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October 23, 2024 31 mins

Who is really running the country and what has he been up to??!!

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
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and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and take the drive to work with you,
but better late than never.

Speaker 2 (00:15):
We're grateful you're here. Now, enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Two three, starting your morning off right. A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding, because we're in
this together. This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell,
Jordan Well.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
Calin Harris took yesterday off to prepare for a television
interview Donald Trump, like he did with McDonald's, stole the
show again on stage with Tulsey Gabbard.

Speaker 5 (00:47):
Now to those of you here are those watching at
home who are independent minded people like myself, who love
our country and are committed to the Constitution and to freedom.
The Democrat Party has no home for a plate for
people like us, but we do have a home in

(01:08):
the Republican Party, where we are welcomed with open arms
by President Trump and so many of you who love
our country. And it is because of my love for
our country and specifically because of the leadership that President

(01:29):
Trump has brought to transform the Republican Party and bring
it back to the Party of the People and the
Party of Peace, that I'm proud to stand here with
you today, President Trump and announce that I'm joining the
Republican Party.

Speaker 1 (01:46):
By the way, I gotta tell you the look on
Donald Trump's face, I'll never know.

Speaker 6 (01:53):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:53):
That looks like the first he's heard that. I don't
think he knew that was coming. I don't know what
that means to the future of the Republican Party, the
futures for all of us. With Telsey Gabbard's few I mean,
could she be the first female president eight years from now?
Time will tell how big of an announcement is this.

(02:15):
David Zanatti's the senior correspondent for your morning show. He's
also the CEO of the American Policy Roundtable. I believe
their crown jewel is the Public Square. Heerd on two
hundred stations in online anytime on demand at the public
square dot com.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
How big is this?

Speaker 1 (02:28):
Telsea Gabbard not just coming out for Donald Trump, that's
a Donald Trump phenomenon, but now saying this party, from
John F. Kennedy to Carter, to Obama to now Kamala
has gone so far left I'm now a Republican could
be very significant in the future.

Speaker 7 (02:47):
Good morning, Michael. It is a significant moment. Those kinds
of political conversions don't happen very often any longer, and
I'm truthfully told is an everer occursion. So yeah, I
think that's it's got an impact the future in regards
to what happens to the White House after the next

(03:07):
forty eight months is a big deal. So I think
that's very, very, very interesting.

Speaker 1 (03:12):
You and I have talked many times about Republicans like
to vote on election day. Democrats the ground game gets
a mail in in vote, and of course they perfected
that during COVID and all the Republicans it was gripe
about it rather than engage in it and compete in it.
And what happens traditionally is the Democrats begin every election
day with a huge lead and the Republicans are playing catchup. Well,

(03:32):
eighteen million people have mail dinner early voted. We don't
know how all of them went. We get a glimpse
in Florida, and in Florida two to one Republican early
voting over Democrats, and when you add up all the
mail in voting, there's just an eighty thousand edge for Democrats.
Overall mail in early voting, Republicans are leading.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
We've never seen that before.

Speaker 7 (03:54):
Well, there's going to be a number of universal votes.
The last time around in twenty twenty, it was seventy
five million for Trump and eighty million for Biden. Basically,
that's that's the big that's a big number. It's over
sixty percent voter turnout, so that's a big number.

Speaker 8 (04:11):
So those votes are going.

Speaker 7 (04:12):
To come out again somewhere, and the first question is
whether it be more or less.

Speaker 8 (04:16):
We don't know.

Speaker 7 (04:18):
But what we do know is that over half those
votes in twenty twenty, because of COVID, came in by mail,
and that overwhelmed the system and created a lot of
the basis for much of the satisfaction about the way that.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
The stands handled it the same.

