Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey gang, it's me Michael. You can listen to your
morning show live. Make us a part of your morning
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(00:21):
listen live, but are grateful you're here now for the
podcast Enjoy.
Speaker 2 (00:25):
Two three, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understanding.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Because we're in this together. This is your.
Speaker 2 (00:38):
Morning show with Michael Dell Charn okay to sixty seven.
Speaker 3 (00:42):
Broadway one night. Ready for takeoff, go on run. We've
never known, We've never done takeoff before. No yeah, seven
minutes after the hour on the Aaron streaming live on
your iHeartRadio app. This is your morning show. This is
your day. Friday, January the twenty fourth year of our Lord,
twenty twenty five. Tomorrow will be twenty five twenty five.
(01:03):
Ooh wow, we'll do it and get that specific in
the song ren and I you know you have this
with with the rejoin music and it's spooky. We'll be
talking about something, the computer will select the song and
it'll be exactly what we were talking about, or a fitting,
chilling take on it. Yeah, and you're like, we're on
(01:25):
a mission from God. It could be the mission of
God that does that. But you know, and it's fascinating
it does. And it happens daily, if not multiple times
a day, and I sometimes I'll reference it on the air.
How does the computer know? I get asked that all
the time. Did you mean to play that? No? I mean,
it makes it such. It's just it's a weird phenomenon.
Another one is and I do it more naturally. When
it happens, it happens, and then when it doesn't, I
(01:46):
don't force it. Red will force one every day a theme,
you know sometimes you know, the days just form themes. Sure,
there's like a general as if it's all been pre
organized in a great parable for us to not miss
a much bigger point than the stories that are actually
in the news. And some days they happen and they're real.
(02:09):
And then some days Red's trying to force him and
I just you know, don't share them with you read
alone it's Friday. No, no, just I but no today.
I think we're having a theme. And it's the same
as Thursday, and the same as Wednesday, and the same
as Tuesday, and the same as Monday afternoon. And that
theme is Promises kept. Donald Trump has just hit the
(02:30):
ground running and keeping promises a couple of biggies, Ice
arresting nearly five hundred illegals with criminal records in the
first few hours of office. And I just wondered, because
you know, I don't want to. I don't want to
be that guy on talk radio. What would that guy
sound like? Too early in the morning to do? Okay,
(02:52):
I'm just I just thought, I get you going. These
criminals have been roaming the streets. It is your previous
administration wanted you and your family armed. Doesn't this outrage you?
Can't we make a couple of quarter hours out of outrage.
The phone number, Give me a call, Weddy Hunter, whatddy
dounter six eight? Marry and Mary Allen you're on. No,
(03:16):
I'm a longtime caller, first time buying him and let
you talk about it. Do you have a recipe for
the football games this weekend? I'll hang up and hear
your comment. I'm a tail gator, but I mean, I
wonder if this dawns. I can tell from sounds of
the day, like even James Carvell, and you know, they're
(03:38):
all they're all just outed. You know. That's why I
never I can't seem to come up with a better
analogy than when Total pulled the curtain revealing the Wizard.
And he's not bigger than life, and he's not bigger
than the room. He's a tiny little man. And then
there's that moment where he looks back and he knows
he's exposed and doesn't know what else to do, so
he just goes back to pulling the levers. There are
(03:59):
some on the left there's going back to pulling the levers,
but it's just not working. Then there's others that's got
to be dawning on them. I was thinking of the
sound bite and this is a Haitian illegal immigrant gang
member read You could correct me, but I think it's
something like seventeen felony crime. And they just kept letting
him out and letting him out. And I think, you know,
(04:22):
we think of Republican versus Democrat and partisan politics, but
I mean, how did that ever get to be partisan.
Went on Earth? Was it an option? Oh? Maybe he
entered the country illegally. He's a part of a gang.
He's committed seventeen felony. I let him go. I don't
even know what people are doing with processing that, but
(04:48):
to make sure you don't miss it. As they're putting
him in the car, he's picked up enough English to say,
blank Trump, you feeling me? Yo? Biden forever brok, Thank
President Obama for all that he's done. I mean, listen
to this, I go, Biden forever bro Thank Obama. Put
(05:09):
everything that I mean, King sounds like he's been here
a while. It's just a little bit. Sounds like a
postgame interview. Yeah, but I mean just just put that
on a loop and run it. I mean, first of all,
that want to make sounds of the day. That's that's
a that's a sound of the decade, isn't it? Specifically
(05:33):
thanking presidents? Did he just reveal everything you need to
know about the border issue, everything you need to know
about Donald Trump and kept promises. Then we come to
the signing of the executive order declassifying any remaining files
on the assassination of John F. Kennedy his brother Robert F.
