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December 29, 2025 33 mins

Political corruption and most expensive New Year's Eve destinations.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, 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.
Enjoyed the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
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 Deltrono.

Speaker 3 (00:33):
Oh my goodness, Kelly Nash in for Michael del Journo,
and Americans are having travel delays, and lots of them.
I'm looking right now, Ezra, just dumping snow all over
the place. Yesterday, over nine thousand flights in the United

(00:54):
States were delayed, seven hundred cancelations yesterday, and obviously when
you have a can flight now, it's hard to make
that up. I'm looking right now at what is it
called flight Aware, and according to them, at this moment,
we have one and thirty one delays in the United
States right now. And as we mentioned earlier, it doesn't

(01:16):
matter if you're like I was, looking at flights from
Las Vegas that are heading to Seattle today, they're being
delayed there. I mean, there's all kinds of delays throughout
the country, even if you're going from warm weather destinations
to warm weather and they just changed it. We're up
to twelve hundred and fifty delays as of right now,
So the delays are starting to pile on as more

(01:39):
and more snow is dumped. The good news is if
you're on the I ninety five corridor, most of that
is going to be rain and or freezing rain as
you get into the northern parts of I ninety five.
That's the most traveled part of the country. But again
Midwest took it on the chin. Hundreds of thousands in

(02:00):
the Upper Midwest without power this morning, So our thoughts
and prayers go out to you, especially when we see
that the temperature dropped fifty degrees colder today for the
high than yesterday's high in many parts of the Midwest.
And if you don't have power, goodness gracious. That is

(02:20):
a tough way to start the week. It is the
final week of twenty twenty five and looking forward to
twenty twenty six. My name's Kelly Nash. Thank you for
all the feedback that people have been giving me on
social media. I'm at Kelly Nash Radio. You can find
me on pretty much every platform TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, x

(02:44):
truth Social. Yes, I went open to an account there
just for you hardcore mag of people. Now, look, as
we head into the final week of the year, I
can tell you that New Year's Eve is going to
be a very exciting time. Not just because you're going
to get to see the ball drop, and not just
because mom Donnie will get sworn in as soon as

(03:05):
the ball drops.

Speaker 4 (03:06):
He can't wait to take office.

Speaker 3 (03:08):
But I can tell you also that at seven thirty
New Year's Eve, you're going to get a big college
football playoff. Miami takes on Ohio State, and so many
of our listeners across the country are fans of either
one of those clubs.

Speaker 4 (03:21):
Those are some blue bloods right there, having a.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
Big Cotton Bowl game seven thirty Eastern massive game. And
then as you move into New Year's Day, it's just
filled with college football playoffs. You start at noon, you're
going to have Oregon Texas Tech, then Alabama at four
o'clock takes on number one Indiana. When is the last

(03:44):
time Indiana is number one? I should have googled that earlier.
Have they ever been the number one college football team?
Indiana number one right now? Alabama back to back games
as underdogs. I don't recall that happening, at least since
Nick Say got there. Ole Miss Georgia wraps out the
evening at eight o'clock on the Sugar Bowl on New

(04:07):
Year's Night. So a lot of great college football. And
then if you're strictly a pro football fan, what a
bizarre way to wrap up the season, because you've got
two games coming up this weekend where its winner is
in loser goes home, and the Panthers and the Buccaneers.

(04:29):
That is the most ironic to me, because the Panthers
are a five hundred club right now with it eight
to eight, and then you got the Buccaneers only got
seven wins on the season, and whoever wins this game
will be the champ of the NFCCU. Unbelievable that a
five hundred club could be the champ of a division.

(04:52):
But then again, that's Saturday, and then of course Sunday
the Sunday Night football game Ravens Steelers, and because the
Steelers blew it against the Browns yesterday, they're in a
win or go home Ravens. If they win, they're in.
So you got two very dramatic football games coming for

(05:13):
the pros this coming weekend. So a lot going on there,
a lot going on with the weather, other things that
we were talking about earlier. Donald Trump seems to believe
that we are weeks away from ending the Ukraine Russia war.
A lot of hopes tied to that because that has

(05:34):
been brutal to watch. If you look at the statistics
and how many people are dying every month in that war,
it is it's really a shame. And like Trump says,
and I agree with him, if he was the president,
this never would have gotten started, it never would have
taken off.

Speaker 4 (05:51):
But now that it's happening, it's hard to stop it.

