Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hey, it's Michael reminding you that your morning show can
be heard live each weekday morning five to eighth Central,
six to nine Eastern and great cities like Nashville, Tennessee, Tupelo, Mississippi,
and Sacramento, California. We'd love to be a part of
your morning routine and take the drive to work with you,
but better late than never. We're grateful you're here now.
Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
Two starting your morning off right. A new way of talk,
a new way of understanding because we're in this together.
This is your morning show with Michael Del Chrono.
Speaker 3 (00:34):
Screw Jack hann and screw the Steelers. You gotta put
Junior Seao in there, buddy.
Speaker 4 (00:39):
Don't forget about Michael's singletary for the Bears linebackers and
ray Lewis. The best part about ray.
Speaker 5 (00:45):
Lewis's career was Eddie George's choked slam on the side Land.
Speaker 1 (00:49):
I don't know if that occurred while you were in
Nashville or not, but that's the best part of Manity George.
Speaker 6 (00:55):
Love your show, brother, keep it up.
Speaker 3 (00:56):
If you talk to a dermatologist, they'll tell you you
sing bet than vasiline. Intensive care and all those other solutions.
I've been using userine for probably about a year and
a half, two years now, and it works.
Speaker 4 (01:12):
Wonders.
Speaker 1 (01:12):
Okay, I think I know how John Stewart feels. I
have discussed one of the greatest scandals in broadcast journalism
history with what the FCC has made sixty minutes release
in what we have found in their manipulation of their
visit with Kamala Harris. In a single stroke of a pen,
(01:36):
Donald Trump ends this imaginary created cultural war on women
in sports, and just like that, it's gone. That's all
needed with somebody to do something common sensical, and there's
a reawakening of self evident truth in America that will
last long after Donald Trump leaves. First with Canada, then
(02:03):
with Mexico, and then oh, by the way, a deal
is signed and the United States no longer pays any
boat fees at the Panama Canal. I mean, promise has made,
promises kept. The great disruptor, the great leader. Everybody's freaking
out He's going to create a ward take over Patama.
Speaker 6 (02:22):
No, he just got his fees done and taken care of.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
He watch Academy, the fifty first tight, fifty first eighties
and nothing. No, he just got them to put one
point three billion dollars towards border security and name of
fentanyl Tzar Mexico sending ten thousand troops. Who knows what
the real genius is behind the US owning the Gaza
strip that you're laughing at today, that he'll come away
(02:48):
with Saudi Arabia rebuilding it and paying for all of it.
I don't even like that we fund NPR and PBS.
I don't know what the federal government is in the
business of using our tax dollars to prop up mouthpieces
for one particular partisan worldview. Let alone you find out
(03:09):
your government's been using eight million dollars of your money
every year to prop up Politico that was doing on
the internet where everyone is, what they were doing on
television with sixty minutes where everyone has left. I'm talking
about some pretty heavy stuff here. And what do you
guys have? Linebackers and put the loation to the backs.
Speaker 6 (03:33):
You can to get time for that, put the lotion
to the back.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
I think you all have checked out and are in
Super Bowl mode. In fact, you're frauds number one because
you said you didn't want to watch the Eagles and
the chiefs, and you clearly do you're ready for the
Super Bowl. I can tell because nobody's comedy or anything
but lotion and linebackers lotion, linebackers. And your fraud's on
lotion too, because everybody knows avon skin so soft. The
(04:00):
best goodness sakes turning your man cards. David Bonson is
an economist. He's also a theologian, and he's our money
whiz Donald Trump's masterful play with Canada and Mexico. Was
this really about bordered drugs or was it about trade?
And when you talk about trade, how important is trade
(04:22):
versus manufacturing when it comes to an economy. And maybe
had the tariffs gone in place and Canadian businesses would
have had to relocate and manufacture here, maybe that would
have been better for the economy. These are the kind
of questions I get, and when I'm in the professor's office,
I might as well pick your brain. Good morning, David, Well,
(04:42):
good morning, Michael. I'm concerned about our talk. We've been
doing this so long and I barely ever had any
disagreements with you, and I got a feeling today's today.
Oh well, No, I'm just asking the question because I
want to dust out trade versus manufacturing within the country.
Speaker 6 (04:57):
Or unless oh on lotion, is that where you're headed?
Speaker 7 (05:00):
So you know, by the way, the political deal, I
just want to help out. It's not eight million a year.
