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January 7, 2025 33 mins

The highest civilian honor to George Soros, what is Biden thinking? Senior contributor Dave Zanotti will cover who Soros is, what he funds and what his agenda has been.

The annual Consumer Electronics Show is underway in Las Vegas. What are the latest gadgets coming your way? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will take a look at the next inventions that will change our lives.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. Your morning show has heard live
from five to eight am Central, six to nine am Eastern,
three to six am Pacific on great radio stations like
News Radio eleven ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk
five point fifty k f YI, and Phoenix, Arizona Freedom
one oh four seven in Washington, d C. We'd love
to have you join us live in the morning, even
take us along on the drive to work, but better

(00:21):
late than never. Enjoy the podcast one two three.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
You're starting your morning off right, A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding, because we're in the stupid
This is your Morning show with Michael Bill Trump.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 4 (00:40):
I just wanted to say thank you.

Speaker 3 (00:42):
You're the only person that can make me laugh out
loud at five am, and that's pre coffee too.

Speaker 4 (00:49):
Ooks. Keep up the good word. Well, we had an
incident this morning at the start of the show shameless
plug for the podcast. You will hear the first hour
on the podcast section.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
We started the day potentially on too many steroids, I believe.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
If I recall correctly.

Speaker 5 (01:07):
At one point I was singing Michael Jackson and.

Speaker 4 (01:09):
Talking to Lisa Marie Yep.

Speaker 5 (01:12):
At another point, I was taking batting practice at a
major league stadium, thinking that these steroids might help my
with my Longballguire with Mark McGuire with Mark McGuire, can't
forget that.

Speaker 4 (01:24):
By the way, I'm not the only one that's had.

Speaker 5 (01:25):
A it's not the same steroids, by the way, But
I'm not the only one that had a steroid issue.

Speaker 4 (01:29):
David's not. He was given steroids for the virus that
he gave to me. Oh no, and.

Speaker 5 (01:36):
He decided to take all six of his first day
at once. He was identified on the street as a
Cleveland to meatball, and he joins us now on the liveline. Yeah,
by the way, David, it would have been nice that
you told me that the steroids will wire you as
I slept two hours last night and was wide a
wink at two am.

Speaker 3 (01:57):
I tried to warn you, and you've just started the story.
But understanding your mental capacity right now and battling this virus,
and that was a story from two thousand and nine.
But I took the whole top row, the whole top
row of the pack at one time, and then I
turned into a rubber baby doll.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Yeah, it was. It was an extraordinary and My wife
looked at me and said, you look like Bob's big boy.

Speaker 3 (02:20):
You have red cheeks, and it looks like you gained
five pounds in a morning.

Speaker 5 (02:25):
I just sit here and sweat, but I hope they're working.
I'm just trying to protect my voice. So I feel
like death warmed over. I don't know where the expression
sick as a dog comes from, because I just passed
my dog.

Speaker 4 (02:36):
He was laying on his back with his legs in
the air. He looked great and breathing great. But yeah,
you sound pretty good to me right now.

Speaker 3 (02:43):
I know I've been starting with for the last three
weeks with a different kind of a virus.

Speaker 4 (02:46):
It is hard when you're in the broadcast because it's
going to get your throat. Yeah you, And you said yesterday, Gee,
I hope I didn't give it to you. And I said,
I'm thinking about a hug at a restaurant that could
have passed it on to Heay, it was you, Okay,
it wasn't me. I hadn't seen you in a while.

Speaker 5 (03:03):
All right, let's get all this, all of the personal
stuff out of the way. So I had read the quote.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
Thanks for showing up for work, Thanks for showing up
for work this morning.

Speaker 4 (03:11):
Well, I didn't really have a choice. You didn't offer
to fill in.

