Kayal and Company
Gotta Collect 'Em All!
![](https://images.castfire.com/image/647/6729/33839/6113800/6113800_2024-08-29-223500-7425055.jpg)
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. Gail and company weekday morning, six till 10. Not one to brag. But right now on our Tony Bruno Show X page, we have 659 people listening. But guess what? Dan Labitar is adding more people. We were like a hundred viewers behind him. But Dan Labitar is a national show. We're at 659 on X alone, not counting our YouTube and the Odyssey app listeners and viewers. So with that, everybody for tuning in this one. - If you are watching currently on X, what we ask you to do is to like it and retweet it. Repost it on your page. Let's see if we can beat. Oh no, that's actually Bubba the Love Sponge. - No, Bubba the Love. Dan Labitar is at 934, Bubba talking about golf is 816. We're 659. So let's get it up to, let's beat Bubba the Love Sponge who I know and Dan Labitar, who I know and work with. And it's not about beating everybody. It's just a fun, fun, fun competition. - The thing that's fun is that this is the first time that you've been back live on X and we appreciate Odyssey allowing you to simulcast this show. - Absolutely. - Normally it would be just on their pages. - Correct. - And we worked it out that this show and tomorrow's show. And we'll simulcast even Nikhil's show if they want to continue doing it on your X page and getting the numbers up and it's awesome and we love it. - Beautiful, we thank everybody. Meanwhile, we got the great Dan Marusque. So Dan coming up in about 13 minutes from now, right? We will get you ready for the morning mystery movie clip, right? - Yeah, and a big prize today, Tony. It's a pair of tickets to politics and pints with Don Trump Jr. hosted by Dom Girdano at the Scottish Red Auditorium. Collings with New Jersey September 12th. Each ticket also includes copies to letters to Trump tickets on sale, 1210WPHD.com. - You've been saying that a lot lately, haven't you? - I haven't memorized it now, yeah. - Politics and pints is a good mix, especially for Kamala Harris. I wonder how many pints you'll have tonight during that pre-taped interview. - I would actually love to go to that. - Well, the politics and pints? - Yeah, I'd love to have you. - I love collings with you. You know, I was once the grand marshal of the collings would holiday parade. The week it was a grand marshal too? - Really? - Well, they just put anybody in that damn parade, don't they? (laughing) - You were really excited that you'd say that too. - Yeah, that means it. - That's the parade where Frank Rizzo taught me how to wave when you're sitting on the back of a-- - Let me tell you something. - Well, Frank, he taught, it's actually, and my buddy at ESPN, who used to be a politics reporter, before he became a sports reporter. You know what I'm talking about, right? ESPN legend, that's Jersey guy. - Why have I, I don't know who you're talking about. - No, that's Stuart Scott. No, Stuart was a friend too, and I work with him, this great guy. Was that? - Chris Berman. - No. - No, local guy. He was a Philly, right? He wrote for the Philadelphia Inquirer-- - South Palantonia? - South Palantonia! - Oh, come on, yeah. - South Palantonia wrote a book about Frank Rizzo before he, you know, transitioned into sports like a lot of journalists do. You know, you start in journalism, you do reporting. Phil was a great local political reporter for the Inquirer, and then he started doing sports, and obviously sports exploded. He went to work for ESPN. He's been there over 25 years, and so Sal wrote a book about Frank Rizzo, and in that book, Sal interviews me and asks me about, you know, where did I learn, you know, how, when you're in a parade, where do you learn how to wave? 'Cause, you know, some people do the thing, and Frank Rizzo told me that you have to, it's like you're screwing in a light bulb. So when you're waving to crowds on both sides of you, you say, just put your hand, cup it like this, and then look like you're, or maybe you're reaching for a boob. - So in other words, don't do the two-handed crazy, like Tim Walts. - Don't do Tim Walts, don't do the Richard Simmons, the Richard Simmons, and run down like you're here. You've just been called up to the stage, and you're the next contestant on the Hollywood, wherever the show is, let's make a deal. - But the reason why was so that you don't get too tired, right? - Right, so it's a nice gentle, so you just go, you just slowly go from side to side, step by step, inch by inch, as the three stooges said, about Niagara Falls. You know what I'm saying? - I'm surprised that Frank Rizzo would wave like Miss America, though. I thought he'd, you know, at least-- - No, it's a cool thing. - It's not