It's eight million total since twenty sixteen. So it either way,
it's outrageous that they're paying the Department of Energy is
buying political subscriptions. But just you know, because I know
that these things matter, that we all get the details.
(05:21):
The whole story is what it is, and it's a
big story. But it isn't eight million a year. It
was eight million cumulative since twenty sixteen.
Speaker 6 (05:29):
So it was four eight what was it was over?
It was over?
Speaker 1 (05:33):
I thought I thought it was more than that I had.
I don't know why, am my memory. I had thirty
six million total, more.
Speaker 7 (05:38):
Than that if you add, if you add all the
other networks involved in other departments. But the political pro
was eight million since twenty sixteen. I put up a
chart this morning of all of it, you know, cumulative
across different departments.
Speaker 6 (05:52):
Okay, that's that's where we're different. Then.
Speaker 7 (05:55):
Yeah, But I think I think on the issue in Mexico, Canada,
at the end of the day, I'm frustrated by the
fact that we have a real important need to get
economic messaging right. And I believe he did exactly what
you said, which was use the threat of tariffs to
try to extract another policy objective. I've been talking about
(06:17):
it since the day of the election. Look, Kevin Hassett,
my very good friend, who is the National Economy Council Director,
went on CNBC on Monday morning and said, this was
not about a trade war. It was about drugs. It
was about fentanyl. And yet when we're going to accompany
the threat of tariffs to the idea of we're getting
ripped off in trade deals with Canada, my problem is
(06:40):
this is a trade deal that President Trump did, and
I think it's a very good trade deal. And I
don't think we're getting ripped off in a trade deal
with Canada at all. And yet if the whole point
was to just sort of use the threat and leverage
to get a few accommodations, there isn't very much fentanyl
coming into our country from the north. It's coming from
the south. Everybody knows that. But at the end of
(07:00):
the day, I just think we have to be really
clear here, separating the categories and a fentanyl zar may
or may not be a good thing. I'm not a
big fan of the word czar. The ten thousand troops
should help. I know Mexico offered him before and the
Biden administration wouldn't take him. But you know, President Trump
is a deal maker, and I have no interest at
(07:23):
all in questioning his ability to make deals. He's extremely
good at it. I just want to point out that
when we go back and forth saying tariffs are going
to generate a bunch of revenue and oh, by the way,
we're not going to do the tariffs because we're getting fentanyl,
two things cannot be true at once.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Well, and your point is he made the original deal.
We're not getting ripped off. So he got his border
focused to the north end of the South. He still
has his old trade deal. It's kind of a win win.
But the messaging you're questioning the messaging and.
Speaker 7 (07:56):
The fact that there are right now a lot of
people that you know, the President has a volleyball for
it for a reason, and I think there's a lot
of people out there that do believe something that is
fundamentally untrue, which is that tariffs don't come at a cost,
and the tariffs are paid by other countries, and it
just isn't true. But apparently the president doesn't think it's
true either, because he obviously doesn't want to do them,
(08:18):
and which is a good thing. I say that as
a compliment, but when we use the threat of them,
I remain amazed by the way that the threats work,
because I would think that the other side would be
as aware as I am that he has no intention
of going through with it, but they apparently aren't. Now.
The only thing I'd say, Michael, I'm not being critical
of President Trump here, I'm not at all. I'm just
trying to consider the big picture. I'm a diehard conservative
(08:41):
who believes the biggest thing he's done this week has
nothing to do with the fentanyls are and it has
to do with no more men playing in women's sports.
That's where I find the cultural victory. But Michael, the
thing is is, we don't know yet right what is
going to happen with Mexico and Canada and the border
and what they're really going to do. What we got
(09:03):
is a pretty good indication that they are going to
take it more seriously than they did in the prior administration.
I would just point out that the prior administration is
who didn't take it seriously. You know, you can't expect
Mexico and Canada taking it seriously when our own president
wasn't taking it seriously.
Speaker 1 (09:19):
I'm looking at like three minutes tops here, So I
want to get to what I really wanted to talk about.
Speaker 6 (09:23):
That was a simple question.
Speaker 1 (09:24):
I wanted to have a discussion about trade manufacturing this
I need the Bible scholar. So when I mean, Donald
Trump continues to do these things and it never seems
to be about what everybody ridiculously reacts to. He's got
something much bigger and he gets it done. So I
don't know if he really believes or wants to own
the Gaza Strip. I think that's problematic because this is
(09:45):
a kingdom versus kingdom war. They don't see Israel's right
to exist and then right after that America's right to exist.
