Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Okay, still Mark's among show on seven to tenor.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
Well, hey, two weeks so Christmas two weeks is Christmas Eve?
Two weeks from tonight. I'm not sure. I think Christmas Day,
so yeah, Christmas Eve is a Wednesday. Yeah, so this
is Thursday. It's two weeks from Christmas Day already, and
(00:32):
then three weeks from New Year's Day. Now, the problem
is New Year's Day, you get a new mayor. It's
inauguration Day. You're gonna get a new mayor on January first.
Guess who it is. Yeah, it's Mom Donnie with his
homeless camps everywhere.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
Mayor Mom Donnie ensures that we connect those New Yorkers
with actual housing. We have to look at the efficacy
of the Adams administration's policy on this. It is a
policy that did not connect a single New Yorker to
permanent housing in an entire year. That cannot be a
policy we continue.
Speaker 2 (01:08):
Now. He's very much like a brilliant college professor. He
speaks beautifully and he uses words like efficacy. We have
to look at the efficacy of what we're doing. I
don't know what the hell efficacy is, but we're going
to look at it and it sounds great and like
any good college professor, sounds brilliant, but in reality cannot
execute a damn thing, can't get anything done, has no
(01:30):
experience actually doing anything, just talks about it. He's looking
at the efficacy and meantime, can't actually do anything, doesn't
know anything, has no practical experience of any kind. The
other thing we find is that when Democrats get on
this homeless thing, they come up with programs to do
(01:51):
something about it. Deblasio had that Thrive NYC to help
the homeless. A billion dollars is poured into it. Not
one homeless person ever got helped, and they can't find
the billion dollars. They still don't know what happened to
that billion dollars. Remember he put his wife in charge
of the program. And of course you can always count
(02:12):
on fake news in the media to never ever ask
anything about the billion dollars and went missing. Can you
imagine going to Channel two, Channel four, Channel five, Channel seven,
go to the New York Times and saying, the mayor
set up a program for a billion dollars and it
went missing. Nobody can find the billion dollars, and all
(02:33):
of them say to you, what's for lunch today. They
don't even care that anyon want to know about it.
If Donald Trump lost a quarter, they'd send a thousand
reporters to go cover this story. They don't want to
know a damn thing about it. Look at Somalia community,
Samalian community Minnesota. Same thing that elon Omar, that wacko well,
(02:54):
actually might not be as stupid as you think. Because
eight billion went missing. They think it's up to eight billion.
It was first a billion, and it was two billion,
other saying up to eight billion might have gone missing.
Same thing. They set up a program supposedly was taking
care of the homeless. Meantime, nobody can find any homeless
that got taken care of. Nobody can find any hint
of the money ever going to where it was supposed
(03:15):
to be. Billions, literally billions missing. New York Times, ABC, NBCCBS,
no interesting, They don't even mention it's not a story
eight billion missing. We've got other things to talk about.
The Trump affordability. So, of course, when you lose eight
billion in tax pair of money, or in Manhattan or
(03:37):
in New York City, when you lose a billion in
tax pair of money, taxes go up. So that's the problem.
So you got Mom Donnie talking about the homeless and
he wants to set up a program to help them. Well,
you're going to see another billion go missing. It's it's
not that these people well I don't know, but it
might not be that they're putting the money in their pocket,
Doublazi or Mom Donnie. But it's contracts to hand out.
(04:00):
It's like that green scheme, the climate change, the reason
they push that so hard. It's billions and billions and
billions and contracts you can hand out. Now, if you're
not so honest, some of the money ends up in
your pocket. But if you're honest. You know, a guy
like Chuck Schumer or somebody like that, I don't think
he's personally crooked. He's a dirty, sleazy politician, but I
(04:21):
don't think he's, you know, personally crooked. But what you
do is you hand out contracts to donors, billions in contracts.
And every time you hand out one of those contracts
that donor owes you, you can call them every few weeks.
I need fifty thousand, I need one hundred thousand, I
need two hundred and fifty thousand. These guys get these
calls all the time, and when they say they need
(04:41):
the money, it's for the campaign for the senator's pack.
So the billionaire, you know, you can pick up the
phone and these type of politicians. The billionaire can call
this guy. He's got his cell number. You can call
him at midnight. I need a favor, I need you
to change of regulation. I need a permit, I need this.
You can call them anytime. It'll get done just like that.
(05:04):
But they'll have a guy call you every couple of weeks.
Can you do fifty? Can you do one hundred? Yeah,
I can do it all right. We'll call you back,
tell you who to write the check to, and they'll
call you back. Write the check to the super pack
this or this, and you keep writing these checks and
those packs pay for anything the senator needs as far
as campaign expenses or staff or consultants or anything like that, advertising,
(05:27):
whatever they need. So that's the racket, that's the green scheme.
