Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. You can listen to your morning
show live on the air or streaming live on your
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(00:22):
join us live and make us a part of your
morning routine. In the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Two three starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:31):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding,
because we're in this together.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
This is your morning show with Michael Gill Trump.
Speaker 1 (00:43):
Michael, I just can't go on being your heided lady.
Let's Stephanie Mills. Now they're even harassing me by way
of email.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
Everybody's getting it on the joke.
Speaker 1 (00:58):
I love it, tarrot Maani. I meant to say, hid
Joe Biden, I said, apparently I still haven't even heart.
I did the news conference. I apologize, I promise it will,
but my part grammar. Then the voice guy sends a
personalized message. He's uplisting in New Orleans. It's been a
rough morning. I think our punt got blocked eight minutes
(01:20):
after the hour. Welcome to December the eleventh, Wednesday. You
have our Lord twenty twenty four on the Aarin streaming
live on your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show.
I am Michael del Journal. Jeffrey's got the controls Reds here.
David Sinati getting ready to join us. By the way,
there's one thing I did not change my mind on
and won't change my mind on. There's another I've completely
(01:40):
changed my mind on. Remind me to do that. But
first things first, Where Joe Biden go This has been
so strange. It's unlike anything we've had in well over
one hundred and fifty years. But you know, Donald Trump
is the president, goes away for four years, he will
(02:00):
be president again. That's different in and of itself. But
the way Joe Biden has disappeared, it appears as though
Donald Trump is back to running the country and he
hasn't even taken his second oath of office yet. That
all feels strange. Joe finally resurfaces in somebody unplugs electricity
on his telepromptery yesterday, But where is Joe? We went
from a desire for a peaceful transferral to what appears
(02:23):
to be a premature transferral of power. Your Morning Show
senior contributor Davesonati is here to say he's probably where
he's always been, and that is wherever he is because
it doesn't matter. Podesta is really running the country, and
he's been writing more checks.
Speaker 2 (02:37):
Hiding behind John Podesta's desk, which goes all the way
back to the first Clinton administration.
Speaker 1 (02:43):
Yeah, that's is it hiding or hided? Now, let's not
go back to that again. Oh well, here we go.
Speaker 2 (02:50):
So, yeah, first off, mister Podesta is busily cashing out
every last opportunity to write a check in regards to
the Inflation Reduction Act. Some media reports say it's as
much as one hundred billion dollars. He's trying to get
pushed across his desk in such a way that it
can't be retrieved by the new administration coming in and
(03:11):
canceling out the program of the project. So they're trying
to get that money so far down the pipeline of
their friends so quickly that, you know, regardless of whether
or not there's even the slightest hope of return for
American taxpayers. It's just payola. And that's what the Insultial
Reduction Act has always been.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
So let me do what the Chicago bear fired coach
didn't have the sense of doing, call time out. Does
this tell us what the highest priority of the Podesta
agenda is?
Speaker 2 (03:40):
You know, I'm not even sure John Podesta, in spite
of all his advocacy, believes in the Green New Deal
or believes in climate change. It is the mechanism by
which the Source organization is exporting American dollars to strategic allies.
Speaker 3 (03:54):
In this country and around the world. It's a plan.
Speaker 2 (03:58):
It's a plan to diminish the effective power of Congress
to control American energy. And that's really what this is
all about, because whoever controls American energy controls the American economy.
And so they've been trying through this sort of mental
terrorism of frightening people so badly that they have to
accept a lower, colder, weirder, poorer world. Here in the
(04:22):
name of their let's all save the climate.
Speaker 1 (04:24):
Can I connect the dot?
Speaker 3 (04:25):
Strange religion? Can I connect the dot?
Speaker 1 (04:28):
So this all begins, and I don't think it had
anything to do with global warming, and I don't think
it has anything to do with the health of our
earth and sustainability of mankind. But this all began with
Agenda twenty one and at the UN, and Agenda twenty
one was really about population control, but it was really
about human control. So it was the globalization of the
(04:49):
world under an umbrella of government. Now what's the problem, Well,
the United States would be a problem, China would be
a problem, Russia would be a problem. Have to do
is a massive redistribution of wealth. So you take underdeveloped
nations and you develop them with the developed nations money,
and you know, so on and so forth. You've got
(05:10):
to eliminate economic and military superpowers in order to globally control.
