Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Hi, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
on great radio stations across the country like wilm and
w DOV and Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM
seven twenty the voice in Middle Georgia. And we're gonna
need some blankets. News Radio six fifty k e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
Two three starting your morning off right. A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding, not because we're
in the stupid This is your Morning Show with Michael O'Dell, John.
Speaker 1 (00:38):
Riis Andsheine Orni Bird gets the Worm, Sleepy squirrel, missus
the nut. Seven minutes after the hour, Welcome to your
morning show. I'm Michael del Journal. On this Monday, December,
the ninth year of Our Lord twenty twenty four, President
Biden praising the regime change in Syria. Apparently he knows
more about HTS and Abu Muhammad al but I'm than
(00:59):
the rest of us because he's former Okada. I don't know.
They're in much better hands. Police are still searching for
the suspect who shot and killed the United Healthcare CEO.
President Trump says children born in the US could be
deported if their parents are in the country illegally. Jurors
in the Subway choke Hold trial of Daniel penny Or
(01:21):
resumed deliberations later today in New York City. Juan Sodo, Wow,
you know I was doing pretty good at twenty six yep,
I was pulling down. Let me see, who was a
sixty grand a year. Holy smoke, it's twenty six years old.
Wan Sodo, however, will be making seven hundred and sixty
five million dollars. He's going to get all the chicks,
(01:43):
he got all the dead presidents. What are you talking about?
Fifteen years, seven hundred and sixty five million dollars. That's
the highest paid athlete in the history of mankind. Remember
that it's a mat now, not a Yankee.
Speaker 3 (01:55):
Remember the first million dollar when Major League Baseball awarded
the first million dollar play and you were just like,
how can somebody spend that much money?
Speaker 1 (02:03):
Money? You know, whenever you start making contracts like that,
the number, the psychology of it. I just couldn't handle
as a player when someone every time you strike out
and they go there's three hundred and sixty eight grand
you know every you know, for every little single thing
you do.
Speaker 3 (02:21):
It's just I live by the Mike Tyson rule. Some
people you thought meant to make that much money. I
get that's the key. We had the Big Ten Championship
Oregon forty five thirty seven over Penn State. I thought
Penn State was impressive hanging in there because I'm not
sure anybody's better than Oregon. SEC Championship, we had Georgia
(02:41):
and Texas a three point game, but Georgia wins it.
The ACC Championship was Clemson by three over SMU. But
SMU kind of like Penn State, played very very well
and respected. So our quarter final playoff games are set.
It'll be Indiana and Notre Dame. How's that for a matchup?
SMU and the two.
Speaker 1 (03:01):
I just highlighted as you know, hey, they may have lost,
but they looked really good. Well, let's have them play
each other. Clemson in Texas. That seems very one sided
in Texas's favor, and the ball's got a tough straw.
They drew the Ohio State Buckeyes in the Horseshoe in
order to continue on in the college football playoffs. So
we got a lot to talk about today asad regime falls.
(03:22):
But here comes HTS and is it any better? Trump
I thought masterfully used his NBC interview to diffuse all
of the liberal fear monitoring narratives from throughout. We have
a rasp me some poll that suggests the American people
see not just Trump's victory, but winning of the popular
(03:44):
vote along with the electoral College vote, as clearly being
a mandate for change. So this is a mandate election,
a mandate presidency. Here's your NBC interview highlighting what the
President's going to focus on in the first one hundred day.
My favorite rasmuster from the weekend was voter's perception of
(04:08):
the election, because really, if you go beyond the specific
issues of this election season, elections, elections themselves were the
big question in election season. Would they be fair? Will
they ever be fair again? I mean, never mind the game,
(04:29):
the narrative games, legacy media plays, never mind these censoring games,
social media plays. I mean, will poll workers and machines
ever operate fairly again? And a good reason twenty twenty
(04:49):
was you would use the expression unexplainable, but it really
is explainable. They we nice COVID, they changed election laws unconstitutionally,
they harvested ballots. I mean, no one's ever going to
be able to explain the eighty one million votes Biden
(05:11):
god seventy seventy seventy seven, seven, eighty one seventy. This
is right back to normal. They all disappeared in twenty
twenty four. Something some Shenanigan took place in twenty twenty.