Speaker 5 (03:14):
So Nicki Hayley says, if we're giving George Soros the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, I mean that is just a
slap in the face of America. And this after reducing
sentences of murderers, pardoning his son, now the oil band,
then eleven Getmo terrorists repositioned in the Middle East and
released from entertainment in Cuba, and oh my gosh, we

(03:37):
got to go to January twentieth. What else will Joe
Biden do? Spitefully on his way out the door. I
want to hone in on the George Soros. George is
someone you and I have followed closely over the years
on local radio, So why not do it on national radio.
Some of America may not be as outraged as other
parts of America, and it would only because they know
very little about George Soros.

Speaker 4 (03:58):
You can help us with that.

Speaker 5 (04:00):
What do we need to know about George Soros that
makes this Medal of Freedom such an outrage?

Speaker 4 (04:05):
Well, it is.

Speaker 3 (04:06):
An outrage, but I'll tell you, Michael, it's something more
we should general population.

Speaker 4 (04:12):
We've got so much to look forward.

Speaker 3 (04:13):
To that I don't want to out kick the outing
button here.

Speaker 4 (04:18):
It's totally affected.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
And I'll give you the bottom line before we even
go farther into the back end.

Speaker 4 (04:23):
The question is which apes. I haven't been able to
find it yet.

Speaker 3 (04:29):
But you know that when those medals were being given out,
John Podesta had to be sitting somewhere close to the
front row. Now to understand George Soros, you have to
understand John Podesta because in two thousand and three, John
Podesta and George Soros founded as a for American Policy,
which has been the organization that has driven the White
House every.

Speaker 4 (04:50):
Time the Democrats have been in office.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
George John Podesta ended up being chief of staff and
go Clinton ended up being chief of staff of Barack Obama.
He ran Hillary Clinton's campaign and he's running the White
House right now. And that ceremony was bought, paid for,
and orchestrated by John Podesta in the center of his
mentor and thunder George Soros.

Speaker 5 (05:13):
So so George Soros is the money and Podesta is
the guy behind the desk. In fact, in Christmas in
America when we did two thousand and two great highlights
was I was on my honeymoon, had no idea I
would ever live in the state of Tennessee, let alone Nashville.
When the Titans came up one yard short, and that
receiver that came up one yard short against the Rams

(05:33):
in the Super Bowl is now my son's principal.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
I mean, you can't make this stuff up. So that
was a thrill.

Speaker 5 (05:38):
The other thrill was the clip you played of Bill
Clinton joking around in the White House. Everybody was off
for the holidays. He was driving through the White House
on his bicycle and he passes the Oval Office. This
is caught on film and Podesta back in the nineties
sitting at the Oval Office desk doing business and Clinton
makes a joke about him.

Speaker 4 (06:00):
This is the longest job.

Speaker 5 (06:02):
John Podesta is the longing, longest serving president in the
United States history, and nobody knows it.

Speaker 3 (06:09):
And the banker behind him live longer. Yeah, Jimmy Carter
lived longer than John Podesta.

Speaker 4 (06:15):
Has been the longest serving president, more than FDR.

Speaker 5 (06:18):
I mean two terms of Bill Clinton, two terms of
Barack Obama, and now a term of Joe Biden. So
if Joe Biden's been cognalbly impaired who's been really running
the White House, the same guy who's running the previous
sixteen years as well, and that's John Podesta. And his
blank check is George Soros, and that's why he got

(06:39):
the Medal of Freedom. You're right to make that the
biggest point. What about George Soros is troubling? What is
his ultimate agenda?

Speaker 4 (06:44):
Do you think?

Speaker 3 (06:46):
Well, his ultimate agenda is the deconstruct national sovereignty and
moves to global government. And that's not a conspiracy, that's
in plain sight. His foundation is called the Open Society Foundation,
which basically means that all the rich guys will tell
everybody else what to do. And that's what he's been
about his whole life. It's amazing is he spent billions
of dollars deconstructing, hollowing out, and then reconstructing the Democrat

(07:09):
Party into the progressive movement run by John Podesta's agenda
at the Center for American Progress in Washington, DC, and
the American media has played along because they want the
money too. Soros has inspired more radical leftist internationalist billionaires
to invest money in American public policy than anyone in

(07:29):
the history of this republic. And he is not an
America first person. He is not a declaration of independence person.
He is a globalist, progressive socialist.

