Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's me Michael. You can listen to your morning
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(00:22):
us live and make us a part of your morning routine.
In the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Starting your morning off right.
Speaker 3 (00:30):
A new way of talk, a new way of understanding
because we're in this together.
Speaker 2 (00:37):
This is your.
Speaker 4 (00:38):
Morning Show with Michael Odell Charna seven minutes half of
the hour.
Speaker 2 (00:45):
Jeffery's a little bossy today. I just want you guys
to know, right off the bat, he's like shoving us around,
bullying us. Well, I mean, you guys just took the
pizza right off my plate like it's high school.
Speaker 5 (00:55):
Hey, we're fixing to start the show and you guys
are yucking it up.
Speaker 2 (01:01):
That's how we get into the mood. You think it's
fun talking about this stuff every day, very taxic, very tiring.
Although I am impressed with one thing. I haven't even
done Sounds of the Day and you already have. Is
that a joke?
Speaker 6 (01:15):
Much credit for this as president?
Speaker 2 (01:20):
Is that a joke? I like the slow, like Hollywood
turn and smile through the badi. It's the creepiest, most
evil thing I've ever seen in Maluk Because he did
it before when he was walking away from another press
conference and then asked him a question. He kind of
turned around and smiled, and I'm just like, man, that
is the devil. You know, I don't This is probably
(01:40):
shocking to some people. I don't watch Fox anymore than
I would watch CNN or MSNBC. I catch him when
I catch him. I happen to, obviously watch the president's
farewell speech, and it happened to be on Fox, and
then I got immediate reaction from from brit Hume. Seems
(02:01):
to be as a tough cell. You know, Brend's trying
to be nice and I'm kind of giggling in my bed,
half asleep. And then Dana Prino, who you know, Jesse
Waters and Dana Prino, of everybody left at Fox are
the only two that I think have something to say
or appreciate when they have something to say. And and
(02:22):
Dana Prino more and more, and yesterday, you know, she
just kind of confessed a feeling I have this morning,
quite frankly, which is you know, and this may be
very Sicilian of me and Italian of me. I don't know.
I would love to paint it in a picture of
growing in faith and being less in my nature and
(02:46):
more in God's nature mercifully through me, But it's probably
more Sicilian. When I'm done, I'm done. And you know,
like if if you part ways with the company or something,
I really I really never think of them again. They
don't even cross my mind. I'm just I'm done and
(03:06):
I've moved on. And so I'm kind of that way
with Joe Biden. Now you can play sopranos teams. There's
no such thing as the Mafia. That is a complete
creation of motion pictures and television. People. We don't like
things getting out of line in our neighborhood, and we
might be a first responder from time to time. No,
(03:29):
but I just you know, I get I'm done. I
have reflective moments like this is at the risk of
being like Dana Prino, I don't mean to be mean.
When Joe Biden is standing there making the statement on
the ceasefire and hostage release, which of course famously this
morning has blown up in his face. There's there's a
(03:49):
clear snag the Prime Minister of Israel bb Data, who
said there's been a last minute crisis with a moss
and it's holding up their approval. So the President presented
a done deal that isn't done. I mean, that's a
pretty disastrous way to start Thursday, January sixteenth for the
(04:09):
outgoing presidency. But as he's making this statement, and again
there's this subtle case that they're trying to make that
they're responsible for it, that this is their achievement. And
I think for many Americans it's a very Reaganesque moment.
Where Jimmy Carter meddled in Iran, it led to the
(04:33):
fall of the Shaw, the rise of the Ayatola, the
rise of the Islamic Republic, with a hostage crisis that
lingered on and on and on and didn't end until
Ronald Reagan took the oath of office. These are some
of these moments you should be grateful for. We've got
a clear picture of what strength does and what weakness does.
(04:54):
Weakness emboldens aggressors, Appeasement emboldens aggressors. This administration, this White House,
from the very first moments of invasion, slaughter, and capture,
couldn't figure out or couldn't say which side they were
clearly on, and they were back and forth. The American
(05:16):
people speak reelect Donald Trump. Donald Trump makes a public
statement if those hostages and I think you'll be lucky
if in the end three American hostages return alive. I
have no indication, I can find no hope in research
(05:39):
that there's a possibility that they're all alive. But when
Donald Trump said, as the president elect, weeks away from
being in power, if those hostages aren't released by the
time I'm in office, there's going to be held to pay,
that's when things started moving. And I think most of
(06:03):
the American people, I think even most of the dead
and journalism media have connected those dots. So it was
awkward to watch him even try to make this his credit.
