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October 30, 2024 28 mins

Kamala’s speech more about Trump than her and all politics of fear

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your morning show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
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morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast
on two.

Speaker 2 (00:19):
Three, starting your morning off right.

Speaker 3 (00:24):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell, Chuman Lanti.
Kamala gave her final major address from Washington, DC last night,
and it was style of a substance, I can assure you. Meanwhile,
Joe Biden called everybody that's vote not Donald Trump, not
the comedian who made the joke. Joe Biden called everyone

(00:50):
voting for Donald Trump garbage, deplorable two point zero. And
vice presidential candidate and Ohio Senator J. D. Van's going
to sit down with Joe Rogan on his podcast today.
So first Donald Trump, now Joe Rogan. He's still holding
out hope for Kamala Harris. I encourage him not to
hold his breath. This would fall under the Left being

(01:12):
crazy crazy Left being crazy. The headline on MSNBC why
Harrison Beyonce was a bigger deal than Trump and Joe Rogan.
By the way, I won't even address the fact that
most of the people that showed up were expecting Beyonce
to sing and then she didn't and they were violent

(01:32):
offstage that she just came out and spoke for a
few minutes. But let's just do the crazy math, shall we?
And I got news for you. These numbers are very
low for Joe Rogan. A typical top ten Joe Rogan
podcast will go over sixty to seventy million, and I

(01:54):
would think Donald Trump would fall under that category. But
the early math, just following what we know already is
thirty eight point eight million people viewed the Joe Rogan
experience with Donald Trump. This doesn't even address the tweets,
the retweets. Just to put into perspective, there were ten

(02:18):
times as many comments to the Joe Rogan podcast. Then
there are watching MSNBCCNN and Fox News. On any given
big news night Beyonce and Harris, maybe thirty thousand people

(02:41):
showed up, most very upset she didn't sing. Let me
put it into perspective for you. If Donald Trump managed
and he was a different Donald Trump in this three
hour interview, just as he was at Madison Square Garden,
I'll be dramatic enough to say I think he finally
found his two point zero. He was not style over substance.

(03:07):
He was nothing but substance. Not all the name calling,
not all to stick. This guy finally gave you real
stories about when he was president, real substance about what
was broken and how he'll fix it. If he managed,
in addressing thirty eight point eight million people to change

(03:31):
the mind of just two percent, I picked two percent
because that's my choice. In milk Skim's too far, hole
is too thick. If he managed to change two percent
of people's minds listening to that podcast, that would amount
to seven hundred and sixty thousand votes. Care to do

(03:52):
what two percent of thirty thousand is? And now here
comes Jade Vans. As for Mama A Kamala, she made
her closing address last night from the site where Donald
Trump spoke at the Ellipse on January seventh. Because we're

(04:14):
so united now under Joe and Kamala, because the Democrat
Party is so united, because they're so filled with joy,
because they never point fingers. Kamala tries to present herself
as she's basically making up lie after lie about Donald
Trump and anyone that supports him, and that she would

(04:38):
be the anecdote for all divisions America.

Speaker 2 (04:41):
For too long, we have been consumed with too much division, chaos,
and mutual distrust.

Speaker 1 (04:49):
And it can be.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
Easy, then to forget a simple truth. It doesn't have
to be this way.

Speaker 1 (04:56):
Oh did you hear that? Honey, Kamala says, it doesn't
have to be this way. If we vote for Kamala,
everybody's gonna get along great. We gotta vote for Kamala.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
It doesn't have to be this way.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
By the way, Honey, my birthdays tomorrow. I was born yesterday.

Speaker 2 (05:11):
It is time to stop pointing figures. We have to
stop pointing fingers and start locking arms. It is time
to turn the page on the drama and the conflict.

Speaker 1 (05:27):
By the way, turn the page on the Dramas she's
broadcasting from where Donald Trump gave a speech, she throws
in the lie and he knew his sking and posse
was on and he's sent under the capitol anyway, that's
turning the page. Let's see how long she can go
without pointing fingers.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Of fear and division.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Fear and division. Think of all the way she portrayed
Donald Trump. He's going to turn the military against you.
If you disagree with them, the military is going to
come to your door. No fear there, no pointing fingers there.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
It's time for a new generation of leadership in America.

