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December 10, 2024 33 mins

It was Luigi in the McDonald’s with the manifesto

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, I'm Michael del Johno, and your morning show can
be heard live as it's happening five to eight am
Central and six to nine Eastern on great stations like
six twenty WJDX and Jackson, Mississippi, or Akrons, News Talk
six forty w HLO and Akron, Ohio and News Radio
five seventy WDAK and Columbus, Georgia. We'd love to be
a part of your morning routine, but we're glad you're

(00:20):
here now. Enjoyed the podcast two.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Three starting your morning off right.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together. This is your morning show
with Michael Delchorn, funny man. Make me let you're proud
of me. Wait a minute, let me do my thing.
Look at the camera, I know as the monkey with
a symbol there. All right, I just got my morning

(00:51):
show pep talk from Jeffrey. I'll tell him every morning.
Don't dance for us, Muggy Red, not up, Pete's looking
stomach me. Don't watch the Mangione story eight minutes after
the hour. Thanks for waking up with your morning show
on the air and streaming live on your iHeartRadio app.
I am Michael del George, Jeffrey Lions at the controls

(01:11):
producer Red is here not wearing red today, dressed in black.
It's a somber occasion if you're just waking up. Luig
Gi Mangioni is in custody. Not a professional hit man.
I mean he had the Stanley Tucci look on the street.
But you know, so he's part in game show character's
flirt with the hostile front desk worker when they find

(01:36):
him at mcdwood a year for McDonald's right. They can't
get a break today, can they? Well, they did get
one break. So I woke up thinking, Wow, we're thinking
a professional hit man. He's in Altoona, PA. And McDonald's
having some chicken McNuggets. He still got we were combing

(01:57):
the lakes at Central Park. He's still got the gun
on him, he's still got the eye, the fake ID
that he handed to the hostel on him. And then
if that was going to leave any question, I mean
I loved one that the altun of police officers like
we knew immediately when we told him to lower his
mask and we had our man. Yeah, And then with
the free page manifest festo was in his top left box.

(02:18):
Last thing he searched out live was the UNI bombers manifesto.
But boy did we get this. I mean I told
you they you know, they either knew where he was,
but they couldn't find him because he left so many
identity clues. I mean the pictures in the in the
cab alone, I mean close ups. But in the end,
I don't think they did know. They just knew what

(02:39):
he looked like. And that's I think it was. Me
and Red were talking off the area, so I said, well,
its pictures everywhere. Somebody's going to see him. You know,
this is got the forty eight hours effect. Uh, And
that's exactly how it happened. It was a worker at
a McDonald's and we're talking about what are you hear
from McDonald's. I was gonna mention in the story of
the same title they never mentioned the lassyria.

Speaker 3 (03:05):
Seriously, if somebody were to walk in front of you,
would you really be able to identify the profile? I mean,
I've thought about that several times. That and that McDonald's worker.
If you were wanted and I didn't know you, and
you walked in front of me, would I be able
to identify you, Well, there.

Speaker 1 (03:26):
Is a guy on Facebook. I have to send you
the profile picture who I thought was me. There's two yeah,
and I thought, wouldn't this be anay opportunity to private
message myself? But then that was the only his profile
picture is the only picture looks like me. And then
when you go look at the other pictures on his wall,
he doesn't look like me. But no, I don't know.

(03:46):
I guess it just struck him. You know, he's seeing
all these images in newscasts and the guy I'll take
a Jaca mcneillgant. I wonder if he supersized it or
if he silenced it. I know it's him when he
ordered it a large frime. All the police police arrived,
told to lower his mass. They recognize him, and abada
being about a boom. That's it. So Luigi Mangioni in

(04:08):
the end, not a professional at all. In fact, a
very sloppy criminal, very smart guy. I mean, we find
out what he graduated from a prestigious private school where
he was valedictorian. He was in I notice how they
mentioned this. He was in the data business up until
a year ago. So makes me wonder if he got

(04:30):
fired and then trying to get health insurance, had a
bad you know, we just don't know. He just seems
to be disgruntled about the level of profits in the
healthcare industry and the unaffordability of health insurance. But the
suspect and the murder of the United Healthcare CEO, Brian Thompson,
is in custody. He's been arraigned and charged. He will