Now it's all done under the mechanism and Agenda twenty
one of the environment. But you can see clearly it's
about control, same thing as COVID. So what you're suggesting
is just as I don't think the environment had anything
to do with Agenda twenty one and globalization, it still doesn't.
(05:31):
This is just one hundred billion dollars to redistribute wealth.
That is very consistent with Agenda twenty one. In other words,
these people haven't gone very far, have they well, and
they still believe they can control the American voter through fear.
Speaker 3 (05:43):
And this is what they're going to do.
Speaker 4 (05:44):
Now.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
The next thing that their next most powerful weapon is
they are going to mobilize ferociously against maintaining the Trump
tax cuts which are due to expire, and Congress has
to take care of first order of business in this
new session. Now that will bring them back. They're really
their fondest platform, the basis upon which they all stand,
which is class envy, and class envy of.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
Course is well, they will start to hear.
Speaker 2 (06:08):
You will start to hear everywhere, everywhere, everywhere, everywhere about
we have to have equity and taxes, and what we're
doing is destroying the middle class.
Speaker 3 (06:15):
And the Trump tax cuts will do only benefit the rich.
Speaker 2 (06:18):
Now you'll never hear from their side the fact that
fifty percent of all of the taxes paid in the
United States, as far as income tax are paid by
the top ten percent, or more than that. In fact,
if you take ninety seven percent of all taxes paid,
said better correct it this way, ninety percent of all
federal income taxes paid are paid by the top fifty
(06:40):
percent income class, the rest fifty percent of the people
in this country who paid context the rest pay two
percent two point three percent. Now, how can you be
any more anti equity than that? But they'll still say
that that's a prejudicial system to play off of people's
sense of envy.
Speaker 1 (06:58):
And agreed. You brought up the key point, which is envy. See,
envy doesn't get into specifics. Envy doesn't really care about facts.
Envy drives by that. Every time I do this, I
crack up because I think of Rush in my Honda
Cord and he was bigger than the entire car, but
he was in the passenger seat. This is before he
lost all his way and we were driving uptown in
(07:19):
New Orleans and he says, starts, don't you wonder what
all these people do?
Speaker 3 (07:23):
I mean, I make a good living. I couldn't afford
a house like this.
Speaker 1 (07:27):
Pull over.
Speaker 3 (07:27):
Let's knock out a door, let's ask them what they do.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
And it was hilarious and we were cracking up, and
I said, yeah, I don't know. I don't know what
they do. I never had that kind of money. But
envy's different than even that. That's curiosity. Envy is you
just passed by a big home and you assume they
have something follow this that belongs to you. That's envy.
Envy doesn't look at it as well. I don't really
(07:51):
care what sacrifices he made. This guy probably never went
to parties in college. He was busy studying when I
was afraid to take an entreprene neural risk. He did
when I wanted to spend time watching football or playing
with my friends. This guy was probably working day and
night and investing and reinvent. We never take into account
anything they've done, things that they have done to achieve
(08:14):
that that you wouldn't do and wouldn't want that in
exchange for what you would have given up. But it
doesn't look at it, just drives by and sees they
have it. I don't. It belongs to me, not them.
That's envy. And that's the game they play upon, and
there's an audience for it.
Speaker 2 (08:31):
And well, and certainly in a realm now talking about
tex SUTs is very very important for them because this
is where they really go on full parade. So they'll
be parading by March. You can rest assured that this
will be the next subject we get through the inauguration
and all that sort of stuff. But then it gets
down to business in Congress, and you're going to see
(08:51):
a resurgence, like a tidal wave of class entity.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
You'll see the attempt of it. Do you think there's
an audience for it? Ay, there will always be an audience.
Will it be big enough? That's next question.
Speaker 2 (09:00):
Because at the same time, you can rest assured that
John Podesta and George Soros and the Center for American Progress.
Speaker 3 (09:05):
Have already started recruiting candidates for.
Speaker 2 (09:08):
The next of congressional elections in two years, and if
they can tip five seats, then they will stop the
Trump agenda. So there's no way they will not stick
around to make that happen. But we always talk about cycles.