Speaker 7 (04:33):
Yeah, yeah, So it's it's it's that. That's a whole
other interesting story in the book that you have to
be written. However, this year, there's an early trend and
it appears that requests for absentee ballots are down they're
down in Pennsylvania, for example, They're down significantly in Pennsylvania
from both parties, but in person voting is up. So

(04:55):
it looks like the big box of votes is shifting
from absentee and mail in intentions to going early in voting.
That's still in person voting, and that's still a lot better,
a lot safer than any other form. So it seems
like this is going in the right direction in regards

(05:15):
to people saying, look, we get it, We're going to
go vote.

Speaker 8 (05:18):
We're just not going to wait one day.

Speaker 7 (05:20):
We're going to go because a lot of people are
going to vote, So this could be a good sign.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
The headline in the Washington Post early voting data shows
Republicans reversal appears to be paying off.

Speaker 2 (05:29):
Oh, they're getting it.

Speaker 1 (05:31):
Looking at the latest polling that we've gotten out, Atlanta
Journal Constitution in Georgia has Trump up four. Insider Advantage
has Trump up two. In North Carolina, another poll has
Harris up one. One that I haven't heard of, High
Point Survey USA. There's one in Nevada, Fabrizio Azeloni.

Speaker 7 (05:50):
I never heard of it, but that sounds like a
good company to buy salami from.

Speaker 8 (05:54):
I'm telling you right there.

Speaker 1 (05:55):
I was just going to say, I'll take the Italian.

Speaker 8 (05:58):
Hero os depasta. Let's check this out.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
He got Trump up to Michigan Trafalgar. The latest has
Trump up two.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
I mean, you start adding that into the two seventy map.
The key of North Carolina and Georgia for Donald Trump
looks good. A week and a half out today would
suggest that Nevada and Arizona are leading Trump's way, and
that Michigan and Pennsylvania are both leading Trump's way. At
that point, you got a well over three hundred victory
for Donald Trump. But I can even at that point

(06:26):
give her Pennsylvania because remember we may not know Pennsylvania
right away, and it's still not enough to get her
back into it. So the poll seems to show momentum,
the early voting, show's momentum. Tulsea Gabbard add some excite.
Maybe Donald's was a huge one. I mean, everything seems
to be feeling Donald Trump's way. And for the Democrats,
they still can't get anything out of their candidate, and
they're turning to Eminem, Barack Obama and now the Boss,

(06:48):
Bruce Springsteen and desperation. Do you think these celebrity endorsements
add up to anything.

Speaker 7 (06:55):
Well, it's where they do them. The Democrats are famous
for lebrity endorsements and those kinds of events on college campuses,
because college campuses are the best way to find votes.

Speaker 8 (07:06):
Nobody saw coming.

Speaker 7 (07:07):
Where you have students who can register in the states
where they don't live but are going to school, and
therefore those are found votes. And if you register them,
you give them the concert, you get them to vote
your way. You've basically created new numbers that weren't there before.
So I'm not so sure it's matters who the personalities are.
I think it matters the location of the event and

(07:28):
what's the net outcome in regards to votes in that region.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
David Sina's the CEO of American Policy around Table, He's
our senior year morning show correspondent. You know, we were
kicking around if Joe Biden was too cognitively impaired to
run for president? Is he too cognitively impaired to be president?
People watching him on the debate or since would say,
does anybody really believe he's running the country. So if
it's not Joe Biden, who really is running this country?

(07:53):
And whoever it is what have they been up to
while we're all playing this campaign game?

Speaker 7 (07:58):
Michael, thanks for taking the time down asked that question.
You may be the only legitimate journalist in America that's
actually asking the question who's running the White House? And
you've been asking that question for a while, and we've
been talking about this for years, because you can go
all the way back to Bill Clinton's administration.

Speaker 1 (08:16):
Tell and tell them about when we did Christmas in America,
and you chose that clip of Bill Clinton riding around
on a bike joking around.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Meanwhile Podesta was at the desk doing business.

Speaker 7 (08:27):
We found, Yeah, we found a video and it's not
hard to find. It's at the Clinton Library. That Clinton
White House produced this video and it was supposed to
be a joke about the last weeks of Bill Clinton's
administration because he was riding a bicycle inside the White House,
down the halls and and and bumping up against the
ice cream machines to find out if you banged on
hard enough, you get.