(04:53):
be soon extradited to New York. The evidence is overwhelming.
As I mentioned, he had the very fake ID that
he was using at the hostel in New York City.
In our sounds a day, you'll hear the arresting officer.
Maybe it was the chief of police that talked about
when they asked him if he had been in New

(05:14):
York in the last week, and apparently his whole demeanor change.
I mean, his demeanor should have changed. Well, I guess
you know, you could be at McDonald and thing. I
had a couple of officers want a cheeseburger. By the way,
it wasn't like nine am. I wasn't early yesterday. I mean,
I can't resist a McMuffin, sausage, egg and cheese McMuffin

(05:38):
with some I mean he was already doing chicken nuggets
for breakfast. He was waiting for the ten thirty switch
on the on the meal. In addition to the fake ID,
the very unique used in his possession, a manifesto in
his possession Courty senioraw enforcement officials he had last searched,

(06:09):
uh the manifesto of the unibomber that he had been reading.
Just a bizarre ending to the story, right, not a
pro at all, just a twenty six year old kid.
And and that was juxtapositioned with the big story out
of New York City, which is Daniel Penny being acquitted

(06:31):
in the case of Daniel Penny. This is such an
interesting story. I think the real twist is this so
yesterday and you're gonna hear this in our Sounds of
the Day later, shameless plugs for Sounds of the Day.
That'll be a kick it off, a shack an hour
here your body chill, that'd be Shike show five Chentral
Chavedo five E shirt, that'd be uh what four oh

(06:51):
five Western West Coast time, enjoying listening to your radio program? Well,
thank you, Yeah, he's got another one. He won't play
for you. I'm sure, Yeah, I won't. I won't play
that one. But uh, you know you're going to hear
the father of the homeless Man, and you'll hear the

(07:13):
Black Lives Matter leader. Listening to the audio of the
Black Lives Matter leader was right up there with listening
to the audio of Kamala Harris, who's apparently on the
holiday Christmas tour. She's going to everybody's holiday Christmas party,
the free one. Don't care, don't get everybody's already moved on. Gamala,
you're doing one that hasn't moved on. It is so

(07:35):
awkward to listen to it with tang.

Speaker 4 (07:39):
But she los and she can't come to to with it,
and she thinks.

Speaker 5 (07:47):
Is about to give up. Nobody be You and Joe
are gone. Don't that goofball? Uh but no, But here's
the odd thing. It's because of Black Lives Matter or

(08:10):
I don't even if I want to pin it on them.
The legacy media narrative, the Democrat Party narrative that all
cops were bad and all bad guys were good because
of a George Floyd incident, which, by the way, justice
was done. Three officers were charged and convicted, So not

(08:30):
all officers, those three and there was no injustice.

Speaker 1 (08:33):
They got justice. Joe Van's in jail right now. But
the very narrative the black lives matter, but cops don't
led to the police shortage, who the heck wants to
be a cop and that kind of an atmosphere. Can't

(08:54):
do your job, but if you do it, you could
end up in jail. Let the bad guys go. So
America's been living in lawlessness and Black Lives Matter is
the face of this movement. And so now you have
somebody in a non policed, crime ridden subway behaving like

(09:15):
a nut and a good Samaritan does something, well, he's equitted.
Now they want a vigilanti movement across the country by
this weekend for the very thing they caused. Here's the
cause again, trying to be the solution Black Lives Matter.
But I put that there with Kamala Harris for a

(09:38):
reason because as you're listening, the only thought that's going
to go through your money is we've all moved on
from both of these. I mean, nobody is. There's no
oxygen left for the Black Lives Matter story. There's no
audience for Kamala Harris and her don't get oh nobody's

(10:01):
giving up. In fact, for moving on in hope. You're
the only one morning your loss stop. You're embarrassing yourself,
kind of like the Dallas Cowboys who embarrassed themselves last
night losing twenty seven to twenty. You worked hard on
your clip, so of all the clips you have, you
have the block, but not the three hundred and sixty
nine yards and three touchdowns from Joe Burrow. But it

(10:22):
was that was like a three minute piece. But we
don't really want to play audio from a pair of
five and eight teams, do we. Well, all I played
It's Joe Buck. I named my fantasy team and made
the playoffs with last night, so that's honorable. That's blocks.
This is not sound.

Speaker 6 (10:43):
And picked up five Cincinnati out across the forty six.

