Kayal and Company
Girls threatening to beat up boys? And it's Debate Eve: Trump vs Harris
I'm Sally Holm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events, major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs. But we also bring you into the smaller, behind-the-scenes stories, the unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey Podcast in partnership with the History Channel, available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. - Caitlin Company, week, day, morning, six till 10. - Politics and pints coming up on Thursday. - Wow, what a week. - And we got Kamala in Trump tomorrow in the city and then Donald Trump Jr. in Collingswood, New Jersey on Thursday night. - Amazing. - And all three of us will be out there to celebrate and have a good time. As Dom Giordano interviews Donald Trump Jr. Scottish Rite Auditorium. I can't wait for that. I can't wait for the after party with the cocktails. - What? - On Uber or Lyft. Hey, get me home, I got a show to do on Friday and I wanna be responsible. Nobody get behind the wheel and drive after they've had a few, all right? We can't be having any more of these Johnny Goudreau stories, it's just tragic. So we'll get to a lot of stuff coming up here in this hour, including Besties No More and why Trump could ride a green wave through the blue wall of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania. And I think it would be very wise to do so. I see very little downside with this, according to some of these latest numbers that I've got right in front of me. But before we get to all of that, let's get to the news. Round number two at 705, the great Don Stensland. - And good morning, Kale and Company News Live. This chilly, fall-like morning. This Monday morning, September 9th, we are sponsored by Best Work Industries for the Blind in Kale and Company News Live. A threatening social media post involving various schools across Gloucester and Camden counties is being investigated by police locally and at the state level as well. We know that from debt for township police, they say they were made aware of that threatening social media post involving one of the schools and that was early last night. And so as this situation developed, they decided across local districts to shut down all of these schools. They were closed this morning, unfortunately, right at the beginning of the school year because of this threat of violence. This morning, police confirming, they have now taken a juvenile suspect into custody after that online threat, that according to Woodbury Police, the threat was made against Woodbury City Public Schools, the Defer Township School District, the Haddon Heights School District and Glassboro Public Schools. So schools in the Woodbury and Defer School Districts, they're the ones that are shut down today. And that means no transportation provided, which affects others, including Gloucester County Institute of Technology Students. And I believe Rowan, yes, Rowan College of South Jersey, they won't have that public transportation because everything is being shut down this morning. Even though the school officials put out an online, they put out messaging online and in social media saying that they believe that the threat is quote, not a serious threat, meaning that it was put online, somebody's in custody, but out of an abundance of caution, that's what they're saying this morning, they're shutting down all the schools. So no school, then for the rest of the week, the schools will have increased police presence surrounding all these schools. You know, not to get off on a tangent and sidetrack and derail the show, but we had an interesting conversation at my mother-in-law's last night 'cause we were doing cake for the girl's birthday. And my mother-in-law was talking about how crazy schools are and she's, you know, she has this concession business that she also does some catering for Friday night football games. And she's like, what world are we living in where it's not safe to go to a high school football game anymore? And she was talking about the Georgia shooting. And I was like, yeah, Judy, those shootings over the last 30 years, they're not happening at a higher frequency rate than they were in 1995. It's just the sensationalism of the media coverage. But then I caught myself and my wife's looking at me because on Thursday last week, my girls, the guidance counselor, when I was taking my nap, called my wife and said that the boy in the fifth grade threatened to beat up both of my daughters as well as four other girls in the cafeteria at school. And it's like, you know, I kind of got up and my wife was telling me the story. And I'm like, yeah, that thing of boys do that when they're in the fourth and fifth grade. And she's looking at me like kind of sideways. And she's like, yeah, but in this day and age, you got to take everything seriously. I mean, are we at that point now where like every single school threat needs to be vetted to the maximum? I feel like I'm stuck between a rock and a hard place. Like, 'cause I don't want to overreact, but 'cause I was a boy in fifth grade and probably made dumb comments to girls, but-- - It usually means they have a crush. - Well, yeah. - That's that age, though. - Yeah, fifth grade. - Yeah, yeah, yeah. - Yeah, fifth grade. - Oh, right now. - You're both insane. - No, you're both insane. - You're both insane. - Not in fifth grade. - Greg. - In fifth grade, I had girlfriends. Like, that's completely, it's completely different. - You had completely different. - You had girlfriends? - Of course. - Yeah, so-- - So that's what we're talking about. - Yeah, but I didn't threaten to beat him. I could do that in like kindergarten and first grade. - Oh, okay, that's what you're saying. - Yes. - Well, this is a-- - No, no, any-- - This is not the brightest bulb in the box. - Seriously? - He has to tell you, he has to crush on the new girls. - Any guy in fourth or fifth grade who's threatening to beat up girls, yes, needs to be examined. - Well, it's funny you say that 'cause I picked him up, but I always pick him up at the bus stop with my car 'cause it's a little bit of a walk, and I waited for, so I knew about the story and then my girls got in, and I'm like, so, anything happened at school? And so she says whatever. I'm like, all right, well, show me who he is when he comes off. Of course, he's, you know, the last one off the bus. Like, the bully's always sitting in the backseat. You know, the jerks of the school bus are always in the last row, so he comes off. Stocker was back there burning heaters in fifth grade. So, he comes off, and my daughter goes, yeah, that's him. I'm like, all right, I'll make a big scene. I don't want him to realize I'm like staring, so I'm looking over at him and he looks at me and makes eye contact with me. And I think the message was relayed. Like, I know that he knows I was staring him down, and he got the message of like, hey, don't make me go to your dad and, you know, the whole thing. - Oh, you should know his name and go, you know, go right up. Say hello, I'm Mr., you know, I'm Mr. Kale. - Well, I said that to my mother. - You know, Tommy, whatever, and say his name. - My mother-in-law's like, yeah, but you gotta be careful. For all you know, he's gonna pull out a gun and shoot you. - Nope, say his name and, you know, just give a firm handshake, meet him, it will end. - If you're, if you're in fourth or fifth grade and you're threatening girls, you're a psychopath. - It's not necessarily true. - It is 100% true, yeah, it is 100% true. - I'm gonna let my wife know Greg's opinion. - Thank you. - We'll handle it from there. - Yeah. - I don't know this, I don't know this child, but in my opinion, he's a psychopath. - Do they have cameras on the bus? - It's a good question. They're not electric buses. - We need cameras on the bus now. - Yes, we need cameras on the bus. - Maybe we do, I don't know. - They're mom. - I went to school on a school bus. - Thank you, 30 years old. Talk about it, you're talking about it. - A lot of school buses. - A lot of school buses have the camera on the bus. - Oh yeah, yeah, you know, you're right. - Yeah, it's in the, it's right above the teacher, the bus driver's head. - Yeah. - Yeah, yeah, they've had this for a long time. Yeah, so I would imagine they definitely have it by now. - What's funny to me is that we go to such great lengths now to keep kids safe and cards, like they're literally in car seats until they're 15. And we put them on the school bus in kindergarten and there's no seatbelts, it's a giant-- - That is pretty remarkable. - Death tube. I mean, is there somebody out there that knows the policy as to why they've never been instituted? - Has it been updated since the '50s? - I mean, seriously. You're sliding around on those leather seats, banging into things. - So dumb. - Falling out the aisle. - Little Johnny can't sit in the back seat without a proper seat. - But yeah, we've got to go on a school bus. - But yeah, we've got flight attendants that act like psychos when you take your seatbelt off on an airplane. - Yeah. - Like you're gonna go anywhere, sorry, Don. This is still the news, by the way. - Well, we have, and we have a lot of news today. Today, by the way, today is the day for the funeral, for the Gujarat brothers taking place at St. Mary Magdalene Catholic Church in Media, Pennsylvania, and even their obituaries noting publicly that it would be streamed on the Columbus Blue Jackets website given the number of people expected to attend. Also in this area, everybody from businesses to schools making arrangements and knowing that there will be increased traffic, the funeral procession starts at noon today. So they're just looking at that as far as how will it impact traffic, school buses, that sort of thing. But Sean Higgins, by the way, the suspect, the suspected drunk driving accused in their deaths remains jailed in Salem County, New Jersey for through this week as he awaits a pretrial hearing in the drunken driving deaths of NHL star Johnny Goudreau and his brother Matthew, a tragic situation that we have been talking about and the man accused of drunk driving though, his court appearance is set for this Thursday, actually. So, or excuse me, it's set for at least this Friday, September 13th, is when he will face the court but he's facing very serious charges, obviously, accused of striking them as they were biking together near their South Jersey hometown the night before their sister's wedding. An absolute family tragedy, it's making international news, but that funeral procession is expected today. And I actually will say that even over the weekend, when we think about how much this has impacted people, Pearl Jam honored the Goudreau brothers at a Philadelphia concert over the weekend Saturday night during a performance at the Wells Fargo Center, Pearl Jam lead singer Eddie Vetter, taking a moment to remember Johnny and Matty as he was called the Goudreau brothers who were killed by that drunk driver on August 29th. - Got you working in a little music in the absence of Phil Onquist this morning, it's good work out of you. - Well, no, Phil, even though he's in San Francisco to see his awful jets play. - He went to San Fran like it's going across the Delaware. - Monday night football, he did leave today music history. - Oh, that's amazing. - So, yeah, yeah. - Working ahead. - I like that. - Look at him. - Phil Onquist. - Where'd he go? - That's why we love you. - I swear. - So, if you, around the National