Speaker 8 (08:46):
Free ice cream. I mean, this is they created this video.

Speaker 7 (08:49):
But the only person and as he was looking for
all his staff, where's so and so, where's so and so?
The one he kept calling out for the most is
where's John? Where's John? And he saw John Podesta. John
Podesta has been in the White House and either a
senior advisor or chief of staff or assistant chief of
staff of every Democrat since Clinton.

Speaker 2 (09:07):
He's a live term of the United States right there.

Speaker 8 (09:11):
And he's doing it right now.

Speaker 7 (09:13):
Just a few weeks ago, he was in China negotiating
American energy policy with China while no one was watching.

Speaker 2 (09:23):
And he doesn't have the title to be doing it,
does he?

Speaker 7 (09:26):
No, he does not. He's not a confirmed Senate ambassador
of anything, but that's what he does. He runs the
White House. He's also been in charge since John Kerry left.
He's also sitting in charge of another big fund, and
that's the Inflation Reduction Act, which gave billions of dollars

(09:46):
or actually not.

Speaker 8 (09:47):
Yeah, billions of dollars.

Speaker 7 (09:48):
He's down in control of dispersing billions of dollars on
the new energy programs, and recently the AP and ABC
News both reported that the administration is to spend all
the money that's left in that fun before it's too late.

Speaker 8 (10:04):
And who's checks?

Speaker 2 (10:05):
Where do those checks go?

Speaker 8 (10:06):
Right across John put Esta's desk.

Speaker 1 (10:11):
I remember seeing the video picture of the election cycle.
This was still Joe Biden versus Donald Trump and primaries
and everything's going on. We got wars and Ukraine and
breaking out in the Middle East, and you know, just
dizzying busyness. And there's this video of Barack Obama pulling
up in a limousine in Great Britain and just walking

(10:33):
in the front door of the Prime Minister's house, and
you're like, what's this former president doing? Having a formal
meeting with the prime minister? Probably sent by John Podesta,
who's really running the country in his fifth term. Including
twos that were Obamas and billionaires. By the way, he
has surrounded himself with why don't you go through that list?

Speaker 7 (10:50):
Well, his billionaire network is amazing. In fact, Forbes did
something that surprises everybody right now, there's an article up
on ford Now Forbes showing that Kamawa Harris leading in
the billionaire network, supporting her by a big number. It's
like eighty one to fifty billionaires in regards to Kamala
ahead of Trump. Well, those billionaire that network, of course

(11:11):
is the strongest connection is the Sorrows network. George Soros
and John Podessa and Herbert Sandler founded the Center for
American Progress in Washington, d C. Which is the power
base for the entire progressive movement, and which John Podesta
still chairs. He's still basically running that organization while he's
running the White House. And there's no way in the

(11:33):
world you can't say that the Center for American Progress
doesn't represent the billionaires.

Speaker 2 (11:37):
Who funded That's why they started this, exactly right.

Speaker 7 (11:40):
It's the most underreported story in America.

Speaker 2 (11:43):
Closing moments with David Sinati, What does this all that
up to?

Speaker 1 (11:45):
If you're John Podesta and you went away, you know,
he ran two terms eight years of Bill Clinton, He
went away for eight years, came right back for eight
years of Barack Obama, and he went away for four
years when Hillary failed. We last saw him on election
night saying we are not conceding this right, will see
you in the morning. And then Hillary two hours later
conceded and he went away for four years. Then the

(12:05):
shadow campaign to save the democracy that you know he
had his hands in, got him back in the office.
I suspect he thinks he's leaving again for four years,
but you better not. You better duck, because he plans
to come right back when it counts four years from now.
But I suspect I can see it in Barack Obama's face,

(12:26):
I can't see Podesta's. Soros's son and father are a
little quiet. I think they know they're disappearing for four years.
But that doesn't mean they're not building something for four
years from now.

