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November 12, 2025 31 mins
John F Kennedy's grandson, Jack Schlossberg, has launched a bid for a U.S. House seat. Mark has some special news to tell you regarding the hit TV show Everybody Loves Raymond! Mark takes your calls! Mark interviews author Ann Coulter. Is there a security issue, depending on which political party you belong to, that determines the amount of protection you receive when speaking at college campuses? Ann believes MSNBC will be ok after it rebrands itself this weekend to "MSNOW" because the network fuels Democrats to act crazy against Republicans.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
The Mark Simone Show on seven Arms.

Speaker 2 (00:06):
Well, you know what, they get to this hour. We'll
get to everybody Loves Raymond. In a second, we'll get
to Epstein, We'll get to Mom Donnie. Just want to
warn everybody there's a horrible, horrible guy who's unleashing a
political campaign. He wants to run for Jerry Nadler's house seat.
It's Jack Schlossberg. He's the only grandson of John F. Kennedy.

(00:30):
He is the son of Caroline Kennedy. He's just an awful,
awful kid with He's had an Instagram account and a
TikTok where he just said the most disgusting, awful things.
He's to the left of Mom Donnie. He's just a horrible, horrible,
awful guy. Here's the veteran political strategist, Hank Schinkoff says,

(00:54):
the whole idea of his campaign is ridiculous. He has
absolutely no qualify ocations, which makes him perfect to run
as a Democrat. But he's imitating John F. Kennedy Junior
by dressing like him, photographs of him riding his bike
around Manhattan like just like jfk Jr. And jfk Jr.

(01:15):
Was a friend of mine. He was a wonderful guy,
a wonderful guy. His sister I didn't know, but she
always seemed unpleasant whenever you were around her. And her
husband was a terrible guy, just awful. And this is
the son of Caroline and what's the husband's name, Edge Schlossberg,
something like that. So again he's just awful. If you

(01:41):
go back and check his early Instagram YouTube, TikTok saying awful,
terrible thing, he's just an awful guy. He's how old
is see? I think he's a young guy in his twenties.
So he's been inspired by mom Donnie. He wants to
run for Jerry Nadler's old seat. Now I'm saying, how
awfully is Nadler was about as low as you can

(02:02):
sink as a human being. So it's not like it's
not like seats getting any worse. But here's Schlosberg, his
big announcement, two.

Speaker 3 (02:10):
And fifty years after America was founded, And our country
is at a turning point. It's a crisis at every level,
a cost of living crisis sponsored by the Big Beautiful Bill,
historic cuts to social programs, working families rely on healthcare, education.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
Yeah, it this sounds pretty bad. But you got to
watch the early Instagram TikTok stuff he did. It's just him, yell,
it's the real Hammy. This is him being formal, and
he still sounds terrible. This guy is like he's mom
Donnie with half the IQ.

Speaker 3 (02:41):
We deserve better and we can do better. And it
starts with the Democratic Party winning back control of the
House of Representatives. With control of Congress, there's nothing we
can't do without it, We're helpless to a third turn encounter.

Speaker 2 (02:56):
Great, you know, I mean, so, now the problem is
whoever runs against him. Ken go back and get that
old Instagram stuff, those videos he did where he just
says all kinds of awful things and just run them
against him. However, it's Nadler's district. It was jerry mandred,
so no Republican has a shot, but hopefully Democrats will
keep him away from the nomination.

Speaker 3 (03:15):
My name is Jack Flossberg, and I'm running for Congress
to represent my home New York's twelfth Congressional district, where
I was born and raised, where I took the bus
to school every single day from one side of the
district to the other.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
Okay, thank you, can I mentioned that guy that talks
like that, right, Well, he's being formal. You got to
go back and watch his TikTok on Instagram where he's
just raging like a like a nut. Hey mom. Donnie's
been doing a few interviews, one yesterday where he sounded
more definite about keeping Jessica tish. You know, he said

(03:53):
the earlier interviews he was open to it, but this
was more like, that's my plan. My plan is to
sew We'll see what she wants to do. If he's
going to try to take control of her or push
her to do things she doesn't want, she'll leave in
a second. She doesn't need to stay there, so we'll see.
We'll see what happens with that. He also had with him. Now,