Speaker 1 (09:21):
David Sonatti's our senior contributor, and he's also the CEO
of the American Policy round Table and the host and
grand Master of Christmas in America that you will hear
Christmas Eve morning, at Christmas Day morning here on your
morning show, a spectacular in nineteen seventy three. This year
old think I've forgotten that, But no, they go in cycles,
and everybody's kind of focused on Doge and the brilliance
(09:42):
of Doge twofold one. We all knew he was going
to secure the border. We all knew he was going
to deport the criminals. We all knew he was going
to continue the tax cuts. He was going to lower
the regulations. He was going to drill, baby, drill, get
energy prices down. These things would all affect the grocery
store prices, gas prices, and restore the economy. We knew that.
(10:03):
But he ends up making his first one hundred day
effort Doge. Doge makes the conclusion, we don't have a
revenue problem, and we don't. In fact, America has enjoyed
highest record revenues, unfortunately offset by crazy spending deficits in debt.
But Doge acknowledges we have a spending problem, and we're
(10:24):
going to start with waste, and we're going to start
with mismanagement and the things that government shouldn't be doing
that it is doing. And I think America is going
to like that. They seem to like it. Even some
Democrats are coming on board. And you're going to bring
out that old chestnut somehas some don't hate them, hate
each other. Let's tear it down.
Speaker 2 (10:42):
Because if what happens in this process, people become convinced
of this reality that we are all being ripped off
by government waste.
Speaker 1 (10:52):
Which I think they are right now. I think they
are right now.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
Amplify that, and we can reveal that, and we can
show that and continue to show that. And this is
a part of the of what we do with the
American Policy round Table. Big government is not a good idea.
Speaker 3 (11:04):
I mean, the.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
Reason that the founders didn't pass term limits at the
very beginning they considered it intently is they thought, to themselves,
who would ever want to do this for a living.
You can't take any money. There's malaria in all the
swamps in Washington, d C. There's no air conditioning course
to be.
Speaker 3 (11:22):
Below seat.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
We've always said the one way to put this thing
on autopilot and solve everything would be a zero based,
prioritized balanced budget, no continuing resolutions, one budget every two years,
so that coincides with the congressional elections, a flatterfare attacks
that way, everybody's got skin in the game. Term limits
(11:46):
would clearly do it. And then you get into some
other things like only paper in person voting US senators
chosen again by states, that we can debate. I am
the most radical. I would take the current debt and
divide it by households and make it their bill. Then
they'll start really paying attention to how government spends.
Speaker 2 (12:04):
Completely agreement that, even if it's only a campaign, that
is theoretical. On that line, if we could get that
message out to people, they would realize what they're owning
for their children and their grandchildren.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
But here's the ultimate point of we don't have nice things. Michael,
I'm sorry, it's why we don't have those nice things.
That's right. I would boil it down to this, isn't
it funny? The one question never answered, never asked, and
it's the most relevant. What is the proper size and
(12:34):
role of government? What is the role and responsibility of
the self governed?
Speaker 3 (12:39):
And intent?
Speaker 1 (12:40):
That is never asked, never answered, And we wonder why
we can't get to those four simple things that would
put this on autopilot and headed in the right direction. You,
my friend, I fear, are headed to overtime today. I
want to discuss when we come back, the uniqueness of
this transition of power where it appears by gone. Kamala
(13:01):
is on the Christmas holiday tour where only she is
having a hard time letting go of the election. Everybody
else has moved on, and then the one thing I
haven't changed my mind on and the one thing I
have changed my mind on that more as we continue
with David Zanatti's CEO of the American Policy Roundtable.
Speaker 3 (13:20):
It's your Morning Show with Michael del Chino.
Speaker 5 (13:25):
Yeah, I just want to push back a little bit
against John Decker Guardian birth right.
Speaker 3 (13:28):
So it's the ship. Yeah.
Speaker 5 (13:29):
I fully understand it takes the constitutional amendment to make
these things happen. But if somebody doesn't get these kind
of big ideas rolling at least in our consciousness, we're
not ever going to solve this, not going to get
done in four years, not going to be under Trump,
but we've got to least start moving that direction.
Speaker 3 (13:47):
Just my opinion.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
Man, No, that's a great opinion, and that's why I said,
I think this is just a floater. I think what
he's going to do and committed to do is deport
those illegals that are in the country with a criminal record.
But yeah, stuff like that, but it would take a
constitutional act and that's not a simple thing to do.
I was teasing something. I'm not going to change my
(14:09):
mind on Unfortunately it was an email and not a talkback.
