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April 7, 2026 36 mins

Who knew, we have a poet, not a pilot.  From the moon to earth.

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Hi, It's Michael. Your morning show can be heard on
great radio stations across the country, like News Talk ninety
two point one and six hundred WREC in Memphis, Tennessee,
or thirteen hundred The Patriot in Tulsa, our Talk six
fifty KSTE in Sacramento, California. We invite you to listen
live while you're getting ready in the morning, and to
take us along for the drive to work. But as
we always say, better late than never. Thanks for joining

(00:22):
us for the podcast.

Speaker 2 (00:23):
Two three, starting your morning off right, A new way
of talk, a new way of understand day because we're
in this together. This is your morning show with Michael
O'Dell charm.

Speaker 1 (00:39):
And just like that, it is Tuesday, Tuesday. I remember
I once called nickname my lawn guy, Tommy Tuesday, Tommy Tuesday,
Tommy I DIVI was called I was called Tommy Tuesday
because the mode the lawn on Tuesdays seven minutes after
the hour Tuesday. For the seventh year of Our Lord
twenty twenty six. Deadline is now fourteen hours away, and

(01:04):
I see bombs in their future. Artemis two is headed
back to Earth splash down Friday off the coast of
San Diego and the Michigan Wolverines are your national champions,
defeating Yukon last night, sixty nine to sixty three. It
was a different game than you might have thought. I've
talked about how many threes Yukon would have to make

(01:26):
Mullins a little cold early. It probably would have taken
I thought anywhere from eighteen to twenty two threes for
them to win. Turned out to be a pretty good prediction.
Their game plan, though, to disrupt the offense inside the
paint of Michigan was very well done. A much closer
game than I thought it would be. But the Michigan Wolverines,
by six are your national champions. And good morning, Welcome

(01:49):
to your morning show. Welcome to this day. I am
Michael del Jo, your humble servant, serving as all as
Jeffrey Lyne with the music and the commercials and the
transitions and whatever sound I ask for. I'm the short
order audio cook, which turned out to be the aus
Alias in full bloom, and it's a head down Magnolia Lane.

(02:14):
We make the transition from March madness to the tranquility
of the Masters. We're gonna hear that all week, aren't we?
Who Will it be little Roy McElroy. Will it be
Scottie Scheffler, Or how about John Brahm with that big
booty Bryce and Deep Champau or could it be little

(02:42):
Red that's right, an overweight short golfer from the area
of Nashville. Yeah, the Masters of what's that is the golf?
No Red Dune golf. You've bember golf?

Speaker 3 (02:54):
Have you?

Speaker 1 (02:54):
I'll take you golfing. I can teach you. He's a
bud butter Now. I used to go off. I hurt
my back too much in college of sports? You play
sports in college? What'd you play?

Speaker 2 (03:08):
Look like?

Speaker 1 (03:08):
The ki's giving me? Are you kidding me? I played everything.
I played football in rugby. Well, rugby will do it.
We'll do it to you. It's funny how we just
kind of transition right from the Holidays too, and then
you you know, shortly after the Super Bowl you get
geared up for basketball, and then you go through conference
tournaments and the March madness. Then we go right into
the Masters and then really enjoy a lot of baseball

(03:33):
with the some NBA and NHL playoffs mixed in. Just
the cycle. And I think it's all just one big
stall for football season, never really waiting. We're working on
which next up I guess would be the draft right
coming up at this month, and whom might the Cleveland
Browns choose wrong this time? More on that another time.

