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September 20, 2025 30 mins
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
This is a podcast from wor Now the wr Saturday
Morning Show. Here's Larry Minty.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Hello, and welcome to Saturday Morning. Did Kathy Hokeel make
a career ending mistake by endorsing socialists? Or in Mom, Donnie,
we'll ask NASA County executive Bruce Blakeman. In the wake
of Charlie Kirk's death, there are calls for a national
conservative revival. Daily Caller columnist Mary Rook explains, Doctor Arthur

(00:31):
Kaplan explains why daylight savings time may be bad for
your health, and rich de Muro from rich on Tech
raves about the new iPhone. But let's start with NASA
County executive Bruce Blakeman. Thank you so much, Bruce for
joining us today. I really appreciate your time. Kathy Hokeel

(00:52):
has come out and endorsed Zorin Mom, Donnie, my feeling
is she might have just lost reelection. How did you well?

Speaker 3 (01:00):
I felt that it was a stab in the back
because Zohar Mondami is a virulent anti Semite. He is
a communist. He wants to be the leader of the
greatest capital city in the world. Capitalism was founded in
New York City. It is the foundation of New York City.

(01:23):
It has created great prosperity. And these people who want
communists and socialist values, point to one country where it's worked,
Point to one country that is as free as America.
It's anti American values that is being spewed by that
mayor candidate. He is a virulin, anti Semite. And we

(01:45):
are disappointed and disgusted in Kafy Hokel endorsing such a
candidate that is so far out of the mainstream that
it is just incomprehensible.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
So many other leading Democrats are and probably will never
endorse or in Mamdani. Why do you think she did well?

Speaker 3 (02:06):
Unfortunately, she doesn't have the integrity of others. Those Democrats
that refuse to endorse Mandani, they have integrity, They stand
up for what they believe in. Governor Holkel has compitulated
to the lunatic left that she's allowed to take over
her party. They control her, she does whatever they tell

(02:28):
them to do. And it's a situation where unfortunately the
Democratic Party is no longer a party of working people
who have American values. It's being taken over by people
on the far far left who they spew all kinds
of rhetoric that is anti American. They spew rhetoric that

(02:51):
you would hear from the leaders of China, North Korea, Venezuela, Russia.
It's just unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (03:00):
And yet he has supports, and yet right now he
will win this election and he will be the mayor
of New York City. Unless you can tell me some
way he can be beaten. What does that say about
the Democratic Party.

Speaker 3 (03:13):
Well, what it says about the Democratic Party is that
they are a party now that caters to the lunatic fringe,
that they are a party that has abandoned American values,
they have abandoned capitalism, which has been the greatest creator
of prosperity of any economic system ever invented in the world.

(03:34):
And that they allow anti Semites to be leaders in
their party. It's just unbelievable.

Speaker 2 (03:41):
The guy that's running against you, Seth Coslow, is he
supporting mom Donny?

Speaker 3 (03:46):
He won't say. He's trying to play both sides. Like
everything else he does. He talks out of both sides
of his mouth. Says that he's pro law enforcement, but
at the same time he writes scholarly articles, if you
want to call it that, in law journals where he
says women make up stories about being raped because they

(04:07):
desire or fantasize about being raped. He's just an individual
who really doesn't have any moral compass.

Speaker 2 (04:16):
In my view, those writings that you just talked about,
This was the first time I have heard about that.
Is that a brewing scandal in the race?

Speaker 3 (04:26):
Well, yeah, we're bringing it to people's attention because we
question his values, we question his judgment, and everything he's
done in his life has been to protect criminals. Yeah,
he served for a couple of years as a prosecutor,
but he probably did that to try and hone his
skills to get criminals off and to erase their criminal history,

(04:49):
which he brags about in advertisements. This guy has represented
criminals who have choked out women, kidnap children, And he
spews all of this anti victim rhetoric and pro criminal rhetoric,
and again, in some audience he pretends to be pro

(05:10):
law enforcement. In others he talks about criminals' rights. So
which is it. Are you going to be like me?
A leader who is very strong on law enforcement, who
wants to protect victims, who has the safest county in America,
who has hired six hundred police officers in the last
three years, or did he want to have somebody as

(05:31):
your leader who brags about getting criminals off and says
that women fantasize and desire to be raped.

