Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
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Speaker 1 (00:31):
This is your morning show with Michael Bell, Johno and
a pleasant good morning to you. It is Thursday, October tenth,
twenty twenty four, and this morning will be all about
Hurricane Milton. The morning after. Officials in Saint Luke Lucy County,
Florida are reporting multiple fatalities. This related to Hurricane Milton
(00:52):
tornadoes in the outer bands prior to the eye making landfall.
Milton has now since been downgraded to a Category one storm,
but it continues to bring devastating rain and win to
parts of Florida. Flash flood emergency continues for portions of
West central Florida, with nearly now three million homes and
(01:13):
businesses without power across the state. President Biden said there's
simply no place for disinformation about hurricanes and relief efforts.
And the Afghan man in Oklahoma arrested for allegedly planning
a terror attack on election Day. He previously worked as
a security guard for the CIA. This is like Kennedy
era stuff. And Amazon is expanding its national pharmacy network.
(01:38):
You know, it used to be I was suspicious of Walgreens.
Could Walgreens be the Antichrist? I mean they're on every corner.
Absolute how many Walgreens do you need? There's one seemingly
every mile, on every corner. And then now all of
a sudden, everything's about that smiley truck arriving. You know,
they ought to do a different truck for their their pharmacy,
like a sleepy one or something. The trousy frown truck
(02:03):
is here, must be my antidepressants. And how about the
miracle Mets headed to the NLCS for the first time
in nearly a decade. While they had to at least
split a doubleheader with Atlanta, which they did with the
Lindor home run, then they eliminated the Milwaukee Brewers, and
then they eliminated the Number one seed phillies yesterday, the
(02:25):
Mets are headed to the NLCS. That's kind of what
is shaping up to be this Thursday, October the tenth. Now,
remember we can't have your morning show without your voice.
So there's three ways to be a part of your show.
Toll free one eight hundred and six eight eight ninety
five twenty two, eight hundred six eight eight ninety five
twenty two. There's also the iHeartRadio app with the talkback button.
You'll see a microphone. You can press it, it'll count
(02:47):
you down. You can make your question or comment there,
and then also email the old fashioned way, Michael D.
We spare you the spelling of the last name, Michael
D at iHeartMedia dot com. All right, not Michael, that's Jeffrey.
We're both here to serve you. The hurricane itself had
a maximum sustained wind of one hundred and twenty miles
an hour when it made landfall came ashore in Siesta Key, Florida.
(03:09):
That would have been about eight thirty pm. As of midnight,
Milton was hovering near Fort Mead, about forty six miles
east of Tampa, with a maximum sustained wind of one
hundred miles an hour, so as you can see, from
entry at one hundred and twenty to inland hours later,
still at one hundred, Winds are always an issue. Now.
(03:29):
One of the things, well, wind, as you know, is
a big culprit in the power outages, which early on
just after midnight, we had about two million customers in
Florida that were dark. That has since risen to three
million homes and businesses together throughout central Florida. But one
of the things that just to tell a personal story,
(03:50):
not to make anything about me, but I'm watching the
coverage and there seemed to be like this shock about tornadoes,
the damage. Tornadoes are doing well. I can tell you
when I got to New Orleans after Katrina, that would
have been about thirty eight hours later, forty eight hours maybe.
(04:11):
When I first got to the neighborhood where I grew up,
I was like, this is not hurricane. This is tornado.
I mean you could a tornado's debris path is very distinct.
Hurricanes are known for flooding storm surge. When a storm
surge hit you, it's your wipe clean. My dad's house
(04:31):
was gone and it looked like they had just laid
this lab. I mean, it was just like clean cement.
There was nothing. And then when I got to my
old neighborhood, that looked like a tornado path. And so,
you know, anybody that's lived through a lot of hurricanes,
no tornadoes come with them. And this one, in particular,
I think they were over at one time one hundred
(04:54):
tornado warnings in central Florida. Oh wow. Now keep in mind,
if it's a warning, it's either you know, there's a
there's a hook, it's formed, or it's come down and
it's on the ground it's visible. So this one in particular,
we'll talk more about this arroy O'Neil later on, seemed
to have a lot of tornatic activity mixed in with it.
