Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
All right, Leonard skin a simple man that can only
mean one thing on this radio program, and that is
all things self proclaimed simple man. That means all things
Bill O'Reilly, all things O'Reilly of billoreilly dot com. So
Donald Trump is would you agree with this statement that
he is in a perpetual, never ending state of negotiation.
Speaker 2 (00:52):
Yes, everything he does is a transaction, okay.
Speaker 1 (00:57):
And if you negotiate an interview with him, and you
said you want an hour, he's going to offer you
twenty minutes or thirty minutes, correct or not.
Speaker 2 (01:04):
Not for me, but for everybody else.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Oh, you don't be He will for you because he
negotiates with everybody. All right, cut the bill O'Reilly. I'm
the best in the world. Crop for just a second,
just one second, that's all I'm asking, all right. But
he will negotiate the time with you if you ask
for a lot of time. Right.
Speaker 2 (01:21):
Yeah, he wants to control the situation.
Speaker 1 (01:25):
Okay, all right, have a different way of saying it.
So Donald Trump shocks the world and he announces because
the world has been ripping us off. That's not an
issue in dispute. That's not an issue in question. It's
gone on for US fifty to sixty years. It is
what the establishment, institutionalized people have simply accepted. Will you
(01:49):
agree with this next statement that he is an iconoclast
at thinks out of the box and does not think
like any conventional politician. Will you agree with that?
Speaker 2 (02:01):
Yes, But there's a reason why he doesn't think that way.
Speaker 1 (02:06):
To add continue, he's not a politician.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
That's the essence of when you analyze Donald Trump. And
I wrote The United States of Trump, the best book
you'll ever read on the man. He has no interest
in politics. So unlike the senators that you had on
your program last night, you interviewed, and you're going to
have on the radio today, I understand he's not looking
(02:32):
at it from a political point of view, which is,
if I say this, is it going to help or
hurt me? It doesn't do that, all right. What he
does is he brings in a very personal sense of
right and wrong, and then he acts on that personal
belief system. So from the very beginning of his foray
(02:55):
into public policy, he believed the United States was getting
homes in almost every deal made with foreign nations. He
has never labored from that, and in his first term
he dabbled in it, but then the COVID diverted away.
But now he's got four years where he can right
(03:16):
that wrong, and he believes that it is wrong, morally
wrong for the world to hose us economically.
Speaker 1 (03:27):
That all right, Now, I'm going to ask you to
go into Bill O'Reilly and what Bill O'Reilly thinks. You
agree that we're being screwed, ripped off, taken advantage of,
and frankly abused. There's no doubt even our allied countries
Germany for example, the European Union, India, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea,
they've all been ripping us off with their tariffs and
(03:50):
charging massive amounts of money to American companies, hurting American manufacturers,
hurting American workers. There's no dispute on that issue, correct.
Speaker 2 (04:00):
Yeah, because they know they can get away with it.
Speaker 1 (04:03):
Well, they know they could get away with it. So
Donald Trump had to make the world and just follow
my logic and see at any point if you disagreed,
tell me you disagree. So Donald Trump goes out there
with reciprocal terrorists. Plus he started with reciprocal terrorists. Then
he started kind of adding, yeah, but we may still
(04:23):
keep a tariff on you because we give you billions
of dollars in aid, et cetera, et cetera, or we
don't like that you don't control your borders, or we
don't like that you don't pay your fair share to NATO,
et cetera, et cetera. And he got the world's attention
to the point that seventy five nations are begging and
Bill I know this to be a fact. They're not asking,
(04:44):
they're begging to make a deal with him right now.
So that results in his announcement earlier today that because
these countries want deals, he's put a ninety day pause
and substantially lowered to reciproc tariffs during this period. The
ten percent immediately and the stock market went insane because,
(05:09):
you know, because of him, say oh, finally, Oh, but
here's the problem build. I knew that this was coming
the whole time, because I know he's a never ending negotiator.
I know that he is transactional. I know that he
needed to get the world's attention to make sure that
they understood that this was real. Am I wrong? Am
(05:30):
my analysis a little bit? I hate when you say that,
go ahead.
Speaker 2 (05:38):
There are a factors beyond Donald Trump's control. As I
just said, he wants to control the playing shield, whether
it's an interview request or anything else. He wants to
have the deciding word and how it all comes out.
