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September 19, 2025 30 mins
(Sept 19,2025)
Heather Brooker joins Neil Saavedra, who will be filling in for Bill all week, for Handel on the News. Obama accuses Trump administration of taking ‘cancel culture’ to ‘dangerous level’ amid media threats. CDC ACIP committee recommends new restrictions on MMRV vaccine. Turning Point USA elects Erica Kirk as new Chair of the Board and CEO following Charlie Kirk’s assassination. Clayton Kershaw announces retirement after 18 seasons with Dodgers.
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You're listening to Bill Handle on demand from KFI AM
six forty and now Handle on the news. Ladies and gentlemen,
here's not Bill Handle.

Speaker 2 (00:18):
Ah. You flatter me with that deeply bespoke opening, mister
John Frost, I appreciate it. KFI AM six forty live
everywhere on the iHeartRadio app. Good Friday morning to you,
Neil Sevadri in the morning crew with you as Bill
is on vacation. So you've got me this week, which

(00:40):
is ending now, I suppose you got me tomorrow for
the four Report. It's gonna be great. We've got a
bunch of people we want to introduce you to. We're
gonna eat some tasty so cal food, and then starting Monday,
I'm back with you. I think we lose the fair
Heather Brooker.

Speaker 3 (00:58):
I know I'll be here early morning. Anchor shifts to
the next two days, but not next week.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Well, you know that's just what happens.

Speaker 3 (01:06):
It is, it is what happens. Amy has to come back.
She cannot stay away forever.

Speaker 2 (01:10):
No, or can she she We'll just trumpify it. We'll
just get rid of the reporters. We don't like we're
saying Amy, you don't come back.

Speaker 3 (01:20):
Oh no, she has to come back.

Speaker 2 (01:24):
Yes, Amy is having a lovely time. I spoke with
her yesterday.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
Is she looking for the eagles? That's what she told me.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
She might go do It won't be far from where
she is, so yeah, she might. You can't. You can't
really go walk. You can't go on the trails.

Speaker 3 (01:42):
I feel like Amy would try. She's really into those eagles.
She's a seven foot redhead. Don't know that she's going
to be sneaking through the trails. I don't know that
that's going to happen, but good luck. Yeah, you can't
walk in those areas up in big all right when
the eagles are just doing their thing, they're en Yeah,

(02:05):
they kind of close it off right there. It's off
a north shore, and you can't. I can't do that.
But good morning to you. Good morning.

Speaker 2 (02:15):
I only heard a tiny bit of the end of
the show there. I was listening obviously on my way
in and all that, But I just heard a little
bit of the end and you were opening up your heart.

Speaker 3 (02:25):
Yeah. I think we do that sometimes here, can't.

Speaker 2 (02:27):
I think it's important. I think it's imperative. People they
don't understand that each day or each moment are like photographs.
They're not the entirety of who we are. You get
little pieces and you kind of have to listen for
a long time to figure out who we all are. Yeah,
and that's an I'm a big fan of sharing things

(02:48):
and being open with the audience, So publish it, thank you. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (02:52):
I wasn't for a long time. I've been hesitant to
whether or not I wanted to share as much as
I did. But my hope is that it helped other
people and that it may be resonated with somebody. And
it's such a huge part of my life when I'm
not here that you know, you're right, people just see
a snapshot of who we are on the air when
you're sharing your you know, the news of the day,

(03:13):
but they forget we're human beings. We're real people with
lives when we go home and families and you know,
stories to tell.

Speaker 2 (03:20):
Yeah. It was interesting during COVID because it was the
first I mean, there's been some fires and things like
that that we were all a part of a course,
but COVID was a weird thing because we were living
through the story we were covering. Yeah, and it was
really strange so no, I did your mom at one point? Again,
it's on, but I'm also preparing for the show. Did
she say hot dog at some point?

Speaker 3 (03:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Okay, I love that. It just takes me back to uh,
you know, it's a wonderful life. Yeah. And the kid
that played Jimmy Stewart, you know, the young George Bailey. Yeah,
she goes hot dog dog.

Speaker 3 (03:57):
She's originally from Oklahoma, so she's got and she's a
really thick accent, and so she and those a lot
of those colloquialisms will come out every now and then,
and it's so funny because people out here are like,
get her to say stuff like say boil, say that.
They think it's funny, like we do with British people, you.