Then it blows up in his face. But to you know,
getting back to Dana Prino, flanked by Kamala Harris, who
(06:27):
I had a coach in high school. Hardnett and Steve
Hardt had played for Tulane. He was a great coach,
great guy, and he knew how small I was. He
knew when it came to football, how athletic I was,
you know. But he would always joke with me, you know,
because he is He's the one that made me. Get
a neck roll. It'll make you look tougher. Get a
neck grol, put that on your shoulder bed. Then you
(06:50):
do his thing with his neck. Show that growth, baby,
show that growth. Don't let him see you looking small.
And that's when you like make your neck look real big,
which is how Kamala Harris was oddly standing throughout the
entire speech. It was just it was painful to watch.
I don't know what it was supposed to be. And
you know, and in that glance, I'm thinking, oh my gosh,
(07:12):
imagine if she had gotten elected how I feel. But
other than that, I don't think of it. They're gone,
it's over. I don't need a farewell. But then as
you're watching and you're listening, and even as you're trying
to find a moment of closure, he unveils this bitter
(07:35):
farewell to the nation, riddled in bitterness, desperation, and hypocrisy
to warn of an oligarchy after he's already given a
medal of honor to George Soros. Oh, come on, man,
I mean bigger than a giraffe. And so I think
(07:56):
it just left everyone. You know, I think brit Hume
hit it right on the head just from watching. I
don't think anybody cares. I mean, if I had to
create a headline president gives farewell to a nation who's
already said good riddance, that would be the headline. I
know that sounds mean, and I don't mean it too.
That's just as honest and straight to the point as
I can be. Now I have said, this president is
(08:19):
not only leaving the most failed president and perceived failed
president in history. It's a pretty easy case to make one.
I don't really feel a need to prosecute any further
or litigate any deeper. I could do an hour on
foreign policy alone, starting in Afghanistan and ending this morning
(08:42):
with him taking a victory lap last night for a
deal that's already kind of blown up. All I do
is look at the calendar and say twentieth get here,
and I thank god we've survived this as well as
we have. But if we do any exercise today in
(09:05):
pure honesty, having lived this together, having the necessity of
understanding to be in the moment and move forward together,
there's probably nothing crueler and nothing more truthful or honest
I could do today. Then compare bitter Joe Biden's case
(09:31):
for his presidency, and then compare that to his polling
numbers leaving and Donald Trump's entering. And that brings me
back full circle to Brit Hume, who said, I suspect
nobody was really watching, not nearly the amount of people
they want to be watching. I'll add to that, Brett,
by the way, isn't it amazing how I can't do
him as well without the glasses, prop. I need that glasses,
(09:53):
prop donnut glasses. They're here. I just don't feel like
opening him. But anyway, make a long story short, he
and desperately all he wants on this way out the door.
I guess gaslight would be the word gaslight you into
(10:14):
thinking he had a great presidency. But it's an impossible cell.
Not a tough cell, an impossible cell. And what I'll
add to what Brit said was time is going to
be even worse to him for he leaves office already
in polling considered the worst president ever. Time time will
prove he was never actually president ever.
Speaker 1 (10:38):
It's your Morning show with Michael del Jno.
Speaker 2 (10:45):
My father used to call it. He's got bigger than
a giraffe. It was more like that, all right. So
was it a farewell to the nation or more of
a bitter goodbye? Mark Mayfield reports on the president's address.
Speaker 7 (10:57):
President Biden has delivered his farewell address. The forty sixth
president spoke to the nation in a televised speech from
the Oval Office. In his opening remarks, Biden spoke about
the Israel Hamas ceasefire deal.
Speaker 8 (11:08):
This plan was developed and negotiated by my team and
will be largely implemented by the incoming administration. That's why
I told my team to keep the incoming administration fully informed,
because that's how it should be, working together as Americans.
