Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael.
Speaker 2 (00:00):
Your morning show airs live five to eight am Central
six to nine Eastern in great cities like Memphis, Tennessee, Telsa, Oklahoma, Sacramento, California.
We'd love to be a part of your morning routine,
but we're happier here now. Enjoy the podcast.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Well two three, 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'dell charm.
Speaker 4 (00:30):
Hey.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Look, I don't know when you're flipping up and down
the dial, if you're listening to somebody miserable or happy
or insightful, someone that loves their company, loves their job
or not. But you are now. We love what we
do and we love who we serve you. This is
your Morning Show. Seven minutes after the hour, It's Veterans Day,
a day set aside to honor the millions who have
(00:50):
worn the United States Armed Forces uniforms. To all of
you who served, a grateful nation is forever and you're dead.
Thank you for your service. The Senate voted Monday night
to end the record breaking government shut down in the
House says it's ready to finish the job. Delays and
cancelations today. The last projection I saw was five hundred
and forty one delays. Waking up this morning in eleven
(01:13):
hundred and fifty seven cancelations as we go to six
percent cutbacks in flights on our way to ten percent,
But unfortunately that's at the forty busiest airports and hubs.
Monday Night football last night, the Eagles improved to seven
and three. It was a kind of a cold night
and an uneventful scoring game, but Eagles went at ten
(01:33):
to seven open the Packers on Monday Night Football. Well,
first it was basketball, Now it's Major League Baseball players
all being charged with taking payoffs to rig prop bets.
Is this a prop bet problem or a sports gambling problem?
And how the heck do we solve it? And why
do we get the feeling it's only going to get
worse day by day by day by day. Roy O'Neil,
(01:55):
our national correspondent, is here. Good morning, Rory, Yeah, good morning.
Speaker 5 (01:59):
And one of the issues, or one of the attempts
to try to tackle this, Major League Baseball said it's
authorized gaming operators will now cap bets on individual pitches
at two hundred dollars and exclude them from parlays the
idea of being, let's make it not so lucrative for
these baseball players to get caught up in these kinds
of things. Because the indictment that was unsealed over the
(02:21):
weekend found that these two pitches for Cleveland and their
friends back in the Dominican Republic were able to make
about a half a million dollars during the two years
they were running this operation.
Speaker 1 (02:32):
So, I mean, we did this when it was basketball first.
I mean, I don't know how you're going to get
around to fix a game. There could be any number
of scenarios. There could be people who are betting and
then they get behind, and then they're told, well, I
can break your legs and end your career, or you
can make sure this prop doesn't happen in your next game.
(02:55):
And there's any number of scenarios. What we don't seem
to have, though, is a player who placed a bet
on his own prop and then determined the outcome. But
just as bad, right, and who knows how how much
worse this is than we even think.
Speaker 5 (03:11):
Well, according to the twenty three page indictment, these pictures,
Class and Ortiz were may have been getting a cut
of some of this operation, so that so essentially they
were throwing specific pictures, even at specific speeds, during their
time in the mound, at specific times or against players,
and then the people back in the dr were then
(03:32):
placing appropriate bets and parlaying them based on this previously
agreed to deal.
Speaker 1 (03:40):
I'm trying to do this in a short segment with you,
or I want you to do all the talking. But
you know, we've all watched a game and then, you know,
we see a penalty or an outcome that ends up
being a half a point different, and our first thought
is this is fixed at some point the integrity of
the game is already damaged, and how do you fix this.
I mean, even if we got rid of all prop bets,
that doesn't get rid of the problem. You're never going
(04:00):
to solve this to get rid of all this gaming,
and that's never going to happen.
Speaker 5 (04:04):
And it's not like this is something new either, right,
I mean, we've been facing gambling issues with professional sports
for a couple of centuries now, so it's not a
new issue. But you know, obviously these apps make it
that much easier for it to happen all across the country,
not just in Vegas or where there's some sports betting happening.
Now that it's in what I think thirty eight states
(04:25):
and the fact that it's now in your back pocket
is an extra concern. And then you got to be
worried that this is really a story about young men
placing these bets, and this is the who it's really
maybe hurting long term.
Speaker 1 (04:37):
Well, listen, X number of gamblers are always going to
have X number of problem gamblers X number of pathological gamblers.