(03:56):
There's so much talk about I happened to be. I mean,
one of the things that makes this so different, you know,
the Apollo program was a television event. It was a
network anchored television event with black and white in and out,
very shaky photos. And here we make our return to

(04:17):
the Moon. I'm sixty one years old and I'm watching
on YouTube in the most vivid color. There was a
lot of discussion yesterday. I'm going to give you a
little bit of a synopsis for those of you that
didn't nerd out like me. I mean, there was a
lot of downtime too, so it wasn't easy to do.
But in watching there were some themes. You know. One

(04:40):
thing that we talked about was and it didn't quite
match the actual setting of the distance record and the
orbiting of the Moon and the close up look of
the Moon. That all took place a day after Easter
here on Earth. Whereas the Apollo eight and the three
astronauts orbit at the moon on Christmas Eve, they made

(05:02):
a dramatic reading and they all took turns reading out
of Genesis, the creation story. They thought this was the
best way to give you a glimpse into their view
and how that view impacted them. And we wondered what
might Artemis two say and who might say it, and

(05:23):
exactly what and that did take place. I happened to
be watching live. She had just gotten through thanking them
for their role in history and their courage and their
service and being a part of this journey. And that's
when Victor Glover, who did most of the talking about

(05:46):
what things meant to the crew, launched into this quite spontaneously.
I don't think this was really pre prepared much. I
think this was really straight from the herd. And you
get a sense whenever you hear from Victor that he
likes to experience things. First. He was asked, I can't

(06:09):
remember what show it was about what they might talk about.

Speaker 4 (06:14):
As we are so far from Earth and looking back at,
you know, the beauty of creation. I think for me,
one of the really important personal perspectives that I have
up here is I can really see Earth as one thing.
And you know, when I read the Bible, and I
look at all of the amazing things that were done
for us who were created. It's you have this amazing place,

(06:37):
this spaceship. You guys are talking to us because we're
in a spaceship really far from Earth, but you're on
a spaceship called Earth that was created to give us
a place to live in the universe and the cosmos.
Think maybe the distance we are from you makes you
think what we're doing is special. But we're the same
distance from you, and I'm trying to tell you, just
trust me, you are special. In all of this emptiness.

(06:59):
This is a whole, whole bunch of nothing, this thing
we call the universe. You have this oasis, this beautiful
place that we get to exist together.

Speaker 1 (07:07):
I think, as we're.

Speaker 4 (07:08):
Going to eat anything about you know, all the culture
around the world, whether you celebrated or not, whether you
believe in God or not, this is an opportunity for
us to remember where we are, who we are, and
that we are the same thing, and that we got
to get through this together.

Speaker 1 (07:21):
It's funny that's Victor Glover basically giving our slogan You're
a morning show. Because we're all in this together. I
can tell you that this is a real thoughtful man period.

(07:44):
This was nothing you could sense every time he would talk.
This isn't pre prepared, This has lived, and this is observed,
and this is articulated straight from his heart. He had
talked to her earlier about how there are no atheists
in space strapped to a rocket, which I mean, you know,

(08:09):
you got to see this. He's trying to tell you
to You should see yourself the way he's seeing you
in space, but see it from his perspective. He's got
strapped to a rocket and went around the moon. Now,
a lot of their responses, all of them is very
similar to every astronaut who has ever gone into lunar orbit,

(08:29):
let alone stepped on the moon. These themes of it's
the old, the old hymn. If you focus on your problems,
your problems are big and God is small. If you
focus on God, he is big and your problems are small,

(08:51):
and the things on earth grow strangely damn so. But
you hear this from Apollo astronauts, and you hear it
again from the Artemis too. There's nothing out there you're
so curious about everywhere else, And he's trying to tell
you there's nothing anywhere else. There's vast darkness, there's no

(09:15):
signs of any life. And in the midst here's this
colorful ball that has everything that can sustain you. If
you think that's a random explosion, go for it. But
our perspective is we're seeing you on earth more the

(09:36):
way God sees all of us. For God so loved
the world that he said it's only a big gotten son,
love the world, one son, one world. Boom he later
and again, I think, you know, some of this might
have been mixed with you know, I know I'm going

(09:56):
to be orbiting. I know they're going to ask the question.
I expected more of a build up. They were about
ready to go to the dark side of the moon
and communication was going to be cut off for forty minutes.
She just wants to tell them one more time, what
a terrific job they're doing, how much courage, how profoundly

(10:18):
important what they're doing is, and thank you. And Victor
responds with.