Speaker 7 (11:23):
During his previous primetime speech from the Oval Office in July,
Biden explained his decision to not run for reelection. President
elect Trump is reportedly considering an executive order that would
save TikTok from ban or sale. The Washington Post reports
to order with suspend enforcement of the TikTok ban or
sale law for sixty to ninety days. Its aim is
to buy the Trump administration some time to work out
(11:45):
a sale or some other solution. The Chinese owned appis
scheduled to be banned in the US starting Sunday, and
Milennia Trump has declined an invitation for tea from First
Lady Jill Biden.
Speaker 2 (11:55):
That's politics. I'm Markeneyfield more on that. Men will give
and move on. Women never do. Remember earlier when I
was telling you I never think about companies I used
to work for. Oh my wife does. She's still rummaging
through the cutlery. Try to take a couple of them out.
(12:17):
She holds a grudge. Yeah, there's no way Milania's gonna
sit and have tea with Joe Biden after the things
Joe Biden and Joe Biden said about her husband. Good
for you, Milanya, That's how it should be. Pam Bondy,
I don't know how to put this into words, and
(12:39):
I get paid to use words. I mean, she just
made United States senators look like petty muppets yesterday. The
level of class intelligence but the spunk in fire combined,
(13:05):
what a bad moment for all of the senators. They
had from start to finish. She played no games before
the Senate. Brian shook as our road to the cabinet
rode to the White House twenty twenty four. President Elect
Trump's pick for Attorney General, faced questions about the twenty
twenty election and border security during her confirmation hearing Wednesday.
(13:29):
Democratic Senator Dick Durbin asked Pam Bondy if Donald Trump
lost the twenty twenty election, President.
Speaker 6 (13:36):
Biden is the President of the United States. He was
duly sworn in, and he is the President of the
United States. There was a peaceful transition of power. President
Trump left office and was overwhelmingly elected in twenty twenty four.
Speaker 5 (13:52):
Bondi is a former attorney general for Florida and defended
Trump during his first impeachment and supported his claims of
a election fraud in Washington.
Speaker 2 (14:02):
I'm Brian Shook. I had to narrow down to two
or three clips for sounds of the day, some really
bad moments for some Democrat senators. She just chewed them
up and spin them out. TikTok plenty to shut down
its app for the US users. This Sunday, Michael Kasner reports.
Speaker 3 (14:18):
That's according to Reuter's, that's when a federal ban on
the social media app would go into effect if the
Supreme Court doesn't move to block it. The law would
only ban new TikTok downloads from the Google or Apple
app stores, and would let existing users still have access
for some amount of time. Instead, users that open the
app come Sunday, we'll see a pop up message that
(14:40):
directs them to a website that has information about the ban.
I'm Michael Cassner.
Speaker 2 (14:44):
So TikTok has kind of become like the warning on
a cigarette package. It's telling you you're gonna get cancer,
you're gonna die, you could have a birth defect, you know,
all the bad stuff. Hey, you sit there and you
spin it as you're puffin. Yes, apparently.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
Now.
Speaker 2 (15:01):
I'm not a TikTok person, never been on it. I understand.
It's kind of like the way my daughter's explained it
to me. You like, real's dad, right, They're addictive, And
I said, well, it's a weakness, it's a problem. Well,
yours are all for old people, you know Carson videos.
It's really very cruel. This is how my children talk
to me, where ours is designed for our audience. But
there's some really good stuff on there, and you know,
(15:22):
so it's interesting that everybody knows the ties to China,
everybody knows the threat involved, but it sounds like everybody's
really enjoying TikTok and they don't want it to go away.
Multimedia crack. Well, have to see how that plays out,
all right, thirty seconds, I'm the Hardwood Cities of your
morning show. Interest. Griz beat the Spurs, Bucks over the Magic,
MAVs fell to the Pels. That's not easy. Lakers one
(15:43):
seventeen one o eight defeated the Heat and the Warriors
by one over the Tea Wolves.
Speaker 3 (15:50):
This is Debo Morris from our little town of Franklin, Tennessee.
Speaker 1 (15:53):
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Bill Jordan. 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
(16:14):
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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.