Speaker 1 (10:48):
It was blocked by Nick Vigel. Great moment, fence comes
back onto the field. I wanted to see if I
could do it properly. You know. Yeah, the block is made. Yeah,
it's an interesting click to show. Nobody cares about. Right now,
I'm doing my Troy eight with my big hands close
to the camera. Everybody giggle the ever tell you about

(11:13):
my interception of football? No, oh, it was a great moment.
I was playing outside linebacker. Okay, past comes, I was like,
my god, I'm between. I have to ask, did you
wear underwear? I was wearing a jock okay, just during that.
I mean, by the way, that's a shameless plug for
the podcast My Harlem Globetrotter story on Friday. A show stopper,
I might add in the first hour, you know. But

(11:36):
I was in the flat and I thought, well, I
got a receiver behind me, and I got somebody come
on the backfield. I was kind of thinking more of
the guy coming out of the backfield, and the quarterback
throws it right to me. I mean, I didn't have
to do anything, but I took one step towards the ball.
I caught it forming a protective basket like I was
the receiver, and just started heading straight down the sideline.

(11:57):
It's a pick six. It's a foregone conclusion. You're the
I'm like, this is going to be the greatest thing
in the world. There's nobody around me. I took one
look to my left. There was nobody within fifteen yards
of me, and I tripped and fell. No, you didn't
down by contact you They you actually tripped yourself and
with them. My god, Well, people don't know this about me.

(12:17):
A little trivia fact. My mother and I both almost
died during birth. I was strangling to death on uibilical cords.
Doctor Heine was presiding over the delivery. Yes, it's on
my birth certificate. I said, Mom, you couldn't find a
better doctor than a Heine. But I was born with
a severe club foot like Dudley Moore. All day they Yeah,

(12:38):
I spent the first three and a half years in
my life in bars. So then the band they're up
in the stands and all that. And so to this day,
I don't walk, I don't drag my leg like Dudley Moore.
Oh okay, but it does come out. If I'm not
paying attention and I'm running, I'll trip because the foot's
naturally money to turn it. But it was a great
feeling until it happened. I don't bet Nick last night.

(13:00):
I'm sure he blocked it, kept his footing. I know
the Bengals went on to win. Why on Earth you
finally arrived with sound and it's up two five and
eight teams.

Speaker 4 (13:10):
I'm sorry in my sounds the thing you won't hear
any block pun but it was tight y, it would
tight a count of loss, and she's the day. She
still can't get over the lost.

Speaker 1 (13:24):
By the way, am I the only one that's been
thinking about this song all day long? Oh? My, I don't.
I'm not making light of it. No, somebody tells somebody
they're gonna go to jail for a long, long time,
as they should. But of all the names, Mangione, Chuck
Mangione eighty four years old. Can we take it to
the break with Chuck? Sure? Absolutely, all right. The basis

(13:48):
of this first twelve minutes was miss a little, you'll
miss a lot, miss a lot, will miss you. We
got one chance to understand and live this day. Tuesday,
December the tenth. Thanks for waking up with the show
that belongs to you. And it feels so good, doesn't it.
This is your morning show. It's your Morning Show with

(14:08):
Michael del Johno very special Christmas Plans, Christmas in America.
By that, it's a good time to do the Christmas
in America promo asked me why Why? Because I got
a little circle spinning and I don't think it's going
to stop anytime soon. Oh, it could be a good
time for storytime. Well, I gave you a chance to
hear a even better story than my interception when I tripped,
But you didn't take him. Well, I said, yeah, I

(14:30):
wanted to hear it.

Speaker 7 (14:31):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Anyway, coming up on Christmas Day, actually Christmas Eve morning
and Christmas morning, we have Christmas in America nineteen twenty
eight and nineteen seventy three plan for you. We will
find the manger in those two years to best understand
the God of all mangers and the God of this year.
So it's going to be an extraordinary narrative and musical
journey for you on Christmas Day morning and Christmas Eve morning.

(14:56):
So I had this wait, wait, hang on a second.
Oh no, it's going to work now, Okay, I guess
I'll do news. You have to wait for the Shannon
Ryan story. Luigi Mangioni, the suspect in the Manhattan murder
of the United Healthcare of the United Healthcare CEO, is
facing the laundry list of charges after being arrested Monday

(15:19):
in Pennsylvania. To McDonald's Sarah Lee Kessler reports.