So when he announced this tariff war, and that's what
it is, the markets and the people of the United
(06:02):
States reacted adversely to it.
Speaker 3 (06:06):
He was not expecting. He was expecting criticism, but he
wasn't expecting the specter of his whole administration wobbling. Once
he understood that that was the.
Speaker 2 (06:19):
Reality, then he went to Plan B. Remember he's got
planned right through K and Plan B was, I'll take
care of the big dog, the one that's the real offender, China,
but I'll let the others. I'll cut them some slack
for the sake of calming the American people. And that's
(06:41):
what happened today.
Speaker 1 (06:44):
Okay, this is where I think you're wrong. I think
he knew that the world would react this way, and
once he locked them into a state of complete fear
of annihilation, and once he let them know that this
is real and they had to react the way they reacted,
(07:04):
which is, we're begging for a deal. No, we understand
we've gotten away with murder, and that those days are over.
The Prime Minister of Great Britain actually said globalization is over.
And Great Britain was kind of ahead of the curve
because they got out of the EU and that's what
Brexit was all about. And I think that, and remember Bill,
(07:25):
he did telegraph that this would happen. He did say repeatedly,
there's going to be short term pain. It's not like
the decline in the stock market took him by surprise.
He expected it, but the American.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
People didn't expect it, not all at once.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
Well, they weren't listening to him then, because he was
very clear it was going to happen, but it wasn't.
Speaker 2 (07:45):
Clear about how it would come down. He was clear
about what was going to happen, but that how he
was shock and awe instead of a slower rolloup, and
that spooked the American public. There's a difference between the
American public reaction and foreign reaction. All right, Now, if
you're right, and you could be, because we're both theorizing here,
(08:08):
then Donald Trump did not relate what you just said
to his primary economic advisors, all of whom are giving
different points of view to the press.
Speaker 1 (08:18):
Yeah, that was getting a little comical at some point
that was getting ridiculously comical.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
He did not explain to them his vision of how
this was going to come down, and they so they
were uneasy, all of them way answering questions. So you
had the bull guy Navarro, then you had Elon musk
Is calling Navarro names. Then you had the Treasury secretary,
who is a little unsteady. So Trump did not call
(08:46):
them all in and say here's the chart, here's what
we're going to do. But that isn't unusual for him
because he is an entity unto himself, and anybody who
works for Donald Trump knows that democracy inside.
Speaker 1 (09:03):
Here's the thing. And this is what makes me happy
about this, And what makes me happy is I don't
want anybody's four one k to go down. I don't want,
but I also don't want America to be taken advantage of.
And I do believe it took a little shock and
awe to get the world's attention, and I think that
(09:26):
we're going to accomplish everything at once. And more importantly,
they're also huge national security implications to making semiconductors here,
for example, making pharmaceuticals here for example, to prevent Mexico
from taking Nissan and Honda automobile plants and bringing them
(09:47):
back to the US. I think it's a big deal
that five hundred billion from Apple. I've gone through the
list of countries that have have pledged investments over the
next four years, countries and company, and it's over seven
trillion dollars bill And so that's a major win that
nobody's factored in at this particular point. And I just
(10:08):
think he played it brilliantly. And I do understand. And
I sat here biting my tongue every day. Linda was
in Washington with us yesterday in Sweet Baby James, I
told both of them, guys, this is going to come
to a quick end. He's getting the result that he wants.
The result that he wanted was to get these countries'
(10:28):
attention and for them to understand that there's going to
be a new normal, and this is the new normal.
Maybe you why why do you O'Riley, Why do you
doubt me after all these years? You know I'm smart.
Speaker 2 (10:41):
I mean, you know, he's the reason you had me
on a program. Uh, he's got a lot of pharmaceutical stuff. Look,
Americas are not a micro economist. And they're not even
macro economists. They don't follow this, they don't understand it,
and I'm not being super sill word of the day.
