Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Previously on your morning show with Michael Del Choonho.
Speaker 2 (00:04):
They're often revealing, sometimes entered today, they're both revealing and
entertaining for everybody.
Speaker 3 (00:15):
Look, you just gotta try harder, not the saw some
gladly opportunity for a brief civics lesson.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
Sure, perhaps you'd like to be alone with the deteriorating
mental conditions.
Speaker 1 (00:27):
I don't know's apart.
Speaker 2 (00:31):
Wow, that's like I could just jingle out right there,
couldn't I remember, folks, Yesterday's sounds of the day can
become tomorrow's opening sounds of the day. That's what it's
all about. I had a Noster del journal last week.
Everybody was listening to Stephen A. Smith and he he
went to town on the Democrat Party to which you
(00:51):
got to keep in mind the lanes, the establishment. James Carville.
This is the guy that headed the Clinton campaign that
took out George H. W. Bush, who was soaring high
after a war and then low after read my lips
no new taxes, But he took them out with Bill
Clinton in the midst of scandals. So this is a
(01:12):
really good strategist from the nineteen nineties. Uh, and he's
establishment and a party that has been splintered by the
extreme left. So how relevant is he David's not. He
made the great point. This is a guy just looking
for some maritime and he's getting it because the real grasstops,
the real grassroots, the real strategists, the real foot soldiers,
(01:35):
the Podesta team, they're laying low and they're ready to pounce,
first in the midterms and then again in the twenty
twenty eight presidential election.
Speaker 5 (01:45):
But what did Carvel come out and say?
Speaker 2 (01:47):
This guy got to stick to sports, which I have
a great deal of respect for, doesn't know.
Speaker 6 (01:52):
Jack deep deep beep beep beep beep about politics.
Speaker 2 (01:57):
And so then the big conversation became Steven A, what's
this guy up to? He's getting into politics an awful lot,
especially on that YouTube show. Is this narcissist, ego maniac
setting himself up to run for office? Which first I
(02:19):
rebuke because he's too intelligent to be referred to in
such a way.
Speaker 5 (02:24):
Number one.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Number two, he's too successful to be suspicious of such
a thing. And number three, his analysis has been spot on. No,
I know people don't like the truth. Honey, how do
I look fat oh ouch? I guess I'll change so
(02:47):
yet last week I said, I got news for you.
Speaker 5 (02:53):
Stephen A.
Speaker 2 (02:54):
Smith is not setting himself up for a run. Stephen A.
Smith is setting himself up to be the John the
Baptist for Wes Moore, the Maryland governor. And that is
their play.
Speaker 5 (03:06):
Now.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
If they don't think they can win, he's young enough,
they'll wait. But if things go either hunky dory, there'll
be a window in twenty twenty eight, or if things
should shockingly go well in the midterms, the door will
swing wide open hunky dory, meaning you'll have control, bigger
(03:28):
control of the House, bigger control of the Senate. Everything
Trump will have done has worked. Yeah, you could go
with somebody bigger than life, like a Wes Moore, because
either way they're going to get to the swing precincts
of the swing districts of the swing states, and you
always got to play. And if you have somebody like
Wes Moore, who's like a very much like a Barack
Obama with a better resume, with a more certain past
(03:48):
and respected past, but just as charismatic, you might America might.
Speaker 5 (03:56):
Choose him. That even falls on Stephen A.
Speaker 2 (04:02):
Smith, to his credit, But last week's question was is
Stephen A. Smith setting himself up for a run? Noster
del Jorno said, no, he's setting up Wes Moore. Well,
here was Stephen A. Smith's response to James Carvel's attack.
Speaker 5 (04:22):
Yeah, check another one up for mister del jornal.
Speaker 3 (04:25):
That's not what you said, sir, So respectfully, let me
state this again for everybody to listen. My life is
pretty damn good. I have no desire to be a politician.
I wouldn't want to contaminate and sully my life.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
I just done that.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
I would not want to contaminate in sully my life.
Let me tell you something I once led. It was
really my first exposure to a state legislature. I led
three bus loads of listeners to Oklahoma City to march
on the capitol, and all I could think of was,
I gotta get out of here and take a shower quick.
The first time I went to Washington, DC, I gotta
(05:08):
take a shower and quick.
Speaker 5 (05:10):
Boy, can I relate to that.
Speaker 3 (05:11):
I wouldn't sully myself by entrenching myself in that cesspool
in the nation's capital. I'm very very clear about that,
and the pay would be significantly less. Let me add
that too, at least for the eight years I'm in office,
because I damn sure if I win the first election,
I ain't losing a second. So understand I have no
(05:34):
desire for it. What I said was, it's an absolute
embarrassment that I am the person that's being mentioned and named.