Speaker 8 (15:23):
He's been arranged in Altoona on forgery charges, tampering with identification,
giving false idea to police, carrying a firearm without a license,
and possessing a weapon that was the instrument of a crime.
Police say Mangioni was carrying a ghost gun and silencer
made by a three D printer and showed a fake
New Jersey license to cops when they questioned him at

(15:44):
a local McDonald's. The twenty six year old Maryland man
will be extradited to New York to face a murder
charge in last Wednesday's assassination of Brian Thompson outside Midtown
Manhattan Hilton. I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.

Speaker 1 (15:59):
Meanwhile, back in a y Mark, the marine veteran charged
in the deadly New York City subway choke hold, was
found not guilty. Mark Mayfield has that story.

Speaker 9 (16:06):
Daniel Penny was charged with manslaughter and negligent homicide in
last year's chokehold death of Jordan Neely on a subway train.
The jury phone Penny not guilty of negligent homicide after
he was acquitted of the top charge of manslaughter last week.
When the jury could not reach a verdict, Penny's defense
argued that Neely was threatening to hurt people. All prosecutors
say he went too far in holding his chokehold grip

(16:29):
by Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
And you heard the block punt. The Cowboys lost twenty
seven to twenty last night on Monday Night Football to
the Bengals, both now five and eight. Joe Burrow three
hundred and sixty nine yards, three touchdowns and none of
them to t Higgins. So I advanced to the fantasy
football players. But nothing selfish about me. That's your top story.
Speaking of Hi, this is Jimmy Bourne.

Speaker 4 (16:47):
My morning show is your morning show with Michael del Jorno.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
Hey, gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
morning show live. Make us a part of your morning
routine or your drive to work companion on great stations
like Talk Radio ninety eight point three and fifteen ten
WLAC in Nashville, Tupelos News and Talk one to one
point one and ten sixty WKMQ, and how about Talk
six to fifty KSTE at Sacramento, California. Love to have

(17:20):
you listen live, but are grateful you're here now for
the podcast. Enjoy. Yesterday we were talking at great length.
Now I forgot the number was at seven hundred and
sixty nine million dollars over fifteen years. Whatever it was
it came to fifty one million dollars a year. Then
we started kicking around the deal that Nolan Ryan would
have been in nineteen seventy nine, which was a four

(17:41):
million dollar four year deal. What would you take Nolan
Ryan for a mill or Juan Soto for fifty one
million a year? How does anybody ever live up to that?
One guy that may know is David Bissay. He is
at the National Baseball League Winter League meetings in Dallas, Texas.
I would imagine David, that's the big story, right, Juan

(18:02):
Soto or anybody making that kind of money over fifteen years?

Speaker 6 (18:06):
Oh well yeah, everybody's buzzing over Juan Soto. US Mere
mortals can't even even put that into context.

Speaker 1 (18:16):
Well, twenty six years old, I thought I was a
big shot making sixty g's. This guy's making fifty one
million a year. At twenty six I did notice on Twitter, though,
a lot of angry New York Yankee fans posting videos
on X last night with some pretty amazing messages for
Juan Soto and his creed. All right, talk to us

(18:36):
about what the big topics are at the Winter leagues
and what baseball fans can expect in the coming year
besides the Dodgers and the Mets.

Speaker 6 (18:45):
Yeah, well, it's not always the highest salary payrolls that
make it to the World Series. There's a young Japanese
picture that is going to be posted this morning and
his name is Roki Sazaki. He throws consistently one hundred
miles an hour. And my understanding is from the buzz

(19:05):
and the lobby year, the Dodgers, the Padres, and the
Yankees are all favorites to land this young phenom who
is coming over earlier than what many expected him to do,
because his salary for the next six years is going
to be like a minor league player that just got
called up. So remember that name, Roki Sazaki. He's the

(19:28):
next Japanese scenom. And also, you know, the ripple effects
of Juan Soto signing with the Yankees has really favored
another Scott Boris client and Alex Bregman. My understanding is
the Yankees the Red Sox are definitely maybe not in
a full blown bitting war, but certainly competing after the

(19:49):
same player.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
David Bissey is at the Major League Baseball Winter Meetings
in Dallas. You know, obviously the Mets came up just
short of making it to the World Series. You might think,
Juan Soto, they also picked homes out of the bullpen.
They double robbed the Yankees. These could be the final
pieces of the puzzle. But that's still a lot of
money to buy a World Series with. And I was

(20:14):
thinking back yesterday to Bud Selig and all the work
he did to try to even the playing field for
the smaller markets to be able to compete, and all
these years later, I'm thinking to myself, with that signing
yesterday of Juan Soto, I don't know that he achieved
his goal. How concerned are owners for parody in the league?
I mean, how can people compete with these big cities
and these national programs and the kind of money they

(20:36):
can pay for a superstar? I guess find people phenoms
in Japan for minor league salaries. Is the way to compete, right.