Speaker 1 (06:05):
And as a sitting vice president, I am now.

Speaker 2 (06:08):
New and I am ready to offer that leadership as
the next president of the United States of America.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
You know, I said that Donald Trump's rally looked more
like a convention. Her speech looked more like a convention
speech and a closing argument.

Speaker 2 (06:27):
I have been honored to serve as Joe Biden's vice president.

Speaker 1 (06:31):
Okay, by the way, where is Joe tonight? Never mind?

Speaker 2 (06:36):
But I will bring my own experiences and ideas to
the Oval office. My presidency will be different because the
challenges we face are different. Our top priority as a
nation four years ago was to end the pandemic and
rescue the economy.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
Now we have inflation, a housing shortage that we created,
in an immigration crisis at the border we created. Oh yeah,
you got different challenges. Now.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Our biggest challenge is to lower costs, costs that were
rising even before the pandemic.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
Wait a minute, was that a finger point? By the ways,
there's gonna be any substance here on how you plan
to Let me guess price gouging or let me guess
you grew up in a middle class house. Let me
guess your mom was hard working and she would sit
at the famaika table. Where are we had it? Anywhere
were substance and.

Speaker 2 (07:32):
That are still too high?

Speaker 1 (07:34):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
I still remember our mother sitting at that yellow for Micah,
taking late at night, the tea in hand, the pile
of bills in front of her, trying to make it
all work. And I've heard from so many of you
who are facing even greater financial pressure.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
Problem is, most note comes from you, and they're still
waiting for you to have a solution, and you can't deliver.

Speaker 2 (07:59):
I pledge to listen to experts, to those who will
be impacted by the decisions I make, and to people
who disagree with me, unlike Donald Trump.

Speaker 1 (08:12):
Well, she there's a fingerpoint, by the way, will she
listen to garbage?

Speaker 2 (08:18):
Don't believe people who disagree with me are the enemy.
He wants to put them in jail. I'll give them
a seat at the table.

Speaker 1 (08:29):
Does anybody waking up this morning literally think that Donald
Trump is going to go through the election rolls and
find everybody that voted for Kamala Harris and jail you.
Does anybody really believe that? Is that a serious closing art?

Speaker 2 (08:41):
We are not going back because we also know Donald
Trump would deliver tax cuts to his billionaire donors.

Speaker 3 (08:50):
I will deliver tax.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
Cuts to working people and the middle class. I will
make sure you have a chance not just to get by,
but to get ahead, because I believe in honoring the
dignity of work. I will enact the first ever federal

(09:15):
man on price gouging on groceries.

Speaker 1 (09:18):
Does anybody really think our problem is price gouging? And
that was about as specific as she got, all right?
Bottom line is as unbiased as I can be. This
is a candidate who's having trouble. People don't feel like
they know her. I don't think after the speech they
feel like they know her any better. They think we're
heading in the wrong direction. They want to hear some

(09:39):
accountability for mistakes that were made. She can't acknowledge them.
They want to know how that she's different than Joe
Biden to reconcile a vote for her. As she told
the View, I can't think of anything that makes us different.
Yesterday she says we're different only because we're in different times.
I'll be different. I think the more of the same
is still on the table and a problem for them.

(10:03):
Failed to take accountability, failed to create a clear difference,
failed to give people a chance to know her better,
Just the same, pre written platitudes and narratives with no details,
still style over substance. As I've said three times now,
if she were leading by six or seven the way

(10:24):
Joe Biden was at this time in twenty twenty, if
she was leading in five of the six swing states
like Joe Biden was, this is a fine hide and
plain sight speech. But if you're losing nationally and you're
losing every swing state, this is an awful speech. And

(10:45):
the problem is it's so awful, and they sent her
out there in the wrong place, delivering the same vague message.

Speaker 3 (10:55):
I smell a rat.

Speaker 1 (10:58):
This stinks to high heaven of John Podesta trying to lose,
because his real play is for after she loses. This
is your Morning show with Michael Del Trono. Hi, Am Michael.

