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
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(00:23):
and make us a part of your morning routine. In
the meantime, enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 1 (00:26):
Well listen, we've got to do this.
Speaker 2 (00:28):
Let me hear you all saying he.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Ow me o he past.
Speaker 3 (00:36):
Three, starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this stage.
Speaker 1 (00:47):
This is your.
Speaker 3 (00:49):
Morning show with Michael Odell Chum.
Speaker 1 (00:52):
That would be the Egals. What who is that? By
the way, that was the mayor of Philadelphia? No way,
can't spell eagles? Well can? I think she froze in
the moment?
Speaker 4 (01:05):
E gee?
Speaker 1 (01:08):
Hell of course.
Speaker 4 (01:11):
And when you're live like that, you can't do what
you do with like in text whenever I misspell something texting,
I just go, oh.
Speaker 1 (01:16):
Turn spell check. Yeah, sorry about that, my fat thumbs.
Speaker 4 (01:20):
But well you just standing there, you GOI yeah, we
uh never delight kind of delight and other people's misfortune
eight minutes after the hour. Thanks for waking up with
your morning show on the air and streaming live on
your iHeartRadio app. Don't forget on that iHeartRadio app. There's
a little microphone that's a talkback button. You press, it'll
(01:41):
count you down three two to one. You can ask
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as everyone is waking up. No longer do you have
to wait on hold with the talkback button, and we
can't have your morning show without your voice. You can
also email me Michael deb at iHeartMedia dot com.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
Why is it read? Boot is always the last thing
I think.
Speaker 4 (02:03):
Of, Well because we think it could be anything, but
because it takes a long time to reboot. But my
logic goes through every troubleshoot before.
Speaker 1 (02:15):
Maybe she just reboot the whole computer. Ye all fixed?
Speaker 4 (02:18):
Yeah I lost forty five minutes this morning, No way,
yes to that, But you know what was happening, like
you don't know. I'm just shocked. I used to think
that's the kind of stuff that never happens, you know,
like to the big talk show host. But then you know,
Glenn Beck came in and filled in and used our studios
on Broadway, and he had something. I guess, just stuff happens,
(02:38):
right like the year sixty fifteen minutes on a nationally
syndicated radio show. Well we're in National's that we were
on the air on time, but I'm very I had
to redo the whole newscast. I had h I was
trying to be sympathetic, empathetic whatever when I said, oh no,
you know, well, it was either just run without a
backup link or you know, take a shot ating And
(03:00):
it's always the last thing I think of, but I
finally did it.
Speaker 1 (03:02):
But anyway, rebooted and all here we are.
Speaker 4 (03:04):
All refugee flights into the United States have been halted
by President Trump suspended the State Department's refugee program that
went into effect. President Trump has been hinting at changes
coming to FEMA. President is also going on a trip
first to the Carolinas, where we know FEMA dropped the
(03:25):
ball after a hurricane and then onto the fires. In California.
There is a fast moving Hughes fire that erupted in
Los Angeles County as the officials ordered over thirty one
thousand to evacuate. Fire crews are battling a swiftly growing
blaze dubbed the Hughes Hughes Fires burning near the town
(03:45):
of I'm probably gonna botch this castaic. It sounded good.
I think it's spelled e G. L ees.
Speaker 1 (03:57):
Well that we've got to do this whatever. I have
a stupid mommible t. That's that we used to use.
Speaker 4 (04:03):
Remember the Miss America pageant person and such. Remember the
old answering the question the fire grow to more than
five thousand acres and two hours.
Speaker 1 (04:14):
Wow, at the.
Speaker 4 (04:16):
Rate it's going to blaze is burning a football sized
field area every two to three seconds. Let that sink
in for a second. Can you imagine a fire running
that fast a football field every two to three seconds.
Speaker 1 (04:32):
Yeah, that's blocked all right.
Speaker 4 (04:33):
For the original two the Palisades fire containment is now
at seventy percent more progress. The Eton fire is now
at ninety five percent containment. With this huge fire, the
one that's growing a football field every three seconds, only
fourteen percent containment.
Speaker 1 (04:49):
We do have poles of plenty.