(11:01):
What they understand is their own lives. And when they
see therefore one case in our stock portfolio is going down,
they don't like it. If the pharmaceutical tariffs drive up
the cost of medicine, that could happen. Donald Trump is
going to have to make another plan. Be You cannot
inflict pain on your populist for a global vision that
(11:24):
will play out in four years. It's impossible and it
won't happen. Now, you are correct in a sense that
Trump has a grand plan, and the grand plan has
nothing to do with Germany or Italy or any of
those countries. It has to do with China. It looks
like Trump is going to get a lot of what
(11:46):
he wants in the trade arena. He's going to take
that power, that increased economic power, and he's going to
confront Beijing with it. Because China, above all else needs
American markets. They have to sell their stuff here. No
one's going to buy it in Russia or Saudi Arabia.
(12:07):
They've got to sell it at Walmart. So Trump is
accumulating economic power in order to diminish the power of
the communists in Beijing.
Speaker 1 (12:18):
I completely think that you you've nailed this, and I
think that China needs access to our markets. And I've
been saying this now for some time, and like this
is this is where he had an ace in the hole,
and the ace in the hole is every one of
these countries, when push comes to shove, if those tariffs
stayed in place, that would then hurt their economies, that
(12:40):
would hurt their manufacturing, that would hurt their workers. And
is there going to be some adjustment on their end
because they've had a free ride for a long time. Yeah,
but I don't really I don't really give a damn
about them, especially considering the fact that they've taken advantage
of us for such a long period of time.
Speaker 2 (12:58):
Bill, that feels right for me. Either there's going to
be a major adjustment. It should work to the long
term advantage of the American economy. But Donald Trump as
president has to keep an eye on day to day
and those drug prices, those pharmaceutical tariffs. You have got
to manage that because senior citizens cannot pay any more
(13:20):
for medicine in this country. And the last point I'm
going to make is you are never going to get
a conversation like we're having right now on any other outlet,
particularly television, in this country. You are not going to pay.
You are going to get Trump's the devil. Whatever Trump
is bad doing, his Badama, Well, that takes a toll.
(13:44):
It takes a toll. He can give as many speeches.
Speaker 1 (13:48):
As he wants, it takes a toll.
Speaker 2 (13:50):
Bill.
Speaker 1 (13:50):
But if it really took a toll, how did he
win the election? Considering they went so hard in the
paint before the election, Hitler, Stalin, Mussolini, Nazi fas just
racist And it didn't work, did it, Bill?
Speaker 2 (14:02):
No, because people were feeling pain in their personal lives.
And that's what Donald Trump has to a very doing.
He cannot do the same thing that Biden did.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
All right, So for a week he put America through
a degree of uncertainty to get to this this this
new normal as I'm calling it, and putting everybody in
line and letting them know the days of ripping America
off or over. I think for one week it was
worth it. Am I wrong?
Speaker 2 (14:31):
No? You're not wrong?
Speaker 3 (14:33):
There it just right.
Speaker 1 (14:35):
Wait, wait, let's stop right there. We finally got O'Reilly
to say, Hannity's right. Why don't you say the words
Hannity's right?
Speaker 2 (14:41):
Why didn't I cut off my toes?
Speaker 1 (14:48):
Oh man? All right, mister O'Reilly, appreciate you. Thanks for
being with us all things O'reillybilloreilly dot com eight hundred
and nine four one sew. If you want to be
a part of the program, all right, I want all
of you to go to all right twenty five now
till the top of the hour, eight hundred and nine
to four one sean. If you want to be a
part of the program, don't forget. Our Tesla contest is ongoing.
(15:09):
You have now just three days left to register, and
we're going to give out the Tesla of your choice
to the winner. And you just simply go to Hannity
dot com and you click on the Tesla contest icon.
It'll take you to the contest page. Word of the
day is swamp, considering I was there yesterday and I
had to take multiple showers to get cleaned up, and anyway,
(15:33):
good luck to everybody. We're excited about announcing our winner
sometime next week. But you have a few more days
to register. Is get the word of the day every day.
Today's word is swamp. Go to Hannity dot com. It's
that simple. Anyone that listens to this show knows that
I'm kind of obsessed with cooking. I love love it.
I find it relaxing, it's fun. I love to get
(15:53):
it perfect. I'm a bit of a perfectionist, and now
I can get it perfect every single time, no risk
at all whatsoever, thanks to chef i q. Since it
is a modern, completely wireless cooking thermometer, it eliminates any
chance that you'll undercook or overcook your food. No matter
how you cook your food. It can withstand the temperature
up to one thousand degrees fahrenheit. It's so simple to use.