A problem gambler won't stop totally loses everything. A pathological
won't stop even when they lose everything, They'll start stealing
and we'll all be paying the price for this. But
you know you're not going to see a hero in
(04:57):
this because baseball basketball paul the way to cricket in India,
they're loving all this gaming. It's their number one advertiser,
and you bet the game and then you want to
watch it. Good for ratings, I mean, but there's only
one way out of this mess, and that's the way
you got in it.
Speaker 5 (05:14):
But the question too, though, if I think it's ragged,
if I think it's fixed, does that now make me
not want to gamble? It's like, you know, I put
that prop bet on, but I don't know if it's
already been a rig to go the other way, and
so now it goes on the other side of Does
it discourage future gaming because you say, this might as
well be professional wrestling.
Speaker 1 (05:31):
You know what gamblers say to that, I'm on the
wrong end of a fix or I'm on the right
end of a fix. No, Unfortunately, Rria doesn't stop them.
That's the problem. You know. The chilling thought is a
guy I'll never forget. I was at Vegas in Vegas
one time with my mom and dad and this woman
was crying and begging her husband to stop playing and
come back to the room. And she was crying, specifically saying,
(05:53):
you're losing our house. It was most scarring thing ever.
I don't think I've ever wanted to casino bet ever again.
Notion that people are doing this on the couch right
next to their wife and potentially losing their house right
in front of them, it's frightening. It's nonsense, it's crazy,
and it's out of control. Rory's gonna be back in
the third hour. Would you take medical advice from your computer? Well,
(06:15):
I think it's coming right, and I would say, and
I do every day from my wife. All right, can't
have your morning show without your voice. There's a talkback
button if you're listening on the iHeartRadio app. We think
this is talking. Look, our number one goal was to
stop the monologue, stop the outrage, and stop all the incitement.
(06:37):
Let's get back to waking up, being informed, being entertained,
and having a good time with it and understanding things together.
So we wanted to wanted to return to a conversation.
You tune in and hear me talking. So this talkback
button is key to this. Used to be a talk rader,
you'd have to call in and you'd rot on hold
(06:58):
and maybe maybe not you'd get on the air. Not anymore.
You hit that microphone and count you down. Three two
one gets you thirty seconds. Make a comment, ask a question,
immediately take your place at the kitchen table, just like
Tom did in Can't Ohio.
Speaker 4 (07:12):
I was a form and you really hit my arts
durings with that story.
Speaker 6 (07:18):
Thank you very much, Michael Big.
Speaker 1 (07:21):
You're welcome, very much. Thank you for your service, and
God bless you on this veteran's day. Roger and Sacramento.
Speaker 7 (07:28):
Yeah, I just want to give a shout out to
my brothers in arms that that trends that have served
from all the wars in the past, and those that
are presently guardian our future. Not all of us had
to fight in conflicts, but I'm still thankful for my
ability to serve and for everyone else that's served around me.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
I'll never forget. I must have been twelve years old
and I was sitting at the kitchen table in Syracuse
with my uncle Joe. Oh my god, I love Michael Joe.
There's never been a character in a Joe Peshe Robert
de Niro movie like my uncle Joe. So I'm just
and this is the kind of kid I was. I mean,
(08:11):
I remember I used to tell you I would think
I would see everything in black and white because the
movies were black and white. So I made Uncle Joe
tell me all these World War two stories. And then
you know, he went and got his medal and he
showed me and I said, Uncle Joe, you got a
purple heart. I got a purple heart? Was it a Nazi?
You know? You know how we used to talk back?
(08:34):
What happened?
Speaker 8 (08:36):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (08:36):
No, I was a cook, But I got shot in
the as, so I got a purple heart.