Speaker 7 (12:36):
Nor does it mean that guys like Bill Gates didn't
just drop fifty million dollars into a campaign that's supporting
Kamala Harris and hope no one would notice. Yeah, now
you follow the money trail, Michael, and the money trail
tells you what the future looks like in regards to
the Progressive Party wanting to control America.

Speaker 1 (12:53):
These early energies. You know, this is like elections one one.
You've been doing this, I don't. You've done doing a
lot longer than I I have. But you know, it
all comes down to unity and energy. The unity with
a lot of people coming over from the other side
seems to favor Donald Trump. The energy we see that
in the two to one early voting in Florida seems

(13:15):
to favor Donald Trump. Even the news cycle, even the
sounds I would play, seems to favor that even in
Barack Obama and Joe Biden keeps cutting her out at
the knees. I mean, I think Donald Trump nailed it
when he said he can't stand her. Donald Joe Biden
does not like how he's been pushed out of office.
And I don't think Democrats the tune of six or
seven out of ten like how their votes were handed

(13:35):
to someone else without asking them. That's all kind of
playing out. It looks very problematic for Kamala Harris. But
don't rule these people out four years from now, because
that's when it really counts quickly.

Speaker 8 (13:46):
And again.

Speaker 7 (13:48):
You may be you may be at least four years
ahead of everybody else in this game. On this one
thing is certain. The billionaires are in play. They are
spending their money big time now. To be fair on
all sides, Donald Trump has a side of billionaires as well,
and those billionaires shade toward the gambling industry. So to
think for one second that a Trump administration wouldn't have

(14:11):
special interests trying to move it in one direction would
be an unfair representation. But the difference is is that
there's no question whatsoever the big tech, high name, highly
identified high progressive activist, billionaires, Gates and all of them
there with Kamala.

Speaker 1 (14:28):
Here's the only thing shocking left in life, the truth.
I'm staring at a freeze frame of Donald Trump standing
next to Kamala Harris. Most in America today are focused
on Donald Trump. You might want to focus on the
other side of that screen, Telsea Gabbard. That may be
the future. Or how about who nobody's looking at? Donald Trump,
Kamala Harris, Barack Obama. It's really John Podesta. That's who's

(14:51):
been running the country for four years, and that's who
plans to be back running at four years from now.

Speaker 2 (14:56):
That's the shocking truth.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
I want my audience to get that other audience don't
even see is on the horizon, and you help us
do that.

Speaker 9 (15:03):
Well.

Speaker 7 (15:03):
I appreciate fact you're willing to look beneath the news stories.

Speaker 8 (15:06):
I really do.

Speaker 1 (15:07):
All right, David Znati, you're not here enough. I hope
you come back before the end of the week.

Speaker 2 (15:12):
This is your morning show with Michael Deltono.

Speaker 1 (15:17):
Aaron realis here because we have yet another sex trafficking charge.
This time it's the Abercrombie CEO. Mike Jeffries, Aaron what's
the story here.

Speaker 9 (15:30):
Yeah, this is a difficult one, Michael.

Speaker 6 (15:31):
So, Mike Jeffries, he has posted ten million dollars bond.

Speaker 9 (15:36):
Yesterday he was arrested and he was charged.

Speaker 6 (15:39):
With running an international sex trafficking ring while he was
Abercrombie's chief executive. The federal indictment it lists fifteen John
Doe victims. It alleges that from two thousand and eight
to twenty fifteen, Jeffries pressured male models into attending sex
parties at locations around the world. It was in Moroco,

(16:00):
it was in France and Italy and England. His homes
in New York, the Hampton's. He paid the men for
their involvement, and he plied them with muscle relaxance and
viagra and lubricants.

Speaker 9 (16:11):
Michael, I'm not going to get into the details on
Morning news.

Speaker 6 (16:15):
It is horrific, It is barbaric, It is degenerate, depraved behavior.

Speaker 9 (16:20):
If it is true. Again, he's been accused.