Speaker 2 (16:24):
Early Bird gets the worm, rise and shine, and welcome
to Thursday, January, the sixteenth year of Our Lord, twenty
twenty five. If you're just waking up. Much was made
yesterday over taking credit for the great ceasefire and hostage release.
It looks different now as the sun rises. The Israeli
Prime Minister's office claims Hamas is backing out of some
of the agreement In the hostage release deal. The Palestini
(16:47):
militant group made a ceasefire hostage deal with Israel on Wednesday.
The President of the United States took to prime time
to take credit, but according to Israeli officials, this deal
was predict on the release of dozens of hostages in
exchange for Palestinian prisoners, and Hamas is re nicking on
(17:08):
the understandings and creating a last minute crisis that is
preventing an agreement. The Cabinet will not even convene until
the mediators notify Israel that Hamas is now in compliance,
so a major snag in the ceasefire deal. Waking up. Meanwhile,
the President delivered his farewell address to a nation who
(17:29):
said good riddens a long time ago and had long
bitter warnings about Oligarchys Red can't remember who said it,
but whoever did, what a great line. This is what
the Democratic Party looks like with no propaganda machine behind it.
(17:49):
I've always used the analogy of the Wizard of Oz
because I was always fascinated by that moment, Toto the
only one not afraid. The little dog pulls the curtain,
revealing a tiny man pulling levers. The brilliant moment in
that shot is when the Wizard looks back for a
moment and he can see that he's exposed, and he's
(18:11):
troubled by it, but he tries to just turn around
and keep moving the levers, like he can get away
with it. That's kind of what the Democrat Party has
looked like for the better part of two to three months,
(18:31):
and they can't seem to get away with anything. There's
nobody on their side. There's nobody spinning for them, there's
nobody gaslighting for them. You could say that with the
President's farewell address, but I think it was even more
evident in these confirmation hearings. I mean, Pam BONDI made
(18:52):
them just look embarrassingly ridiculous. If you watch any of
these Conforce hearings, I mean unless you're just so in
the matrix on the left, in which case you can't
notice pettiness, childnish, childishness, hypocrisy theater because perhaps you've sunk
(19:19):
to that level. Two different ones come to mind, heg
Seth and Bondie. Heg Seth did it in a completely
different way, and it was very, very effective. Don't get
me wrong. BONDI just came out swinging right back at him.
Was it was unbelievable, I said, yesterday morning. But they
(19:39):
don't know what they're in for. Bond Bam, Bondie. If
you think, oh, she's attractive and well dressed, and you
know they hate that, don't mess with her. This is
no Sarah Palin. This woone will eat you up, chew
you up, and spit you out on the floor. And
they kept coming back for more, and you left not
(20:03):
only thinking, well, obviously she should be confirmed, but you
know we really should maybe like that owner of the
Los Angeles Times, maybe we should maybe recast the Senate,
get some serious people in here that know what they're
talking about. And I go back to the wizard looking
over his shoulder, and they think they can still play
(20:24):
this us versus them this blind partisan politics. And so
whether it was a confirmation hearings or even the bitter
farewell to a nation who's already said good riddance, what
we're really faced with is what Joe Biden was trying
to And it's not just a tough cell. It was
an impossible cell. But what his farewell address was trying
(20:47):
to sell you versus what you already feel about him.
And that's where you come to the quick conclusion, this
is impossible. The American people see this presidency as a failure.
It's not just a perception, it's a reality. According to
(21:09):
a new CNN poll, President Biden will leave office with
his approval rating remaining at the lowest level of his
term and his favorability rating close to his personal low.
The American people broadly view Biden's four years in office
more as a failure than a success. Overall, thirty six
(21:30):
percent of US adults say the approve of the way
Biden handled the presidency that matched his previous low in
CNN polling, even fewer rating his performance positively on immigration
just thirty one percent, foreign affairs thirty two percent, the
(21:50):
economy thirty three percent. Even his strongest issue in terms
of approval ratings are underwater now, like protecting American democracy,
which is a theme they create aided in the boogeyman
of Donald Trump, and that's only at forty six percent,
Handling of the environment forty four percent, dealing with healthcare
(22:10):
policies at forty three percent. Biden's favorability rating, a measure
of personal feelings rather than job performance, is favorability rating
thirty three percent, unfavorable fifty eight percent. Most American sixty
one percent say they see Biden's presidency overall as a failure.
