All Episodes

April 28, 2025 91 mins
This is the full episode of The Morning Show with Preston Scott for Monday, April 28th.

Our guests today include:
- Dr. Joe Camps
- Jerome Hudson 




Follow the show on Twitter @TMSPrestonScott. Check out Preston’s latest blog by going to wflafm.com/preston. 
Listen live to Preston from 6 – 9 a.m. ET and 5 – 8 a.m. CT!
WFLA Tallahassee Live stream: https://ihr.fm/3huZWYe
WFLA Panama City Live stream: https://ihr.fm/34oufeR Follow WFLA Tallahassee on Twitter @WFLAFM and WFLA Panama City @wflapanamacity and like us on Facebook at @wflafm and @WFLAPanamaCity.
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Yes, it is our home, sweet home. We won the
cosmic lottery if we were born here. How you doing? Friends?
Welcome April twenty eighth. More on that date and mere
moments here on the Morning Show with Preston Scott. He
is Jose, I am pressed in great to be with you,
Show fifty three sixty seven. Let's start in Philippians two,

(00:24):
verses five through eight, Having this mind among yourselves, which
is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in
the form of God, did not count equality with God
a thing to be grasped, but emptied himself by taking

(00:46):
the form of a servant and being born in the
likeness of men, and being found in human form. He
humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death,
even death on a cross. That's certainly the crux of

(01:07):
the gospel, right. But the key to those verses is
at the very beginning. And I think when we read
these verses, because I know a lot of you have
read this verse before, but I think we skim by

(01:28):
what's really being said here. Let's go back verse five.
Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus.
What mind see, that's the thing. We look at these

(01:52):
verses and we look at Okay, this is a description
of Christ. It's describing a very specific attribute of Jesus,
that he humbled himself to serve God's purpose. Even though
he was God, he did not, as as man, consider

(02:13):
himself equal to God. He walked in the role of
God in the flesh of man. And so the trait
that's being highlighted here is humility and obedience. Right, So

(02:34):
let's back up to the beginning again. Have this mind?
What mind? A mind of humility and obedience to God?
Wait a minute, here we go, how which is yours?

(02:54):
In Christ? Jesus? You can't possess the mind required to
submit yourself, to be obedient, to be humble, to consider
others more important than yourself unless you acquire it through Christ.
See what I mean. We read these verses and I

(03:15):
understand we get our focus on Jesus as well we should.
But the back end of this is the front end.
It's how do you obtain the mind of Christ? Well
through Christ? How do you get these qualities of humility
and obedience through Christ? Ten past the hour It's the

(03:35):
Morning Show with Preston Scott. You know I got so
much good feedback to posting a message after Palm Sunday

(03:55):
in advance of Easter. I'm going to do it every Monday.
My blog page will be Message Monday, and I explained
the reasoning and what I'm focused on the purpose. But

(04:16):
there's a message up today, and there will be one
each Monday, hopefully. I mean, I will confess to you
that there may come a moment when I like forget,
but not likely, but it could happen, though I hope not.

(04:40):
Today is April twenty eighth. Let's take a peek inside
the American Patriots Almanac. In seventeen fifty eight, James Monroe
was born in Westmoreland County, Virginia. He became the fifth
US President. I have his babble to my right. Seventeen
eighty eight, Maryland becomes the seventh state to ratify the
US Constitution. Eighteen seventeen, the US and Great Britain agreed

(05:02):
a limit naval forces in the Great Lakes region, providing
for an unfortified US Canadian border. Isn't that interesting? The
United States and Great Britain had naval forces in the
Great Lakes. We don't think about that. That's kind of crazy.

(05:23):
Wonder what they thought about sailing on the Great Lakes.
I didn't like it, but you know, nineteen fifty two
US post World War II occupation of Japan ends. See
we're good people, all right, you learned your lesson. Ah,
don't make me come back here. We're gonna play nice

(05:43):
moving forward. No more of this secret attack. Okay, hey,
you crazy people nineen, and now they're buddies. See see
nineteen sixty five. Fearing that the Communists might gain power

(06:06):
in the Dominican Republic, Landon Johnson sends US forces to
help end a civil war. And it was on this
date in nineteen ninety seven that the one and only
Grant Allen was born. Grant Allen's celebrating a birthday today

(06:26):
and go ga happy birthday. Today is National Global Pay
It Forward Day. Okay, I'm not sure about paying something
forward globally. That would seem to be expensive, but you know,
I get the concept. No, I understand National Superhero Day,

(06:50):
National Brave Hearts Day, Brave Hearts for Kids organization. Let's
see that's about that's I suspect it's dealing with childhood
cancer and it is. Boy, you want to you wanna
you want to find a mission to give to Saint
Jud's if you've got if like you have no outflow

(07:14):
in your world. I mean, obviously I'm a big believer
that you tithe and you give to your local church family,
but if you don't have like a something that you
want to tie into Saint Jude's man, I watched run

(07:37):
Rich Run. Rich Eisen of the NFL Network used to
be with ESPN, really good broadcaster, very good broadcaster. Rich
years ago, as almost like a joke, did a forty
yard dash in his suit during the NFL Combine Draft
or something, and it turned into a thing. They've raised

(08:02):
better than seven million dollars for Saint Jude with run
Rich Run. And he did it again this past They
showed it on the draft the final day of the draft.
It was awesome. But yeah, that would be a cause
I would heartily endorse National Blueberry Pie Day and National

(08:28):
Great Poetry Reading Day. So there you go, sixteen.

Speaker 2 (08:33):
Past the hour, come back with some PSAs and some
menu news.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Sorry I carried away. They're ten No ten twenty two
minutes past the hour, Monday of the Morning Show Joe
Camp's next hour, Doctor Joe will join us Little healthy expectations.
Jerome Hudson in the third hour, Next Hour Christianity Today,
I'm going to talk a little bit about that disgraced

(09:19):
formally incredible publication honoring Christ and presenting really good theological articles,
discoveries archaeologically, I mean, just good stuff, and it just
turned a crap. Guy. I want to say, Russell Moore

(09:43):
used to be involved with the Southern Baptist Church and
tried to ruin it and largely succeeded. Now he's the
publisher or the head of Christianity today. He's a train wreck.
He's an embarrassment. And what he's doing to that once venerable,
venerated magazine is just I said to my wife over
the weekend, someone with some means needs to buy it,

(10:06):
kick him out and put that that publication online, in
social and in print back in its place. But I
don't know. Maybe maybe that's what we'll do for our
our project this year. Maybe maybe during the Giving season

(10:26):
we'll just raise a few million dollars and buy the
thing we've It would be aggressive, that would be an
aggressive move from us, But I'll bet we we might
be able to create some momentum like a go what

(10:52):
does a give, go send type thing. What is it?
There's a fundraising thing. No no, no, no, no, no, no,
no no, there's a Christian version. I mean it's it's
it's like I said, it's someone knows listening, knows what
I'm talking about. Send me the link president Atiheartradio dot com.

(11:17):
Now go fundme is like, I mean, whatever, they just
they rip off people. They get so much money and
they allow things and they don't allow things that it's like, yeah,
we'll we'll just skip that real quickly. Today is the
day the Rolling Remember in Sunrise Ceremony eight o'clock North
Florida Fairgrounds here in the Capital City to support children

(11:42):
of Fallen Patriots Foundation. Since two thousand and two, this
organization has provided more than seventy six million dollars to
support more than thirty two one hundred military children from
all branches who lost a parent in the line of duty.