Speaker 2 (05:37):
Let me get your reaction to a couple of national
stories right now, especially the Jimmy Kimmel being taken off
the air indefinitely. It seems like the Democrats are rallying
around him. I'm not sure what their play is, except
that they're blaming Donald Trump. I don't think Donald Trump
had anything to do with Jimmy Kimmel being taken off

(05:59):
the air. Think was his ratings and the fact that
he lied. Do you understand what's happening?

Speaker 3 (06:04):
Yeah, I think you hit the nail on the head.
I think you have it down perfectly, Larry. The fact
of the matter is Donald J. Trump is way too
busy with many issues that are much more important than
Jimmy Kimmel, and to suggest that he had anything to
do with the firing is just ridiculous. You're absolutely right.
His ratings were tanking, and he says things that are

(06:27):
live on television on a regular basis, and he's not funny.
That's the biggest sin of being a late night talk
show host that has a show that's supposed to be
predicated on making people feel good and happy and being funny.
He's not funny.

Speaker 2 (06:47):
Let's talk about Charlie Kirk for a second, his impact
on the Republican Party and his impact on the nation
going forward. The death, I think is going to inspire
a lot of people.

Speaker 3 (06:58):
Bruce Well, it already has. You've seen that people have
been galvanized, and they've gotten off the couch and they've
gotten into the game and they understand what's at stake
in America. What's at stake is that you have all
of our college campuses and many of our public schools
around America that don't teach children the values that we

(07:20):
were taught when we were growing up, American values, and
they take basically all kinds of information and they twist
it and turn it against America. Till now, we've had
children growing up, going through the school system, going to
university who have heard about things that are not true,

(07:42):
and basically they've been indoctrinated. And Charlie Kirk was a
breath of fresh air because he had the courage to
go on to campuses and engage in peaceful dialogue with
people who disagreed with his opinions, and he was able
to articulate a different frint metaphor for what is going

(08:03):
on in the world. And I think that basically the
plan was to silence him because he was getting incredibly
effective of being able to make sure that people heard
the other side of the story and not just what
the liberal woke professors in Doctor Nate our kids with
each and every day.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
I agree with you, Bruce Blakeman, NASA County Executive, Thanks
so much for being with us. Coming up, Doctor Arthur
Caplan from the Langgune Medical Center says it's now legal
in New Jersey to use human remains for composting. Doctor
Caplan explains.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Next back now to the WOOR Saturday Morning Show with
Larry Minty.

Speaker 2 (08:47):
Welcome back, yet another reason to get rid of daylight
savings time. Doctor Arthur Caplan, professor of Bioethics at NYU
Land Gone, explains, Good morning, Doctor Applin, thanks again as
always for joining us. This is music to my ears.
I hate daylight savings time. I don't know why it

(09:08):
ever existed, and now finally there's some medical support for
getting rid of it.

Speaker 4 (09:14):
Yeah. It turns out not only is it a nuisance.
And by the way, if there was ever a bipartisan
idea getting rid of daily safing, it turned out that
studies showed that stroke rates increased and you also had

(09:36):
more heart attacks around daylight saving times change. And everybody
thinks it's due to the circadian rhythms being disrupted. So
you know, we get into a sleep cycle and get
used to it and then all of a sudden we
flip it. And I know it's not a big change,
but for many people it's a change in the time
they have to get up to go to work. It

(09:58):
does seem to be intrusive enough to cause health problems.

Speaker 2 (10:01):
And is the increase in the stroke rate that's significant.

Speaker 4 (10:05):
Timey, But you know, for what end, I mean, what
are we getting here. Somebody's gonna call or let me
know by email or something that they love daylight saving
time because I don't know, the kids get a little
more light or something at the bus stop, but the
whole society, both the economic cost of changing the clocks,
the loss of sleep and productivity, and now these health issues. Again.

(10:29):
Ben Franklin loved the guy. His idea out of date.

Speaker 2 (10:33):
Yeah, it has something to do right, as I remember,
and you can correct me on this if I'm wrong.
It has something to do with back in the old days,
back in Ben Franklin's time, when kids had to go
to school but they had to work the fields as well. Yeah,
and then they just wanted them to be safe walking
to school. That's right, that's it.

Speaker 4 (10:50):
Right, And they wanted also to get that extra time
to harvest. So it was really agricultural. But that's not
our society anymore. We don't eat it. It's time to
change one way or another. The kids are either going
to school when it's dark or coming home.

