All Episodes

October 6, 2025 34 mins

A former NFL quarterback turned broadcaster was stabbed and then arrested after an altercation with a delivery driver. What caused the fight, and what is next for Mark Sanchez? National Correspondent RORY O’NEILL will have the story. 

President Trump is urging both Israel and Hamas to embrace the peace plan that he has championed – but will it truly stop the fighting? White House Correspondent Jon Decker has the update. 

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, 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 your
morning routine. But better late than never. Enjoy the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
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 Gill Charm.

Speaker 3 (00:34):
Seven minutes after the hour.

Speaker 1 (00:35):
Welcome to Monday, October the sixth year, up on NORD
twenty twenty five on the air and streaming live on
your iHeart app.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
I'm Michael Honor to serve you this morning.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Jeffrey's got the sound, Red's got the content, Murray's got
the NFL story.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
In a second, here are your top stories.

Speaker 1 (00:52):
Marco Rubio says speed is paramount when it comes to
a deal ending the war in the Gaza. We begin
today with the meeting in Egypt. It better result in
some hostage releases or I don't think we get onto
even the heavier lifting, which is what to do with
that area in the future. A judge has blocked President
Trump's administration from sending members of the federalized National Guard

(01:15):
into the streets of Portland. We've got an activist judge
that will eventually go up to a higher court and
ultimately ruled and write eight has officially closed all of
its stores.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
Roy O'Neil is joining us. All right.

Speaker 1 (01:28):
So we have Mark Sanchez, broadcaster now former quarterback with
the Jets. He's in Indianapolis to cover the game and
something happens out in the bar. It ends up with
him being arrested and stabbed. Wow, get us up to speed. Yeah,
it's pretty crazy.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
So there was a man who was working driving a
box truck parked in an alley and the essentially his
business is emptying out cooking oil used cooking oil from
locations and swapping it out And apparently allegedly this is
when Sanchez, around twelve thirty in the morning, goes out
and has some sort of a confrontation with this guy.

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Ends up getting in and out.

Speaker 4 (02:07):
Of the truck, is accused of taking the man, picking
him up, throwing him to the ground.

Speaker 3 (02:11):
He's a sixty nine year old man.

Speaker 4 (02:13):
There are photos of him that have surfaced, and the
injuries are serious. Sanchez himself or the elderly man to
defend himself, stabbed Sanchez several times, even fired pepper spray
at him, until he finally left the scene and was
founded a nearby bar. The man did say that Sanchez
smelled of alcohol, so that's part of this investigation. But

(02:35):
Sanchez was quickly found himself in a hospital bed with
nd cups on as he was being treated for his.

Speaker 1 (02:42):
Injuries, and then eventually got released and went and got processed.
All right, So you know, twelve thirty to night before
you're supposed to be working. That's not good a sixty
nine year old man, that's not good. Rehab in court
is what I see in his future on the network
for his job's sake.

Speaker 4 (03:04):
Yeah, they've put out some pretty innocuous generic statements as
a result, but not much from the network otherwise. But yeah,
exactly what was this just alcohol? Something else going on?
I think that's what we're trying to figure out too.

Speaker 1 (03:16):
All right, We're he's going to be back in the
in the third hour and we'll talk a little bit
about the Middle East peace process while you're here.

Speaker 3 (03:21):
Now, Rory.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
You know, you would think if there's one part of this.
None of us is simple by the way, from an
ancient perspective or current events perspective, but releasing hostages that
ought to be the easy part, disarming Hamas, getting them
to stay away. What to do with got I mean,
the heavy lifting is still to come. But if they
can't do step one today, don't you get a sense

(03:45):
there'll be an unleashing of.

Speaker 3 (03:49):
Israeliza. Yeah?

Speaker 4 (03:52):
Yeah, President Trump on True Social already said that, you know,
without a deal, that will be bloodshed.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
It was what he said on True Social.

Speaker 4 (03:59):
But yeah, but it's also the last marketing chip that
Hamas has at this point, not that there are many left,
but that's all they've got, are these hostages. Sadly, part
of the deal, though, is that the forty eight hostages
will be released those dead and alive, but hundreds of
Palestinians being held by Israel would also be released in exchange.