Speaker 6 (16:23):
But long story short, Jeffries is posted a ten million
dollar bond. His associate James Jacobson, who is an employee
of Jeffries, and his boyfriend, his romantic partner, Matthew Smith. So,
this James Jacobson was actually there to groom these young
boys for Matthew Smith and Jeffries. This is they use

(16:47):
burner phones to communicate, They had their victims sign office closers,
They had security companies surveil and intimidate the sex traffic,
they abuse. They participated in barbaric, truly barbaric.

Speaker 9 (16:59):
Behavior, and I hope if they fall for it all right.

Speaker 1 (17:02):
So first we have Jeffrey Epstein, and that's a financial guy,
but very connected politically. And then of course the real
concern became and this guy was filming it and using
this for leverage.

Speaker 2 (17:17):
What names are on this?

Speaker 1 (17:19):
And of course we've been got airplane logs and visits
to their private island, and that was all swept under
the rug, probably because it was unflattering for one side.

Speaker 2 (17:28):
Then you get p Diddy and now you get this
no wonder.

Speaker 1 (17:33):
My wife looked at me and said, what's going on
with all the sex trafficking and what would be what
would be causing that you know that void if you will,
that this has become. I don't know if there's a
moral prep you know, debauchery that is being revealed across
or if it's a pattern and a certain group. Is

(17:57):
it mainly in political and entertainment? Your political fascinating here?
And when you I was once standing it was like
nineteen eighty eight with an early mentor of mind, Tom Crimsears.
And that's back before everything was, you know, for security reasons,
blocked off, and you could literally walk up and look
into the windows of the Capitol.

Speaker 2 (18:13):
You could go anywhere. You could walk right up to
the White House.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
And we were standing in the Capitol and we were
having a personal conversation and he looked at me and
he said, you know, there really are three capitals.

Speaker 2 (18:23):
I said, really.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
What he said, Well, you got Hollywood, which is the
sensual capital of the world. You've got New York, which
is the money capital of the world. And we stand
right now in Washington, the power capital of the world.
And he made an interesting observation. And when it comes
to political power, when you have political power, you have
access to the money and you have access to all

(18:45):
the sensuality. And I can tell you every time I've
been to Washington, watching some of these congressmen and senators
that you're seeing on television, there's all young girls following
them everywhere, and it's these are nerds from high school
that suddenly have beautiful women throwing themselves at them.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
And he was so right.

Speaker 1 (19:01):
But I'm wondering where all this sexual debauchery comes from.
Is it Hollywood? Is it politics? Is it all of them?
Because it just seems like every time we turn around,
meet the tip of the iceberg and the latest is
Mike Jeffries you.

Speaker 6 (19:16):
Oh no, no, my god. I think it always. It
was always in existence, you know, always. You can go
back to Cleopatra's This is not new, This is not
new for human behavior. What is new, and this is
a good thing is people falling now, and I mean
falling from grace and it's being exposed, whether it be p.

Speaker 9 (19:34):
Diddy or Jeffrey Epstein or you.

Speaker 6 (19:38):
Know Weinstein or now Mike Jeffreys' fashion movies are like
whatever it is music, it's the truly deprived and it's
when people at the top of the totem pole the
power utterly abuses their power in such gross ways, and
they do it pretty openly, as like an open secret,
if you will.

Speaker 9 (19:56):
But that is changing.

Speaker 6 (19:58):
And actually my husband brought this up the me Too movement,
because this is kind of a bigger reckoning because me too.

Speaker 9 (20:03):
You know, women have their say, they had their say.

Speaker 8 (20:06):
It was a big.

Speaker 6 (20:06):
Reckoning, and now it's kind of happening for the men,
both with p Diddy and with Mike Jeffries, where you
know they're double stigmatized a lot of the time, so
coming forward and having this me too movement for the men.

Speaker 9 (20:17):
He's a big part of this process, but I think
that a bigger thing.

Speaker 6 (20:21):
And what my husband says, he's like, you know, people
meet at the office all the time, they have for
a long time, and occasionally it leads to something and not.