(05:16):
Milton is accelerating east northeastward across central Florida. I think
sometime late late this afternoon early evening, Milton should have
exited the state. Deaths have been confirmed in Saint Lucy County. Again,
(05:37):
those are more related to the tornadoes. President Biden said
pre deployed thousands pre deployed federal personnel are in the
area of the affected storm, including about a thousand Coast
Guard members. You know, there's gonna be I am a
big non fan of this making politics out of everything,
quite frankly, let alone a hurricane. Look, if there are
(06:00):
some things you could have done better in Eastern Tennessee
and Western Carolina, I would ask this question, do you
think anybody would admit it? And if we're not willing
to admit it, are we not willing to learn from it?
Are we expecting perfection? Or are we politicizing? Now? Clearly
things could have gone smoother in Western Carolina, and clearly
(06:22):
they're going to go smoother in Florida. Now do you
appoint to a governor? Do you appoint to a president?
I mean, yesterday it got ridiculous on all ends, starting
early in the afternoon with Joe Biden going on his
tie rade against Donald Trump, to then these stage things
that we're doing with Kamala to make her appear as
(06:43):
though she's command center point person, which is she a
candidate or a vice president? And device, I mean, you
got the president of the United States on the call.
Do we really need the vice president chiming in? I
do have a question, and she's great and standing throughout.
I mean, that's making politics of a hurricane. It sound
like when Trump does it I don't like wha Kamala
(07:04):
does it. I don't like when Biden does it, only
when any of them do it. But it would appear
that at least some lessons have been learned and some
preparations were made quite differently in Florida. Now, if you're
going to make politics out of this, left, it's going
to tell you that there's no place or politics in
(07:25):
this and half the country in a matrix, is going
to say that's gaslighting, and the other half you know.
But somewhere along the line, I'll leave you on your
own to discern mistakes that were made in Carolina, that
were perhaps learned from and not made in Florida, And
after Katrina, none of these mistakes needed to be made.
(07:46):
When we get into the show, outside of the hurricane,
a couple of very interesting stories. And this isn't coming
from me, this is this is audio coming straight from CNN.
Democrats getting anxious about this type race, getting nervous, they're
getting twenty sixteen flashbacks, And in the case of Hillary Clinton,
(08:10):
a much better candidate but in a much more hubrious position,
they just simply thought they had it made. They made
the assumption they couldn't lose and it was going to
be easy, and it impacted their execution and then they
were surprised and they were the first to be surprised
(08:31):
because of polls. Now we kind of understand that nonchalantly
and say, well, Donald Trump under poles because people really
strongly support him on the far right. They don't trust universities,
they don't trust networks, they won't answer the phone. Let
theone tell you who they're voting for now when you
want to get really nuanced. And by the way, nobody
(08:55):
has said this, but this anxiety would apply to Kamalad
just as it would have to Hillary. Did a lot
of people say they were voting for Hillary and then
when they were all alone, not And we could never
understand is it because they hated her like they hate Trump?
(09:15):
Is it because she was a woman? Are there men
that to get along or saying I'm all on board, honey,
and then they get in there and they don't. There's
a lot of things to look at and say are similar,
and a lot of things to be anxious about if
you're the left. Because I can still pour over the
(09:36):
two seventy to win map and I can tell you
if I go by the pure numbers, there's nothing to
be nervous about. If you're Kamala Harris. Things look pretty
good in Nevada, look pretty possible in Arizona. You're a
dead heat in North Carolina, which could be the the
(09:57):
kill shot if you will to the the whole map,
and you're right there in Pennsylvania, you're right there in Michigan,
in Wisconsin. What's to be so anxious about a lot
when you give it some thought. We'll give it some
thought a little bit later. On the latest polling numbers
that we have from October ninth, Arizona, Trump is up
(10:20):
now by just over not quite one and a half, tight,
but up. And Nevada he's trailing by a point Wisconsin.
Look at how close Wisconsin is Harris forty eight point seven,
Trump forty eight point two. We always talk about Michigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania.
(10:41):
These were elections decided by twenty thirty thousand votes in
a state. They went Trump's way in twenty sixteen, they
went Biden's way a little bit more so in twenty twenty.