They handed at billions in contracts and ten to twenty
percent of it came back to these politicians. Same thing
with these homeless programs. They'll hand out these contracts and
the money will come back to them in various ways.
The Mamdani transition team, for instance, has already raised like
(05:48):
five million bucks a transition team. All they do is
they need a conference room. You know, if you really
have your transition team needs a few offices in a
conference room. They got the big business guys who are
don't you know, charities do that all the time. They
call the big business guy, the CEO. Hey, we need
the conference room, Sure, come over, use it for six hours.
(06:11):
We'll lend it to you. We do that here at iHeart.
We got beautiful conference rooms. If there's a big charity
we're trying to help, you need to use our conference room,
Come use it. We got one that holds like two
hundred people. You can use that one. They do it
all every company, every major corporation does that. It's free.
You don't need to raise four million for your transition
team five million. But mom Donnie just did that in
(06:33):
the last couple of weeks. So this is good news.
By the way, that he turns out to be just
as slippery and greedy and as money making as everybody else,
so that it means the big business guys may be
able to keep him in line in various ways. Hey,
the inauguration, as they say, is New Year's Day. Eric
Adams is the current mayor, obviously, and he's saying now
(06:55):
he might not go to the inauguration. That would be
quite a slap in the face to mom, Donnie. He
didn't say he wouldn't go, He just said he hasn't decided. Well,
you're supposed to go, obviously, you go. Says he hasn't
decided if he'll go. You know that idiot. Brad Lander
left wing, very left wing. He was the controller. You
(07:16):
can get away with being a controller because nobody knows
what the hell of controller does controller controller controller, You
can say either one controller is perfectly acceptable. And generally
they're guys who have no personality. Remember Scott Stringer, very
nice guy, Scott string he wasn't a koup, just a
nice guy, but cute, a cute guy, but not a
(07:37):
lot of personality. Brad Landed the same way. He's more
he's not so cute. He's more of a silly guy
with no personality. Even in his campaign, it just sounds
like people kept saying, he sounds like mister Rogers.
Speaker 4 (07:47):
I love the people who make this city what it is,
So I'm running for Congress because the challenges we face
can't be solved with strongly worded letters or high dollar
fund risk.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Well, it's certainly forceful. Hey, I'm running for Congress. You
know why. I'll tell you why. Everybody kept telling him
just sound exactly like mister Rogers, and I guess he
had to answer that.
Speaker 5 (08:13):
But a mister Rogers that stands up and fights Ice
and fightes Trump and fights Muss and try plumb to
crops and fights a bad and said this was our neighborhood.
Speaker 2 (08:26):
Okay, that's even worse. Hey, But I stand there, I
fight Trump. I find I find sounds terrible.
Speaker 5 (08:33):
But a mister Rogers that stands up and fights Ice
and fights Trump and fights Muss and try clump the
crops and fights a bad and said this.
Speaker 1 (08:43):
Was our.
Speaker 2 (08:46):
Okay. But on the other hand, you know, Mike Tyson
has got to be the toughest guy ever. Mike Tyson.
You ever hear him on the radio? Hi, Mike Tyson?
Speaker 1 (08:56):
Right?
Speaker 2 (08:58):
Can you imagine if you got a fight with a
guy on the phone and he said, you can't talk
to me like that, and you didn't know it was
Mike Tyson. You just heard this voice. What are you
gonna do about it? I'm coming down, Yeah, you come
down here that it's Mike Tyson. But he's got to
run against Dan Goldman, Who's Now, this is a race
that doesn't matter either way because Lander is a very
(09:18):
far left wing kook, but so is Goldman, so it
doesn't matter who wins that thing. But Lander's going after Goldman.
Speaker 4 (09:24):
I mean Democrats choosing not to support the Democratic nominee
for mayor.
Speaker 5 (09:29):
Of New York City in a general election.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
Yeah, I think that was a failure that showed that
we need something different.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
He does sound like it sounds like Charles Nelson Riley
without without the charm. So Goldman going after him.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Now, I welcome Brad to the race. I'm not really
thinking about this right now. I'm in Washington, really focused
on making sure that healthcare can will not be taken
away from millions of people. We are focused on the
immigration ragnet that Donald Trump is sweeping the country with.
Speaker 2 (10:04):
Yeah, here's the problem. Goldman is a much better looking
guy than Lander, and he's got a much better voice.
So he looks good, he sounds good. You getting a
debate and Goldman's talking to Mile a minute, we're gonna
do this in this and then we at Lander talks
like this, it's not going to work out too well.