No one's going to embrace us owning that land in
the Gaza Strip. But I can't get a clear picture
if this is maybe another tactic to get maybe Saudi
Arabia or a Muslim nation or a group of Muslim
(10:06):
nations to step up and rebuild guys. I'm not sure,
but what was your take on that whole jaw dropping announcement.
Speaker 7 (10:14):
I'm doing a much better job in the second term
than I did in the first term not taking certain
things said very seriously, because I do believe he has
an ability to speak off the cuff, say some things
that sometimes don't go anywhere. Sometimes he has a plan
behind it that I don't know about, and other times
he just sort of thrives in the chaos at the moment.
(10:34):
And I need to do a better job not letting
some people style that is very different than mine get
to me. In this case, I think what you just
said is the Takams Razor. I mean, it's not a
for sure thing, but it's the simplest explanation. He's using
it to try to get Saudi Arabia to be more
on board. I would take it as upset about it.
I wasn't as upset about it as I figured most
(10:56):
of MAGA would be. It's really really interesting that you
can run a campaign on America first, no more endless wars,
no more foreign higlements, and then yet say in your
second week, I'm going to go take over the most
toxic spot in the world. But again, I think you're
right that he has some other play here, and I'm
totally willing. I think the president has earned my patience
(11:19):
as we figure out come.
Speaker 1 (11:20):
Oh yeah, this week alone, let alone the last two.
David Bonson as our money with with the Bonson Financial Group.
He's an economists. He's also a Bible theologian. You know,
when we see these things one a day. There was
a great Babylon b satire spoof about the media begging
Donald Trump to take a day off. They just can't
keep up with everything he's doing and accomplishing every day.
(11:42):
These accomplishments are adding up. Are they adding up to
Trump victories? I don't think it's Republican victories because I
don't think it was a red wave. It was an
Orange wave. But you know, in particular, well the political
correctness cave and the latest with the war on women
that you suggested was the biggest story of the day.
Speaker 6 (11:56):
And I agree.
Speaker 1 (11:58):
Is this the revival of self evident truth, truth itself
which has been under attack for so long that this
long hour of insanity might be over and then it's
actually a lasting awakening culturally? Or are these just Trump victories?
Because if it's the latter. We got something to be
really excited about.
Speaker 7 (12:19):
Different categories when it comes to men and women's sports
and the transgender issues. All of that is the president
following up on what was already happening as a cultural victory.
So sometimes politics leads the culture, other times culture leads
the politics. President Trump would not have done what he
did if people like you and me and another sixty
seven percent of America didn't already believe that it is
(12:43):
patently absurd for a two hundred and fifty pounds am
to be playing high school sports next to one hundred
and twenty pound woman. And so the president is doing
what he's supposed to do is allow the politics to
follow the culture, put the teeth of the law into
where the culture is in other areas, yes to now
need This is what he doesn't traditionally like doing, which
(13:03):
is how do I get complex legislation done? With tax
you know, these types of things are still ahead, but no,
the victory is so far. That's where the hockey puck went,
and that is a good thing. Where he has to
go do unpopular things politically where the culture isn't there yet,
that's harder to do. But with immigration and transgender. President
(13:26):
Trump's doing the right thing and the culture has already
moved in the right direction.
Speaker 1 (13:31):
I love our visits. David Bonson with the Boons and
Financial Group are economists, theologian and money whiz all in one.
Cherish our times together. Have yourself enjoyed. Who you like
in the super Bowl? By the way, do you follow.
Speaker 7 (13:42):
Sports very very much? It's not so much that I
like the Chiefs is that I hate the Eagles with
the holy passion ordained by God?
Speaker 6 (13:51):
Are you a Giants fan?
Speaker 4 (13:54):
No?
Speaker 7 (13:54):
A huge Dallas Cowboys And we'll talk about it another time.
Speaker 6 (13:56):
Oh my god, I gotta go now you are here
was the crush? It's over?
Speaker 7 (14:02):
Talk. Thanks Michael.
Speaker 6 (14:03):
You got to have a great day. Yeah, I kind of.
You know.