Speaker 2 (04:15):
Know, yeah, say water, say water, say gas you mean petrol? Petrol.
But that was sweet, good on you, thank you. So
I blush your mom and we're praying and sending goodbye.

Speaker 3 (04:30):
I appreciate that so much. Thank you, boy.

Speaker 2 (04:33):
I shouldn't have gone to you from a human. Good morning, Neil,
Good morning, ConA. You know what somebody called yesterday? I
think it was Ericlesarto, who's a friend of the show.
So I don't know how to take this. He said
that he was team Coneil because we're both stupid. Oh
we're not both. It's like you are and then there's me.

(04:56):
Why do you start hurtful? All right, that's it. I'm
making a call. We're getting a zoo animal to do
your job. Great, smart Kimmel, well played. Now you're out
of a job, dummy. Uh Will, how are you? Sir? Okay?

Speaker 3 (05:18):
Will has He said he's doing traffic for like three
or four different stations this morning, so he may be
doing their traffic.

Speaker 2 (05:24):
Hit hello thereon refused to turn me on. Well, his
wife has the same complaints I here, so that's rough
on everybody. No, I'm sitting here yelling and you're not
hearing me. But yeah, good morning, good morning, sir. All
is well, all is well. I will say though. One
of the roads going up to Big Bear where Amy's
hanging out, washed out right, Yeah, way thirty eight is poof.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
Well maybe i'll see you on Monday.

Speaker 2 (05:49):
I saw that. Yeah, wow, ahead, did she just go?

Speaker 3 (05:56):
She's under the rain.

Speaker 2 (05:58):
Unfortunately they're like other roads but still yeah, well there's
actually not that many. There's like three main ways to
get up there. Yeah, but yeah, she's having a good
time staying at our place up there. Oh cool. Yeah.
She didn't apparently know that it was sasquatch themed, so
she's like, oh, it is very big footy. I'm like, yeah, awesome,

(06:21):
that's the thing. That's the thing, very big footy. Yeah.
And Matthew, good morning to you, sir. Good morning.

Speaker 1 (06:27):
You know.

Speaker 2 (06:28):
Oh, I know you hate being on Mike I do.
You're super creative. You're a great guy, great at what
you do. But he gets on the mic and goes, hey, Matthew,
very true and producing my game. But I'm gonna set
this one up, knock it on life. And you have
the world's smallest stapler with you, which is very cool. Yes,

(06:51):
I've ever seen. Good for you? I got a staple?
Where's my red st stapler? Where's the cake? What's that
from Cono? That would be Office Space? God, I love
that kid. When I adopt him, I'm gonna adopt you.

Speaker 3 (07:13):
Can we play the theme music from Office Space? That
main song that he plays when he's driving in the car.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
Oh, I forgot there's a clean version of that?

Speaker 3 (07:23):
Goes can we say d A m N? Can we
say that on the damn? Yeah? Okay, there we go. Damn,
it feels good to be a gangster. That's the one
I was thinking of.

Speaker 2 (07:30):
Yeah, that's what Cono rides into every day. It's got
that blaring.

Speaker 3 (07:35):
Honestly, there are just some songs that are driving perfect
for driving in your car, and that's for sure one
of them.

Speaker 2 (07:41):
He pulls up in his jeep with no doors and
he's like damn, He's like, kicks the door shut. It's awesome.
It's awesome. All right, let's use some handle on the
news lead story. Shall we go? President? Although you wouldn't
know it right now, Barack Obama accused the Trump administration

(08:01):
of escalating cancel culture. You know how, you didn't say
creating it because that would be the left. I think
that's funny. You're escalating it. We wanted to keep it
at a four, and you're taking it to an eight.

Speaker 3 (08:15):
This one goes to eleven.

Speaker 2 (08:17):
Yeah, eleven, speaking of a spinal tap. Isn't there movie
the new documentary coming out?

Speaker 3 (08:24):
It's out?

Speaker 2 (08:24):
Is it right now? Yeah? It hasn't heard much. That's
not a good sign.