Speaker 6 (20:44):
Yeah, that's one way, but player development, drafting and no, honestly, Michael,
all these owners, all thirty owners, are making a lot
of money, and they're making a lot of money off
of teams like the Yankees, Dodgers, and Mets. With the
revenue sharing that Bud seely put in place. But you know,

(21:06):
teams like the Pirates have got to start putting that
money back into the team instead of pocketing that money.
So there is a way for them to compete. It's
just a matter of whether or not these owners want
to reinvest in their team instead of investing it somewhere else.

Speaker 1 (21:23):
Yeah. I looked with the exception of the Cubs who
won the World Series in twenty sixteen. For the Cubs,
you bring up Pittsburgh, I could also probably easily throw
in Cincinnati as another great example. Teams that had storied
histories but now really can't compete with these salaries, putting
out subpar products, but by and large getting away with

(21:43):
it at the stadium, and you wonder how long they
can play that game. You know, you got to find
a way to win at least once every couple of decades,
I think, to keep to keep history alive in the present.
And some of these markets are not competing very well.

Speaker 6 (21:59):
Yeah, just speaking about Cincinnati in particular, they made some
bad mistakes and they stuck with a manager that really
wasn't effective and David Bell and a GM that wasn't effective.
So again, you know, you look at the Cubs.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
They they did.

Speaker 6 (22:16):
A complete rebuild, tear down, and went to the draft.
The Astros did the same. But you know, the Reds
are on the right track with a lot of good
young players. But now that a lot of these cable
TV dollars are starting to evaporate, they've reorganized it. And

(22:36):
that's why you're seeing some of these other mid market
teams spend early on in free agency because they've gotten
a new revenue stream. But like I said, there's revenue
sharing and a lot of these teams need to start
reinvesting those dollars they're getting from the big market teams
into players to make their team better. That was the

(22:58):
spirit of the rule that a Budd Seedly put in
place many years ago.

Speaker 1 (23:03):
David Vise hanging out at the Major League Baseball Winter
Meetings this year in Dallas. It was here in Nashville.
Camera was it last year a couple of years ago,
But Dallas has turned this last year. Last year was here. Yeah,
And the big buzz is a Japanese phenom and he
is going to belong to.

Speaker 6 (23:19):
Whom either the Dodgers, the Padres, or the Yankees. And
the other buzz is Alex Regman from the Houston Astros.
The Yankees need to get some offense to replace Soto.
He's a guy that's on their radar, as well as
Max Freed, who's a free agent who bitch for the

(23:39):
Braves his entire career.

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Great reporting, David, we'll talk again soon. Appreciate it very much.
Thank you for joining us. You got it forty three
minutes after the hours, seventeen minutes before the top of
the hour. For just waking up. Guess what I'm getting again?
What's this spinning circle? What's causing this? I don't know.
We should probably do Sound of the Day. It could
be all those loaded causing this, but I can try

(24:03):
to see if this will work anyway. Turns out the suspect,
the suspect arrested in the murder of the United Healthcare
CEO in Manhattan last week, is a Maryland man with
Ivy League degrees. Sarah Lee Kesler reports.

Speaker 8 (24:17):
Luigi Mangioni, the twenty six year old man facing charges
in the assassination of Brian Thompson, graduated from the University
of Pennsylvania in twenty twenty with a bachelor and master's
degree in computer science, who was valedictorian of a private boys' school,
the Gilman School in Baltimore. The NYPD said Mangioni was

(24:38):
found with a handwritten manifesto. Newsweek reporting that it said
that violence is the only way to change the healthcare
industry and that, in his words, these parasites had a coming.
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.

Speaker 1 (24:51):
Here's a crazy story. Almost two hundred people are dead
in Haiti after a weekend of violence that reportedly targeted
voodoo practitioners. Mark Mayfield has that story.