(04:14):
this is a TV interview with Channel four. He's being
interviewed and he's going to sit right there and do
the interview. But next to him is Dean full of Han.
Keep an eye on this guy. This is his first
deputy mayor, and it was interesting that he had him
sit with him at the interview. So this guy's going
to play a big role. Now, this is not the
guy you want running city hall either, because he's a
crazy left winger. But he was Deblasio's first deputy mayor

(04:38):
for many years. So as we keep telling you, this
could be just a repeat of Deblasio, which wasn't great.
Obviously was terrible. New York declined under Deblasio, but we
got through it. We got through eight years at Deblasio.
So he's brought in this guy full of Hand and
had him right next to him in the interview. And
I noticed tonight Full of Hand's doing his own in

(05:00):
interview New York one. Nobody sees New York one. But
it's interesting that that he would let Full of Hand
do all these interviews. So this guy's gonna have a
lot of clout. Now, the bad news of this fool
of hand Dean full of Hand, however you say his name,
he's got a lot of clout in Albany, nobody better
connected plugged into the legislature of the Assembly. So if

(05:22):
you need to get stuff passed, this is a guy
that can get stuff done up there. So that means
Mom Donnie would have some influence up there with him. Now.
The other interesting thing is Mam Donnie actually asked about Trump.
Mam Donnie said he will reach out to Trump. He
said it's a crucial relationship. This is quite a concession

(05:43):
on his part. Remember before the election, I'll fight Trump,
I'll battle Trump. I would never talk to you. Well,
now the election's over, he says, it's a crucial relationship,
I will reach out to him. So when they reported it,
well you talk to Trump, Well, I'll reach out to
the White House. Now what all that mean. Well, if
he tries to talk to Trump, I don't think Trump

(06:03):
would talk to him. Usually, the way this stuff goes,
he'll reach out to the White House and get a meeting,
but the meeting will be with someone else first. Probably
Susie Wiles will meet with him. Chief of staff. She'll
have the meeting with him, and then they'll see how
that goes, and then that will lead to probably not
a meeting with Trump because neither of them would want

(06:24):
that photograph out. But if it goes well with Susie Wiles,
it will lead to a phone call with Trump and
they'll talk and see if they can listen. They're not
going to be friends, but they'll see if they can
come out to some kind of an arrangement, some kind
of relationship where they could at least be civil with
each other. He was asked about parades and things. You know,

(06:45):
he didn't show up for the Veteran's Day parade. Is
he going to go to parades? You got to remember
he certainly you're not gonna seem with the Israeli Day parade.
There's a lot of parades you won't see this guy
at and he was asked about it.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
There are many parades that I would not be attending
because I'd be focusing on the work of leading the city.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Yeah, he's focused, focused. You want to see some focus,
watch this guy. But the parades are on Sunday. You
don't have to focus on Sunday. And what he's really
saying is I hate these people. I'm not going to
their parade. Hey, Mikey. Cheryl who won the governor's race,
there's a lot of people analyzing how she did it.
People thought Sheitarelly was a great candidate. He was Okay,

(07:22):
he wasn't a great candidate. The truth of the matter,
she had a lot more charm than he did, despite
her lying, despite her insider trading, despite her Navy scandal,
despite her her horrible positions on things, her terrible positions,
despite her bad record. Still, you know, even when she
was lying and conning it, she still had more charm

(07:44):
than Schlosburg. He was kind of a charmless guy. I'm
sure he's a nice guy. He just didn't have the
personality you need. But Politico and others doing these examinations
of how she won, her incredible strategy with social media,
her staying on met her media strategy. Now here's what's
going to happen twenty twenty eight. Looks at this point

(08:08):
like Gavin Newsom is way out in front right now,
he's the nominee in twenty twenty eight. Of course, a
lot can happen. It's a couple of years away, so
a lot could happen. But right now it's Gavin Newsom
and Mikey Cheryl wants to be the VP candidate. Newsom
Cheryl California, New Jersey, West Coast, East Coast ticket. That's

(08:29):
what they're looking at. Newsom way out in front. Now,
this is what they call the shadow primary. It doesn't
mean much now now you go back in a lot
of campaigns, there was one guy that was way out
in front, the obvious one. But that was so early
that by the time it got to that election year,
somebody else rose up. But one thing about being the