Speaker 3 (04:20):
You know, that's what they always do.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
You know, they always create an invasion, create an attack,
use the hostages as their end game.

Speaker 3 (04:27):
They just never did it this time.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
And it begs the question, so what does AMAS ultimately
think it can gain? Like the houthis and has balon
a lot of others. They're not what they used to
be and there's not much left time for them. And
we'll see where it goes today in Egypt, but royally
back in the third hour to have the complete details
of that. There's not a whole lot to say that.
I got an email this morning that was and I

(04:55):
share it just because I don't want to withhold anything.
I just don't even Trump's big insane lie about Portland. Hello, Michael,
how can you not tell the truth about this? Where
is the video of Portland burning to the ground. It
is not happening. You claim to be a religious man.
God is watching. Well, God is watching, and a judge

(05:20):
is ruling. And I think ultimately I don't know how
it'll go, but I would think the president has every
right clearly to protect a nice facility or a federal building,
especially in light of local law enforcements inability to do so. Now,
I don't know what kind of craziness that's what leads
into our polls of plenty when I get an email

(05:42):
like that, you just don't know. Now, this person, I
will give him credit. He'll always send you a bunch
of different things. I mean, it'd be a full time
job watching everything he sends me. But they're all from
usually from specific places. And I can give you the
I could do a newscast in the right matrix and

(06:02):
the left matrix every day for you. The problem is
what's in between. And I'll give you an example of that.
Here's the story today in our polls of plenty, and
it says the media, and we call it death of journalism.

(06:24):
Trust in the media is at an all time low
twenty eight percent. And what's laughable is none of us
believe twenty eight percent, right. But then again, the media
you think is fake, the other half of America thinks
is real. And the media you think is real, they
think is fake. So I don't even know if any

(06:44):
of these numbers have any credibility at all. In other words,
in the fog of war and the fog of matrix,
none of it makes any sense. But let me give
them to you first, Americans, confidence in mass media has
edged down to a new low, which is twenty eight
percent percent expressing a great deal or fair amount. This

(07:07):
is down from thirty one percent and down from forty
percent five years ago. Now, when I started telling my
local audience about the death of journalism, I said, and
don't mishear me. This is not a victory for the
right because you think the media is controlled by the left,

(07:28):
and if the left journalism is dead, you know, happy
days are here again.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
No, this is a problem for our republic period.

Speaker 1 (07:40):
This will fan the flames of US versus them, shirts
and skins and two alternate realities. It feeds the matrix.
Seven to ten US adults now say they have not
very much confidence or no at all, and it's about

(08:01):
fifty to fifty within that thirty six percent not very
much confidence and not at all thirty four percent. So
what is America turning to TikTok podcasts? And that's real journalism?

(08:23):
There's no bias there or escape. Maybe you're listening to
crime podcasts just you know, per escape. So what you
get is a detachment. Now, the bottom line is, how
would you solve this? Well, you would solve this by
you know, removing.

Speaker 3 (08:41):
Bias, how fact checking? Who miss the checkmate?

Speaker 1 (08:51):
And it's coming from every direction, the none at all.
In nineteen seventy, I'm trying to think seventy five, I
don't know. I'd have been about eleven or twelve, it
was like three percent. Now it's up to thirty six
percent that don't trust the media at all. Combine them

(09:18):
with not at all and not very much, and you
can do the math. Sixty six and a half out
of ten. Here's another great example in this other story. Oh,
by the way, when Gallup began measuring trust in the
media in the seventies, between sixty eight and seventy two
percent of Americans express confidence in reporting. And let me

(09:40):
tell you something. It's a lack of trust that has
been earned. Let me tell you that I spent twenty
five years trying to expose media bias to America. Although
Democrats and Republicans continue to express different levels of trust
for the media, the percentages with high confidence in reporting
are at low points among both parties. Republicans confidence, which

(10:01):
hasn't risen above twenty one percent since twenty fifteen, has
dropped to single digits eight percent, independence is at twenty
seven percent. For Democrats, fifty one percent now express trust
in the media. They own it and half of them
don't trust it. But they're the only ones.