Somebody had some pushback to our visit with Rory as well.
When I said whether or not they would, you know,
do this federally or through the state. Why would you
do that? Why would you do that? And the person
was asking me is he being sarcastic? And I don't know.
I didn't have time to really address it, but the
answer would be I'm not changing my mind, And the
(14:32):
answer would be, I don't know. Daniel Penny the fact
that they're not charging him with first degree murder, I mean,
if this is not first degree murder, what is? Or
you know, see Donald Trump any number of cases in
New York. I think most Americans are suspicious of proper
law and order and prosecution in New York. It might
(14:55):
they might do better to go federally instead of state.
I think it was a legitimate question. I stand by
that the one I changed my mind on. I you know,
it's not that big of a deal. Twice a year
we turn the clock back, right, Davi, We only got
a minute and a half, so we'll save the Biden
thing after the news. But let me give you an
example if because normally I would have said, yeah, I'm
for just leave the same time, not anymore. For example,
(15:17):
if we just left the same time, when we move
our clocks back an hour, we doomed northern Maine to
darkness at three forty five in the afternoon. It gets
pretty dark early here in Nashville too. We're in a
tough cusp for that. But you know, if we didn't
do that, you would have if we stayed standard time
year round, those same folks would have daylight coming through
(15:41):
their windows at three point thirty nine am. And then
they have this chart where you start looking at when
it gets dark and when it gets light based on
the time of the year, and it gets to be
ridiculous numbers. In fact, you wouldn't see sun in some
parts until nine oh one on January for I mean, yeah,
we kind of have to move the hour, don't We.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
Don't worked very well? Yeah? Did we?
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Was that? When did we go to this?
Speaker 2 (16:05):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (16:05):
I think it was in the seventies that a shot
was made at this and it was like.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Eh no, yeah, that would I change my mind? Done
whether or not to do this case federally. By the way,
Manngioni is Italian. I have no idea what the family picture.
They're all wearing India Indian clothing. Will try to solve
that as well.
Speaker 5 (16:22):
I'm Joe Big in Tampa and my morning show is
Your Morning Show with Michael Bilgiono.
Speaker 1 (16:35):
Hi, it's me Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard
live daily on great radio stations like News Radio six
fifty k e NI Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven ninety
Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one oh four seven in Washington,
d C. We'd love to have you listen live every day.
Make us a part of your morning routine, but better
late than never. Enjoy the podcast we were talking about.
(16:55):
You know this, this whole thing is historic in and
of itself. In fact, it's only happened one other time
in Grover Cleveland. I was right, it was the eighteen hundreds.
He won in eighty four, he lost in eighty eight,
came back and won a second term in eighteen ninety two.
So it's been some one hundred and thirty years ago
since this happened. So that makes this all very, very different.
This is not, you know, a president elect as much
(17:18):
as it is a former president. But adding to that
is the oddity of Joe Biden just kinds of disappears.
Kam is going around, you know, don't give up everything
being fine, and of course nobody's even thinking about her,
let alone having any kind of you know, she's going
to Christmas parties and talking like there's a planned insurrection
coming and there's just no audience for that narrative. But
(17:42):
the oddest thing is how Biden seems to have disappeared. David,
I don't know how to paint the picture any clearer
than this. It's Donald Trump, the president elect, who's in France,
sitting next to the first the spouse of the France president,
with Joe Biden, Joe Biden's wife one person away. It's
(18:04):
as if Joe Biden has left and Donald Trump is
already serving. The ball is already moving. America seems to
be behind the ball that is wronging, and he hasn't
even taken his second inaugural address or a the office.
Speaker 3 (18:17):
What do you make of this?
Speaker 2 (18:18):
Well, the level of our vulnerability is a nation for
the last four years is staggering. It's frightening. We've been
more vulnerable than ever before and it's been covered up.
The level of our vulnerability over these next forty days
is frightening if you think about it, and by Donald
(18:38):
Trump in essence getting up off the chair early necessary
to work, he's basically saying, just understand, it may look
like forty days, but on day forty one you would
be very sorry.