(08:49):
shadow primary winner is you can raise a lot of money.
So Newsom will spend a lot of time raising money
and look for Mikey Cheryl to get involved with Newsom
somehow she wants to be the VP candidate. Just heard
on the news Eric Adams said he will be traveling.
He's going to Israel and he wants to do more travel,

(09:10):
and he wants to write a book, and he wants
to do a documentary. And he said he's going to
go back to school and get his doctor at a PhD.
I don't know that way he'd be a doctor. I'm
doctor Eric. It's not going to sound good. First of all,
anytime you hear PhD, you'll lose all respect for the person.

(09:32):
It means they spent too many years in school. If
you said to somebody, Hey, the guy over there, he's
a PhD. Do you say to your oh, I got
to talk to him. No, you run the other way.
Who wants to talk to him? But Adams will find
things to do. He's going to do a lot of traveling.
He's very good at profiting off other countries, you know, Turkey, whatever,

(09:55):
So he'll be doing a lot of traveling, see what
he can pick up over there. Everybody loves Raymond. I
love that show. I still watch it every night. They
have these marathons every night. Everybody loves Raymond marathons. And
I could watch that show over and if it's absolutely timeless,
it holds up well. You know, I was trying to think,

(10:15):
why does this hold up so much better than other sitcoms. Well,
the guys that put it together, Ray Romano and Phil
what's his name Rosenthal and the other guys say one thing.
They say they were very careful not to put any
technology in the show. They don't show him on the phone.
You never see him pick up his phone once. All
they have to. But you generally don't see any computers,

(10:37):
any phones, you don't see the TV, you don't see
any of that. So and they did that deliberately because
they didn't want to look outdated. You know, when you
watch Seinfeld and he's got an answering machine and a
you know, a regular desk telephone, and you see his computer,
it's like a primitive, primitive computer. It looks so outdated,

(10:58):
but they were very careful to keep it that way,
so it looks absolutely timeless. You can watch it over
and over again. But they're going to do this thirtieth
anniversary sure, yeah, believe it or not. Thirty years since
Everybody Loves Raymond started nineteen ninety six. This special will
be ninety minutes now. One reason they're doing this is
TV has run out of money. Primetime TV has very

(11:20):
few viewers. A primetime show used to get twenty thirty
million viewers. Now it's one million, two million, so that's
less revenue, that's a smaller budget. All they can afford
now are game shows, and these documentaries are cheap to do.
Last night, you might have seen that Golden Girls special reunion.
Well they're no longer with us, but people talking about it.

(11:41):
This Everybody Loves Raymond will be a reunion. They rebuilt
the or they found the original set the living room
in the house, and they're going to all go back.
The cast gets back together. Now. The problem is the
two of the most key players, the mother and the father,
are dead. They're no longer so they're not going to
be in it, but there'll be a lot of clips.
It'll be ninety minutes long. They got to fill time.

(12:04):
It's really cheap to do these reunion shows. Ninety minutes
will fill an hour and a half. So they can't
afford to do dramas or sitcoms anymore, too expensive to do.
But November twenty fourth, keep an eye out for that. Hey,
you ever use open table to make a reservation. A
lot of people use open table. You know they're spying

(12:26):
on you. Open table keeps track of everything you do.
So you make a reservation, open table, you go to
the restaurant. You do this all the time. Open table
compiles data from the restaurants. What you ordered, how you behaved,
if you gave the restaurant, any problems the staff, any
problems where you rude, where you're a good tipper, what

(12:47):
did you spend? All that kind of stuff goes into
a big, big open table file and then you kind
of get a rating. So when you make the reservation,
the restaurant can look you over. If you're a real problem,
they can cancel your reservation, or they can look at it.
See what kind of customer you are? Always a big drinker,

(13:07):
big wine drinker. Oh there's all kinds of fancy went, well,
we'll see them next to the wine cellar. That kind
of stuff. It's kind of like uber You know you
got a rating the uh you know the driver. Sometimes
you get a you try to get an uber. One
person tries, oh, there are no cars available. It's twenty minutes.
Someone else tries one minute, they'll be right there. It's

(13:29):
because that person has a higher rating as a passenger.
The uber driver sees your rating. You got a five,
we'll be right there. You got a two. Let somebody
else take this one. So just remember that when you
use open table. So if you're going to go to
a restaurant, get drunk and be rude, make the reservation
on the phone, don't put it on an open table.