Speaker 2 (11:05):
With right, exactly. Absolutely. Yeah, it's never never ever made
any sense. Well, this is a kind of a show that.

Speaker 4 (11:14):
One let's let's listeners, let's push our legislators. You know,
we could really like get rid of this thing.

Speaker 2 (11:22):
Do we know why people have held on to it
for this long?

Speaker 4 (11:26):
Some people argue that it actually does still increase economic productivity,
but I don't think there's an ounce of data for that.
I think it's one of these customs and traditions that
is just it goes year to year. Some legislator pipes
up and says, you know, why are we doing this exactly?
And it's sort of like, I don't know, because we've

(11:46):
always done it. Not great rationales.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
Well, here's something that I don't think we've always done.
And it's kind of a shocking headline that New Jersey
now allows human composting after death. Can you explain this
to me?

Speaker 4 (12:02):
All right? Put down your breakfast, everybody. This is an
idea that's been around for a little bit. By the way,
legal in twelve states, including New York. No people get cremated,
and you know, people get buried. A third idea came
up was, look, if we treat a human body as
somebody's going to, you know, degenerate into dirt and dust

(12:28):
in the biblical sense, you can make that process happen
in about sixty days if you bury the body in
a special chamber. Companies offer this, cover it with vegetation, straw,
that sort of thing, and it will become compost and
then people take those remains the dirt and use it

(12:49):
to grow a tree or something of value to the
person who died and the loved ones who remain. I'm
not against it. I think it's safe, it's not pollue.
It probably saves us a lot of space on graveyards,
and not to be too morbid about it, but you know,
even if you're buried in a coffin or some other

(13:14):
burial mechanism, when you are gonna fall apart in there,
and I'm like, this is doing anything that doesn't happen
eventually to us all cremation, Well, if you prefer that,
but obviously you're turned into ashes. So I don't know,
but it seems to me it's a legitimate option for
those who want it.

Speaker 2 (13:35):
Yeah, you kind of talked me into it when you
were giving the explanation because I wouldn't do it. But
if somebody wants to remember a loved one with a
tree or a garden and this helps them, then why not.
They're not hurting anybody.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
Yep. And you know where, but I'm gonna make a prediction,
you know where else this is gonna go. Pets?

Speaker 2 (13:55):
Yeah, no, that makes a lot of sense.

Speaker 4 (13:58):
You know, their dog, their cat, Do they grow the bush,
grow the tree, grow whatever. It will be kind of
a living memorial. So I think you're going to see
it expit not greatly. You know a lot of people's
taking I don't know about that, and I don't know
what the cost is to the truth, but I do
think we should make it legal. It's not hurting anyone

(14:20):
doesn't pollute.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
Yeah, but we should have a say in it. Right,
should be able to say, Hey, listen, I don't want
to be a tree.

Speaker 4 (14:26):
Oh yeah, sure, absolutely. You get to pick. You get
to pick. You get to pick, even for your dog
who might have been opposed.

Speaker 2 (14:35):
Hey listen, I do want to talk to you at
a future date about this next story about AI and
the dangers of AI, not only when you go to
it for medical advice, but when you go to talk
because we had a teenager die when they were contemplating suicide.
But I think we're going to need more time for
that conversation. So is it okay, doctor Caplin? We'll talk

(14:55):
about it next time. Very good, doctor Arthur Caplan, Professor
of bioeth at New York University Land Gone Medical Center.
Coming up is the death of Charlie Kirk going to
start a national conservative revival. Daily Caller columnist Mary Rook thinks,
so we'll talk to her. Is the new iPhone worth

(15:17):
upgrading for? Rich DeMuro, host of rich On Tech, tells us.

Speaker 1 (15:22):
Coming up now, more of the Woor Saturday Morning Show
and Larry Minty.

Speaker 2 (15:28):
The death of Charlie Kirk has brought a week of
national mourning, but in its wake a new purpose, a
new awakening, and possibly a new leader to carry on.
So says Mary Rook, opinion columnist for The Daily Caller. Mary,
I loved your I loved your column this week. I
really did. I want to talk about the revival in

(15:52):
a moment, but first let's talk about you personally. And
I know you were moved and you were shocked and
you were saddened by the death of Charlie Kirk. Can
you tell us what your immediate reaction was and how
that reaction has grown to this column.