(05:56):
Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. Nothing
like declassifying the sixties, right? I mean, what has the
government been keeping from you and making you think is
partisan fighting or narrative about the border that that Haitian
(06:21):
criminal didn't make crystal clear? What might these three assassination
files tell us about our government sixty years ago? I
mean that's the first question, right. How much will be redacted?
(06:42):
How much will be revealed? Why is this so important
to Donald Trump? Does he regret not doing it and
halting it in his first term? Is he a different
person this time and feels a need for you to
(07:03):
see something new, old but new? Does he know what
the government has done to him and didn't succeed that
he thinks you can learn from from the three where
(07:24):
they did succeed. I want to play that sound. I'm
going to do all these and sound of the day.
But there's just something about I mean everything the office
looks different with him sitting in it. The paintings are different.
(07:48):
He is surrounded by early founding father presidents. He's got
a collage of the mes that have been given to
him from those who have served our country, and a
man stands there with a stack of executive orders and
(08:12):
announces them one at a time as he signs them,
and he makes some comments. This is all, and I'm
sure it's dawned on everyone. But you know, I'm the
least fan of the People's House, but by intent, I'm
the biggest fan of the People's House. And by and large,
(08:36):
I'm not really an executive order guy who likes the
presidency having to steer the country. That isn't how it
was designed or intended to be. But there's something about
the way he's doing it though, right not in secret.
Hundreds of executive orders by Joe Biden, most not reported
(08:59):
in news, all done in secret. This guy with cameras
in the Oval office daily. Here's how this one sounded.
Speaker 4 (09:11):
Lastly, sir, we have an executive order ordering the declassification
of files relating to the assassinations with President John F. Kennedy,
Senator Robert F. Kennedy, and Reverend doctor Martin Luther King June.
Speaker 3 (09:23):
I had a big one. Huh, that's a big one.
People are waiting for this for along, for years, for decades.
There he goes signing. Now the question is what's in it.
I'm reminded of Cash Patel who was doing an interview
(09:43):
and I believe it was with Glenn Beck and they're
sitting around there talking about the assassinations, and at that
time the notion that this person has promised when president
they're going to release it. Now there's it. You know,
as much as I love Cash Betel is the only
one sitting in the room that has read everything unredacted.
(10:07):
So you're looking into the eyes and you're interviewing and
talking to a person that knows what's in it. The
first reveal is there something in it? Because that's our
question today, is there gonna be anything new in this?
Is there bombshells in this? How much is it going
to be redacted? Or we're really going to have something?
Really that kind of conclusively gives us boom. Mystery solved.
(10:33):
There's your closure. Apparently you weren't smart enough or had
enough character or could handle it sixty years ago. Now
you can. And Cash Betels would not reveal what's in it,
not knowing what would be revealed ultimately or redacted. His
(10:57):
first signal was there are conclusive thinks you're going to see.
His second tell was the involvement of your government, and
the way he said it was you're not going to
learn anything you probably haven't already figured out. Well, that's
(11:20):
a pretty open ended answer, isn't it. And anybody could
take that and run in a million different directions. I
rewound and watched it ten times, and this is my take,
and I could be wrong. I think what cash Betel
was trying to say is you're going to see that
(11:40):
your government was involved, and that a lot of the
things you've been hearing were pieces of the puzzle, and
what people did with those pieces formed different pictures. So
when you see the real picture, you're going to recognize
(12:00):
all the pieces they just weren't in the right place.
Does that make? Am I making any sense whatsoever? Because
I have spent much of my sixty years I have
an autographed copy of the Warren Report by President Gerald R. Ford.
I mean, I have been studying this stuff my entire life,
and you get these pieces a puzzle in your hand,
(12:22):
and I don't you know, I don't think that Lee
Harvey Oswald was a hero, But by the same token,
he wasn't just some loan nut you don't leave, you
don't serve in the military, leave this country, get placed
in the Soviet Union, which I think. I think the
Soviet Union knew he was a spy. That's why they
(12:43):
put him up and let him live like a king,
because he wasn't gonna see or learn anything. And I
can assure you, in the sixties, you don't go to
the Soviet Union, return from the Soviet Union, no questions asked,
no charges filed, and you're just free to go about
your business and head straight to New Orleans and play
(13:07):
both sides of a Cuban crisis. I mean, there's something
more to Lee Harvey Oswell and it's screams CIA. So
I'm just speculating. Is that what cash Ptel is trying
to say? You're gonna see this guy wasn't off in
Mexico or in Cuba meeting with Soviet assassination heads to
(13:32):
try to pull off or be a part of the assassination.