Speaker 1 (14:06):
We had our visit with Chris Meyers from Fox play
by play guy, and I think we got a great
game ahead, I really do. And I think it's going
to be a close one. But I see the Chiefs
walking away with the three p too. Twenty one minutes
after the hour, quick look at your top five stories
coming up? And a director making a very important movie
about a mind blowing reality. He wants me to be
(14:29):
in it should. I you'll find out next half hour.
Your morning show continues.
Speaker 2 (14:33):
Next, Hey, join the conversation. It's your Morning show with
Michael dil Choro.
Speaker 6 (14:41):
I got what I was looking for at a Bonson.
Thank you. Hey, don't you worry, Michael.
Speaker 4 (14:45):
This is Jeff and Tulsa.
Speaker 6 (14:46):
I got you back. I just looked it up.
Speaker 2 (14:49):
CNN says it was eight point two million dollars in
subscriptions last year.
Speaker 4 (14:54):
So hey, you were right, buddy.
Speaker 6 (14:56):
Keep up the good work. Thank you. I don't look guys.
Speaker 1 (15:01):
As a rule, I don't get contentious with my with
my guests, your contributors.
Speaker 6 (15:08):
The truth will have its day.
Speaker 1 (15:09):
I will wait till they're gone, and I will casually
replay one of your talkbacks that vindicate me. I'm kidding,
and I'm glad Big John caught that, because yeah, that
whole first half, I'm just trying to get you your
ants and then I'm getting attacked. Right.
Speaker 6 (15:24):
New data shows that mid air collision.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
The data confirms the black Hawk was over its ceiling
and over by over one hundred feet. And why I
still think it was out of place too, because when
you switch from runway one to runway thirty three it's
a different approach. That helicopter was on the wrong side
of the Potomac to boot was on the left side
when it should have been on the right side because
it was switched. Now, the helicopter being on the left
(15:48):
side makes sense if you're landing at runway one. I'm
telling I'm going to be right about this too when
it's all said and done, the last minute changing from
runway one to runway thirty three in the black Hawk
being above its altitude ceiling.
Speaker 6 (15:59):
These are your two causes. But you know what do
I know?
Speaker 1 (16:03):
I'm just a guy wearing the wrong lotion on my
skin today.
Speaker 6 (16:08):
That's how I feel today.
Speaker 1 (16:09):
Stop attacking me, everyone, and put the lotion to the
bathket Caves winners over the Pistons. Last night, Grizz mauled
the Raptors, Bucks one over the Hornets, Whizz beat the Nets.
Warriors lost to the Jazz Oh Casey Thunder up by
thirty one over the Phoenix Suns, and Kings lost big
to the Magic on the Ice. The other Kings beat
up on the Canadian sixty three Birthdays Axel Rose sixty three,
(16:33):
boy time Flies.
Speaker 6 (16:35):
Rick Astley never going to keep you?
Speaker 1 (16:38):
How about the Ultimate rock Voice next to the Ultimate
bubblegum Rick Astley fifty nine years old, Stranger Thinks, actor
Charlie Heaton thirty one and.
Speaker 8 (16:46):
Tom Brohaw is gonna be bloy a high handles today
and I'm your Birthday, Happy Birthday. We are so glad
you were born and thanks for way hanging out with
hearty or out of your loveloo.
Speaker 5 (17:04):
I'm Daniel Carsey and Tampa and my morning show was
Your Morning Show with Michael del Jornam.
Speaker 6 (17:16):
Hey, it's me Michael.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
Your Morning Show is heard live from five to eight
am Central, six to nine am Eastern, three to six
am Pacific on great radio stations like News Radio eleven
ninety k EX in Portland, News Talk five point fifty
k f YI and Phoenix, Arizona Freedom one oh four
seven in Washington, d C. We'd love to have you
join us live in the morning, even take us along
on the drive to work. But better late than never
(17:38):
enjoyed the podcast.
Speaker 2 (17:39):
It's said curiosity and knowledge is power. I guess that
would make understanding the switch and you'll get tons of
it here. It's your Morning Show with Michael del.
Speaker 1 (17:52):
Jno Kathy and Nashville writes, I knew there was something
I liked about David Bonson, and now that he's revealed himself, Oh,
it's not the theologian, right, it's not the economist and
money whiz part. And now that he's revealed as a
cowboy fan, I know why. Well, I'm glad you enjoyed
his last appearance. Now a different Kathy wrote this and
(18:15):
read this guy by both of us. All right, so
he got a bartender AOC saying the guy who's revolutionized
the automobile industry and space travel has rockets that return
to his base is the most unintelligent billionaire she's ever
heard of. A bartender giving a secretique. But this is
the payoff, Kathy writes. Oh, by the way, Michael, she
drives a tesla. Oh my god, you can't make this
(18:39):
stuff up. All right, So people don't know this. I
don't have sense to say, no, Well, you just talk
show hosts.