(11:21):
I'd love to have you listen to your morning show
live every day. We're heart on great stations like News
Talk five point fifty k FYI and Phoenix News Radio,
eleven ninety k EX in Portland and ten ninety The
Patriot in c app Make us a part of your
morning routine. We'd love to have you listen live, but
in the meantime, enjoy the podcast. Elsie's husband in San
Francisco was sentenced to life without parole. The Menendez brothers

(11:43):
are about to get out and they killed both their parents.
We're letting out illegal immigrants who are creating crimes. This
guy hit her and boom, he gets life without parole.
What are you in for at Nancy Pelosi's Hub and
over the head can't make this stuff up. Rory O'Neil

(12:05):
is our national correspondent. He's here to talk about more
than fifty million votes that have been already cast in
this election. Is that good news for Harris or Trump? Well,
I will tell Rory, but that's the question of the
day anyway.

Speaker 4 (12:17):
Yeah, and we're all trying to read the tea leaves
here and see what's in the data.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
On the positive side.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
For the Trump team, it's a big, big Republican turnout
in early voting, something that they don't traditionally do. Early
and absentee vote numbers among Republicans much higher than expected,
typically known as the party that shows up to vote
on election day.

Speaker 3 (12:38):
On the plus side for.

Speaker 4 (12:38):
Harris, though, we're seeing a big gender gap in the
early voting numbers as well. Harris leads a gender gap
with more women voting for her than men, and in
this case, in the early voting, fifty three percent of
the turnout as among women, the rest among men.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
So good news and bad news.

Speaker 1 (12:56):
We crunched all these numbers yesterday state by state Rory
and you will see anywhere from fifty four to forty
five percent leaning female. The problem is there's still, with
the exception of one swing state, more Republicans that have
early voted. And then when you look at the percentages
of independence, and they vary by swing state, one has

(13:19):
to wonder who's got the advantage with independent voters on
this one. So, yeah, there are more women early voting,
and yet there's still more Republicans. So you'd have to
actually read the tea leaves even closer and say, do
you really think that there's a lot of Republican women
out there voting over abortion? Because that would be the
only way to try to exegitte this in her favor.

(13:41):
So I don't know that it necessarily doesn't look clearly
in Donald Trump's favor.

Speaker 4 (13:45):
Right, I would also take the nicky Haley kind of
voter perhaps then maybe, So it's yeah, again, we're all
trying to interpret this y yeah, because we can't know.

Speaker 1 (13:55):
And the other thing is like, what about in Michigan.
We don't know how many of those Democrats, our union
people afraid about losing their job or have already lost
their job, or blackmails in Michigan, or his Muslims in
Michigan who we know are disgruntled. So don't even assume
that the Blues are necessarily voting blue.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
Right, So when you're looking at what two million ballots
have already been returned in Michigan, there's a twelve point
gender gap, with women fifty six men forty four.

Speaker 3 (14:23):
I don't know.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
If I were a Trump supporter, that would bother me,
and I'd be doing everything I can to get women
out to vote.

Speaker 3 (14:29):
And narrow that gap between now and Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (14:32):
Well, he is leading in Michigan right now, so that'll
tell you a little bit something about maybe how all
those voters are leading. But we'll never know, you know,
we talked about this rory the other day. I got curious.
I remember singer Michael W. Smith was doing a concert
and I was backstage saying hello to him, and he
pulled me aside, this must happen to you all the time, too, Hey,
my dad is really nervous about Mitt Romney. How's this

(14:54):
race look? And this was about ten days before the election,
and I remember saying very very close, but I think
Romney has it. And I was so embarrassed in being
wrong ten days later. So we're going through all this
exercise now. In this election, I went back and looked
at the polling, and about the time I was visiting
with Michael W. Smith, it was dead even. But it

(15:15):
broke from there and in the last ten days you
can see the polling break for Obama to a seven
point lead, and then he was the original underpolar He
even extended that in the actual election. But we can't
see breaks like that anymore because we're twelve years down
the line with people have no home phones, don't answer
their cell phones, and certainly one side doesn't answer their
cell phone if it's a university or a media outlet.

