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July 18, 2025 • 14 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:01):
This is a test.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
This is only a test.

Speaker 3 (00:08):
Okay, this is a test. I you sent one in.

Speaker 4 (00:13):
Good morning, Mike or Michael. Well, what did you two
goobers think? What's gonna happen when you set and beat
a dead horse for four hours? The only reason I
tuned in is I thought maybe Jimmy Singenberger might be
playing again this morning. But I'll just have to go
check him out at the bar.

Speaker 1 (00:31):
I guess, hey, Michael, I live out east of the
airport and there's a road called Odin And for the
longest time there was a mile stretch of this road
that was dirt instead of paved because apparently it belonged
to Aurora. Well about a year or two ago, they
finally paved it, and it was really nice and clean
and quiet to drive on. And I guess people didn't

(00:54):
like that, because they send in a bunch of people
to cut up patches of the road and re asphalt it.

Speaker 5 (01:00):
Now it's not quite as nice, Michael.

Speaker 6 (01:02):
When you get to that website of one fifty bridge
building whatever dot com, or Michael says, go here dot com,
which I think is probably a little bit better to
get to. Anyway, you should vote no on all of it,
not just the bridge, but all of it, because why
would we want to spend that millions of dollars on

(01:22):
various projects that no one will see all over the
entire state? Fix our roads.

Speaker 7 (01:28):
Good morning, Michael and Dragon. I just voted no. But
those little sneaky devils them down the state Capitol and
Governor's office, they try to get you to vote on
another project for the one hundred and fiftieth anniversary celebration.

Speaker 5 (01:45):
Just let it be, people, let it be.

Speaker 7 (01:47):
Let's just celebrate having a great state and make make
Colorado great again.

Speaker 5 (01:52):
And so the hell hole.

Speaker 8 (01:53):
It's become Helloha Friday Fellas, Michael, this is just another
colossal way of money, just like the bridge at C
four seventy and University for pedestrians and bicycles. The Democrats
must not use our road system because it's crap and
they just waste our money like it's nothing.

Speaker 2 (02:16):
Michael. Sorry, I didn't get a chance to leave a
talkback this morning. I was too busy at Winchell's trying
to look through all the windows of the donut selection
to determine what protein I was going to have with
my coffee. But I got that figured out so I
figured I'd call in now and leave it talkback, since

(02:38):
you guys are probably wanting the nice winchells, don't it,
but not today?

Speaker 9 (02:43):
So the cost of the bridge is only affecting Denver
taxpayers and not state wide taxpayers. If that's the case,
why is the governor pushing so hard for it. I'm
thinking state funds are probably going to pay for it.
And if that's the case, every zip code vote in
the state should be eligible to vote, right.

Speaker 10 (03:06):
It is always stunning to me how little common sense
so many people have. If you want to bring all
these people into America and just give them free everything,
how long do you think that's going to last. It's
headed for a train wreck always.

Speaker 3 (03:27):
Yeah, Brownie, I did vote no, and I used my
old Denver zip code that I happen to remember from
however many years ago, and I didn't think a two
five P three would work. So have a great weekend.

Speaker 11 (03:41):
You're listening to the situation with Michael Brown on six
point thirty Khow Yes, it's taxpayer really Friday, and we
know that Michael is physically here, but is he really
ever mentally here?

Speaker 2 (03:55):
Yeah? Question answered? Have a great Friday.

Speaker 12 (03:59):
Happy Friday, Michael and Dragon. Michael the young lady who
asked about just voting no on all of the items,
as Dragon said, you can't do that. I think part
of that is to give Polish the opportunity to when
his bridge loses, he then will have a mandate to
go and do the other things. Whatever it is gets
the highest vote, a bunch of small events or whatever.

(04:23):
What I'd like to see is a flyover a military
parade downtown, lots of fun downtown.

Speaker 13 (04:28):
How good they Michael?

Speaker 14 (04:30):
The ZIP code for Denver is eight two five, if
anybody cares.

Speaker 10 (04:36):
If you use a VPN or virtual Private network, your
IP address gets encrypted when it goes to the VPN server,
and your information looks as if it's coming from the
VPNs server. And if you use different VPN servers, lots
of ways to vote multiple times. Some banking apps don't
allow you to use a VPN, but hypothetically, if it's

(05:00):
not sophisticated, you could vote multiple times in a contest
using a VPN.

Speaker 13 (05:05):
Michael, I listen to you five days a week every week.
I thought that I had obsessive compulsive disorder, but now
that you're on Saturdays, I realize that I'm being stocked,
so Dragon, I can quit my meds.

Speaker 8 (05:24):
Hey, Michael and Dragon.

Speaker 4 (05:26):
Every time I bring donuts to the shop, I wait
for someone to take a bite and say thank you,
and I tell them I glazed them myself.

Speaker 5 (05:34):
Why does NPR beg for money all the time? Why
do they? It's like fifty of their programming is is
begging and begging for money. Buy money there to get
my money.

Speaker 15 (05:51):
Michael Tom from South Dakota, US, dumb soun of bitches
up here. We use our phone and click on that
little weather app on our means green and it usually
tells us right now, right then, what our weather is
happening here in South Dakota. And I'm in a rural

(06:11):
area where you can't see your neighbor. Thanks Michael for
that intelligent comment.

Speaker 16 (06:19):
Michael, I'll often catch the NPR station in the morning
as I'm flipping through all the different news stations seeing
what I missed the day before, and one of their
taglines is fact based reporting. Hey, it's based on fact.

Speaker 17 (06:34):
Good morning from South Dakota. Just driving around of my truck,
listen to you on bluetooth. I expected retirement to be
a little more exciting than this everyone, have a great day.