(12:08):
Ninety eight percent of third party donations go to programs
perfect rating from Charity Navigator. That's what you're looking for.
And so yeah, if you want to give, you can
support Fallenpatriots dot org Fallenpatriots dot org and if you're
in the area and can go eight o'clock North Florida

(12:29):
fair Grounds. Speaking of Godly purposes. National Day of Prayer
coming up this Thursday, so just make note and there
you go. April the twenty six, over the weekend, we
had the Bible reading sort of to lay the groundwork

(12:51):
for the day of Prayer, little praise and worship from
eleven thirty till noon prayer from a noon until one
fifteen down at the historic State Capitol. Actually this will
be in the courtyard, never mind, between the two capitol buildings,
so they'll be between the two of them. It will
not be facing Appalachi Parkway, which is probably a pretty

(13:15):
good thing from a noise perspective. So there you go.
I don't know if you've heard. McDonald's is adding a
new menu item. It's their first permanent addition in more
than four years. Mccrispy strips. They are the chicken is
a thing. I'm telling you, Chicken is a thing, and

(13:39):
one percent of white meat coated with a crispy, golden
brown breading bursting with bold new black pepper flavor, and
they serve it with a new creamy chili sauce. You
get one container of the chili dip with a count
of three. If you get four of the crispy strips,
you get two of the cream chili dip sauces sore.

(14:05):
That's a permanent it's it's moving across the country. Might
not be get the McDonald's you eat at. If you
eat at macde's, the chicken Big Mac is going to
come back and only just a limited time type thing.
They'll they'll roll that out, So that's not going to
be a permanent, But the mccrispy strips is a permanent addition.

(14:30):
Why not a McRib I'm just why not? Because people
go crazy at the holiday season. That's why twenty seven
minutes past come back with the Big Stories in the
press Box. It's the Morning Show with Preston Scott. Big

(14:53):
Stories in the press Box this morning on the radio program.
And I know to some of you, the NFL has died,
you don't. It died with Colin Kaepernick and the political
correctness that the league walked in for years and and
still to a large degree does. It's it's a shame

(15:15):
Roger Goodell has allowed it to go the way that
it's gone. He's done a lot of really good things
to help the league, but political correctness has killed them
with a lot of core supporters, and I get it.
You still have to credit any any sporting you know,

(15:38):
league that is able to take three days of talking
and turn it into a national event. The NFL Draft
is three days of announcements and talking and it's viewed
by millions, attended by hundreds of thousands, even a little
old Green Bay. But what happened over the weekend with

(16:01):
Shador Sanders needs to be discussed, the son of Dion Sanders.
It had to turn political because idiots like stephen A.
Smith and others claimed it's racism. He wasn't drafted because
of racism. Eighty percent of the players drafted before Shador

(16:24):
Sanders were black. The first person drafted was black. That
is so cosmically hilarious. Stephen A is kissing up to primetime.

(16:45):
He's trying to curry favor with a statement like that.
As opposed to Shador Sanders is just an arrogant man
raised in the arrogance of his dad, who use God
as a little bit of a punchline. And maybe he
has a real relationship with him or not. That's not
my place to judge. But when it's well, you know,

(17:08):
God has a plan. But everyone knows I should have
been drafted by now. Now it's he barely posted a
five hundred record at Colorado and he is having his
jersey retired. They're retiring his jersey he played their two
years really anything to help Primetime stay in Colorado. Let

(17:36):
me tell you, you're going to retire the Sun's jersey
and he's going to leave. He's not going to have
long term success because that's why he bolted from Jackson
State for that very reason. You can he's not that coach.
He's just not Can he help a program? Absolutely? Is

(17:57):
he smart? You bet talented? Unbe crazy talented. Dion his son.
He might be an okay NFL quarterback one day. I
don't know. But when you say to NFL teams, don't
get me if you ain't trying to change the franchise
or the coach, and you look at him spending an

(18:19):
absurd sum of money for his own draft room. That Oh,
by the way, he wasn't drafted on the first day,
He wasn't drafted on the second day. He only got
drafted on the third day by a team that passed
him up. Every team passed him up four times every team,

(18:40):
including the team that drafted him, picked other quarterbacks before him.
And what's interesting about that is the team, the Cleveland Browns.
Perhaps they remembered something that coach Prime said. I love
what the Browns have done this off. But if I'm

(19:00):
a young quarterback, ain't no way I'm going to Cleveland.
I would pull in Eli Manning if possible. Now, this
was a post back in twenty eighteen. Ain't no way
I'm going to Cleveland. Eli Manning, you might remember, was
drafted by then. I think it was the San Diego Chargers,

(19:22):
and he demanded a trade. He wouldn't play there. So
Philip Rivers went to San Diego from New York and
they got Eli in with the Giants. Well, okay, then,
Now Shador Sanders is victim of his own ego, his

(19:47):
own overinflated value of himself. He came by it honestly.
But it's not racism, just that's just laughably stupid. Forty
one minutes after the hour.

Speaker 3 (20:10):
You mayor of Relville dispensing information at the speed of sound,
and if you're lucky, he'll be wearing his Clark Kent glasses.
Today The Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (20:41):
I still think I'm watching a TV show when I
hear that about music, which is why I picked it.
It just makes me happy. Adam Schiff, the newly minted
senator US Senator from California. Adam Schiff being elected as
a US Senator really is all you need to explain
the disaster that is the state of California. He's on

(21:09):
Bill Maher on Friday Night, The Real Time with Bill
Maher the panel discussion. Listen to these words from Adam Schiff.
So we're going to have to change how we do
business in California. We're going to have to address people's
legitimate concerns about crime. He recalled an experience he had

(21:34):
two years ago in San Francisco when his luggage was
stolen out of his car, admitting it was the one
time he did not heed warnings from others about not
leaving valuables and vehicles while in the city. We've told
the stories TV crews showing up to do with Live
report and their vehicles broke it into in the minutes
they were gone. He goes on to say, and what

(21:57):
was most memorable about the experience for me was I
went into Target in South San Francisco ten o'clock at night.
I'm getting toilet trees I'm going to need for my
next two days in the city. First of all, I
had to get a clerk, which is hard to find,
to unlock the shampoo or whatever. So that's one thing.
They have everything under lock. And so the clerk comes

(22:23):
and does that, and now he shares the exchange. I
get to the cashier and the cashier asked me if
I want one of those Target bags with a little
bull's eye on it. I said, yes, that Target bag
is going to be my luggage for the next two days.
And she asked me what happened and I told her,
and she basically said, in not so many words, yeah,

(22:43):
Democrats are bleepholes. The cashier says to a about to
be state or US senator, Yeah, democrats are a holes.
And I thought, you know, if the cashier in South
San Francisco at ten o'clock at night believes Democrats are

(23:04):
bleepholes because the shampoo was locked up and my stuff
got stolen out of my truck, we've got a major
problem we have to address. Here's what's hilarious. We've been

(23:25):
saying the same thing for decades Democrats are just wrong.
Does Jesus love them? Absolutely? Maybe not as much. No,
I'm just teasing. I'm teasing, just kidding. We all fall short.