He was there tracking and informing on the plans. I
don't know. I mean, I'm I'm as intrigued by Donald
Trump signing this, and you know that's the president saying
(13:52):
these are big ones. So he's acting like you're going
to learn something you didn't learn and then I go
back to the cash Ptel interview, and I'm thinking, I
think my analogy, it's a five hundred piece puzzle. You've
held every piece in your hand over the last six years.
It's just never been put into the right places that
paint the picture. And I suspect the picture is going
(14:16):
to be a little bit of all of the above
and a whole lot of There have been things going
on and they still go on today that are very
different than the way your government is portrayed. And I
can't lose this main piece, a man who I believe
(14:39):
was to be assassinated, Otherwise I can't explain that three
ring circus in Pennsylvania, or snipers on a roof with
the shooter in their sight allowing who they're protecting to
remain on stage, let alone allowing the shooter to get
HI before you take him out. He'll tell you it
(15:06):
was God. People that don't believe in God will tell you, well,
he doesn't turn it just the right moment. He's dead,
but he isn't dead, and he's alive, and he just
signed this yesterday, and I think it's more than a
promise kept. It's Your Morning Show with Michael del Chino
CDP up early, see what you're doing up so early?
(15:29):
Laughing out loud talk radio guy just reminds me of
the clip we were doing with all the voices, and
you were the voices too. You should play that clip, thanks,
brother kaplan Ah, that was the old me, the old
you had Cherie from the Booby Barn. I don't do that,
so I don't even I don't even play off color
reden joined music. Oh wow, hush, my little darlings, don't
(15:55):
you cry? You know your talk show host is bow
to die. I don't think I'm ADHD though, I'm just
add right. There's a difference, isn't there. I think there's
a little hyperactivity to you as well. No, not at all,
you know. No, hypridi is like jumping plays. I don't
have any of that. I think just da d D.
My mind just wanders. I'm bored with too much. I
(16:17):
have to keep keep things moving. I think at times
India will strap you in. Oh those were the days. Hey,
uh Tammy. Trilo has the story of how ADHD shortens
our life and you'll be shocked by how much you'll
probably start smoking today. That more coming up next half
hour on your morning show. Stay with us.
Speaker 2 (16:39):
Tell you this is Mike the Baptist in Cottontown, Tennessee,
and my morning show is your morning show with Michael
Bill jornos.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
Hi. It's Michael.
Speaker 1 (16:52):
Your morning show can be heard on great radio stations
across the country like News Talk ninety two point one
and six hundred WRC and Memphis, Tennessee, or thirteen hundred
The Patriot in Tulsa or Talk six to fifty KSTE
in Sacramento, California. We invite you to listen live while
you're getting ready in the morning and to take us
along for the drive to work. But as we always say,
better late than never. Thanks for joining us for the podcast.
(17:14):
Welcome to Friday, the twenty fourth of January, Year of
Our Lord twenty twenty four, twenty five. Rather we have
yes if your guy I can't stand that one. It
is AFC NFC Championship Weekend. It all starts Sunday at two.
We got the Eagles eag L e S hosting the Commanders.
(17:35):
That'll be up first to two Central, three Eastern, followed
by Buffalo in Kansas City to take on the Chiefs
five thirty Central, six thirty Eastern. And we'll know our
Super Bowl opponent. I what's your predictions, guys. I actually
think the Commanders are going to win that game. I
think the Commanders are in. You think they beat Philly? Yeah,
that means Philly's gonna win.
Speaker 3 (17:54):
Buffalo. Can they do it this time? I mean they
can in the regular season, but can they in the postseason?
Can they in the big game? And if not? Now
when I would love I mean at this point now,
I would love a Buffalo after Washington Super Bowl. The
punter caused the safety for no apparent reason in the world.
(18:14):
That's the other thing. The only way we'll really know
is talk to the refs. Right, Yeah, I think the
fix is in for Kansas City and Philadelphia. The chefs,
that's probably what they want, the chefs in the I
don't remember what her fake name was for the Commander's misspelled.
Oh yeah, I have to go back, and we'd have
to go back and listen to them. Firefighters, let's start
in Los Angeles area. Exhausted, I mean, battling deadly infernos.