Speaker 3 (10:22):
That have it.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
If you didn't have Democrat controlled in the Democrat Party
back pocket media and they're fifty one percent. Where would
it really be already? And I think probably most listening
to this show would fall under the eight percent. But

(10:44):
look at the matrix even there, eight percent of Republicans
have no trust in the media. Fifty one percent of
Democrats trust the media. How do I have a conversation
with both?

Speaker 3 (10:57):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (10:57):
I don't know what you're watching and know what you're
listening to. I don't know what you reacting too. Because
one side's getting all of their side of the story
none of the other. The other side is getting only
their side of the story and none of the other,
and the two shall never meet. Here's a great example.
So if you wanted to become a United States congressman,

(11:18):
let's say in the House of Representatives, you might want
to consider serving in the military. Then come back and
get your law degree. That might be the perfect combination.

Speaker 5 (11:29):
Right.

Speaker 1 (11:31):
I'll tell you what you don't want to do is
just tell everybody how many offices you've held. Now, if
you're a Democrat, you might not want to be in
the military. In fact, it could hurt you. So the
headline is military experience tops candidate's credentials.

Speaker 3 (11:52):
Well, only if you're Republican. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (11:54):
Overall, fifty five percent of adults say military service on
a candidate's resume makes it much sixteen percent or somewhat
thirty nine percent more likely they'll vote for that person.
But then when you look at the breakdown, it's seventy
seven percent for Republicans. They're more likely to vote for
you with the military. We got a guy running for
Congress right now, and this whole commercial is him telling

(12:18):
you about how he flew missions in Iraq. I suspect
he'll do very well in a primary. On't how I'll
do it a general. Why because it's only forty nine
percent for independence and forty percent for Democrats, fifty two
percent no difference at all for Democrats, twenty two percent,
no difference for Republicans. So it's very strong, But you

(12:43):
have to ask yourself, does it actually hurt? I mean,
Democrats keep running these people with military experience, but I
don't think that's a good idea because their voters don't
really like it and trust it. So Republican voters don't
like people that have been in office, and Democrat voters
don't like people that have been in the military. Americans
believe military veterans possess leadership qualities. Thirty one percent strong

(13:05):
leadership qualities. Fifty two percent agree with the statement put
the country interests ahead of their own. Thirty one percent
strongly agree, forty seven percent agree. Work well with people
from different backgrounds, twenty six percent strongly agree, fifty one
percent agree understand complex global strategic issues. Twenty five percent
strongly agree. Fifty percent agree it's it's a good thing,

(13:27):
but it's all one sided. So if you want to
be a Republican and run for office, military good, You
want to be a Democrat, not so good. In fact,
it could even harm your chances. And in between, nobody's
trusting the.

Speaker 3 (13:44):
Media except the left.

Speaker 1 (13:48):
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(14:09):
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Speaker 6 (15:18):
This is Your Morning Show with Michael Del Chrono.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Federal judge has blocked the Trump administration from sending members
of a federalized National Guard into the street support and
Mark Mayfield has the very latest US Distorcy.

Speaker 7 (15:32):
Judge Karen Immigrant granted the motion for a temporary restraining
order finaled on the state of California on Sunday night
emotions softly deployment of up to three hundred members of
the California National Guard to Portland. California Governor Gavin Newsom
said on Sunday he would sue the Trump administration after
it federalized three hundred California National Guard troops and deployed
them to Oregon. I'm Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 1 (15:51):
The Supreme Court's going to hear some controversial cases in
its new term that begins today.

Speaker 8 (15:56):
On the docket will be cases involving the use of
race in congression, redistricting, conversion therapy for miners, and state
laws banning transgender athletes in girls sports. The High Court
will also hear cases involving the Trump administration, including on
the legality of President Trump's global tariffs and on whether
Trump can fire Democratic appointed officials without cause.

Speaker 3 (16:18):
I'm Monica Nelson.

Speaker 1 (16:19):
House Democrats are going to meet virtually today. Oh yeah,
the government it's still shut down. Scott Carr has more
from Washington.