Speaker 3 (05:54):
The big sticking point on the negotiations seems to be
at this point, according to Zelenski, they've Russia has agreed
with a lot of the points that Ukraine wants. The
one big sticking point is the land, the stuff that
Russia has already taken over. They want to keep it,

(06:14):
and obviously the Ukrainians don't want him to keep it.
Are you going to continue the war to keep that land?
I know Putin will. Putin will continue this war. He
doesn't care. He does not care how many Russians die.
He cares about the power. And so we've been fighting

(06:34):
this thing for years. They've got some pretty valuable land
that they've taken from the Ukraine, great.

Speaker 4 (06:39):
Farming land, some energy in that land.

Speaker 3 (06:42):
Strategically, if it's a coast to the sea, that's important.
Putin wants to hang on to it. Trump seems to
be indicating this is your best shot for a deal
right now. Zelensky, you should take this deal. Give him
that land. We'll partner with some European countries. Although it's
not United Nations, it is a bunch of countries that

(07:05):
are in the UN saying we're not going to allow
them to attack you again once we get a peace
deal here. So that seems like a we're very close.
We're hopeful in that instance.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
This is your Morning show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 3 (07:28):
We've been having a lot of fun this morning despite
all the weather delays, traffic delays, all kinds of power
outages across the country thanks to this Ezra storm. We're
currently sitting at one two hundred and fifty flight delays
across the United States. So if you're planning on traveling
for the holidays.

Speaker 4 (07:48):
Good luck.

Speaker 3 (07:49):
That's I mean, really all I can say, and I'm
right there with you. I am planning on going to
Connecticut a little bit later on this week, so hopefully
we kind of work it all out before then. But
no telling, no telling is this weather has just been
a disaster. Speaking of disasters, Minnesota and the fraud, it's

(08:11):
nine point two billion dollars so far. We got cash
Betel saying that they're flooding the zone with investigators to
try to find out who's behind it.

Speaker 4 (08:22):
How did it happen.

Speaker 3 (08:23):
We've got several hundred people indicted so far in Minnesota.
About ninety nine percent of them are from Somalia or
you know, maybe not a birth in Somaia. Maybe we're
born in America, but from Samalian families. Look at this
we've got Maine is now talking about interpreters. A main

(08:47):
federal investigator warned Maine officials five years ago about interpreter
fraud screen scams back in twenty twenty, and for years
they've been hanging out and it just keeps rising. So
back in twenty eleven, they were budgeting about eight hundred
thousand dollars for interpreters, and then as the fraud kicked in,

(09:10):
it's now over four million dollars a year. That's one
little thing. And again, in case you're wondering who are
the interpreters, I'm just reading this. This is from the
Main Monitor Main's latest round of prosecutions regarding main Care.

Speaker 4 (09:28):
That's another taxpayer.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Medical that is Somalians that are running that fraud. The
interpreters are also from Somalia. So again this just seems
to be one of the interpreters, abadir Amide estimated to
have taken.

Speaker 4 (09:48):
One point eight million dollars.

Speaker 3 (09:52):
Goodness gracious, I mean, they're just they're running amok in
this country with fraud. If you look at Massachusetts, large
scale scams right now happening across Massachusetts. They're looking into
could be another ten to twenty billion dollars in Massachusetts.

(10:14):
We talked about, obviously what's going on in Washington State,
but they're all going to have to take a back
seat to California. Now, this is not being as reported
as you would think it would be reported, but it's
coming from their own investigation. So California investigated itself. Gavin

(10:40):
Newsom's administration and aid agencies are now on the High
Risk watch list for fraud, waste, and mismanagement. The food
stamp program alone, called CalFresh, appears to have two and
a half billion dollars in fraud. The Department of five Finance,

(11:01):
who was responsible for COVID relief in California, say fraudsters
swiped thirty two billion dollars homes, spending another twenty four
billion dollars. No audits were being done on these things.
This is just money gone all said. Right now, it
looks about seventy six billion dollars of fraud in California.

(11:26):
And as they as they joke about it, and I
mean they are joking about it. The idea that Silicon
Valley is in California, they were not using California. The
state was not using the proper computer technologies to guard
against this. And again home to Silicon Valley, which invents

(11:49):
all the computer systems, they did not use the proper
computer systems.

Speaker 4 (11:54):
Now why wouldn't they?

Speaker 3 (11:56):
That's when you start asking yourself, are the official in California?
Did they want to be a part of the fraud?
Do they just want to be scammed? What is happening
with it appears right now. And how about this. I
don't want to say it's a Democrat only problem, but
so far it's only been Democrats that are being accused.