necessary, it's just minimal hand movement so that your arm doesn't get tired throughout the entire parade route. So you know-- - Just everybody try that-- - If you're really shaking, then after a while, you know, you're gonna lose feeling in your arm, but if you just do a gentle, you're like, the people don't realize that you're not really moving your hand that much. - Greg is getting waterboarder with Elvis Music, so you know he's listening. Come on. - I just love all this-- - Kimmy says, wait a minute, Kimmy says, "I love Henry's voice, he should comment more." Now, is that your radio voice? - No, this is my real voice. - Have you done professional broadcasting before? - I have not, no, this is my first job at a college. - Really, you're just a college kid? - I'm 25 now, but yeah, I've been here for a few years. - Oh my God. - Wait, what did you do? When did you grab what you were in college for nine years? - No, no, I've been here for two and a half, I've-- - Okay. - Yeah, so now I got you-- - But you never did any kind of like college radio or, you know, late night sex lines, women looking for guys with deep voices-- - So he says that because this is, so Tony has sounded with this low voice since he was 17, 18. - Yes. - Now, so you have that same, have you had this voice, this low voice since you were that same age? - Yes, since about middle school, honestly. - Oh, you got a great lot. You know, if you have, you know, to get in the radio, it's pretty simple. People ask me all the time, what does it take to be like you, Tony? Just have a lovely speaking voice and average intelligence. That's all you gotta do. And then you BS your way and you move your way up the food chain. And then someday, you can pretend that you won an election and you may be installed as the next president of the United States of America. It could happen to anyone, just dream big. - Either that or go into voiceover work. That's one of the things that Tony, Tony always says that if he could have had any other job besides being a radio show host, he would have liked to have been a voiceover. - Exactly, like the guy that does the movie lines. - Oh yeah, totally. Like all those trailers and stuff, they're the best. - In a world, you know, those things. No, I mean, the guys who do that, they get into a studio, you know, like Jim Cutler is one of the great guys. He does all the ESPN stuff. He does a lot of voice tracks for radio stations all over the country. One of the great voice guys. And he goes in and he'll do in his house, he'll sit there and do every radio station in America's liners for that day. And then they're fresh, you know, coming up on the show. He was the voice of ESPN radio. I don't know if he's still doing their liners, but that's a guy who just, that's his job. And he's one of the best at it. And so that's a job, you know, you don't get a lot of name recognition, but the paychecks are good. And when you're really good at it, people call you looking for you to do their stuff. You know what I mean? - Oh, absolutely. And you can almost be like a niche celebrity, like the EA sports guy. - Yeah. - Yeah. - Yeah, the game. - No, I actually had that guy, believe it or not, when I did the game, I contacted him and have him do a Tony Bruno. He's in the game. - Oh, that's awesome. - Yeah, I had that guy do that for me. Imagine, I mean, you talk about my loins girding. You talk about chills running up and down my inner thighs. The guy, the EA voice guy said, "Tony Bruno, he's in the game." Do we still have that, Robin? - Oh, I have to find out how to do somewhere another. - You see, I'm not one of those guys like Keith Obermann has like every show he's ever done on VHS tape, sitting in his kitchen, I'm not making this up, sitting in his kitchen cabinet in his condo. - No food. - No food. - No food. - Just VHS tapes. He had like every episode of Mystery Science Theater, 3000 video tapes. I'm sure he's transferred them to digital. But look what I'm holding today, drinking my coffee out. - Oh, yeah? - The last ESPN show that Keith and I were on together, K.O. - Before TV. - Five o'clock on ESPN. - Through the 40 year friendship out the window because you had the audacity to say all lives matter. How dare you. - Was Obermann always political when you were working with him or is this your sign? - Not really. In fact, I used to bust his chops when I was doing the show with him. And I would do my segment, which was called, it's an outrage, right? It was called, it's the outrage segment. Or the Bruno Bash, that's what it's called. - Bruno Bash, Bruno Bash. - The Bruno Bash. And I would come in and poke fun and stuff, you know, pull clips. Now everybody's doing clip shows. But I would find like the weirdest sports clips of the day. And then I'd always try to