Speaker 9 (16:25):
The Democratic House Minority Leader Hakim Jeffries uploaded a letter
to his website Saturday saying people will die if the
Affordable Care Act text credits are not renewed in a
proposed government funding stopgap bill. He also said millions will
lose their healthcare coverage and the cost of premiums, co pays,
and deductibles will skyrocket. The Republican Senate Majority Leader John

(16:47):
Thune joins with the Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson and
President Trump in vowing to not give in to Democrats
assistants on continued healthcare funding.

Speaker 3 (16:56):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington.

Speaker 8 (17:00):
This is Deebo Morris from our little town of Franklin, Tennessee.

Speaker 6 (17:04):
My morning show is your Morning Show with Michael Dell BORNEO.

Speaker 5 (17:13):
Hi.

Speaker 3 (17:14):
I'm Michael.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
I'd love to have you listen to your morning show
live every day. We're heard on great stations like News
Talk five point fifty k f YI and Phoenix News
Radio eleven ninety k EX in Portland and ten ninety
the Patriot in Seattle. Make us a part of your
morning routine. We'd love to have you listen live, but
in the meantime, enjoy the podcast. Thanks for bringing us
along with you, and good morning. Welcome to Monday, October

(17:35):
the sixth. Really three big stories. I guess, like me,
you would need someone to tell you this. But Saturay
Night Live continued it's anti Trump obsession and even had
Bad Bunny as the host, who basically told us, for
those of you that don't like him singing at the
Super Bowl, learn Spanish tough.

Speaker 3 (17:52):
We'll see how that plays.

Speaker 1 (17:53):
We've got a Virginia age who was caught with a
twenty twenty two text exchange calling for the Speaker of
the House Virginia to be shot two bullets of that.
He wants to be apologized and just move on and
continue with his race. The governor in Virginia calling for
him to withdraw from the race, the President of the
United States calling him to withdraw the race. And meanwhile,

(18:15):
we've got peace talks headed to Egypt and unrest in Portland,
and the Supreme Court getting ready to begin another round
of cases. It's a pretty busy docket for a Monday.
Let's start with President Trump urging both Israel and Hamas
to embrace his peace plan and do so quickly and
truly stop fighting. John Decker follows all things White House.

(18:37):
He is our White House correspondent to your morning show.
Good morning, John, You do get a sense the President
wants to see some hostages released asap or else.

Speaker 3 (18:46):
Well, that's right, that's.

Speaker 10 (18:47):
The ultimatum that the President has given Hamas. The or
else part is that he will give a green light
to Israel to continue to conduct their mission to essentially
rid Gaza of Hamas.

Speaker 3 (19:01):
So these peace talks.

Speaker 10 (19:03):
These final negotiations, are taking place over the course of
the next few days in Cairo, Egypt. It's Eve Witkoff
who is leading the administration's point of view, as well
as Jared Kushner who helped put together this twenty point
proposal in the first place, and there of course are
representatives from the Israeli government, representatives from Hamas as well.

Speaker 3 (19:24):
We'll see what comes out of it.

Speaker 10 (19:27):
I think there are going to be a lot of
sticking points as it relates to this twenty point agreement
that the President has put forward, and we'll see if
they can get past those sticking points.

Speaker 1 (19:35):
Well, the first sticking point is released to hostages or else,
that's number one, and then Marco Rubia kind of lead
out in the talking head shows this weekend. The second phase,
that's the really heavy lifting, getting Hamas to disarm, most
to leave and release their ambitions for the future and
the state of Gaza and Israel once Israel withdraws its

(19:56):
troops from the Gaza. That's the really we can't even
get to the tough stuff because we can't get by
the simple stuff. What's interesting is they always take hostages
whenever they carry out an offensive, and then they use
the hostages to end the conflict. But this is Draugon
now and they're not taking the execue. Does anybody have

(20:18):
any idea what Hamas thinks it's playing for.

Speaker 10 (20:22):
Well, Hamas has always wanted to not only gain control
of all of gods At, which they've controlled for the
past two decades, but they want to essentially lead a
Palestinian state.