It's that laser close. Anything can make a difference. Pennsylvania
right now, Donald Trump is up forty eight point three
(11:02):
to forty eight point one. The margin of era of
alone would leave you scratching your head. This should be
very troubling and have a lot of Republicans anxious. And
this continues to hold, and we don't know exactly how
Helene is going to impact voter turnout. Trump forty nine
(11:24):
point one, Harris forty eight point six. She's within a
half a point in North Carolina. I have no way
for Donald Trump. I mean unless something gets really crazy
like ewins Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, but goes on to lose Arizona, Nevada,
North Carolina. George is awful tight too. Georgia is only
(11:45):
a one point lead for Trump forty nine to forty eight.
So you go through these numbers, why are they anxious?
They're anxious because one thing we do know can't prove.
There's a proclility not to maybe want to vote for
a woman president, or an unlikable woman at that Hillary
I think was more unlikable, whereas Kamala seems incapable, incompetent.
(12:13):
But even with that aside, they know Trump under poles,
which means he may not be winning by a half
or may not be trailing by a half. He may
be leading by three. I'll never forget. We had a
weather man until so Oklahoma and God rest is soul.
He was a great guy, I think was Gary Shore.
(12:34):
And Gary would come on television when a storm was approaching.
I mean, you know, give him credit, Jeffrey play it safe, right, Yeah, absolutely,
anywhere from a dusting to a foot and a half
of snow. I heard it one night one night and
I started cracking out. Well, I think between a dusting
and do you know what this election reminds me of
a Gary Shore snow forecast. This could be anywhere from
(12:56):
Kamala winning to Trump winning in a landslide. And I
do this for a living and I can't look you
in the eye and definitively tell you what I think
is going to happen. And you know what the bottom
line is. Nobody knows, you know what the bottom line is.
Everybody's freaking anxious. This is your morning show with Michael
(13:17):
del Chno. If you're just joining us, you missed it.
During the commercial break for News and Everything, I sang
the theme song to Laverne and Shirley as Neil Diamond
and it was shows dipping. Thank you so much, all right,
third thirty six minutes after the hour, if you're just
waking up. Officials in Saint Lucie County, Florida are reporting
multiple fatalities. This has to do with tornadoes associated with
(13:38):
Hurricane Milton, and many of those preceded the landfall which
finally happened. Now, Milton downgraded to a Category one storm
but continues to bring devastating rain and winds to parts
of Florida. Flash flood emergency continues for portions of west
central Florida. There's some nearly three million homes and businesses
starting the day today across the state without power. Taylor
(13:59):
Swift is donating five million dollars to help communities that
are struggling during Hurricane Helene and Milton. Nice contribution on
her part. President Biden says there's simply no place for
disinformation and hurricanes and relief efforts. Yes, both sides can't
resist making politics out of hurricanes and suffering. Does it
(14:19):
seem like everyone is driving crazy these days? I know
that sounds like a typical, cheesy like news setup. And
when you say driving crazy, yeah, like in cars, Like
when I was growing up, and this would have been
like late seventies, I was in New Orleans, and I'm
telling you that's still the craziest driving I had ever
seen in my life, where you could you could literally
(14:43):
go through the drive through at Dakre's, get a White
Russian and be drinking your White Russian and weaving in
and out of traffic. So some of the I am
not the person to ask, but I will tell you
I can relate to this. I do sense in Nashville,
and I think it has something to do with people's
stare at their phones or you know, distracted. But people
are driving crazier than ever. Aaron Rail has that update
(15:05):
coming up in minutes from now. Sounds of the day.
Cut off twice this morning on the way in. I mean,
nobody's even on the road at three in the morning.
Two people on the road and they both cut you off. Yeah,
they just whip out in front of you. It's like
nobody's watching nobody Colley. They make me slim. Well, I'm
going to play right into it. Does it seem like
everyone's driving a little more crazy this day? These days,
(15:26):
we're going to look at some of the worst places
to be driving. I'll be interested to see our all
of our your morning show cities where they rank, I
would think DC. Uh, you know, there's some aggressive drivers
in Saint Louis. But I noticed Saint Louis was much
more civilized than Nashville, really Nashville and Atlanta area, Chicago.
(15:48):
Very angry, Yeah, very well. See if New Orleans is
still on the list. All right. I only bring this
up not because I'm shallow. Whenever these kinds of things
come up, I don't know what to say about them.
If you need me to comment, we're in trouble. But
so I get technical, you know, like with Barack Obama.
I mean, I get this whole identify as I know
(16:10):
that that's a cultural and societal thing. So if Barack
Obama wants to identify as a black person, that's his prerogative.