Speaker 5 (16:07):
You know, I think, like millions of Americans, I wanted
to believe it wasn't true. It was so such a
blow to your senses and every sense of the word. It,
you know, kind of makes you fearful to be a conservative.
You go through those stages of grief like everyone else.
But then I woke up and you know, watching Erica

(16:28):
Kirk be so strong in her first address to the nation,
it lit a fire in me and I thought, Okay,
this is exactly the type of woman that I want
my daughters to be. This is exactly the type of
woman that I want to be. And what am I
going to do from here? And like, let's make actionable
changes to our society and wake people up. You know.

(16:49):
I think the kind of the overarching you know theme
here and especially with Charlie Kirk's message is and you
said this several times, God, family, country, and so we
need to be moving forward and those action plans in
order to keep Charlie's memory alive in our nation.

Speaker 2 (17:07):
That was really well said. What do you expect to happen? Now?
I think everybody there is a growing movement already in
the country. I don't think that the Democrats and certainly
Tyler Robinson saw this coming, but there has been already
a sort of revival that is looking for a leader,
that is looking for a path forward. What do you

(17:29):
expect to happen?

Speaker 5 (17:31):
You know, I think we all woke up. I've seen
video after video after video of men saying I haven't
been to church in years. I've been neglecting, you know,
this faith aspect of my life with my family, and
I'm going to do what Charlie Kirk said, which is
be a strong husband, be a strong father and lead
my family in this way. So I think that's really beautiful.

(17:53):
One of the things that I said in the piece
is that Charlie is a one of a kind. He
was this man who understood what it meant to be
a father and a husband, understood what it meant to
be a man in this day and age when they're
attacked all the time. How do you stand strong and
all of those things. I don't think that he's replaceable.
That's the sad reality of it. However, I do think

(18:15):
that in his death, there's far more good in the
world with all of these people rising up, and it's
going to take everyone to fill his shoes. I think
that's the sad reality. There's not going to be kind
of one king maker that passes the torch. We saw
yesterday that Charlie Kirk's wife, Erica, is going to start
leading tp UFA, which I think is such a great idea.

(18:38):
I saw on his show yesterday that Megan Kelly was hosting,
where one of the men said that someone called Erica
very important person. He wouldn't say who. Shortly after Charlie
Kirk's death, and they asked her who, how much do
you know, and he said her response was everything. So

(18:59):
I don't think there's any better person to you know,
handle the juggernaut that is turning point USA. I think
this is going to be a really great move. And
then if you watched her address, and if you haven't,
I really urge you to go back and watch it
because it was so powerful and so meaningful. I think
it was one of those moments where you clearly saw

(19:20):
one how much she loved Charlie and two how driven
she is going to be. I mean, I made this
comment the other day that there in that type of woman,
there's absolutely nothing she won't do to see something succeed
if you hurt the man that she loves. And I
think that's that's what we're seeing in this movement. We
need more women like that to stand up alongside their

(19:41):
husbands and you know, their fathers and all of those
things to help lead this country out of the darkness.

Speaker 2 (19:46):
And Sunday is a huge moment for her because a
lot of eyes will be watching to see if she
can be the person that takes over. I can't imagine.
I can't imagine Mary the pressure on her for that day,
but I have a feeling she's going to rise to
the occasion, do you.

Speaker 3 (20:03):
Oh?

Speaker 5 (20:03):
Absolutely. I mean, when you watch the address, I'm sitting
here thinking if that were my husband, if that had
happened to me, would I have had the strength to
stand up and give that speech and you know, not
break down every five seconds? And she held so strong.
I think that she, you know, God made her built
for this moment and it's you know, it's tragic, and

(20:25):
it's sad, and it's all of those things that Thank God,
Charlie Kirk has a wife like Erica, who you know,
I think really will rise to the moment. We saw
that on Friday, and I expect nothing less on Sunday,
although I will admit that the pressure I feel like
now as she's moving through these stages of grief is
even more than it was when she gave her first address. So,

(20:47):
like you, I'm very interested to see how that all
you know, transpires. But I do believe that she is
going to be excellent.

Speaker 2 (20:54):
I do too. But there's going to be seventy three
thousand people there and it's going to be telecast around
the world. If she lives up to what you and
I both believe she can do, she will be the one,
and she will be able to and she will have
so much power going into these future elections.