(22:34):
My advice would have been, only eleven presidents have done it.
Don't be one of them to get on the helicopter
and scoot out. There's no use coming into the room
and saying goodbye to everyone when six out of ten
didn't appreciate you coming and are glad you're leaving. You
(22:54):
just slip out the door, you get in the car.
The party's over. But these numbers and the way the
president's speech last night was trying to present impossibly the
previous four years, well that's the gap between reality and
(23:15):
their tone deafness or maybe is. And I'd love to
give credit, we just can't simply remember who said it.
This is what the Democrat Party looks like with no
propaganda machine, just exposed, rejected, and failed. Now, I do
want to say a couple things about Joe Biden. There is,
(23:38):
and it's very small, a human part of me who
really despises politics. Frankly, I like self governed people, free
and protected in liberty, and I like servant leaders for
a time, going to serve and accountability to the people
(24:00):
who elect them. That's nothing like we're living. Maybe it's
what we're heading towards. I pray so, but everything is
so dysfunctional. If I ever go to Washington, or I
ever go to a state capitol, man, I can't get
to a shower fast enough. It's filthy. Can't stand any
of them, and very few even those who arrive with
good intentions remain in good standing. They lose their intentions
(24:22):
and become a part of the problem. It's just a mess.
But if you want to look at it from a
political standpoint, here's Joe Biden. Spent his entire life in government.
He had one dream be President of the United States,
blew it early in life with plagiarism, Then he finally
gets it in a coup, a shadow campaign to save
(24:45):
the democracy, and so the one thing this man wanted
most in life he finally got and failed. That's sad.
I genuinely sometimes think I hope he really is as
cognitively impaired as he appears. Maybe he doesn't realize it,
(25:07):
but he ultimately failed himself. If you compare his inaugural
address to his first actions within thirty minutes after leaving
the podium, he failed himself. The notion of an old
(25:28):
guy restoring you know, sense and sensibility and will not
fight over every little thing. We'll focus on uniting and
solving problems really an exercise. I don't have long enough
windows to do it, but would be to read you
verbatim his own inaugural dress and compare that, and we
(25:55):
would just take the highlights of each quarter of each
year of his presidency. He failed himself over and over
and over again. And then last night the notion, I mean,
you lose before you ever begin. A farewell address for
(26:18):
Mike Reagan FDR. Maybe, and I guess Jimmy Carter will
be known for the Malaise speech. Joe Biden will be
known for the bidder goodbye to a nation that said
(26:39):
good riddance, but it doesn't match what he was trying
to sell you in no way matches how you feel
about him. Six and ten think he's a failure. They're
in a spirit of good riddance as he's giving a
better goodbye. He leaves at an all time low. Meanwhile,
(27:01):
the survey and a Fox News poll shows Donald Trump's
personal favorability rating a fifty percent, up from forty eight
percent in October. It's the highest ever in a Fox
newspoll and an equal share of unfavorable fifty to fifty.
But that's remarkable when you think of what this man
has been through from having an election, let me say
(27:27):
it in their words, having a shadow campaign to save
the democracy, and a weaponization of COVID and changing of
an election laws costing him as presidency, impeachments January sixth,
constant legal and media harassment and demonization, and he enters
(27:49):
office with a fifty percent favorability rating. How do you
like my garbage truck? Oh, they like your garbage truck.
When Donald Trump took office in twenty seventeen, his favorability
rating was forty two. After all he's been through, He's bigger, stronger,
and more liked. I think America is more prepped and
(28:10):
interested in his inaugural address than Joe Biden's farewell address.
At least for half the country, they're saying thank God.
Well over half the country, three corners of the country
is saying good riddance to Joe Biden. This is your
(28:30):
Morning Show with Michael de Chuno. Make your voice heard
on the iHeartRadio app using the talkback button, just like
this Arizona.
Speaker 4 (28:37):
Caller Marie Michael One statement, a few questions. I don't
think Joe Biden really did anything on his own, with
maybe the exception of Afghanistan. So who was acting as president?
