Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:01):
You can listen to your morning show live on the
air or streaming live on your iHeart app Monday through
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(00:23):
and make us a part of your morning routine. In
the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Well two three starting your morning off right. A new
way of talk, a new way of understanding because we're
in this together. This is your Morning Show with Michael
del John.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
Yes it is everyone in Happy New Year's Eve to
all of you and yours. This is your morning show
with Michael del Grono, Jamie Allman. Really pleased, privileged to
be with you on this New Year's Eve. Something is
just feeling so good about this brand new year. And
(01:09):
it's so interesting how of course, during the holidays, all
these awful stories with plane crashes and subway crimes and
just all kinds of really just mayhem all over the place.
And yet in the end there's a feeling of hope
and a feeling of optimism going into the new year.
Speaker 1 (01:31):
And not to mention the fact that Donald Trump's.
Speaker 4 (01:34):
Finally telling everybody, hey, listen, no more tweets. Just for
a little bit, people, if you could just calm down
a little bit, it'd be nice to make this thing easy.
We're going to try to get through this, and just
shut up for just a little bit. It'll be it'll
and we'll go through this just fine, thank you very much.
(01:54):
And I don't know whether it's optimism can sometimes turn
into things that might be very healthy for you. So
I rarely eat breakfast or anything of that nature. You
always kind of get your game face on it. I
keep myself starving, so I'm hungry and whatever. But during
the holidays, of course, there are all these balls of
(02:16):
things that just kind of sit in these cases and
things like that. And so I get up this morning,
I make a cup of coffee, I'm on my way
out the door, and there's this thing of I don't
even know what they are, but I know that there
are balls of caramel or chocolate or whatever. And I
(02:38):
decide that I'm going to go ahead and just put
one of those in my mouth and head out the door.
And it's so funny during the holidays, how often you
eat things that you otherwise would not eat, and you
also don't know what they are, but you know they
look good, like you know they're delicious, and they look
(02:59):
delicious because they're so opulent and big and just chocolatey
or marbley or whatever. And you'll just put that stuff
in your mouth just when you pass by a bowl
or whatever it is. And so I did that this morning,
and I'm.
Speaker 1 (03:17):
Feeling really good. I don't know what that was or who.
Speaker 4 (03:20):
Made it, because you know, there's always that question because
because it's his hanging around the house and you never
know who made it.
Speaker 1 (03:28):
But you're just thinking, well, that was I.
Speaker 4 (03:30):
Didn't have any of that over the holidays or on
Christmas Day or whatever. But I'm going to have one
now at three in the morning. I'm just going to
do it and just kind of, you know, come what may,
I'll go ahead and do that. So good morning everyone,
in a happy New Year to you. And I have
to tell you that this happened over the last couple
(03:52):
of days and.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
I happen to have some.
Speaker 4 (03:55):
Anecdotal knowledge about the wiliness of weather.
Speaker 1 (04:01):
And I'm not being flip about this at all.
Speaker 4 (04:04):
I'm just telling you I have a sense of the weather,
mainly because I have a lawn full of plastic lighted
blow molds that I've collected over the past forty years.
So I've got a major scene. I've got a rooftop Santa.
I've got about thirty plastic lighted Santas. I've got plastic
(04:26):
lighted snowmen. I've told you the story about where all
that came about and the obsession came about. But I
am very very aware of December weather. I know every
single day that comes that is either rain or wind
or whatever, because if it's windy weather or whatever, my
(04:49):
blow molds are all over the place. Until I finally
learned how to stake them up, you know, I got
I finally learned that. I just you know, I hammer
a bunch of steaks in there and put Mary right
over that thing, and she never topples over anymore, but
every once in a while they do. As I'm very
familiar with the December weather patterns, and I know that
(05:10):
what we're seeing right now in the Southeast, which is
really rough. It's a really hard time for a lot
of our brothers and sisters in the Southeast. But December
is like that. And I know a lot of people
are already kind of chiming in on the whole global
warming thing and how this is all usual, but it
really isn't. I can tell you just from the anecdotal evidence.
(05:33):
I've know scientists at all. I'm just telling you that
I know that December it's either seventy degrees or well
at least where I am in Saint Louis area, or
pouring down rain, or it's seven inches of snow. It
just is that way in the United States of America.