Speaker 3 (20:32):
That is what they have said, and it's just hard
to believe.

Speaker 10 (20:35):
I don't know if if you buy what they may
be saying that they're just going to all of a
sudden give up their ambitions just because of the deadline,
you know. I mean, they've they fought over the course
of so many years to achieve that goal.

Speaker 3 (20:50):
We'll see. I mean, after all, tomorrow.

Speaker 10 (20:52):
Marks exactly two years since the October seventh terrorist attackle
in Israel, which was led by Hamas and star this
war in the first place, Michael. So we'll see if
this is a pivotal week as it relates to trying
to end that war and get those hostages back home
to their families.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
Meanwhile, we have another judge in a district interjecting themselves.

Speaker 3 (21:15):
It'll probably go to a higher court.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
But I would think that the president feels pretty confident.
If what I would call rioters not protesters, want to
continue to cause trouble at federal buildings or ice facilities,
president has every right to protect those facilities, especially if
the local law enforcement can't seemingly do it for himself.

(21:39):
I would think that part would uphold in the long run.
But you're the attorney, not me. You're a US Supreme
Court bar attorney. I mean your thoughts on that.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
My thoughts are on that.

Speaker 10 (21:49):
It depends how, you know, if you federalize the National Guard,
how those National Guard troops are used. If they're used
in the way that you just described, no problem at all.
Protecting federal buildings, protecting federal assets, protecting ice officers in
some cases not a problem.

Speaker 3 (22:05):
It's when you want to use the National.

Speaker 10 (22:08):
Guard for law enforcement that's where you get into problems.
So I think it's all in the details in terms
of how the National Guard is used out in Portland,
and if it's used the way that you describe that, Michael,
I don't see any problem, and the President should ultimately
prevail as it relates to legal challenges regarding the action
that he's had.

Speaker 1 (22:27):
Now this is oversimplifying, but what the President is doing
in Portland, I can see what he's threatening to do
in Chicago. Now you're talking about what you were discussing,
and that could be far more problematic.

Speaker 3 (22:39):
That's right.

Speaker 10 (22:40):
So Portland a very different situation than what we're seeing
in Chicago. Chicago, however, you know, boy, I mean, I
think it goes back to when President Obama was in office.
The crime problem that's existed in Chicago, it's not a
it's not a new thing.

Speaker 3 (22:56):
It's existed for quite some time.

Speaker 10 (22:58):
And you know, I don't know if the governor of Illinois.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
The mayor of.

Speaker 10 (23:03):
Chicago believes that everything is as my mom would put
a hunky dork the same thing.

Speaker 3 (23:08):
Yeah, it's not.

Speaker 10 (23:10):
It's a problem, and you know, I'm surprised. You know,
if you have a problem, sometimes federal help can help
alleviate the problem.

Speaker 3 (23:18):
But that's what the governor says. They don't want to
do that.

Speaker 1 (23:21):
But that's if everybody's scoreboard is law and order and
law enforcement and security and safety of its citizens.

Speaker 3 (23:29):
It's not.

Speaker 1 (23:30):
We're all playing politics with it. And that's the biggest
part of the problem. John Decker is always great reporting.
We'll keep an eye and all of our presens flying
towards Egypt today. All right, can't have your morning show
without your voice. Let's get to your voice. Let's start
in Tampa with Bill. Bill pretty much summarizes the day
for us.

Speaker 3 (23:48):
Good morning, Michael.

Speaker 11 (23:50):
First, the twenty eight percent of people that trust the
news or media, they only trust the weather. Second, ignorant
Bunny should be given a one way ticket home and
sold never to return. And third, think about the Palestine
gaza problem. It would be like us having a Muslim

(24:11):
nation embedded in Tennessee chanting death to America.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
On a daily basis. Jingle out, let's play some music.

Speaker 5 (24:21):
No.

Speaker 1 (24:22):
I always said, imagine if our solution for nine to
eleven was we'll just give al Qaeda New York and
then call it peace. One side does not see the
other's right to exist. I have breaking news for you.