(16:16):
It's like a toothpick, a little thicker. You just put
it in your steak, your burger, your chicken, your pork chops,
your pork ribs, your fish. You just stick it in.
Then you go to the chef i q app that
you download in seconds and it's the easiest app ever
to use. You pick your desired level of duneness. It'll
tell you want to flip your steak over, and flip
your burger over, flip your pork chops over and it'll
(16:38):
tell you when it's done to whatever level of dundness
you want. It's the coolest thing ever. Your friends, your family,
your neighbors, they're all going to think you went to
culinary school. They'll want you to cook every time, which
for me, I love. I'm like, all right, great, I
don't have to sit around in a circle while everybody
checks their phones. G Lindy. Ever noticed that you're a
group with a group of people, everyone's checking their phone
(16:58):
the whole time.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
Phone policy personally.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
You have no phone policy. I can't live with them.
Speaker 4 (17:05):
Week Well, when we do dinner, we put it away.
Speaker 1 (17:09):
I never had family dinner growing up. Okay, I just didn't.
Speaker 4 (17:14):
It's not how I'm talking about now. Like, if you
go out to dinner, you know what I mean.
Speaker 1 (17:18):
If I take my kids out of the dinner, I'm
checking my phone.
Speaker 4 (17:20):
I don't care, really, folly, I won't do that.
Speaker 1 (17:23):
I actually put it like under my leg and it
vibrates when it goes off, and I check my phone.
Why do I expect a response at all hours of
the day and night from everybody on our team if
it's important Now when I'm sending stories at five am.
What time did I last send you a story this morning?
Like five am twenty two, five twenty two. Okay, I
(17:43):
don't expect you to respond to that, but if I
wrot call me now, I would expect a call.
Speaker 4 (17:48):
Yes, But you see the difference is I have a
special ring for you and a special alert for you.
So when no, no, no, it's much worse. We've played
it before.
Speaker 5 (17:59):
It's obnoxious, but I can't miss it. But everybody else
I'll silence during any kind of meals.
Speaker 1 (18:04):
Okay, but how often that is so rare that you're
going to get that call? Very rare? And if I
do make that call, I.
Speaker 4 (18:12):
Mean rare, but you know when you say.
Speaker 1 (18:14):
You, but it's that's very rare. If I'm going to
call a five am, I'm not calling a five am.
I'm not waking you and your family up because that'll
wake up the whole freaking neighborhood. Whatever that sound is.
Find chef you can find Yeah, let's play it after
this by chef iq. Since at chef iq dot com.
(18:35):
On top of their already low price, you'll get an
additional fifteen percent off of checkout with when you use
the promo code Hannity that chefiq dot com two day.
All right, you want to play you can play it.
Speaker 5 (18:47):
You have to text me go ahead and text meant
play it into the mic.
Speaker 1 (18:52):
Okay you ready? Hey, all right there? Oh my gosh,
what if you let me see what happens? But what
happens if I talk you it repeats go ahead cool,
and I'm listening to it. I'll turn my I mean,
(19:17):
it makes you sound like so evil, but I don't.
I don't contact you that way. I just send stories.
Speaker 4 (19:22):
Can't miss your call. So if I miss your call,
it's a problem.
Speaker 1 (19:25):
So there's something. If Adam Schiff is sitting the fan
for whatever reason, which has happened occasionally over the years.
I need my team in place. That's all there is
to it. That's part of the job. I don't apologize
for it. I say thank you. There you go.
Speaker 4 (19:41):
I love those thank you. Thank you for saying thank you.
Speaker 1 (19:44):
In light of today's news and the fact that Donald Trump,
oh gee, shocked the world true or false? Did I
not tell you yesterday af air? Watch what he's about
to do once he got the up over seventy nations
that were begging to make a deal, I said watch
(20:06):
what you're going to do, I said, And did I
not call this exactly how it went down?
Speaker 5 (20:12):
No, one hundred percent. I mean we talked about it yesterday.
You know, the MIC's were down, and you know we
were on commercial break and you were just like, listen,
things are about to hit the fan. He's about to
really do a big pivot and nobody knows what's coming.
Speaker 1 (20:24):
I was like, all right, right, And by the way,
I didn't say that from any specific knowledge that I
had from him or anybody else. It's because I know
him and I just know how his mind works.