Speaker 3 (08:27):
Spinal tap too.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
The end continues, Yeah, ALRIGHTY loved the first one, but
he's the president. Obama says that it's weaponized. That now
cancel culture is weaponized, and it's pressure to media companies
into silencing journalists and commentators. Not a good thing. No,
it's in less they're on the right. Then he says,

(08:52):
go for it. We'll get into some more of that
stuff coming up a little bit later.

Speaker 3 (08:58):
Oh all right, so we're going to continue you on
with the end continues. So this is concerning President Trump
said overwhelmingly negative coverage of him by TV networks should
and could be grounds for the Federal Communication Commission to
revoke broadcast licenses. He made these comments on Air Force

(09:20):
one when he was talking to reporters. He said, I
mean they're getting a license. I would think maybe their
license should be taken away. It'll be up to Brendan Carr.
He says, their ninety seven percent coverage is against him.
They give him bad publicity or press. So he said,
I'm just gonna take my ball and go home.

Speaker 2 (09:38):
That seems odd for Trump. He doesn't seem like someone
who would force himself upon someone else, upon something else.

Speaker 3 (09:46):
I don't know. Here's the one point I want to
make though national television networks like ABC, CBS and NBC
and Fox are not granted licenses by the FCC. So
that means the FCC can't go to ABC and say
we're going to to take away your license. What they
do is they issue licenses to individual local broadcast affiliates,

(10:07):
authorizing stations to use public airwaves. So that's why when
big companies like Nexstar in Sinclair say, hey, our affiliates
licenses are in jeopardy here, we got to make some
decisions or you know whatever. That's what the FCC does
have control over, Like we're a local station.

Speaker 2 (10:27):
Yeah, the FCC has controlled license.

Speaker 3 (10:29):
Yes, the FCC has control over us for sure. That's
why we can't deal with all that for the station. Yeah,
So it's a it's at a local level. It's not
like they would go to iHeart and pull Iheart's FCC.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
No, the actual networks, right, because they there are some
that would own television or might own the station, but
you don't like yeah, but you don't own the signal. Yeah,
you can own the station the antenna, but not the signal. Yeah.

(11:03):
We'll be talking about that later. Because there's a lot
of ramifications and I want to I want to cool
I want to cool that down a little bit. Slow
our role the temperature. Yeah, just bring the temperature down.
Pack your patients. What other sayings are there?

Speaker 4 (11:20):
Chill out, chill out, stay frosty. Let's take a chill pill.
Take a chill pill, Take a chill pill. All right,
all right?

Speaker 2 (11:31):
You have the US Health Secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Junior,
a controversial dude. Obviously, he handpicked his vaccine Advisory committee,
if you remember, uh, he had kind of booted a
lot of people and recommended that the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention adopt new restrictions on the combiny combination

(11:56):
shot that predicts or protects rather against chicken pox as
well as measles, mumps, and rubella. That's what we're familiar with, right.
So this new panel advised that the vaccine known as
MMRV not be given before age four, and that children
in this age group instead get separate vaccines, one against

(12:21):
MMR and the other four chicken pox. But the vote
was eight to three, with one member abstaining. This guy
scares me. Yeah, he makes me nervous. Trump has moments
where I go, but that's getting worse. And we'll talk

(12:41):
about that with the FCC stuff. And I don't like
when they say bad things about me. We'll get into
that a little bit later, but the whole it just
seems like we're letting people that learn about vaccines on
the internet run how we see medicine from the country,

(13:02):
which scares me.

Speaker 3 (13:03):
It's scary, and I don't think that there is really
much we can do other than just be in touch
with your doctor regularly and do your own research. But then,
you know, I don't know. It is a.

Speaker 2 (13:15):
Scary I just talked to your doctor, But some.

Speaker 3 (13:17):
People don't have a doctor, don't have access to a
good doctor, so I don't know. It's a tough, tough situation.
So Turning Point USA has elected Erica Kirk as the
new CEO. Of course, she is the wife of the
late Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated just over a week ago.
It was a unanimous vote by the board and some

(13:41):
board members saying all of us Atturning Point USA have
a special role in carrying Charlie Kirk's mantle and completing
his vision of bringing us all closer to our Lord
and fostering a prosperous country for generations to come.

Speaker 2 (13:57):
That would make me nervous to take over. Well, it's
like you know, with the state of affairs and like
there's one parent left in that family. Yeah, and you're
going to put them out there just a I'm down
polarly for faith and standing up for your faith and
your beliefs, all that stuff I think is important.