Speaker 4 (07:42):
Just as.

Speaker 5 (07:44):
Islam the radical not just form of government, but system
of life, Islamic laws. This guy is equally anathetical to
everything America stands for in terms of freedom, our inspiration
and declaration of independence, and in terms of our roadmap
the Constitution. By the way, if you're listening on the podcast,

(08:08):
because I've been working with you how many years now.

Speaker 4 (08:12):
I turned in two thousand and seven, you.

Speaker 5 (08:14):
Just said you like the cliffs Notes of wisdom. You
just said in about thirty eight seconds. It took me
fourteen minutes to explain it earlier in the show. If
you're listening to the podcast, you can hit a little
backwards button like fifteen twenty seconds at a time, go
back and hear that entire explanation again. It's brilliant. That's
what they're about. They're about redistributing wealth, deconstructing superpowers military

(08:41):
economic superpowers for the purposes of global control. You can't
get more anathetical to the definition of the Medal of Honor,
the highest civilian metal you can put around someone's neck,
than George Soros and you need to know who put
it around his neck ultimately, John Podesta, and you need
to know George Soros. What about funding apparatus of this,

(09:01):
because you talked about how they formed a policy group,
they also have Arabella and other arms and tentacles. And
then we also have to get in in about two
minutes that the baton is about to be passed from
George Soros to his son, and I send something even
darker in the sun.

Speaker 4 (09:21):
Yes, and Alex received their award.

Speaker 3 (09:23):
You know, Michael, there's one thing about the Open Society Foundation.
They issued a press release crowing about as right lit
they should, is about George Soros receiving this award, and
they said that the high point of George Soros's career
was when the United States Supreme Courts outlawed traditional marriage.

(09:44):
I shouldn't say outlawed, but in essence deconstructed traditional marriage
and in the foundation's terms, gave us a marriage.

Speaker 4 (09:51):
Equality in the United States. They said that the high point.

Speaker 3 (09:54):
Of George Soros's contribution to the United States of America
was there radicalization the issue of marriage and making marriage
in essence a token for the LGBTQ community. That's what
they consider to be his highest accomplishment in America. Now,
I ask you, how could someone like George Soros be

(10:15):
responsible for that? Because he funded it all, just like
he funded Stacy Abrams and the entire Georgia election defficult
in twenty twenty, just like he's funded prosecutors to decriminalize
crime itself across the major cities of this country.

Speaker 4 (10:31):
And that's the guy who got the award.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
And Arabella is just another example of the tentacles of
how the rich guys, the international globalists have gotten together
and aligned up ways for left wing billionaires in America
to unite to deconstruct the country. None of this is conspiratorial.
It's all in plain sight, and it's all online. All
you got to do is take a look, go to

(10:55):
Capital Research Center and that's one place, Capital Research Center
for all the background. And we do a full hour
expose on George Sauros and this award this coming weekend
on the Public Square.

Speaker 4 (11:07):
Yeah, the Public Square dot com.

Speaker 5 (11:08):
I encourage you to listen that they'll get a lot
more in depth on this and you'll be as outrage
as Nikki Haley and as we are.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
In this but not surprised. I hope. At the epicenter
of our republic is.

Speaker 5 (11:21):
A moral people and a nation under God, which is
where liberty and justice for all comes from. At the
epicenter of our nation are our states. And at the
epicent of our states are we the people. And at
the epicenter of we the people, our municipalities and our
communities and our neighborhoods.

Speaker 4 (11:39):
And at the.

Speaker 5 (11:39):
Epicenter of the epicenter of the epicenter.

Speaker 4 (11:41):
Of it all is the family.

Speaker 5 (11:43):
And this is what they give him the award for
the seeds of deconstructing the family in America, because everything
this guy stands for is about deconstructing sovereignty, deconstructing our economy,
deconstructing our society and our culture for the purposes of
laying it down at the table of global governance of

(12:04):
the rich.

Speaker 4 (12:05):
And it's all right there online to read.

Speaker 5 (12:07):
It's kind of like when we talk about the justice
movement within the Democrat Party.