Speaker 6 (18:47):
No.
Speaker 1 (18:48):
Then I got asked by Victoria Jackson of Sarahnette Live.
Jeff Allen, great comedian. They're doing a fundraiser. Hey, you
want to do some stand up comedy? And it doesn't
dawn on me. Well, I'm not a comedian. I just
say yes, and I do it, and I kill. I
do it twenty minutes, sent and kill. Then I get
started to ask to stand up comedy. I got asked
(19:10):
by somebody to do a movie. Well I'm not an actor.
Speaker 6 (19:15):
Just like when I was asked to write a book.
Speaker 7 (19:17):
Well I'm not an author.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
I did go to summer school for English in high school.
As a matter of fact, I just wasn't into Macbeth anyway.
Make a long story short. I write the book. I
do this stand up comedy. Then I get approached to
a movie and it doesn't dawn on me to say, well,
I'm not an actor.
Speaker 6 (19:31):
I just do it. In fact, here's a clip from
the trailer.
Speaker 4 (19:35):
Whatever happens, we'll always have this time together.
Speaker 6 (19:42):
I love you, and that love has changed all of
us forever.
Speaker 2 (19:56):
Don't go.
Speaker 6 (19:58):
Made that love comfort us in the days and a half.
Thank you. You know it's stellar.
Speaker 1 (20:09):
Acting like that that probably got the attention of award
winning director Jeffrey Peterson the California and New York Best
Short Film of twenty twenty four. More than a diagnosis.
Working on a new project wasn't always like this, and
he joins us now Jeffrey I'm assuming you saw the
clips of my great acting in my debut and that's
(20:30):
what made you want me.
Speaker 9 (20:32):
Actually, yes, And I knew one of the actresses there,
and she, you know, told me to check it out.
And as I was watching it, I'm like, wait a minute,
I know who that is.
Speaker 1 (20:42):
Yes, and I expect you know I was. I was
actually the chaplain, so I'm in full Navy formals and
I conduct the sermon over the casket in the big
funeral scene. And this was a period piece, so I remember,
you couldn't have anything out of period, like you couldn't
have a bottled water sitting around because they didn't exist
(21:03):
back then. And my experience was there's a lot of
waiting and then all of a sudden, boom, it's time
to go.
Speaker 4 (21:13):
It was.
Speaker 1 (21:14):
It was different and a challenge for my add but
it was a project of love for these two directors.
And you know how I got involved was, you know,
the same way I got involved in stand up comedy,
the same way I got involved writing a book. Somebody
brings it up and I don't have enough common sense
to say no, Sure doesn't matter that I've had no
training and I'm not an actor, but it was a
great experience. And then you know you contacted me and
(21:37):
I was not familiar with your short. Tell everybody first
a little bit about the award winning short More Than
a Diagnosis, because this blew me away.
Speaker 4 (21:47):
Thank you so much. It's an honor to be on
your show.
Speaker 9 (21:50):
The first short film More Than a Diagnosis is just
it was a kind of a passion project like this
one is. And it basically shows two scenes in under
three and a half minutes, the first one being a
doctor that gives a prenatal diagnosis of Down syndrome in
a very typical usual way, and then the second scene
shows a more more you know, empathetic empathy way and
(22:16):
how to give it and how she gives it a
little bit better. And because in the in the community
of special needs in down syndrome, it's typically given in
with the I'm sorry for you, you know, here's you
know you might want to consider other options versus encouragement
and congratulations.
Speaker 1 (22:34):
But the role, the role of the presentation in dictating
the outcome is unmistakable. And here's the shocking truth of
this interview. For everybody, this just knocked me right. Over
seventy five percent of babies with Down syndrome are terminated.
That that number alone shocked me. And then the exploration
(22:56):
into the how it's presented, you know, dictating the outcome.
The short's powerful because the reality is.