(13:50):
That way it won't be recorded there. So hey, we'll
take some calls in a minute. Eight hundred three two
one zero seven ten is the number. Hey, check out
my instagram if you didn't see it. The actual Johnny
Carson desk from the Tonight Show. The actual set was
at the Paley Museum, a wonderful museum you should visit.
But I went over there and sat in the Carson desk,

(14:11):
the actual Johnny Carson desk. The pictures up on Instagram.
Mark Simone Nyc at Instagram. Mark Simone Nyc at Instagram.
Also I'll be on Cudlow later today between four and
five on the Fox Business Network. But we'll take some
calls next eight hundred three two one zero seven ten.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
Now more Mark Simone on sevent tenor.

Speaker 2 (14:38):
Well, let's take some calls. Let's go to Oh, Richie Gold,
the great comedian then Connecticut Richie Gold? How are you
Grood Mark?

Speaker 5 (14:47):
How are you used to taking my call? Great show
as usual? As listened to Alan's wid great comedy writer.
I remember him going back years when he used to
work for Saturday Night Lives.

Speaker 2 (14:58):
Now he's writing on music Broadway play about Rodney Dainsfield.
You must have worked with Rodney.

Speaker 5 (15:04):
Yeah, let me tell you something coincially how thinking minds
comic minds parallel? Tony? You know Tony Bovoka.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Was Tonya who is the owner of Dangerfields. Who's uh
out there in Long Island lives near Bill O'Reilly? Actually
Tony Bovaqua, great guy.

Speaker 5 (15:20):
Yeah, that's right. So listen to this. Tony and I
have been working on a movie script talking about writing
about Rodney Dangerfields and the birth of the Dangerfield Club.
And it has all the elements of of what happened
to the club that people that try to influence it
one way or the others. To talk about Rodney's history
and Tony how they got together working the you know

(15:41):
the small rooms. Yeah, there's a they downstairs. Blah blah blah.
So it just shows you out, was mister Alabel, And
I said, Tony and I are writing a movie about this.
He's doing a Broadway play and Tony and I are
writing a movie about Rodney and Tony how they came
together and developed this idea for danger.

Speaker 2 (15:59):
Ton A Vaca was a bass player and they played together,
Rodney and him in the living room. And when Rodney
opened the club, he got Tony to be the the
guy run the club, and he turned out to be
brilliant at running a club, a comedy club.

Speaker 5 (16:11):
So, yeah, you used to hang out here. I remember you, Rodney.
Everybody used to hang out at that club. He was
the in place to be and opened the nineteen sixty
nine and a lamp was fifteen years straight. So you
were there during a hey day. I remember Mark.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Well, uh yeah, keeping well, keep in touch with me,
or I'll put you together with his wife Belle. Maybe
you guys can work together or something like that.

Speaker 5 (16:32):
You never know, because Tony the anxious and he knows that.
In fact, Zwibel used to rife for Roder So there's
a whole views.

Speaker 2 (16:40):
All right, well we'll we'll work out a meeting for
all everybody get involved in a richie. Thanks for calling.
Let's go to uh also Connecticut, Gideon and Greenwich. Is
this Gideon Fountain?

Speaker 6 (16:52):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (16:52):
I know this guy, Yes you do.

Speaker 7 (16:55):
In fact, I saw I just ran into John Katzimatidi
the Pierre Hotel for that Hudson Institute. Yea yearly event
with Rubert Murdoch. With there, I said a cat's matins.
You should acquire Mark Simone. But of course you have
to stay at w R.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
This is iHeart. This is like being in the New
York Yankees. This is the biggest best radio company in
the world. Yeah, don't you don't you have the radio
station in Greenwich?

Speaker 5 (17:23):
I do.

Speaker 7 (17:24):
In fact I even said to thanks Mark. If I
said to John, hey you want to buy a radio station,
he wanted to know how many watts and you know
that kind of thing. So maybe he's interested.

Speaker 2 (17:32):
That's a good station. W g H, very good station.
What's the guy there, Bob.