Speaker 1 (18:51):
Well, he came out, made the address directly to Hamas,
and Iran ultimately released these hostages or else. As soon
as I take the office, there's going to be hell
to pay. I'll never be able to prove it, but
it sure looked like and it was probably Pedesta in
Soros more than Biden or seemingly trying to start a
(19:14):
world war or escalate things into world war. And it
looks like Donald Trump got on the phone with Kim
Jong un, got on the phone with Vladimir Putin and
doubts that. I mean, so I think we were vulnerable
for four years. Yes, I don't think we've been vulnerable
since the election result because these countries know what's coming
and the accountability. But it's strange. I guess the question
(19:35):
becomes was Joe Biden never really running the country, And
now because Podesta has moved on to writing final checks
on his way out the door, it just appears as
though Biden has disappeared, or is Joe Biden a disgruntled
former employee was forced out because Joe Biden looked like
somebody that voted for Donald Trump not resented.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Him well, and the said capacities, we don't know how
many hours a day that Joe Biden actually is cognizant
of what's going on.
Speaker 3 (20:06):
We just don't. And I'm just trying to be fair.
Speaker 2 (20:09):
I'd give them the benefit of the doubt because it
just doesn't look good no matter where we are. So
fortunately Donald Trump got off the chair. Michael, have you
seen the film Reagan? No, I have not watched it yet,
but you know, I finally broke down and watched it
last night. Because I tend to be so against anything
that seems like a Dnesh to Suze a production.
Speaker 3 (20:29):
This was not anything that's it's.
Speaker 2 (20:32):
Like, okay, let's get you know, let's yeah with Dennis Quaid.
Let's treat everybody like all conservatives or fourth graders, and
we're going to, you know, watch the fireworks and go ooh.
This is a substante piece because it's based on Paul Kanger,
the professor at Grove City College's book The Crusader and
Kanger has written more on Reagan than just buy anybody else,
(20:55):
and it's he's got the facts right. And when you
look at the facts, it's the insight of Reagan and
understanding the currents of the day and how to make
strategic alliances and when to move. And I feel that
somehow Trump may be now in that sort of analysis
where he's got people who are giving him the right
advice on how to navigate on the geopolitical front, and
(21:16):
that's a tremendous value. He's got great domestic instincts. It
sounds like this experience factor's kicking in because he seems
like he's making all the right moves in regards to
what to say to the world to help them understand
there is indeed a new president.
Speaker 1 (21:32):
Your Morning Show senior correspondent David Zinnati, closing moments, final
two observations, and the view from forty days out is
that this is a much more effective presidency coming than
had he won in twenty twenty. He gets a second
meaningful inaugural address, he gets a second meaningful one hundred days.
(21:52):
He seems to be forged differently for the moment in
a way he wouldn't have been had. He just flowed
into a second term, and in that, I think is
a message of great optimism and hope.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
Well, if you compare that with the fact that a
year ago we were looking at a second Biden administration,
a second term, it's a staggering thought by comparison of
what America has been spared from. And I think that is,
in fact, what this vote was all about. It was
about survival. People knew we could not go forward any longer,
and I'm convinced that they felt they had been deceived.
(22:26):
And American people don't like be lyed to.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
I said yesterday, and I didn't mean it to be mean.
I was just meaning it to make the point nobody
is thinking about Kamala Harris. I don't think anybody's thinking
really about Joe Biden right now, but no one's thinking
about Kamala Harris. And yet she's showing up at all
these Christmas parties like she's talking people off a suicide watch,
and she's seemingly the only one that's having a hard
time moving on that bared out in a Rasmussen Report survey,
(22:53):
twenty four percent of likely US voters believe it would
be in the Democrats' best interest to Harris once again
be their candidate. Sixty one percent said they should find
another candidate. The view, forty days out from the beginning
of a Trump presidency that will make the Democrats have
a very difficult road if he succeeds. Period does not
(23:15):
seem to include Kambala Harris moving forward.
Speaker 2 (23:18):
No, and for the Democrat money, which is what it's
all about, because the Democrat Party is a party that
is paid. There's not a lot of working volunteers in
the Democrat Party. Their machine is a paid machine. It's
about a takeover, it's about continuing to try to find
a way to make.
Speaker 3 (23:37):
Radicals rich again.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
It's because where they're going and their paid plan is
the congressional election. They are already moving down the line
to candidate recruitment. They are already moving down the line
to paying the people to get the change in Congress.