Speaker 4 (04:52):
Three and four believe it's likely that all of Trump's
cabinet picks will be confirmed by the Senate. That's an
interesting pole. Now there's a distinction in the way the
question is asked. What you think will happen and what
you think should happen are two different questions. So we
have seen pretty consistently things and it depends on how
they ask it. You know, sometimes they ask how do
(05:13):
you think President Trump was handling the transition? And that
would be in the mid to high sixties, and of
course at that point, the biggest part of the transition
is cabinet members being named. So the presumption is that
roughly the same or about the same amount of Americans
that are pretty hopeful and pretty excited about Donald Trump,
(05:35):
and that goes beyond just Republicans obviously, to independence and
some Democrats. It seems to be right in line with
how they feel about his confirmation selections. But now this
is a specific question, do you think they're going to
all go through? Remember we thought hag Seth would be
a problem, Telsea Gabbard would be a problem. RFK Junior
(05:56):
would be a problem. Nobody's looking like a problem. Seventy
three percent of America expects the entire cabinet. Just eighteen
percent don't see confirmation for all of Trump's picks. Pretty
smooth flight so far for Donald Trump. Busy flight, turbulent
for the air, but not for the passengers.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
The Biden legacy.
Speaker 4 (06:22):
I have said this for four years, and it's what
I would say to Joe Biden if he pressed me
to his face. While I don't think by the end
of his presidency, there's very many Americans that think he
really was president.
Speaker 1 (06:40):
And really doing things. And I think that's gonna drip drip,
drip and trickle out more and more in the weeks
and months and years to come. I always said it
this way. He leaves office literally ranked one of the
worst presidents ever. Time will not be kind to him.
Time will prove he wasn't even president.
Speaker 4 (07:02):
But if he was, and he certainly was, you know,
if you go back and look at now corn Pop
is a great example that the dementia phase was already
in progress when he was a candidate in twenty twenty.
There were a lot of signs of that. But if
you look at his face, his speech pattern, his eyes
(07:28):
going into office, and I can tell you this, we're
saying along goodbye to my mother in law right now.
A year is a long time. Four years is almost
an eternity in the stages. So you can see that
Joe Biden was diminished, entering and gone at some point
(07:49):
in but at the beginning when he was kind of there.
Two things come to mind. His inaugural address, followed by
walking right across the street and doing twenty nine executive
orders reversing everything Donald Trump had done. And then when
we waited sixty four days for a news conference, he
(08:09):
was smart enough to know the plan was, you get
us into the White House, then we'll hand it over
to Kamala by way of us really meaning Podesta, Soros,
whoever really was running things behind the scenes. And he
made and I felt it, and I think it was real.
He took a real stand and he gave the border
(08:30):
to Kamala.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
Harrison.
Speaker 4 (08:31):
I remember I was live on the air and I said,
he just handed the poison apple to Kamala. He just
sent a message to Pedesta and Soros. I'm Dave, and
I'm not leaving reference to the movie David if you
haven't seen him. So I think those were two day
every things now towards the middle. In the end, I
don't think he knew what was going on. If you
go back to the inaugural address. Oh, by the way,
(08:51):
they got even remember scheduling the debate in June before
either convention, probably not giving him his drugs, letting him
go out there. I mean, they got their White House back.
They just wanted to lose a general election. But going
back to that original speech, it was all about unity.
Had he just done it, but he didn't. He gave
(09:15):
this whole inaugural address about how we're not going to
fight over every little thing. We have a lot of
common ground. Let's remember that we've got some challenges, let's
tackle them together, Let's find common ground, and really kind
of foreshadowing Trump's speech. Only Trump did it and is
(09:39):
doing it right now as we speak, common sense. In
the end, Joe Biden failed himself. Now he did something
that David's and NAUGHTI has never forgotten. And it is
bizarre for you know, I heard some people I chose
(10:02):
to take a different view of the far left ministry
yesterday in that I wanted you to see how the
left is having tantrums. They're losing, and they're losing decades
of ground and seconds. They're having tantrums and they're reacting
that minister that was certainly a tantrum the president, Wow,
(10:23):
better man than me. I would have got up and
walked out. But they don't have a response yet. That's
the problem. But I can't tell you how many people
were making all the obvious observations. I wonder if she
ever gave a lecture to Joe Biden for killing innocent
(10:44):
babies or you know, of course, it's not a two
way street. It's never a two way street. There's one
side that it still believes in traditional values. They believe
in a God, his way, his truth, his life, his word,
his spirit, and our republic under that God. And there are
(11:06):
others that have created a new God. I mean, we
get that, but the train has moved on. And for
Joe Biden to talk about the soul of America and
when we look at his legacy, there's nothing more damning
for the left today.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
And there's a lot of things we could kick around.