slip in some sort of political comment. And then Keith would give me a weird look. You know, 'cause he knew, I mean, I knew he was a Democrat and I wasn't even a Republican. I was just a guy who didn't care. You know, I didn't care about politics. I mean, I always follow politics 'cause I was a political science major and journalism. So I've followed elections my whole life since I was a young kid watching JFK come up Broad Street in South Philadelphia when he was a president in the '60s when I was a young punk kid. So I've always followed politics. But Keith, when he went to MSNBC, remember he left ESPN and went to MSNBC, he was in LA actually doing local sports on TV. And he was like the top sports guy in Los Angeles on television. And then he moved to Connecticut to work at ESPN. And when Keith was on MSNBC from LA, I was in LA and I would be a guest on his countdown show all the time. I'd go into a studio in LA. I'd do it with him when he was doing the ESPN show, the Oberman Show. I would go to New York every Friday and appear live on that. So Keith's been into politics and sports and everything his entire life. He's a smart guy. But we really didn't talk politics on the show. I would dig, I would just like, a little jab to Adam. But I mean, to try to get him to talk politics. - This was even before you actually declared yourself a Republican. - I didn't declare anything. - No, but like you were, you had been Democrat. Like you and I were both Democrats. - Yeah, Philly, when you come out of the womb in Philadelphia, there's two things you must do. You must root against the Dallas Cowboys. And you must vote for a Democrat. That's legendary. This is even before the Cowboys were a football team. 19, 19, what year was the last 72 years ago? Last time Philadelphia had a Republican mayor, Richardson Dilworth, 72 straight years, Democrats only. Even Frank Rizzo was a Democrat. - But you know what I feel I-- - And then the Cowboys, hating the Cowboys is a birthright. When you come out of the womb and the doctor slaps you at your butt and pulls a placenta out, the first words you hear is I hate the Dallas Cowboys. - You're a tradition unlike any other. - But you know what I feel like, Tony? - I feel like yes, everybody had to be-- or everybody was Democrat. But I don't feel like I left the Democratic Party. - No, they left me. - I feel like they left me. - Exactly. - And I think that there's a lot of people that are kind of coming to that conclusion that the Democrat, the party has changed so drastically. I haven't changed. I haven't changed my views. - Me neither. I've been consistently common sense. Because before there was, oh, you have to identify as a political party or you're a Democrat or a Republican and independent. No, I've been common sense. And there shouldn't be Republicans. It should be common sense party. Look at the facts that you see how it affects your life individually and then you determine what makes sense to you. You know, if abortion is the most important thing in your life, then vote accordingly. But if it's the economy, if it's immigration, if it's whether you can afford to buy food, you know, things like that. So some people, that's not the most important thing. To me, if abortion is the most important thing in your life when you vote. - And you're living your life wrong. - Again, you can have as many abortions as you want. I just don't want to pay for them. - Simple. - So question for you, then, Tony. - Yes. - A guy that's been, you know, public facing for as long as you have a celebrity, Keith Olberman level, a guy that goes Democrats almost lauded on Twitter. And I know you're not a woe is me kind of type, has there been vilification that you faced after coming out as a supporter of conservative policies and such? - Of course, I mean, and I don't even, it's not that I come out and so, you know, I don't even have MAGA in my account, right? I don't put MAGA and stuff like that. I just put my history for people who catch up and find me on my social media, Tony Bruno Show. I don't have to post MAGA, you know, because then you have people who just, they think MAGA, you know, we know who used MAGA? Bill Clinton said, "Make America great again." When he was running, when people, you know, loved Bill Clinton and we voted for him and he was a good president, you know, even though he got sloppies under the desk, but interns, you know, I don't care about that stuff. He was a good president, he wasn't peached, but then they reelected him. And so the world has changed into what we now consider bad behavior, good behavior, mean tweets. You know, the guy was a philanderer. All these people are philanderers. All politicians with power. I was a philanderer for a while, but I was divorced and I was living in L.A. and I