That's the first chip that they've got to get in
this play. And you know, Soros and company are not
(23:59):
going away. Billionaire network wants control now. Donald Trump represents
a real threat to George Soros because he is picking
off portions of the billionaire class and portions of the
billionaire industry saying, maybe we can find a way to
work together that doesn't involve you bowing your need to
the sorous idols. Maybe maybe you could become American again
(24:21):
instead of international globalists.
Speaker 3 (24:22):
He's offering them an option.
Speaker 2 (24:24):
And if he gets successful on that track, Soros and
Company knows they're in trouble.
Speaker 3 (24:29):
So they got to stop this guy and the way
they're going to stop hims in Congress, that's what they've
got to do.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
The bipartisan report on the assassination attempt of Donald Trump
played out in the hearing on the Hill yesterday. Preventable
should not have happened, a gross display ultimately of cascading
failures at all levels. In the end, we said from
the beginning, this is really poor planning, really poor execution,
(24:55):
or something worse. They come to the conclusion of poor planning,
poor execution, poor communication between the Secret Service and local
law enforcement, why that building was in and outer perimeter.
Bottom line is where might America have gone at John F.
Kennedy not been killed in daily Plaza. Will never know. Unfortunately,
(25:16):
where would we be right now if Donald Trump doesn't
turn his head to look at that graphic and is
assassinated thank God. We'll never know. Just such a profound
moment when you think about it, because the more in
all of this report, there's no explanation as to why
all these breakdowns happen, and seemingly only in this place.
(25:37):
I think Donald Trump's response is going to be not
so much to try to crucify what happened to him
or almost happen to him, as much as he'll get
his revenge by revealing what happened to JFK and let
you connect the dots. I think that's what's coming well.
Speaker 3 (25:49):
And then fixing it. That's the key. We've got to
fix it for the years to come. And you know,
when you remove.
Speaker 2 (25:55):
Yourself from a position of merit based promotion and you
move to DEI and other such things, you deplete the
spirit of any agency. So I wouldn't be why should
we be surprised that it hit the Secret Service.
Speaker 1 (26:09):
Appreciate your time, David. We'll talk again very soon, I hope.
Speaker 3 (26:11):
Thank you. Michael.
Speaker 1 (26:12):
Look forward to Christmas in America. You can find it
at the Public Square dot com under CIA Christmas in America.
Speaker 3 (26:18):
Hey, real quick, look.
Speaker 1 (26:18):
At our top five stories of the day. President Biden
says the new administration is inheriting a strong economy. He
finally resurfaced until the teleprompter went out to brag about
his accomplishments. Mark Mayfield has that story.
Speaker 2 (26:33):
Like most Grace economic developments, this one is neither red
nor blue in America's progress since every month's progress.
Speaker 6 (26:41):
Speaking at the Brookings Institute, Biden said his White House
put the economy through a fundamental transformation and said he
hopes President elect Trump's administration continues that progress. He acknowledged
that his term work through disruptions from the COVID nineteen
pandemic and Russia's invasion of Ukraine. However, he said with
work from both sides of the aisle, inflation is down
to pre pandemic levels.
Speaker 3 (27:02):
I'm Mark Mayphew.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
Anthony Wiener the disgrace New York City congressman planning a
political comeback after more than a decade of being sidelined
with scandal. Sarah Lee Kessler has the story.
Speaker 4 (27:13):
The sixty year old politician who was forced to resign
from Congress in twenty eleven in due prison time after
sexting a fifteen year old girl wants a city council seat.
Wiener spiled the necessary paperwork so we can speak at
a Democratic candidates forum on Thursday, although he sang publicly
he's merely considering a run. Wiener was hoping to become
(27:34):
mayor in twenty thirteen, but that dream was shattered after
he was embroiled in another sexting scandal. If he does run,
it'll be for Carlina Rivera's seat, which he has to
give up next year because of term limits.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
I'm Sarah Lee Kessler.
Speaker 7 (27:50):
Well.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
The last surviving member of the Mod Squad has died.
Michael Cole had long career in television and acting, spanning
over forty years, but best known for playing undercover cop
Pete Cochran and The Mod Squad, which ran from nineteen
sixty eight to nineteen seventy three. A representative for Cole
said he died in Los Angeles on Tuesday, surrounded by
loved ones, after living a very full, in vibrant life.
Speaker 3 (28:11):
He was eighty four years old.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
One of my earliest childhood memories is Bonanza Mod Squad
in Room two twenty two. Isn't that odd? And then
the night my dad turned onto Cavin, I was like
but Johnny Beckham the Mega Million's Jackpot is rolling over again.