(15:37):
So we don't see these breaks anymore. You really have
to read the tea leaves. It's almost like you have
to feel it and discern it more, but never really
know until election day exactly.

Speaker 4 (15:49):
So a lot of it is talking heads trying to
spin this the best way possible.

Speaker 3 (15:53):
And you know, you'll find that these.

Speaker 4 (15:55):
Numbers also vary from state to state as well, giving
you some encouragement here or encouraging you to take more
action there if things aren't going your way. So yeah,
but that's how this information is also being processed in
the campaign, saying all right, look, you know here we
are fifty million plus ballots cast, but we still have
time until Tuesday. So if we are seeing weakness in places,

(16:17):
let's jump on it. If we are seeing you know,
positive numbers, let's jump on those.

Speaker 3 (16:21):
Two.

Speaker 1 (16:21):
We got one minute. And you know, I think you
like me. We try to be objective. First. First of all,
I know I'm biased personally. I have a biblical worldview.
I am a conservative at heart. I don't trust Republicans
because they don't always live with they believe. But I
have nothing in common with Democrats. I mean, that's just
a confession. But then when I get on the air,
I want to have a conversation and I want to
give people useful information. I thought last night was a

(16:42):
great speech if she was leading like Joe Biden by
seven percent right now nationally, and she was leading in
all of the swing states nationally. But she's not, and
therefore I don't think it was a speech of much
substance or style. It certainly didn't give people a chance
to know her any better or any different. It was
the same wording as the convention speech. There was no accountability,

(17:03):
and there was no separation from the administration with any specificity.
I wonder how effective it was in targeting undecided voters,
because what undecided voters have been asking for wasn't delivered.
Everyone was watching the World Series much did you see
my Yankees? By the way, I'm such a fraud Rory.
I almost didn't want to come on the air today.

(17:24):
Here I am given this gift from God by way
of iheartened premiere to inform people like you, and I
get to do, and I've been in a bad mood
all week, and then I wake up all cherry this
morning like a child because my team won. Isn't that pathetic?

Speaker 3 (17:37):
You should be embarrassed for those Yankee fans interfering in them.

Speaker 1 (17:39):
Play's Volpi's Grand Slam be allowed.

Speaker 3 (17:44):
They should not be allowed back in the stadium tonight.

Speaker 1 (17:47):
Volpi's Grand Slam made my year. I mean, this is
Can you imagine where you grew up in Massachusetts? Right, Boston,
Rhode Island, Oh, Rhode Island. So you but you were
not far from posso get so, Yeah, you were a
Red Sox fan. So I imagine growing up in New
York City. You're a Yankees fan. Your parents even took
you to a World Series when you were nine years old. Then,
of all, you got to be the best of the

(18:07):
best in high school, the best of the best college,
best of the best in the miners. You make your
way of all the teams that select you at your
home team, that'd be like the Cubs choosing me. I'm
playing in a World Series. I mean, this is all
beyond anything anybody can imagine. And then you hit a
Grand Slam for the team that you have been a
fan of all your life in a World series, to
keep your team alive and force a Game five, that's
got to be a great It's a feeling. I don't know,

(18:29):
that's for sure.

Speaker 4 (18:30):
My happiest moment was watching a stadium full of miserable
Yankee fans after the first inning.

Speaker 3 (18:34):
That was my greatest loved it.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Of course, if I'm a Yankees fan, you're a Red
Sox fan. Roy O'Neil, he'll be back on fightingately next hour.
We always give the final story to Rory. If you're
just waking up, these are your top five stories of
the day. My thing isn't playing. Not that music. It's
supposed to be going, but I don't know why it's not.
So I'll just launch right into them. GOP Vice presidential candidate.

(18:58):
Watch it start now while I'm talking GOP Vice presidential
candidate at Ohio Senator jd Vance will now sit down
with Joe Rogan and a podcast. First, Donald Trump reaching
sixty something million probably and here comes jd Vance.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
Now.