Speaker 9 (20:28):
Everyone what but the point being he's like, you know, it's.

Speaker 6 (20:33):
The real dogs that seem the fall, the real bad
guys where it's like, you know, if someone falls in
love with the it's not the end of the word,
like now you can't, but like the idea of being like, no,
these are these are predators through and through, and they're
the same archetype of the same person, different execution and
different industry.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
The only thing I would have learned, the only thing
I would have learnt the audience too, is this guy.
If you thought with Jeffrey Epstein and Jillian, how do
you say Galen?

Speaker 2 (20:59):
Galen? Gillian? I can't remember what her name was.

Speaker 9 (21:02):
Maxwell.

Speaker 2 (21:03):
Yeah, if you thought what they were up to was sick,
this guy really did.

Speaker 9 (21:07):
This guy really really really.

Speaker 6 (21:11):
By the way, so he hasn't been at the Helm
for almost ten years.

Speaker 9 (21:17):
And it's it's not gonna matter. If you look at
the I've been checking out the ticker prices. It's down
a little. It's been down week over a week, but
year over year it's up quite a bit.

Speaker 6 (21:23):
There's now a woman who runs the company. But quick
side note, Michael Jacobson was hired by Les Wexner of
who also in Victoria's Secret the Limited. He was Jeffrey
Epstein's good pal, bought his mansion on the Upper East Side,
and was also mentioned many many times in Epstein records,

(21:44):
So there's.

Speaker 9 (21:44):
A lot of overlap here.

Speaker 6 (21:46):
Oh and also fun fact, the guy who represented Jeffrey
Epstein also representing like Jeffrey.

Speaker 9 (21:53):
So yeah, I know, I know.

Speaker 1 (21:54):
That's the latest on the latest sex scandaling. Meet the
tip of the Iceberg, and you wonder what's next. Darreon
Royal Great Reporting. We'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
We're just waking up. Top five stories of the day.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Former President Barack Obama was in Detroit with M and
M Governor Gretchen Wimer all.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Campaigning for Mama La Kamala.

Speaker 7 (22:13):
We do not need to see what an older lunier
Donald Trump looks like with no guard rails.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
That's all they got. He's a boogeyman because they don't
have a candidate. Obama said, the nation is ready for change.

Speaker 2 (22:32):
America's ready to turn the page. Who're reading for a
better story Michigan.

Speaker 9 (22:38):
We are reading for President Kamala Harris.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
That's how they got left is Barack Obama. And you
know what doesn't sound like much to me.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
Former Democrat presidential candidate Telsea Gabbard was on stage with
Donald Trump and made the shocking announcement not that she's
supporting Donald Trump, but that she's converting. She's now officially
joining the Republican Party. Mark Mayfield has the details.

Speaker 10 (23:00):
Ever made the announcement at a rally in North Carolina
for former President Trump on Tuesday, saying it is because
of her love for our country and specifically because of
the leadership that President Trump has brought to transform.

Speaker 8 (23:11):
The Republican Party.

Speaker 10 (23:12):
She left the Democratic Party in twenty twenty two to
become an independent.

Speaker 8 (23:16):
I'm Mark mayfew.

Speaker 1 (23:17):
Why are you worried about who's going to be on
this Fox interview or on this CNN interview, or this
town hall or ABCNBCCBS or even debates, because all of
them put together don't add up to one visit with
Joe Rogan. And that's exactly what Donald Trump will be
doing on Friday. Brian Shook has more.

Speaker 11 (23:33):
The Joe Rogan Experience has been one of the most
popular podcasts, particularly among young men who've been key targets
of the Trump campaign. He's visiting Texas the same day.
Harris has a campaign rally planned in Austin. This comes
as Trump has done several interviews recently with other figures
popular among men, including Theo Vaughn, Ben Shapiro, and Aiden Ross.

(23:57):
I'm Brian Shuck.

Speaker 2 (23:58):
Everybody forgets the second part of the famous quote. It was, yes,
I see dead people, they're everywhere.