(23:51):
Sin is sin. But here's the thing. Democrats as an
organization are on the wrong side of everything, especially God's word.
It's just it's a brutal, uncomfortable reality. Does that mean

(24:15):
all Republican No, it doesn't. What it means is that
as an organization, the documents that found the Republican Party
are at least not flipping a bird to God. Democrat
Party platform organizational statements they flip a giant bird to
the God of the universe. And that's the difference. You're

(24:39):
a member of an organization that's flipping off God. Doesn't
mean that Republicans aren't sinners, of course they are. We
all are, We all fall short. It's the difference is
what does the organization stand for?

Speaker 4 (24:55):
Not?

Speaker 1 (24:55):
Are is everyone inside of it perfect? If you're a
member of a Democrat organisation and you call yourself a Christian,
if you're registered, you have a problem. You have you
are you have the same problem. And I've used this example,
I'll continue to use it to hammer home the point.
You have the same problem that someone has saying that

(25:15):
they're a Christian and they were a member of the Klan.
You have a problem, Hey, my problem to deal with.
That's your problem before God. But you have a problem.
You can't reconcile those two things. Just is what it is. Sorry,
forty seven minutes past the hour. Parental warning coming up next.

Speaker 3 (25:41):
Consider him your truth detector. The Morning Show with Preston
Scott on news Radio one hundred point seven WUFLA.

Speaker 1 (25:59):
All right, listen, parents and young people, and yes we
have some youngsters that listen and look, anyone that's like
in their thirties or less is a youngster to me,
just the way it is. Don't take it as like
I'm patny on the head, like you're just you know,

(26:21):
a child. You're just a younger person. Don't fall prey
to this. This is now a thing skinny talk. It
is a new weight loss trend making the rounds on
TikTok skinny talk. In fact, as of April twenty six,

(26:50):
there were sixty thousand plus videos from different creators talking
about skinny talk. Talk not talk talk. And while there's

(27:10):
certainly content that promotes some health and wellness, gives you
some tips, and I suppose that's fine. I don't know
about you. But the social messaging out there, featuring everybody
from doctor Drew to who knows who else, is just
it doesn't help.

Speaker 4 (27:31):
It.

Speaker 1 (27:31):
There's so much confusion about weight loss that sometimes when
a trend like this starts to go viral, young people
grab hold of it because everybody else is doing it.
I joked for years with doctor Camps about writing a
book on dieting as a novelty, and it would be

(27:56):
three pages long. The book. I'd have some real flowing
forward and lengthy introduction, and then chapter one would be
one word or series of words. Chapter one would be
eat less food. Chapter two would be drink more water.

(28:20):
I mean, that's all that I would put on the page.
And chapter three would be get exercise. There you go.
There are now so many contrarian views on everything. Is
protein good for you? There's some people that say no,

(28:44):
there's others that say nothing but protein, that's all. I
don't believe either. But this new skinny talk thing, it
it can lead to devastating consequences because they're promoting things

(29:05):
like literal starvation and malnutrition, which in younger people leads
to brittle bones. It leads to brain difficulties, it leads,
it leads to organ failure, it leads to all kinds
of problems. So I'm just putting it out there because
that's you know me. I've got my finger on the
pulse of what's going on with young people. So be careful, folks,

(29:33):
be smart. Hey, ruminators, Welcome to Monday on the Morning Show.
We're gonna polish off the month of April and head
to May. You know, you know, before you know it,

(29:54):
we're gonna have to start talking about hurricane season, right
oh man, just over a month away. But anyway, welcome friends.
Hope you had a nice weekend. We mentioned last week
The Unbelievable Christianity Today was a magazine founded by Billy Graham.

(30:20):
And I remember when I was in vocational ministry, there
were because these days did not have the advent of
the Internet and all kinds of content available, which even
when the Internet got spun up, there was very limited
content available, and so magazines were a thing. And I

(30:48):
to this day love magazines. I like the tangible quality
of holding a magazine in my hands. I like flipping
through the pages. I love dog earing content that I
find interesting and Christianity to Christianity today was just a
tremendous resource. It was a reliable arbiter of good and

(31:16):
bad theology that might be circulating around. There are spin
offs that were useful, but Christianity today was kind of
the flagship. It was the flag bearer of journals. And
then Russell Moore came into the picture. There was a

(31:39):
steady decline, but Russell Moore has accelerated it. Russell Moore
has ruined Christianity today much as he did the SBC,
the Southern Baptist Church. He used to be the head

(32:04):
of the ERLC, the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission, which
was the policy arm of the Southern Baptist Convention. What
started this off is as Easter rolls around, they post

(32:26):
on their social media the Bible doesn't say Jesus was
nailed to the cross. Coyle, man of the Babylon b posted,
is this at the Babylon b It was not. It
was not satire. It was a tease to an article

(32:53):
by some alleged Biblical theologian. A singular one Bible scholar
thinks the crucifixion may have been done with ropes. The
Bible doesn't say Jesus was nailed to a cross underneath
the post the reader. The reader notes that reader context

(33:17):
came just flying in, pointing to the scriptures in Old
and New Testament, but notably New, notably John twenty where
Jesus encountered Thomas on the night of the resurrection, saying,
put your fingers here and see my hands. Reach out
your hand, put it in my side. Do not doubt,

(33:39):
but believe see my hands elsewhere in scripture. We didn't
just have the eyewitness accounts from John nineteen, Paul wrote.
In Colossians to fourteen, Paul writes that on the cross,

(34:02):
Jesus canceled the charge of our legal indebtedness, which stood
against us and condemned us. He has taken it away,
nailing it to the cross. And so I'm twenty two.
It says they pierced my hands and my feet. I mean,
it's heretical what Christianity today posted. Now they came back

(34:26):
with an apology, and I want to turn now to
Megan bash him and what she said in reply to
all of it, which, by the way, I'm trying to
get her on the show. She's fearless. She also knows
God's Word. That's next ten minutes past the hour on

(34:49):
the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 5 (34:53):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (34:58):
At Easter Time, Vanity Today rolls out the Bible doesn't
say Jesus was nailed to across. The writer gets pushed
out there, Daniel Silliman, I clearly messed up. I'm sorry.
So how does a senior editor miss something that kids

(35:25):
in Sunday school know? How does the piece by this
scholar get put in the magazine to begin with? The
posts in response went something like this, thank you for
the apology. I believe the editorial review board at Christianity

(35:49):
Today has some apologizing to do as well. And then
we get to Megan bash him. Now. Meghan has authored
a book that you might want to have on your radar,
Shepherds for Sale. How evangelical leaders traded the truth for
a leftist agenda. And this circles back to why my

(36:10):
blog page is going to dedicate Mondays to good Bible
teaching because we don't have enough of it. I dare
say seventy to eighty percent of pulpit teaching is probably
an error. And I'm not talking about an honest difference
of interpret interpretation. We're talking fundamentally flawed, as in, like

(36:33):
the Pope, all paths lead to God type flaw. And
to those of you that don't want me to poke
at that, I'm sorry. Until the Church corrects it and
calls it for what it was, heresy, terrible theology and doctrine,

(36:53):
I will continue to say it because that's what the
leader of the Catholic Church said. Megan Bashim starts weighing
in on this. I will say I was told by
multiple EERLC staffers that when controversy swirled around the entity
over Russell Moore's leadership, he would disappear and leave the

(37:15):
staff to deal with it. He would not answer tough
questions himself. He is the editor in chief of this magazine.
What makes it to publication is ultimately his responsibility. For
him to say nothing and send the writer out alone
to speak is poor leadership and characteristic of more. Now

(37:37):
she picks on the article itself, and she goes on
to say it does not address the fact that the
quote scholar who offered his expertise for this piece appears
to be an LGBTQ affirming Does Christianity today make it
a practice to use the scholarship of rank theological liberals.