Speaker 4 (11:28):
Tammy Trahilo is going to have in our news report
coming up in our Top five stories, a piece of
research on democracy. Something were not something that Left created.
It was to be there, you know, Trojan horse. And
not only did they lose people's view of democracy in
(11:50):
their defeat and in Trump's victory, their view of republic
or even democracy under Trump way, do you hear if
it's gone up down? I mean, it's one thing to
lose on Israel, to lose on the border, to lose
on the economy, but to lose on something you created
that doesn't even exist that it's a bad day for them.
Speaker 3 (12:12):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chorno.
Speaker 1 (12:16):
Red was just saying off the era.
Speaker 4 (12:18):
Did you see the video of the guy in Canal
Street with his hockey puck and hockey stick, you know,
playing hockey and you know, and then read made a
comment because Red's a Yankee and he's this way snobbishly.
Who would even have a hockey stick in New Orleans?
We played hockey in New Orleans, you goofball. In fact,
we had a professional team, not in the NHL, but
(12:40):
the one of the best names ever. And I thought,
if they had any common sense, we had a name issue.
Speaker 1 (12:48):
So why were we the New Orleans Saints? Because when
the Saints go march.
Speaker 4 (12:52):
In and all right, so and then we were the
New Orleans Jazz, which is New Orleans probably most famous
trademarcus Jazz. Well, unfortunately, because my brothers and my friends
and I we would go to Popeye's Chicken, get a
two piece all white meat, and then you get this
one little one dollar voucher that would get you into
a Jazz basketball game. Now put you in the rafters.
(13:14):
But you know they had these ramps at the Superdome
and oh yeah, it was walk down them like you
walk up them. And so what we would do is
for one dollar we would get in and then we
would go sit right down on the floor.
Speaker 1 (13:26):
Yeah.
Speaker 4 (13:27):
Pete Marivitch would never sit down during timeouts. He would
lean up against this, you know, the desk thing, and
that's right where we were sitting right behind him. You
oh yes, Well my next door neighbor played for the Jazz.
Speaker 1 (13:41):
Nate Williams.
Speaker 4 (13:42):
Wow, that's that's the trip to shoot baskets in the
front yard with an NBA player, just to just to see.
There's something about basketball players. I don't know what it is.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
I mean, their legs are like chiseled, like a statue,
you know, the bots the arms and the just the
smoothness and when there's nobody guarding them and there's not
thousands of people watching in television.
Speaker 4 (14:08):
Came they never miss They can do magic stuff right,
it's ivy stuff. And the ball would go so much higher.
It's like remember when you were a little kid, the
first time you went to a Major League baseball game
you saw one of their foul balls. You're like, we
don't fill ball like that. I mean they you know,
and how high. That's that's what I remember most, the
green of the grass and how high their fly balls go.
(14:32):
And then the when they would throw and like play catch,
the ball kind of did a little, it sped up,
kind of a thing that we don't have.
Speaker 1 (14:40):
Well, actually I had a very good arm. I just
couldn't feel very well.
Speaker 4 (14:45):
Hit like a as I said, I hit like a
major leaguer and I feelded like a minor leaguer. You
know what that'll do, keeping the miners keep.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
You watching on TV.
Speaker 4 (14:56):
I was with the the they call it the Roving.
Speaker 1 (15:04):
What do they call him?
Speaker 4 (15:05):
Roving as a specialist coach and he rove so he'll
go to Rookie League, A B, Triple A, you know,
they're all over the place working and developing players. So
the name, that's my brain's not remembering the name. So
he's in town and he's working, and I mean, you know,
just to show you, you know, you can have great
(15:26):
little league coaches, great high school coaches, great college coaches.