was lonely and I wasn't on a Mormon mission or, you know, a mercenary. I was the guy who moved to California with a suitcase and my wife, you know, stayed behind 'cause she didn't want to move to California. So you think I'm gonna live like a monk? Like a capuchin monk? - Well, you got divorced. - Right, I didn't get divorced, so it was separated. - Okay. - And you got to keep the one here separated as the great Governor Andrew Cuomo and his brother, Chris Cuomo, said, "I was single and ready to mingle." You know what I'm saying? I became a man whore. I'll admit that. I became a man whore for at least what? How many of the years when I was in L.A., I was there from 2000 to 2011. My man whore days started around 2003. - Uh-huh. - And then, you know, it ended when I met Robin. My man whore era came to an abrupt end. (laughing) So there you have it, a man whore update. - I'm firstly, I'm happy to hear that. (laughing) - I feel like this might come back in niches somewhere in the near future. (laughing) I didn't have two wives, I was separated, legally separated. - And then divorced. - And then divorced finally. - Yes. - And then broke after the divorce. - Yes, the divorce, well, we won't go there. - This is the Kaling Company podcast from Dark Radio 1210WPHD and on 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 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. - Gosh, can you believe three and a half hours have already gone by like, that is boom. - Oh, by the way, I want to play the chick from, do we have to take a break here? - No, we're good, nope. - I want to play the chick from New Jersey 'cause this is local. I want like to keep it local, live, local and late breaking. There is a candidate for one of the seats in New Jersey. I never heard of her, but I found this clip of her yesterday. I wrote it down, what's her name, Robin? - Sue. - Not Sue, Sue, Sue, Sue, Susan Altman. - Yeah. - Susan Altman, Susan Altman. You want to talk about delusional, lying, whiny, pathetic weasels? And I'm not, it's not because she's a woman because she's, she spouts the same stuff that every single dude running for any political office in America right now is the lies. But I want you to listen to this clip and I want you to, as we get ready to play this, I want you to count the edits. It's only one minute and 10 seconds. And in the one minute and 10 seconds, I want you to count how many edits she has. If you can last a minute and 10 seconds listening to this absolute moron, do we have the clips? - Yeah. - Hi, this is Sue Altman. By now you've probably heard a lot about Project 2025. It is 900 pages of complete nonsense. They say it's not part of the Trump agenda, it's ridiculous. It's written by Trump's own people and it could have big implications for the garden state. All right, so here we go, 900 pages. A national abortion ban is all over this thing. Medicare and Social Security, on the chopping block, they wanna privatize it and they wanna stop Medicare from being able to negotiate drug prices. They wanna eliminate the Department of Education and with that over 4,000 teaching jobs here in the garden state. If this threat of a Donald Trump presidency is real, then the threat of Project 2025 is real. And we need a Congress who will hold them in check. Tunking Jr. has never stood up to people in his own party. There's nothing moderate about a Republican, career politician who will do whatever it takes to get ahead in his own party. I'm Sue Altman and I'm running for Congress 'cause I will always put in Jerseyans first. More than a party, more than extremism, more than the pressures of the media. I wanna put New Jersey first. - Wow, how many edits and how many lies? Well, the lies were constant from-- - From Jump Street to Jump Cops. - First of all, Project 2025. - I'm gonna talk like that. And when we talk like that and you have to have some, how many edits did you count? Henry Phil, Dan, how many edits did you add? - At least 10 minutes. - I got dizzy after a while. - 16, wow. - 16 edits. - And I like when she takes the sip out of her frappuccino. And I guess she used to play college basketball or something. - I don't know. - She has a basketball up on her counter and she's running against Tom Kane, the former governor of New Jersey. I guess his son, she's running against him in New Jersey's District 7, wherever the hell that is. How the hell can anybody vote for that? - How-- - And again, I'm not supporting either party, I'm just saying, watching that and watching the number of, and I'll flat out lies. And people are gonna vote for that chick. - How they get away with still saying that-- - Project 2025. - Project has anything to do with Project 2025 when he is verbally, more than once, said that he has absolutely nothing to do with