Speaker 9 (25:00):
The killings in the capital port of Prints were orchestrated
by a gang leader who believed his son's illness was
a result of voodoo as according to the Committee for
Peace and Development. UN Secretary General Antonio go Teris called
the violence horrific.

Speaker 1 (25:13):
His office at at.

Speaker 9 (25:13):
Least one hundred and eighty four people, including one hundred
and twenty seven elderly men and women, had been left dead.
The Haitian Prime Minister's office called the slaughter a monstrous
crime that constitutes a direct attack on humanity.

Speaker 1 (25:26):
I'm Mark Neefield. Elon Musk is on a mission to
make the government more efficient, but he's not going to
be able to do it alone. Brian Shuk reports.

Speaker 2 (25:34):
He must work with a new congressional caucus co chaired
by Texas Republican Pete's Sessions, who says they have a simple.

Speaker 1 (25:41):
Goal, every dollar the government needs, but not a pain anymore.

Speaker 2 (25:45):
He says a key part of the process will be
to roll back the work from home movement that started
during COVID. The lack of oversight, he says, has made
workers less efficient. Sessions invited Democrats, who called Musk's department
unconstitutional and elite, to be a part of it.

Speaker 1 (26:01):
I'm Brian Schuck. I don't know I have how I
ended up with two kids that are country music fans,
but I did, and Morgan Wallan is everything to my daughter.
His chair throwing case will be presented to a Tennessee
grand jury. Lisa Taylor has the details.

Speaker 10 (26:16):
Lisa, the CMA Entertainer of the Year, is accused of
tossing a chair off the rooftop of Eric Church's Nashville
bar Chiefs back in April. It narrowly missed the Metro
Nashville Police officers who were standing on the ground below
while in his charge with reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct.

(26:37):
Attorneys for the singer are said to appear in court
on Tuesday.

Speaker 1 (26:40):
I'm Lisa Taylor. Well, today's a day for beer lovers.
Not that I can say that I'm one of them,
but if you love beer, this is your day. Bree
Tennis with everything you need to know about National Lagger Day.

Speaker 7 (26:51):
Today, we celebrate the third most popular beverage in the world. Today,
it's not about water number one or tea number two.
It's all about the lagger. Today. The oldest human produced
drink in the world, dating back to ancient Egypt. Five ingredients,
brewed cold because science found out cold is best for
like Chris beer, and who can argue with more than
three thousand years of craftsmanship. American homebrew says loggers are

(27:15):
great with any kind of food and any kind of event,
including holiday shopping.

Speaker 1 (27:19):
I'm Bree Tennis. Did you know that I would have
never I did not guess. The beer goes back three
thousand years to ancient Egypt. I mean pre Tennis fascinating,
far more fascinating than your blocked punt audio earlier I
deleted it. Munday Knife football Dallas Cowboys lost at home
twenty seven to twenty to the Bengals. Both now five
and eight on the ice. The Docks lost but in

(27:41):
a shootout, so we get a point three to two
to more at all. And it was the birthday boy
last night with what was it three hundred and seventy
eight yards three touchdowns over three hundred Joe Burrow, quarterback
of the Cincinnati Bengals, twenty eight years old. Today, chef
Bobby Flay is sixty and Partridge family oldest sister Susan Day.

(28:02):
Anybody want to take a guess? Oh man, let's see.
It's gonna make you feel really old. I'm gonna say
sixty five. She's in her seventy seventy two years old today,
Susan Day. Love me though, And if it's your birthday,
Happy birthday to you. We're so glad you were born.
And thanks for making your morning show a part of
your big day. This is your morning show with Michael Deltono.

(28:26):
You can't have your morning show without your voice. Use
the talkback button. It's on your iHeartRadio app. If that's
where you're listening to see a little microphone you press it.
Count you down, three two, one, lot of being by
the boom, No more waiting on, hold, rotting out, hold,
waiting for a talk shows to come to you your question,
your thoughts instantly here at the Morning Kitchen Table, and
we appreciate using the talk back button. Can always email

(28:47):
Michael de Michael D. We spare you the spelling of
the last name at iHeartMedia dot com if you're just
waking up. Altoona police have twenty six year old Luigi
Mangionian custody. He's the suspect in the manhunt for the
killer of the United Healthcare CEO Brian Thompson. They found
him with the weapon, they found him with the fake ID,
they found him with a three page manifesto. We think