But I mean, you can learn something every day from somebody.
But I know, and sorryway make a long story short.
I'm working out with these Caribbean shortstops and you know
that was the epiphany when I was, you know, turning
double plays and watch this guy just slide and what
motion across taken? No, I'm never making it. And that
(15:47):
was the end of my baseball career. But yeah, we
have hockey. But we had the best hockey name, the
New Orleans Brass. And I thought for sure when we
got the Pelicans, that's what we would rename them to
because when I was growing up, the Pelicans were our
TRIPAA baseball team. But the Nor Orleans Brass that's a
great name that is right now and it was a
hockey team.
Speaker 5 (16:08):
Hey, I'm Olympic gold medalist Scott Hamilton and my morning
show is your morning show with Michael del journal.
Speaker 4 (16:20):
Hi.
Speaker 2 (16:20):
It's me Michael, your morning show can be heard live
daily on great radio stations like News Radio six fifty
k E n I Anchorage, Alaska, Talk Radio eleven ninety
Dallas Fort Worth, and Freedom one O four seven in Washington,
d C. We'd love to have you listen live every
day and make us a part of.
Speaker 1 (16:36):
Your morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.
I was the coast on there anytime, anywhere.
Speaker 4 (16:42):
On your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show. I'm
Michael del Journal.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
He didn't sleep at all last night. That's Jeffrey Lyon.
We kept you up. I don't know.
Speaker 4 (16:52):
I got home my son and I could not go
to sleep, and then I would I would, I think,
because you.
Speaker 1 (16:58):
Don't wear headphones anymore. That's what gotcha staying up.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
They were chafing my ears. Man got he's moisture. Well,
I have to I guess the moist dreizers. But Red's
not wearing red. He's wearing rust. But he's here, content producer.
And you can't have your morning show without your voice.
Use that talkback button on your iHeartRadio app. That way
you don't have to wait on hold. We can instantly
get your questions. And your comments and share them with
the entire class. You can always email me Michael D.
(17:23):
We spare you the spelling of the last name Michael
de at iHeartMedia dot com. Well, if you're just getting up,
all refugee flights into the United States have cup to
a halt. Resident Trump suspended the State Department's refugee program.
He's also hinting at changes coming to FEMA. Historic winter
storm brought record breaking snowfall all the way to Florida.
(17:44):
We documented that with my brother yesterday in New Orleans.
And yes, they can play hockey in New Orleans. Did
I just that was a very kind of Biden moment.
He insulted my hometown, assuming we didn't have hockey sticks
and pocks.
Speaker 1 (18:00):
There were weapons.
Speaker 4 (18:02):
I wasn't any better than my brother, but my brother Bobby,
because our family, really, you could make a case we
were a baseball family, yes, but at heart we were
a hockey family.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
None of us could skate.
Speaker 4 (18:16):
And my brother Bobby, his nickname was the flying Nun
because he looked like I'm in a rambling mood today.
Speaker 1 (18:21):
Aren't I like Sally Field? Yeah?
Speaker 4 (18:23):
When she used to take off. You know, people don't
if you go back and watch the Flying Nune. You know,
she didn't take off very steady. It was like, you know,
it was wires, and she took off like she was
not wires. And that's what they used to call my
brother Bobby, the Flying nun. Just del Jorno's all of us,
not skaters. Baseball players, yes, football players with heart, not
(18:46):
a lot of speed, size or skill you had the
want to. We're very small people, the del Jornas. We'd
come from shoemakers and produce salespeople on the street. We're
very small people. Well what a background. There's some mafia
mixed in there, but the mafia didn't really exist. It's
just a Hollywood creation. Anyway, make a long story short.
(19:10):
I just you know, I rambled on and on and
I just realized I didn't do the top stores last
hour as I'm talking about sneaking into New Orleans Jazz games.
Speaker 1 (19:23):
How great our hockey team's name was the Brass. Yeah.
I don't know what's there's something wrong with me this morning?
Speaker 3 (19:29):
Hey?
Speaker 4 (19:30):
Should I reboot myself? How would I do that? We
need you to go? Can you spell Eagles for me?
I'm feeling, you know what. By the way out of
every nothing will happen today, profoundly silly, memorable, un memorable.