Constitution Center, which will take center stage across the nation and worldwide as this is the first presidential debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald J. Trump. So, an historic day for multiple reasons, a lot of excitement building across the city of Philadelphia as the debate day approaches. It will happen tomorrow evening, September 10th at 9 p.m. And a lot of residents though, and commuters kind of dreading all the traffic and security lane closures will be happening. If you've driven by these huge, you know, huge silver fences have been put up all around and it's not only one set of fencing, it's actually two plus all the barricades. - Which is still one layer of fencing less than we saw at the DNC in Chicago to keep out the pro-Homos protesters because remember they were triple fenced. - Oh, that's true. - Yeah. - That's a good point. So, just to watch out, I said all the road closures earlier this morning, but especially Eastbound Ben Franklin Bridge traffic from Isaac 676, into New Jersey, that will be shut down tomorrow night, eight to 10 p.m. That's a big one for many evening commuters, but starting early tomorrow morning, we all have to be mindful of this because there will be a ton of road closures, rerouting traffic, and remember those rolling road closures that authorities say will be necessary throughout the day tomorrow to ensure public safety, it is a necessity, and then there are many first, they're calling them first amendment demonstrations. So, protesters of all sorts will be allowed. - By the way, Mangal Mush, one of our buddies on the YouTube chat says that he had a hard time finding the show again today on YouTube. So, if you're watching right now, please, please hit the like button and hit the subscribe button. The more subscribers, the more likes we get, we will get in people's algorithms because YouTube is doing their damnedest to throttle us, censor us as best they can. No, I'm not moving the show to another platform. This is still the biggest platform. I never usually will move here and move it there. No, I'm not moving. We're gonna stay on YouTube 'cause that's where the most people are, and I need everybody to, we just need to be better than them, we need to outsmart them. So, everybody watching right now, hit the thumbs up button, please, and hit the subscribe button so we can get in people's algorithm. - Think about the hurdles we have to clear on a daily basis in this format. - It's unbelievable. - You know, MSNBC wants to boycott X, YouTube wants to shut us down and keep us out of their algorithms. - Having the best summer ratings-wise, the station has ever had, and I'm still getting, well, you know, advertisers or they don't, they don't like the Trump brand, it's like a shot up. - By the way, guys, another good month. - Sell my radio station, please, thank you. Thank you. - Was that a PSA to sales? - No, it's a PSA to everybody. - Oh, okay. - I'm doing my part. - I'm gonna say, the sales out here. - Sales doesn't come until tomorrow. - No, no, no, no, no, sales, dude. Sales, the sales team, at least the director of sales and the market manager are our biggest fans. So, like, I'm not casting dispersions on them or our sales staff. I'm just saying that advertisers, you know, I know, you know, we're looked at as, well, you know, they say controversial things. - Toxic. - Toxic formats, but, you know, with a lot of people listening to our station right now, a lot, so. - Don't have you ever said anything controversial or toxic help us. - Help us. - I know, help us. - Not me. - Objectively, I go back and I watch clips of the show on YouTube, where I listen to segments on the app with a rewind feature, shameless plug. - Same. - I don't think we've ever said anything remotely controversial. - That's not true. - I mean, well, Don's used the T word once or twice. - Yeah, I'm peachy doing it. - I'm talking about Twitter in the past 10s. - You, you twit. - You tweet. - Oh, she's such a tweet. (laughing) - We-- - Hall of Fame comments. - We're proving to get results. - Yes, we're proving to get results yet. Yet, you know, you have advertisers and people who run companies that are like, "Well, I don't wanna alienate this, you know, "this group and that group." - Speaking about, speaking of advertisers, what about Don sponsors here for the big news? - Oh, yeah, yeah. - Yes, because we are sponsored by Best Work Industries for the Blind, Best Work Industries for the Blind, Changing Lives, a nonprofit organization located in Cherry Hill, Best Work Industries for the Blind, providing training, as well as employment for people who are blind or visually impaired for employment opportunities, or if you'd like to donate, go to bestworkindustries.org, Natural Lands is the sponsor for our weather today, even though we started out quite chilly. We were at 52 degrees, I think, when we started out this morning here in Center City, now mid-50s and heating up to a lovely 79 degrees, still that low humidity with the sun, gorgeous week ahead, not much rain at all this week, so dry, lower humidity, sunny skies, 79, and we will heat up into the 80s this week, but it will feel so good, because weather-wise, we're at that low humidity mark, but I think the high point was Thursday at 87 degrees, so just a gorgeous week and we head into the weekend, next weekend, mid-80s. This is full football weather, I will tell you in a beautiful night to come out and see Donald J. Trump Jr. on Thursday night, that's gonna be exciting and certainly a highlight for many of us, and happy birthday to the Kale Twins today. - Oh, thank you, 10 years old. - 10 years young. - 10 years young. - Oh my goodness. - 8 for years, and I can hand them the adult invoice of what they've caused me for the last 18 years. (laughing) - Yeah, not eight years, my friend. - I can't wait to give that statement. - Yeah, well, maybe, I'll give it 15. - Okay. - But. - In eight years when they're teenagers, you're gonna be losing your mind. - Yeah, I'm already losing my mind. (laughing) - I will point out to Governor Josh Shapiro joining the view on Friday and talking, sounding off, I'll just give you that as a lovely headline, but we are talking debate watch for tomorrow night and the talk of Philadelphia and the nation is once again, Philadelphia takes center stage. We're sponsored by Natural Lands and I should mention to you for our Philadelphia Eagles, we are excited to see Saequan Barkley Sores and Eagle scoring three touchdowns Friday night in the first NFL game in South America leading the Eagles for 34-29 victory over the Green Bay Packers who lost quarterback Jordan Love to an injury in the closing seconds. So for our Philadelphia Eagles, a lot of excitement. Phillies were blown out by the Marlins 10-1 in the series finale, but overall, we took the series. - Actually, I think it was tied. I think it was four games. - Okay, thank you. - Two, two. - But we're still-- - Yeah, seven games. - They're still losers. We're still the winners. - Robert Schwartz, I think, pointed that on the 6 a.m. - Thank you, Robert. - So thank you, Robert. By the way, the Eagles, Monday night, September 16th, 815 against the Falcons, right? - It's another ridiculous stretch. We're gonna go 10 days between Eagle games. How many games are they gonna play in prime time again? Whatever happened to just playing at one o'clock on a Sunday? - Yeah. - I just want, I want, I want a clock window and then I want to be done. - Yeah, I'm agreed. - These late games. - So I envy, if you have tickets to tonight's Phillies at home game, we're versus the Tampa Bay Rays, 640. So you'll see the sunset. It will be a stunning evening in Philadelphia. - Stunning. - Stunning. And we have, and so this week they're at home for, you know, the beginning of this week. Wow, weather-wise, perfect weather for our Philadelphia Phillies first in the National League East, I should point out. Every 70 days, a mature oak tree produces enough oxygen to support a human for one year. Natural lands has preserved more than 125,000 acres of open space in our region, including millions of oak trees. Learn more at NatLans.org. Natural lands land for life, nature for all. Natural lands, thank you for sponsoring our sports and weather killing company news live. - All right, Dawn, thank you very much. Still ahead this morning before and after the cut sheet, two stories on COVID, two females in sports and entertainment that are getting political, the opportunity to wager and gamble on the election. But up next could Trump ride a green wave to victory? It's killing company as we continue. Talk radio at 1210 WPHD. - I love to dream and to think about my new kitchen with the lighter kitchen cabinets. Maybe I'll go blue, you know, kitchenmagic.com. I love looking at all the before and after kitchen makeovers where magic happens. But when it comes to your home, trust is everything. Who do you trust with your kitchen? I'm always saying, get out of my kitchen, but not to kitchen magic because for 45 years, kitchen magic has built an impeccable reputation for transforming kitchens with precision professionalism and such care from custom cabinets to countertops, back splashes. And what about the storage solutions? That's so important. They get the job done fast at kitchen magic. And just a few days, your dream kitchen becomes reality without the hassle. Trust the name your neighbors have relied on for decades. Kitchen magic, get your free in-home consultation at kitchenmagic.com. Let's cook up something extraordinary. Kitchenmagic.com, do this, kitchenmagic.com. Tell them, Dawn, thank you. Hopefully you'll listen to my fandal picks last week when I told you to take minus two and a half to eagles at minus two and a half. Big victory against the Packers in Brazil over the weekend. What a great NFL weekend that was. And you have another chance to start the season with a big return on fandal in partnership with Valley Forge with C&O. It's America's number one sports book. You'll get started with $200 in bonus bets guaranteed when you place your first $5 bet on tonight's game. That's the 49ers and the Jets, the New York Jets, film, fill all my questions out in San Francisco. Season's insane. Have a brief call for an any time touchdown. Christian McCaffrey on the over rushing yards. Or Aaron Rodgers, the return of Aaron Rodgers on the over. Passing yards, go to fandal.com/grag to make every moment more of the season. Fandal.com/grag, fandal sports. A weekly wish of our number 1210WPHE and the NFL, 21 and over president PA. First online run money wage or only $5 first deposit required bonus issued as now with drawable bonus bets, which expires seven days after a seat. Your churches apply. See you try to the sports book at.fandal.com/gamblingproblem. Call 1-800-Gambler. This is the Kaling Company podcast from talk radio 1210WPHE and on the free Odyssey app. By the way, I saw a little video montage yesterday because Alan Lickman, I think on Thursday or Friday of last, we gave his 13 key indicator and he has predicted Kamala Harris to win the election. And three months ago, he said the only way that a Democrat's going to win is if Joe Biden is removed. So now he's being ripped for that and being called a partisan hack to which I would sit there and say, well, he's accurately predicted 10 of the last 11 elections. So you might not like his prediction, but I don't know that I would call him a hack. 10 out of 11 is a pretty good percentage as far as nailing things. But one thing I think Donald Trump can absolutely nail that