(05:53):
So I want to begin the morning with a prayer
for our friends and our loved ones, are fellow citizens
in the Southeast because of the tornadoes, and four people
have passed away as a result of the bad weather there.
Speaker 1 (06:10):
And NBC is talking about.
Speaker 5 (06:13):
The South slammed with severe weather. Stop what the pretty
nearly forty possible tornadoes.
Speaker 1 (06:21):
To the ground. One just hope it breaks up.
Speaker 5 (06:24):
After another tearing through Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and Georgia,
the outbreak ripping apart homes, even a school. Winds over
seventy miles an hour, uprooting trees and downing power lines,
cutting off electricity to hundreds of thousands overnight in western Mississippi.
(06:45):
Firefighters and others picking through the rubble of this home
with their bare hands in the city of Brandon. Wendy
Freeman is grateful to be alive, nearly getting crushed by
a tree that toppled onto our house.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
The roath is falling in, only stuff is falling on
my head.
Speaker 4 (07:01):
Yeah, so you get the idea that not everything is
Carmel balls in the morning for a lot of our
brothers and sisters in the Southeast particularly, And so as
we head into the new year, we continue to pray
for all those who continue to recover, not only from
the hurricanes down in the Carolinas and in Georgia who
(07:24):
are still recovering right now and didn't have much of
a Christmas or a holiday, And then our friends in
the Southeast who are just now recovering from some of
the terror of the weather patterns that are basically average,
everyday normal for December, they just happen to have sometimes
(07:46):
results that are very abnormal and unusual. For people, so
I want to make sure you all are thinking about
those people as we head into the new year on
this beautiful New Year's Eve.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
I'm really please.
Speaker 4 (08:00):
I'm blessed to have Jeff and read On with me
right now and you guys, I can't wait to go
through the morning with all of you and talk to
you a little bit about what's been happening. And if
you guys would like to chime in on whatever you've
been hearing over the weekend or just the past twenty
four hours or so, make sure you go ahead to
that iHeartRadio app and the talk bat button there, and
(08:24):
I'd love to hear from you about what's on your mind.
Speaker 1 (08:27):
I will tell you as we headed the show.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
I'm really happy that Donald Trump has put his support
behind Mike Johnson.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
And it might be because I'm just getting.
Speaker 4 (08:41):
Old, because I'm just I just don't want I am
so fatigued by the stress and the division not only
in the country but within the party that I'm just
kind of really happy that President Trump is taking a
leadership role.
Speaker 1 (09:01):
I don't know whether you're all.
Speaker 4 (09:03):
Up for a big house speaker fight or whatever you
might be thinking in your minds.
Speaker 1 (09:09):
I just am not and I used to be. I
used to be thinking, yeah, Westphers, knock him down, just do.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
This, And I'm thinking, well, maybe it's not such a
bad idea just to kind of like take what we have,
go in with a level of peace and let's have
a little fun, shall we. So we'll talk more about that.
And really happy and honored to be with you filling
in for the great Michael del Jorno. I'm Jamie Alman.
Speaker 3 (09:39):
It's your morning show with Michael del Jorno.
Speaker 4 (09:44):
This is the Michael del Jorno Show. I'm Jamie Alman.
Really pleased and privileged to be with you. And if
I wasn't mistaken, Jeff, that would have been old police.
But either that or there they're stealing old police, because
that's old police, right, there's.
Speaker 1 (10:02):
Some old police. And Bruno Mars made another million out
of it.
Speaker 6 (10:07):
Right on.
Speaker 4 (10:08):
I I and that and that's not a bad thing.
I've actually taken by kids to go see Bruno Mars.
And I got to tell you, man, you when you
when you take your children to see concerts of people
who work really hard and who always make sure that
they never take their audiences for granted, And that's a
(10:31):
that's a big deal in any kind of industry, of course.
But I remember seeing Bruno Mars in concert. I took
one of my daughters to see him, and.
Speaker 1 (10:42):
That the display I was.
Speaker 4 (10:43):
I was more thinking of it analytically, obviously as a dad.