Speaker 6 (08:41):
But yeah, Uncle Joe wasn't on the front lines, is
what I'm getting.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Yet, Look, service is service person that he served. I've
made sauce a lot on Sundays. I've never gotten shot
in the rear end. All right, Donald Trump, it's gonna
be a heck of a library, right when this is
all said and done. First he suess CBS over sixty
minutes and the bye and gets sixteen million dollars. Then
Stepanophilis and ABC gets another fifteen million. I haven't gotten
(09:07):
the number. I know he sued CNN for. I think
it was like two hundred and forty million, but I
don't know what he got. We've seen some things that
look like five million, could be more. He's going to
seek a billion dollars potentially from the BBC. Unbelievable. The
left knows no boundaries. So why the BBC now and
(09:29):
over footage from January sixth, Well, there was a documentary
and there's some competitive involvement from the Telegraph, and then
a memo that surfaces, and you see the deliberate bias
of the BBC and how they edit Donald Trump's speech
on January sixth. Well, lucky for you, we have the
(09:52):
side by side comparison. I'm gonna tell you up front,
because you can't see, you can only hear. They literally
take a snippet from the front of the speech and
then they edited to a section fifty five minutes later
to completely change and make it appear as though Donald
(10:18):
Trump said something when he did not. It's the BBC
panoramic at it. Here we go, we'll start with the
BBC's version.
Speaker 6 (10:34):
We're going to.
Speaker 5 (10:34):
Walk down to the Capitol and I'll be there with
you and we fight.
Speaker 6 (10:41):
We fight like hell, And if you don't fight like hell,
you're not going.
Speaker 1 (10:44):
To have a country anymore. No. I can tell you.
It was live on the air when this was happening,
and I remember at this point in the speech there
were two things to concern me. And you know, I
love the president. That wasn't a good day. That wasn't
a good day because I knew he had been briefed
by Secret Service, he knew there were elements out in
that crowd, and chose to do a rally style anyway.
(11:06):
I think he put the Vice president constitutionally in an
impossible position and was sent ranting raving lunatics to go
sick them. I thought it was completely disrespectful to a
loyal vice president. I'm not that big of a Mike
Penn's fan, so you should know this particular point when
(11:27):
he said that, I was like, well, wait a minute,
maybe he is going to lead them down to the Capitol,
not the way the BBC edited it to fight by
fight because that would have to be cleared by Secret
Service ahead of time. Is the president going to the Capitol.
There was a lot of things, and in the end,
(11:50):
the only thing I'm critical of is he had been briefed.
He should have chosen his words far differently, knowing what
he'd been briefed, and he walked right into the trap
set by Nancy Pelosi, who was briefed by the Sergeant
at arms of the threat, and she purposely made him
stand down. She wanted. I think I believe the doors
(12:11):
were open for the early people. I remember watching them
just they're just strolling in in statutory Hall, looking around
like they're taking a tour. Then it gets ugly and
it gets violent. Then they pin insurrection on Trump. Look,
I guess what I'm getting at is the day was
bad enough, but that didn't stop the BBC. So notice
they're at it. We're gonna go down there and we're
(12:33):
gonna fight, fight, fight, But is that really how it happened?
Only if you added out fifty five minutes of the speech,
we're gonna walk down to the Capitol and we're gonta
cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women. Fifty
four minutes later, out of context. Fight, We fight like hell.
Speaker 6 (12:58):
And if you don't fight like hell, well you're not
going to have a country anymore.
Speaker 1 (13:02):
So you know your first question is going to be, well,
why now? Well because of a documentary, because of the
surfacing of an email, and what did it lead to
two top leaders at the BBC resigning on Sunday? And
this scandal is just getting airborne. And the reason bias,
(13:27):
bias in editing. Now sixty minutes that was sixteen million?
What will the BBC be? The BBC's most senior executive director,
General Tim Davie and the chief executive of the News Division,
Deborah Tarnas, both quitting after the leak of a deeply
critical memo that, among other things, revealed that the BBC
(13:49):
had misleadingly edited a speech by the President to make
it appear that he had directly called for violence on
January sixth, when he did not. In a to staff
on Sunday afternoon, Davey said his resignation was entirely his decision.
He added at the director General he took ultimate responsibility
for the mistakes made by the BBC. Turnas said, the
(14:12):
controversy over the documentary made by the BBC's Panorama series
had reached a stage where it is causing damage to
the BBC, an institution that I loved. Therefore I shall
step down. Meanwhile, Donald Trump, who is raking it in
(14:35):
at CBS with his lawsuit to sixty minutes stepping offlis
in ABC, CNN, Oh, what on earth might he get
from across the pond at the BBC. History shows that
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Speaker 3 (16:02):
This is your morning show with Michael del Chrono.