Speaker 4 (12:12):
That's all there. The videos are all there.

Speaker 5 (12:14):
Everything I talk about from the Time magazine manifesto of
February fifteenth, twenty twenty one, how they stold the election
in twenty twenty with old Joe, It's all right.

Speaker 4 (12:22):
There for you to read. You can go to the
what was the the Oh, I'm gonna say, I'm trying
to mansion stuck in my head.

Speaker 5 (12:32):
I can't get to the medical Remember the conference they
had and Fauci was there and all the scientists, the
Milk and Institute. Yeah, that video is still online. Read thanks,
and you can see them. You can see them talking
about how, you know, well, mRNA is gonna, you know,
take billions of dollars and we're gonna have to wait
about a decade to get approvals and trials. And when

(12:55):
scientist chimes in, well, we could have an emergency, you know,
like one of these neuro virus, this could league from
a lab in Asia, and then there's an emergency, we
can introduce it that way. And then it happened two
weeks later, and all of this fight within the Democrat Party,
it's right there. There's even a video where they're explaining
why they chose AOC a bartender, and how she defeated
a ten term Democrat. They weren't targeting Republicans, they were

(13:19):
targeting Democrats because they want to first take over the
Democrat Party. Then they want to get rid of the
electoral College. Then they want to undo and dismantle the republic.
This is a massive plan, and they just gave the
highest Medal of Freedom award to somebody who is deconstructing freedom, republic,
in liberty. The only thing left shocking in life is

(13:41):
the truth, and nobody explains it like you.

Speaker 4 (13:43):
Thank you, David.

Speaker 5 (13:43):
I know you're a busy day and you had to
cram this in, but people can hear your in depth
exposa everything you know about George Soros on the Public
Square this weekend, heard on two hundred stations nationwide and
anytime at the Public Square dot com.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
Thank you so much, David, Michael appreciate you.

Speaker 2 (14:01):
It's your morning show with Michael Del Jorno.

Speaker 4 (14:05):
Good Morning.

Speaker 5 (14:06):
Twenty seven minutes after the overage, just waking up, Donald
Trump was declared the official certified winner of the twenty
twenty four presidential election by content votes.

Speaker 4 (14:15):
For President of the United States. Are as follows. Donald J.

Speaker 6 (14:19):
Trump of the state of Florida has received three hundred
and twelve votes.

Speaker 4 (14:24):
Kamala de here.

Speaker 5 (14:25):
We interrupt that tally with a steady ovation and with that,
Vice President Kamala Harris went where only Nixon, Humphreys and
Gore had gone before today.

Speaker 7 (14:34):
I did what I have done my entire career, which
has takes seriously the oath that I have taken many times.

Speaker 8 (14:40):
Speaking after the count of the Electoral College during a
joint session of Congress, Hereris said she upheld her constitutional
duty to ensure a peaceful transition of power to other
sitting vice presidents in modern times who lost races for
president also had to stand in front of Congress and
read the votes against them. They were Richard Nixon in
nineteen sixty and Al Gore into I'm Lisa Taylor.

Speaker 5 (15:01):
Not to correct Lisa, but Herbert Humphries ran for president
against Richard Dixon in sixty eight and lost to head
to certify Richard Nixon's victory. A judge is rejecting President
elect Trump's efforts to stop is sentencing this week.

Speaker 4 (15:14):
Mark Mayfield fills us in.

Speaker 9 (15:15):
Trump is to be sentenced for a criminal conviction in
his New York hush money case. On Friday, Judge Wanmreshawn
said January the tenth as Trump's sentencing date. Trump's lawyers
appealed the decisions to dismiss his attempts to have his
conviction tossed out. Trump is now scheduled to be sentenced Friday,
just ten days before his inauguration.

Speaker 4 (15:32):
By Mark Mayfield, Well, I think a rooster could craw
on this one. Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is residing
as the leader of his Liberal party, but will remain
Prime minister until a new leader is chosen. Bryan Shook
has more.

Speaker 6 (15:45):
He made the announcement Monday, calling it the best for
the country.