it. Might there be one or two things that his, his, what he wants to do in the future has in common with it? Maybe, but for the most part, 900 pages of just wishful thinking of whoever wrote that. And it has nothing to do with Trump. He's mentioned it over and over and over again. It's-- - I'm embarrassed to even live anywhere near New Jersey where she represents. I wanna hear from people in New Jersey on the YouTube screen, on my Twitter screen, my Facebook, my Twitter page, @TonyBruno on, @TonyBrunoShow and X. How can any, seriously, and again, I don't care whether you vote, if you want to vote for her, but tell me if you saw that ad. And we just gave her a minute of free advertising. - No, but we're gonna break it down. So, several people commenting already on the YouTube chat room. Suzy loves Jeffy says she needs bangs like Robin. I totally agree. - Like totally. - Like totally. Chris Forsyth says she looks heavily medicated. - No, that's just all that coffee in the frappuccinos. But when the first words out of your mouth are like, it was the first word, it was like, when I hear a woman, I don't care. - Hi, this is so up man. - By now, you're not-- - Yeah, this is so up man. - Hi, this is so up man. Like, totally. - That is actually, that's a speech pattern. - I know, I hate it. - Oh, what is it called? - Local fry. - Local fry, thank you. - Local fry. - Yes. - Do you get fries with that? You go catch up or mayo with the both of the fry. - That's not talking about. - Wow. - It's that speech pattern. It's like almost like you're swallowing the words as you're trying to save them out. - It's my name, same name. - It's in California. - That was the old valley girl speak, right? - Yeah. - It's a little bit more subtle. Valley girl was like, oh my god, like totally. Gag me with a spoon. Yes, that is vocal fry. - By the way, speaking of merchandising. Merchandising. Donald Trump is selling trading cards with framed samples of the suit he wore during the debate. And you could all one for just $1,485. - I don't even think that's a digital, like it's an NFT card, right? - Yeah, I don't know. He did that before. - Well, he's got a 15, if you purchase 15 of Trump's digital trading cards for $99 a piece, you can be the proud owner of a physical Trump trading card, which includes a framed piece of the suit. He wore during the debate with Joe Biden. Oh, it's like the, it's like the sister. It's like the shroud of Turin, they would cut it up and sell that. Wow. - Or like the 1,000 game of the vet, where they cut it up. - Oh yeah, yeah. The seats when they take, yeah, they cut up the Astro Turv. - I think we actually have a little bit of the wooden floor from the, from. - Yeah, we got it. The Sixers gave me a part of the old floor, the spectrum. - spectrum. - Who doesn't have that? I have part of, I have the diamonds from Darryl Dawkins when he pulled down the rim at the spectrum and it burst into a million pieces. - Oh yeah, you have it. - The Sixers collected that and we're handing out to the media Darryl's diamonds. I took him down to the diamond, took him down the Samsung street and they switched him in the back and gave me some real diamonds because those were more valuable than some of the diamonds, some of those dudes are selling down there. - I can't believe, I can't believe. - Tony, Tony. - What? - Since we're so excited. - What? - Are we about ready to do the second half of your favorite segment? - Do we have more cut sheet choice morsels too? - Got a couple things there. - Yeah. - Canberra, Danny, you're starting to fade. I mean, you guys have been working in your butt stop. All day yesterday we're driving in the rim. You gotta call your back, we're in thunderstorms. - Yeah, we did a miscalculation yesterday, Tony, nine when we went up to visit the lot. - Well, they see dark clouds every day. That doesn't mean we're gonna have like that. - They see dark clouds every day. There's always a passing shower. So we thought, no big deal. The clouds were a little darker than normal, but we're like, yeah. - And these poor guys are up on a roof with no ropes. And then all of a sudden, they saw the storm come and you see the lightning. - Well, the first thing that gave us a clue that this might not be just a normal passing shower was the wind started. - Oh yeah, you can feel it. - The wind came ahead of the rain and it was whipping things around. And I was trying to pick up things that were flying all over the work site. And then we go standing inside and it's starting to rain, sprinkle a little bit. And we're thinking to ourselves, oh, all the guys are safe, they're off the roof. They got their equipment, all their power tools are safe. They decided they weren't gonna be a work, it was already like three o'clock. So they're gonna go