Speaker 9 (23:05):
Powerful, exactly exactly in fact, I heard you know. I've
gotten so many messages I can't even count how many
I got from people all over the world. And I
did get some pushback, even from doctors. One doctor didn't
say anything about the first scene, but he was all
over the second scene, nitpicking it to pieces. I'm like, oh, so,
(23:28):
I'm thinking you're like one of the more closer to
the doctor in the first see. I didn't say that,
but it was an email. I'm like, hmm, so I
pretty much hit the nail on the head.
Speaker 1 (23:36):
So the only thing that's really relevant in my mind is,
you know, the biblical view. The psalmist David said that
God knew us while we were still being formed in
our mother's womb, knew every hair on our head, and
had already fearfully and wonderfully made and purposed us. That's
my biblical view. I noticed that the angels appeior to
(23:58):
Mary and Joseph inception, not birth, so I have a
biblical standing, and then I have an experiential standing. And
I can tell you this, Jeffrey, with all my heart
and soul of mind, I've never yet, I mean, for
every child of special needs I meet, I meet a
special pair of parents chosen by God to parent them.
(24:20):
And I've never met one that ever wished or expressed
in any way that their child had never been born.
So this notion that God views us in the womb
is fearfully and wonderfully made and gifted and purposed for
His glory. And yet now in reality, three out of
four babies are terminated. If somebody looks into the womb
(24:41):
and sees down syndrome, it's just amazing. And then the
link to how it's presented. All right, So this new
project wasn't always like this. How does it relate to
the first award winning short.
Speaker 9 (24:54):
Well, it's the same actress, Sharon Lemir plays doctor. And
what got me I hadn't really thought of going any.
Speaker 6 (25:03):
Farther with it.
Speaker 9 (25:04):
But what I thought of is, what if this doctor
there's more to this doctor? What if she changed her mind?
What if something happened in her life where she's like
suddenly not pushing termination and suddenly pushing an advocacy for
people with special needs. What would that look like? What
that story be like? It would have to be pretty radical, change,
(25:26):
pretty tragic if anything, and even finding Jesus at some point.
So you know, that's where I put together this new
story and got a bunch of people on board. You know,
because even just posting things on social media, you can
rarely change anybody's mind. But what if that doctor had
an experience which changed her whole life and her whole
(25:47):
whole mindset. So that's pretty much kind of where I
went with the storyline on this new short film.
Speaker 6 (25:53):
So here's a dilemma. You know.
Speaker 1 (25:55):
The Bible says God knew us while we were in
the womb, fearfully, wonderfully gifted and purposed us for his glory.
Now we have a medical community that says, oh, that's flawed.
Your child has the Down syndrome chromosomes, you should terminate it.
Something may have to give. Certainly a light needs to
(26:16):
be shined on this when we come back. It's not
too late to get your name in the credits too.
Speaker 6 (26:20):
I'll tell you all about that.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
Forty four minutes after the hour, sixteen minutes to be
to work on time in the Central time zone.
Speaker 6 (26:27):
These are your top five stories of the day. Well,
the new data.
Speaker 1 (26:29):
Confirms what I think we already knew that Blackhawk helicopter
was above its ceiling or wherever.
Speaker 10 (26:35):
The NTSB still wants more proof in its investigation. The
black boxes from both aircraft have been recovered, and the
NTSB says they're still working on synchronizing the recordings. Meanwhile,
official said Tuesday the Cruz had recovered all sixty seven victims.
The helicopter crashed into an American Airlines jet last week,
causing both aircraft to fall into the Potomac River. I'm
(26:56):
Mark Neefield.
Speaker 1 (26:56):
It's not cheap protecting the president of the United States,
especially this Tammy Trihilo explains onm Beach.
Speaker 11 (27:02):
County Sheriff Rick Bradshaw asked the county Commission for forty
five million dollars to cover the cost of anticipated deputy
overtime through November of this year, and thirteen million is
back pay for expenses during Trump's visits last year as
a candidate.
Speaker 7 (27:15):
We've already heard some information or he may be spending
more time here than in Washington.
Speaker 11 (27:21):
And that means more of visits from world leaders, which
is why the sheriff says so much money will be
needed to keep the President and his visitors safe when
they're at mar A Lago. The Commission ultimately approved their
request in anticipation of being reimbursed by the federal government,
so that could take up to a year. I'm Tammy Triho.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
Donald Trump isn't the only one having problems with the
World Health Organization. Argentina just pulled out of the WHO.
Speaker 12 (27:43):
This comes after a similar move from President Trump last month.