He's actually he's more than anything Caucasian. So whenever these
kind of crazy fights come up, I just like to
get right to the particular. In the case of Kamala Harris,
(16:30):
she is primarily fifty percent India Indian, and then her
father is Jamaican, which makes him only thirty six percent
of African American bloodline. But if she wants to identify
as black for whatever reason, that's her prerogative, which is
what got Donald Trump into trouble because for the longest time,
(16:52):
she clearly identified by the race of who raised her.
When she became a prosecutor, where she became attorney generaler
when she became a United States senator, everything was first
Indian American, so that's clearly what she was identifying as
at the time. And then in this race, apparently she
(17:14):
wanted to identify as black. All right, Well, in this
identify culture, I guess you could change. But if you're
Donald Trump, don't take the bait because no matter what,
they're going to use the weapon against you. So that
is what I believe. And Donald Trump has said some
pretty stupid things in his life, but on this one
I would defend him. I think what he was trying
(17:35):
to say is, well, for the longest time, she was
identifying as Indian. Now she's identifying as black. I don't
know what she is, because that's possible in this culture.
You can have a male genitalia but identify as a woman.
So somebody could be bewildered. I don't know what are
you today? Are you a man or a woman? I
don't know. I got to ask you in order to
please you? Was I think where Trump was coming from. Now.
(18:00):
I just went to bed last night praying, please don't
take this babe. But I had not seen this original clip.
But out of all the clips with Colbert, the one
I chose was when she first on the view couldn't
answer the most important question she needs to answer, are
you different than Joe Biden? Because America doesn't want more
of the same, And she botched it. Well, I can't
(18:22):
think of anything. Nothing comes to mind. And you're like, well,
that's one of the greatest gaffes in the history of gaffes.
In fact, if you are Donald Trump, just play that
as your commercial for the rest of the way. Seriously,
that's all you need those eight seconds. Well, nothing comes
to mind, paid for by Donald Trump. And I approve it.
I approved this message. I mean, that's what a gaff was.
(18:44):
So now eight hours later, seven hours later, you're filming
late in the afternoon, the Stephen Colbert Late Show. All right,
you know, by then it's already been viral for six
hours or someone should running this campaign. And he asks
her again with a long set and he still can't
answer it. Well, after that, I came to the conclusion
(19:06):
I think this is the worst candidate in the history
of candidates. I mean, I don't know how incompetent you
have to be. I mean, I'm not seeing that. I'm
not gonna say she lacks nimbleness. That's moronic. Then John
Decker says, well, she's not the worst. I've covered a lot.
So then I said, Okay, John, who's the worst? Is
(19:26):
it the caucus? Well, I don't know. I have to
get back to you. I'll get back to you. Yeah,
I'll get back to you. Because that's the freaking worst
when you can't answer that question. But that's not even
when went viral yesterday. This went viral, and it comes
from this perspective. She's fifty percent India Indian, she's thirty
six percent African American, and then because that's what's in
(19:51):
Jamaican blood. Well, apparently after first identifying as an Indian
then later identifying as a black, I think she's about
ready to come out and identify is a Jamaican.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Listen, purpose, have you no empathy, man, you know, for
the suffering of other people?
Speaker 1 (20:10):
Have you no sense of My daughter was playing this
over and over again. You have to Dad, listen to this.
She's got a new accent. Purpose. Have you no empathy, man,
have you no empathy? You know for Donald Trump? Please
don't take that bait. But yes, that's the strangest. Now
what struck me strange is this constant You know, we
(20:31):
often talked about what's their play going to be. Are
they gonna, you know, have Joe leave office so she
can actually be president at the time of the election,
so she can be president to seem presidential. No, they're
going to try to use hurricanes and people suffering to
put her in positions of acting as president, which is ridiculous. Now,
(20:54):
I will say this, other than his tyred against Donald
Trump yesterday, Joe Biden has been spectacular. It actually has
seemed pretty cognitively well coordinating with governors. So here's a
conference call, and you got the Department of Homeland Security secretary,
you got Joe Biden, you got FEMA directors, and then
you've got people on the ground in Florida. And of course,
(21:16):
like the Hollywood Square is, they put her on the
upper left hand corner vice President Kamala Harris, and then
she's got to constantly try to act like you know,
she's in charge, and she's president. This is the most
disgusting example of playing politics with the hurricane, and she
couldn't even pull that off.