(12:18):
I'm sure at some point a Republican state will be
dragged into this mess, but at this moment, it's only
been the Democrat led States and Gavin Newsom, who's hoping
to be your next president and who in the last
polls I saw was the front runner. He is expected

(12:40):
to win the Democrat nomination at this point and then
be the Democrat nominee for President of the United States.
Remember Tim Walls was your vice president nominee last year.
Tim Walls seems to be getting caught up in the
mire of this entire fraud scheme. Plenty of photographs with
Tim Wall's hanging out with the fraudsters, plenty of looking

(13:03):
the other way. It would seem while the fraud was happening,
things that should have been red flags in Minnesota didn't
get to Tim Wall's attention.

Speaker 4 (13:12):
For whatever reason.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
And are we going to go back to back with
the Democrats nominating people who are at best oblivious to
the fraud happening right underneath their own nose. Now, I'll
point out with Gavin Newsom, he bragged recently in an
interview with the I think it was The New York
Times that he did that podcast two weeks ago talking

(13:35):
about the idea that he was one of the first
in the country to have sanctuary rules, that he set
that up as a mayor when he was in San Francisco.
The sanctuary states, the sanctuary cities are the cause of
the immigration problems. Meaning if you would if you don't
like ice coming into your neighborhoods, it's very simple.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
Donald Trump wants the work to the worst.

Speaker 3 (14:01):
When you arrest them in your city, you've already arrested them.

Speaker 4 (14:06):
They're in a jail cell. That's under federal law.

Speaker 3 (14:10):
That's when you're supposed to let ICE know, hey, we've
got an illegal alien.

Speaker 4 (14:14):
That we're holding. They'll come in, they'll take them.

Speaker 3 (14:17):
It's safer for the actual detainee, it's safer for the
general public, it's safer for the federal agents, it's safer
for everybody. But you don't do that because you say,
we have sanctuary policies, so we have to release the
person back into the public, and that's when ICE has
to come and look for them, and that's when they
end up detaining people who might actually be American citizens

(14:40):
as they're trying to run their investigation, and then you
have acts of violence, as you've made it seem as
if ice agents are doing something horrific, when in fact
they're just trying to not only enforce American policies, they're
actually trying to keep Americans safe, and you put Americans
at risk. This is Gavin Newsom is on the forefront
of that. He bragged about it. He loves the fact

(15:02):
that he loves the fact that the state of California
paid for all these illegal aliens healthcare benefits and basically
bankrupted California. If they didn't have the fires, they wouldn't
have had extra federal funds to get themselves through the year.
Does somebody want to accuse Gavin Newsom of starting the fires?
I'm not going to go that far, but he certainly

(15:22):
benefited from them.

Speaker 2 (15:26):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 3 (15:35):
This is Kelly Nashvilley in this morning having a great
time and appreciative of all the feedback that people are
giving to us, especially on the talkback feature through the
iHeartRadio app. And I understand we have Curtis from Tennessee
on HI.

Speaker 5 (15:49):
This is Curtis from Tennessee. Speaking of states, the Republican
led state only had one hundred thousand dollars of snap fraud.
That's not bad considering how people have been trying to
steal from us. Still not good because it's going on.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
Absolutely, I mean, any fraud is horrible, but you're correct
in comparison to seventy two billion in California, or nine
billion in Minnesota, or you know, maybe up to a
billion dollars in Maine. I mean, the numbers can be
staggering or they can be numbing.

Speaker 4 (16:27):
That's the other thing.

Speaker 3 (16:28):
You know, you throw around a number like seventy two
billion dollars, people don't think about really the significance of
that figure because it's they feel like it's not their money, but.

Speaker 4 (16:37):
It is your money.

Speaker 3 (16:38):
That's the whole point is that, you know, when you
see in Minnesota, for example, there's what like ninety eight
town mayors that are suing Tim Walls right now because
they're saying that because of your fraud, the state level
fraud has denied these towns the taxpayer funds that they
were that they need in order to run well. I

(16:59):
heard one of them being interviewed over the weekend. He
was talking about the idea that we don't have a
water processing facility because we're a town of four thousand
people and we're pretty far from another town. So we
were hoping and we were expecting to get money from
the state level in order to build a water treatment

(17:20):
facility in their town.

Speaker 4 (17:22):
But they have not gotten it now.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Of the nine billion dollars, he's talking about, something like eighty.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
Million was what they needed.