You know, look how hard he works you. But but
it was really impressive. I mean, I got to it's
kind of like Taylor Swift like in a lot of ways,
because you know, as much as people give all these
people heat about their celebrity status and everything else, when
(11:04):
you look at the sum total of what they do
and how they do it night after night after night,
and not take their audiences for granted.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
And so you know, if.
Speaker 4 (11:15):
That's Bruno Mars, then he can have a little bit
of my nineteen eighty two Police.
Speaker 1 (11:22):
I'll give him that. You can have that.
Speaker 4 (11:25):
I mean, that's how that's how that goes. You can
take that and if you're if you're doing that. Plus
I love the nineteen eighties Police, and so there we go.
So congratulations, Bruno marsh you pulled it off. You got
me fooled. Speaking of the eighties, they're back in New
York apparently as the Guardian Angels.
Speaker 1 (11:46):
I mean, this is.
Speaker 4 (11:48):
I love these kinds of stories because it does kind
of remind us. As much as it does also remind
us of the Mayhem on the subways and everything else.
Speaker 1 (12:00):
It reminds us that.
Speaker 4 (12:04):
Kind of everything old is new again in a lot
of different ways. And that's kind of a common theme
these days, especially with President Trump and some of the
focus on the border and our economy and just things
that otherwise we've forgotten about over a period of a
few years and beyond where you know, we just kind
of just get so mired up in in the in
(12:28):
some of the laziness and just taking things for granted
and things like that. I think the H one B
debate is a really good one, and even though people
are saying that it's a civil war of sorts and
there are a lot of unnecessary things happening with things
that are said. And I'll follow up on that too,
(12:49):
because President Trump finally just kind of shut it down
a little bit and said, you guys, you guys.
Speaker 1 (12:54):
Have to stop tweeting. You got it.
Speaker 4 (12:58):
This is President Trump, by the way, right, And I
know he didn't say tweeting, but he's in this moment,
is that you guys have to shut up for just
a little bit, give me, give coach a little time
to have things kind of settle in here and stop
(13:18):
mouthing off on your own.
Speaker 1 (13:19):
I need this time. I thought really hard for this.
I am here.
Speaker 4 (13:28):
I'm about to pull off a Grover Cleveland here on
the twentieth January, and I need you guys to calm
down just a little bit. And that's coming from President Trump.
And you know he, as you know, is a prize
fighter and a pugilist in only the best of ways.
He'll take on anybody at any time, even on Christmas Day,
(13:52):
which I loved when he tweeted out or put on
truth social a few things about taking back the Panama
Canal and buying Greenland. The guy never gives up on
just kind of spitballing, But we kind of want the spitballing.
Speaker 1 (14:11):
To be his at this point.
Speaker 4 (14:13):
I have to tell you, as much as I do
love Elon Musk, anybody who can land a rocket perpendicularly
into a cylinder from space has my admiration. Believe me,
nothing is off the table in terms of my admiration
(14:34):
of Elon Musk. But at some point we just got
to have a little bit of order and it seems
to me that President Trump is in that mode now
where it's like, guys, let me do the talking, let
me do this.
Speaker 1 (14:53):
And I love you guys.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
I love the fact that you are passionate about what
you do and passionate about what you're thinking about America.
But we've got to have some level of order here
or we're all just going to be fighting and other
people are going to take advantage of it.
Speaker 1 (15:13):
What have you? And the back to order part is
really nice too.
Speaker 4 (15:20):
Knowing, for instance, that the Guardian Angels are back, if
you can believe that, on the New York subways. And
Curtis Leewa, who, while he has aged a little bit
like all of us, have still hacks that red beret
and the red jacket, and we're back to nineteen seventy
nine and it's probably not too soon.
Speaker 7 (15:44):
Well, in day and night patrol see person patrols who
are all together walking through the cars, which is something
the beliefs no longer do notic sand No mental health
workers in crisis in de Bende have all these fancy nas.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
I haven't seen them. And we spend millions of dollars
on my dead.
Speaker 6 (16:02):
Our job is a do a wellness check on a
homeless person, if they're homeless or emotionally deserve see if
they're okay.
Speaker 1 (16:11):
If all of a sudden we walk.