(24:44):
They don't see your right to exist either. And two
years ago they invaded, raped, slaughtered, took hostage. Now there's
been a lot of good that's you know, comes since then.

(25:05):
I think Hamas has been beaten back a few decades.
I know the Huthies and Hesba Llah have usually to
end a conflict, they release hostages, but they don't have
a future either way anymore, and defeat is not acceptable

(25:26):
for them. They would choose to die in fighting as
an act of worship over a future that doesn't include them,
let alone conquering. Push comes to shove. My guess is

(25:47):
you probably won't even get hostages released. That even more
tricky if they played the game of Okay, we'll release
the hostages, we'll disarm uh and we'll remain in the
and we know that we'll never rule again, because that
that'll just be a time of regrouping. We may not
even get that far with them. So I suspect Israel

(26:11):
will continue to prosecute this war. But we pray for
peace where peace doesn't even seem possible. And uh, and
I pray it for for Israel and for people everywhere
in the Middle East.

Speaker 3 (26:23):
Oh Steven, Oklahoma.

Speaker 5 (26:24):
City Michael del Jarnal, So federal judge blocked Trump from
sending troops into Portland, and newscom is laughing it up.

Speaker 3 (26:35):
Trump should just send them anyway, What's what's news? I'm
going to do call it doj I can't stop laughing.
My friend, Yeah, it's coming. Uh and he will. Jim
and Defiance, Ohio.

Speaker 12 (26:47):
For cities like Chicago and Portland, they want ice and
border patrol out, say fine, but we're also going to shut.

Speaker 13 (26:55):
Down every federal.

Speaker 12 (26:58):
Building in these places, shut down Social Security offices, VA
post offices, federal courts, shut them all down, get out,
and then look at them and say you wanted it.

Speaker 3 (27:11):
Deal with it.

Speaker 1 (27:15):
Probably worth more than what's happening right now. What he's
in Arizona.

Speaker 3 (27:19):
We'll give him the.

Speaker 14 (27:19):
Final say, I guess my question back to your listener
that expressed criticism of President Trump's comments over Portland is
does he feel the behavior of those protesters is normal
and acceptable because it goes way beyond protesting. So what
is he offering as a solution just to ignore and

(27:40):
accept that behavior. Yeah, I don't think those questions that
is a sensible way to look at something. I don't
think we're dealing with sense and sensibilities right now. My
guess is that that person living in that side of
the matrix, whytch what they watch, the videos the algorithms

(28:03):
are feeding him are all telling a completely different story
and showing completely different videos. Remember, bias exists by the
stories you cover in the stories you don't, the angles
you choose, and the angles you don't. They don't choose
those angles, Woodie, not on the left. That's my point.

(28:26):
The problem isn't just media bias. You also have the
social dilemma that feeds it, education system that feeds it,
media that feeds it, movies that feed it. And no
matter what, you can't seem to get around it. But yeah, no,

(28:51):
we don't know the difference. Look, we don't value the
truth anymore as a people or a portion of us
don't or law and or for a portion of us.
I mean, if you're watching online what they have done
with Charlie Kirk's assassination. Now it's only impacting people that
are living in the world. I got news for you.

(29:13):
People that live on x have a different blood pressure
than people that listen to spa radio on Sirius XM.
I mean, you know, it's just I don't know.

Speaker 1 (29:24):
Chicken or egg, right, But yes, I would agree with you.
That's rioting. That's not protesting. That's rioting on purpose. It's
trying to provoke a response and then provoke the response
into greater chaos. There's somebody playing a much bigger game

(29:46):
of chess here, and we continue to play the role
of the pond. That's ultimately the problem. All right, did
you hear the best performing assets of twenty twenty five
are not stocks, the precious metals. This year, gold and
silver has risen as staggering twenty nine percent, and some
experts believe gold and silver is a bowl market.

Speaker 3 (30:10):
And it's just begun.

Speaker 1 (30:11):
Central banks are buying gold to protect against the falling
dollar and silver, Oh my gosh, it's powering the future.
The skyrocketing demand thanks to solar evs ais silvers like
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(30:34):
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Speaker 6 (31:05):
It's your morning show with Michael del Chano.