(38:04):
Remember now, Russell Moore is the same dude that posted
photos of himself wearing a mask showing his VAX card
and chastising Christians for not getting the vaccine. She goes
on to say, did some digging, and this is the
same category that David French falls in. David French is

(38:28):
a train wreck, wants popularity, so he writes water down
rubbish for the New York Times so he can get published.
And so the New York Times con seem as though
it's catering to Christians and the evangelical righte. No, nothing
can be further from the truth. David French is a heretic.

(38:53):
So she says, did some digging into more David French
and Curtis Chang's Bible Study curriculum that teaches Christians how
to engage in politics. Turns out it's funded by major
secular left foundations that promote abortion and trans treatments for kids.
And she just goes on and on and on how

(39:15):
the apology from the writer is fine and probably heartfelt,
and I hope so, but how did it get there?
How did Christianity today arrive where it is as an embarrassment.
So I'm going to circle back to I sent a
note to Megan. I said, what do you think of
putting together a movement to buy the magazine. Let's rescue it.

(39:42):
Let's rescue it. Sixteen minutes past the hour.

Speaker 6 (40:00):
Twenty one minutes past the hour.

Speaker 1 (40:03):
Marcus lamonas you know who he is, you should you will.
Marcus is the man who owns Camping World. He's the CEO,
I should say, of Camping World. And he is shutting

(40:27):
down one of his stores in North Carolina because they
are ordering him to take down his flag. Camping World,
you might know, has famous for putting up flags the
size of a basketball court, massive US flags, and and

(40:50):
he's closed the smaller of his two RV dealerships in Greenville,
North Carolina, because as council members are disparaging his business
since he won't take down the giant flags. The flags

(41:12):
are thirty two hundred square feet and the flag polls
about one hundred and thirty feet. And he just simply said,
we think the ordinance is wrong. They should probably do
a little research on the statutes in the state of
North Carolina. I also think it's wrong. Council members have

(41:34):
been working very actively to disparage my business, and on
April eighteenth, I had to consolidate modification of two dealerships
in town, our business which has been unfortunately impacted uniquely
in Greenville, North Carolina, and so they just he fights,

(42:02):
he said the city. The communications manager for the City
of Greenville said the city took legal action. Said it's
not about the American flag or the type of flag.
It's about bringing the flag in compliance with city code.
He said he would rather shut down the business. Listen

(42:28):
to what he said. I wasn't born in this country.
I immigrated from Beirut Lebanon, came here to Miami, Florida,
and had an opportunity to live the American dream in
this country. I put a lot of sweat and tears
into building this business, for my people, for the country,

(42:50):
and it's my love letter to tell everybody how grateful
I am. This country provided me an opportunity where it
didn't have to to make money to be a capitalist,
to provide jobs in America. From my perspective, the flag's
not a problem. It has FAA clearance, and for me,
this feels like an opportunity for the city to say

(43:11):
we want to control what's happening there. He proposed making
a fifty thousand dollars donation to Manard Children's Hospital in
Greenville and lieu of fines with the agreement that the
council would change the ordinance to allow his flags. Then

(43:33):
he said he would make the donation. Didn't want to
do it in exchange. He would just make the donation.
The merits of the children's hospital stand on their own.
Anytime an organization like that's trying to good things and
actually doing good things, they're deserving of a contribution. There
are a lot of states that'll take that Camping World

(43:54):
without any questions asked. There's a time and a place
for codes and so forth. But if you've ever seen
a Camping World location, they're usually in the outskirts of
a community near an interstate, and it harms nobody in

(44:17):
the middle of that massive piece of property that they
have to have for all of the RVs they carry
to fly a massive American flag. Think about it. We
think it's too big. Whatever. Anyway, Marcus lamonas Camping World,

(44:50):
let me just say this Camping World should be on
this radio program anywhere this program is heard. Camping World
should be streaming on it, because that's my kind of business.
And I don't even drive an RV. Wouldn't be opposed
to it. I just saying I don't twenty six minutes
past the hour, come back and let's do the big

(45:10):
stories in the press box. It's now twenty seven pouts.

Speaker 5 (45:13):
Past shoe with Preston Scott.

Speaker 3 (45:16):
They're gonna get a I'm just which knock knock?

Speaker 5 (45:21):
Who's nash on WFLA.

Speaker 6 (45:29):
Well, it's up to.

Speaker 1 (45:34):
The legislature and perhaps the Supreme Court. The strategy against
Trump is law fair. Once again, different kind, different version,
district judge suggesting that they have power to stop nationwide policy.

(45:55):
Judges now are blocking the Trump administration from eradicating DEE
from schools. Here's what makes this interesting. For decades, the
Department of Education has tied funding to local schools on
strings being attached. If you would like this funding, you

(46:18):
have to do this. You don't have to do it,
but if you want this funding that originally comes from
your state back to you, you have to do this,
this and this strings attached. Trump is saying, well, we
want to do the same thing, only the funding will

(46:41):
be connected to not engaging in DEI inside the classrooms.
It has no place in public education, and it doesn't judges,
three of them Maryland, New Hampshire, Washington, DC have said no, no, no.
The Biden is Minute Registration said the DEI is fined.

(47:02):
So because they said it, it remains that's not how
it works. First of all, that's not what the law says.
And so once again we have a really good definition
of judicial activism unfurling here. Judicial activism is when a
judge doesn't follow what's written in the law. Even if

(47:23):
the law is flawed and you don't like the results
of the law, it was legally passed. It is law.
If the consequences of that law are bad, the citizens
then have the right to go back and force Congress
to change the law by voting in new members or
raising us think about it. But what the judicial does

(47:45):
not have the right to do is say, well, we
like what they were doing better, so it doesn't matter
what the law says, We're going to do what we
think is right. Judges don't have that now they exercise
that authority, they just don't have it, and so will

(48:07):
now have to go through the appellate process to deal
with it. But this goes right back to we just
don't need the Department of Education, period, even in an
issue like this. Just be done with it. Let's leave
it to the states in the local districts. And if
you don't want DEI in schools, you voted out. If

(48:30):
you want it in there, you voted in. Whatever. The
other big story in the press box I had to
address the issue of Shador Sanders and some of the
commentators out there suggesting that it was racism that he
didn't get drafted until what the fifth round? Is that
what it was? No, he didn't get drafted because he's
an arrogant young man and profect. Look racism when eighty

(48:57):
percent of the players drafted before he was picked or all,
and the first pick was black. And I mean, if
I go through the list of the draft picks, the
top the first round draft picks, the overwhelming majority are black.
And I don't care. But when someone says that it's

(49:20):
race that kept him, no, it's him, it's his dad.
These are professional franchises. They don't want to note from
a dad because their son's not playing. They don't want
a parent interfering. They don't want a kid who's not

(49:41):
thrown one football as a professional in the NFL to
be telling them how to run their franchise, which is
what he did. The word is he was sandbagging interviews
with teams that he didn't want to play for. That
gets around. These are professional businesses. They have no time

(50:03):
for this. None. They'll put up with that crap. If
he proves himself to be an incredible star, they'll put
up with stuff. But until then, I just wonder if
Dion understands how much he's harmed his own son by
allowing him to be the way that he's allowed him
to be. Forty minutes past the hour, Doctor Joe Camps

(50:26):
is on deck. Some healthy expectations are next.