Speaker 1 (19:15):
The most effective thing about I had made the dramatic statement,
whoever goes on Joe Rogan wins because of who he reaches.
Where do you think undecided. People were last night watching
Kamala Harris delivered a delivering a teleprompter speech, or listening
to things like Joe Rogan, Megan Kelly So and now

(19:37):
here comes Jade Vance. But the key was the Donald
Trump that showed up for three hours and the way
he talked and JD will shine too. Meanwhile, Joe Rogan saying,
I've Invitedkamal. I'm waiting to hear from her people. I
promised it'll be a nice conversation. We just want to
get to know her as a human being. I really
hope she can make it. She's not very interested. One
thing we know, deplorable did not help Hillary Clinton and

(20:00):
probably played a key role in her losing the election.
She didn't call Donald Trump deplorable. She called anybody that
would support him and vote for him deplorable. They've since
been called Nazis, and yesterday President Biden called them all garbage.
Mark Mayfield has more.

Speaker 5 (20:17):
Just the other day, I speaker at his rally called
Puerto Rico a floating island of garbage.

Speaker 3 (20:22):
Well, let me tell you something. The only garbage I
see floating down there as his supporters.

Speaker 5 (20:27):
Biden made the comments during a campaign called Tuesday with
Voto Latino, going on to say Trump has no character
and doesn't care about the Latino community. Biden added that
Puerto Rican people are good, decent, honorable people. The comments
come in response to a comedian Tony Hinchcliff's joke at
Trump's rally on Sunday, in which he said there was
a floating island of garbage in the middle of the
ocean right now.

Speaker 3 (20:47):
I think it's called Puerto Rico.

Speaker 5 (20:49):
I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (20:50):
Because they're having a sanitation crisis. Not a good joke.
But Donald Trump didn't make it, and nor did his supporters.
But you know what, I'm just one person with an opinion.
I think President Biden knows that. I think President Biden's
doing everything you can to get calm a little loose.
She doesn't need much help. Her big closing argument from
Washington was last night.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
One week from today, you will have the chance to
make a decision that directly impacts your life, the life
of your family, and the future of this country.

Speaker 3 (21:23):
We love.

Speaker 1 (21:24):
Thank you for stating the obvious. The sirens, of course,
who are ems emergency personnel coming to try to revive
her campaign. Harris gave her final major address in Washington, DC.
On the same site, Donald Trump spoke at January sixth,
twenty twenty one, talk about during the page and looking forward.
The whole positioning was looking back and a lot of
pointing fingers in the name of It's time to stop

(21:46):
pointing fingers.

Speaker 2 (21:47):
Donald Trump has spent a decade trying to keep the
American people divided and afraid of each other.

Speaker 5 (21:56):
That is who he is.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
But a America that is not.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
Who we are?

Speaker 3 (22:03):
Isn't it too rich.

Speaker 1 (22:08):
On tweet this as they've called us all nazis this
as the president in the basement muzzled is saying everybody
vote for Trump is garbage. You show no, you call
them garbage. Joe, don't all right, Harris says, this election

(22:31):
is a time for change.

Speaker 2 (22:33):
We have to stop pointing fingers and start locking arms.
It is time to turn the page on the drama
and the conflict. It is time for a new generation
of leadership in America.

Speaker 1 (22:50):
Well, the platitudes, talking points and narratives and style over
substance could win. She'll win. Doesn't look like she's winning,
and doesn't look like this is going to change the
truectory very much. Meanwhile, both are hitting swing states. Harris
will hold rallies today in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where she's trailing,
then in Madison's, Wisconsin, where it is a dead heat
not a good sign. Trump will also be in Wisconsin

(23:11):
at a rally in Green Bay and an earlier stop
in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, also a very tight swing
state race. Two new lawsuits have been filed in New
York against Sean P. Diddy Combs, accusing him of sexual assault,
this time on two boys. Michael Kastner has the story.

Speaker 6 (23:28):
One lawsuit, filed Monday, says the alleged assault happened in
two thousand and five, when he was just ten years old,
and that he was given a soda spiked with drugs.
In the other suit, also filed Monday, a man claims
he was sexually assaulted by Combs in two thousand and
eight when he was seventeen. Both men claimed they were
auditioning for Combs at the time of the alleged assaults.