Speaker 1 (19:43):
That will ever top that. I just I don't know what.
I thought.
Speaker 4 (19:46):
That was a cheerleader some fans, you know, who wouldn't
know how to spell eagles.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
And then I got I.
Speaker 4 (19:54):
Make the joke. I go, who was that? And you're like,
that's the mayor, Yeah, that's the mayor. I mean at
that point, I think you're thinking about, you know, your vote.
I mean, she can't spell eagle. Just watch the Vince
Papali movie Invincible. You learn how to spell it. But no,
we're gonna kick around. We're gonna do the top five
stories of day for you coming up and get them
(20:15):
if we get to them. Yes, and I wanted to
go through this Biden legacy polling. It's funny for a
guy that promised unity, he really I used to say
his biggest failure was he failed himself. I mean, he
did a speech on unity and then we're not going
(20:37):
to fight over every little thing, and then he walked
across the street into twenty nine or somebody did twenty
nine executive orders. Don't but when you think about it,
he did kind of unify as didnty. I mean in
and a roundabout way. It was always offensive to David
Zanatti the notion that an unborn child on an offspring
(20:58):
doesn't isn't considered a person a life or having a soul.
But this democracy that we're not or a republic, does
have a soul. Now, the government of buying for the people,
of course it has a soul, but they deny that.
They believe in an administrative state and a nation that
has a soul. So he often talked about the soul
(21:20):
of America. Joe Biden campaigned for president on the promise
of uniting Americans, but he leaves office with most voters
saying he failed. Fifty five percent of likely US voters
say America is a more divided nation after four years
of Joe Biden. I almost were in a weird mood anyway, right,
(21:44):
Why stop? Sure what went through your mind when you
read that read I'll tell you what went through my mind, because.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
Your first notion is, well, your first human notion is
what do I agree with that?
Speaker 6 (21:55):
Or?
Speaker 4 (21:56):
Are we more divided today? We were more divided last year.
I don't think you could get more divided than we
were last year. Now, don't think too much of yourself,
because if you go back to the sixties in Vietnam
and a lot of the racial civil rights movements, we've
(22:17):
been this divided before.
Speaker 1 (22:18):
We've had assassinations before.
Speaker 4 (22:20):
But I mean, we are that divided or somewhere a
little ahead of that a year ago. You almost have
to go back to the Civil War to find us
be more divided. And back then we were divided over
one or two things. That's the other thing about the
question that I think is is too hard to ask
in a poll. This is the most we've been divided
(22:40):
over many things. That's what has me so shocked and
awe how just all of a sudden, it just it
just imploded, like it was professionally imploded, and it's all
just over and moved on. We're not fighting over genders anymore,
because we we were fighting over everything, which is really
(23:02):
the point of his speech. But the first thing went
through my head read when I read that was America
on race. What an opportunity in Barack Obama to make
lifetimes of strides forward on race. I mean, I remember, again,
you got to understand everything that Barack Obama believes stands
(23:25):
for and was selling is anesthetical to everything in my
worldview policy view, I had nothing account but I remember thinking,
there is one good thing every black child waking up.
Speaker 1 (23:40):
We can get.
Speaker 4 (23:40):
Beyond all this nonsense of what happened hundreds of years ago,
and something that we all may have taken for granted
that when you looked at the President of the United States,
he had the same color skin as you, and I thought,
how wonderful this is going to be for people of
color to see the president of the United States. Now,
I mean, at least I get that, But my first
(24:01):
thought was you would think after eight years of that
we would have made progress.
Speaker 1 (24:06):
We didn't.
Speaker 4 (24:08):
I think when Barack Obama left office, race relations were worse, certainly,
and this may upset some people, but I had a
best friend who was black, and I was not welcome
at his funeral. And the reason I wasn't welcome at
his funeral is because I was white. That's how much
hate had been drummed up in the black community towards whites.