Speaker 1 (16:06):
I believe that Patricia is probably listening to wb UV
and Biloxi, Mississippi. She writes for Motion Springs, Mississippi. You
made me cry this morning. You're an angel. Angel that's
kind of like a Morgan Len Morgan reference. Yes ye,
I mean you're a yeammy little angel. Thank you for
all you do and say uh. This one comes from Cheryl,
(16:29):
who writes, I always love your Veterans Day tribute. I'm
not even a veteran, but love our armed forces. Thank
you for your insights and storytelling. PS. You lived in
an Italian household. Course you has. Of course you had
a suit at five wow. Talk about By the way,
for those of you that follow me on x or
on Facebook, I went ahead and posted the picture of
(16:51):
me and Toot. Toot came over and apparently I dialed
up for date night at five I even had the
moves at five U. And if you want to see
my socials, you'll find them along with the link to
the podcast and everything you need to know about your
morning show and spell it out your morning show online
dot com. That's also where you find out what city
and station we're at annon near you.
Speaker 4 (17:16):
This is from Oka, Wisconsin in my Morning show with
your morning show Michael del johna.
Speaker 2 (17:29):
AHI, it's Michael. Your morning show can be heard live
weekday mornings five to eight am six to nine am
Eastern and great cities like Tampa Florida, Youngstown, Ohio, and
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. We'd love to join you on the
drive to work live, but we're glad you're here now.
Speaker 1 (17:43):
Enjoyed the podcast, So off the air, I just said
to Jeffrey, I said, oh, I was doing a line,
and then I said, what movie does this come from?
You deserve to be kissed and kissed by a man
who knows how. And he goes, mister d and bro
that was you want you to have a real man,
real man? That was different? Uh? No, I I could
leave this up to the talkbacks.
Speaker 4 (18:04):
But open your eyes and look at me. No, I
don't think I will kiss you, although you need kissing badly.
That's what's wrong with you. You should be kissed and
often someone who knows how.
Speaker 1 (18:19):
I told you about my high school scam.
Speaker 8 (18:21):
No.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
I used to do an impersonation of Robbie Benson kissing
because Robbie Benson used to like, as he was kissing you,
he would be feeling your hair and face like like
you had braille and he was blind. But teen, I
knowle Robbie Benson, dude, Yeah, whenever in movies, whenever he
kissed his hands of me all over your eyes and
in your hair and on your face. It didn't nice
(18:45):
castles and so, but I had it down in school
where the girls could good kiss me like Robbie Benson. Curse,
I'm going around kissing all these good looking girls. Kiss
he like Robbie Benzon would kiss me. I'll do it,
But I mean, how about the confidence of our gable
And by the way, I love that it starts with
the rejection. Nah, I won't kiss you. But you just
(19:06):
had to be kissed and kiss by a man.
Speaker 4 (19:08):
Oh, I don't think I will kiss you, although you
need kissing badly.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Do you need to kiss?
Speaker 3 (19:12):
What's wrong with you?
Speaker 1 (19:13):
I did that to my wife. Wait a minute, have
you ever seen Gone with Them? No? But I have
seen that scene and I love it. I did that
to Andrew one time. No.
Speaker 6 (19:21):
No, you deserve to be kissed and kissed by a
man who knows how. That's how they talked in the
old days. And she's falling for it. She's like, she's
you know, a mush.
Speaker 1 (19:30):
You should be kissed? It off?
Speaker 4 (19:31):
Am I someone who knows how? You're the proper person
I might be, I might be the right moment of
a game.
Speaker 6 (19:39):
You are a.
Speaker 4 (19:39):
Conceited, black hearted vomit with but I for a while
that you come and see me.
Speaker 1 (19:45):
I'll tell you why is gard it?
Speaker 4 (19:46):
Because I'm the only man over sixteen and under sixty
he was around to show you a good time.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
Ah, that's the confidence of the old days. They don't
make him like they used to, did they. I still say,
now that gets you a visit to the Oh.
Speaker 1 (19:58):
Yeah, yeah, he'd be sued. Try that at the office
by the cooler. All right, it's Veteran's Day today. We
honor all the millions who have worn the uniform and
served our country. A grateful nation is forever in your dead.
If nobody has said it to you, thank you so
much for your service. Me and my family are very
very grateful. This edit voted Monday night to end the
(20:19):
record breaking government shut down, and the knives are out
for the Dems. Red gets the line of the day,
and I keep saving it for sounds of the day.