Speaker 10 (15:48):
This country deserves a real choice in the next election,
and it has become clear to me that if I'm
having to fight internal battles, I cannot be the best
option in that election.

Speaker 6 (16:01):
Trudeau has served as the country's prime minister since twenty fifteen.
His decision comes as he's faced falling poll numbers ahead
of a general election. Many analysts predict he will lose.

Speaker 3 (16:13):
I'm Brian Shuk, I'm Jim Schultz in Tampa, and my
morning show is your morning show.

Speaker 4 (16:26):
Hi, It's Michael.

Speaker 1 (16:27):
Your morning show can be heard live on great radio
stations across the country like wilm and w DOV and
Wilmington and Dover, Delaware or wgst AM seven twenty the Voice.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
In Middle Georgia. We're going to need some blankets.

Speaker 1 (16:40):
News Radio six fifty k e n I, Anchorage, Alaska.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine.
Now enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 5 (16:47):
And the guy was a former chief of police and
at that time I was just talking to him, Gee,
do I want to have a gun? You know, I'm
not really comfortable around guns. I think, he said, Listen,
there's a reason I'm in the alarm business.

Speaker 4 (17:00):
Routers.

Speaker 5 (17:00):
Most will avoid your home just if you had the sign,
let alone the actual alarm system. And number two as
far as having a gun, you know, we find a
lot of people end up having their gun used on
them because you just don't know what you're going to
do in that moment, and that's what happens, you don't know.

(17:22):
And what I love about the burner launcher is and
it fires several things that can knock them down or
it can.

Speaker 4 (17:27):
Release tear gas.

Speaker 5 (17:28):
Either way, it incapacitates them for like up to forty minutes,
and so they can't take your life and you don't
have to make a permanent life decision. And I actually
fire them very accurately. I love it's turned out to
be a real solution. So shameless plug for Berna and
Karen's email. Keep the emails coming. Michael Didiheartmedia dot Com.
I do love this segment because it gives us a

(17:52):
chance to just be alone and one on one and
if I had to boil things down. Yeah, there's Kamikazi
Joe trying to sabotage the transition. He did it with
the Medal of Freedom to Soros. We broke that down
for you last half hour. He's doing it with the
offshore drilling band. He's doing it with the eleven Gitmo
terrorists that are being released from Guantanamo Bay and sent

(18:14):
back to the Middle East. There's also the Trudeau out
story and then the two death Row inmate stories. Those
last two I haven't had a chance to get to
and they may be my favorite. Am I allowed to
have a favorite story in Trudeau we get. We really

(18:37):
kind of arrive in the same conversation we had when
we were doing James Carvel earlier in our Sound of
the Day.

Speaker 4 (18:45):
Here's Carvel, who.

Speaker 5 (18:47):
Ran the Clinton campaign in the nineties, coined the phrase
it's the economy Stupid, and forgets it in twenty twenty
four and convinces himself Kamala Harrison is going to.

Speaker 4 (18:57):
Win and what did he forget? It's the economy, stupid.

Speaker 5 (19:02):
And then he's bragging on CNN about how the Democrats
need to change their narrative and stop talking like ridiculous
NPR reporters, to which Jensaki, who's interviewing them, the former
Biden White House Press secretary, now disguised as some kind
of television host, says Yeah, we love our intelligentia, we

(19:23):
love our academium, but we really do have to speak
more in people's languages. In other words, cut to the chase.
They just lost an election and they think their problem
was narrative. Narrative was the cause. It's not the solution,
because the true cause was consequence the policies that failed.

(19:49):
So if you just change a narrative to try to
manipulate people, you haven't addressed while you're really lost. Your
worldview doesn't work, your economic policies don't work. That's what
you need to change. But they can't do that, because
that's all they are a bunch of people who believe

(20:10):
differently than you. They don't tolerate the way you believe,
while they force you to tolerate in the name of
acceptance and validation. The way they believe, and their way
never works. We're all human. I always say this to
my Christian friends. What part about all have sinned and

(20:36):
fallen short? Don't you get It's the most unexclusive club
on earth. All I've been doing all my life is
failing and learning from it, failing and learning from it.