But what about the elections we just finished, Well, that's
a very interesting topic. American voters overwhelmingly say the twenty
twenty four elections across the country and in their own communities,
(05:35):
because we got always view it that way. Americans sit
in a home or an apartment, in a neighborhood, in
a community, in a city, in a state, somewhere in America,
and so they have the perception of where they're at,
and then they have the perception of America as a whole.
And they say, by and large, in their own community
(05:55):
and across the country, the elections were run well. They
expressed high levels of confidence that votes were actually counted
and accurately. I mean, California didn't do a lot to
help us all feel peace, did they. It took almost
exactly a month to solve a house race that they
(06:17):
just kept counting and counting and knocking on doors and
correcting and counting until they won. Now this stands in
start contrast to four years ago, when far fewer voters
expressed confidence. Today, eighty eight percent of voters say that
the elections across the US were run and administered at
least somewhat well. Well, what does that mean? Up from
(06:40):
fifty nine percent in twenty twenty. Ninety three percent of
Trump voters say the elections were run and administered at
least somewhat well. After all, this time we won. Four
years ago, Trump was contesting his defeat by Joe Biden,
and Joe twenty one percent of his supporters said the
(07:04):
elections were run well. This begs the question how much
of election shenanigans are whether Trump win or lose, the
perception whether he wins or lose, because the realities you
have both. You had them pull shenanigans in twenty twenty
and he lost. This time, they weren't capable of pulling
(07:27):
those same shenanigans and he won. So twenty one percent
thought the elections were run somewhat well in twenty twenty.
That jumps all the way to ninety three percent among
Trump voters in twenty twenty four. Voters who supported Kamala
Harris for president are less likely today to say the
election this November was run well than Biden's voters were
four years ago. Still, a wide majority of even Harris
(07:49):
supporters eighty four percent believe the election was run well.
Look how quickly we seem to have put all that
behind us. You can get more specific in person voting,
Ninety four percent of Trump voters are at least somewhat
confident the votes they cast were counted as voters intended
up thirty points from twenty twenty. That's ninety four percent
(08:12):
of Trump voters. Eighty six percent of Harris voters confident
in person balance were counted as they were supposed to
absent to your mail in In twenty twenty, just nineteen
percent of Trump voters expressed confidence in the count and
accuracy of ballots that were cast. That jumped to seventy
two percent in twenty twenty four. Nearly all of Biden's
(08:34):
twenty twenty voters ninety five percent, were confident the twenty
twenty Harris's voters still seventy eight percent confident there's no questions,
a little mix of both. If your person wins, you
feel a little bit better about how things were done.
But there's no question. Here's the main takeaway. There's an
(08:57):
asterisk by twenty twenty period from the games that were played,
the weaponizing of COVID, the changing of election laws state
by state, the harvesting of votes, to the unexplained ten
million extra votes for Joe Biden. That if that was
a spike in temperature, if you will, that's all seemed
(09:17):
to have. The fevers gone down and America feels better.
So for the unspoken biggest story of the election, would
you have a fair election? America feels pretty good about it.
Now we press on to the result, which is Donald Trump.
Is it a mandate for change? How smart was he
in this NBC interview? Very that will be featured in
our Sounds of the Day. We'll also talk to Chris Walker,
(09:39):
he is the Republican consultant and your morning show contributor.
On the inaugural address and how important is that messaging?
I think it stood out as one of the most
important sections of President elect Trump's interview with NBC this weekend. Rory,
of course has an eye on the Syrian capital falling
and into whose hands and what might be next to
(10:00):
John Decker on Donald Trump about everything from deportations to
terraffs he governed all in that NBC interview will get
to the White House correspondent John Decker's take on that
as well, miss a little, you'll miss a lot, miss
a lot, and we'll miss you.
Speaker 2 (10:11):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chno.
Speaker 1 (10:16):
We're not to the twelve days of Christmas yet, right
until like ond's your Thursday. Yeah yeah, And if you
have on those cheesy calendars in your house, or you
open the door to the calendar date, yeah, and you
gotta hers she's kisses, yeah, yeah, whatever you put. Yeah,
you open the doors on the not twelfth day of Chris.