Speaker 5 (50:30):
This is the Morning Show with Preston Scott.

Speaker 1 (50:40):
Notime for some healthy expectations. Doctor Joe Camps joins us.

Speaker 4 (50:43):
Good morning, sir, Good morning, how are you today, Preston.

Speaker 1 (50:47):
I'm doing well well.

Speaker 4 (50:48):
You know, sometimes over our lifespans we have some trouble sleeping.
And one of the things you could do is you
could try TikTok's a Sleepy Girl mock tailor to do that,
or you could try listening to people crunch, foil, all
kinds of things. But certainly at times we do have

(51:12):
this issue. But if it's a constant issue, you know
that some people always resort to sleeping pills, and I
just wanted to address that this morning because it's been
shown recently that over time sleeping pills can shortens one's
mortality about forty five percent. But what they have found
out is that there's a probably some deep seated health

(51:37):
issues that revolve around this, and I wanted to just
chat about a couple one. A lot of these people
tend to be obese, so they have upper respiratory issues
with their neck and obstruction of the airway. Some of
these people also have depression, have pulmonary issues, and then

(51:58):
underlying is hard disease. So just resorting to a benzodiazepine
or they add histamine or drugs that interfere with your
brain and maybe cause you to become drowsy, you are
to maybe get a stronger look behind this because there
certainly could be some significant health issues underneath this. And

(52:20):
then I think that it just goes to show that
in today's society, you know, we think that you know
appeal or you know something of that nature can just
cure all and there may be issues that you are
being obscured by the decisions you've made to get away
from the sleeping pills. So I just wanted to raise

(52:45):
caution to that because sometimes we have grown accustomed to
just finding the path of least resistance, which is not
always the best decision. So just before you pop those pills,
you might want to get a really good assessment of
where you are, get a good physical exam before just

(53:06):
resorting to medication to help you with an issue that
confronts us all from time to time. So that's my
message this morning, pressent.

Speaker 1 (53:14):
Joe to underscore the importance of sleep to healing up
the body after the day, to keep the body in balance.
Is so underestimated by people.

Speaker 4 (53:28):
Oh it's absolutely And you think that you can get
by on you know, maybe three or four hours, Oh no,
that's just not good enough. You need a minimum of eight.
But if you could get six, that would be okay.
But you just need a minimum of eight so that
your body has a chance to function like it really
needs to, your brain gets a chance to rest, and

(53:51):
you could can live a healthier life and more enjoyable life.
But certainly that can be very challenging. From time to time.

Speaker 1 (54:00):
Body heals itself to a certain extent while you rest.
I mean you you played, you played, you were a
college football player, that rest after practice after games was
vital to recovery.

Speaker 4 (54:10):
Oh, it's it's it's it's the very it's the very
thing that needs to be done. And that's why sometimes
when you look at when you're having playoff serieses and
other competition at a championship level, you always hear the
co says, well, we need to get some rest. I mean,
if you if you pay attention to that, you hear
that all the time. So rest is something that's vitally

(54:33):
important and to our overdo every day function. And certainly
if you're an athlete or exercise quite a bit, you
know that rest is essential for you to achieve what
you're trying to do. So you can't get around at present.
It's one of those things that the body just needs.

Speaker 1 (54:50):
Thank you, Joe, appreciate it. We'll talk again today, thank you, sir.
All Right, doctor Joe camps with us. If you're struggling, sleeping,
you know, not just you know, obviously Joe's addressing a
lot of things to think about before you start dumping
a bunch of medicine in yourself to sleep. There are
nutrients that can help you sleep more naturally. But also

(55:13):
just something simple, pay attention how much you're drinking liquids
or eating foods that can interrupt your sleep. Something that
I started paying attention to about ten years ago is
how much I'm drinking before I go to bed. I
want to just sleep. I don't want to get up
in the middle of the night and go to the
bathroom ruins my sleep. Forty six minutes past the hour.

(55:34):
Come back with more here in the Morning Show, Joe

(56:00):
Hudson in just a little bit here on The Morning
Show with Preston Sky. Tomorrow, on the program Richard Stern,
we're gonna try cryptocurrency take two. We're gonna give it
a shot and try to do a one on one

(56:22):
course again. This time we won't to have the phone issues,
I promise, because if we can't call him, he's gonna
call us. We're gonna be good to go. So Crypto
Tomorrow on the program, also Manly Minuted and Animal Stories.
So we're already building a program now, even in the
midst of the one we're in now earlier in the

(56:45):
show I mentioned if you missed it, McDonald's is rolling
out their first new permanent menu item in better than
four years, Mick Crispy's chicken strips. I don't know how
many different iterations of chicken you can do. You got
chicken nuggets, you got chicken sandwiches, you got grilled sandwiches,

(57:08):
you got fried sandwiches, you got blackened sandwiches. You got
spicy sandwiches, which are I guess you would describe those
as perhaps a breaded sandwich that has a lot of
spicy seasoning in it. You've got what chicken fries. Chicken
fries are a thing. You got chicken tenders. We got

(57:31):
chicken chopped up on salads. So we've got McDonald's. Now
Taco Bell, Wendy's are ramping up chicken. I pulled through
a Wendy's the other day and I almost I almost
went with this special chicken sandwich I saw. I was like,

(57:54):
that looks good. But I didn't want a big chicken
sandwich at that point. I just wanted a little, just
a little burger. Just yeah, you eat that stuff too much? Yeah,
probably Taco Bell chicken nuggets. Really, that's a thing we know,

(58:24):
the chicken big mac is. It comes around the standard,
like the cheap chicken sandwich at McDonald's and a lot
of these places, like a Burger King. Even if you
try one once, you're like, eh, you're reticent to do
it again because so often it's just thin. It's just
so thin. And I've literally gotten a sandwich at a

(58:48):
drive through that had cardboard where they just threw the
patty down and the cardboard was still attached. They didn't notice.
They threw it in the fryer and it came out
and I got hardboard with the chicken. Kid, you not
true story. My family was with me. We were going
to look at Christmas lights. Right now. At the Taco

(59:13):
Bell Test Kitchen, ninety five percent of its innovation spotlight
Chicken Crispy Chicken burritos, Chicken tacos rolling around, you've got
the Cantina Chicken menu with the Cantina Chicken Burrito, the
Kantena Chicken Casadia, the Cantena Chicken Taco. Sorry, I'm getting

(59:34):
into character there. If you have to do okay, let's
set aside Chick fil A because it is the Lord's Chicken.
If you have to do chicken at a drive through?
Where are you going?

Speaker 5 (59:52):
KFC?

Speaker 1 (59:54):
Okay, it's a chicken specially placed though, and I put
KFC Popeye and Chick fil A is chicken specially. So
if you're not, if you don't have one of those
at your disposal, you're going Taco Bell. You want chicken,
You're going Taco Bell, McDonald's, Wendy's, Burger King. Where are
you going for some chicken? What's the choice? It's tough,

(01:00:20):
isn't it. And I know I didn't pick Guthries, and
I didn't pick Slim Chickens, and I didn't pick Bojangles.
I know, I know, I know those are chicken specialty places.
But it's just it. You're gonna see more chicken on
the menus, which I guess is fine, but it would

(01:00:42):
be interesting to me if it where prices stay when
it comes to chicken. We'll see where Jerome Hudson goes
for chicken. Five minutes past me, Allen, it's Monday on

(01:01:04):
the morning show.