Speaker 3 (17:31):
And again, to raise eighty million amongst four thousand people
is pretty tough. An extra eighty million, but if you're
talking about millions and millions of people, it's not that
hard to do it. But it is hard to raise
nine billion, and it's certainly hard to raise seventy two billion.
As they're looking at in California, how many of your
tax dollars, what percentage of your tax dollars Californians might

(17:52):
have gone to fraud.

Speaker 4 (17:53):
So that's just something to think about.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
And we mentioned California in the seventy two billion dollars
and Gavin Newsom possibly in trouble regarding some of that.
By the way, if you're in California and you're a
very wealthy person, you might this might be your final
day or two to get out. And what I mean
by that is today is the twenty ninth of December.

(18:19):
On January first, things could change dramatically in California because
coming this November, they've got a ballot initiative, and so
far the Liberals have always gone with whatever the governor
seems to want. Right, they wanted to redistrict against their

(18:40):
own state constitution.

Speaker 4 (18:42):
They got it overwhelmingly passed.

Speaker 3 (18:45):
So this is the twenty twenty six Billionaire Tax Act,
which imposes a one time five percent levy on the
networth of an individual or trust that has a billion
dollars in assets more. But it's retroactive to January first,
twenty twenty six. So if you're living in California and

(19:09):
say you move out in February, they're going to still
come back and get you.

Speaker 4 (19:14):
That's their plan.

Speaker 3 (19:15):
They're going to come back and they're going to get
their five percent of your billion dollars. And so there's
a lot of people right now that are trying to
make a decision do we get out of California here
really soon?

Speaker 4 (19:28):
Now?

Speaker 3 (19:28):
Gavin Newsom says, I'm looking to make a big tent party.
In one of the ways we do it is to
make people pay their fair share. Make you pay your
fair share. So if you agree with his analogy that
the fair share is to take five percent of the
billion as a one time thing, do you think it'll
be a one time thing? What if I took five

(19:51):
percent of your billion dollars and then I had you
still had a billion left. Why wouldn't I come back
for another five percent in a year or two? How
many people will move to save themselves millions of dollars millions?
And I know a lot of people would say, well,
that's greedy or whatever?

Speaker 4 (20:11):
Is it? Is it greedy?

Speaker 3 (20:14):
You know when Phil Mickelson said he was going to
move from California to Texas because he said it would
save him on average something like three million dollars a year,
and a lot of people are like.

Speaker 4 (20:25):
Well, he's greedy?

Speaker 5 (20:27):
Is he?

Speaker 3 (20:28):
I mean, I just think you're looking out for your
best interests. If you believe in the American dream, which
a lot of people still believe in, and a lot
of people feel like they don't have access to the
American dream. The reality of the American dream is that
you are supposed to look out for you, and if
you do the best you that you can do, you're

(20:52):
going to do all right. And while you're doing the
best to you that you can do, other people will
benefit from that because you have some unique skill set
that you're contributing to society that you are, whatever it
is that you're contributing in order to get that money
that's helping all of us. You know, the JFK, the

(21:13):
rising tide lifts all ships. Everybody benefits when you do better.
That's the way it's supposed to work. And if the
government was to take less money, this is one of
my big points, is that I would like to see
charity returned to the local level.

Speaker 4 (21:31):
Here's the reason for that.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
If you're one of those people who believe in the
immigration of anybody who can get here should stay here
like it was previously, then you would also have to
revert back to the pre nineteen thirty rules, meaning that
when you got to America as an immigrant, you had
no safety net, or as an American, you had no
safety net. There was no social security, there was no welfare,

(21:55):
there was no anything. You got to America congratulations. You
survived the long walk up from Brazil or wherever you
came from, and you also survived a long boat.

Speaker 4 (22:05):
Trip to get here, where many people died.

Speaker 3 (22:08):
And then the reward was you got to go to
work and work your tail off. But unlike other countries,
you could climb a ladder. That was the goal is
to climb the ladder, but you've got to get to
America then climb the ladder. Today, since the thirties, since
we've changed the rules, a lot of people get to
America and they sit in the safety net. The safety

(22:30):
net has become a hammock. They relax and enjoy the
fruits of other people's hard labor, but they contribute nothing.
So I would because of local charities, are going to
be a lot less likely to be ripped off. A
local charity will actually get to know who you are.
They'll understand if you're capable of working.