(24:30):
And if you go back and study Barack Obama's life
and his mentors, that's the agitation, that's really what they
were about. He was known Martin Luther King. It's funny
I mentioned this. I watched the documentary on Uhammad Ali,
who was my hero growing up, along with many children
(24:53):
around the world at that time, and so you would
think I'd be focused on everything Muhammad Ali, but I
wasn't fascinating. He was watching America in the background. As
Muhammad Ali was going along, I'm watching America behind him
and ooh. And I don't know if the documentarist meant
this or not, but you can see in the spirit
(25:18):
realm a battle for the soul of Muhammad Ali that
I was completely unaware of because my gosh, if I
go back to most of the years Muhammad Ali was champion,
my best friend was Victor Woods. I would say Victor
was black, but I never thought of him as black.
Speaker 1 (25:39):
He was Victor.
Speaker 4 (25:43):
I believe his mom was a doctor and his father
was a scientist. If I remember correctly. His mom was gorgeous. Really,
I slept at his house. He's loved at my house.
Speaker 1 (25:52):
He stole my train set, he did, and I never
forgave him for that.
Speaker 4 (25:56):
But anyway, make a long story short, I wasn't noticing
all that, and this documentary really brought it out. I mean,
Martin Luther King Junior was spending time with Muhammad Ali,
sharing the gospel with Muhammad Ali, talking to Muhammad Ali
of what he could mean for the Kingdom of God,
(26:16):
and he rejected that and he went Muslim and was
a brotherhood and all them, you know, we're all playing
for him. There was a tug of war for the
soul of Muhammad Ali, and you wonder how things might
have gone otherwise. So but that's kind of what this
struck me. As you know, Barack Obama left office, and
(26:37):
I don't think we were better off racially. I think
we were worse off. Joe Biden went in there to
stop all the nonsense, and all you did was get
more nonsense and unify the country, and he's clearly a failure.
Fifty five percent of likely voters say America is more
divided as a nation than four years ago, and I
think that's a true statement. Doesn't feel like it the
(26:59):
last four months though, right It's just kind of like
everybody's figured out the self evident truth question, what makes sense,
what doesn't, and the power was just taken away. I
chose to make my last chapter of my book a
story about my one and a half pound chihuahua Charo
(27:19):
and my sixty five pound well bred athletic Labrador Retriever,
and it was the one pound Mexican Chihuahua that ruled
the house. And I used to look at that and think,
why does Clio allow that? All she has to do
is just take the house back in one chomp. Her
(27:41):
toys were bigger than that dog, and that little dog
with only three teeth would hang onto her lip and
Cleve would walk around scared and the dog's dangling Cucci. Yeah, well,
so she was named after Charikuku you Goo, and I
kept waiting for America to do the same. They have
created this illusion that there's an administrative state and a
(28:02):
big powerful government and you're just a minion. But it's
not so. You live in a republic and all the
power has been given to you. You just need to
take it. And it just seems that I thought, you know,
maybe in the Tea Party movement was the beginning of it,
and in the Maga movement, you know, kind of coming
along and then all of a sudden, one fail swoop,
it just kind of happened, didn't it Just don't I
(28:25):
don't know. I mean I looked at that thing I
had two thoughts. One, I thought of Barack Obama and
how worse off we were after eight years racially, and
then my second thought was, I don't know if I
believe this poll. I think this poll is very accurate
if you're thinking of Joe Biden's four years, But the
minute the election was over and the minute the transition began,
I don't think it is true. I don't think we're
(28:45):
that divided anymore. And it has really flipped and now
you're down to just the bare essence of those who
have made a god of political correctness wokeness, and they're
not ready to let go, and they're having a tantrum.
But the majority of America has moved on. That's why
(29:06):
I said, wait, do you hear the Tammy Truhilo story
coming up next? On how America feels about democracy, the
issue they created over something we're not and guess what,
they lost the election and seemingly in the poll, democracy
won and everybody is just move.
Speaker 1 (29:29):
On, dot Org, I promise you no more rambling.
Speaker 4 (29:34):
Andrew made an observation that she thinks the Platinum Hour
is different from the other two hours that I get
far more serious.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
Later in the show, do you notice that.
Speaker 4 (29:46):
Well there, I think you're a little more loose in
the five am hour. Eh, yeah, you know you're getting started,
you're warming up. But I like this time with just
a yeah. What do you think platin card listeners? You
want me to wake up? Serious too much? Right, I'm
thinking of my West coastcause three o'clock in the morning,
I got a guy.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
Well you think of that? The President shanged out on
my watch. I do it all.