Speaker 7 (17:36):
We've had you, We've had you there, I've Ben.

Speaker 2 (17:38):
I guess who's that nice guy that works there, Bob Small.

Speaker 7 (17:41):
Bob Small. October twelfth is Bob Small Day in Greenwich
every year.

Speaker 2 (17:46):
All right, well, thanks for calling great stuff. Let's go
to uh. Let's go to Aaron in Indianapolis. Aaron, how
you doing?

Speaker 5 (17:55):
Good morning?

Speaker 6 (17:56):
Mark?

Speaker 5 (17:57):
Speaking of Rodney Dangerfield, I have the play as seeing
him do a couple of shows in Indianapolis back in
his day.

Speaker 7 (18:04):
And oh those were just awesome shows.

Speaker 2 (18:07):
And you didn't have to wander backstage, did you?

Speaker 5 (18:10):
No?

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Oh? Good good, Because when Rodney was on the road,
things were going on back there you wouldn't want to
know about. Rodney had quite a private life going on there.

Speaker 5 (18:20):
That's right, that's right.

Speaker 2 (18:24):
I'm editing myself. I'm uh, well, one day we'll tell
stories about Rodney, but not not right now. Let's go
to uh Vincent and Brooklyn Vincent, how.

Speaker 6 (18:34):
Are you doing? Good morning, Mark. You're cracking me up
as usual.

Speaker 2 (18:38):
I'll tell you what Rodney I don't want to. He
was playing a big place in Massachusetts and he told
the agent I need a bed in the dressing room,
and guy, my god, the guy arranged for a bed,
but the agent called him he said, listen, there's a
problem that it's right next to the kitchen. It's very noisy.
I don't know if you can be able to sleep.
Dangers sleep. I'm not gonna be sleeping.

Speaker 6 (18:59):
He's gonna ted Kennedy. Will added Chris Doddy, you know
what I mean, Okay, Mark. Last week a lot of
these crazy Democrats were making the New Jersey election and
Virginia election a rebuttal of Trump's policies. It was never
such thing. Mclaroney, Jack CHATTERERELLI could run a much better campaign.

(19:26):
He was trying to stick too many points into like
fifteen seconds. None of these candidates, even in New York,
really explain why things are very high, why rent is high,
why things are seemingly unaffordable, and win some sears. Although

(19:47):
a good candidate, she was not a Glen Youngkin. When
Glen Youngkin would go on stage, literally he reminded me
in many ways like Johnny Cossidy. He would own the stage.
And that's probably because the guy is a businessman. He's
used to being around people, high powered people selling his

(20:10):
products and everything. Mark, yesterday we spoke about Curtis saying
he's gonna stay in the fight. He's gonna He's in
it to win it. Mark Curtis has to say that
if Curtis doesn't stay in the fight with the Guardian Angels,
he will become irrelevant. He's almost irrelevant.

Speaker 2 (20:32):
Curtis is never irrelevant. Curtis has been a fixture for
thirty years.

Speaker 6 (20:36):
No, I'm not. I don't mean in the fact that
people are gonna forget who he is. But right now
that's the only thing he's got.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
You know, I should have say it, but I hate
to say. But when a guy like Mamdani comes into office,
it's good for Curtis. Becau's more crime, he can be
more of a time. No, it's good for us. It's
like another pandemic. You know, we got our highest ratings
when pandemic people are scared. They turned to the radio.

Speaker 6 (21:00):
Exactly, he could be like, he could be like a pitbull.
He could all be nipping at his ankles all the time.
And that's where it's really good. But you know, the
first time I got a few seconds, all right, the
first time the Democrats are won Virginia, they would claim
that Virginia is the southernmost northern state and that when

(21:23):
a Republican winn it. They would say, it's the southernmost
northern state.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
That's a good point. All right, Vincent, thanks for calling,
great call. Got to take a break for the news,
get caught up on everything, and then when we come back,
and Culter will be with us next on seven to ten.
Wr Mark her Well and Culture the best selling author
of the great Columnists. Make sure you follow her on Twitter. Hey,

(21:51):
even better substack where you can see she's got interviews
and podcasts and all sorts of stuff and culture dot
sub stack and Culter, how you doing fantastic?

Speaker 4 (22:03):
How are you Marximone?