Speaker 3 (10:23):
This, remind you of one of the most important mysteries
there on earth, and that's love. Christ said, in response
to what was the greatest command, that it was to
love God with all that you are, and he also,
being a great teacher, said this guinea's equal to it,
and that is to love your neighbor as yourself. And

(10:46):
so as we prepare to go out of radio communication,
we're still ful. Feel your love from Earth and to
all of you down there on Earth and around her,
we love you from the Monk.

Speaker 1 (11:04):
I mean, I just thought, I just thought the whole
day was so beautiful. It's amazing. You know. I had
this conversation with doctor Joe on Friday, Galotti. I watched
a very dear friend go all the way through medical school,
and he would tell these stories I might share. I mean,
Bill Bright would have shared the Gospel with you, with

(11:24):
the four spiritual laws, I might talk a little differently.
It is a powerful pathway to God to go through
med school. The more we go inside this body, it's
a miracle. It's so designed, intelligently designed. It literally leads

(11:45):
people to faith. And every time we send someone to space,
isn't it amazing how boldly they speak of God, just
by changing their perspective and position. And for Artemis too,
nobody ever further away from Earth, and in what sounds

(12:05):
like to your ear, nobody closer to God. I thought
yesterday listen. I predicted Michigan when they were doing the seedings.
The team was that big, that good, had that many
key players, were that deep. It was just in control
inside the pain just too dominant. They weren't going to

(12:26):
sleep walk, and nobody was going to be better. There
would be shining moments for others, but for me, it
was one of the most obvious picks ever that Michigan
would win the National championship. And in going to the Moon,
it was predictable that for some of us we would
latch on and take a journey again, and it would
be both futuristic and nostalgic at the same time. And

(12:49):
I knew faith would have its moment every time you
take man that far from Earth and put them that
close to God. I don't know about you, but I
couldn't turn off you. And it was so spontaneous and
so unrehearsed and so not forced. Why I haven't felt

(13:10):
this good watching something since Billy Graham Crusades. I mean,
it was just it was amazing. I will tell you
this one personal thought. I have never had a desire
to get on a plane and fly to San Diego
and be anywhere near that splashdown, and if I ever

(13:30):
come across Victor Glover, I have never wanted to throw
my arms around somebody more in my life. What an
extraordinary spokesperson for this crew, What an extraordinary human being.
I had a great time, and it wasn't watching the
national championship. It was watching our nation with a Canadian

(13:51):
going where literally no man has ever gone before. I
sure hope it piqued your curiosity. I hope you got
to experience some of it too. Change my life, all right?
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(14:16):
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Speaker 2 (14:27):
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Speaker 1 (14:29):
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(14:50):
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(15:15):
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(15:35):
ask for it by name. Let me do it this
time name. All right, there's Boomer. See you think I
make this stuff up? He loves it. This is your
morning show with Michael del Chrono. Well, we're all looking
at the clock. Less than fourteen hours till the deadline
is up with the RON and looking at their list
of ten demands, I can tell you I don't need

(15:57):
thirteen more hours. This is going in a bad direction fast.
President Trump says this is a critical period for Iran
and the clock is ticking more from Mark Mayfield.

Speaker 5 (16:06):
On Monday, from the White House, Trump told reporters Iran
will have no infrastructure if it doesn't meant it's Tuesday
deadline to strike a deal with the US.

Speaker 6 (16:14):
We're giving them to eight o'clock Eastern time, and after
that they gonna have no bridges, They're gonna have no
power plants, stone ages.

Speaker 3 (16:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (16:25):
The President appeared to pivot from his original demand for
Iran to reopen the straight of Horror moves by Tuesday
and focus more on an overall deal by the deadline.
Trump said, we have an active, willing participant on the side.
I'm Mark Meyfield. You know, war tends to get everybody's
testosterone up. And I'm not a weak person, and it's
not that I don't believe in strength. But a real

(16:45):
challenge here is going to be if you're struggling politically
to understand this world. At four dollars a Gallon. Well,
part of the problem with the Stone Age and all
of this bombing is there'll be no refinery.