Speaker 6 (16:12):
Into a situation where there's an episode, which oftentimes happens,
we have to calm it down. A lot of times,
these homeless and emotionally deshop pressions. They know of the
Guardian agents, we can have a calming effect. We can
also bring the situation to the attention of Compson on
the platform.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
I mean, this is great. This is Steeve the wrestler,
a refugee from the People's Republic of Minnesota.
Speaker 5 (16:42):
And my morning show is your Morning Show with Michael
del join.
Speaker 8 (16:46):
On, HI.
Speaker 2 (16:53):
It's me Michael. Your Morning Show can be heard live
daily on great radio stations like News Radio six fifty
k and Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven ninety Dallas, Fort
Wort and Freedom one O four seven in Washington, d C.
We'd love to have you listen Life every day. Make
us a part of your morning routine, but better late
than never. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 4 (17:12):
It appears that when all is tallied, Joe Biden has
spent forty percent of his presidency on vacation. Now I
can't say I blame him. You know, we all have
(17:33):
those feelings that we just want to kind of get away,
but forty percent on vacation. I mean when you compare that, Listen,
we know that President Trump does, indeed play golf when
he gets a chance, he goes to the country club
or mal Lago.
Speaker 1 (17:53):
We all get it.
Speaker 4 (17:54):
But here's a guy, and I'm looking forward to this too,
because this is the one thing I really loved about
his first go round. In spite of all the controversies
and things like that that people just piled on top
of him, he wasn't shy about tweeting things out at well,
(18:16):
let's say, eleven forty five pm on a Friday, which
was I think on purpose because he wanted to make
journalists work all weekend long time. I'm honestly, I'm not
kidding you. Some people talk about personalities and about work
(18:38):
ethics and things like that, and I think people kind
of forget that President Trump is a guy from Queen's right,
and he's a real estate dude, and he's spent his
whole life making deals and making money and all these
other things in business.
Speaker 1 (18:56):
And he's from.
Speaker 4 (18:57):
Queens and so President Trump does mess around when it
comes to either just relationships or jockeying for position or
throwing stuff out there in a positive way passive aggressively
and sniping for instance at Justin Trudeau and telling me
(19:21):
it could be the next governor. I mean, he punks
people like nobody's business. And it's great to kind of
have that kind of work ethic and constancy. And it's
also great to have a guy who I mean remember
when he was wearing the sanitation vest and the story
(19:42):
he told about after he was in the in the
garbage truck, which is quite possibly one of the greatest
diversions ever, which was the garbage truck scene and.
Speaker 1 (19:56):
Him in the gar.
Speaker 4 (20:00):
Yeah, and then he shows up at the rally, and
some of the best speeches that Trump has ever given
are speeches that he is giving to us on background,
like he's telling us the story about how something came about,
for instance, when he was talking about famously talking about how.
Speaker 1 (20:25):
Somebody one time.
Speaker 4 (20:26):
And he's given some great speeches by the way poland
Middle East, I mean, it's it's dramatic. But when he talks,
for instance, one time at a rally about whether or
not he should have a dog and that was one
of my most favorite moments about Trump's speeches, when he
(20:47):
was talking about, Hey, you know, people think I should.
Speaker 1 (20:49):
Have a dog. What would I look like with a dog?
And we're all thinking, probably not like Donald Trump.
Speaker 4 (20:58):
And we were like all automatically intuitively aware that a
dog wasn't the Trump thing. And he goes, that's not
my brand, basically, that's what that's what he was talking about.
Speaker 1 (21:12):
He's like, that's not what I do.
Speaker 4 (21:15):
And then with the sanitation vest thing, he was really
troubled about going on to the stage without a suit,
in a suit cote on, and because that's his thing.
You know, here's a guy who rarely, if ever, is
without a tie except maybe when he is golfing or
(21:40):
doing whatever he's doing. But he always has a tie
and a coat, and that's his thing. It's like, this
is what I do. I'm a businessman. I dress for
the occasion. You're not gonna see me in jeans. Oh,
by the way, the chess guy is back. I told
you about yesterday who decided he was going to die
(22:05):
on the hill of a dress code. But he didn't
die on the hill of the dress code. Apparently the
chess people did so in New York. This guy Magnus,
who's the number one more Norwegian chess player, was going
all millennial on these guys and they said, you got it.