A spokesperson for Argentina's president said President Mela won't allow
the WHO to intervene in our sovereignty, much less than
our health. Trump also announced on his first day back
in the White House that he was withdrawing the US
from the WHO, bringing criticism from public health experts. I'm
Lisa Taylor.
Speaker 1 (28:04):
The first trailer for the next entry in the Jurassic Park.
Speaker 6 (28:07):
Franchise is now out.
Speaker 1 (28:09):
Jurassic World Rebirth takes place five years after the events
of the Jurassic World Domination. It features a new cast
led by Scarlett Johansson Jonathan Bailey. The film is directed
by Gareth Edwards and Steven Spielberg. Serving as executive producer.
Jurassic World Rebirth will hit the theaters on July second,
and that's your top five stories of the day. Coming
(28:31):
up Part duh. We'll continue our visit with award winning
director Jeffrey Peterson. Let's find out what my role is
going to be, and I'm gonna have some demands for
the trailer as well. When you're more joke continues.
Speaker 2 (28:43):
Next, this is your morning show with Michael del Journo.
Speaker 6 (28:48):
Thank you, Mike mccannon.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
You know, I really hate that inconvenient truth is a
phrase that was stolen by a real big lie because
this is really an inconvenient truth. Seventy five percent of
babies in the womb identified with Down syndrome are terminated.
Some America needs to address and deal with. And that's
exactly what director Jeffrey Peterson has done and won awards
(29:10):
for and plans to do again. I'm excited to be
a part of it, just to be a part of
the cause and help get spread the word on this.
I am curious what the reaction, Jeffrey, knowing what the
reaction was to the first film will be to this
the sequel.
Speaker 9 (29:24):
I think you know the people I've already talked to.
Now they come on, especially a couple of these actors
that are wanting to be on board. You know, I
tell them the storyline and they're just blown away. They're like, yeah,
count me in.
Speaker 4 (29:37):
You know.
Speaker 9 (29:38):
It's a lot of the people, even in the disability community,
you know, just like, oh wow, that's you know, I've
talked to hundreds of people's at events, you know, and
telling them about this new story, and they're kind of
blown away because yeah, they realized that. You know, doctors,
the majority of them, not all you know, push that
termination a lot of times unfortunately.
Speaker 4 (30:00):
And what if there's hope.
Speaker 9 (30:02):
What if there's hope for people in the medical field,
you know, even to change their minds, they don't have
to push termination. These these people with Down syndrome and
special needs, they're some of the most wonderful people you'll
ever meet.
Speaker 6 (30:17):
All Right, So, my listeners, I want to know what's
my role going to be?
Speaker 9 (30:21):
Yes, Well, when I seen you, uh do in in
your in that film you were in, and something clicked
and I remembered you talking about, you know, with you know,
with all all your stuff in your personal life, you know,
putting on a doctor's lab coat and I'm.
Speaker 6 (30:38):
Like, no, it's worse than I just visualized you. In
taking care of my mother.
Speaker 1 (30:43):
Uh, first of all, I became a very skilled, uh
you know, intensive care nurse because I cared for right
in my home and I had feeding tubes, bleeding tubes,
I had it all. And uh, then it became when
we would end up in the hospital watching over her,
I'm starting to diagnose things better and I have more
(31:04):
hands on than the nurses and the respiratory therapists and
the doctors.
Speaker 6 (31:07):
And in this last round, I'm.
Speaker 1 (31:10):
Literally ordering blood work, X rays, breathing treatments. And I
was telling my Jeffrey. I was like, and they're listening
and doing it, so you know what, it really isn't
a stretch for me. I've been an unofficial playing an
actor in real hospitals. Why not on screen? Do I
have many lines to learn?
Speaker 4 (31:28):
Yes, yes, you have a few.
Speaker 7 (31:29):
You know.
Speaker 9 (31:30):
It's it's And when I heard you talking about that,
I just visualized you in a lab code.
Speaker 4 (31:34):
I'm like, well, there we are. You're perfect. You fit
the perfect look.
Speaker 9 (31:38):
I had in my mind. And yeah, you have a
do have a few lines. You're You're not the kind
of doctor that would push termination. You're the positive encouraging
doctor for this.
Speaker 4 (31:50):
This couple uh.
Speaker 9 (31:51):
In the in the film, and I'm like, he's perfect
for this.