Speaker 4 (20:55):
And getting up and doing better.

Speaker 5 (20:57):
The next time, until one day I realized, you know what,
I can't do it. Perhaps I should hop on across
of my own, get rid of me, and allow God
to live through me. But we should all not beat
ourselves up over the mistakes, but beat yourself up if

(21:19):
you don't learn from them. Not the analogy I would use,
because it was one of the one of the epiphany
moments of my life. I'm sitting at my friend Joe
viggs restaurant, eating a meat ball, waiting at my pasta,
and it dawns and at this time, and I'm not bragging.

Speaker 4 (21:38):
I don't say this to impress you. In fact, I'm
telling you how stupid I was.

Speaker 5 (21:42):
So this is shameful, not bragging, but I do it
to impress upon you the importance. Everybody kept trying to
hire me, and so I wouldn't go and stay, and
they'd give me raises. So I ended up in a
very small town, making a real lot of money, and
like an athlete at twenty, living like an idiot. My

(22:05):
house payment, i remember, was eight hundred dollars. My car
payment was fifteen hundred. I actually went to do a
remote at a BMW dealership. I made one hundred dollars
an hour for three hours, and I bought a seventy
three thousand dollars BMW seven forty. I was an idiot,
and it didn't matter how many times I got a raise.
I would always outspend it. Sound like our government. Yes,
Until one day eat a meatball at dawn zombie and

(22:27):
I turned to my friend he about fell over. I said, Joey,
what my key, Joey, I don't have to make more money.

Speaker 4 (22:36):
I can just spend less. He burst into laughter. But
that was an epiphany for me. That's what an idiot
I was.

Speaker 5 (22:47):
But look at how James Carville he sitting with Jensaki
political operative now posing as a CNN host. He's telling
everybody else how to talk when he himself, just a
month ago, was convinced Kamala.

Speaker 4 (23:01):
Harris was gonna win and forgot a phrase he coined.

Speaker 7 (23:05):
That I kept saying, it's the economy stupid, it's the
economy stupid.

Speaker 4 (23:09):
He forgot it. I didn't look.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
The ultimate lesson is we don't fail because we don't
know what to do.

Speaker 4 (23:16):
We fail because we don't do what we know.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
And I'm seeing it in James Carvell and I'm seeing
it in Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. So I told you
this guy's going Sure enough, he announces I'm stepping down
as the leader of Canadian Canada's Liberal Party, but.

Speaker 4 (23:31):
I'm going to remain Prime Minister until my.

Speaker 5 (23:33):
Replacement is chosen. Why ready for this? It's time for
a reset.

Speaker 4 (23:42):
Now.

Speaker 5 (23:43):
In the case of Canada, the reset is somebody from
the same party taking the same office and doing the
same things and expecting a different result. I call that
not reset. I call that insanity. Right up there with
James Carvel saying it's no longer about the economy stupid,
it's just saying things like the economy stupid and not
using NPR language. They don't get the failure, they don't

(24:07):
get the change that is necessary. Now, look, I don't
know if Donald Trump is going to take that office
in a different way than he did the first time,
and make America great again and keep it going in
that direction long after he leaves or not.

Speaker 4 (24:24):
The actions look good right now. He looks like he's
not ready to be a disruptor. He's ready to be
a leader.

Speaker 5 (24:30):
He's not ready to keep fighting a campaign fight but
actually governed. But the losers, if you think Kamala doesn't
get why she lost, I don't think they get. They
think they just got to be clever with their lies,
more clever with their narratives. They don't realize yet their

(24:51):
worldview doesn't work. Their policies are proven failures. Cause of
death is not narrative. Or the next Liberal in Canada
to move into the Prime minister office.

Speaker 4 (25:09):
They might want to consider changing their policies. Oh, but
they won't. And that's my final say for this Tuesday,
January the seventh.

Speaker 2 (25:21):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael del Chono.

Speaker 4 (25:25):
I didn't quite get to it.