home for the day. And Tony and I, we had a little penny with us, the dog. We'll just wait it out inside. The house that's now has a cover over it. So we're not gonna get soaking wet. - But it's not totally, the roof is not totally on. The flyway will be continued. They're probably putting the plow it up right now. - Yeah, and within five minutes, we realized that we had made a horrible mistake by trying to wait it out because-- - We got soaked, the fog was soaked. - The wind and the rain-- - The temperature dropped from 91 to like 72. - It was, the wind was going sideways, the rain was going sideways. - Yeah, we posted videos on the X account yesterday. - The lightning started coming like every three seconds. - It's coming like, okay, no-- - This time of the year, you know, it's hurricane season. So you don't have to have hurricanes. We get thunderstorms because the moisture in the air, but we've had one hurricane go away from us and go up the west coast. And then there was the other one that was on the east coast and went up. - Debbie. - No, in Bertot or something. - Oh yeah, the Debbie went up in the panhandle and then Ernesto. - Ernesto, that's right. - Ernesto went up to North Carolina on the-- - So we get, it's like if you ever go to Disney in the summer here, and that's Central Florida where it's hot and humid too. You know, you go to Disney and then every afternoon there's a thunderstorm and people, and they sell more than they sell those really cheap, those slickers, those Disney slickers because they know people are going to buy them. But a lot of people thought when we went and we would go there and it'd be hot and humid, you felt good getting soaking wet. And the rain is warm and there's no lightning, which is dangerous. You just, you don't carry, you stand out there and you get wet and you cool off. - So every day around three or four o'clock, there's a passing shower. There's gonna be a little bit of thunder, a little bit of lightning. Yesterday was a lot more than a little. - Yeah, it was a big one. - We decided to run to the car after we realized that it was much more. And from the garage to the truck, which was parked on the other side of the street, was maybe 30 feet. In that 30 feet, both Tony and I were soaked from head to toe all the way down to our underwear. I mean, it was-- - Yeah, two socks on the wear shirts. And this is-- - Towels that we had in the truck. - This was right when we were supposed to call you. We were gonna have a leisurely call sitting in our truck. And then that, then that, yes. - Well, if you wanna see the videos, they're on that, my Tony, there's a three part series. You know, it's like a, it's like the triple cast. - So I gotta ask, is someone that wants to visit Florida, what's the best time of the year to come down in your opinion then? - Well, I mean, it's not bad, I mean, it's hot. It was from May to November is when we have the hottest, because we're tropical. So, you know, if you've been to like the Bahamas or the Virgin Islands or, you know, anywhere where the water is warm, the part about being where we are so far down south on the west coast of Florida is right across Miami. So if you make a straight line across from where we are, all the way to Miami, you know, the climate's tropical there too in the summer. It's hot and humid. And that, you know, that causes, and I'm not a meteorologist, it causes thunderstorms almost every day. But then when you start getting to late October and November, that's when this place goes crazy. There's more people here coming from all over the world. They call them, you know, what do we call them? - Snowbirds? - Snowbirds, yeah. They come down here from all over, and they spend November through May here in Florida and then go back home in Minnesota. You can see all the license plates because it's the weather here is perfect that time of the year. - And here it's not, it's not super cold, because if you go up to Northern middle Florida, like Orlando, it gets chilly at night. Up at Tampa, it gets chilly at night. But we're so far south that it's a tropical climate. So picture yourself getting off an airplane when you're going on vacation, and you know, you don't have a tan and you're coming from Philly in like, you know, May before Memorial Day weekend, because most of the time Memorial Day weekend, the water's not warm enough to go to the shore. So you come down here and it's like getting off a plane. It's like being tropical. You can feel the humidity, but you also feel like, wow, I'm on a tropical vacation. I can get a tan now and go into the ocean and sit poolside drinking my tons. - After we lived here a year, we were acclimated. The summers don't bother us at all. - No, I love the heat. - It gets hot. Like if you were coming down here