Miss your true love has for you. Michael's Top five story.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Twin you.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
That guy didn't say very well, let him get warmed up.
I don't perform, and let you throw a buck my
guitarck case. President Biden is praising the regime change in Syria.
Lisa Cardon reports.
Speaker 4 (10:58):
Speaking from the White House Sunday, Biden called the collapse
of Assad's government a moment of historic opportunity. For the
long suffering people of Syria.
Speaker 5 (11:07):
This regime brutalized and tortured and killed three hundreds of
thousands of inn Serians. A fall the res e is
a fundamental lack of justice.
Speaker 4 (11:16):
Biden also warned there's a moment of risk and uncertainty
over what comes next. The president outline continued US involvement
in Syria to help establish a transition away from the
Assaud regime toward an independent nation that serves all Syrians.
Biden's remarks came after a coalition of rebels captured the
Syrian capital of Damascus, prompting Assad to resign.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
I'm Lisa Carton in Sounds of the Day. You'll hear
what Donald Trump said to NBC, not edited or not
framed in any way, just as it was asked and
as it was answered. But one of the questions had
to do with deporting children. I mean, you don't want
to separate them from their parents, right. Mark Mayfield has more.
Speaker 6 (11:58):
In an interview with NBC's Meet the Trump said he
doesn't want to break up families, and so children may
have to leave alongside their undocumented parents once he takes office.
Speaker 7 (12:07):
Well, what you going to do if they want to
stay with the father. We have to have rules and regulations.
You could always find something out, like you know, this
doesn't work, that doesn't work.
Speaker 6 (12:14):
Trump also reaffirmed his commitment to ending birthright citizenship. He
also appeared to say his administration's deportation efforts would go
well beyond undocumented immigrants convicted of crimes and target most
others as well. Despite these comments, Trump insisted he wants
to keep immigrants who are so called dreamers, those brought
to the US as children and who are enrolled in
the DACA program.
Speaker 1 (12:34):
I'm Mark Mayfield. And when it comes to the Fed
Reserve chair jer Own Powell, President like Trump, has no
plans to replace him. Tammy Trehila reports.
Speaker 8 (12:41):
Powell's term runs until May of twenty twenty six. Speaking
with NBC News in an interview that ered on Meet
the Press, Trump said Powell would probably leave if he
told him to, but he isn't planning to do that
right now. Trump first appointed Powell in twenty eighteen, but
soon thought about removing him over a dispute about interest rates.
President Biden reappointed powelland twenty twenty two, al has said
(13:03):
he won't leave the job early and doesn't believe Trump
has the legal authority to fire him. I'm Tammy Triheo.
Speaker 1 (13:09):
Holiday shopping forecasted to reach a historic high this year.
The same is to be said for purchase returns. Chris
Caragio has that story.
Speaker 9 (13:18):
A new report by the National Retail Federation and return
management company Happy Returns expects this year's returns to reach
seventeen percent of all merchandise sales, making for eight hundred
and ninety billion dollars in return products. The return rate
in twenty twenty three was at fifteen percent, totally seven
hundred and forty three billion dollars. The Federation also discovered
(13:39):
that returns hid an annual high during the holidays. I'm
Chris Cragio, written by Irving Berlin and performed by Bobby
and Assisium. I don't know why I slipped into Laurence
Buck just the way it was written.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
I guess. Written by Irving Berlin for the nineteen forty
two musical film Holiday Inn. This song won the Academy
Award for Best Original Song at the fifteenth then Academy Awards.
It's now on top of the list of best songs.
Lisa Carton fills us in dream Man.
Speaker 4 (14:16):
Christmas, a new holiday list compiled by newsweeks as the
most popular Christmas song of all time is Bing Crosby's
White Christmas. The nineteen forty two hit was the title
track of Crosby's White Christmas Musical and quickly became a
favorite among members of the US Armed Forces.
Speaker 1 (14:34):
At Christmas spostpic Lisa Carton, Yeah, I don't make him
like Bing Crosby anymore. Put on a little sweater, sing
(14:54):
a beautiful Christmas song during a holiday special, then go
home and beat your sons. All right, here's our question
of the day for your your morning show talkback line.