Speaker 5 (25:26):
But my other favorite story are the two prisoners who
were among thirty seven federal inmates whose death sentences were
commuted last month by Joe Biden, and two of them
refused to sign the paperwork accepting their clemency Shannanagovski and
Lenn Davis. Now anybody, they're being held in Terahoot, Indiana.

(25:50):
Anybody could just say, well, you know it's bad when
you won't even accept you'd rather be dead than take
a clemency from Joe Biden.

Speaker 4 (25:58):
Well that's a funny punchline, but that's not the truth
of it.

Speaker 5 (26:00):
In fact, the truth of it is even more revealing.
They're both seeking an injunction to block their own death sentences.

Speaker 4 (26:12):
On claims of innocence, and this.

Speaker 5 (26:17):
Commutation would actually give them a legal disadvantage as they
seek to appeal their case on claims of innocence.

Speaker 4 (26:24):
Well what does that reveal? It just reveals to you
how sloppy all of this is done. When you hear
of these pardons, or you hear of these commutations, you're.

Speaker 5 (26:33):
Thinking, well, someone's doing their job right. Probably not Joe,
but some No. Was he just pulling these names out
of a hat? Did nobody investigate the cases? Did nobody
talk to the victims and family members?

Speaker 7 (26:49):
Did nobody talk to the actual prisoners themselves.

Speaker 5 (26:57):
I'm always saying the only left shocking in life is
the truth. How about that one? The truth behind why
two of thirty seven, and who knows how loosely the
other thirty five were looked at chose not to take
their commutation and convert to life in prison over the
death sentence because they still believe they're innocent and they're

(27:18):
in the middle of an appeal.

Speaker 4 (27:20):
And nobody noticed that.

Speaker 5 (27:22):
The body of former President Jimmy Carter expects to drive
in our nation's capital today. He'll lie in state in
the Capitol Building and then a formal national funeral service
will take place at the cathedral. A judge is rejecting
President trump sentencing coming up later this week. Nobody expects
them to get jail time, but the sentencing will go forward.

(27:44):
And the first US bird flu death was reported in Louisiana.
And today is the continuation of the annual Consumer Electronics Show.
We had a long conversation early in the first hour
on steroids, I might add, and I was talking about
my virtual experience with the Rory. What do they call
that mass that Apple does that puts you in virtual

(28:06):
reality where I was like working on my computer on
the surface of the moon, oh, the glasses or whatever, Yeah,
whatever it is, it's it's incredible, I mean, and I'm
thinking I remember doing it with my son at the
Apple store and I looked at him and I said, well,
you can't top this. I mean, now you could watch
a baseball game at Fenway Park standing next to the

(28:27):
first basement. I don't know how that's going to affect
people buying tickets down the road, but it is. It's
pretty extraordinary. And I guess my thought was when I said,
one who wants to stand, We're Americans. We don't stand.
You just want to sit up the couch. Well, yeah,
but you know when I saw this yesterday, I was
thinking to myself the Consumer Electronic Show, they should be
a big deal.

Speaker 7 (28:47):
What could possibly be next? With everything that's on our
phones and on our eyes?

Speaker 4 (28:51):
What could be next? Right?

Speaker 7 (28:53):
Yeah, So now they just call it a CEES. They
dropped the long name. But a lot of this is
going to be AI. A lot of it is robotic,
even the little robot vacuum cleaner.

Speaker 4 (29:03):
Now they're adding a robot arm.

Speaker 7 (29:05):
To it so it can pick up your dirty socks
on the floor rather than just drive over them.

Speaker 4 (29:10):
So we're seeing more of that can avoid the pile
of poop that it spreads all.

Speaker 7 (29:15):
Over spread, And we're working on that. But one of
the things I thought was just smart, just clever. Imagine
you're standing at your stove in the kitchen a lot
of Americans self included the microwave of and is right
above the stove, right, so there's the fan that goes
up in the.

Speaker 4 (29:33):
Mine's to the right of it. But yeah, I get it.
But you know that, you know the setup.