Speaker 1 (16:58):
There's no refining. Doesn't matter what's going through the strait
of horror moves so gasp. I mean, the President needs
to stick to his word. I get it. But this
is gonna make what America is viewing as a real
political problem much much worse. Astronauts are now headed back
to the Earth. They will splash down on Friday off

(17:18):
the coast of San Diego, Georgia. Voters are headed the
polls today to pick a replacement for congressional seat vacated
by Marjorie Taylor Green and the Michigan Wolverines are your
national champions, defeating Yukon sixty nine sixty three last night.
March madness is behind us. We press on now towards
the masters. I'm Jim Schultz and Tampa and My Morning

(17:40):
Show is Your Morning Show with Michael GILLSONA Hi, I'm Michael,
and your Morning Show is heard on great radio stations
across the country like one oh five, nine twelve fifty
w HNZ and Tampa, Florida News Radio five seventy k
ABN in Youngstown Ohio and News Radio one thousand KTOK

(18:04):
and Oklahoma City love to have you listen to us
live in the morning, and of course we're so grateful
you came for the podcast. Enjoy Now there's kind of
like four big things that you really need to know
this morning. Won the Michigan Wolverines are your national champion
sixty nine sixty three over Yukon. As I predicted, Yukon
had an extraordinary tournament and they were in this game

(18:27):
all the way. It just took too It would have
taken too many threes to try to pull this off.
But Michigan didn't play particularly well, especially some of their stars,
but it was They're just that deep. They were that good.
The other is we set a record. Artemis two broke
Apollo thirteen's distance record. It was the furthest from Earth
any human beings have ever been, and the closest to

(18:50):
the Moon any human has ever been. In addition to that,
I had talked off here with Red and we talked
about this the air with Rory yesterday. These images were
bringing new technology this time and the fact that I
could lay in my bed in high definition and watch

(19:12):
this entire mission on YouTube is almost surreal. It's the
difference between a Walter Kronk guy black and white, shaky
distant view. And I felt like I was in the capsule, which,
by the way, they might want to consider a height
limit on the next journey because it looked like worms.
I mean, they fill it up. That would not be

(19:35):
for the claustrophobic by any stretch. But I can tell
you this notion of my perspective of the moon as
gray ash from the sixties looks far more like soil
now in twenty twenty six. Now, how much of this

(19:55):
could be an event that happened that had kicked things up,
or how much of this is change or change from
what we thought it was. I remember, I can't remember
her name, another female astronaut. She kept saying, And they
would do this long drawn out thing where you'd have

(20:16):
a video and then a high def zoom camera in
a window. They would do the same thing in another window.
Then they had some permanent mounts on another window, and
they would do these in shifts of two, and they
would actually switch windows and switch partners. And the point
is that you would have the video, the stills, and

(20:36):
their verbal narrative, so you get the human observation with
the video with the stills, just to see if we're
getting all of this right. And she kept saying in
one of her summaries, it's just looking. You know, this
seems to be a common theme here. We're seeing brown, brown,

(20:56):
and more brown. And I made that observation to worry,
you know, was it reflections or the moon looks a
lot more like soil this time than ash, So we're
going to learn a lot more about that. We're obviously
going to learn a lot more about that once they
land and walk around on it as well. But there's
something so futuristic and so nostalgic about this entire journey,
and it's just been a blast just to sit and watch,

(21:20):
and yesterday the observations of these astronauts as they were
further away from us than any human has ever been,
and seemingly, from their words, so much closer to God
and a godly perspective. It was profound. The other story
is Donald Trump. He has given an ultimatum, he has

(21:40):
given a timeframe, So now he's in a position either
ron does it or he follows through with what he's threatening.
And if he doesn't follow through with what he's threatening.
I mean, I know how everybody on the right reacted
when Barack Obama drew a line in the sand and
then caved. And if Donald Trump goes through and takes

(22:05):
out all of their power, which could now we understand,
involve a human shield of children. Yes, that's how sick
this regime is. They'll all be safe, but they'll put
the children to die. This is an uncomfortable showdown in motion.
So and if you take out their power, you take