Speaker 5 (21:14):
I completely agree. And you know, as far as like
it's not even the Republican movement, because I hate to
call it that, it's really this revival inside America, I
think that she understood the importance of the work that
Charlie was doing. You know, it's more than just whipping
votes for Donald Trump in the election. What he was

(21:35):
really doing was going to these college campuses where these
kids felt like there was no hope. They can't buy
a home, they're never going to get ahead, They're going
to be suck in this you know, kind of depressing
rat race for their whole lives. And he told them, no,
you've got hope. Let me show you how to live
a life, a good life, a full life, a committed life,
and you know, go out into the world and feel

(21:56):
joy and happiness and where you are.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Mary Rook, opinion columnists for The Daily Caller. Coming up
next another Amazon Prime Day. Rich DeMuro from rich on
Tech tells us about it.

Speaker 1 (22:10):
Here's Larry Minty with more of the WOOR Saturday Morning Show,
Welcome Back if.

Speaker 2 (22:16):
You love Amazon Prime Days and if you love iPhones,
you've come to the right place. There are new iterations
of both, and Rich DeMuro, the host of Rich on
tech on woor, has all the details. So Rich, you know,
I'm an Apple guy. I'm excited about this new iPhone

(22:37):
coming out, but I don't buy every new one unless
there's something so spectacular about the new model that I
have to get it. So is that the case with
the new model coming out?

Speaker 6 (22:51):
Well, you know, there's four new models, so it really
depends what you're looking for. But I will tell you this,
The headline this year is if you are thinking of
upgrading or your one to upgrade, this is the year
to do it. Really, I think that Apple, Yes, I
think that Apple has hit it out of the park
this year. Every single phone they came out with is

(23:11):
in its own right, really really good, and they fixed
a lot of the stuff that tech reviewers like myself
had issues with. So for instance, entry level iPhone seventeen,
you're gonna get better battery life, You're gonna get a
better screen, it's glare free. You're gonna get the new
selfie camera that's eighteen megapixels take selfies and horizontal vertical
group solo, you don't have to shift your phone around.

(23:33):
It's also going to get glass that doesn't break as much.
The screen is brighter, it charges faster, and the thing
they change that everyone wanted and this was for nerds only.
Regular people didn't really notice this, but we did. When
you scroll through social media, it's gonna look smoother, and
when you watch movies, they're gonna look better. So that's
just the iPhone seventeen entry level at eight hundred dollars.

(23:54):
I think that is an incredible phone for most people.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
What are the other phones? Is it? Is it on
usual they're putting out four phones or they still just
the new model the iPhone seventeen, just different variations.

Speaker 6 (24:08):
Yeah, it's different variations, but typically they've done an iPhone
seventeen and then an iPhone seventeen plus. This year they
ditch the plus. They replace that with a super thin
model called the iPhone Air. Super thin and lightweight. If
you are all about like the latest, greatest, coolest Apple stuff,
you want this one. The downside to that phone is

(24:28):
there's only one camera lens, so you're very limited in
the types of pictures you can take. And then the
other thing is the battery life, it's good, but if
you are on your phone twenty four to seven, it's
not going to be the best that Apple offers. And
then if you are all over social media not only
looking at it, but also taking pictures, taking videos, and
you want the best of the best. This year, the

(24:48):
iPhone seventeen Pro and Promax, they stay cooler, They have
better screens that are glare resistant, which is really nice.
They've got that new selfie camera, new ultra wide camera.
The battery life is I think that Apple just polished
these phones to a level that they said, you know what,
We're just gonna do everything that people have been asking
for years. And I don't think you can find a

(25:09):
better overall phone at this point.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Wow, you talk me into it. I'm going to get
a new phone. How about the iOS twenty six they
had to roll out as well.

Speaker 6 (25:17):
Yeah, so iOS twenty six if you're not getting a
new phone, and by all means, if you like what
you got, you don't have to change it. You get
up this new software updates called iOS twenty six now
available for the iPhone eleven and higher, also the iPhone
se two and higher. Yes, they changed the whole naming Convention.
It used to be iOS eighteen. They skipped nineteen through
twenty five. They went straight to twenty six, kind of

(25:40):
like the car makers. They call it liquid glass. There's
a whole bunch of new features. I think the most
important one to turn on is the call screening assistant.
I posted this to my Instagram at rich on Tech. Basically,
your iPhone will answer your phone in the background to
people that are unknown callers and ask them to say
their name and the reason they're calling you. Then and

(26:02):
only then will it ring your phone with that information
that they just said transcribed on your lock screen. So
if you're getting a call from solar panel installation company,
it will say, Jim from Solar Panel Installation, We've got
a great deal for you. You say, never mind, you hang
up on them, not that you have to if you
want solar go ahead.