I don't think could backfire on him because even if you are the most staunch conservative and you don't imbibe in alcohol or marijuana, you're still going to vote for Donald Trump regardless of his stance on weed or alcohol. And I thought this story was fascinating. This is from the New York Post. Trump's green wave, how a shift on marijuana could put him over the line in three key swing states. And as we've talked about, mostly this election is about Pennsylvania followed by, of course, Michigan, Wisconsin and Georgia to a lesser extent. But according to A.G. Carnegie of the New York Post, he writes, Donald Trump shocked political observers last week when he appeared to change his position on legalizing marijuana. But it could become a political jackpot. New surveys and polls suggest voters in the blue wall states of Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania could be swayed by Trump's green opinion on cannabis. Pauling shows that Americans broadly support marijuana legalization and there's very little downside for Trump endorsing it. They go on to highlight his post that he had on Truth Social last week. This was on, actually this was about 10 days ago, on August 31st. I think we talked about this when Sean Farris was in for Greg after Labor Day. And the Ragnar Research Group pulled 1,000 likely voters from August 18th to August 31st. And it shows broad support for weed legalization with very little political downside. They also say that Vice President Kamala Harris could be vulnerable on the issue. She supports legalization, but the Biden administration has been accused of slow walking efforts to change how the federal government classifies marijuana. And I'm thinking back to two clips of Kamala Harris that we've played on this show that I'm sure a lot of you have seen either on television ads or certainly on social media. I mean, she is a marijuana hypocrite if you think about it. She has said many times how she smoked marijuana when she was younger, maybe she still does today, yet when she was a prosecutor in San Francisco, she was very, very stringent and strict on weed possession crimes. She locked up everybody from marijuana, whether you were a user or a dealer. And if you recall, I think this was either when she was running for office at the state level or maybe 2019, 2020, remember the viral clip of Kamala Harris bashing young people, saying young people are stupid, and she was laughing and giggling. And then she changed her dialect and the way she speaks. And she was basically saying college kids in dorm rooms, that's why we send you there to be taught because young people are stupid and she's giggling. You play those two clips and then have a Trump ad in support of marijuana. I think Donald Trump has a great opportunity with young people. And I was thinking about this, you look at 18 to 29 year olds, you wanna expand that to 18 to 35, you wanna go even further 18 to 44. I mean, Gen Z, Millennials and Gen Xers, a lot of marijuana users out there. I'm not a weed guy, I've said it many times on the show, but I am for legalization of it. I don't like smelling it in public and I certainly don't want people to be impaired while driving under the influence of marijuana. But my God, the legalization of it should be a sweeping thing across this country. We need to get past the stigma of pot. I mean, every time you turn on the radio or TV, what do you see now? Sports betting ads. Remember when sports betting and sports books and gambling was taboo and you couldn't talk about a number and broadcasters were like banned from talking about how the Eagles are a three point favorite? You can't go anywhere without being clobbered over the head with a sports book ad. Same thing with marijuana. And I'm not an edible person, I'm not a joint person. I've had marijuana one time in my life. I told you six years ago, I tried a gummy in 2018 in Nashville on a couch. I almost chewed my lips off. It's not for me. But my God, this is a golden opportunity for Trump. Stocker, you're a guy who is not against weed. - I'm not against weed. - I am not against weed. - Am I missing something here? Is this a great spot for Trump? - It absolutely is, 'cause it plays into the whole freedom aspect of everything. - Yes. - I just, I don't know. See, it's with this situation, you have a lot of people who can see right through Kamala Harris as somebody who preaches that she, nobody should go to Jeff or smoke in a little weed. Is all, you know, she, she says that yet. - Right. - Record states that she's locked up a ton of people. - The hypocrisy of it. - Black and brown people, a ton of them in the Northern California suburbs for smoking said weed. So, you know, she's kind of a hypocrite on this. I don't know yet. I do think that that's a lane for Trump, but I don't know if he's a little too late to the game on this. - I don't know. - Well, no, I think he's been pretty consistent. I mean, that was with his, when he was president, with commuting sentences and that sort of thing, he was, remember the whole Kim Kardashian, is, you know, I think, was it Ivanka, was involved in that as well, trying to, you know, make sure that they had, you know, some justice and reform for people who were, and that's what, on true social today, that's his true social post today, saying, as I previously stated, I believe it's time to end needless arrests and incarcerations of adults for small amounts of marijuana for personal use. We must also implement smart regulations while providing access for adults to safe tested products as a Floridian. He says he'll vote yes on amendment three, you know, because he's a Florida voter, but he says as president, he'll continue to focus on the research, unlock the medical uses of marijuana, et cetera, et cetera. So to me, I think he's, what he's talking about is as a Florida voter, this is why he'll do this, but I think it's important that he says, as I previously stated, he has long said people should not be going to prison for 10 years. - So of course not. And that was part of, in his presidency, he was commuting those sentences or providing people with pardons for this reason. - Right. And we talked earlier in the first hour about doctors, and what do doctors do? They want to put you on medicine, they want to give you painkillers. You know, there's a lot of research out there, and I know a lot of people that used to be, when I was in Tennessee, and I did the sports show in the morning down there, I worked with a former Tennessee Titan in Baltimore Ravenwide receiver, Derek Mason, and he's still in great shape, but after 12 years, his bodies really banged up, his joints are killing him, and he's very, very healthy, eats clean, works out hardcore, instead of taking any sort of anti-inflammatories, he's got one of those marijuana cards for pain tolerance, because you have a lot of these guys, and there's a lot of research and data out there that shows, instead of taking a lot of these painkillers and these prescription drugs, that marijuana for joint pain is a far better and safer alternative to what big farmer provides, so I think a lot of people look at it from that standpoint as well. If you want to jump in 855-839-1210, but I do think that will play well for Trump, it'll be interesting if people pick up on his stance on it that have their head in the sand, but according to the data, Michigan, Wisconsin, and PA, it's certainly on the table. - Well, we said that, I mean, with abortion and weed being on the ballot in Florida, it's smart for Trump to shift his stance on both of them. If he did, I mean, if the perception is that he's for these two things, I think that helps him because we've said it for months on the show about how, in those 11 states, 12 states where abortion's on the ballot, you know what I mean? That could spell trouble. - Yep, 855-839-1210. If you would like to join the show, what is on the cut sheet after a few days of talking heads on television? You will find out next here on Talk Radio 1210, WPH. - I'm Sally Helm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events and the lesser told stories, ones you might not even know happened. Find History This Week on the Free Odyssey app or wherever you get your podcasts. - J. - It's a killing company on demand from Talk Radio 1210, WPHD, and the Free Odyssey app. - The first, and maybe the only debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris, we'll get you set for that tomorrow. Big reaction show on Wednesday. - It's gonna bet. - It's it, right? - This is it, right? I don't see them doing another debate. - I mean, we know Trump was willing to do multiple ones. He certainly wanted that one on Fox. The Hannity Town Hall from September 4th was originally supposed to be a Fox debate between Trump and Biden. - Oh, I didn't know that. - Yes, yes, so as of now, it looks like one and done, and then we'll wait till October 1st and J.D. Vance and Tim Walls will have their only debate. - Well, I mean, the voting, early voting, starts on what, the 16th? - And it's already underway in other states as of two or three days ago. - Oh, really? - That's right. Yeah, Pennsylvania's coming up actually a week from day. - Yeah. - September 16th, next Monday. All right, 747, let's find out what is on the cut sheet. ♪ What's on the cut sheet ♪ - What's on the cut sheet on this Monday is sponsored by Cherry Hill Volvo. Enjoy back to school savings on a 36-month lease of a C40 for $369 per month. Down payment, taxes and registration fees do at inception, except no taxes on the C40 in New Jersey. It's amazing. No taxes on the C40 in New Jersey where they tax everything in that state. Visit Cherry Hill Volvo today. Cherry Hill Volvo where relationships matter. Starting with cut one there, Captain Kirk. The big endorsement over the weekend (laughing) of Kamala Harris. - Why? - This was, well, it's not Liz Cheney. - From? - Liz Cheney did an interview, a town hall style thing with Texas Tribune. - And this is what she said to the moderator, cut one, Captain Kirk, go. (upbeat music) - Nah, this works like a charm. (laughing) - It's the big take. - All right. - 2.0. - All right, I'm done with this. I will play this. Start it over. Cut one, go. - Dick Cheney, your father. A beloved figure among Democrats for many, many years. Do you, if you know who he will be supporting or who he'll be voting for, do you care to share with us who he might be voting for? - Dick Cheney will be voting for Kamala Harris. (cheering) - Whoo! - Wow. Words I never expected to hear. - Yeah. - You know, if you think about the moment that we're in, and you think about how serious this moment is, you know, my dad believes, and he said publicly, that there's never been an individual in our country who is as grave a threat to our democracy as Donald Trump. - As Dick Cheney, oh, sorry. - And that's the moment that we're facing. And so I think recognizing that, and let me also say, you know-- - All right, let me just stop this. This just infuriates me forever. I heard liberals talk about how he was Darth Vader. He's the most evil human. He's the most evil human. He got us into the Iraq war. It was all because of Haliburton. It was all because of his greed and his need for money, and he lied us into that war. Now, all of a sudden, they're cheering. Yes, now he's voting for Kamala Harris. - WMDs, right? - I think kidding me. - Yeah. - You know, you said many times on this show that politics is wrestling, and it really is, because this is like the good guys all of a sudden becoming the bad guys, and