It's a disgrace to this Democratic Party. It shows you
have no bullpen and I know that's what got your
your intendans up, and that's what robbed you up, even
more so because you brought up how I have a
(05:55):
relationship with Wes Moore and Joshapiro, Jos Shapiro. I met
him one time in my life, to him one time
in my life, and hey, I think he's a fabulous government.
Speaker 2 (06:03):
He's a fabulous governor. Only met him once. I don't
know him. He wouldn't sell himself. He's certainly not interested,
and he wouldn't take the pay cut.
Speaker 5 (06:11):
So what does that leave enough for the state of Pennsylvania.
Speaker 3 (06:14):
And I think he knows his stuff and I'm honored
to have met him, and I'm looking forward to cultivating
a relationship with him.
Speaker 5 (06:20):
West Wore is a different animal. I love this brother.
Speaker 3 (06:22):
I know him from sports because he and I talk
about the Ravens all the time. I think he's doing
a damn good job with the state of Maryland.
Speaker 5 (06:30):
And if there is.
Speaker 3 (06:30):
A Democratic nominee to look at, it is definitely him.
Speaker 6 (06:34):
All right, at my writer, am I right?
Speaker 3 (06:46):
West Moore is an absolute winner. I'm not apologizing for
that to anybody.
Speaker 2 (06:51):
So what is Stephen A. Smith up to wes Moore?
What I tell you through two and a half years ago,
well a year and a half ago, when this national
show started. Two and a half years ago, if you
were listening locally in Nashville, wes Moore is their big play.
Speaker 5 (07:08):
And I don't know when.
Speaker 2 (07:10):
Could be three years, could be eleven, twelve years, wes
Moore is probably going to be president. Well I've got okay,
So this you're going to love. This is a former
Clinton polster. Remember the old analogy that Joe Rogan gave
us how the Indians, you know, you could take out
a buffalo or two at a time, or you can
(07:31):
just chase them off a cliff. They'll fall, they'll die,
and then you harvest them. And Joe Rogan said, Democrats
don't have another play. They're going to go right off
the cliff. Well, here's a former Clinton polster saying the
Democrats are falling off a cliff.
Speaker 7 (07:43):
That's a new pauling coming out Monday that I've just
looked at. And frankly, the Democratic Party is falling off
a cliff. The ratings, which were in the high forties
are going to be like thirty five percent. And I
think the basic question who's doing better job as president
Biden or Trump? Trump is winning that with fifty seven percent.
(08:04):
I think you're seeing a retrospective assessment of Biden and
the direction the Democratic Party was going really a lot
more negative.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
Than it was on election day.
Speaker 7 (08:14):
And they're looking at the contrast on immigration, on economic policy,
on some of the social policies, and boy, they're reevaluating
in the Democratic Party. I have never seen anything like this.
This is a record low for the Democratic Party in terms.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Of Yet how they bring themselves back and pull themselves
up by the bootstring, so to speak, is the difference
in whether they even exist by the end of the
decade or find a new lane and find a way
back to a victory. But they are headed off the
cliff as we speak. Best moment sounds the day. This
(08:51):
is a classic presidents talking about men participating in women's sports,
calls out the main governor right to her face.
Speaker 4 (09:00):
The NCAA has complied immediately, by the way, that's good,
But I understand Maine is the main here, the governor.
Speaker 5 (09:10):
Are you not going to comply with it? Well, we
are the federal law. Well you better do it.
Speaker 4 (09:18):
You better do it because you're not going to get
any federal funding at all if you don't. And by
the way, your population, even though it's somewhat liberal, although
I did very well there, your population doesn't want men
playing in women's sports. So you better you better comply
because otherwise you're not getting any federal funding. Every state.
Speaker 5 (09:36):
Good.
Speaker 4 (09:36):
I'll see you and could I look forward to that.
That should be a really easy one. And enjoy your
life after governor, because I don't think you'll be an
elected politics.
Speaker 5 (09:46):
The future of Maine. I see a new governor in
your future. You're going to get smoked.
Speaker 4 (09:51):
That really don't know what he said at the end
of their sense.
Speaker 5 (09:56):
I don't think he knows what he said either. It's
got to be a big misunderstanding. I'm gonna lin, I'm gon.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
L it is tight.
Speaker 5 (10:05):
How do you like my garbage?
Speaker 1 (10:06):
Show, miss a little, miss a lot, miss a lot,
and we'll miss you. It's your morning Show with Michael
del Churno