Speaker 1 (31:54):
All I went a good costume, you know, in my
last movie. We got there first, I was in awe
of wardrobe because you just arrive and these people are amazing.
So you're like, well, how are you going to have
a full dress naval formal that's gonna fit me? And
they had about two or three to pick from, and
then it was like, this jacket's never gonna fit. That
was not I mean, they just start ripping off buttons,
(32:16):
re sewing on buttons. It's amazing, and boom, there you are.
You're you're a naval chaplain. But then we went to
do the hat and we couldn't make it fit and
it was formed, so they had to cut it. Well,
it never fit the same after they cut it, and
the hat looks like it's ten times too big for
my head, which made me look a little foolish. I mean,
make sure I look like a doctor when this is
(32:38):
all done, and I'll agree to do it.
Speaker 6 (32:41):
As a director, You'll love this.
Speaker 1 (32:42):
When we went to to the movie set, my son
came with me, was very young at the time, and
we got some great pictures I'll cherish the rest of
my life. But so we were stuck in traffic on
our way to this memorial cemetery and where they were shooting,
and so I had script completely memorized. I could do
it backwards and forwards. I could get so beyond knowing
(33:04):
what I was going to say that I could get
in the moment and deliver it. And so to kill
time on our way to the set, I changed all
the words and now instead of honoring this individual, I'm
making them out to be a loser. And so then
it flash forward, you know, after all the standing around,
and I mean hours and hours, and then it's like, okay,
we're ready, you know, and the boot you got to
(33:24):
just turn it on. That was different for me. Well,
when it came time action, all I could think of
was how I changed the lines, not the original line.
I will never make that mistake again, I promise. But
we got through it and it was a great scene,
and I'm sure we'll do the same. All right, So
talk to us about where that in our final minute,
Where the project is. This is a powerful story that
(33:46):
needs to be told and told again. America needs to
know that it's a fact seventy five percent of babies
with Down syndrome are terminated. Let America chew on that.
And if this can draw attention to that for people
to believe in life and want to be a part
of it. Is it still possible to invest in how
would they get a hold of you? And is it
fully cast?
Speaker 4 (34:04):
Absolutely?
Speaker 9 (34:06):
Absolutely, yes, it's The website is more than a film
dot com. That's more than a film dot com. You'll
see we even filmed a short teaser trailer on there,
and you'll see that there'll you can donate there. There's
different levels. You can donate any amount from a couple
bucks to one hundred to two more. You know, you
can get your name in the film credits. You can
(34:26):
even be an extra. You can visit the set and
have dinner with the cast. There's all types of levels
of donations as well.
Speaker 4 (34:35):
And if you especially encourage those.
Speaker 9 (34:37):
Have businesses, if they want a sponsor, they can have
their logo and their business name and the credits and
on my website. And that's more than a film dot com.
Speaker 6 (34:46):
More than a film dot com.
Speaker 1 (34:47):
Director Jeffrey Peterson, by the way my Jeffrey and read
want to be extras.
Speaker 6 (34:53):
My wife would actually like a line or two.
Speaker 1 (34:55):
So you know, there's a lot of negotiations to happens.
Speaker 4 (34:58):
There's all kinds of things we can do.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
It's a message that must be heard. It's a movie
that must be made. You're just the guy to do it,
and I'm proud to be a part of it. Thank
you so much, Jeffrey. People want to get involved more
than a film dot com and the film will be
wasn't always like this. Thanks for joining us, Jeffrey.
Speaker 4 (35:14):
Thank you Michael.
Speaker 1 (35:15):
By the way, it's always difficulten we have guests with
the same name as you.
Speaker 6 (35:17):
I never know. I kept saying Jeffrey, and then you
would respond. I was confused.
Speaker 1 (35:21):
Then a couple of times I was talking to you
Jeffrey and he responded, Yeah, that makes it difficult. Anyway,
we're looking forward to that's my big movie break. It's
coming soon. We'll keep you abreast of that and you
can be a part of it as well. All you
have to do is go do more than a film
dot com. All right, I don't know where today went,
but it went by fast. If you missed anything, don't forget.
The podcast is on your iHeartRadio app. Go make a
(35:43):
difference in someone's life, Cherishers, and we'll all do it
again tomorrow morning, the Friday before the super Bowl.
Speaker 2 (35:48):
We're all in this together. This is your morning show
with Michaeldenhild.
Speaker 4 (35:53):
Show Now,