(29:11):
we got our guy. Meanwhile, Marine veteran Daniel Penny has
been charged and was charged with the deadly New York
City subway choke hold. Was found not guilty and acquitted yesterday.
BLM is calling on all persons of color to carry
out vigilante activities through the week. Obviously, vigilantism would be

(29:32):
to go after the criminal, take the law to your
own hands and get the criminal, not go out and
get innocent people because you don't like the way a
court case turned out. TikTok is asking for an emergency
motion by the way. I have to interrupt and just
say this. I feel like this entire show was going
great until you played that audio of the blocked punt.
It's kind of taking it down slid since, don't you think?

(29:54):
Is it just me and my only one feeling it? Weird?

Speaker 3 (29:57):
Things have happened since we played the block punt. Yes,
I will agree with you there, And we still haven't
heard the story about the cheerleader.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
But well it's not as good as the globe trotter story.
They could be, And you ought to be feeling pretty
bad that you made fun of me for I had
to pick six but I tripped at the twelve yard
line and you didn't know I had like a Forrest
Gump childhood. Well no I didn't. I just couldn't see
all the cheerleaders like bullying me run. So anyway, this

(30:29):
is girl Shannon Ryan. She's one of the cheerleaders. She's
so cute in the Irish cheerleading uniform too. I had
such a crush on her, But you know, I had
some bad, bad experiences with crushes, Like my first was
Becky Green. Becky Green, I think was second grade or
fourth grade, fourth grade, And I finally took me. You
know how slow a day goes by, let alone months

(30:50):
in elementary school like an eternity. And so finally I
give Susan Barry this little note and it says do
you like me at a square? Yes and no? Maybe
to check one. I said give this to Bridget Seaford
and it came back gross no. So I had no

(31:13):
confidence that stuck with me like four or five years.
Gross no. So finally I'm a freshman in high school
and Shannon Ryan is one of the most gorgeous girls
in the entire school. I just assume she's not interested
in somebody like me, and it turns out she is.

Speaker 9 (31:28):
No.

Speaker 1 (31:29):
But there was a weird twist. My brother was obsessed
with her, so she felt uncomfortable dating me with my
brother obsessed with her, My middle brother, Fredo, not the
cool one, Sony. One night, you know, we're together and
we finally have a kiss. So here's my dream. This
is my big recovery from Bridget Seaford in the fourth grade.

(31:54):
And I go and I finally get a chance to
kiss Shannon Ryan. It's a one and only kiss because
we can't be fate, and it's like a hallmark. We
can't be because of my brother. And I couldn't feel
the kiss because I had chap lips. That's the way
finally got to kiss her, and I couldn't feel because
had chap lips. Unbelievably intercepted a ball running for a touchdown.

(32:15):
There's no more than fifteen yards. I just tripped because
of a club foot. All of this because you played
that block punt story and ruined the entire show.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
I hope you're satisfied. I'm really not, and I apologize
to the audience. What a year for McDonald's. Right, that's
the headline in the in the story in the Daily Caller.
But really, when you think about it, it's not an
insane year for McDonald's. You realize it's only been about
an insane month.

Speaker 1 (32:43):
And roughly the last month, just as Trump went, yeah,
Trump just goes to McDonald's. Next thing, you know, he's
learning how everything well, well it all begins with Kamala, right,
who lied and said she worked at McDonald's. Right, he
doesn't go to McDonald's if she doesn't lie about going
working at McDonald's when she was a teenager. So anyway, yeah,
Donald trump servant fries working to drive through. Really, from

(33:04):
that moment on, it was over, and he coasted to
a electoral college landslide victory, even winning the popular vote.
Then they get e Coli for a month, I'm eating there.
Then I'm doing the story. They're finally clear of you,
col I've been eating there for two weeks. Yikes. And
then now here's this professional hit job on the United
Healthcare CEO. And it turns out it's not a professional.

(33:26):
It's a twenty six year old former valedictorian of an
Ivy League school, just you know, pop. And where do
they find him? Sitting in a McDonald's eating a chicken McNugget.
I mean, it's been quite a year, but really quite
a month? Are you, Louis or Louis? And I'm not
going to play chuck Manngione anymore that could be perceived
as a poor taste. We're all in this together. This

(33:49):
is Your Morning Show with Michael nhild Joe and Now
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