Speaker 15 (06:46):
Tom from South Dakota. Guess what, ninety seven percent of
all adults on a cell phone and they already make
these stupid emergency notifications. And also in a rural South
Dakota has high speed internet. So do you really think
we still need NPR or PBS. Don't think so, please

(07:10):
save me.

Speaker 10 (07:12):
Listening to your show yesterday and today, it made me
wonder if Marlon ever asked where's the beef?

Speaker 2 (07:21):
Michael?

Speaker 18 (07:21):
Someone I grew up with posted on Facebook that basically
INPR is gone. Wait a minute, between one and ten
percent of their funding was federal and they can't buck
up and raise the funds. There are some fundraisers, fundraisers,
what are they do? This is ridiculous. You could just

(07:43):
raise the freaking money.

Speaker 19 (07:45):
The only reason why NPR and PBS were able to
get money from the government for so long, obviously, was
several things. The big key ones were Big Bird, Sesame Street,
that's one, and the late great Fred Rogers. Those were

(08:06):
the two things that helped PBS and NPR stay on
the dole. Fred Rogers was an honest man, by the way,
and thanks to Big Bird and Fred Rogers, PBS and
NPR were able to get away with the left leaning
programming that they were able to put out. And I
mean the list is endless. But the one thing that

(08:28):
stands in my mind is the movie Tongues Untied about
black gay men. Hey, you know, want to put that
out there, fine, just wish it wasn't done with other
people's money. And one reason why progressive talk isn't as
big as it was in the two K is for

(08:49):
this one reason. Liberals and the left at large like
that quiet talk on the radio. They really saved the
rage for the street. Well, you still have a handful
of progressive talkers and Tom Hartman, Stephanie Miller, Rick Smith,
and Tavis Smiley who you mentioned, just is not as big,

(09:11):
and others like Ed Schultz and Rachel Maddow found their
niches in uh television news sources. Ed Schultz going to
MSNBC and eventually to RT before he tragically passed, and
Rachel Maddow still the best thing at MSNBC. So progressive

(09:34):
talk isn't dead, just more of a niche format in
niched markets.

Speaker 18 (09:41):
Michael, from what I can find on the web, it
seems that only about one percent of NPR's budget is
actually tax funded, So why are people going so crazy.
It's stupid with them, advertise with them, raise the money.

Speaker 3 (10:02):
It is that simple.

Speaker 19 (10:03):
And in certain markets like San Francisco and Washington, d C.
The NPR News Talker is still the alpha dog leading
the pack. Washington, d C, the NPR News talk station
still gets double digits, with the all news station running

(10:25):
commercials a close second, so it'll survive in certain places.

Speaker 18 (10:32):
Michael, you see there's a lack of empirical data regarding
the uh intensity of these natural disasters. Well, I submit
to you that the fires are hotter, much much hotter. Yeah,
there you go, they're hotter. Michael. When you get fired
up and the spit line as you're presenting your show

(10:54):
and you're just viewing all this information, you put out
an awful lot of two. Man, you gotta just calm
down because you're a contributor to, you know, that global
warming thing. Come on, Silver, get up, run.

Speaker 16 (11:14):
Michael's about to talk about epscene again.

Speaker 20 (11:19):
Trump's condition requires compression, socks. Biden's condition required a new brain.
Which do you think the mainstream news media's case spend
more time talking about Over the next four years Michael.

Speaker 21 (11:33):
I know you just said that Trump needs to kill
that horse, and it's probably u metaphorical, but is that
kind of like Christy Nolan killing her dog? Michael is
supposed to back and forth between Donald Trump and Jeffrey
Epstein regarding his fiftieth birthday or whatever.

Speaker 2 (11:53):
The heck?

Speaker 21 (11:54):
It just sounds like some sophomoric little essay that was,
you know, some little poetry assignment in class that some
kid wrote. It just doesn't mean sound real. It sounds
conjured up in, it's fake. He doesn't sound real at
all to me.

Speaker 17 (12:13):
Good morning from South Dakota. If there's so many Epstein files,
why didn't he use one to break himself out of
jail instead of hanging himself like a Christmas tree ornament?
Oh wait, Christmas tree ornaments don't hang themselves. Everyone have
a great day.

Speaker 22 (12:33):
Hey, mister myke gol loved the show. I just thought
i'd mentioned that on Clan Bug yesterday. Uh Bershowitz was
on there and he said there's absolutely no list that
has Trump's.

Speaker 15 (12:46):
Name on it.

Speaker 22 (12:48):
Now, I know that's neither here nor there, but I
thought i'd throw it out.

Speaker 14 (12:52):
There if Trump was involved, or if he's name Biden
and company would have. I've made it public long ago.
I don't think that Trump is in there. I don't
think he's involved. I think it's all about making a
mess for Trump to deal with.

Speaker 23 (13:14):
Michael. The evidence is stark Trump and mister Epstein were
good pals, whereas our previous president would probably have noted it.
They were but buddies.

Speaker 2 (13:27):
Michael, you kill trigger.

Speaker 24 (13:30):
When they asked me what my response would be to
Michael Brown doing the Epstein story yet again, I just
want to say, don't, don't.

Speaker 18 (13:43):
Just don't more, Mike. I know a'reund the taxpayer relief shots,
but Stephen Colbert running the Late Show into the ground
so far that they're going to get canceled. That's just
poet justice, Michael.

Speaker 21 (13:59):
That at the scenes, kind of like DRT dats.

Speaker 23 (14:03):
That's that's it.

Speaker 10 (14:05):
That's all.

Speaker 4 (14:07):
Hey, Michael, I've been trying to share your taxpayer relief
shots with a lot of my friends for quite a
while now, and surprisingly I'm not getting good feedback on it.
Don't know if maybe you could do something like put
some wacky sound effects in there for special ones or something.
I don't know, just a thought
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