What do you think was the better deal? And can
this all be explained by inflation alone? Nolan Ryan the
first ever make a million dollars a year, or Juan
(15:16):
Soto making fifty one million dollars a year for fifteen years.
Keep in mind Nolan Ryan got a million a year
for four years right from the Astros. Jansoto is fifty
one million dollars a year from the Mets and for
fifteen years a total of seven hundred and sixty five million.
Is that explainable all by inflation? Cause I'll tell you what,
(15:38):
Nolan Ryan for a million year. That's that's a bargain,
basement hunt. I bet he gets Thanksgiving off too. Oh well,
I'm just guessing. Sh Sorry, I apologize, Christmas hasn't happened yet.
The field of the first ever twelve teen Cowllege football
(16:00):
playoffice set Lisa Cartin is back with that's Ginny.
Speaker 4 (16:03):
The selection committee announced Sunday. The number one seed will
be Oregon, followed by Georgia, Boise State, then Arizona State.
All four will get first round buys and won't play
until the quarterfinals. In the first round, number five Texas
will play number twelve Clemson, and number eight Ohio State
will take on number nine Tennessee. Number eleven SMU will
(16:25):
face number six Penn State, and number ten Indiana will
play number seven Notre Dame. Now that you got that
all straight, get your office pools ready. Yes, I'm Lisa
Carton and.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
The NFL charges fell short in Kansas City nineteen seventeen.
Rams outscored the Bills forty four to twenty two, forty
nine ers easy over the Bears. Seahawks went on the
road against the Cadinals Buck's easy twenty eight to thirteen
over the Raiders, Titans, Cabbage fell to three to ten,
losing it home to the Jags ten to six, and
the Browns lost in Pittsburgh twenty seven to fourteen. And
that's your top five stories of the day.
Speaker 9 (16:58):
Hi, I'm gonna from Peplow, Mississippi, and my morning show
is your Morning Show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 1 (17:14):
Hey, it's me Michael. You can listen to your morning
show live on the air or streaming live on your
iHeart app Monday through Friday from three to six Pacific,
five to eighth Central, and six to nine Eastern on
great radio stations like Talk six fifty KSTE and Sacramento
or one oh four nine The Patriot in Saint Louis
and Impact Radio one oh five nine and twelve fifty
w h d Z in Tampa, Florida. I'm sure hope
(17:36):
you can join us live and make us a part
of your morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 10 (17:41):
By Christmas is a twelve day holiday that starts on
Christmas Day, not before. That's called Advent. The Twelve Days
of Christmas starts on December twenty fifth, Christmas Day, and
goes till January, which is the epiphany.
Speaker 1 (18:03):
Thank you, you're what it's an epiphany for me? Are
you kidding me? I'm going to do the rest of
my show from the coreck. Did you guys have that
when you were in school? Yeah? The little you know,
they they were like nooks, and then the teacher when
they would punish you is they would move your desk
in there, which wasn't a punishment at all. It was
the first ever work cube. I would also rummage through
(18:24):
other people's lunchbox. Well mine was always where there was
no codes, but you know, I would put pictures up.
I made it like everybody, like I cared what the
teacher was teaching, kind of cues. I was able to
just sit there and draw pictures of the Chicago Bulls. Yeah,
so that's the I don't know if that's news to
anybody else. Did you know that the twelve Days of
(18:46):
Christmas begins on Christmas Day? You knew that? I did
not know that? Okay? Did you? Oh you did? Red? Yeap?
Oh great, So just let me make a jerk out
of myself saying my wife reminds me of it all
the time. Well, you know, I don't want to say
anything's upset anybody because I know how you guys are
a little on edge. But I didn't realize it till
(19:08):
that caller from WHLO and Akron, Ohio, that I am
celebrating the twelve days at Christmas this year. I'm up
from Christmas till January? What about us? No, you'll be working, Okay,
I tickle myself thirty seven minutes after the hour, Thanks
(19:29):
for waking up with your morning show on the Earth
streaming live on your iHeartRadio app. By the way, our
teacher giving me detention wasn't our only talk back. Our
bookie at the your morning show Sportsbook checked in. He's
already got odds, so this popped up this morning. Will
Trump stop birth rights? Citizenship? Yes? Minus one ten? No,
(19:50):
plus three hundred? Book it? What about the odds on
Michael knowing the twelve Days at Christmas start on Christmas,
not twelve days before Christmas. You got out on that yet,
Bang bang, Thank you. President Biden is praising the regime
change in Syria. By the way, not everything Joe Biden
said was easy to understand on that particular topic. Listen,
(20:14):
make no mistake.