How do we find out and how do we hold
those people responsible, including the Democratic Party.
Speaker 2 (28:59):
Well, the answer to that, I mean, there's a lot
of people that speculate it's still Barack Obama. But I
think there's a layer above Barack Obama, and that's John Podesta.
In fact, that's why David Sanadi and I have spent
so much time just exposing the relationship with Podesta and
Soros and their ultimate agenda and goal. These are people
that not put America first. They're preparing America to place
(29:22):
at the feet of a global governance. The problem is
they can't make much headway because you can't get China
and Russia from being a superpower either military or economic,
and they need all three to comply in order to
pull it off. But the reason we suspect John Podesta's
(29:42):
he's been there since Clinton. John Podesta, i would argue,
is the longest serving president in the United States history,
got away with it for eight years of Bill Clinton,
got away with it for eight years with Barack Obama,
was trying to get away with it for eight years
with Hillary Clinton. That didn't work, and he's been getting
(30:05):
away with it with four years with Joe Biden. David
does a Christmas in America and we did the year
two thousand, I think two years ago, and of all
the video clips, he chose thought it was the year
two thousand and it was a great one. Bill Clinton
was joking around riding through the White House. Everybody was
(30:25):
on vacation and he was literally riding through the White
House on his bicycle and taking in like a video tour,
and they passed the Oval Office in his bike. He
goes this. John never takes the day off, and you
see Podesta behind the desk in the Oval office working
that's thirty years ago. I think I make a pretty
(30:50):
compelling case. It's John Podesta side by side with George Soros,
and I think the one that they planned to plot
in a global governance situation. Not far behind is Barack Obama.
Barack Obama never to your eyes or your sense, it
strikes you as a former president, does he? I'll never
(31:11):
forget were we That was your morning show, wasn't it then? Yeah?
I was here. I think we were on just in Tulsa.
Maybe we were onto ten markets at that time. But
I'm on the air and all of a sudden on
a television you just see Barack Obama showing up at
ten place and he's just walking in to see the
Prime Minister in England. Yeah, yeah, yeah, And I what's
(31:34):
up with that? Like official business? And nobody even asked
him what the business was about. And he doesn't look
like somebody there that's making a former presidential visit. He
was like, there's on serious business. So your guess is
as good as mine. It's for time to tell. And
(31:55):
getting back to our quote of the day, this is
what the Democrat Party looks like with no propaganda mahone.
Perhaps without a propaganda machine to mislead or distract the
American people, we will get to the bottom of that.
That's why I always say Joe Biden leaves office one
of the most failed presidents ever, and time will be
even worse to him because it'll prove he was never
actually a president. He did have mornings for us all
(32:19):
last night that we're entering an oligarchy in the US today.
Speaker 8 (32:24):
An oligarchy is taking shape in America of extreme wealth,
power and influence that literally threatens our entire democracy. Are
basic rights and freedoms and a fair shot for everyone
to get ahead.
Speaker 2 (32:38):
Who gets rich with the members of the United States Congress.
But are you kidding me? This from a forty sixth
president who put the medal of freedom around the neck
of George Soros, or who has enjoyed zuckbucks from Zuckerberg
or Bezos, or an intelligensia community, a mainstream media oligarchy
(33:00):
for decades. I'm back in kindergarten. He who smelt it Delton,
someone who did a lot of dealing yesterday was bond
Pam Bondy.
Speaker 5 (33:12):
Road to the White House twenty twenty four. President Elect
Trump's pick for attorney General, faced questions about the twenty
twenty election and border security during her confirmation hearing Wednesday.
Democratic Senator Dick Durbin asked Pam Bondy if Donald Trump
lost the twenty twenty election.
Speaker 6 (33:30):
President Biden is the president of the United States. He
was duly sworn in, and he is the president of
the United States. There was a peaceful transition of power.
President Trump left office and was overwhelmingly elected in twenty
twenty four.
Speaker 2 (33:46):
Coming up in our Sounds of the Day, I'll play
a clip where she turns the attacking leading question completely
around on the Senate. We're all in this together.
Speaker 3 (33:56):
This is your morning show with Michael new I'll join
nowh