Speaker 2 (22:05):
I'm good, I'm good. Hey, let me this. You see Berkeley,
this's a terrible college. There's a turning point event there.
Yesterday Antifa gets violent, goes crazy. University didn't have enough protection,
everybody says when it's a liberal speaker, to make sure
there's plenty of security. But not for this one. Justice

(22:26):
Department now taking a look at going after them. You
speak at all these colleges, what is wrong with them?

Speaker 4 (22:32):
Well, you remember, they should have sent the nationally they
Trump should have sent the national guard when Berkeley shut
down my speech, and I think think it was twenty seventeen.
I went back the next year, but I had the
Proud Boys protecting me. That was November twenty nineteen, and
several thousand ANTIFA showed up. Yeah, don't expect local lawn enforcement.

(23:01):
I've directed not to protect or the campus security to
protect you. Trump should have done this long ago. It
should have done it when it started. Listened to Senator
Tom Cotton, this is these these are state universities. That's
why we have civil rights laws because states, certain states

(23:21):
back then, the Democrat states of the old Confederacy, weren't
enforcing the rights of black Americans. That's why we have
the ability of the federal government. Well, even from the
beginning of our country, the very reason we have a
constitution and a strong president was to put down mob actions,
criminal behavior in our country. Surprisingly enough, the founding fathers

(23:45):
were not thinking about, you know, what can we do
to help Syria or Ukraine. It was to protect our country.
And you know, Trump should have been doing this from
the beginning, and it wouldn't keep happening. I'm glad he's
sending in national goal hard to protect ice agents. But
when this happens on college campuses, particularly college campuses, that

(24:06):
are state institutions, though according to Supreme Court rulings, even
private colleges have to have to But be well, all
everybody has to obey federal law. But federal troops could
go in and enforce things against private university because of
all the money they've taken student daid and research money.

Speaker 2 (24:25):
Well, the good news is Antife has now been officially
declared a terrorist group. This Department of Justice letters are
going after UC Berkeley for allowing terrorism on the campus.
And this will allow the Department Justice a really step
in and do something.

Speaker 4 (24:39):
But well, they ought to. This is something I mean,
this is why a lot of people like me support
this idea of America First, we're constantly solving the rest
of the world's problems. We're constantly getting Americans. The news media, oh,
focus on what's going on in Europe. Now, what's going

(25:00):
on in the Middle East, and what's going on in
the Balkans. Can we please pay attention to what's going
on to Americans because our country is in trouble and
this is what we expected Trump to do. Put our
interests first.

Speaker 2 (25:12):
Yes, the shutdown Democrats what a victory? Huh? Could you
tell me what they achieved with the shutdown, yet it did.

Speaker 4 (25:21):
Not work well and the argument they're making and Republicans
are going to have to learn to navigate this. Although sorry,
let's let's pause for a moment to celebrate what knuckleheads
the Democrats look like. No one has ever wont to
shut down, so I don't know why they would think
they could win this one. But they're thinking, oh, because
they want to keep subsidizing Americans healthcare. I've always thought

(25:46):
Republicans are too afraid of this issue. Their voters are
not made up of welfare recipients. There may be some
Trump voters who have had your ali in public assistance
for a time or but this permanent underclass, just generation
after generation after generation living on welfare, having other Americans

(26:07):
pay for them, pay for their food, pay for their
health care. I think senators like Josh Holly are making
a big mistake acting like, oh, yeah, this is the
Trump base. No, you're insulting the Trump base. It isn't true,
and I think most Americans are sick of paying for
other people's health care food. If the snap benefits issue, man,

(26:31):
thank god for Twitter. It has been all over Twitter
showing you know, obviously quite able bodied people, and a
lot of the men threatening to go loose and rob
stores if they don't get their snap benefits anymore. And
I'm thinking, if they have that much, I mean you
can see them time. They have enough, plenty of energy.
It look like strong young men. Surely they could get

(26:52):
a job. Dotto for the women who, if anything, could
stand to lose a few pounds. And healthcare. Nobody cared
about me losing my healthcare under Obamacare. One thing you
will notice as a difference between Republicans and Democrats. When
Republicans say they will solve an issue, and do solve

(27:12):
an issue, that issue goes away forever. They actually do
solve it. For example, Ronald Reagan ending the Cold War,
defeating the Soviet Union, puff gone, Soviet Union is no more,
Rudy Giuliani solving crime not only in New York City
but basically across America. Well, then Republicans lose that as
an issue to run on. We start running on it again. Now.