Speaker 5 (20:36):
Well, if you've ever read The Art of the Deal,
which I keep on my desk because I'm like, okay,
page thirty four, what's going to happen next, I mean,
he really does. He's a very very smart businessman. And
I think that's the difference between him and the swamp
aka the word of the day. There's a big difference
between them because none of those people have run businesses for.
Speaker 4 (20:55):
The most part.
Speaker 5 (20:56):
And I mean, with the exception of AOC to Kennedy's point,
you know who needs the directions on the back of
a shampoo bottle? She was a bartender, So it's like
you know, the bar said, pretty.
Speaker 1 (21:06):
Low, Why are you trashing bartenders? I was a bartender,
so was I.
Speaker 4 (21:10):
But I'll tell you what.
Speaker 5 (21:11):
When I was a bartender, I was getting my MBA
and I was trying to learn about business and how
to do business.
Speaker 4 (21:16):
And I tell you I was a bartender.
Speaker 6 (21:18):
I was.
Speaker 1 (21:18):
I was not living my best life, let me put
it that way. Exactly years old, I was. I was
flirting with anybody that would flirt back with me, and
I was probably drinking too much. All right, let's go
to the before this announcement of Trump today and before
the stock market goes crazy and rebounds in a crazy way.
(21:39):
Joyla's behar sunny Houston. This is their predictions of doom
and gloom. They have no desire after ten years to
even contemplate or understand in any way that Donald Trump
is the quintessential never ending negotiator.
Speaker 7 (21:55):
First of all, if he tanks the entire what do
you call it, not nothing the stock market that all
his billionaire friends can swoop in and buy everything. Look,
that's not an original idea. That's hawkeem Jeffrey said that
or and the other thing, and in fact, today on
truth Social he wrote Trump wrote a Great Time to
(22:15):
buy HM. The other theory is from James Carville, which
I think is interesting that he wants to shoke such
instability and chaos to consolidate power for himself so that
people start to really go nuts, which we're starting to. No,
we're not well, people are starting to get mad.
Speaker 4 (22:33):
Well, that's good, you want them to get mad.
Speaker 7 (22:35):
But how how mad will people get and how broke
will people get? And how many jobs will be lost?
And then he can he can say, well, there's too
much chaos, and now we're going to have martial law
in this country and he becomes a dictator. I mean,
I don't know that may be out out of the boundaries,
but it's possible. We went from the envy of the
world to the enemy of the world.
Speaker 8 (22:55):
Yes, I don't know who said that, but what I
will say when you from my perspective, I'm looking at
this and I'm thinking, no country can count on America anymore.
They're going to ice us out economically, We're going to
be on our own because they're not going to be
able to depend on a country that every four years
could could elect a dictator. They can't rely upon us.
Speaker 1 (23:19):
I mean can they be any more wrong? And by
the way, did you notice that jointless sounds like you audience,
everybody in the audience. Anyway, let's not go down that road.
Speaker 5 (23:29):
Let's not believe you just compared me to Joilis behar
What have I done to deserve this?
Speaker 1 (23:36):
No, just for kicking giggles. All right, let's get to
our busy phones. Let's see Noela is in the great
state of Hawaii. Paradise. What's up, Noela? How are you?
Speaker 8 (23:49):
Helloha?
Speaker 4 (23:50):
Jean?
Speaker 9 (23:51):
I took a gander and just dialed the number, and
your lovely lady answered, I am over the moon.
Speaker 1 (23:59):
Thank you, Glad you got through. Listen, I live in
Paradise too. I live in Florida. As far as I'm concerned,
they're comparable. I've been to Hawaii, only ones, but I
loved it.
Speaker 9 (24:08):
Yeah. My brother went to that show that you did here,
and a lot of wow did too.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
Yeah.
Speaker 9 (24:15):
We would love to see you and the President come
to Hawaii because we are so forgotten out here. I'm
a warrior, patriot woman, patriotic Wahine and I just keep
telling everybody skate patient. He knows what he's doing, he
knows what he's doing. Things are not going to happen overnight.