then the bad guys become, or the heels become the baby faces, and the crowd cheers for you. So think about this, or you can use the sports analogy. We basically have a six-player trade. So actually, it's a four for three. So the Democrats get Liz and Dick Cheney, they get Adam Kinzinger, and they get Bush. And the Republicans now, on the receiving end of the trade, got Elon Musk, Tulsi Gabbard, and a Kennedy. - Yeah. - We're living an upside-down world. Bush's are now supporting Democrats, Kennedy's are now supporting Republicans. As I've said for many times, and for two years on this show, it's really remarkable how conservatives have become what they used to despise, and the liberals have become what they used to despise. It's like role reversal. It's really wild. - I think this could play in Trump's favor. - I agree. - In the sense that-- - I agree, 100%. - Cheney is the face of the swamp, if you will. So many do, as Greg said, we look at history and how things age, the Iraq War and Afghanistan War have not aged well, right? And so I'll admit, I voted for Bush, Cheney, okay? And I believed in that ticket. - As did I. - Okay. - I'm sure a lot of people listening in this audience did. So yeah. - But when you look back, and if you read all the different books, and I remember, and I apologize whose book this was, but there was one that famously quoted that George W. Bush kept saying, "Oh, you almost had me, and he did not want to go in." And it was Cheney who was widely credited with really talking the president into that, and convincing him, and so more than any other voice. But then look at the profits, profiting with Halliburton and his investments, billions of dollars. I mean, tens of billions of dollars, depending on which site you look at, in one I was looking up, for example, Halliburton's KBR division allegedly built government agencies to the tune of $17.2 billion in a rock war related revenue, and that's from 2003 to 2006 alone. And so someday it's upwards of $39 plus billion. So if you look at what Trump could do with that then, he can say, "Hey, remember," he said, Trump says, and he told Stern in that famous interview you play, "The Trump said he was against the Iraq war, "like Rand Paul and others." That's what he says, so he could say, "I was against the swamp, I was always against the swamp." Dick Cheney, the face of the swamp. - And I think I speak on behalf of the MAGA base. You can take the bushes, you can take the Chinese, you can take Colin Powell, you could take Condi Rice, and you could have him Democrats. We don't want him, that's fine. - What this is is the Neocon movement of the Republicans, joining forces with the Neocon movement of the Democrats. And I agree with Dawn, this I think works in Trump's favor a lot, because I know it's shocking because he's a lifelong conservative, I get it. But the loathing, and I was on the air for this time, I remember like 2004, 2003. Like the hatred that liberals had for Dick Cheney was off the charts, he was the most evil human being that ever walked the face of the earth. - But you know what those people are saying now, because my mother-in-law said it to me last night in passing, I went back inside for another slice of pizza, she goes, "Oh yeah, even the Chinese have left your boy." I'm like, "Good, have him, take him, I don't care, "I don't want him." - Cheney is still paid by a Pentagon contractor. - This plays into Trump's anti-establishment thing, and I think that this, and I know-- - Anti-war. - And I know over the weekend, George W. Bush's spokesperson came out and said he will not be endorsing anybody, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, but you know he ain't voting for Trump. - I don't know. - You know he's voting for Trump. - I'm not saying he's voting for Kamala, I don't know that. - But he's not voting for Trump. So look, I think that this, to Don's point, this really serves Trump well, having Dick Cheney endorse Kamala. - In 1995, Cheney left the Department of Defense and became the CEO of Halliburton, and over the next decade, Halliburton shares returned 467 percent. - Yeah. - And he's not voting for the president, he's not voting for the president. - Mm-hmm. - It's tens of billions of dollars. - So of course, because of this, Liz Cheney, was brought out on all the Sunday shows this weekend, this is from ABC this week, this is cut nine. Asking about if she's still a conservative. - Conservatives for Kamala. - Cut nine, Phil Go. - By the way, are you still a Republican? - I'm a conservative. - Ah. - Have you left the party? And remember, 'cause we spoke about this a while ago, and you said if Trump were the nominee, you would not consider yourself a Republican. - I'm certainly not a Trump Republican. I am a conservative. I think that what's happened to the Republican party today is indefensible, and I hope to be able to rebuild, as I said, after this cycle. But I also think it's really important for us as we're thinking about rebuilding, as we're thinking about the future, the country, to recognize that at the end of the day, the vast majority of people in this country want to know fundamentally that their elected officials are gonna defend the peaceful transfer of power, and that they are gonna put the constitution first. And as someone who's been a lifelong Republican, it's heartbreaking to me to see what has happened to so many of the elected officials in my party, and I know we can do better. - So Liz, if you wanna put the constitution first, how can you support a lady who's trying to decimate the first and second amendments of the Bill of Rights of the Constitution? You know, to me, oh, it's indefensible what the Republican party has become. Look, if you're a Republican or a conservative and you're gonna hold your nose and vote for Trump because you don't like what the current version of the Republican party has become, I got that. I'm fine with that, I disagree with you. I think it's a better version of what Nikki Haley represents, which I have labeled her as a rebranded, refurbished, repackaged, warmongering Bush Republican. That's fine, if any of these people out there are like, "I'm gonna vote for Trump, I don't really like him." Okay, I got you. But to me, you talk about indefensible. Indefensible is calling yourself a conservative and voting for a left-wing progressive. How can any self-described conservative vote for somebody with communist and socialist principles? Somebody answer that, if you can answer that question for me, I'll give you 12 bucks. - Well, I'm glad you brought that up because Jonathan Karl Aslett's changing about that. And she says that she's changed and she's more of a moderate. So she's a moderate conservative, okay. - Cut 14, Fogo. - But before I leave Harris's policies, back in 2019, when she was running for the Democratic nomination, she took a range of positions, Medicare for all, she suggested she would favor abolishing ICE, decriminalizing illegal border crossings, a whole range of issues that she has now, you know, apparently changed. Would you still have been able to endorse Kamala Harris if it was the Kamala Harris of 2019 and 2020? - Look, I think that she has changed in a number of very important ways on issues that matter. And I would encourage independence to look at where she is on these policy issues today. I would encourage independence to compare where she is today with where Donald Trump is on these issues. And so I think from a policy perspective, it is very important to recognize the change, to recognize that she understands that this election is gonna require a coalition of people from across the political spectrum supporting her. And that also necessitates an understanding that you've got to govern for all of those people. And on top of all of that, the Republicans have nominated somebody who is depraved, somebody who shows us every day that he has tendencies and he's willing to embrace things that are fundamentally a danger to this nation and to our constitution. So the choice in my view is not a close one. - So Liz Cheney trying to portray the concept of moderate. I mean, first of all, we're 50 days in, 51 days, Kamala, how do you know Kamala Harris is a moderate? And I mean, if you go to her website, there's still no policies posted on her website, which is staggering to us. - And as a senator, she was listed as one of the most progressive, one of the most far left. I just to me, what I view this as is personal. It's personal because Liz Cheney keeps, so where's your evidence? Where's the follow up question to say, well, Liz Cheney, what do you base this upon with Trump? And to me, it's personal. She personally doesn't like him. And perhaps because as well, Trump has bashed her dad in the Iraq war, et cetera. By the way, George W. Bush and Laura Bush have just, they have remained silent. They've not endorsed anybody. They're not talking about it. So that's as far as the Bush family goes. But I think with the Chinese, this has become personal. Liz Cheney's saying that he was a danger democracy, et cetera. I mean, he left, he and Melania, we all watched the live news conference. When they left, bye bye, they waved goodbye. They said, thank you, we love you. Got on the plane and flew to Marilago. And so they left, he didn't stay. He didn't barricade himself in the white. Like it's absurd that she still doubles down on this narrative. This reminds me of, when you talk about all of these lifelong GOP pro-war swamp creatures, it reminds me of either the workplace or in professional sports. When there's a new boss or a new coach comes in and the current staff or the current players, they feel like, you know what, they don't like the new guy because he doesn't align with what the previous vision was. So they have sour grapes. I mean, show me or find me one pro-war Republican that truly loves Trump. You're probably not going to find them. Other than a Lindsey Graham, who I don't trust as far as I can throw, you know, Lindsey Graham will say whatever, just to get ahead in his own personal life. - I love him. - But you know he hates Trump from the standpoint of, you know, Trump being anti-war. And Don, you've said it, peace through strength, peace and prosperity. And if you're in the Halliburton industry or any of the war defense, the military industrial complex, Trump's bad for your business. That's why they want him out. You don't got to look too far past the fact that's about money. - A road war in the YouTube chat says, the coalition thing is real. That's what Western Europe countries do to defeat the populace, right? UK and France, most recent. He's a hundred percent correct. - Yep, yep. Although he was not correct about social media last night when he was tweeting us, trying to claim that I said that Trump's going to win New York. - Yeah, I was Don that said Trump's going to win New York. - He said, he said he's going to go back and pull all the receipts. I said that Trump could pull out a lot of surprises. He could pull. I think that as far as New Jersey or New York, I think Trump will do better than anybody thinks. - Yes. - I am concerned as far as Florida, I do think it's good that they have and we talked about that early, what he was putting on in true social because you'll have the marijuana vote versus the abortion vote in Florida. But I do worry about that being on the ballot in Florida because Ron DeSantis, and as well as the abortion measure that DeSantis wants is more conservative than the bulk of the nation wants. So I am concerned about that. - Yeah, well, Ron, if