Speaker 6 (01:01:05):
I'm Mark Levin.

Speaker 1 (01:01:06):
He's Jose on the phone line, Jero from Jacksonville.

Speaker 7 (01:01:11):
Go, oh wow, how you doing buddy.

Speaker 8 (01:01:22):
I'm doing great. I'm doing great. It's so funny because
you know, you do thousands of hours of live radio
broadcast and you usually are not You usually don't just
find yourself at the precipice of a cliff staring down
like that. There's a little bit of wind up that's involved.

Speaker 1 (01:01:45):
That I could help. Jerome Mudson is the entertainment editor
at Briybart dot com. He's the author of the Fifty
Things books. But more important to any of that, he's
a friend of Jesus and he's a friend of ours.
I've got to ask you. We've been riffing a little
bit about Christianity today and what a train wreck that
publication is. Does a publication do entertainment slash media outlets

(01:02:11):
in the Christian world? Does it find its way to
your eye? Do you pay attention to example, for as
an example of what's happened at Christianity today.

Speaker 8 (01:02:24):
So I'm a little unfamiliar with the current scandal around
in Christianity today, but I read at least one hundred
websites a day just sort of looking for the interesting
comment or quote from you know, name your favorite celebrity.
And so there are several celebrities who are very open

(01:02:48):
about their faith and so I will read in Jerusalem
about a half dozen to a dozen of those platforms.
But now I'm intrigued.

Speaker 1 (01:03:02):
Well, they rolled out at Easter time this and social media.
The Bible doesn't say Jesus was nailed to a cross,
and it was to promote an article where some lone
evangelical Bible scholar thinks the crucifixion would have been carried
out with ropes, no nails. And so yeah, they've had
Russell Moore, the publisher is a train wreck. He ruined

(01:03:26):
the SBC. He's doing the same to Christianity today. He
rolled out the writer, and the writer said I am
so sorry and apologized, and I believe the writer. He
offered a heartfelt apology, but it doesn't explain the publication's
just disastrous fall from what Billy Graham founded it to be.
I was just curious. But that leads me to a

(01:03:47):
great segue. You were talking about celebrities and sharing their
faith Jerome. It seems like and you will be the
one to correct me. And I know that you will
if in fact I am wrong on this or expand
on this dramatically. It seems like more and more people
in the world of entertainment, be that sports, be that

(01:04:10):
Hollywood music are being more open about their commitment to
Christ and their faith. Is is that accurate?

Speaker 8 (01:04:24):
I'm not surprised when you know, look at the first
thing that comes to mind when you ask me, that
is the last thing that I think I remember. So
maybe it's a little bit of recency bias, okay, And
that is Jalen Gosh, the Philadelphia Eagles quarterback, Jalen Hurts.

(01:04:44):
Dalen Hurts. And it wasn't just uh, you know, I
you know, thank God, you know that we won this
football game. You know, He's like, I want to give
all honor Christ, uh, without whom I wouldn't be here,
you know what I mean? It was very just just
not your boiler plate. And then the head coach, Nick

(01:05:06):
Sirianni comes right behind him and sort of says the
same thing. And I don't know, Preston, if you know,
I just I don't get Hagita. But I love my
job anyway. I have to watch basically all of the
big award shows and you just never hear any of
the artists, producers, the makeup artists, the actors. You never actually,

(01:05:31):
well I wouldn't say never, but if a thousand times,
you know, nine and ninety nine times, you just don't
hear any reverence to Christ being paid. That said, I
just I feel like I'm seeing more headlines. And again,
I read a lot more headlines than beverage being but

(01:05:53):
I feel like I'm seeing a lot more coverage of
just these mega revivals, particularly on college campus.

Speaker 1 (01:06:00):
Hang on a second, Jerome, I want to pick up
right there, ten past the hour. I got to take
a quick break. We want to preserve the time and
our segments here. Jerome Hudson with me, author of the
Fifty Things books. Just look up fifty Things Jerome Hudson,
you'll find him and entertainment editor at Breitbart dot Com.

(01:06:23):
It's The Morning Show with Preston Scott Buddy of The
Morning Show. Jerome Hudson back with us from you were
talking about what's going on on various college campuses. We've
talked about Ohio State being kind of the epicenter, at
least in the world of college athletics. There was a

(01:06:44):
revival going on before the football season even started, and
then you watch them win the national title and all
those guys taking advantage of that platform to talk about Jesus, right.

Speaker 8 (01:06:56):
And you know, so I guess what I'm to get
at is I don't know if it is sort of
the chicken of the egg is is it is it
happening more or is it being covered more and reported
on more. I'm probably the worst person to be able

(01:07:16):
to sort of discern that because I'm just seeking out information,
you know, twenty hours a day, and so I'm seeing
it myself.

Speaker 1 (01:07:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:07:27):
But but you know, you had the hobby lobby founder
David Green, He's had you know, his his his campaign
now for a few years, by the multi million dollar
ad spots for the Super Bowl what is it called
he gets us? He gets us?

Speaker 1 (01:07:46):
Yeah, and they're they're brutally bad. But whatever it's I mean,
it's bad. It's bad theology.

Speaker 4 (01:07:52):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (01:07:53):
And and but but see that's that's a that's a
sort of a discernment that you'd make, right. And I
don't know if they're I think they're just trying to
at least capture the imagination and the attention of the
surface level person who's like, you know, Christianity curious.

Speaker 1 (01:08:11):
Yeah, because because good theology won't do that, we got
to pludge it up.

Speaker 8 (01:08:17):
But this is this is sort of the most media
space in which sure you just you know, they do billboards,
but again, multi million dollar advise on you most watch event,
you know, entertainment event of the year. I just I
don't know if that was happening thirty years ago. But

(01:08:40):
you also had I think, you know, maybe maybe an
oversaturation of the televangelists. It's just a it's a fascinating
conversation to have in the in the social media age
which we are, where you have influencers, but then you
have Christian based influencers. You know, I think it's I

(01:09:02):
think it's a lot more ubiquitous, just the acceptance of Christ.

Speaker 1 (01:09:06):
It was yesterday on worldwide international television. I mean, it's
not really even arguable that while the Super Bowl is
the event, the game of soccer internationally is the most
watched anywhere in the world. And yesterday Liverpool clinched the
Premier League Championship. And one of the guys that scores
a goal is a kid named Cody Gatpo and Cody

(01:09:29):
Cody runs after he scores his goal, pulls off his
jersey and underneath is a white shirt that says, I
belong to Jesus.

Speaker 8 (01:09:37):
Just you see I see about a half dozen of
those examples a week, and again, I love to see it. Yeah,
but I just don't know. I just don't know if
that was happening in the nineties.

Speaker 5 (01:09:51):
That's my point.

Speaker 8 (01:09:53):
It was happening because I wasn't watching football in the nineties,
you know where. If it was happening, it probably didn't
make it to the American mainstream press.

Speaker 1 (01:10:04):
See. I think the pendulum swinging somewhat. I think there
are more young men in particular embracing Christ and their
faith than I can remember in at least a generation.