Speaker 4 (30:10):
I can't do all that talk radio. But I thought
that was a fascinating poll. But I don't know if
I buy it. Alright, So sixteen percent think we're less
divided now, I think that's four months ago.
Speaker 1 (30:20):
That's not today.
Speaker 4 (30:21):
I feel like seventy percent of America's just moved on.
There's just a just a die hard, bitter thirty percent
that are hanging out of their old gods and their
old failed policies. But that's why we have to talk back.
But greed disagree, let me know.
Speaker 1 (30:37):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chona.
Speaker 7 (30:41):
I just think this is the most exciting part of
the football season, where we get to see the Egglass
play the Common Years and then possibly go to the
Super Bowl.
Speaker 1 (30:49):
Against the chefs or the bullets.
Speaker 7 (30:51):
And I think we need to hear a vig John
Bookett on this one morning show family.
Speaker 4 (30:57):
I want to co host the show with her. I
think he is brilliant.
Speaker 1 (31:02):
We had one other real quick, did we want to
get that in or no? That every time? She is
always the caller of the day, that's for sure. Yeah,
oh yeah, you ready for Brian? Oh yeah, Brian, Oh, Brian, Brian.
Yeah you're Brian Pizza boy boy. You just proved to
me that you're smart as I thought you were.
Speaker 3 (31:26):
Black.
Speaker 1 (31:26):
Congratulations, my friend. I wonder what I was well over
the Herbert Hoover the poll. We're talking about the race
race relations.
Speaker 4 (31:36):
Yeah, well tell me about it. Chance, by the way,
was his name. He wrote a fiction novel and I
was one of the characters in it. We had a
lot of fun, but I couldn't go to the funeral.
The House is passed the Lincoln Riley Act, named after
a murder murdered Georgia nursing student, Mark Mate. By the way,
the Senate passed it last week. You knew about that
(31:58):
or right after the inauguration some Monday. Now it's been
passed by the House. Mark Mayfield reports.
Speaker 5 (32:05):
The legislation was passed Wednesday, aiming to clamp down on
illegal immigrants who commit nonviolent crimes like theft. It will
be the first bill cent to President Trump to sign
into the Wall after returning to the White House this week.
The Lake and Riley Act word to require ICE to
detain undocumented immigrants or charged arrested or convicted of committing
acts of burglary, theft, larceny, or shoplift.
Speaker 4 (32:26):
In I'm Mark Mayfield. Well, we documented with my brother
the record set in New Orleans. But weather experts say
winter storms set all kinds of snowfall records for the
state of Florida. Brian shook As details.
Speaker 6 (32:37):
National Weather Service meteorologist Andy Hayner in Tallahassee says they
use special boards to collect the snow for measurement.
Speaker 1 (32:44):
The white color makes it so that you know, if the.
Speaker 4 (32:47):
Sun were to strike the board, it wouldn't heat it.
Speaker 1 (32:49):
Up and cause the snow to melt.
Speaker 6 (32:51):
Some volunteers simply stuck a ruler into the ground. The
new records will include nearly nine inches recorded in Pensacola
and almost ten inches that fell in nearby Milton, where
the previous record of four inches was set in nineteen
fifty four.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
I'm Brian Schuck.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
So Donald Trump was the boogeyman, the Pabach, a tyrant,
a dictator, a bigot. Democracy was at stake in the election.
Speaker 1 (33:19):
Remember all that.
Speaker 4 (33:20):
Well, slightly more Americans are becoming satisfied with how democracy
is working in our nation.
Speaker 1 (33:25):
Tammy Trihilo has that story.
Speaker 7 (33:27):
A Gallup survey show that while most Americans over six
and ten are dissatisfied with how the United States democracy
is working, about a third report they were satisfied in
December of twenty twenty four. That was a six point
jump from the number of those who said they were
satisfied in December of twenty twenty three. However, Gallup notes
that satisfaction is still low overall. Figures were much higher
in the nineteen eighties and nineties. I'm Tammy Trhuo.
Speaker 1 (33:50):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael nhild Joano
Speaker 5 (34:00):
F