you can find tape with me saying that Trump's going to win New York. - He's going to, by the way. He's like a, he was in the FBI or something. - I'm going to claim artificial intelligence. There's no way I ever said Trump's winning New York. I'll tell you what, if he finds authentic tape of me saying Trump can win New York, I will get a Kamala Harris tattoo on my keystone. - Oh, wow. - Whoa. - I know I never said that. - Wow. - And by the way, for those that aren't in the know that are like, who the hell, what are you guys talking about? He, Road Warrior, one of our great listeners and bike riders tweeted us last night about, I guess Trump in trouble in Ohio, which I would say Trump has as much chance of losing as Ohio, losing Ohio as he does winning New York. I would say relax, Trump's not losing Ohio. And I know other people are concerned, is Trump in danger in Texas? He might only be up four points, but Trump's not, Texas isn't turning blue this year. - Everybody loves as if it's a sport, everybody loves to talk about the, there was one thing I saw yesterday I read and it said, if Trump wins, what is it, Pennsylvania, Georgia and North Carolina, that combination, if you like a, like an old fashioned slot machine or whatever, the casino, if he gets those three-- - Triple bars. - Triple bars, yeah, like my mother-in-law, just pump the quarters in, hit the spin button. I like pulling the lever though, I'm not a slot guy, but if I ever play slots, I like to pull the lever, I'm not a button tapper. - Bro, that bet you made, you better pray. There's not a tape if you say, he could win New York. - I never said he could win New York, boy. - But you said if you did, you would get a tattoo of Kamala Harris with your face. - I said he's making inroads. I said, look, he's, I think what, was he seven or eight points behind? And this was like two months ago, this might have been against Biden or Harris, but he was, you know, within single digits, but no. I never said he could or would win. There's no way I ever said, and I say a lot of dumb things on this show. (laughs) Self-admitted. - By the way, it's election day in Delaware tomorrow. It's a primary election day tomorrow, just so weird, such a late primary. - I know, eight, five, five, eight, three, nine, 12th out. We'll continue with the cut sheet, but a lot of people want to chime in on the Cheney stuff that we're playing here with Liz in the endorsement of Kamala Harris. Let's grab Rich. He's in Glenmore. Rich, your own talk radio at 1210. Rich, you go right ahead. - Good morning, everybody. One of the things that really bugs me about the Cheney thing, and I've never been a Bush conservative. I've never been, you know, Cheney or Romney. I held my nose in voted for Obama in '08, and it turns out he was just a crook like the rest of them. And a war crook, too. I'm 57 and 84 when Reagan was running and took the map, all but one state. I couldn't vote because I couldn't vote. I wasn't 18 yet. And, you know, I remember that very clearly, Hal. Everybody, our age, my age, loved Reagan, and our parents hated him for whatever reason. They were all Democrats, Union Democrats. They, you know, Democrats are the party of the working people, which is not the case now, even if it was then. And I got to wonder about these people that shouted from the rooftops about pro-life, like Cheney, like Bush, how they can, you know, stand up there and say they support Kamala of all people and her positions. So I gotta ask, are they gonna go to the rallies and say they're now for, you know, up to ninth month abortions? And, you know, it just seems not just hypocritical, but it proves that they were phonies all along. - Well, I mean, you know, the left loves their optics and thanks for the call, Rich. It wouldn't surprise me if you saw a Cheney or a Bush or a combination of them out in public in the next 50 plus days with Harris at a rally. - I can't imagine a, first of all, Liz Cheney got destroyed in the last election she was in. - So her coalition is, you know, three people. - Yeah. - And did Cheney is hated by the left and now he's hated by the right. - Which is hard, it's a hard feat to a couple. - It really is, I mean, that's the territory I stand on. The left hates me and the right hates me. Which is why I know I'm doing something right. But I can't imagine them wanting to come out and, you know, supporting him because who's coming out to see them? - I can't imagine there's any election impact on these endorsements, much like, you know, Elon Musk, I don't know if that really ultimately moves the needle for Trump. But I mean, if you're gonna trot out Dick Cheney, I mean, he's two years older than Joe Biden. Sir, I'm looking, I just looked it up on my phone. He was born January 30th of 1941. He's 83 and he's a walking pile of dust. I mean, the Democrats continue to just go old and old and old. But I was told for so many years, and this was like when I was growing up in the late 90s and then during the Bush era from 2000 to 2008, you know, Republicans old, the Democrats are the party of old now. It really is remarkable how much younger and diverse the Republican party is. And I think that's another thing that doesn't sit well with some of the old guard Bush Republicans. I know there's a lot of people that wanna win. Let me just zip through a couple of these calls and then we'll continue with the cut sheet. Let me go to Don in Franconia. He's got some thoughts on the chain. He's Don, you go right ahead. - Thank you. Good morning. Hope you guys are doing well. - Yes, you too. - Sounds like you are. - Yes. - To make a long story short, whoever was talking to Liz Cheney, after they asked her about who she was gonna vote for, they should have followed it up with a question. Who would you vote for if the contest was between Nikki Haley and Kamala. - Oh, she got Nikki all day. - Absolutely. And Nikki, of course, is gonna vote for Trump. And it goes back to 2016 when Jeb Bush was the leading candidate for the Republicans at that time. And Donald Trump gave him a brand new rear end, to be honest with you. And ever since that happened, there's been no love between Bush and Trump. - Yeah, he called him low energy Jeb Bush. And to your point, this is a fun game we can play. What Republican would Liz Cheney not endorse right now? I think the only two she would not endorse and vote for are Trump and Vivek. I think she would back DeSantis. I definitely think she would back Nikki Haley. She would absolutely back Tim Scott, Chris Christie, Doug Burgum. She will not back the two outsiders, Trump and Vivek. That's my take, and I'm standing by it as we continue. - Tulsi Gabbard was on with Tucker Carlson, and she discussed the Dick Cheney endorsement of Kamala Harris. This was just a little bit of that conversation. This is cut 21, go. I have a very simple message for my Democrat friends, my independent friends. Those who may not be sure about who they're voting for in this election, Dick Cheney has just made the choice very clear. A vote for Kamala Harris is a vote for Dick Cheney. The architect of everything that has gone wrong in the Middle East for the last few decades. (audience cheering) And so it's interesting because if you listen to the New York Times or some of the other mainstream media they're saying, oh, you know, don't expect much from Kamala Harris in the way of policies and details and plans, and we're not gonna know much about what kind of president she's gonna be because she doesn't have much time. They're conveniently ignoring the fact that she's been there working in the White House the last three and a half years alongside Joe Biden. She's been the last one in the room, according to her, as these big decisions are being made. But we look at who she says, her response to the Dick Cheney announcement today was that she was honored to have his endorsement. And we got military veterans in the house. (audience cheering) Got a lot of you who probably served in the Middle East like I did. And so it sickened me, Tucker, to read those words today, both from Dick Cheney, Liz Cheney, and Kamala Harris because we have people who we care very much about who were killed in those wars because of Dick Cheney. - I mean, she really is the perfect person to say I'll go on this because she is the, you know, she's the epitome of the anti-neo-con. - Perfect to speak on that, perfect to speak on not having stolen valor, unlike Tim Walz. Perfect to speak on how she used to be a Democrat and now is a Trump Republican. I mean, I've told you many times, I think she's super, super impressive. It's kind of mystified there, by the way. She's got a bottle of water next to her and Tucker's got three ginger rails. That was a little odd. I'm not sure what's going on there. By the way, Tucker, put some socks on, man. I mean, what's going on with that one? - You don't like that look? - Yeah, he's a weird dude. I like that long, strange guy. - I like that look. - But no, she's very spot on. You know what's interesting is, we heard about this unity ticket, right? And, you know, then we heard about no labels and we hear about third parties. I think just looking at this from a nonpartisan lens, I think both sides are trying to present this United Unity ticket party because you look at Trump, he's got Elon, he's got RFK, he's got Tulsi, and this kind of goes back to what we were just talking about with, you know, the trades in the political world. And then here, all of a sudden, here's Kamala Harris with these, you know, old guard Republicans. It's truly bizarre times. I mean, I don't know if you would have said four years ago or eight years ago that a Kennedy would back a Trump, or a Kennedy would back a Republican, and some of these career Republicans would back a Democrat. I think people would look at you like you had five heads. I mean, this is something, and think about how things have changed over the last, let's call it eight weeks now from Trump being shot to the debate, to Joe dropping out to Kennedy. I mean, nobody, I mean, remember when we were talking about like Trump court cases and what the election will look like, we'll Biden make it to the finish line, we'll Trump make it to the finish line. There has been so many plot twists and swerves in this election. I don't think we saw any of this coming ahead. Nothing really is remarkable. And anybody who thinks or says that they did is lying, by the way. And anybody that thinks that we know how it's all night and we have no way. Nobody really knows how November 5th's gonna play out either. We still have like 56 days. We have a lot of things that can happen between now and early November. Speaking of that, this is cut 18 there. Harry and then CNN's nerdy poll guy always hopped up on Red Bull. Says this is the closest presidential campaign in 60 plus years. And he said the race has been consistently close in the way that he has never seen. And the funny part of this is he's in it. He's like, in my lifetime, I've never seen this. And I'm like, dude, you're like 19 years old. (laughs) Cut 18, go. And just point out how close this race has been consistently, consistently close. All right, campaigns were any candidate led by at least five points in the polls. Look, most of the time there's at least some stretch or one of the candidates is ahead by at least five points, at least three weeks from which one candidate led by at least five points. That happened in every single campaign from 1964 to 2020. How many days have we had this campaign where one candidate was ahead by at least