during the summer, it would be overwhelming for somebody who is not used to it. - 'Cause we always used to say it's not the heat. It's the stupidity that gets you. - But after you've been here, like the winter, if you were to come down, it would be short weather for you. I'll probably be putting on a little sweater or something because I'll be chilly. It's your blood truly does thin out. - No, Kimmy Phil is not on vacation. There will be fill time today. - Yes, there will. And speaking of whether news and weather is sponsored by budget blinds, summer's a great time to brighten up the window treatment in your home. Budget blinds is your one stop shop for blinds, shades, shutters, custom drapery and motorization. Visit budgetblinds.com for a free in-home consultation and the only no question asked warranty in the business, we need some, Tony. - I need some budget, everything, man. I need, but anyway, we'll get to that later on. But anyway, that the Trump, I'm watching the video. There's actually a video of these Trump, we have to play this. We have to play this one last video. It's a Donald Trump trading card one. - Do I have that pool? - It's on not for you. No, I don't think it is something that Tony just found. - No, it's the post, but the post millennial and who is the local guy, what's his face? - I'll send it over to the phone. - He used to work over at CBS Radio in Philly. The post millennial is the tax guy. - So it's post millennial on X, if you can find that. - Yeah. - And, yeah. - Oh, he's, what's his do his name? - I don't know. - Pozo, that's right. Jack Busybik. - Oh, Jack Busybik, yeah. - He's Jack Busybik. He's a Philly guy. - He's a pretty stomp show for a bit. - Yeah, he used to produce, he worked at 1210, he worked at the old, all these 98 in the building. And so, but he's blowing up. And now he has a Pozo and he has the, the post millennial is one of his sites too. And he has the Donald Trump trading card video. And he got to play it. It's just, it's just, it's so Trump and it's so ridiculously funny that it's impossible not to laugh. But, but if you contract, you know, if you buy the entire collection, you also get to go to play at Don's course, President Trump's course in Jupiter. How about that? - Not drops at Jupiter. - No, no, that's, that's what do you call it? What's the name of that group? - Train, train, train, train. - Train, that's right, that's good, train knowledge. - I'll have that clip for you after the break. - Okay, we'll take another break. We'll come back, we'll play the Donald Trump tape. We'll get a preview of the, I have an actual preview of tonight's debate. It's being recorded right now. My source is deep with inside CNN headquarters. Told me that there will be one thing that you will see tonight on the debate that you only will hear about right here when we come back right here. On sports radio, I almost said sports radio. On talk radio, 1210, WPHT. It's a killing company on demand from talk radio, 1210, WPHT, and the free Odyssey app. - In his trading card collection, and if you get the entire collection, then you'll get to play golf at one of his courses, tracks as we like to call him in our golf world, down here in Jupiter, Florida. Let's go to the former president of the United States, Donald J. Trump. - Is your favorite president, Donald J. Trump, with some very exciting news. By popular demand, I'm doing a new series of Trump digital trading cards. You all know what they are. We've had a lot of fun with them. It's called the America First Collection. 50 all new stunning digital trading cards. It's really something. These cards show me dancing and even me holding some Bitcoins. Here's the best part. I'm doing great things for my Trump digital card collectors. First, there's the real physical Trump cards. Purchase 15 or more of my Trump digital trading cards, and we'll mail you a beautiful physical trading card. It's really, I think, quite something. Each physical trading card has an authentic piece of my suit that I wore for the presidential debate, and people are calling it the knock out suit. I don't know about that, but that's what we're calling it. - I think that's what we'll cut up the knock out suit, and you're going to get a piece of it, and we'll randomly plug that in five of them, a true collector's item. This is something to give-- - All right, Donald, we don't mean to laugh. - Your grandchildren. Number two is to purchase 75 of my Trump digital trading cards. - 25. - And you will also be invited to join me for a Gallaud dinner at my beautiful country club in Jupiter, Florida. We really have tremendous dinners with my collectors. Have a lot of fun together. We're gonna have a good time. I'm keeping my Trump digital trading cards at the same price of $99 each. - What? - From