Speaker 4 (22:51):
So how many.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Americans are saying I'm medically unable to work, and yet
you see they're fine. You wouldn't give them charity. You'd
take get off you're tough and go to work just
because you've got a sore leg or a sore arm
or whatever. Who cares go to work, You can work,
Go to work. They're not and they're also not going
to double pay you. They're not gonna inadvertently have ten,

(23:14):
you know, ten payments going into the same mailbox that month.

Speaker 4 (23:18):
That's not gonna happen.

Speaker 3 (23:19):
With a local charity, local is better, Local would also
clean up a lot of this fraud. The people would
get a lot more money, and the people would also
get out of that safety net as soon as possible.
They would want to get to work because you're chasing
the American dream. That's what all Americans should want, is
the opportunity to chase the American dream. And when they're

(23:42):
chasing the American dream, they're making all of our lives better.
That's how capitalism works. What the Democrats are proposing right
now actually makes things worse.

Speaker 4 (23:51):
It ensnares people into a life of.

Speaker 3 (23:53):
Well, if I get off this, I'm gonna have to
take a step back. They've already built up the safety
net to a point where I'm making three, four or
five thousand dollars a month.

Speaker 4 (24:03):
If I step back, I can't. I'm probably gonna have
to take a job making.

Speaker 3 (24:06):
Less than that. So why would I do that? That
is the quandary.

Speaker 4 (24:11):
But it's not.

Speaker 3 (24:14):
It's not overcomeable. I mean, we can actually fix the problems.
You just have to make the hard decisions. Trump is
trying to make these hard decisions. We were talking about
that earlier and the I think was in the first
hour where the idea of reclassifying what is a professional job,
and so they're reclassifying nursing. That is a difficult decision
because then you only qualify for one hundred thousand dollars

(24:35):
of student loans as opposed to the professional degree that
gets you two hundred thousand dollars in student loans. The
idea being that if there's less money available for nursing students,
that the schools will charge less money. The cost of
a nursing degree has gone from three to five thousand
dollars for the whole flipping degree to its like one

(24:56):
hundred and forty thousand dollars. Now that's because government money
artificially inflated the costs, and we have a lot of
nursing people, people who've got nursing degrees that are working,
that are very much in debt and will be indebted
for decades to come. Because of this. We're trying to
fix it. Hard decisions are made need to be made,

(25:20):
difficult decisions that will put people in a bad situation
temporarily in order to set them up for greater success.
Often compared to like a diet. You're going to go
on a New Year's diet. It's going to suck. It's
going to suck the first month, maybe first six weeks.
It'll suck being on that diet. But if you stick
with it, you get through that rough period, you're setting

(25:42):
yourself up for success. No more diabetes, no more blood
pressure medications, longer life, healthier life. You've got to get
through the tough part. You got to make the tough decisions,
stick with it, and then reap the benefits of making
that tough decision. Those are my thoughts. What are your thoughts?
Let us know on the talkback feature. Always love to
hear from you on the talkback feature. It's on the

(26:03):
iHeartRadio app. Hit the microphone, it'll give you the three
two one countdown, and then you just let us know
in thirty seconds or less what you're thinking. And again,
you don't have to be a rhymer like some of
these other people. They're writing poems and stuff. They're off
the charts, but if you want to give them a
run for their money, go ahead and give it a shot.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
This is your Morning Show with Michael del Chno.

Speaker 3 (26:29):
This is Kelly Nash and for Michael del journal having
a great time this morning. And as we get ready
for New Year's Eve, are you one of those people
who plans on going out?

Speaker 4 (26:37):
Maybe you want to.

Speaker 3 (26:38):
Do it big if you're trying to go big for
New Year's Eve. I was shocked at this. The most
expensive New Year's Eve destinations in the world. Number one
is not New York City. A matter of fact, it's
not even Number two. Number two is Rio de Janeiro
in Brazil. Is the second most expensive place to bring
in the new year.

Speaker 4 (26:59):
Number one is Miami Beach, Florida.

Speaker 3 (27:02):
That's the most expensive New Year's Eve destination to hang
out at. Then New York City, Edinburgh, Scotland. Why would
I want to go there? Sydney, Australia. I get it,
it's warm, kind of like going to Miami.

Speaker 4 (27:15):
It's warm.