five points nationally? Look at this, zero, zero days, zero days. The fact is this race has been consistently tight in a way that we have never seen before, Mr. Birmingham. This is always versus never. Correct. That's the difference between this campaign and every other campaign we've seen for the last 75 years or so. All right, the battleground polls that we're looking at, give us some perspective on how close they are. You know, sometimes we look at these seven close states and you know, you see all these numbers that are up there and you go, I can't make heads or tails of it. So I just want to sort of combine them and look at the Democrat versus Donald Trump and those seven closest battleground states. Look at the 2020 final margin and average across these seven states. It was Biden plus 0.9 points. You don't think that could get any closer? We can in fact get closer. Look right now, Kamala Harris up, but get this by just 0.6 points on average. Only about half a point, 6/10 of a point. My goodness gracious, that is how tight we are talking right now across these seven battleground states. It is a race, Mr. Berman, that is well within the margin of error when you look across these seven key battleground states that will determine this. I'm Sally Home with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events, major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs, but we also bring you into the smaller behind the scenes stories, the unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey Podcast in partnership with the History Channel, available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. Election, it is pretty remarkable. And I have been of the belief. I've said this for probably close to two months now and going back to maybe the 4th of July. I think this is a razor, razor thin election, one point in polling that's not accurate, could sway the outcome. It's staggering. And I am also of the belief that we will wake up Wednesday morning and come in here. And I'm going to do a big take not knowing who won the election. And we've already been told Pennsylvania be ready. They probably will not have the results on election night. - And not probably, they're definitely not coming. - Right. So I mean, I'm thinking, you know, we could go Wednesday, maybe into Thursday. Dare I say into Friday? Not knowing who won this thing? I wouldn't rule it out. - It is ridiculous, but it makes for great content on the show. - What's the, I mean, it'll probably be Friday, but not in time for our show on Friday. I'm guessing it'll probably be 1002. (laughs) I don't know. I do think, cause it does take, it does take Pennsylvania forever. - It is. - So, you know, and on that note, we should actually look up. I mean, maybe Kirk, I know you're doing video and stuff, Kirk or Jim, I just would like to know how many registered voters are in Florida versus Pennsylvania, because I just love the fact that Florida can, and I know there's been issues, you know, 24 years ago and, you know, the whole bit with the hanging chads and stuff, but I just want to know why is it that some states, and I'm talking states with a big, big population, not these little rinky dink states, but like, how can you wrap up a result in three, four hours? And I'm talking about the late evening hours. You know, at seven o'clock, everybody's sitting down to watch it after they've done their day and they've came home for maybe voting after work. How is it that some states can do this so succinctly and others are an unmitigated disaster? - Well, it depends on the rules. Like, we can't-- - I know. - Dawn, we can't start, they can't start counting in Pennsylvania until election day, right, until the polls close. - Supposedly. - And polls close in Pennsylvania what? - I can't get attention to my life. - Yes, I am. - At eight o'clock, nine o'clock on election night in Pennsylvania, I think the polls close. - Yeah. - Cut 25 here. How important is fracking in Pennsylvania? - Super. - You know, we hear a lot about fracking and what the, you know, what the importance is because Kamala has a flip flop. She was for banning fracking. Now she's not on CNN on Friday night on Anderson Cooper's show. John King actually did a deep dive into how important fracking really is in Pennsylvania, how many jobs it affects, this, that, and the other. 'Cause they were debating whether it was important or not, cut 25, so go. - But Pennsylvania, let me bring up this map. The darker the shading you see on the map here, the counties where there are more fracking, more oil and gas extraction jobs. So let me just draw a line here. You see the deeper shading up here across the tusps and stay and I'm gonna come down and draw, it's not perfect, but you see the line right there. Now this is where you have those oil and fracking jobs. Around 30,000 jobs, maybe closer to 20,000 jobs, depending on as David noted. There's some drills, there's support jobs around it. So it's not a ton of jobs mathematically, but there's where they are. Now let's come out and let's come back to the map of the 2020 election. That's mostly Trump country. That's mostly Trump country. So why, as Michael said, would the vice president take the risk of changing her position and being called a flip flapper? Well remember, she did it in 2020 to be on the ticket with Joe Biden. So yes, it's about maybe, let's say in a place like here, Washington County. This is where Bill Ware was in the South part of the state. Trump wins with 61% Joe Biden. In Pennsylvania when it's so close, if you can change the margins, if you can get to 38%, you know, 39%, you're helping yourself a little bit, but I would argue it's about more than that. It's about trying to show respect with Hillary Clinton did not for people who work with their hands, not just in the oil and gas industry. Let me show you this, I wanna take the lines away so it's not so confusing. This is the wind margin in Pennsylvania in 2020. See the lighter shading here? Michael just mentioned the suburbs. He knows them as well, if not better than I do. This is Bucks County, the more blue collar Philadelphia suburb, and the more blue collar of the collar counties, Joe Biden won that by the least. He won all those suburban counties, but he won that by the least. Then you move up here to Northampton County. It was a tie. What do you find in these places? Look over here, Lehigh County, where Allentown is. A margin, but not as big as in the Philadelphia suburbs. Same in Monroe, and over here, I just wanna get to Lackawanna, that's Scranton. That's where Joe Biden was born. He wins, you say that's a healthy margin, but it's not as big. Look how deep the blue is down in Philadelphia and the more affluent suburbs. What are you saying when you say I wanna pose for Aggie? I get Michael, she's open to the charge on flip flop, but what she's trying to do is not repeat Hillary Clinton's mistake. Until these people as well, you work with your hands. I respect what you do. - So there's two takeaways that I had for that. Number one, I'm glad that Mr. King brought up Northampton County, because Northampton County, if you aren't familiar with that county, is Easton, Pennsylvania, which is where I am from originally, and then parts of Bethlehem. Parts of Bethlehem are Lehigh County, other parts in Northampton County, and that is the ultimate bellwether. I believe in the last, I wanna say the last, 18 years, or maybe it's 18 elections. 18 elections seems too high. I think it's 18 years. However, Northampton County votes is how the state of Pennsylvania ultimately plays out. - Yeah, 'cause it swings. It swings back and forth, and whoever wins, Northampton usually wins Pennsylvania. - But I think the issue of, this whole issue of fracking, another reason it's credit. First of all, Pennsylvania, the nation's second largest, producer of natural gas, third largest producer of coal, and 16th largest producer of crude oil, third largest producer of electricity. And so Pennsylvania, we in, during the Trump administration, helped make America energy independent. So part of this, part of these jobs, and you think about what's going on now, a lot of the jobs have left, during the current administration, also the regulations here in Pennsylvania are excruciating, and that's why a lot of companies have left and gone south, et cetera. So people in that sector and the energy sector know that. But what Trump can also speak to is there are people here in Pennsylvania who are paying more, about 40 plus percent more in their energy costs. - Oh yeah, and that's why-- - 40 percent. - Right, and that's why Comma was such a fraud. I'm gonna lay out tomorrow as part of our debate preview, big take, the nine flip flops of Harris, but on the energy front, so you're telling me, so you want to ban fracking, and then create EV mandates for transportation, have electric school buses and charging stations, but now that you're running for president, you're ditching the EV mandates, and well, four years ago, I did say I was opposed to the ban on fracking. I've got this story in front of me, and I've yet to get to it, but I'll just read the headline because it's been in my pile for a while, from Politico. Kamala Harris' secret power, she is whatever you want her to be. That's an insult, actually, because it's not that she's open to adapting and evolving with the times, it's she'll say whatever she needs to say to get elected. She's a fraud. - Yeah, and Biden, though, people trusted Biden, people here trusted that him, and in fact, we saw all of those jobs drying up, and so I don't know that, to me personally, the word that I get is that the Biden-Harris administration loses that trust, even though it's Harris now, she's still Biden-Harris. So why would people in Western Pennsylvania, why would they trust it? For Trump, I would wonder, remember back in the day, Sarah Palin, when she was governor in Alaska, she had said for people in Alaska, because they were sitting on liquid gold, whatever you want to say, they all got a tax rebate. Wouldn't it be interesting if Trump said something to that effect, because here in Pennsylvania, the Marcellus Shale alone contains an estimated, I looked up 84 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, largest natural gas field in the nation. Imagine, if Trump said, hey, you Pennsylvanians, you are literally living on a gold mine, and you Pennsylvanians, you should get a rebate. - Oh yeah, no doubt. By the way, before you get to these calls, I just wanted to say that we're streaming live on YouTube, YouTube.com/1210WPHT. Please, we had problems getting in people's feeds this morning, if you're watching right now, everybody watching on YouTube, please hit the thumbs up button, everybody please hit the like button, and also hit the subscribe button, excuse me, so we can get in people's algorithms. Do it, and do it now. - Yes, 855-839-1210. Very interesting range of callers here, as far as what they want to talk about, based on what we're discussing here, in the cut sheet, let me actually start in Jim Thorpe, with Jason. Jason, you're on talk radio 1210, you go ahead, Jason. - My man, good morning, guys. Thanks for having a great show, I do appreciate it. - Sure. - I drive all over those areas that, excuse me, that they were just talking about, Northampton County. I get into Box County a little bit, but I was just up in Wilkes Fair, and I'm there several times a week, every week for what I do, drive around and sell food. Expensive food. But I turned down a little corner, through a little