Speaker 4 (21:36):
The flood, we really got to watch those areas in
those communities, so it takes quite a while for that
water to drain.
Speaker 1 (21:44):
Thank you very much.
Speaker 3 (21:46):
Hey, Ken, I have a question for you. You mentioned
words matter, and I know there is a lot of
to the people of Florida and in particular the people
of the Tampa as a region. We urge you to
take this storm serious.
Speaker 1 (22:03):
Flood. What she's really wanting to urge you is to
take her seriously, and it's failing miserably. And then if
you bring up anything like real questions, real money that's
going to the Middle East, real money that's going to Ukraine,
real money that's going to cities to care for immigrants
(22:25):
that have flooded our country based on flood policies, well
that's just misinformation, right, Peter Doucy put this little home
video together.
Speaker 4 (22:34):
Peter Doocy here outside the West Wing of the White House,
where this week one of my questions about foreign aid
versus hurricane relief was called misinformation. President Biden is fond
is saying, show me your budget, and I will tell
you what you value. If he's got money for people
in Lebanon right now without the Congress having to come back,
what does it say about his values. There's not enough
(22:57):
money right now in North Carolina.
Speaker 1 (23:00):
That's off mis information.
Speaker 3 (23:01):
Wait, no, that is your whole your whole premise of
the question is misinformation, sir?
Speaker 1 (23:06):
What you don't Yes, yes, it's misinformation. I've got the
information right here.
Speaker 4 (23:11):
The Vice president is posting on social media about one
hundred fifty seven million dollars in additional assistance to the.
Speaker 1 (23:17):
People of Lebanon.
Speaker 4 (23:19):
President Biden is posting about how the Small Business Administration's
disaster loan program is going to run out of funding
if Congress does not come back. To a lot of
people watching these briefings, a taxpayer dollar, A taxpayer dollar
is a taxpayer dollar.
Speaker 1 (23:37):
That is not misinformation.
Speaker 5 (23:38):
That is a fact.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
You can even have misinformation in your question. I don't
have time to do it right now and sound of
the day, but you know how we fear AI. It's
also going to be very entertaining. Here's somebody that took
the sixty minutes logo, the sixty minute layout and has
Donald Trump talking to Joe Biden. Now what they're mocking
(24:02):
is how sixty Minutes edited their interview with Kamala Harris
as bad as Kamala Harris is. She was actually worse
in the way they edited it. I mean she was worse.
They tried to edit it to make her look a
little better and change your answer. So this AI mocks
sixty Minutes Max's editing and edits to the point where
it's Donald Trump talking to Joe Biden. It's the best
(24:25):
AI I've seen to date.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
We created the greatest economy in the history of our country.
Speaker 6 (24:30):
Well, first of all, let's put this in perspective.
Speaker 2 (24:32):
The unemployment numbers for African Americans, for Asian Americans, for
Hispanic Americans, virtually every number was.
Speaker 6 (24:39):
The best inflation rate month to month was just just
an inch at the.
Speaker 2 (24:44):
Best stock market price ever.
Speaker 6 (24:46):
Got that. But guess what we are. We're in a
position where for the last several months it hasn't spiked.
Speaker 2 (24:53):
You know what, she deleted thirty three thousand emails.
Speaker 6 (24:56):
How that could possibly happen? Anyone could be that irresponsible?
And I thought, what data was in there that may
compromise sources and methods. By that, I mean names and
people helped or et cetera. And it's just totally irresponsible.
Speaker 2 (25:14):
Yeah, I think it's disgraceful what she's done, Honest to god,
that's all.
Speaker 6 (25:18):
I thing.
Speaker 2 (25:19):
Biggest scandal was when they spied in my campaign. I
think it's I haven't look, they spied in my campaign.
Speaker 1 (25:26):
They got caught, don't.
Speaker 2 (25:28):
And then they went much further than that, and they
got caught.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
It was our Justice Department. It was see I should
correct myself. This really isn't AI. But the way they
masterfully because it looks just like, you know, like when
Biden's talking, they cut back to Trump like he's the interviewer.