(18:37):
Now for weeks, this would have been a grueling enough
sprint let alone, it's been a marathon, and now they're
grappling with more wildfires scorching Los Angeles County, including the
Hughes Fire, which has burned through more than ten thousand
acres since it began less than forty eight hours ago.
Two new fires are reported yesterday afternoon San Diego County,
(19:01):
the Gilman and the Border two fires. Treacherous mud slides
and toxic debris flow could be next. As here comes rain.
Much of southern California is expected to get doused with
much needed rainfall. And your first thought is, well, that'll
help with the fires, and then you start dealing with
the mudslides. Where are we at with containment? The two
(19:24):
biggies the palis side the Palisades Fire twenty three four
hundred acres at seventy five percent containment, the Eton Fires
at fourteen thousand acres at ninety five percent containment. Now
we got the new ones. The Hues fire is now
under thirty six percent containment, the Border To fire at
zero containment and at six hundred acres, and the Laguna
(19:45):
Fires at ninety four acres with seventy percent containment. Then
we've got some incident fires. The Clay fire is at
eighty five percent containment. The Supalti fire is at sixty percent,
and then we have two others that are at zero
zero percent containment and small. But I mean they've been up.
They've been in such a battle for so long, with
(20:08):
new ones constantly popping up. And here comes rains and
the threat of mud slides. Another big story we're kind
of keeping our eye on is the age of our Congress.
You know, we often joke you're supposed to go to Washington,
humbly serve and come home and from all walks of life,
(20:33):
so that the People's House is a first and foremost
focused on the people, not themselves, the people's prosperity, security
and future, not their own. And of course now we
have career politicians. They simply don't leave until the toe
tag arrives. Walking around at the State of the Union,
(20:55):
it was just like, oh, walking dead. Well, got some
good news, not great news, but good news. Congress maybe
get maybe getting just slightly younger, still way too old
and in term limits are still in high demand. What
(21:17):
do you think the median age of voting members of
the House of Representatives is. Well now it's at fifty
seven and a half, which doesn't sound bad at all,
does it, and that's down from fifty seven point nine,
so we went down zero point four in age. But
(21:38):
it's kind of well, we were trending lower and lower.
One hundred and fifteenth Congress was at fifty eight point
four than one hundred and sixteenth to fifty eight, and
then we jumped up in one hundred seventeenth to fifty
eight point nine. Now back down to fifty seven and
a half, so you know, going in the right direction. Anyway,
the median age of the United States Senate the club
of one hundred twenty four point seven, down from sixty
(22:03):
five point three. One hundred and fifteenth was sixty two,
one hundred and sixteen sixty three, one hundred and seventeen,
sixty four, one hundred and eighteenth, sixty five. You can
see where that's at. It per set the number of
(22:26):
those ninety and up in the I think it's or
just are we down to one red. I'm looking at
this thing. The colors are mis misleading. One in the
second ninety nineties, we have two in the eighties, upper eighties.
(22:49):
That's right, because these colors are very very similar. Okay,
so we have five that are between eighty and eighty
nine and we have one that is ninety plus. If
you look closely, you'll see a really dot. So in
the Senate there's one plus ninety, there's five eighty to
eighty nine, there's twenty seven, seventy to seventy nine, thirty three,
(23:11):
sixty to sixty nine. Add all those up, that's all
retirement age and the House House there are none. You're right,
there are a none ninety plus. There does seem to
be thirteen between eighty and eighty nine. There's seventy one
between seventy and seventy nine, and then there's one hundred
and four between sixty and sixty nine. Generationally, we can
(23:33):
now say that the boomers have fallen. The silent generation,
which would be from Great Depression to World War Two,
is now seventeen in the House and six in the Senate.
The Baby Boomers nineteen forty six, and I am the
last of the Boomers of nineteen sixty four, they make
up one hundred and seventy in the House, sixty in
(23:54):
the Senate. And then you have Gen X now one
hundred and eighty the House, twenty eight in the Senate.
We now have sixty six millennials in the House twenty
eight in the Senate and then gen Z. Now were
almost to people born in two thousand, nineteen ninety six.