You can't wear jeans. He goes, well, okay, then tomorrow
(22:25):
I'll wear something else. They're like, no, today, you have
to wear jeans. He goes, well, I'm not going to
change into gens for you today, and then he said
it was on principle, he wasn't going to.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Change into jeans. This is the principal thing.
Speaker 4 (22:42):
And besides, I'm too old for this, even though he's
like thirty five, and he goes, I'd rather be someplace warm,
And simultaneously, the chess tournament website had his picture on
there talking about how great it was that he was there,
and so they knew the value of him, and so
apparently they worked it out. So he's he's back, and
(23:05):
I don't know exactly how it all worked out, but
what have you. I just want to give you an
update on that story I told you about yesterday. So anyway,
back to Donald Trump. So he's fretting about having to
maybe not wear a coat when he is giving a
speech at a rally and not being dressed up, and
(23:27):
whoever has was running his campaign, and these people are brilliant.
And I happened to think his son, his youngest son
was probably was probably the most favored advisor. And they
go down to just wear the sanitation vest. It'll be great.
He goes, do I wear it over my coat? Like, no, no,
(23:50):
you don't wear it over your suit coat. You just
wear the sanitation vest and live large. And he did
and it wound up being so great. So that's about
as much of a flippant kind of guy you can
get out of President Trump. Then double back to Joe Biden,
(24:11):
with forty percent of his presidency spent on vacation, including now.
Speaker 8 (24:18):
Arriving in Saint Croix alongside First Lady Joe Biden for
a final holiday vacation before he leaves the White House
next month.
Speaker 1 (24:26):
This is the third year.
Speaker 8 (24:27):
In a row of Biden family has traveled to the
US Virgin Islands for New Year's this trip now putting Biden.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
There's the tally.
Speaker 8 (24:34):
Look at that number, five hundred and seventy days on
vacation while technically on the job. According to RNC research
that Ashley Stromeyer is nearly forty percent.
Speaker 1 (24:45):
Of his tie things.
Speaker 4 (24:46):
That is incredible forty percent of his presidency. And then
you flip flop over to President Trump, who's not even
taking a salary for his work. And we're in a
really good point in time right now. I think where
(25:08):
you're talking about work ethic, you're talking about great old
school American values, and yet people are still complaining about
halftime at the pop Tart Bowl, which listen, if you
could do that, it's fine. We have that luxury which
is great, and also talking about whether or not to
(25:31):
wear jeans at chess tournament. So you have to admit
we're in a pretty good place on this beautiful New
Year's Eve, my friends.
Speaker 3 (25:42):
This is your Morning show with Michael Deltno.
Speaker 1 (25:46):
Hey, Jamie, speaking of Poland.
Speaker 9 (25:49):
You know, if you illegally crossed the Poland border, they
just kill you.
Speaker 1 (25:54):
Why can't we do that?
Speaker 4 (26:00):
Well, that's a good question, my friend, and I have
to tell you that sometimes things are not that easy,
and sometimes things are not really something we want to do.
And I'll explain that in just a second. I'm Jamie
Allman filling in for the great Michael del Giordo, So
(26:21):
he's referring to I'm not laughing about killing people, by
the way, just so you know, But he's referring to
the Polish MP's who went ahead and passed a law
saying that soldiers can shoot five live rounds, for instance,
(26:42):
and I think it's they put it at five two
people coming in from Belarus, and there's a particular problem there,
And really it was a it was an attempt to
scare people away from crossing the board, so they not
one person has actually been shot and killed crossing the border,
(27:06):
and they also granted immunity to the soldiers who do that.
So usually in a country like ours, a better way
is to just simply make sure our border is secure
in a fashion that makes it not a wise move
(27:26):
to come over here in any way, shape or form.
A couple of things are happening with that that I
think are very effective. One is to crack down on
what now apparently is the admitted illegal activity of businesses
that are hiring illegals.
Speaker 1 (27:46):
And what was interesting is that President.