(22:29):
out their refineries, you take out their refineries, you got
a much bigger oil crisis than the Strait of horm
moves being disrupted. So this is a very difficult situation
and a very tough call for the president, I can
tell you. Looking over after all this time, Iran releases
their ten point plan. This is the chances that this

(22:51):
ten point plan could change in thirteen hours or zero.
A full and permanent end to hostile alities, not a ceasefire,
immediate lifting of all crippling US sanctions, establishment of a
new security framework in the region that would new to
America's allies and legitimize Iran's terror proxies. Ironclad guarantees for

(23:15):
safe passage to the Strait of horror moves under Iranian terms,
massive Western funded reconstruction commitments to repair the damage from
their provocations. No restrictions whatsoever in Iran's nuclear weapons program.
I mean, you don't have to read all ten. So

(23:35):
the big question is what's coming and if the president
follows through with his words, a lot of bombing and
even more disruption of oil, just saying that's kind of
what's happening. And then we kind of all made that
transition that we do seasonally right where we go from
the height of excitement, bands playing crowds, filling domes for

(23:56):
a little basketball court and gang the perfection of the
NCAA Men's basketball tournament, the envy of all other sports,
and then when it's all over and the shining moment
has happened, things begin to quiet down. We turned to
Magnolia Lane where the azaleas are in full bloom. It's

(24:18):
the Masters, a tradition unlike any other. I thought you
were at the Masters, Good morning. Where how do you
have would you bring your mobile set up with you?
I did?

Speaker 3 (24:29):
I did so?

Speaker 1 (24:31):
Where are you right? Are you near Butler Cabin? Am
I seeing Butler Cabin in the background or is that
on a television screen. You are you are Butler Cabin,
and it looks very surreal and quiet. There any golfers
walking around, loosening up, putting. Why would you you? Are
you doing broadcasts from the Masters? Davidson Audius joining us
right here with you, right here with you, and you

(24:52):
travel with I thought for sure we'd be on the phone.

Speaker 2 (24:54):
No, we're fortunate. Maybe maybe the phone tomorrow. Obviously there's
a lot of news tonight, so I think we could
we do phone tomorrow.

Speaker 1 (25:01):
Yeah, so tell me what the what the word is there?
It's tough. It's tough to repeat at the Masters. So
for Rory McElroy, that's what I'll be rooting for. But
my expectations are somewhat tampered. I know that the odds
on favorite is Scottie Scheffler is up there, John Rahm,

(25:22):
Bryce and d Chambeau. Here's the bottom line. The best
golfers in the world and the most beautiful of settings
and challenging of courses. It really is a tradition unlike
any other. What's it like to be the Masters?

Speaker 2 (25:34):
Well, it's a it's a blessing, of course to be here,
and it's an expression of American initiative and ideals, yet
internationally traveled, and and and then the most so after
sporting event in the world.

Speaker 1 (25:48):
We come here because golf.

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Matters as to a lot of other athletic things. What
happened last night in the NCAA matters, Human competition matters. C. S.
Lewis made a comment in one of his great works said,
we must play. The reason for that is because the
God that we serve is not a horrific god of terror.
He is a god of joy. In his presence, their

(26:09):
fullness is fullness of joy. At his right hand, their
pleasures forever. There's somebody at the end who puts all
the pieces back together again. And for years people have
been using golf to pull them all apart and trying.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
To put it back together again.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
And that's kind of if you play the game. You
know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 1 (26:24):
What's the buzz around Augusta, Well, the buzz around us,
of course, you know what I'll tell you.

Speaker 2 (26:28):
The news of the day is infecting this. You can't
you can't get away from this. People who come to
this event are very well informed on what's happening in
the world, and there's a considerable concern here about what's
happening in Iran and about the president, and many many
people stopping to take time to pray for our president.
Is we must. This is not a place you can

(26:49):
run and escape even from news like that. And so
I think that there's a tremendous concern we must all
really remember to pray for our president, for our Congress,
for the people advising him and them today. I mean,
Donald Trump's got himself up against a situation here where
learning on the job is perilous. And what we're confronting

(27:11):
here is a conflict of ancient evil, and we've got
to keep that in perspective, and we've got to get help.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
That's because stop stop, I know, I don't mean to
be rude, all right, So we're talking about ancient evil,
immovable motive, and you're going to put an hour on that.
You're going to say by blank time on blank day
next week, to an ancient evil.