Speaker 4 (10:19):
I love the people who make this city what it is.
So I'm running for Congress.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
I'm running for Congress. And then Goldman talks like this.
I think Goldman wins that debate easily. Uh does sound
like mister Rogers, Well here it is again. Let me no,
that's the same one. Uh yeah, it's going to be
a problem for him. He's not gonna do well, Brad Lander,
but he's gonna be like the next Scott Stringer. These controllers,
(10:48):
that's the problem of that job. You end up running
every four years, every two years for anything and everything,
and it goes nowhere. You always lose every time. Hey,
that Luigi Mangione got caught in Pennsylvania, goes to McDonald's
and they're starting to release all the material. You know,
he's in McDonald's. This is kind of crazy. He's in McDonald's.
(11:12):
You know, a chain, a fast food, big chain like
that McDonald's. You got to figure they got security cameras everywhere,
they probably got video over every inch of the place.
And he's just sitting there eating. He's not wearing sunglasses,
he's not wearing a hat, he's not trying to disguise himself.
So if you listen to the nine to one one
(11:33):
calls from the manager, she says, a lot of people
eating here, many of our customers think he looks like
the CEO assassin from New York. So they recognized him
even in the middle of nowhere in Pennsylvania. And if
you look at the interviews with these people, it was
the eyebrows. You know, he has these unusually thick, big, bushy,
(11:54):
weird eyebrows. So they said that was the first thing
he said he look like. And they saw the same
exact eyebrows, which were very unusual, and that's why they
knew it was him. So the guy's not that bright.
First of all, you got those big eyebrows, put on
some sunglasses so people can't see him, or you know,
dye your hair a different color and shave off the eyebrows,
(12:16):
or cut him down, you know, get rid of the
eyebrows and your dye your hair looked at you know,
even David Jansen in The Fugitive new to do that
so or you know, were a hat and sunglasses when
you're going to be sitting in a McDonald's with a
lot of people around, so he got himself caught. But again,
you know he wasn't I guess the brightest assassin in
(12:37):
the world. You know, it's right across the street from
where we are. Now we can go over that window
and see the spot where he did the shooting. And
it's sixth Avenue and fifty fifth Street, and it's got
surveillance cameras over every inch of it. So when you
do anything there, there's gonna be video of you doing it.
So I don't know how any chance of beating the case.
(12:58):
It's all on video. So, hey, Time Magazine. You remember
Time Magazine? Anybody remember that they still do this thing
called Time Magazine. I don't know who sees it or why,
but they still do the Man of the Year, the
Woman of the Year. Well now you got to call
it the person of the Year, Person of the year.
This year the architects of AI. And then there's a
(13:19):
picture of eleven guys who you never heard of. You
don't know. Apparently they created AI. But it's Time Magazine.
Twelve people see it, eleven of whom work there at
Time Magazine. Hey Rosanna Scato, Good day New York. We
love Rosanna Scatto. Her family owns a wonderful restaurant called Fresco.
(13:40):
It's on fifty second Street. It's one of the great
Italian restaurants in New York. It's a lot of famous faces.
I was there yesterday. It's a great restaurant, Fresco, you
know it. It's been there for I think thirty years now.
Well no, well actually more than I remember going to
the thirtieth anniversary party, and that was a couple of
years ago. So they're in the news today because they
had a woman who I guess is the accountant, the bookkeeper,
(14:03):
And it looks like this bookkeeper was stealing money. You know,
when you're the bookkeeper for a big thing like that,
you can make you can embezzle, you can. And it
looked like she took some money that was meant for tips.
It looked like she wrote checks to herself. It looks
like she siphoned cash out of thing. Well, how much
(14:23):
did she get? How much could you embezzle? Look at
this two point five million dollars was embezzled. Now this
is over a seven year period, but still that would
be about three hundred and fifty thousand a year that
she was embezzling pretty good. Well, they must make a
lot of money at this restaurant if they didn't notice
a two point five million missing. But they caught her. Finally,
(14:45):
she's been turned over to the DA. Alvin Bragg will
prosecute her. Looks pretty bad for her. The embezzled funds,
it says, paid for her lifestyle away from work, including
one hundred thousand she used to buy a house in
Pennsylvania with her husband. So a prosecutor's got all this.
They caught her. She here's the picture. They don't recognize her.
(15:07):
She didn't look familiar, very heavy. She might have been
rating that refrigerator there too. Some food might be missing.
I would take a look at that, But they got her.
I don't see how she gets out of this. This
is pretty bad. Hey, we'll text some Jimmy Faylor will
be with us in a few minutes. We'll take some calls. Next.
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten is the number.
Eight hundred three two one zero seven ten