of that media exposure.
Speaker 1 (30:51):
Yeah, because I mean, you know, sixty minutes is we
live in a matrix right now. So I'm not applauding
either side. Both sides are part of the problem. But
the extreme right it only goes to extreme white right
sites or watches extreme right hosts or listens to them
and then repeats narratives, and the left does the same.
Speaker 3 (31:09):
That's mainly a left source, I think.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
In sixty minutes, so it probably made already apprehensive people
not too excited about Kamala within her base to be
a little less excited. I don't know how much harm
it really did, is my point. Now, Joe Biden going
to Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, I don't know if that.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
Helps, but here.
Speaker 14 (31:29):
Yeah, that's the trip that President Biden is taking today.
Speaker 4 (31:32):
Out to Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
Speaker 14 (31:34):
He's also going to be traveling to just outside Philadelphia.
Speaker 10 (31:38):
That's a campaign trip.
Speaker 14 (31:39):
The trip to Wisconsin is touting some of the successes
of the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law and how the Infrastructure Law
has replaced two hundred million dollars in lead pipes in
Milwaukee and nine billion dollars in lead pipes all across
the country.
Speaker 4 (31:54):
So that's what he's doing in Milwaukee.
Speaker 14 (31:57):
You know, I don't know if he is a net
positive for Kamala Harris given his low approval ratings, but
he's going to be in these two battleground states today.
Michael Wisconsin in Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania's campaign visit for Bob Casey Jr.
Speaker 10 (32:13):
Senator Bob Casey Jr.
Speaker 14 (32:14):
Who's running for another six year term in the US Senate.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
Well, let's be fair about it, Okay, So big picture
probably not a help. You don't want to link Kamala
Harris to this administration that may or may not have
been successful on, especially the border and the economy. He
was a very, very skilled politician in his day. He's
kind of passed his prime and cognitive ability.
Speaker 3 (32:35):
But I don't know that. You know, these races are
so tight.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
You got Barack Obama coming, it really can't hurt to
send Joe, and I got news for there's a lot
of people that embraced Joe. They don't think he's necessarily
as cognitively sharp as he was when he's younger, but
who is. But in some cases he may reach some people.
Speaker 3 (32:52):
Kamala hasn't been very effective in reaching it could help.
Speaker 4 (32:56):
Well, that's right.
Speaker 14 (32:56):
You know, Pennsylvania is actually his home state. You know,
that's where he was born, born in Granton, Pennsylvania. So
maybe in Pennsylvania.
Speaker 10 (33:03):
Boys.
Speaker 14 (33:04):
Pennsylvania important for both Harris and.
Speaker 10 (33:06):
For Trump, so you know, it makes sense he'll be there.
Speaker 14 (33:09):
That's the state other than his home state of Delaware,
that he's visited the most during the course of his presidency.
And I would expect some additional visits up to the
Philadelphia area between now.
Speaker 4 (33:22):
And four weeks from now.
Speaker 10 (33:24):
Four weeks from now.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Is election dead, thank god. So do we have any
itinerary for Barack Obama? I mean, I would presume it'll
be he's going to be focused laser focused on Michigan
and Pennsylvania, but I'd be very interested to see if
Barack Obama tries to go close the deal in North Carolina.
I haven't seen the itinerary yet.
Speaker 4 (33:42):
Yeah, you know, I haven't seen it either.
Speaker 14 (33:44):
All I know is that starting Thursday, will be in Pittsburgh.
But if I had a bet, here's the places where
I think Barack Obama will be over the course of
the next four weeks, not only Pittsburgh, but also Philadelphia, Detroit, Milwaukee, Atlanta.
Those are the places that I think they're going to
put Barack Obama over the course of the next four weeks,
(34:06):
maybe even out west.
Speaker 10 (34:07):
In Las Vegas and Phoenix as well. So he's going
to be on the road.
Speaker 14 (34:11):
I'm sure he's got a suitcase packed for all that.
Speaker 1 (34:13):
He might want to pack Michelle with him. Michelle tends
to be the most, yeah, most effective on the campaign. Triow,
great work as always, and thanks for not shanking me
in the yard today, John, and you were right about
sixty minutes I gave you credit.
Speaker 3 (34:25):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Hill and Choano