Speaker 2 (27:35):
You're we're not dealing with people who understand the art
of the deal.

Speaker 1 (27:40):
They're gonna And so now, just to add to the
horrificness there, this is like I don't know how to
describe it. This is like their youth pasture of a deprived,
just a horrific, hateful religion. But anyway, uh, this like

(28:00):
the National Youth pastor calling for the youth to make
a chain of children to circle all the power plants.
So when you show the power plants being blown up,
you're going to see the children all lined up getting
killed with it. I mean, you know, just to add
to the visual. That's that's how committed they are to
this or that's their view of human life. And David

(28:22):
Is I keep trying to remind everybody because I know
testosterone gets high, but you take you bomb them into
the stone Age. It's going to be very hard to rebuild.
And all of the refineries are going to be offline.
Now what are your gas prices? I mean, this is
a This is not the greatest situation to to find
yourself in. No, it's not.

Speaker 2 (28:38):
And and it has serious political ramifications. I'm sure we'll
talk about as a day's unfold for the Trump administration,
and not to suggest that they shouldn't be be thanked
for having the courage to face this ancient evil. We've
got to make sure they understand what they're dealing with.
And this is the time where we have to get
on our knees and humble ourselves and ask God to

(29:01):
have mercy on our country, mercy upon those in authority
over us, and hopefully and pray that the President is
getting all the counsel that he possibly can, because this
is not any longer a question about partisan petty politics
among political parties. This is about people living and dying
in many ways. And look, I could say a lot

(29:25):
of things about Islam right now that would only incite
more difficulty. And I'm not suggesting for a moment that
compromising with evil being a muddied spring in the face
of evil, as the Book of Proverbs talks about the
ancient Hebrew Book of Proverbs, is a smart idea. But
clarity involves more than push and war, as we've talked

(29:46):
about for many times, is about the power of the
human will. And this is what the other side, as
you say, often gets a vote. Let's pray the president
has given granted wisdom.

Speaker 1 (29:58):
I don't remember where I was, oh interest store. The
person said, what's going to happen in Iran? I said,
I don't know. Because the enemy has a vote. The
enemy has to say I would have probably. I mean,
I think the danger is the minute you said you
have forty eight hours or else to this group of
people or else what they're martyred. That's the only promise

(30:18):
of salvation. So I get significant, Yeah, very very significant.
All right. Let me let me just also get back
to sure. It was surreal to just lay in my
bed and I got to tell you from about three
thirty Central to six thirty. I'll say it this way,
there's nothing that happened on that basketball court last night
that compare it at all to what I watched from

(30:38):
three thirty to six thirty on my phone laying in
my bed where I was in the art. You know,
I'm right in the capsule with them, as they are
the furthest away from Earth any human being has ever been,
and it shouldn't shock us. The closest to God perhaps
any human has ever been, and how that impacted them,
And just to listen, you couldn't have asked for a

(31:01):
better spokesperson than Victor Glover and his descriptions, Like so
many of the Apollo astronauts that orbited the Moon or
landed on the Moon, it changes your view of God
and Earth completely, of reality for certain, because nothing else
we needed this For that, I think that it's not
very small.

Speaker 2 (31:21):
And and this entire reality and only the tiny fraction
of it that we see, is so much bigger than us.
And none of us got here by choice. All of
us got here by somebody else's choice, and that's an
important reality to understand. So yeah, and you know, Michael,
nothing that we're facing today is bigger than God's power.
And oftentimes when we are at the end of ourselves,

(31:43):
that's where the beginning actually starts. So I think it's
it's a wonderful thing to be watching. And I certainly
appreciate someone from that far leaving the known world as
we're able to communicate with it, reminding us of the
teachings of Jesus Christ. Those astronauts really brought us something unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (31:57):
Well, because man's on Earth or Earth looks so big,
you know, thinking there's something, and then and then they're
up there looking back and they're going, do you realize
there's nothing out here? For those of you that are
looking up wondering what's out there? Searching? Searching? He said,
nothing but darkness. And then there here's this oasis of
color and life just floating in the middle of it.