Speaker 3 (14:18):
But it's such a big public position and such a
big move to make after something so horrific and tragic
has happened.

Speaker 2 (14:27):
I think she needs to have a handle on it
because she knows the vision probably better than most. But
I don't know that. It's like a tough role, a
step in two for sure. Indeed, So this was a
crazy story. The there's a man who ended up unresponsive
after writing a roller coaster at Universal Orlando Resort and

(14:49):
this is that start Us Racer roller coaster, which is
there at Epic Universe, which I'd love to go to.
He died. He it's unresponsive. They performed an autopsy and
he's only in his thirties, but they say that it
The autopsy conclusion is pretty shocking because it raised more

(15:11):
questions than it answered. Really, it had dealt with blunt
force trauma. But was it the head, was it the chest?
Was he banging around. Was he in the seat properly?
Was it the accident caused by the ride or him
doing something. We didn't really get any information about those things,

(15:34):
but I guess there's there's more investigation that needs to
take place there.

Speaker 3 (15:38):
Well, and the ride goes up to sixty two miles
an hour.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
I mean that's yeah, which is faster than you think.
I mean, in your in your car, you're going no
big deal. But in a on a roller coaster, that's
that's very very fast, very fast. How about one more story?
You got it?

Speaker 3 (15:59):
So, you know, good news for Clayton Kershaw, but sad
news for Dodgers fans. Clayton Kershaw has announced he is
retiring after eighteen seasons with the Dodgers, and that will
be effective at the end of the season. He caps
off a Hall of Fame career with three Psy Young Awards,
undoubtedly one of you know, Dodgers fans favorite players for many,

(16:23):
many years. He's decided he is going to take a break,
a much deserved break. I can't imagine doing anything for
eighteen years, much less physically demanding sports.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
Yeah right, It's like that's when your body tells you
to retire, you don't even make a decision. Yeah, So
there's a poll. The Emerson College polling survey was commissioned
by Nextstar Media and they're basically looking into Proposition fifty,
and of course that's the one that talks about the

(16:57):
redistrict redistricting measure here in California. It'll be on up
for vote in November, and it looks like it's leading slightly.
The poll conducted on September fifteenth through the sixteenth, found
fifty one percent of voters that plan to vote plan
to vote yes. I think that's the right way to

(17:19):
say it. Fifty one percent of voters planned to vote yes, okay,
and then on Prop fifty, while thirty four percent say
they'll vote no. Another fifteen percent are still undesigned undecided. Now,
among voters who say that they're very likely to vote,
support rises to fifty five percent. I think this is

(17:39):
a silliness at the point that if either something is
right or something is wrong, if you're being and you
don't believe in it, if you believe in it when
it suits your needs, then that becomes wishy washy. I
think we need to stand up for things and call
out Texas if we think that it's wrong what they're doing.

(18:01):
We the people, and I'm not part of one side
or the other, but we the people need to stand
up to say no, don't do that. We want as
many people represented individually as we can. The best way
we can do that is the way to do it,
not you know, drawing redrawing lines to benefit ourselves in
either way. And I think, actually, uh, the California redistricting

(18:27):
will cause actually more disruption than I think even Texas
did as far as actual body of representation. But to me,
it just means Trump owns us. If we react as
Californians to everything Trump does in the negative, we're still
being manipulated in my book. All right.

Speaker 3 (18:49):
So it's raining outside, so much needed rain. It's been many,
many months since we've had a good soak in here
in Socow. And the problem with this rain is that
because there's gonna be so much rainfall that there is
a chance for some flooding, There is a chance for
some mud slides, and we are under a floodwatch in

(19:10):
a lot of southern California, especially let's see San Berdanino County.
They're worried about it there. We'll just mentioned earlier in
Big Bear Route thirty eight. There's some issues up there,
so be careful when you're hitting the roads today. It's
gonna be wet, it's gonna be muddy. Could be some
flash floods in your area.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
What areas are we looking at here in southern California
that are really going to be getting well, let's see,
because you know, I burbank here where the studio is
like a drizzle, Yeah, just a little bit.

Speaker 3 (19:46):
I feel like when they say stuff like this, it's
mostly out in like this says this says San Berdanino County.
So I don't know if that's just like all of
the county or anywhere in particular.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
That's just kno rains yesterday. Yeah, he brings to the clouds.
What No.