the beginning. - What, only $99? - Wow. - It's really easy to buy. - But wait. - You need an email address and a credit card or crypto. You know, they call me the crypto president. I don't know if that's true or not, but a lot of people are saying that. So don't miss out. Go to collecttrumpcards.com. Go right now and collect your piece of American history. Let's have fun together and enjoy my Trump cards. We're gonna have a lot of fun. We'll be talking about it for a long time. - Thank you very much. Have a good time. - Ladies and gentlemen. - You know what? The AI images of Trump being used on the cards, they look like if Elon Musk and Donald Trump had a kid. Okay. - Well, that would, well, I guess men can get pregnant. So who would be the father? That's what I want to know. But anyway, it is so fun. It's just beyond funny, right? - But it's, you know what? - There's a lot of money. - You know who lives in Jupiter, Florida, right? - Yes, the fabulous-- - Vince Pappalli. - Pappalli, we should go visit. - Vince Pappalli lives in Jupiter, Florida. - Yes, yes. You'd be surprised. You know who else lives down here? Down in Naples, farther south from us? The 76ers head coach. He lives down here. Nick Nurse, you know who else has a place in Jupiter, Florida? - Villanova. - Villanova, two-time national champion. Jay Wright lives down here. Everybody's got a joint down here in Florida. - Anybody that's lose anybody. They're moving, right? They're gonna be our neighbors. - It's a great state. - And, yeah, and if you want to move down here too, we'd be happy to show you around. - And no tax on tips and no state income tax. (laughing) - Ruben's on the wound there, Tony. I'm in Jersey, it's not fair. - Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. - Don't tell me Jersey, taxes aren't I? - You have the worst of both worlds. You live in Jersey where the taxes are high and you work in Philly where the taxes, you have to have a- - You have to get the double dip. - Double dip tax. - Yeah, it's bad, it's bad. - It's ridiculous, man. - Well, let's get to fill. I'm gonna get to fill all 'cause 'cause Phil's my boy. He saved our bucks the last time we were in Philly. (upbeat music) - Hey, August 29th. We celebrate the birthday of Kyle Cook from Matchbox 20, who's now 49, and Rick Downey from Blue Oyster Cult, who's now 71. Heavenly birthday, shout-outs to Sterling Morrison for the velvet underground, as well as MJ Michael Jackson. We also lost Barry Cowsel on this day in 2005. Singles of Koo, don't tread on me by Metallica in '91, privatized by Hall and Oats in '81, and personal Jesus by the Pesh mode in '89. Albums of Koo definitely may be by Oasis in '94. Keeper of the Seven Keys, part two by Halloween in '88, a farewell to Kings by Rush in '77, and Kiss a Death by Motorhead in 2006. Also, in 2009, on what would have been MJ's 51st birthday, nearly 14,000 people in Mexico City perform the thriller dance, establishing a new Guinness record. In '80, Valerie Bertinelli, Finagels her way backstage at a Van Halen show to meet Eddie Van Halen, in '66, the Beatles played their last paid show, and in '69, Elvis Presley attends Nancy Sinatra's opening night at the International Hotel. But lastly, in 2019, Noel Gallagher said he wanted to start a petition to break up the Foo Fighters, the reason Taylor Hawkins, of course, former drummer now sadly gone, told a crowd during the UK Reading Festival they wanted Oasis to reunite. Well, Taylor, they just did. For 'Kell & Company', I fill up with. ♪ Oh, oh, oh, oh ♪ (laughs) Phil, I mean, nobody delivers like Phil. Nobody gives you this kind of music knowledge. Deep, deep music knowledge. Well, guys, it's been a lot of fun. We want to thank everybody, Dan Baroski, working all day and all night, Henry Machet, and the great Phil Almquist, who saved our lives. You know, last night, a DJ saved my life on the dance floor, but Phil literally saved Robin in my life, just about a month ago. Yeah, we never found out if, like, we got sick. Hopefully he did not get sick. We never did find out from Phil. Well, we'll be back tomorrow morning, and we want to thank everybody, all of you watching on YouTube, listening on the Odyssey app and listening live and watching live on the Tony Bruno Show X channel. So we'll be doing it tomorrow. We'll start at six tomorrow, so we'll go all four hours on the X channel, as well as YouTube and the Odyssey app. Thank you so much for listening. Kathy Barnett's coming up next. Start your day with Kaylin Company, weekday morning, six till 10. I'll talk radio 12, 10, W, PhD, 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 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.
Hr 4Mystery MovieSusan Altman for CongressRain yesterday in FLDJT - Digital Trading cardsMusic History