Speaker 4 (27:49):
Trump and Tom Holman's pursuit of the illegal alien agenda
wound up making a lot lot of people, even in
the media, confess to the real problem that we have
in this country because remember when they talked about mass
(28:11):
deportations and all of that stuff that would be going
on and will be going on as of January twentieth.
The news media, you noticed, immediately started doing stories about how, well,
if that happens, then forty percent of the egg industry
will be dilapidated and the food supply industry will go away.
(28:34):
And we're thinking, oh, so that's the problem, that's the problem,
and apparently it is, and they don't even realize they're
confessing to all of the things that are exacerbating the
illegal alien problem, not to mention the fact that we're
(28:54):
not calling them illegal aliens. We're calling them migrants, which
is absolutely not a correct or precise portrayal of what's
going on. So anyway, we're suddenly that our egg prices
will skyrocket and our meat prices will skyrocket because they
(29:15):
no longer can employ illegal aliens. Well wait a minute,
isn't it illegal to employ illegal aliens? Well yeah, kinda,
well yeah, yeah, okay, but they but they're like telling
us they're giving up the entire ghost when we threaten
mass deportations.
Speaker 1 (29:36):
They basically told us.
Speaker 4 (29:38):
The very reason why illegal alienship is so bad, not
to mention the inhumanity of it and the human trafficking
and all those things that are that are that are
going into all.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
That, and so to a certain degree, it was really nice.
Speaker 4 (29:57):
To see the main free media, at least the national media,
finally doing their jobs. Like if they were doing stories
before all this, before the mass deportations about how forty
percent of the food supply industry is inhabited by illegal aliens,
(30:20):
most Americans would really be upset about that.
Speaker 1 (30:24):
They'd be thinking, wait a minute, what.
Speaker 4 (30:27):
And I realized that when we talked about deporting people
and securing our border, and we had Obama like.
Speaker 9 (30:35):
What's going to make the hotel bends, who's gonna who's
gonna pick our strawberrys? Who's gonna everybody was kind of
like there was a little bit of that, but we
I actually had no idea how prolific the illegal hiring
was in this country until the until the news media
started freaking out about mass deportations, and they kind of
(30:59):
backed in to the investigative job that we've all been
waiting for, which is real numbers about how many illegal
aliens are in this country and why they're coming here.
So when the news meeting is like, well, forty of
(31:20):
the food industry includes illegal aliens who are employed by
these companies.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
We're thinking, well, no wonder they're.
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Coming over here illegally, No wonder they're popping.
Speaker 1 (31:33):
Over the border.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
Some of them, at least others are here to sell
drugs and are trafficked by the cartels.
Speaker 1 (31:39):
And we get all.
Speaker 4 (31:41):
That, and of course there's summarily abused and can't call
the police ever, And it's just really a level of
a subculture that we as a civilized society shouldn't be
shouldn't be supporting. But it was funny how when this
all happened, the news media helped the entirety of the
(32:05):
whole reason why we have an illegal alien problem. They
confess to the entire thing, but they used it as
a defense of illegal alienship, which of course there's no
defense for hiring illegal aliens. Well, and there was even
a guy from Texas who came out of the woodwork
(32:27):
and gave everybody his name.
Speaker 1 (32:29):
I don't remember what it was, but he was.
Speaker 4 (32:31):
He was quoted in some news article and he goes, yeah,
our construction businesses go right down the tubes. We couldn't
hire illegals. I'm like, do you know what you're doing here?
Do you know what you're saying? And Tom Holman's like,
what's your name again? And where are you and what's
your address? And where do you live again? Because at
(32:52):
that point they're just confessing it all, and that's that's
the primary problem. So I think our approach is probably
much better and probably a little more civilized and maybe
even a little more constructive in the end. I think
if you just simply threw it out there, if Tom
(33:15):
Holman somehow came on television and said we're gonna shoot
everybody that comes across the border there, probably would have
an effect. But I'm not quite sure we would have
an effect the.
Speaker 1 (33:27):
Way we would like to be.
Speaker 4 (33:31):
You know, I'm not beyond craziness or crassness, but I'd
rather have it more of a regimented craziness and crassness.
Speaker 1 (33:41):
And I think that we're approaching it in the right way.
We're all in this together. This is Your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld Joe Now