neighborhood the other day, and I saw my first Kamala Harris side. Now, I was blown away, because literally, they were the first ones, and they were probably a half a dozen of them. As I got to the end of the road, there's a gas station, and what I noticed, I don't know if there's a correlation here, between the lady smoking a cigarette, as she's pumping her gas, and the neighborhood I just drove through, but I just had to bring that up, because, you know. That's a great observation. It really shocked me, you know. So anyway, thanks for doing what you did, Greg. You put on a great show, man. - There he is, Jason, and Jim Thorpe. It is interesting. I noticed this yesterday. I took a couple of back roads to get up to the turnpike. Instead of getting on from Plymouth Meeting, Norristown, that exit, I went up through Valley Forge Road to some of the townpike to Lansdale, and typically, when I go that way, I mean, I know Montgomery County is very blue. I saw a lot of Trump Vance signs. And I gotta tell you, not that it means anything, and maybe it's just because they're new to the ticket, and it's only been, you know, 49 days or whatever. I honestly, I have not seen a lot of, and again, it doesn't mean anything, but I haven't seen a lot of Harris Wall signs. Have you guys noticed that in your daily travels? - I've seen, yes, I have since now. - You have, okay. - But it's certainly not as much as the, look, we go through this all the time. Signs don't mean anything. Yes, you see a lot of signs, but Trump supporters are very passionate, you know what I mean? So they put up 90 million signs in their yard. By the way, there's some of them that I've seen are huge. Like they take up the entire post- - Oh yeah, it almost looks like a billboard. - It looks, it does look like a billboard. And by the way, Trump, if you drive on 95 and 276 here, Trump and Vance have billboards, digital billboards out. So you know, I think that's a smart play too. - And by the way, I know we talked last week about what's up with the anti-Trump pro-coma ads we had to explain a thousand times, you know, the FCC, you have to do it. And I posted on Friday, you know, the, I think it's the Whatever Communications Act of whatever year it was either the '60s or the '30s. - 1934. - Yeah. - And I got this response from somebody, "Well, a girl to you, you're never gonna hear a pro-Trump ad on the sports or the music station." Just for that person who tweeted me whoever the hell it was. I'm driving home from my mother-in-law's last night and the sports station, WIP had the Sunday Night Football game on. First commercial I heard was a pro-Trump ad. So you're wrong again, all right? - Yeah, like nobody can, nobody can turn them, nobody can turn them down. It doesn't matter. So stop, stop with it, oh, you won't hear it. - No, look, you know, I know the truth hurts and I'm the only one that seems to say this, but if the Trump campaign was smart, they would advertise on radio, especially this radio station, because there's a ton of listeners on our radio station, but as of right now, they're not. And I don't know why. Kamala Harris is. - Well, maybe they think they have this audience locked up already. - But they shouldn't. - Well, I should assume that. - But I also think- - They should not assume that. - I also think them advertising on the sports station is smart if there are independence or undecided men, because let's face it, the sports station caters to men, 25 to 54, and you certainly wanna reach those people as well. - Well, we're third men, 18 to 34. - Oh, yeah, I know. - So if they really want to beating, beating said sports stations, both of them. So if they wanna reach the youth male vote, maybe they should advertise on our station. That's, stop doing these podcasts and start doing the shows on this station because by the way, guys, another good month, we reach more, 18 to 34 year olds than a lot of these podcasts do. So stop. - We reach more people than CNN's prime time line. - Oh, thank you. - I can't tell you how much pride I take in that. I let my mother-in-law know that every single day. (laughing) - You know, continue with these calls or- - Yeah, why not? What the hell? Michelle is on the main line. Michelle, you're on talk radio 12. 10, Michelle, go ahead. - Hey guys, so I was asked yesterday to speak to a Washington Post reporter. She is on the religion and spirituality desk. And it was a little group talk about with people who are Jewish and carrying guns and how they feel about carrying guns since October 7th. And she then, she was all over the place and she was saying how she's going canvassing with people. She wants to see how it's like to canvas with Harris supporters and Trump supporters. And I kept asking her a few questions. I was like, so Washington Post. I said, listen, I don't really read the Washington Post. I read a camera and I read honesty and reporting and I read all the things that you do wrong. So I'll use the New York Times instead of the Washington Post if it's gonna make you defensive. As far as asking a few questions about inconsistencies. And she was so bent out of shape that anybody would question their fact checkers. - Of course. - So when I brought up to her that Snopes, one of their favorite fact checking organizations has just changed the true false flag on fine people on both sides. - Yep, yep. - She got so pissed off at me. She got like, she was like, well, do you know what Trump actually said? I said, I can repeat it verbatim if you'd like. I said, I have certain and she was like, well, well, well. So the reason I'm saying all this 'cause it was a ridiculous conversation and this woman was truly dark side. And she was Jewish too. I was hoping with a bizarre conversation about post October 7th and how people are standing and the election and why would Jews vote for Pamela Harris was where the conversation kept going. - I don't believe any of the polls, not of one of them. Trump is gonna run away with this. She was with six people and all of us got to a point of being afraid to speak. My husband, I came home, he's like, you might have just ruined our lives. That crazy woman who knows what she's gonna say with what you said. I'm like, I don't know. But I don't believe anyone's gonna give an honest, any Trump supporter will give an honest opinion to anybody after that little experience. - Michelle, I'm with you. I don't trust the polls and I don't know that I believe them either. But I just didn't thank you so much for the call and I'm glad that you put the Washington Post on blast because they're a lot like MSNBC. They think they're the gatekeepers of facts and truth and then when they get exposed, they get snippy. But the only thing I disagree with is the Trump's gonna run away with it. Nobody, I do not see either side running away. I mean, if Harry, and again, don't trust the polls but I'll cite a poll for the sake of making my point. If Harry Etton is correct, I mean, think about what they just said in the last, however many 15 elections, there was always a three week stretch where somebody had a five point lead. In this election cycle, there has not been one single three week stretch. - We don't have landslide elections anymore. Let me repeat that. We do not have landslide elections anymore because of the Electoral College. It's just not, it's not gonna happen. So anybody who thinks either side is gonna run away with anything is wrong. - I'm Sally Helm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events. Major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs. But we also bring you into the smaller behind the scenes stories. The unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey podcast in partnership with the History Channel. Available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you get your podcasts. I'm gonna give you a little bit of a hot take. - Uh-oh. - Uh-oh. - And I've been thinking about this for a while, boy. - Uh-oh, here we go. - But, you know, it's what I do. I think Trump, if you're forecasting Trump to win on November 5th, I think the best game, and my mentions are gonna blow up, so @nickelkatelyy1, 8L on Twitter. - I like it, own it. - Have a take and stick by it. - Yeah, have a take and don't suck. 270 to 268, I feel like, is the most likely Trump outcome in the Electoral College. - What is it? - 270 to 268. So that would mean he wins Pennsylvania as the tie, is basically, I think it's coming down to Pennsylvania. I think it's coming down to Bucks County and Northampton County. I think, if you're to say, if Trump wins the most likely final result in the Electoral College is, to me, it's 270 to 268, which then, I think, Kamala Harris goes into election denier mode, and I will also say this, I think if Trump is going to lose, the worst case scenario for Trump to lose is also 270 to 268. Because if he loses by two points in the Electoral College, you know what the conversation's gonna be. We know what the conversation will be for the next six weeks and the next six years, the next four years. We know what it will be. I don't even need to say what it'll be. You know what it'll be. So that's where I'm at right now. I still think it's a coin flip. I still go slight advantage Trump at this moment in time. - Also, guys, we don't know what's gonna happen tomorrow night with this debate. - Right. - So, you know what I mean? Like, that could, we didn't think that on June 27th or whatever it was that in the first five minutes of the debate, Joe Biden would poop his pants and stop, forget where he was, go, here we are, but here we are. - And if you think about the numbers in the last two elections, Trump was over 300 in the Electoral College against Hillary and Joe was over 300, four years against Trump, four years ago against Trump. I don't think either. I don't think either candidate's eclipsing 300 in the Electoral College, which illustrates again my belief that this will be razor thin. - Somebody asked, I forget who it was. One of my haters, I think, asked if why I said that last week that it was smart for Trump to do the podcast and now I'm saying that it's not smart for him to do the podcast. I didn't say it was not smart for him to do the podcast. I said that if you're looking for 18 to 34-year-old men, you should start by this radio show. - Oh, yeah. - Well, that's what I'm saying. So stop hearing what you're hearing. I do think it's good that he does Theo Vaughn and I think you should do Joe Rogan and I do think it's good to get that age demo, but don't brush aside regular radio because you think that you haven't locked up in the bag. - Now, here's the question for you though. Are you saying he should do an interview? - Well, he has done. - I know. He's been on with Richard, he's been on with us. I get it. Are you saying he should do more interviews with this station or are you saying he should spend more advertising dollars with this station? - I think he should spend way more advertising dollars at this rate. - And the reason I asked that is because we talked about the spending last week, how Trump is basically, both Harris and Trump are both spending, I think from now until the end of the election cycle, over $70 million a piece on Pennsylvania. I think Trump was around 71.9 million and Harris was around 74 million. It was basically a coin flip on spending. If that's the case, then yeah, he should absolutely spend more money on this station. But I would also be, I'm bombarding people with billboards, with mail. I mean, I can't tell you. I swear to God, every three days, at