But who dropped dead and made Bernie Sanders a Democrat?
(20:39):
All of a sudden, Bernie's going around talking like a Democrat.
He's now telling his fellow Democrats what his party should
do and believe and who they should elect. He's not
even a Democrat, He's an independent and a socialist. I
warned this yes yesterday. Careful where you go with this narrative.
(21:05):
This is a narrative that McCay's makes hay for the socialists,
not the Democrats, and it can win an election in
New York City, but it can cost you everything and
a national midterm election. The knives are out. Meanwhile, there's
all these questions about you know, well, well let's get
through this set. Well it did last night. Well will
(21:26):
they get through the House or we'll get held up
in the House. Well, the speakers saying we'll have it
done by tomorrow. President's ready to sign. John Decker, a
White House correspondent, is joining us. John, what could possibly
go wrong?
Speaker 8 (21:38):
Well, I don't think anything's going to go wrong. It
passed out of the thanks to those eight US senators
who typically caucus with Democrats. They broke away from their
Democratic colleagues and supporting this continuing Resolution, which funds the
government through the end of January. Now it goes through
the House. The House speakers indicated he's supportive of the
(21:59):
legislation's so it's going to pass largely along party lines.
And then it will get to President Trump for his signatures.
He's already indicated he will sign it. So by the
end of the week, Michael, we will have the government
reopened and this long national nightmare will be over.
Speaker 1 (22:16):
So I'm informed by Jeffrey that all traffic controllers the
President is proposing giving a ten thousand dollars bonus for
having served through the shutdown. Was that your idea? Too
big spender?
Speaker 8 (22:29):
That was not my idea. No, it's a good idea. Again,
I don't know what authority the president has to spend
money like that. There needs to be an appropriation from Congress.
But in any case, you know, as you probably have
heard from so many of your listeners, air travel has
just been a mess over the course of the past
few weeks because of the government shutdown.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Well today alone, this was the early numbers at four am,
So I don't know that it could be worse now
but at four am, because we're going to six percent
today cutbacks. But as we've talked about and documented, unfortunately
that's the forty busiest airports and or hubs for connecting flights.
So by bumping today to six percent cutbacks and flights,
(23:11):
there are five hundred or were at four am, five
hundred and forty one current delays and eleven hundred and
fifty seven flight cancelations. So everything should be signed by
the president. I'm guessing late Wednesday, but it's going to
take a while for things to get to normal. And
can they get to normal in time for Thanksgiving? Travel
time will tell well. I think they should. I think
(23:32):
they should get back to normal. That's certainly enough time.
Speaker 8 (23:35):
And maybe that is what, you know, compelled some of
those Democrats that thinking. But more importantly, I think for
some of those Democrats who decided to vote with Republicans,
they were getting a lot of pressure from unions. Unions
that essentially said, support the cleans R. Support the clean
continuing resolution that has already passed the House and has
(23:59):
the support of a majority of the Senate. And that's
the reason why Dick Derbot, he's the number two Democrat
in the Senate, so he broke away from his Democratic
colleagues in supporting this continuing resolution.
Speaker 1 (24:11):
Yeah, and then you got Tim Gain too. You know,
you're hearing a lot of different rhetoric, and we're going
to feature it all in our Sounds of the Day.
Some are saying, hey, look, you know, we played a
game of poker with the president. He called our bluff.
He wasn't going to budge. It was a bad bet.
Others saying the minute people started not getting their food,
we had to cave. And then you've got the socialist
Democrats who've got the knives out and they want Schumer gone,
(24:35):
and they want this to be momentum going into the midterm,
even at Bernie talking like he's a Democrat when he isn't.
So there's varying degrees of narrative coming out of this,
but I think our nightmare is about to be over.
I'm sitting here looking down at a new piece of
research that suggests the President is doing great when it
comes to foreign policy with the American people, but they'd
like to see him spend a little bit more time
(24:56):
on domestic issues. And on the domestic front, I wonder
if the President's feeling that as we get ready to
head into holiday mode and year two of this administration.
Speaker 8 (25:06):
Well, the President was asked a question along those lines
yesterday in the Oval Office, and he explained, you know,
in order to make things right in terms of domestic policy,
you will also have to.