(24:15):
We have five in the Senate and sixty six. No
gen Z in the Senate. Oh no, no, that was you're right,
that's millennial. No, no gen Z in the Senate. But
we have won in the House, so I mean heading
in the right direction, mainly thanks to death by party. Overall,
(24:41):
the median age of the Democrats is fifty seven point six,
mediing age of the Republicans fifty seven point five, so
they're almost identical. In the Senate, the median age for
all Democrats is sixty six, a little bit younger on
the Republican side sixty four and a half, but not
a lot younger, but a little younger. You know, why
don't we all just start following what Nancy Pelosi's husband
(25:02):
is buying and selling. We get rich, playing into the
age of current politics, and do we wonder why politicians
stay forever in Washington, DC? We turned to Paul Pelosi.
Just a brilliant stock trader, right, no inside information. He's
(25:22):
a good guesser. The ex House speaker. Nancy Pelosi's husband
made thirty eight million dollars worth of stock trades in
the weeks leading up to Donald Trump's inauguration, including an
investment in a once obscure AI firm. How did Paul
Pelosi know what? I don't think any of us even
discussed that Donald Trump was going to form some kind
(25:46):
of a AI, A doze, if you will, kind of
a group. Paul knew. He jumped all over that he's
about to get even richer. He told the Post that
though through Tuesday's trades, who are copying Pelosi have amassed
forty five million dollars in realized and unliced realized gains
(26:09):
so far. Obviously there are people following what Paul Pelosi
is buying and selling, and they're getting rich too, thirty
eight mil for him, forty five for those that are
following him. I thought that was a very that's right
up there with the EIGHTYHD Die young. What do they
(26:32):
say cigarettes on average takes off your life used to
be seven years. I don't know if it still is.
I thought it was seven minutes off your life every cigarette.
That can't be we'd all be dead. Well. I mean,
this was the seven minutes seven minutes times twenty yeah
times three hundred and sixty five times forty two, I'd
(26:54):
be dead, you said seven years. No, I think in general,
it's like, you know, I would take seventy the total life. Yeah, Like,
if you were gonna live to seventy nine, smoking makes
it seventy two. I remember being an unimpressive number because
I was like, well, would I rather enjoy the next
sixty years or not enjoy the next sixty years and
lived sixty seven miserable. When I was a smoker, I
(27:17):
was terrible. I would turn everything into the smoker favor,
you know, Like I go into a nursing home and
I'm like, I don't want to live this long. I'm
gonna start smoking. Right, I'm in the world's worst ex smoker.
Now everything stinks can well, no, I still don't. Yeah, no,
I do that. Like I can smell a smoker, you know,
like or like somebody's been smoking outside then they went
inside and then I come walking through it. I don't
(27:38):
like that smell, but I miss actually smoking. I would.
I'd like one up right now, get you a pin,
you know, should pin keep it between your fingers over there,
But you're sick of the sound of me chewing gum. Yes,
oh that old chestnut. But anyway, waiting to hear coming
up in our top five stories the day, how ADHD
(28:01):
affects lifespan. That's coming up next. Also, roy O'Neil is
going to be joining us next. Half hour rain expected
this weekend in southern California. You think that'd be great,
right to help put the fires out? No, No, you
get mud slides and toxic flows of materials. We'll have
more on that coming up in minutes. All right, what's
(28:21):
your plan? If you faced and listen. The only difference
is it's been them and it hasn't been you, But
next time it could be you. What's your plan if
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del Jorno. To learn more, This is your Morning Show
with Michael Del Trono.
Speaker 5 (30:15):
Yeah, I've also got ADD as a sixty one year
old man, but I also got OCD. So what happens is.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
When I'm like zeroed in on something that my.
Speaker 6 (30:24):
Ocd's kicking in like high gear.
Speaker 3 (30:27):
My ADD lets me drift away check something else out
for a little bit, okay, and I go back to
the other thing.
Speaker 6 (30:34):
I zero in on it, I get it complete in
and then I can kind of float away with my
ADD thing and.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
Check on something else. So it's really kind of cool
how it balances out. There's a lot of people right
now going, what the heck is he talking about all
of us with a d D. Yeah, we followed right along.
I can assure you. I mean I haven't read, and Jeffrey,
I'm Michael. There's no place we'd rather be, and no
one would rather be within you. This is your Morning Show.
Top five Stories. President Trump is making his first trip
(31:04):
of his second term. Michael Cassner reports he'll.
Speaker 2 (31:07):
Be stopping in North Carolina, where Tropical Storm Helene caused
billions of dollars worth of damage last September, then head
to California to review the damage from the recent Los
Angeles area wildfires. In a Fox News interview that aired
Wednesday night, Trump threatened to withhold federal aid to California
if it's water policies aren't changed. Also criticized FEMA and
(31:27):
said he'd rather see the states take care of their
own problems in Los Angeles. I'm Michael Cassner.