Speaker 5 (20:16):
Some of the rebel groups that took down Asad have
their own grim record of terrorists.
Speaker 1 (20:20):
When you went, you would write about baby he knew
what he was saying. All right, So here's the thing.
The big story is, after fifty years, the Assad regime
falls and shockingly fast. Now we'll do more of this
with out Lieutenant Colonel James Carafano tomorrow. But who led this?
You know, this is like the last time something like this.
(20:41):
That was like the fall of Cuba, you know, and
everybody's like, who's this castro kid? I thought he was
like an attorney or something. Oh boom, and here comes
Abu Muhammad al Gilani, former al Qaeda left kind of formally.
Speaker 8 (21:02):
But what is he?
Speaker 1 (21:02):
Now? Do you celebrate this or do you just hold
your breath for the next brand of Islamic hardline government.
That's the question of the hour. At home President elect
Donald Trump sits down. Well, I say, sits down. You
(21:25):
know those I love those formal when they do these interviews,
they're so stage. You know. They always start with a balk. Yeah,
they're just strolling through an office, or they go outside,
they stroll through the street, you know, or they do
something like that. I thought Donald Trump read set up
this way, just struck the perfect tone. Even in a
(21:46):
fact check of her fact check. He didn't do it
in a typical, you know, Donald Trump's style. He was
very nonchalant about it. Oh no, it really wasn't the
last forty years. Is just the last two and a
half years of the Biden administration, You can look that up.
But he just struck the perfect tone and he covered
(22:07):
everything that kind of collectively dismantled all of the fear
narratives of the left. And I can't be I wasn't
duped by those narratives when it was happening. But boy,
don't you wish you could just sit down, have a
cup of coffee with somebody that was and have him
(22:28):
watch this interview with NBC and go, does that look
like somebody that's never gonna leave? Is that like somebody
that's gonna be a tyrant? Is that like somebody that's
gonna turn the military against his own people? I mean, collectively,
it is these sounds of the day today, all interview clips.
But it was just the perfect right tone for Donald
(22:53):
Trump unmeet the press, and that goes throughout. I thought
this question really honed in on it.
Speaker 10 (23:03):
What do you want to say to Americans who didn't
support you in this campaign.
Speaker 7 (23:08):
I'm going to treat you every bit as well as
I have treated the greatest MAGA supporters. There's never been
anything like MAGA in the history of this country. These
people are so dedicated to making America great again. It's
very simple, and I'm going to treat them just the
same as I treat Mega. We're going to treat everybody good.
We want success for our country. We want safety for
(23:29):
our country. Our country is a crime pod and we
have to get rid of crime. We have so many
things to do. We have to do the prices, we
have to do all of that, but we have to
get the criminals out of our country.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
We have to bring down crime.
Speaker 7 (23:40):
People have to be able to walk across the street
and buy a loaf of bread without being shot.
Speaker 1 (23:45):
And that's going to happen.
Speaker 7 (23:46):
But what I say to them is I love you,
and we're going to all work together and we're going
to bring it together, and you know it's going to
bring it together success.
Speaker 1 (23:55):
I mean, it was just just like that throughout, the
perfect tone and answers, and I don't want to get
for those of you that listen every day, and I
know it's a few of you but for the few
of you that do. I don't want to get repetious.
But this is another example of the different Donald Trump,
(24:18):
forged by all the harassment, forged by all the unfair attacks,
forged by assassination being trapped in court. Had Donald Trump
just gone from his first term to his second term,
I assure you he wouldn't be the same president he's
about to be in January and with the same tone, leadership, abilities,
(24:42):
laser focus, and team around him to get it done.