No grand prize winner last night. Next drawing will be Friday.
It'll be worth six hundred and seventy million dollars. Don't
get your hopes too high for the extra holiday spending cash.
Your odds of winning is roughly one in three hundred
(28:33):
and two million. And it seems like a pointless chore.
But a lot of us do it every morning, and
according to Breed Tennis, this morning task can help you
actually sleep better.
Speaker 8 (28:43):
A Yuga Paul shows thirty seven percent of all Americans
always make their bed in the morning. They say men
do it more than women. The reason we don't is time.
But the Hotel Association says that the sheets are already
on the bed, that task should take you less than
three minutes, and there are positive psychological benefits to me
in your bed every day. The National Sleep Foundation says
making that bed in the morning has been proven to
(29:05):
reduce stress, increase feelings of calm, and help you sleep
better when you crawl into bed at night. I'm Bree Tennis.
Speaker 1 (29:11):
That's your top five stories of the day.
Speaker 3 (29:14):
This is your Morning Show with Michael Deltno.
Speaker 1 (29:19):
Twenty six year old Ivy League grad charging the murder
of the CEO of United Healthcare is fighting extradition. Caitlin
Clark is your Time Magazine Athlete of the Year, and
massive evacuations are underway due to wildfires in Malibu, including
the home of Dick Vandyke. Roory O'Neil's here with that story.
Speaker 7 (29:36):
Good morning, Rory, Yeah, and Mark Hamill Luke Skywalker himself
was trapped inside his home for a while told not
to leave while firefighters responded to this area. You know
that wildfires started at about ten acres on Monday night
and Pint Tuesday night was at three thousand acres.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
Those San Anna wins really whipping up those flames.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
This is the occurrence and it always seems to be
in the these general areas. How does this one compare
to past ones. I think the speed is a big
surprise this time around.
Speaker 7 (30:07):
And you're right, these wildfires are relatively common, but they
are getting more and more frequent. The one thing you
have with wildfires, though, is that this area now will
get a reprieve for a couple of years because all
the brush has been burned down. It takes a couple
of years to grow back and then dry out again.
So some of these exact areas are going to be
fire proof for another year or two, but we are
(30:29):
seeing just an increase in intensity and frequency of these
wildfires in southern California.
Speaker 1 (30:35):
I have a great appetite for America's beauty. I think
of Maine and the Atlantic Ocean crashing against the rocks.
I think of driving through the Smokies, and then you
get into the Anerontics. It just gets more and more
and more beautiful. I got to tell you a drive
through the Malibu Canyon and popping out right at the
ocean by Pepperdine University with some of the most breathtaking
(30:58):
drive I've ever taken. I've always dreamed of having a
home in Malibu, right on the water, where your backyard
is the beach. It's moments like face where you don't
want to be too high up on the mountain, that's
for sure.
Speaker 7 (31:10):
That earthquakes, yeah, that earthquakes, rising oceans. Yeah, It's all
about pretty bad combination right there. And you know, thankfully,
it looks like the firefighters were able to get jump
on this. Granted it's not contained, still could whip up,
but the winds were cooperating.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
By the end of the day. Yesterday.
Speaker 1 (31:29):
Rory, great reporting all day. We'll talk again tomorrow. Thanks
for joining us. I will say it was Jeffrey I
think sent me the video and it's cold Play and
one of their hit songs. And they did the song
with Dick van Dyke at his home with generations of
his family. You know, Dick Van Dyke's got a son
seventy seven years old. Just to put into perspective, but
(31:49):
it's like to live that long and he's dancing and
singing along and it's absolutely dort. You should google that.
What would they find that under? What was the name
of the song? Oh, I'm blank. Yeah, I have to
bring it back to you tomorrow. The thought is just
hiding or hid it from me and I can't get it.
But we'll tell you about more tomorrow. But you can
google that. And boy, the irony waking up this morning
(32:11):
and he's being evacuated from that very home where they filmed.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
It in Malibu.
Speaker 1 (32:14):
All right, we'll see you tomorrow morning, five am Central.
Speaker 3 (32:16):
Six Eastern.
Speaker 1 (32:17):
We're all in this together.
Speaker 3 (32:18):
This is your Morning Show with Michael nhild Jow Now