Speaker 3 (31:33):
So Donald Trump's CIA director nominee John Ratcliffe. He got
confirmed yesterday. It looks like Pete Heggseth is next. Bark
Mayfield fills a sin.
Speaker 7 (31:45):
The Senate voted largely along party lines Thursday to advance
Hegseth with a final vote of fifty one to forty nine.
Republican senators Lisa Murkowski and Susan Collins voted against him,
with Murkowski saying she cannot in good conscience support his nominade.
She added past behavior that Hexseth has admitted to, including
infidelity on multiple occasions, demonstrate a lack of judgment. Hexth
(32:08):
has based allegations of sexual assault and excessive drinking. The
Senate advanced Exseth's nomination on Thursday, setting up his confirmation
vote on the floor Friday.
Speaker 3 (32:17):
A markeney Field. President Trump says inflation, the crisis of
inflation is the worst in modern history.
Speaker 6 (32:23):
He addressed the World Economic Forum virtually as it took
place in Switzerland Thursday.
Speaker 3 (32:28):
The entire planet.
Speaker 6 (32:30):
Will be more peaceful and prosperous as a result of
this incredible momentum and what we're doing and going to
do it, marked Trump's first major speech to global economic leaders.
Trump placed the blame for rising prices on former President Biden.
He also urged businesses to begin producing their products in
the US.
Speaker 3 (32:50):
I'm Brian shug. Now, you guys say I can't be
professional in the five o'clock hour, I think this is
sounding very professional. I was like, what did take a
bill today? What's going on? I was inspired by John
in Youngstown. College enrollment numbers are up and higher than
before COVID nineteen. Tammy Trehilo has all the details.
Speaker 8 (33:07):
According to a National Student Clearinghouse Research Center report, total
enrollment last fall was up four and a half percent
from the year before. That's nearly a half percent higher
than in twenty nineteen. Undergraduate certificate program saw some of
the biggest increases, with an over twenty eight percent increase
in enrollment from twenty nineteen levels. I'm Tammy Trheo.
Speaker 3 (33:26):
Well, here it is the story. I've been teasing. A
new study shows that those with ADHD have a shorter
life expectancy. Lisa Taylor has that story.
Speaker 5 (33:35):
Research published by Cambridge University Press found that men with
ADHD were likely to live seven years less than those
without ADHD. For women, it was likely to shorten their
lifespan by eight years. The studies authors wrote that the
evidence is extremely concerning and highlights unmet support needs that
require urgent attention. Find mesa Taylor.
Speaker 3 (33:54):
I mean that's a significant number. That's a significant story.
Just buried up, I tuned out. What did she say? Well,
you know, RFK would would have his theories as to
why we're seeing so much more ADHD. But a lot
of us uh have or no children with ADHD? What
is ahead in the next generation? Seven years for men,
(34:16):
eight years for women with ADHD and less life expectancy?
All right, it's a championship weekend. First up on Fox
two o'clock Central Sunday. Commanders. By the way, it was
what was Mary's funny name for them? The now I
forgot you hang on, I got it right here versus
the morning. This is Mary from Boise, Idaho.
Speaker 5 (34:35):
I just think this is the most exciting part of
the football season where we get to see the Egglesses
play the Commandeers, and then.
Speaker 3 (34:44):
It's called the Bills the Bulls. If you're not knowing,
if you don't get that, the mayor of Philadelphia was
leading fans in a cheer. He goes, give me an e,
give me a ge. She left out the a. It
was a bit embarrassing. Listen, you've got to do this.
Let me hear you all. Gee, if they make the
(35:06):
Super Bowl, you got to throw her. In the Sounds
of the Day over CBS at five thirty is the Bills?
Can they do it this time in a game that
really matters against the Chiefs fifteen and four versus sixteen
and two. That Sunday at five thirty Central, six thirty
Eastern Basketball Blazers one oh one seventy nine over the
Magic Bucks beat the Heat Warriors, huge over the Bolts,
(35:27):
Lakers by twenty one over the Celtics, Clippers beat the
Whiz Thunder, lost to the MAVs, Kings lost to the Nuggets,
and in hockey, the Red Wings beat the Canadians, Blues
lost to Vegas Ducks five to one, easy over the
Penguins crack and shut out three to nothing by the Caps,
and the Preds shockingly won a game six to five
over the Sharks. We're all in this together. This is
(35:50):
your morning Show with Michael Nhild Joano