This is a wiser, much different Donald Trump. You can
make a case that moving forward, it might be in
the American people's best interest to make these one term
presidencies with a two term MA. How different might all
(25:06):
of them have been with four years off to learn
from their mistakes, to gather their wits, you know, come
back knowing how everything works. We had a single prayer
and a single prediction, if Donald Trump could find his
Donald Trump two point zero, he'd be elected president. And
(25:29):
he did, and he was, and there is something very
very different about him. And as you'll see in our
Sounds a Day coming up at six oh five, throughout
this interview with Meet the Press, it was front and
center clear answers given in the right tone, collectively dismantling
(25:51):
all the fear narratives that the left used because they
didn't have a candidate to run against him. Well, President
Biden is praising the regime change in Syria. Speaking from
the White House Sunday, Biden called the Asad government collapse
a positive development for the Syrian people. Okay, that'd be
(26:15):
a tough one to prove, but as a good news
for the United States. For enemies of Islam, nations and
causes in the world as a whole, not so much.
Speaker 5 (26:30):
Make no mistake, some of the rebel groups that took
down Assad have their own grim record of terrorists.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
When you would write abuses, including the new leaders from
Al Qaida, I kind of not eleven teams like yesterday
for me. President like Trump is sticking with his plans
to levy tariffs against America's trading partners. Mark Mayfield fills
in the details.
Speaker 6 (26:53):
In an interview with NBC News that aired over the weekend,
Trump said that heavy tariffs will be imposed against nations
like next Ago, Canada, and China. Asked about concerns that
tariffs would increase prices for American consumers, Trump said he
can't guarantee anything. Presented with evidence that tariffs in his
first administration cost Americans some eighty billion dollars, Trump disagreed,
(27:14):
saying they cost Americans nothing.
Speaker 1 (27:16):
I'm marked me for you now. As for deportation, President
elect laid out all the ground rules. Brian Shook's here
with our.
Speaker 6 (27:23):
Rode to the White House twenty twenty four. President elect
trump'sys children born in the US could be deported if
their parents are in the country illegally. In an interview
with NBC's Meet the Press, Trump said he doesn't want
to break up families, and so children may have to
leave alongside their undocumented parents once he takes office.
Speaker 7 (27:40):
Well, what you kind to do if they want to
stay with the father. We have to have rules and regulations.
You could always find something out, like you know, this
doesn't work, that doesn't work.
Speaker 6 (27:48):
Trump also reaffirmed his commitment to ending birthright citizenship. He
also appeared to say his administration's deportation efforts would go
well beyond undocumented immigrants that are convicted of crimes and
target most others as well. These comments, Trump insisted he
wants to keep immigrants who are so called dreamers. Those
run to the US's children and enrolled in the DACA program.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
I'm Mark Mayfield. You know there's a lot of pressure
this time of the year to be happy. For many Christmas, well,
it can be a holiday of great blues. Michael Casner
reports Chorus.
Speaker 11 (28:23):
Counselors say that seasonal depression can show up in many
different ways. Mary Beth Fisk, who's a counselor in Texas, says,
if you're not feeling the spirit, it's important to know
that you're not alone. The best thing to do, she says,
is to talk it out. Study show that voicing your
feelings can help those who are facing depression. Also, she says,
(28:44):
it's important to get some rest and eat ride. I'm
Michael Castner.
Speaker 1 (28:48):
I've had three hours sleep. I spent all day yesterday
in the hospital. Again not for me, My mom and
two most important people in my life didn't get Thanksgiving off.
Does that pretty much summarize everything?
Speaker 10 (29:02):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (29:02):
You care? I do. Juan Soto is staying in New York.
Don't get excited, Yankee vans he'll be a met and
he signed for fifteen years and seven hundred and sixty
five million dollars. Now I made a joking reference to inflation.
The one million a year for four years that Nolan
(29:26):
Ryan got nineteen seventy nine with adjusted for inflation would
be four point four million a year. This is still
fifty one million dollars a year for fifteen years. Use
your talk back buttons on your iHeartRadio app. Who was
the better bargain, Nolan Ryan is seventy nine or one
Soto in twenty twenty four to twenty five. I think
(29:49):
I'm going with Nolan Ryan. This is your Morning show
with Michael Deltono. We got them all out in force
this morning. Let's do Pat listening in the Nashville area
Murphy's Borough to be exact from the talk back line.