(23:50):
These are just two of many lawsuits filed following the
hip hop moguls arrest for sex trafficking and racketeering. Combs
maintains his innocence.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
I'm Michael and the Yankees forced a Game five, winning
eleven to four last night over the Dodgers. Dodgers still
lead three games to one and can win the World
Series with a win tonight in the Bronx At eight oh.

Speaker 3 (24:08):
Eight, This is Rebecca in spring Hill, Tennessee, and my
morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (24:18):
I'm trying to be somewhat objective. It was supposed to
be a closing argument. It was supposed to address undecided voters.
It was supposed to define her more as a person
as a presidential candidate. It seemed to me to be
classic style over substance. It was just another rehash of
the nomination speech from the convention. I'm not sure it
really reached too many undecided voters. John Decker is our

(24:41):
White House correspondent. Before we get to polling, polling, polling,
what did you think of Kamala, Kamala Kamala last night?

Speaker 7 (24:48):
I mean, it was fine. You know, I don't know
because I can't get inside the head of an undecided voter,
so I don't know what moves those people to get
off the fence, you know. And maybe last night speech
that she gave beautiful backdrop as always, because how could
you not have a bad backdrop with the White House
in the background. But you know, as far as moving voters,

(25:11):
we'll see. I mean, there's just days left for those
few people out there to get off the fence if
they haven't made a decision yet. Between the most Tamala Harris.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
And Donald Trump. The most objective I can be because
I am biased, I'm going to have a biblical worldview.
I'm a conservative. I'm not even a Republican because they
don't always live what they believe and I have nothing
in common with Democrats. But my objective opinion would be
from doing this for over four decades. If she was
leading nationally like Joe Biden was by seven, if she
was leading in all of the swing states like Joe
Biden was, that's a great speech, but she's not. And

(25:43):
I don't know if it closed any gap. And we
do kind of know what undecided voters are concerned about.
They don't feel like they know her. They don't see
her taking accountability for mistakes that have been made and
she won't acknowledge them. And they want to know how
she's different than Joe Biden because they think we're heading
in the wrong direction. And I don't think there was
any specifics or substance to really have reached that very effectively.
But that's just my opinion. All Right, Polls, polls, polls,

(26:04):
what do they say? Are they accurate? They certainly changed
over the years, haven't they.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Well, they have.

Speaker 7 (26:10):
You know, we can go through various cycles. We know
how the pollsters and polls got it wrong in twenty
sixteen predicting that Hillary Clinton was going to win in
the Swing States, was going to win the presidential election.
That didn't happen. And most recently, they got it wrong
in the twenty two twenty twenty two midterm elections when
they predicted a red wave and that red wave never happened.

(26:33):
And so A lots on the line for the polling
industry as it relates to this election cycle, Michael, because
they got it so wrong so recently, and I think
the polling industry they're on the line in terms of
their reputation going forward. If this particular race that's coming
up is not as close as the polls indicate, always

(26:53):
within the margin of error, if it ends up being
a runaway for one candidate or another, Boyd will they
have gotten it wrong for this election cycle.

Speaker 1 (27:00):
We only have one minute, but they have fallen victim
to what we've all fallen victim too. Technology changes and
the matrix. We're a very divided country. People are off
on the far left watching and reading what they watch,
people on the far right watching and reading what they watch.
There's a mistrust of everyone, including each other. When the
phone rings, they don't have home phones, they have mobile phones.
Mobile phone doesn't recognize them. If it doesn't, it sees

(27:22):
a university or network, they don't want to answer. I mean,
they got a real problem getting accurate polling, and I
don't know that they will be able to until we
solve this matrix and division problem.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
Well.

Speaker 7 (27:34):
Yeah, technology is a big part of it. You know
I've mentioned before. I know the posters literally, the ones
that conduct them for the major broadcast networks, and you
know I used to work at Fox. I know that
poster as well, and they insist we got it right
this time. We're going to be accurate this time. Of course,
we don't know that answer until the results come in
to see how happy were.

Speaker 1 (27:55):
What we do know is it looks a lot different
than twenty twenty. We're all in this together. This is
Your Morning Show with Michael del Journo
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