Speaker 1 (24:06):
But the best part of the quote from six cents
was the second part.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
And they don't know they're dead.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
That's the truth of the media, the mainstream media, even
cable news and talk radio. If you're not careful, you're
already dead and irrelevant. You just don't know it, fears
of another Donald Trump presidency. Well, you can see it
in the polling numbers, but maybe you can see it
best here. Migrant caravans. They're all trying to get in

(24:34):
before Donald gets elected. Tammy Trehilo report.

Speaker 12 (24:37):
You're in Rakelan Melnick with the American Immigration Council says
they're coming up from South America and into Mexico.

Speaker 8 (24:43):
Keep an eye out.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Darian gat migration is increasing again.

Speaker 12 (24:47):
He says, the gap is the key crossing point is
migrant's enter southern Mexico at the Texas border. Several large
groups have recently been stopped after they crossed the Rio Grande.
They include illegal immigrants from as far away as they ran.

Speaker 9 (24:59):
I'm Tammy.

Speaker 1 (25:00):
Former Los Angeles Dodger pitcher Fernando Venezuela has died.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
Phil Ferrar looks back at his colorful career.

Speaker 13 (25:06):
Fernando Valenzuela is the only player in Major League Baseball
history to win both the Rookie of the Year and
Cy Young Awards in the same season. In nineteen eighty one,
Fernando Mania arrived, embraced by the Los Angeles Latino fan base,
one of the finest moments ten years into his career.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Ando Valenzuela has pitched.

Speaker 13 (25:26):
A no hitter the late Vin Scully on the call.
Valenzuela called Games in Spanish for the Dodgers.

Speaker 8 (25:33):
The organization said earlier.

Speaker 13 (25:35):
This month he was stepping away from the broadcast booth
to focus on his health.

Speaker 2 (25:40):
He was sixty three. I'm Phil Farrar too young.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Halloween is almost a week away, just a little over
and if you're ready to carve that pumpkin, Bretennis has
some tips to keep it from turning to mush.

Speaker 12 (25:52):
The moment you.

Speaker 14 (25:52):
Carve that pumpkin, the clock starts ticking on the life
of your masterpiece. An intact pumpkin as a shelf life
of up to six months, but a car to pumpkin
will last about three to five days before the onset
of mold, rot and bugs. Pumpkin master says longevity is
in preservation. Get that pumpkin dry and code it inside
and out with petroleum jelly or pumpkin fresh spray. But

(26:14):
even then the life expectancy is only seven to ten days.
I'm Bree Tennis birthdays today. Actor Ryan Reynolds is forty eight.

Speaker 1 (26:21):
Singer weird Al Yankovic a sixty five forty nine, ers,
Nick Bosa twenty seven, and the mother of your morning show,
Joan del jorno eighty three years old. Today, Hey, this
is John Watson.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael del jorno.

Speaker 1 (26:38):
Roy O'Neil is joining us because we always give him
the final story. Telsey Gabbard first leaves the Democrat Party,
then joins RFK Junior and endorsing Donald Trump. Last night
she announces she's joining the Republican Party. And what about
that US intelligent leak, you know, giving away what Israel
planned to do in its retaliatory strike.

Speaker 2 (26:57):
With a ron Wow. Fear not.

Speaker 1 (27:01):
The FBI is investigating, and Donald Trump and Kamala Harris
are a non stop push to election day. Meanwhile, there's
also two weeks left. Who will control the Senate? I
got the Republicans plus three, or at least the trajectory
is plus three.

Speaker 2 (27:15):
It's easily plus one. Who will control the House?

Speaker 1 (27:18):
I got the House the Republicans plus six, could be
as high as eight.

Speaker 8 (27:21):
But what do wh I know?

Speaker 1 (27:22):
National Correspondent always gets the final story.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
Roy O'Neil joins this Good morning, Rory. What do you see?

Speaker 8 (27:27):
Yeah?