Speaker 12 (30:06):
Michael, in response to your question of the morning, this
is Pat and Murphysborough. If you recall, we supported the
rebels in Afghanistan back in nineteen eighties, the muja Hedeen,
and that leader twenty years later, twenty one years later
was part of al Qaeda that flew planes into the
World Trade Center.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
His name was Osama bin Laden.
Speaker 12 (30:26):
So I think a cautious watching of who is now
leading Syria is appropriate.
Speaker 1 (30:33):
First of all, Pat, very wise. Second of all, that
was not my question of the day. That was my
statement of the day, which is careful celebrating the ignorant narrative.
Speaker 13 (30:43):
Oh Sod is gone, Sod has fallen. In Syria's free
no ablue. Muhammad al Golan, former Al Qaeda, led the
charge for HTS. I don't like there's any brighter days
ahead for Syria.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
But my question of the day was would you take
Nolan Ryan at one million dollars a year? Some have
even joked I'd take him today at four million dollars
a year at sixty eight years old, or won Soto
at fifty one million dollars a day. But you guys
can answer whatever question you want. Clemson, Look, they win
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the game against SMU, but I don't think they won
the courtroom of public opinion. And so SMU is in
even though they lost, and Clemson doesn't get a bye,
even though they won the ACC championship. You're SEC champion.
Georgia over Texas gets the buye. Oregon over Penn State
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gets the BUYE. But they threw in Arizona State with
a very impressive victory for all to see on television
in Boise State. So Oregon, Arizona State, Georgia Boise State.
Resting your quarterfinals will be the Indiana Hoosiers and the
Notre Dame Fighting Irish great game SMU and Penn State
I think the two most impressive of teams who lost
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their conference championship games and they meet up against each other.
Then you have Clemson in Texas. That's the most one
side of the quarterfinal games. There's just there's just no
way Texas loses that game and Tennessee, oh talk about
the wrong straw. Tennessee gets Ohio State in the Horseshoe
to kick off the quarterfinals. Football. Last night, Chargers fell
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short in Kansas City nineteen seventeen. Rams outscored the Bills
forty four to twenty or forty two forty nine. Ers
easy over the Bears thirty eight to thirteen. Bears. Very
disappointing season. I don't know by anybody else. In fact,
I might even give them the most disappointing war. I
thought they had in all of the skill positions. They
had all the right players to achieve absolutely nothing. Coaching, Well,
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it could be Seahawks went on the road thirty eight
eighteen over the Cardinals. Another disappointing team this year. Bucks
easy over the Raiders twenty eight to thirteen. Titans cobbage.
They're now three to ten. Lost at home to the
Jags and they don't even have a quarterback. I mean,
you know you don't have a quarterback. When you play
a team who's on the road without a quarterback and
they win ten to six, you are a factory of
(33:08):
seven oh. They lost two. Browns lost to Pittsburgh twenty
seven to fourteen. On the hardwood. If we got some sneakers,
this squeak Calves beat the heat Sons lost by five
to the Magic Grizz one forty one to twelve over
the Wizards. That's a Memphis WRC market against the Wizard,
DC Freedom market. Two of our great markets fought in
(33:32):
basketball last night and the Grizz Maldam Warriors beat the Wolves.
Clippers lost to the Rockets, Kings won by forty four,
Lakers one oh seven ninety eight over Portland. Last night
on the ice, Stars doubts the Flame six to two,
Lightning forty two over the Canucks, cracking seven to five
over the Rangers. And birthdays today and they got it,
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puppy love. Do you know I was perusing all the
birthdays I didn't look to see which birthdays. Red said, no,
you're the same ones I did. I pretty much. I
didn't have Glenn Younkin, the governor of Virginia's fifty eighth
My son went, who's Donnie Osmond? I said he was.
He was the lead singer at the Osmen Brothers. Donnie
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Osman is sixty seven years old. Madame Judy Dench is
ninety and one of my all time favorite actors. He
alligator brunt in his veins. John Malkovic seventy one years old. Today, Hey,
if it's your birthday, Happy birthday. We were so glad
you were born, and thanks for making us a part
of your big day. We're all in this together. This
is your Morning Show with Michael nhild Joano