Speaker 1 (25:16):
Get things right. In terms of foreign policy, the.
Speaker 8 (25:19):
President, by the way, does not have any more foreign
travel plan between now and the end of the year.
After that trip that he recently took to Asia. I
think the next trip potentially could be to China. That's
in April of next year. So I think for the
most part, the president is focused on domestic policy between
now and April, and that's certainly important for Republicans who
(25:43):
hope to win stake and keeping control of both the
House and the Senate ahead of the mixture of elections.
Speaker 1 (25:49):
I don't think the American people think of tariffs as
focusing on domestic policy might be the perceptual problem. And
for foreign policy, a lot of unfinished business. Even in
the gods let alone. Things are escalating with Russia and
Ukraine and then another attack on two alleged drug boats
in the Pacific, so lots to keep our eye on.
(26:11):
At least we're getting one issue done, and that is
the government reopen. That's a good news. The bad news
we continue on our journey to thirty eight trillion dollars
in ten You can hear what's going on inside the
Beltway right from the White House. It's the White House
briefing group with John Decker. His podcast will be up
by nine Easter eighth Central, and he'll have more than
Thank you John so much. Thank you, Michael. You got
it all right. Forty four minutes after the hour, we're
(26:33):
just waking up.
Speaker 6 (26:34):
How long National night, Metrizova.
Speaker 9 (26:37):
On this vote, the eyes are sixty, the nays are forty.
Speaker 1 (26:41):
The bill, as amended is passed the Senate vote of
Monday night to end the record breaking government shut down
and reopen federal agencies, passing a bipartisan measure. After eight
Democrats joined Republicans to break the stalemate.
Speaker 10 (26:54):
The final vote was sixty to forty, with all Republicans
except Rand Paul of Kentucky supporting the bill. The legislation
now heads to the House, which could vote soon as
Wednesday to approve the package and send it to President Trump.
Announced his support for the bipartisan agreement earlier in the day.
Senate approval follow a lengthy series of votes rejecting various
amendments before consolidating the deal into a single package. The
(27:16):
bill includes a many US of three full year appropriations measures,
including full funding VERSUSNAP benefits through next September, and keeps
most of the government running on a short term basis
through January thirtieth.
Speaker 1 (27:26):
I'm Mark Neefield. Speaker Johnson said, the House is ready
to finish the job, and the President he's excited and
certainly ready to sign and reopen the government.
Speaker 11 (27:34):
Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump City approves
of the deals struck between Republicans and a handful of Democrats.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
The dealer is very good.
Speaker 10 (27:42):
We're not going to be giving one and a half
trition dollars to people that came in from jails and
from the gangs and drug dealers and all.
Speaker 1 (27:50):
Of these others.
Speaker 11 (27:51):
The agreement has been passed by the Senate. Now it
goes to the House and then to the President for
his signature. I'm Tammy Truhio.
Speaker 1 (27:58):
Abid to overturn the right to same second marriages has
been rejected by the Supreme Court.
Speaker 9 (28:02):
The justices declined to take up the appeal from former
Kentucky County Clerk Kim Davis to overturn the twenty fifteen
landmark decision. The bid had been seen as a long
shot by analysts. Davis received national attention when she refused
to issue marriage licenses to a same sex couple due
to her religious beliefs. One of those couples was awarded
(28:23):
damages by a jury after they food I'm Michael Cassner,
Well the.
Speaker 1 (28:27):
Wizard of Oz. Fans will soon have a chance to
own one of the most iconic costume pieces from the film,
Mark Mayfield's Back with more Yil part of what You've
Done Now.
Speaker 10 (28:40):
Margaret Hamilton's original Wicked Witch of the West black Hat,
who is going to go up for auction next month,
is going to be part of Heritage Auction's December Hollywood
Signature auction. The auction will also include Judy Garland's Red
Rehearsal Slipper and a cast ironed copy of L. Frank
Baum's The Wonderful Wizard of Oz Book. Other items that
will be part of the auction include Elvis Wriths nineteen
(29:00):
seventy six, Harley Davidson, Marilyn Monroe's Cleo Patrick costu, and
artwork from Star Wars.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
I'm Mark Neviier. I always thought Sam Kinnison would be
perfect in that role if they ever redid right. Today
is Veterans Day, the day set aside to celebrate those
who have served our country pre Tennis with some pointers.