Speaker 7 (29:37):
But they've taken the door of the microwave and they're
turning that into a tablet computer. So now when you're
staring at the door the microwave, it's actually a tablet
so you can look at the recipe in front of you.
It has cameras that look down on all four burners
of the stove, so you can see better what's going
on in the pot in the back, and look down
from above you can check out recipes, make sure you

(29:59):
have the right ingredient from the fridge, suru the web,
watch TV from the door of the microwave.

Speaker 4 (30:06):
Which is why they do it on the door of
the spot.

Speaker 5 (30:09):
I'm just gonna say, the microwave is usually over in
a minute and a half. Why do I do it
on the door of the oven? That you're gonna spend
a little more time in front of you. Bring up
something very interesting though.

Speaker 7 (30:16):
But the microwave is an eyeless if it's done that
set up though, when a microwave was an eye level.

Speaker 4 (30:21):
Now I'm standing the story away. Yeah, yeah, okay, I
get it. I get that.

Speaker 5 (30:25):
What's interesting is they're going to start cooking with light.
I can't get into this because I actually know the
guy that's started the company. The microwave could become obsolete
and it can be a much more delicious, moist and
healthy way to make food. So but that's a cool
feature that's probably done by Samsung, the same people that
do those cool things on refrigerator doors and then they.

Speaker 4 (30:43):
Break in a year.

Speaker 5 (30:44):
But la, yeah, anything else that's kind of sticking out
this year.

Speaker 7 (30:49):
Yeah, TV's are bendable. They can sort of bulge out now.
And also there's this big push towards portable TVs. Not
like the little three inch screen you had as a kid,
but like a ffty five inch TV mounted with the wall.
There are suction cops built into the back of the TV.
Absolutely no chords at all, So this thing is just
charged up and then you just stuck it to the

(31:11):
wall and you can watch it wherever you want to go.

Speaker 4 (31:13):
So you go to the bathroom, you just tack it
on the bathroom wall.

Speaker 7 (31:16):
Or if you're a tailgating, you just stick it to
the side of the pickup and you can just watch
the game from there.

Speaker 5 (31:22):
You don't need cable, everything streamed, and you don't need power.

Speaker 4 (31:26):
You can use I like that one. All right, you're
making a liar out of me. Any other one. None
of them rushed to buy you. Probably not a lot
of this is geeky stuff.

Speaker 7 (31:36):
We just got the presentation from the head of en
Video last night. Samsung did as well. They've got a
little rolly ball. It's called Baldly but it can roll
around and project your image anywhere your movie or your TV,
so it will just be a mobile IMC.

Speaker 5 (31:52):
I am seeing that a lot online, these little things.
And in other words, you can sit laying in your
bed and you can shine on the ceiling, kind of
like when we're at the Dennis and you can watch
TV off the ceiling.

Speaker 4 (32:02):
Really off. Anything doesn't ever limit.

Speaker 7 (32:04):
Yeah, and it's it was kicked around for a long time,
but now it's actually in production and we'll be available
to buy later this year.

Speaker 5 (32:11):
So you've been doing this for a long time when
you're not touring the world, and what percentage of these
are actually breakthroughs and stick versus they just lead to
it ultimately will stick.

Speaker 4 (32:24):
Well, I think it's a little of both, you know,
a lot.

Speaker 7 (32:27):
It's like the concept car business, right, they never get
you that dream Cadillact that you ever saw that's got
eight wheels and move sideways and looks. You know, James
Bond would be to wait to fly the little but
the little things. Oh, it's the airbag here, the better
seatbelt there, the interactive controller there. It's the little incremental steps.

(32:48):
But they put these big things out there. But then
what ends up at Best Buy down the road. It'll
get there eventually. It's super expensive.

Speaker 5 (32:57):
It's the Annual Consumer Election Show, or as we call
now CES in Vegas underway. That's what's new on the horizon.
Great reporting, Rory. All right, you guys, one chance to
live today Tuesday, January the seventh. Gon make a difference
in someone's life.

Speaker 2 (33:10):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndheld, Joano
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