Speaker 3 (20:06):
I want to give Conno.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
A hug, Team Conna.

Speaker 3 (20:11):
With the sadness, Tao. I think San Bardino County got
the majority of the rain faux show.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
All right, Hamas is in the news the piece of
crap organization. They issued strongest messaging about Israeli hostages. And
you know what I hate about this is that they
pretend like they give a rodents whole about these hostages
at all. We don't even know how many of them

(20:43):
are alive as it is, but it's like, oh, now
we're going to mistreat them or you're never going to
get them back or whatever. They're just pieces of garbage.
But they're saying that regardless of what you feel about
net Yahu, by the way, saying that Israeli Prime Minister
Benjamin net Who's Gaza City ground incursion means that Israel

(21:05):
has lost any chance of getting its hostages out so
or dead or alive, they say.

Speaker 3 (21:11):
So.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Basically, they're saying, because of the actions of Israel, there's
going to be consequences, but what their experience is experiencing
is not the consequences of their actions. It just anyways,

(21:32):
I hear you.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
So.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
Kamala Harris, you know, has a new book out called
one hundred and seven Days, and in the book she
has revealed that Pete Budhajudge was actually her first choice
for running mate in twenty twenty.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
Four Foot Dead Judge Jedge Boothaji.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
She says though that pairing Buddha Judge, a gay man,
with herself, a mixed race woman, would be too big
of a risk withs so she felt like she had
to choose Tim Wolves.

Speaker 2 (22:05):
That's the most that's the most horrible. That's the most
horrible thought though. But she's not wrong, I guess. I
mean people say that Obama got in. I mean, I mean,
I just.

Speaker 3 (22:19):
I just feel like it would have been a lot
for that ticket, a lot of change all at once,
you know, and people would have been like, whoa.

Speaker 2 (22:26):
It's just I don't know why we care, I really don't.

Speaker 3 (22:30):
I think that I absolutely believed, and I had thought
this at the time, that there were conversations happening behind
the scenes of if we put two people who are
pushing the envelope with diversity here up front on this ticket,
that people absolutely turned people away. So they felt like
they needed to bring in a straight, family white guy,
you know, family man figure.

Speaker 2 (22:51):
But he wasn't impressive at all.

Speaker 3 (22:54):
I mean, I liked I thought it was very likable.
He was very folksy.

Speaker 2 (22:58):
Yeah, yeah, you know, so was Palin. Yeah, she was folksy.

Speaker 3 (23:04):
It's folksy, man. How do I can see Russia from
my house?

Speaker 2 (23:11):
She probably can. I mean, that's just playing geography. I
mean Russia's yeah, you know Alaska, Yes, Alaska was part
of Russia at one time. I mean, it's yeah, it's not.
She reads every newspaper, all of them, all of them.
So come on, now, who's got the time. Yeah, they

(23:33):
all say the same thing. You ever read, like multiple
newspapers and it's the exact same story.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
It is the same owned variations.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
Of sometimes not even variations, because they're all owned by
the same company.

Speaker 3 (23:44):
That's true if you can tell who's using the same
wire services and like who's pulling from the same outlets.

Speaker 2 (23:50):
For sure, Apple iPhone, the seventeen goes on sale bumping.
I think on the twelfth and September twelfth, you could
do the pre ordern't done that in years. I loved
me some Apple products have been using them since i'd
moved to computers as a young artist. And when I
was designing and they said they wanted me to try something,

(24:14):
and the folks from Apple came out to show me
how to use this computer. I'm like, this is a
glorified type setter, big whoop. And you know, as we're
doing design work, working in dark rooms, doing color separations,
designing all these things, and all of a sudden, I
fell in love with these little machines and now we

(24:35):
hold them in our hand, which is crazy. So The
new products includes the iPhone seventeen Pro, the iPhone seventeen
Pro Max, and iPhone Air that's the really really really
really really thin one, as well as the new Apple
Watch and AirPod models. So you know, Apple's got a

(24:57):
lot of pressure on itself to innovate and do all
these things. I haven't been impressed with a lot they
do little bits. It's time for me to upgrade, so
I'll do that. I'm on a fourteen. I usually do
I don't know, every two years, sometimes two. Yeah. Yeah.