(32:18):
He's trying to let you know. And I thought it
was so interesting that, you know, God so loved the
world he gave us only begun sent you see the
world differently. How about I thought of you yesterday because
he started with the love of the Lord that God,
with all your heart, so on mind. Then he went
with the equal and love your neighbors yourself. The church
today is very well projecting anyway, very focused on loving God.

(32:43):
But boy, we fail at loving each other or even
remembering that call. It was just all of his world.
I've never wanted to go find a guy and hug
him so much in my life. I mean, I think
Victor Glover just went from a no name I had
never heard of to maybe my favorite astronaut ever. And
I can't explain to anybody nothing was planned or read
or rehearsed. This guy was talking straight from his heart.

(33:06):
Just like he's looking at the moon and making his
observations for science, he's looking at Earth and making his
observations about God. It was so powerful yesterday, and we
all need it today because you need to pray for
your president. We need to pray for this little earth
that's about to get perhaps a lot more dangerous. All right,
final thirty seconds. How does the merchandise look? I think
I've changed my mind and I want something.

Speaker 2 (33:27):
Well, and the world keeps turning in real space and time,
and well, everything looks different in the light of this
today's news. But again, this is why we pray, and
this is why we have hope, and this is why
we carry on. So the drama here will continue out
someone's life will be changed inevitably as an athlete and
as a professional in the world because they'll win this tournament,

(33:49):
which is one of the few life changing moments in athletics,
like last night was. By the way, congratulations on picking Michigan.
You had it all right all along. Yea, they were
that good.

Speaker 1 (33:57):
Don't even bring it up with the Red Reds all bitter.
I just I will not acknowledge this championship. That's five transfers,
all starters.

Speaker 7 (34:06):
Okay, Okay, I get it, I get it. But but
we'll keep praying. As I mentioned from Connecticut. Okay, sorry,
I don't know. People got the betterness and.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
The drama unfolds down here because this is a transformational
event also, and it's also a testimony of the human
spirit because there's people here that are gathering for different reasons.
It is a reflection upon two separate world views.

Speaker 1 (34:32):
UH.

Speaker 2 (34:32):
To be certain, uh and and and therefore we must
continue to express the reality because ultimately, evil in this
world has to be overcome by doing good. So war
is a piece of dealing with evil. But as America
has seen over and over again, even if you have
to knock down an enemy that wants to destroy, ultimately
you have to pick the people back up to their left.

Speaker 1 (34:53):
You are right, though, somebody's gonna win and they're going
to be forever known as a as a Master's champion,
and there's you can talk about an open champion, r
PGA champ predictions strong.

Speaker 2 (35:03):
I gotta gets to the driving rings today to see
how they're swinging it.

Speaker 1 (35:06):
All right, that's David's anatur senior contributor lying from Butler
Cabin and Augusta for the masters. As we turn, we'll
talk tomorrow. David. All right, everybody's talking about these weight
loss injections because the results are so dramatic. They lower
your blood sugar, they reduce your appetite, you eat less,
you lose weight. Now, unfortunately we're learning you lose a

(35:26):
lot of muscle too, and a lot of bone density.
That could be something down the road to deal with.
What if you want to lose weight but you don't
want the painful injections. Are any of the intense side effects? Well,
that's why the doctors at Lean created and these studied

(35:46):
ingredients and Lean have been shown to you. Ready for
the list. Lower your blood sugar, burn fat by converting
it to energy. Curb your appetite and craving so you
eat less, you're not hungry, and you lose weight, and
combined with exercise in the right diet, fat only and
it stays off. Now, it's not just for somebody trying
to lose a pound or two before a wedding. This

(36:07):
is for frustrated dieters trying to lose ten or more pounds.
You're gonna love the way you feel and you're gonna
love the results. I wanna get you started with twenty
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Enter the promo code yms that stands for your morning
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