(27:34):
Cut taxes. Reagan did it. They never went back up
to close to the level they were before he came in.
When Democrats solve a problem like health care or poor people,
they just make the problem so much bigger, and it's
just it was always amazing to me watching the Democratic primaries,
you know, every four years since Obama, and their big

(27:57):
subject is Americans can't get health caare. It's a disaster. Yeah, okay,
you guys said Obamacare would fix this and you made
it worse, so we can't get back to them. That's
the one premise we need to start with. And then
Republicans have to figure out how to do this in
a fair way and stop giving better healthcare to illegal
aliens and welfare recipients than hardworking Americans.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
They can't claim Obamacare is working anymore because if it was,
it wouldn't be an issue right now. We wouldn't have
better shutdown over it. We wouldn't be talking about it
if it was working.

Speaker 4 (28:28):
So right, everyone just pretends that they they don't remember Obamacare.

Speaker 2 (28:33):
Happy do we lose her? Oh there you are, you're
still there right?

Speaker 4 (28:39):
Yeah, something happened, we lost.

Speaker 2 (28:41):
You for a second. Hey we only got a minute left.
Friday's the final day of MSNBC. It then becomes broken hearted.
It then becomes ms now from a tiny studio that
got kicked out of it. What do you think will
they survive.

Speaker 4 (28:56):
They're kidding. I can't see bit Repetitive mentioned that to you. Mark,
it's a little tough, even for those of us who
enjoy laughing at liberals. I don't think ms I was
kind of noticing recently, like with a shutdown, MSNBC is
not good for the Democrats. We really should hope that
it continues. They they represent the far progressive left. They

(29:19):
are you know, tickled pink over Zorhan Mom Dommie. I
think they are taking the Democratic Party in a direction
that is not good for the Democrats but is good
for Republicans. So maybe we should try to get MSNBC
a little more, a little more visibility.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
Oh very good, Yeah, very good insight into that. Well,
everybody check out and Culture on Twitter. Make sure you
follow on Twitter. But even better as substacks. He's got
columns and videos and interviews and podcasts and all sorts
of stuff. Go to and Culter dot substack dot com
and culture dot substack dot com and Culture. Thanks for
being with us.

Speaker 4 (29:57):
Good to talk to you, Mark Simone, Bye.

Speaker 2 (29:58):
Bay I take care. Hey, don't forget Jimmy Falis now
with us every night nine to midnight. Very good show.
Funny interesting every night nine to midnight. Right here on
seven to ten, WR.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
Give WR a bre said on the iHeartRadio app to
hear mar Simone and all the WR hosts in an instance.
Now back to the Mark Simon show on wor.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
Well, the House should vote later today on the shutdown.
That could be the end of it by tonight, by
six seven o'clock tonight, that may have the vote. And
you know the problem is getting everybody there. They have
to vote in person, which means they all are somewhere else.
They all have to fly back to DC, and the
shutdown caused air traffic delays, so because of their own shutdown,

(30:47):
it's tough for them to get there to end the
shutdown with the vote. But they should get it done
tonight and then well that won't be the end of it.
They'll they'll have to do this again in January. So
but I think Democrats learn their lesson not to go
through this again. Hey, we're out of time. I'll be
on Cudlow this afternoon between four and five, somewhere in

(31:10):
the middle of the show.

Speaker 7 (31:11):
There.

Speaker 2 (31:12):
Also check out my instagram if you want to see
Johnny Carson's actual desk. It was here in New York,
the chair, the couch from the set. Take a look
at my Instagram, Mark Simone NYC at Instagram, make sure
you follow me on Twitter and all of that stuff.
Don't go away. Buck and Clay are coming up next
with a great show for you. Then the most listened
to radio show in America, Sean Hannity. He'll be here

(31:35):
at three o'clock. I'm here every day ten to noon,
or listen anytime. Just get the podcast. But I'll be
back tomorrow at ten and I'll talk to you then
right here on seven to ten w
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