On Veterans Day Etiquete coast.
Speaker 12 (29:22):
To coast, they'll be parades and celebrations, both festive and sombered,
honor veterans. It's a great day to show American pride.
So we're your patriotic clothing and show appreciation, but don't salute.
That's reserved for military members past and present. The Secretary
of Defense and the President, Miss Manners, says it's okay
to say thank you for your service, but she says,
(29:42):
make it less generic and more personal. I'm bre Tennis.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
It's your morning show with Michael del Journo.
Speaker 1 (29:50):
Jim in Portland, Oregon writes, thank you for your personal
statements on behalf of veterans. Good luck to you. Thank you, Jim,
I presume and thank you for your service. This one
is long, but from Rich. Rich writes, I heard your
tribute on the way in and was very moved. Thank
you for sharing, but also what a masterclass in humanity.
(30:13):
I also heard you mention campus crusade for Christ. My
wife Stacy was the first woman to tour on a
book tour to campuses. She did it for about six
years until our baby came along. Andrea Cole campus crusade
for Christ doing magic, and I heard after he passed
last year that's somewhere around five hundred thousand converts from
(30:36):
his touring and dedication. I was disappointed he passed before
he could teach me to levitate. I'm not shocked to
hear you were a part of it. Your gospel is
rolled out slow and direct, but never overhead. It's astounding,
profound and urgent, just the right sauce. You are too kind. Yeah, no,
that was Listen. There's nothing like being eighteen years old
(30:58):
and going to Daytona Beach and while everybody's partying, having
sex and getting drunk, you're walking up. You know, have
you heard about the four spiritual loss. It's a pretty
tough cell. It's like trying to sell an electric vehicle
in a blackout. It's not you know, it didn't go.
But anyway, if you want to hear my Veterans Day story,
(31:19):
it was in the first hour for the Platinum Card listeners.
When the podcast is up roughly ninth Central, ten eastern,
just hit our one and you'll hear it. And if
you missed our interview with Leanne Morgan, that was a
riot from our three yesterday you'll find that in the
podcast section as well. All Right, I brought up this poll.
By the way, keep the emails coming Michael di at
iHeartMedia dot com, and of course use the talkback button
(31:40):
if you're listening on the iHeart app. Can I get
all the promos in? Can I be myself for a second?
Speaker 6 (31:44):
Can I just be mean?
Speaker 1 (31:45):
Yeah? All right? When it comes to foreign policy, And
by the way, I'm not taking a pot shot at
the president. I'm just saying, you know, we're not quite
the phase two in the Middle East and amass and
playing well with others in the sand, so that's not
going great. The Ukrainian Russian war has done nothing but escally.
We're going to talk about more with Colonel Stephen Bucci here.
(32:06):
In just a few minutes, they were attacking each other's
power grids over the weekend with extensive bombing. I mean,
you know, I'd like to get the conversation back to peace.
But nevertheless, forty five percent of like the US voters
rate the way Trump is handling foreign policy issues is
good or excellent. That's higher than the forty three percent
from December of twenty eighteen. Forty two percent now give
(32:29):
him a poor rating on foreign policy, so overwhelmingly with
a slight edge, the Americans think the presidence doing great
on foreign policy. However, sixty two percent believe it would
be better if Trump spent more time dealing with domestic
issues like the economy. Twenty four percent disagree with that
in fifteen percent are not sure. Twenty eight percent think
(32:50):
Trump is spending too much time dealing with foreign policy issues. Well,
nineteen percent say he's not spending enough or to please everyone.
Eighty percent of Republicans rate him is doing good or
excellent when handling foreign policy. And of course Democrats can't
root for our country, can't root for peace. We just
got to oppose the president. It's only twenty eight percent
of Democrats and thirty six percent of non affiliated voters.
(33:11):
And the same can also be said for domestic policy
as well. It falls right down party lines. So, just
like everything, we're living in a matrix. But the president
does have some things to weigh. He could seize the
end of the government shut down and build some momentum.
Probably should start with energy to get gas and food
(33:32):
prices down. I wonder how he'll recalibrate over the holidays
and kick off the second year of his second term.
Speaker 3 (33:39):
We're all in this together. This is your Morning Show
with Michael ndhil Jorno