Speaker 8 (01:10:19):
This is so fascinating to me because I know that
you know, okay, so you know, since the fifties there's
been like a client I don't know if it's been
precipitous in people going to church sure, which you know
is not the end all be all. You go to
church seven days a week, right, doesn't really put down
a marker of what your faith relationship with Christ is.

(01:10:43):
But I think that is fact. You has been opened up.
And there have been several different parables, the hallowing out
of the middle class, the ninety thousand manufacturing structors that
existed in two thousands that don't exist today. You know
so worked and what it means to be a man
and what it means to be a provider. I think

(01:11:04):
a lot of different variables kind of created this vacuum,
and so you're seeing it in the political space where
women have sort of really taken over the messaging apparatus
of the left and the Democratic Party, pushing men to
the side. Women based issues like abortion have sort of

(01:11:24):
aided and embedded that. And you see Trump winning fifty
percent of the young vote and an overwhelming majority of
men generally, but also Hispanic men and Black men, and
I think, to your pensulum's waning point, faith has also
been a part of sort of this the feeling of

(01:11:48):
that vacuum, if you will. It's like strength and masculinity,
all these things aren't bad.

Speaker 1 (01:11:54):
Hang on a second, Jerome, it's we're laid into the break.
It's seventeen past the hour more with Jerome Hudson. Next,
completely organically the subject matter thus far with my guest

(01:12:17):
Jerome Hudson at brightbar dot com, where he serves as
the entertainment editor. He's the author of the Fifty Things books,
former part of this radio program years ago, and he
survived that but as fate would have it. I had
one article Jerome saved that I wrote your name on
because I wanted you to weigh in on this, and

(01:12:38):
I'm just going to turn you loose to talk about it.
Netflix rolling out their own version of Narnia with the
possibility of a Meryl Streep as asland, what could go wrong?

Speaker 8 (01:12:56):
So the film is directed by Greta Gurrich, probably now
most famous for directing and writing co writing the script
for Barbie. And you know, her politics are no secret,
especially if you read right bart She's she was early
in the Hillary Clinton camp and that's probably enough said

(01:13:20):
right there. Netflix, through the years and in recent years,
had stayed away from a lot of the controversies that
just seemed to to play that company daily, certainly weekly
a decade ago, and this one it just it seems
like it's an unforced era in the sense that you
have a property from a the love you know, de

(01:13:44):
pl cs lewis Christian author. I mean I've heard people
define him that way, but he certainly has tunes that
are held high in the minds of people who are Christians,
and the Chronicles of Narnia is one of them. And
so hirre Netflix hiring a director who's been open about

(01:14:05):
her left wing politics, who's infused different versions of that
in her most popular films in the past, to helm
this project, which the last time it was made O Gosha,
I want to say twenty years ago was haroldon right.
It at Box Office Records. It was an international blockbuster, and.

Speaker 1 (01:14:27):
So there in my DVD collection, say it again, They're
in my DVD collection, right, And you.

Speaker 8 (01:14:38):
Know, lastly, what I'll say is, you know Meryl Street
sort of being rumored ass as you know I a
portraying Aslon was. I didn't believe it originally. I like
to be as completely as can It's completely honest with
the audience possible. I'm like, this is in my business,

(01:15:00):
like we don't I don't necessarily, I'm I'm usually not
the first to report something right. And so if I
get a headline that says Meryl Street, who is just
very toxic, I would say, with probably a lot of
the center right people who would who would show up
to watch this Netflix Narnia version YEP being being rumored

(01:15:22):
to play Asthmon and like this can't be real. And
then some of the trade publications start to leak it
which bolstered it. And I'm like, Okay, this this might
be real. And I actually don't know if he has
the part or not. But if if Meryl Street does
portray the Will of Last Long in the Netflix Narnia movie,

(01:15:42):
I mean, it's it's a war footing, you know, in
my mind, because I just again I could be wrong.

Speaker 4 (01:15:49):
I try to.

Speaker 8 (01:15:51):
You know, you haven't seen a movie. I haven't seen
the script. Nothing's leaked. But it doesn't look good. It
certainly doesn't look good.

Speaker 1 (01:15:58):
Jerome, tell me this. We got about we gotta minute
and a half lear here before we gotta go. How
is it possible? I mean, are the works of CS Lewis?
Are the Narnia chronicles just open to anybody to take?
Does no one have to sign off on who does
what with it?

Speaker 8 (01:16:15):
Yeah?

Speaker 7 (01:16:15):
I don't.

Speaker 8 (01:16:15):
I'm not granularly familiar with the Narnia and the CS
Lewis the estate and the intricacies of that. But generally,
when you have an electoral property like say Superman or Batman,
the rights to the character belong to the creator's, a
state or the family right. So they generally contractually have

(01:16:38):
to make a new Superman or a new Batman every
five to ten years. And I would assume that Netflix
they may have just bought everything Narnia. Maybe not everything
CS Lewis, but everything Narnia, the licensing, all the IP

(01:17:00):
and and so this could be the first of you know,
a few movies or the first movie and then a series.
Boy huh. It just it's confounding, and not a lot
of things surprised me, And this one so far is

(01:17:21):
a head scratcher for me. It really is that Looks
is run by really smart people. They's done an incredible
job throwing that brand. They're in football now, they're in
football now. I mean, they're doing live comedy shows live.
And this one is just like it's like it's like
the Titanic steering purposefully steering into what could be a

(01:17:44):
massive iceberg. Right, yeah, but I'll wait and see. I'll
wait and see.

Speaker 1 (01:17:49):
Always good to visit with you, my friend. We'll talk
again next month. Thank you.

Speaker 7 (01:17:53):
I love you so much, Love me.

Speaker 1 (01:17:54):
Too, all right, Darrel Mudgson with me this morning confounded him.
Twenty eight Past the Hour, Brightbar dot com entertainment page
and the Fifty Things books. Twenty eighteen, Netflix acquired the

(01:18:21):
rights to all seven books of CS Lewis's The Chronicles
of Narnia. Multi year deal with the CS Lewis Company
allows Netflix to develop a new series and films based
on the Narnia universe. The deal was the first time
a single company held the rights to all seven Narnia novels.

(01:18:45):
If it was for the propagation of the gospel and
the message of CS Lewis contained in his books, they
have rights of refusal on how those books are portrayed.
If it was to make a buck, they just sold
the rights and they don't care. I don't have the answer.
I don't know which it is. I've read articles in

(01:19:05):
the break from quoting his step son, he was interviewed
by Rolling Stone magazine in October of twenty eighteen. But Dad,
gum it. As long as you maintain editorial control of

(01:19:28):
the material, and you know, a little creative license, that's fine.
As long as the theme and the reason why I
have the DVDs of the three the trilogy is because
they were faithful to the C. S. Lewis Chronicles of Narnia.
I thought the very first one something the Witch and

(01:19:56):
the Wardrobe, I mean, I thought was just spectacular. I
mean really thought they were great, really good, really good,
really good. Anyway, not the big story in the press box,
just a little carry over judges blocking the Trump efforts
to eradicate DEI from schools. This is more district judges

(01:20:18):
thinking they can hold sway over a nation that it's absurd.
If you want a district judge the old sway in
that district whatever, but beyond that, no way, no chance.
So the fight. And it's so crazy because the reasoning

(01:20:42):
is because they say, well, Biden's administration said it was fine,
and they encouraged DEI and and and even though Biden
connected funding to DEI and you know, rolling out the
DEI mandates reversing that is somehow wrong. Look, the Department

(01:21:03):
of Education has had strings attached to all of its
funding forever. You have to do this to be eligible
for the funding. And this is why education choice is
steamrolling across the country. People are sick of it, just
sick of it. And the cries of racism. After Shador

(01:21:25):
Sanders gets drafted late in the NFL draft as opposed
to early, where he thought he should be, he's called
himself a legend, dude, really a legend. It's just it's

(01:21:46):
it's so funny. I'm gonna I'm gonna qualify this in
just second, forty minutes past the hour back with more
of the morning show.