Speaker 2 (26:20):
Oh it sounds amazing. There's another Amazon Prime Day coming up.
Didn't we just have one?

Speaker 6 (26:25):
Larry, I don't even want to talk about Prime ed
anymore because it's so boring. It's like, Okay, we get it.
You have these like every other third Thursday of the year.
But we do have another one. It's called Prime Big
Deal days. It runs October seventh through eighth. You do
have to be a Prime member Amazon. I feel like
they've saturated the market with the Prime memberships. Now you
heard we talked about a couple of weeks ago how

(26:47):
they're kind of cutting off the external sharing with other
people that you might know, so they have to get
their own membership. You know, teenagers have to get their
own membership. So Amazon's really pushing Prime Day to sell
more memberships. But also you do save money, and my
advice is the same for every single Prime Day. Number one,
add the stuff that you want to your cart right now.

(27:09):
If you can wait two weeks, that stuff might go
on sale. The second thing is if you have your
eye on any Amazon products we're talking Kindle, Echo, Ring Fire,
those typically go on discount, so wait to buy those
products until October seventh and eighth. The other thing is
Amazon services, whether you want Kindle, on limited, audible, Amazon Music,

(27:31):
all those things typically have some sort of good introductory
deal or just a deal in general. So again, a
lot of Amazon stuff on sale, but other products as well.

Speaker 2 (27:40):
I'm embarrassed to say this, but I had no idea
and still have no idea what Google's nano Banana AI
is and now they held update.

Speaker 6 (27:52):
It's not a big deal that you don't know what
this is. I just think that well number one Google
pushed out this update to their AI. You know Google's
AI is called Gemini. That's their big competitor to chat gibt. Right,
they are locked in an all out war because CHATGBT
is changing the way that Google does business. And so
basically Gemini has reached number one in the App Store

(28:15):
on the iPhone because of this Nano Banana AI photo
editing update. Here's what you can do with it. Not
only can you edit photos now if you upload something
and just say change the background, take a take away
that tree, make me a clown, whatever you want to do.
It takes that photo and makes those edits in a
very realistic way. That's something you used to have to

(28:35):
know Photoshop to do. Here's the two cool things you
should try with this. Number One, you've got an old
photo that's damaged or it's black and white, you want
to make it color. Upload it to Gemini AI say
restore this old photo. Boom, it will do it perfectly,
something that used to take a lot of skill. Second thing,
you got a picture of your kid playing baseball through

(28:55):
a fence. Ask it to remove the fence. It will
remove the fence and make the picture look perfect. It's
really quite incredible. They call it nano banana. That's just
fancy speaker. It's really fancy and high tech.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
Here's a real important one. And I have a couple
of people in my family with autism and there's a
new screening test out.

Speaker 6 (29:15):
Yeah, this is wild. So it's a test called clear Strand.
And you know, if you have a child with autism
and you've talked to a doctor, they say it can
take years to get a diagnosis. Well, this test uses
just a couple of strands of hair. You send them
into a lab and it will tell you, even if
the kid is as little as one month old, if

(29:36):
they don't have autism. So it doesn't say yes, your
child has autism, but it's ninety five percent accurate in
saying your child does not have autism. So it's a
really interesting new way to screen for this. If you
suspect your child has this, and that way you can
get them the help they need sooner. And we know
that that makes a big difference in the quality of life.

(29:58):
Later on, the test is expensive. It's seven hundred and
fifty dollars. They're hoping to get more insurance on board.
But again it's called Clearstrand. And by the way, Larry,
they say, in the future they can apply this same
technology to test for other things like adhd als, even
pancreatic cancer. This is just an incredible breakdown.

Speaker 2 (30:18):
That's amazing. Rich Demiro rich on Tech has heard Sunday
nights from eight to eleven PM on WR Rich is
with us every Thursday at nine thirty five. Make sure
to sign up for his newsletter at Richontech dot tv
that wraps up Saturday morning for this week. Thanks so
much for listening, and thanks to executive producer Natalie Vodka
and producer Peter Ayerlano for putting the show together every week.

(30:43):
I'll be back Monday morning from six to ten for
MENTI in the Morning. Hope you join us.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
This has been a podcast from WR
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