Speaker 1 (31:10):
Here's what we're all chewing on this morning. The President
says he thinks the hostages will start being freed and
very soon or else more from Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 7 (31:18):
Trump spoke briefly to reporters, says he left the White
House on his way to Norfolk, Virginia, where a kickoff
celebration of the Naties two hundred and fiftieth birthday.

Speaker 3 (31:26):
They're in negotiation right now as we speak. They've started
the negotiation. It'll last a couple of days.

Speaker 10 (31:32):
We'll see how it turns out, but I'm hearing it's going.

Speaker 3 (31:35):
Very well, bothe.

Speaker 7 (31:36):
Israel and Helmas have indicated support for Trump's twenty point
proposal to end the war in Gaza, but with conditions
that still need to be negotiated. You a weekend post,
Trump said, when Israel has agreed to the initial with
a draw line that was shared with Hamas, he added,
the ceasefire will be immediately effective.

Speaker 3 (31:50):
And the hostage exchange can begin. I'm mark Mayfield back
to work for the Supreme Court.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
They'll hear some controversial cases in their new term that
begins today.

Speaker 8 (31:58):
On the docket will be case is involving the use
of race in congressional redistricting, conversion therapy for miners, and
state laws banning transgender athletes in girls sports. The High
Court will also hear cases involving the Trump administration, including
on the legality of President Trump's global tariffs and on
whether Trump can fire Democratic appointed officials without cause.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
On Monica Nelson government.

Speaker 1 (32:22):
Still closed, House Democrats will meet virtually today to discuss
the ongoing shut down. Scott Carr has more from Our
Nation's Capital.

Speaker 9 (32:29):
The Democratic House Minority Leader Hakim Jeffries uploaded a letter
to his website Saturday saying people will die if the
Affordable Care Act text credits are not renewed in a
proposed government funding stopgap bill. He also said millions will
lose their healthcare coverage and the cost of premiums, co
pays and deductibles will skyrocket. The Republican Senate Majority Leader

(32:50):
John Thune joins with the Republican House Speaker Mike Johnson
and President Trump in vowing to not give in the
Democrats assistants on continued healthcare funding.

Speaker 3 (33:00):
I'm Scott Carr in Washington, h right today.

Speaker 1 (33:02):
I'm a Walgreens guy. Growing up in Kenner, Louisiana. We
were Records family. Achords won bankrupt, they got taken over
by Right Aid and guess what.

Speaker 3 (33:12):
Right eight has slowly gone under.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
In fact, Write eight has officially closed all of its stores,
beginning and end of more than sixty years of business.
In fact, I even went and googled my old eckert
on Chateau Boulevard and West Esplanade and Kenner, Louisiana. It's
a Walgreens. Tammy Trio has more on the end of
Write eight.

Speaker 15 (33:31):
The pharmacy chain confirmed the closure in a statement on
its website, thanking its loyal customers for their many years
of support. Right eight has struggled financially in recent years.
The company filed for bankruptcy protection May, just eight months
after emerging from a previous Chapter eleven filing in September
of twenty twenty four. The company at that time operated
over twelve hundred stores across fifteen states from California to Vermont,

(33:53):
and it planned to keep stores open and sell off
assets in an effort to maintain prescription services for customers.
I'm Tammy Tree.

Speaker 1 (34:00):
Former Jets quarterback and Fox Sports analyst Mark Sanchez is
out of the hospital and went straight for processing at
the jail.

Speaker 3 (34:08):
More from Jonathan O'Halleran.

Speaker 13 (34:10):
Police say Sanchez was stabbed during a physical altercation with
another man, and court documents say the victim in the
case said he thought Sanchez was trying to kill him.
Sanchez was arrested at the hospital on charges of battery
with injury, unlawful entry of a motor vehicle, and public intoxication.
He was in Indianapolis to cover Sunday's coltson Raiders game.

(34:31):
TMZ says Sanchez was released from the hospital and was
processed through the local jail. He's now posted cash bail.
Jonathan o'hallor in NBC News Radio New York.

Speaker 6 (34:42):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael Ndel Joano
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