least two or three times a week when the mail comes at my house, I've got these Kamala Harris, like they almost look like postcards, but they're longer and rectangular. Are you getting them tuned on? - But it's ridiculous. And by the way, isn't it against like the earth to waste all these, this high quality postcard paper? The amount of paper from both campaigns, but especially for from Democrats, but from both campaigns, it's unbelievable. The amount every day, the junk mail. - Yeah. And as far as the interviews go, two things. Number one, you're right, Trump should actually go on, on the Rogan podcast. I'm a little surprised he hasn't done that yet, although maybe it's in the balls in Rogan's court. But we've got to try to get Trump on it. We've got to reach out to the fine ladies that made it happen last time. - Senator John Federman makes a prediction for Trump and Harris debate. And he says that he needs to focus on Pennsylvania voters. This is cut 24, Kirk go. - John Federman, thank you so much for being here, sir. Kamala Harris is already there this weekend, preparing for her debate against Donald Trump. You've read it her on the tarmac in Pittsburgh. What do you think she needs to do to win over key voters in Pennsylvania? - I mean, I really want to just point out that I haven't said anything different since back in 2016. Back then, as a surrogate for Secretary Clinton, after my campaign, and now in 24, it's going to be very close. It's going to be very close. And we have to do everything that we possibly can to make sure and have the conversations with all across Pennsylvania and all kinds of rooms that may be hopelessly red kinds of counties, but it's going to be the one on the margins. And I've always maintained that. And that's what happened in 2016, that Trump won. And then of course, Joe Biden won by 80,000 votes. So I've been predicting this is going to be close regardless. And that's where we're at now. And that's why I'm committed to showing up all across Pennsylvania. And people understand it's all about the choice. The choice. And it's not about policies or who has more money or talking about scandals or things kind of thing. People all have to ask themselves, what kinds of the next four years do we want? Do we want that kind of chaos and that kinds of absolute kinds of reckless and bizarre behavior from Trump? Or do we want four more years of getting us through a pandemic and standing with our allies, like Ukraine or Israel through all of that? And by any metric, our economy is the world's absolute world's envy on that. So I'm proud to stand with Joe Biden. And I'm absolutely proud to stand with Vice President Harris. And I also wanted to say that it's going to be a straight up debate. She's going to do great, of course. But Donald Trump will be good too. I mean, we can all remember, he wrecked all of the Republicans. He's a good debater. But at the end of the day, I don't believe this debate's going to be definitive because it's going to come down to this choice. And it's going to be close. So I'm glad we're actually playing this, especially in the context of a debate. Because I feel like this is exponentially different from what we saw two falls ago. I mean, Dr. Oz destroyed Federman on a debate stage. But Federman blew him out in the election because people had already made up their mind that Oz was terrible and Oz was a fraud. I think differently, though, this time. I've seen a lot of people tweeting two things on social media that Trump's going to dominate the debate, which I agree with. And the debate won't matter, result-wise, on the election. That's where I disagree. You can't sit here and have watched, witnessed, and lived June 27, and then try to argue that debates don't matter. And Donald Trump put Joe Biden out to pasture. He put him into retirement. And Joe had a lot to do with that himself. Because as soon as Joe opened up his mouth, it was over. And we saw that. So you can't sit there and say, well, I think Trump's going to dominate, but it's not going to matter. It is going to matter for that little sliver of the undecided out there. For 95% of people out there probably won't. They've made up their mind. But if Trump has another great night and he just sticks to what he has to, and has that laser focus, that tunnel vision, and then has a few moments where he kind of puts Kamala on the spot, especially in the rebuttal time bank that he gets, he can be very, very good. It also-- one thing that I think people aren't talking about as much is just the human factor of seeing for the first time Kamala Harris on this platform. Because I will say to you in my lifetime as a newsperson, just covering presidential elections, to be at this point when you have your close to election day, basically, and you have the major candidate for one party who has really not been put to the test. I don't think this has ever happened in our history, that you have somebody like this, Kamala Harris, the fact that she's able to get away with not answering questions, not having multiple news conferences, sit down interviews, the one on CNN with Dana Bash, doesn't even count in my mind, because it's one. I mean, yesterday, she's in Pennsylvania. She's been hunkering down in Pittsburgh area, in the Pittsburgh area, for what, five days? And she's walking-- it's like weird. She thinks she's like, what, Taylor Swift, a celebrity? She's walking with her husband. She's wearing all black and a cap to cover her face. And she's out for a walk. And they're like, are you ready? Are you ready, vice president here? And she's like, ready, and thumbs up. And that's allowed. The question should be, vice president Harris, you are the vice president. First of all, who's running the country? Where are you and the president? You're in Pennsylvania, hunkering down for prep. That right there shows me how unqualified she is. But number two, the fact that the media just lets her get away with not answering any legit questions. Doesn't even say, why won't you take our questions? Why won't you hold a news conference? This is absurd. And so tomorrow, if she looks nervous, if she looks, it's the way she looks. And so tomorrow matters, it becomes a magnifying glass. When you say nervousness with looks, can you pinpoint it? Is it smiling too much and giggling? Is that the nervousness? Or is it like the straight face that shows the nerves? It's because you can't hide anymore. You're not hiding behind your cap. You're not hiding by the distance of security. Now that camera is on your face. And that's why for Trump, I hope that's why the cameras matter. I hope that they keep the camera on her as much as possible. See the reactions. And I hope for Trump, I think that's why the Harris campaign, by the way, why they wanted his mic to be open. They hope that he interrupts. Don't interrupt, let her go. Yeah, and keep in mind, experience matters. This will be Donald Trump's seventh presidential debate. This will be Kamala Harris's first. So I want to end the cut sheet with Cut 19 here, Phil. This is whoever put this together on social media. Every time I want to leave social media and I'm like, I'm done with social media. Bring Stalker back in. There's one thing that happens that I'm just like, oh, that is so good. Every time Kamala Harris speaks and says things and tries to be funny, somebody put this together. This is Cut 19, Phil Go. So you know how those lids are? Because this is run just going to speak, OK? So this is it. So you know how those lids on the Starbucks kept their white, right? And so if you were lipstick, they get all over the lid. And so can I find myself in meetings, if I'm the only woman, and that's kind of until I keep taking the lid off and having my cup out so that I don't have that big lipstick or I can't believe it. So I said, can we do something about the color of the lid? Get a straw, lady. Well, look at that laugh. So that was that conversation. She can't even solve that problem. I know. Seriously? Get a straw. What do I do? Seriously, Donnie. It's a dress side. Was that side? I know it's a show. But yeah, no side felt there. Look, I know it's a joke, but seriously, she's talking about it. And she can't even solve that problem. And you think she could-- you think that seriously, you think that she could be the most powerful person in the world. And there's a lot of people that do. And it's never good when you're the only one laughing at what you think's the funniest story. You know, every time I try to throw out a zinger from time to time and neither Greg or Donne responds, I know it was a bad one. But I do it anyway, because shoot or shoot. Is that it? That's it. All right, nice one. I mean, it's not it. I have a ton more, including-- I want to get to this, eventually, before the end of the show. I have a Bill Clinton state of the Union address from 1995. If you close your eyes, it could be Trump's policy. Oh. Well, it's amazing. Yeah, we've pointed that out in the past as well. By the way, I had a couple of people over the weekend, one specifically who said that they love the cut sheet so much. They said one day out of the year, you guys should do an entire four hours just riffing off of the cut sheet. We should do, like, cut sheet Super Bowl. Just one day. It's a lot of work. We could sell it. We could make money off of it. It'd be amazing. Honestly, we're doing-- we're going to probably do that the day after the debate. You know what I mean? We'll just play cuts. It'll probably be one four hour cut sheet. Yeah, there you go. All right, come back. Find out what's on-- oh, no, that's 947. And we still have an hour and 3. I'm all out of whack now. What a great day this has been. I'm feeling good, by the way. I'm in a good vibe right now, good headspace. My mental health is great. 855-839-1210. We'll come back. We'll get to Adon Stensland, big three. And then coming up in the 9 o'clock hour. Besties know more. And are you ready to wager on the election? It's coming around the corner in this country very soon. And I, for one, applaud that. Back after this here on Kale & Company. Yeah, I can't wait for tomorrow. I'll be doing some test driving with my friends from Piazza Premium automobiles. You know, it technically is still summertime. And this week, what a gorgeous week weather-wise. No time, like the president, to get back out on the roads. My friends at Piazza Premium Automobiles, they're going to help you find that luxury vehicle you've been eyeing. You know, Piazza has thousands of new, as well as certified, pre-owned vehicles from some of the most beautiful, powerful brands on our roadways right now. Mercedes Benz, Land Rover, Jaguar, Maserati, BMW, Porsche, Alpha Romeo, and so much more. Just visit Piazza Premium Automobiles.com. You can always stop by one of their many Pennsylvania, Delaware, or New Jersey dealers. PIA, ZZAP, Piazza Premium Automobiles.com. Tell them to on-site you. Start your day with Kale & Company. Week day morning, 6 till 10. I'm Tark Radio 1210, WPHT, and the free Odyssey app. I'm Sally Helm with the podcast History This Week. In each episode, we serve as your eyes and ears into history's biggest events-- major elections, world wars, scientific breakthroughs. But we also bring you into the smaller, behind-the-scenes stories-- the unsung heroes, secret meetings, even personal grudges that changed the course of history. Listen to and follow History This Week and Odyssey podcast in partnership with the History Channel, available now for free on the Odyssey app and wherever you at your podcasts.