Speaker 3 (27:17):
Vienna, Austria, that sounds beautiful, Cancun, Mexico, Amsterdam, then Copenhagen
and finally Paris, France. Didn't Paris have to cancel a
bunch of things due to all the terrorist threats that
they were getting. I don't know if I'd be wanting
to go to many places in Europe these days. And

(27:38):
by the way, what are you planning on doing? You
and I are working? I'm assuming you're working because you're
up and you're at it and you're listening to the radio.
And I'm thankful for your participation. But what are most
Americans doing? Number One activity for the week between Christmas
and New Year's Watch old movies and TV shows. That's
what the people love to do. Number two where comfy,

(28:00):
close almost exclusively. Three eating leftovers, four napping, and five
is eating snacks. They just love their food. Look, I'm
like you, I like my food too. I'll be snacking
a lot when I get out of here, that's for sure.
Number ten on that list. By the way, showering only

(28:22):
if I have a visitor. Nine percent of Americans say
I don't plan to shower this week. This week, I've
taken a day off before. I might have taken a
weekend off. Maybe I don't really remember that. Probably when
I was younger, I might have taken a whole weekend off,
but a whole week without showering, that that would be uh,

(28:43):
that would be staggering to me. If to go, I
certainly would not want to be around you if you
took a week off from the showering. The blizzard conditions
continue throughout today for many Americans. We've got tens of
millions of Americans that are under blizzard watches. We've got

(29:04):
travel delays happening throughout the country. Let me take a
look and see if we got an update on our
flight delays. It looks like we're at one thousand, two
hundred and fifty according to flight Aware right now, one
two hundred and fifty flight No, I'm sorry, we just
updated one thousand and five hundred and thirteen, and that's

(29:24):
kind of what I was expecting. The longer the further
into the day we get, the more flights that are
going to be delayed. So fifteen hundred plus are delayed
at this point, and we're seeing plenty coming out of Phoenix,
Las Vegas, San Diego, Dallas, you know, Tampa, areas that
you might think would be you know, pretty warm destinations.

(29:48):
They're still getting the flight delays because a lot of
the planes that were coming in from the Midwest or
from the Northeast are being delayed and or canceled, and
so they don't have the planes available right now. This
is it happens every time you've got a major storm
like this, people all over the country end up in

(30:09):
these long delays and or cancelations because the flights are
just having a hard time getting to where they need
to be. So if you're planning on traveling by air,
be careful obviously by road. We were talking earlier this
morning four feet of snow and some of the California.

Speaker 4 (30:25):
Mountains four feet fell. That is incredible.

Speaker 3 (30:29):
You got thirty six inches in some parts of the
Midwest though as well, so they're giving it a run
for their money. Three feet of snow in the Midwest.
And the temperatures are what's really affecting a lot of people,
because we're talking a fifty degree drop, so like when
yesterday's high would have been like forty, it's not negative

(30:50):
ten today, So that is a massive swing. And unfortunately
for hundreds of thousands of people, they don't even have
power in this area. So please be prayerful for those people.
Pray for the linesman, Pray for the people who are
going to restore that power that they can get it
back on as soon as possible, because this storm has

(31:11):
become a mess as we try to bring in the
new year. All right, So we're getting ready to wrap
things up here in just a minute. If you are
somebody who would like to continue the conversation after the show,
you can follow me on Instagram, Facebook, x, Truth Social YouTube.

(31:33):
That I mentioned all the platforms, I think I got
pretty much all of them. I'm on pretty much all
of them at Kelly Nash Radio at Kelly Nash Radio,
and you can also just see what I look like.
People want to know with the radio personality. It looks
like that's a good way to find out on the Instagram,
the Truth Social, the Facebook, what have you. But also

(31:53):
you can continue it on the talkback feature. Adam will
be back tomorrow. He's producing the show out of California today.
I'll be back tomorrow as well. If we get some
amazing talkback features, we can quewe those up and play
them back tomorrow. Love to hear what you're thinking about.
That's really what the show is built on. Michael del
Joerno has been doing this show now for a little
while and he has built something very special. As this

(32:16):
show has grown through the past year, it really has
gotten a lot more affiliates, the audience has grown substantially,
and he's built it on the idea that it's your
morning show, that you drive the narrative, and it couldn't
be any truer. This is one of those shows I
get to guest host on several shows. This show is

(32:38):
very special in that sense that you are the people
who dictate where the show is going to go. It's
not necessarily host driven as much as it is listener driven.
So love to get your talkbacks again, either on social
media or right there on the talkback feature through the
iHeartRadio app. I'll be back tomorrow morning. Look forward to it. Then,
my name's Kelly Nash. Enjoy the rest of your day.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
H We're all in this together. This is your morning
show with Michael Del Joano.
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