Speaker 15 (27:28):
I think that there is a chance that the Democrats
can win the House. It might be just some pretty
wishful thinking, but keep in mind Democrats need a net
pickup of just four seats to flip that and there's
a possibility this election could be the first in American
history where control of both chambers flips, So that is

(27:50):
in the cards anyway. I think you're right that the
Senate is most likely to flip Republican with between resignations
and the John Tester in Montana and Shared Brown.

Speaker 8 (28:00):
In Ohio probably the most vulnerable.

Speaker 15 (28:03):
Fascinating though, that an incumbent senator might be booted out
of office. That's a rare the in and of itself,
let alone to have it happen, you know, with two
Democrats in the same years.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
Okay, so you know we're gonna you know, the Republicans
are gonna pick up West Virginia, you know, the ones
that really intrigue me, Michigan, Rogers and Slotkin.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
That lead is down to.

Speaker 1 (28:27):
One for Slotkin, down to one in Michigan, and if
things are going as well for Donald Trump at the
top of the ticket in Michigan, that could be enough
to carry that one over. Brown in Nevada is up five.
That looks pretty secure. New York looks very secure. But
there's another one Arizona. Yeah, the well, the North Carol

(28:49):
Where did that one go? I had it a minute ago.
I couldn't believe that it was within two in Pennsylvania.
Pennsylvania's within two, Ohio's within one. Now, the notion that
Brown could lose, I don't know. I think the Senate
is easily Republican. The question is is it going to
be one or is it going to be three or

(29:09):
shockingly four, a lead that's gonna flip the House. I
have the Republicans plus six, but you know there's about
eighteen that are in that undecided zone. They would have
to break virtually all for Democrats for them to have
any chance.

Speaker 15 (29:22):
And if Donald Trump wins, then the bar for Republican
control of the Senate is a little bit lower because
then you'd have jd. Vance in the Senate as a
tie breaker the Senate, and he could be The other interesting.

Speaker 1 (29:32):
Thing Rory that we never talked about is America loves
the check and balance, but they don't know which way
this election's going. Like if Donald Trump was sitting like
he was after the first debate with Joe Biden, and
then the momentum just built and built and built. Then
it would be baked into the cake that America would
be going to vote for Donald Trump but want to
check in balance and maybe lean towards the Democrat senator,

(29:53):
but not knowing that you're not going to have that
check and balance influence.

Speaker 2 (29:56):
I don't think I am not a subscriber to that
k and why.

Speaker 8 (30:01):
I just don't think people think that way nationally. You know,
it's my Senate.

Speaker 15 (30:05):
Well, it's the same way they say they hate Congress,
but except for my guy or gout, they're great, and
it's the same in the Senate.

Speaker 8 (30:10):
So I think they vote on that individual.

Speaker 15 (30:13):
I don't think they vote with this idea of well,
I'm going to vote for Donald Trump, but I'm going
to put a you know, the third of the states
that have a Democrat in a Senate race, I'm going
to vote for that one to offset them.

Speaker 8 (30:23):
I don't think people do the math like that.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
I have a Republican senator who's a Republican. I didn't
vote for it, and I voted for Donald Trump. But
maybe I'm just a spiteful little Italian who knows.

Speaker 8 (30:32):
But but why didn't you vote for that person?

Speaker 2 (30:34):
I don't believe in her. I mean, they're just that's personal.

Speaker 8 (30:37):
I don't But did you do it?

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Because you know no, no check and balance. But no.

Speaker 1 (30:41):
I'm just saying, traditionally we have seen that trend or
that can happen.

Speaker 2 (30:45):
I don't think that's going to be the case this time.

Speaker 8 (30:47):
Don't subscribe. I call that coincidental.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
Coincidental. All right, well, our visits are never coincidental. Both
what both of us know. We've all got two weeks.

Speaker 1 (30:56):
We're killing time till the reality sets it. All right,
good reporting today, We're we'll talk again tomorrow.

Speaker 2 (31:01):
We're all in this together.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Del Joyo.
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