Speaker 3 (25:17):
I always can tell when it's time to upgrade because
my phone starts getting really hot. Does your phone do that?

Speaker 2 (25:23):
Yeah? Or it slows down, the battery starts You're like,
what the heck happened?

Speaker 3 (25:27):
The battery life goes down like so much. That's we're
onto you, Apple, that's sus it's every two almost on
the exact two year mark because I have the two
year like payment plan, and almost on the exact two
year mark, it starts to have some problems. All right.
So this is a wild story. This teenager, sixteen year

(25:49):
old Colorado girl was on vacation with her family in
Belize in August of twenty twenty four, apparently when she
was attacked by sharks. Yeah, plural sharksultiple sharks. And I
guess she was diving with her mom one hundred and
twenty feet deep into the dark. Please follow that under things.
I never want to do without her.

Speaker 2 (26:11):
We'll sit and watch from the shore.

Speaker 3 (26:13):
She says that she and her family loves scuba diving
together in her certified divers and they were she was
down there and she saw the sharks started. Sharks started
biting her hands. So she punched the sharks six times.

Speaker 2 (26:27):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 3 (26:28):
That's wild.

Speaker 2 (26:29):
And then its wife came over and said, don't do
that to my husband off.

Speaker 3 (26:33):
And then bit her again. And she said people started
throwing oxygen tanks at the sharks to try to get
it off so she could get back in the boat.
When you're throwing a punch underwater, isn't it kind of
like punching through like jello where just like blue?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
Yeah, I mean it's gonna slow down. You're not aero dynamic,
you're awkward dynamic. I guess at that point he's going
to slow it down. But what are you gonna do?
You gotta do something. Of course you're gonna punch it
in the nose, and they have recept her there. It's
very sensitive, which is why they always say, punch it
in the nose. It's a lot. There's a lot of
it's tender, and so a small punch will do.

Speaker 3 (27:08):
Yeah, or just don't go in the ocean with sharks,
that's my choice. It's kind of their territories, what you're saying.
That's where they live. Where I live is up here.

Speaker 2 (27:19):
Yeah, where you can run. Yeah. But she's in good spirits. Yeah,
she's like, I never thought I'd be bit by a shark,
But here we are.

Speaker 3 (27:28):
Here we are, and I got a cool story.

Speaker 2 (27:29):
I just like that to here we are. So whatever.
The new policy here in Los Angeles requires LA County
oversight officials to have communications basically to review and approve
and coordinate before going public. So this is interesting because

(27:51):
imagine it this way. The whole point of being a
watchdog looking at LA County and it's Paul's see it.
This is another form of muzzling criticism. So now you've
got LA County watchdogs suddenly need to ask permission before
they can bark, if you will, to the press into public.

(28:16):
And there's this. This is more of the concern that
we're getting about censorship, which I'll get into a little
bit later, and why it's different from cancel culture. There
are two different things.

Speaker 3 (28:30):
People just don't want to hear criticism. They want you
to just do what they say.

Speaker 2 (28:35):
I do not trust that my wife. I love her
to death. She does not pull punches. I know exactly
what's on her mind or how she feels or uh,
you know, my performance anything not. I mean not that
kind of performance. I mean show like because she's a

(29:01):
former radio producer, like, she doesn't pull punches. I love
that our former boss here, Rob Bird Lucci, same way,
doesn't pull punches.

Speaker 3 (29:10):
Michelle Cube s.

Speaker 2 (29:11):
Yeah, you want people around you that are honest with
you in life, and you need negative feedback. Be better
at what you do. True, true, true, All right, one more?
Shall we go?

Speaker 3 (29:22):
All right? Republican led Senate just confirmed forty eight of
President Trump's remaining nominees for below cabinet level federal positions,
moving ahead with what's called an n block nomination package
nominee package, So that means forty eight nominees were all
just confirmed by the Republican majority Senate and they are

(29:42):
going to be getting to work.

Speaker 2 (29:47):
Alrighty there, this is KFI heard everywhere on the iHeartRadio app.
You've been listening to the Bill Handle Show.

Speaker 3 (29:52):
Catch My Show Monday through Friday, six am to nine am,
and anytime on demand on the iHeartRadio app.

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