Not it sounds like they're having a cup of coffee
at a conversation. But this is that is unfair to
say AI. AI would be something completely different. This is
(25:52):
just somebody masterfully editing. And you do this for a living,
so you know how long that does? Good stuff? But
it goes out and on for about three minutes. But
is for my two cents, it was the most entertaining
thing that went viral yesterday. Farm and these do and
by the way, they were getting along. This is Rebecca
(26:13):
in spring Hill, Tennessee and My Morning Show is Your
Morning Show with Michael Del Giorno. The morning after Hurricane
Milton makes landfall, officials in Saint Louis County St. Lucy County,
Florida are reporting multiple fatalities related to Milton. Tornadoes that
were associated in the outer bands. Milton now downgraded to
a Category one. We have about three million homes and
(26:35):
businesses without power, and a flash flood emergency continues throughout
the state. If you're thinking, it just seems to me
like everybody's driving crazy now, which look they're texting, There's
a lot going on in the cockpit. I'm the worst
person to judge this because a I grew up in
(26:56):
New Orleans, which are the worst drivers on planet Earth.
It's a Third World country for crying out loud, and
I now live in Nashville. But if you think it
seems like everybody's driving crazy, what are the best and
worst places to drive? We have the report to prove it.
Aaron Reale with our Reality of the Day. Good morning, Aaron,
Good morning.
Speaker 5 (27:15):
Yes, So another wallet hub. I love these and hate them,
and they're so great and we can talk about them.
But they used four key metrics to figure out the
best cities drives to drive. They looked at the one
hundred biggest cities in the US and the big things
were cost of ownership and maintenance, traffic, infrastructure, safety, and
then access to vehicle repair. Best city Raleigh Raleigh, North
(27:40):
Carolina followed, Yeah, interesting, followed by Boise, Corpus, Christy, Greensboro, Jacksonville, Orlando, Scottsdale, Wichita, Tampa,
and Plano.
Speaker 1 (27:49):
I see, I think Orlando's a nightmare. Tampa's good luck
because it's mainly only got one interstate.
Speaker 5 (27:55):
So I like that you're bringing all this up. But
apparently the worst city used to drive Oakland, California, Philly,
San fran La, Detroit, Chicago, New York, DC, Seattle, San Jose,
and Denver.
Speaker 1 (28:08):
I knew DC would be in there. I'm surprised nothing
from Oklahoma's in there because if you go to road
condition in Oklahoma, we have bridges falling, We had potholes
that were constantly messing your car up. So I guess
they get off the worst list. Where was Nashville? And
all this because I'm telling you that we've got some
really bad drivers here.
Speaker 5 (28:25):
Do you?
Speaker 1 (28:26):
Oh? Yeah, Well, listen, the speed limit is merely a suggestion.
Speaker 5 (28:31):
So is Nashville one of the biggest cities. Now, I
don't think it made this list, believe.
Speaker 3 (28:35):
It or not.
Speaker 1 (28:35):
So yeah, that's the problem. So it's only doing the
major cities. Yeah, although but Nashville.
Speaker 5 (28:39):
You would think, no, it didn't. Shockingly, it didn't make
this I don't know why I would think Nashville would
be big enough. But no, it's I guess it's like
bigger cities. If you want Memphis, that's number sixty seven. Yeah,
I don't know why Nashville.
Speaker 1 (28:54):
The other part that's interesting is just you know, the
distracted driving. Yeah, that they don't have that in there
as a and I guess because that's everywhere, right, so,
and that.
Speaker 5 (29:03):
Is a big problem. So I actually think the deadliest
city in which to drive is Miami. Like I'm just
like this place. Oh, Nashville is on there. It's number
forty one. Sorry skipped right over.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
Oh that's not bad.
Speaker 5 (29:15):
Yeah, not bad, but we got away with thirty seven. Seriously,
I think Miami is deadly, and I think there's several reasons,
but that distracted driving is a massive part of it.
And I love Miami. I've spent a lot of time there,
but I think you have a lot of people from
different cultures and yeah, a lot of visitors, and there's
(29:35):
kind of different rules. Not I mean the rules of
the road are generally the rules of the road, but
like the cultural differences where you'll see people like there
won't be any cars at a stop light on either
side and you'll be waiting for a while and then
someone will just drive through it. I'm like, wait, no,
that's not optional, Like that's going to turn green Ston.
Speaker 1 (29:53):
Yeah, wait, Yeah, That's how I feel about medians too.
Sometimes I like to just jump right over the curve
and have my way with my left turn. We're all
in this together. This is your Morning Show with Michael
Del Jorno.