Speaker 5 (01:22:00):
At that time on news Radio one hundred point seven
double USLA.

Speaker 1 (01:22:10):
The claim by some that Shador Sanders sliding down in
the draft was because it was racism. The first round
picks thirty two of them four were white. That's eighty

(01:22:34):
seven point seventy five percent were black or mixed multi ethnic.
I'm just oh, spare me. The first pick black, the
second pick black, the third pick black. It's insane. I

(01:23:00):
am all about calling out racism where it exists, as
long as we call it both ways. We got to
call it both ways. But just ridiculous. Hey, I don't
know if you've seen this. There is a new Disney robot.

(01:23:35):
Disney Research is behind a AI robot that mimics human emotions.
It's a little guy. Just think of Wally Wally, Remember
Wally oh Man, Wally broke hearts, melted hearts. But it's

(01:23:58):
able to replicate natural gestures and delivered actions with striking accuracy.
It learns by observing and mimicking human operators who guide
its emotional responses during interactions, and then over time, because
of AI, the robot becomes capable of engaging with people
on its own, making interaction happen on its own, back

(01:24:23):
and forth. Would you want something like that?

Speaker 4 (01:24:32):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:24:33):
Now, for some people that are real isolationists, this is
this is gold. For some people, they don't have to
interact with actual human beings. This is like a slightly

(01:24:53):
more intelligent version of having a dog. Some of you
may be a cat, some of you are real cat people.
I get that. I'm not gonna get into a cat
versus dog thing. Everyone knows dogs are far more capable
than cats of doing things. But I'm just tasing. I'm

(01:25:13):
stop the emails right now. I'm just having some fun,
even though I definitely prefer dogs over cats. But that said,
that's just my personal preference. But for some people an
emotional support robotic figure, would you want it cartoon like

(01:25:34):
a La Wally or would you like it human looking?
I would definitely if I had to embrace robotic technology,
give me the robot looking thing. I don't want something
mimicking a human like you see him in these shows
kind of creepy. And for some it's like there are

(01:25:56):
some dudes that are like, you know, yeah, I mean
there there, it's weird. You know, robotic robotic companions. How
about if I put it that way, you know what
I'm saying. Yeah, no, no, no, no, that's that's creepy

(01:26:16):
to the core. Give me one that looks like a
robot that's kind of comical and cartoonish. That'd be kind
of fun. That'd be kind of cool to have one
of those running around carrying a tray full of food
to your friends on a pencil. You know, here's some dip.

(01:26:40):
I'd love to do the voice for something like that.
That'd be fun. Just and maybe a robot that did
different voices.

Speaker 6 (01:26:47):
Honey, I'm coming over with your blue mcguay. The penzels
are in the oven.

Speaker 1 (01:26:58):
Forty six minutes past the hour. What are the odds?

Speaker 6 (01:27:28):
Huh?

Speaker 1 (01:27:31):
You and Valentine thirty six of Sali Hull, England back
in February discovery that his black twenty sixteen Honda Civic
Type R had been swiped stolen from his overnight parking space,

(01:27:51):
and he was, obviously, as we all would, you'd hope
to get your car back because it's a it's a hassle, right,
I would have sagine it is a massive hassle to
go through replacing a stolen car. He said, sure enough,
I found one for sale, same color, same year. In fact,

(01:28:13):
it had the same custom exhaust system I had put
in mine. So he bought it twenty six thousand dollars,
I mean totally different VIN number, different license plates. But
as he drove it, he started noticing some things. There

(01:28:36):
was a tent peg in the back, some Christmas tree
pines in the boot, the locking wheel nut was in
a Tesco sandwich bag that's where he kept his And
then he noticed the GPS on board had previously been
to his house, his parents' house, and other places that

(01:29:04):
he frequented. And then he realized he bought his stolen
car back. Ouch ouch cabbibel baby. That stings, but think

(01:29:25):
about it. They were able to switch out the VIN
number and put a bogus VIN number in This thing.

Speaker 5 (01:29:37):
Brought to you by Barono Heating and Air. It's the
Morning show one on WFLA.

Speaker 1 (01:29:45):
What are the odds Our verse today? Came from Philippians two.
We went through verses five, six, seven, and eight. That's
where we started the broadcast. Uh cries of racism Sanders. No,
Shador isn't entitled, just self absorbed young man with a

(01:30:07):
circus that surrounds him, called his dad and his own
attitude and ego, and NFL teams just they weren't going
to waste the first, second, third round pick on him.
They waited to the fifth round. We'll see what happens.
I don't wish bad on anybody. Well, that's not entirely true.

(01:30:31):
I wanted Barack Obama to fail, and I wanted Joe
Biden to fail. There are people I want to fail.
But i'm you know, if he makes it, that's fine,
but he's writing a lot of checks that his skill
set better be able to cash or he is going
to come out looking really bad. Dad even worse because

(01:30:52):
Dad insisted on the University of Colorado retire his number.
He didn't win him a national title. He barely won
fifty percent of his games. But we're retiring hiss Jersey. Okay,
it's not racism, friends, When eighty seven and three quarters
percent of the opening round draft is all minority and oh,

(01:31:16):
by the way, eighty percent of everybody picked in the
first five rounds judge blocking several judges blocking trumps they're
all district judges attempts to eradicate DEI from schools. We
talked about Christianity today. What a train wreck that magazine is.
Should we buy it? I'll put in a few bucks.
Skinny talk, be advised weight loss, bad weight loss ideas

(01:31:40):
coming on TikTok, and kids are falling for it. Tomorrow
Richard Stern of Heritage, a little crypto one oh one.
We'll have animal stories at a manly minute. Can't wait
to join you.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

On Purpose with Jay Shetty

I’m Jay Shetty host of On Purpose the worlds #1 Mental Health podcast and I’m so grateful you found us. I started this podcast 5 years ago to invite you into conversations and workshops that are designed to help make you happier, healthier and more healed. I believe that when you (yes you) feel seen, heard and understood you’re able to deal with relationship struggles, work challenges and life’s ups and downs with more ease and grace. I interview experts, celebrities, thought leaders and athletes so that we can grow our mindset, build better habits and uncover a side of them we’ve never seen before. New episodes every Monday and Friday. Your support means the world to me and I don’t take it for granted — click the follow button and leave a review to help us spread the love with On Purpose. I can’t wait for you to listen to your first or 500th episode!

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Dateline NBC

Dateline NBC

Current and classic episodes, featuring compelling true-crime mysteries, powerful documentaries and in-depth investigations. Follow now to get the latest episodes of Dateline NBC completely free, or subscribe to Dateline Premium for ad-free listening and exclusive bonus content: DatelinePremium.com

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.