(24:35):
They're going to happen, but we just got to hold
the line, stay patient. But what I would ask of you,
mister Hannity and Linda and everybody out there, please pray
for us out here. This is so deep blue. It's
beyond me and the things that they're doing. I keep
an eye on our legislature. I go on the Zoom meetings,
I go down there. The rallies against all of this
(24:58):
were just obnoxious, and our representatives for just being so
it was just awful because they were not representing me,
a laha of the people of Hai, and so thank
you so so much, and keep me in your rolodexity.
Do you want weekly updates, you just give me a call.
I will tell you you know what's going on over here,
(25:19):
because we feel so forgotten because we're out in the
middle of the Pacific Ocean showing, you know, and and
we just need some better representation and we're trying. But
there's a lot of problems over here. But for me,
today's a great day. I get to talk to you, Linda,
thank you so much for keeping that guy in line. Katie,
what a one.
Speaker 1 (25:39):
Oh good grief. Why please, no suck it up to
the staff. That's not allowed.
Speaker 4 (25:44):
Let me tell you something. This isn't even a suck up.
Speaker 5 (25:47):
I am a huge stand up, this warrior woman, and
and you know what.
Speaker 4 (25:50):
To pay to pay homage to her. I think we
should do a remote homage.
Speaker 1 (25:57):
Want me to take the show to Hawaii? Should be
in touch with the show. Well, the time difference alone
means we're doing the show at nine am.
Speaker 4 (26:06):
We did that in Singapore.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
No, we did it at nine pm. I think is when.
Speaker 4 (26:10):
We But I'm saying, am.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
I think you're right.
Speaker 4 (26:16):
It was twelve hours. I know I'm right. I know
it's painful for.
Speaker 1 (26:19):
You to right. Yeah, nine am. I remember walking out
in Singapore and it was daylight bat of an air
conditioned room. It was not only daylight. I'd be soaking
wet because of the humidity. In thirty second, it was
a sweat like that.
Speaker 4 (26:33):
They had to it's nicer and Hawaii.
Speaker 1 (26:34):
Though much nicer. All right, we appreciate it. Noela, God
bless you. Try to get back to our phones. Don't
forget go to Hannity dot com. It ends this contest
in just a few days April, the eleventh and every day.
Get the word of the day, go to Hannity dot com,
click on the Tesla contest icon and takes you to
the contest page. Today's word of the day is swamp
(26:56):
because I was all slimy from being in the swamp yesterday. Anyway,
back to our busy phones. All right, I'll do this,
I'll do this. I'll take a hit for the team.
Mowed the liberal in New York and Brooklyn a mo
the liberal in New York. You're never gonna You're never
gonna leave Brooklyn, are you.
Speaker 6 (27:14):
I just came back, excuse me from Boca Raton. I
was down there visiting my granddaughter.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
Well, your granddaughter has more sense than you. What's on
your mind?
Speaker 6 (27:25):
Uh? Well, you know, listen, I just want to tell you, why.
Speaker 1 (27:29):
Do you just say it, Hannity, You were right about Trump.
He pulled off a brilliant negotiation move and we're all
better off because of it. And America is not gonna
ripped off, gonna get ripped off, And all you left
wing lunatics were wrong and you panic for no reason.
Why don't you just admit it?
Speaker 6 (27:46):
Oh? May I, Cooper may I, Cooper may I, Maxie
my Cooper. Sure, I'll take it everything. I don't need anything,
so it's not really affecting me. So I feel sorry
for the little people though, the Walmart shoppers, the.
Speaker 1 (28:02):
Mazing hang on the little people that are not going
to get ripped off by tariffs by other nations because
now the negotiations really begin, you know, every country and
the on Earth. Do you think they should be ripping
us off and taking advantage of us like this? I'm
sick of it. Why are they charging us tariffs and
we don't charge them tariffs? Why is you the European
(28:24):
Union doing it? Why is Germany put a thirty percent
add on our our automobile sticker price? No way, I'm
not putting up with this crap.
Speaker 6 (28:32):
Sean Sean. One thing, American cars are too big for
the roads in Europe.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
We gotta do we make small cars. Yeah, well you
ought to love me. I'm driving a Tesla and I'm
giving away a Tesla. I bet you like free stuff.
You probably signed up every day.
Speaker 6 (28:49):
Every day I get up by way put the password. No,
I haven't signed up. Actually no, I gave up driving
last year. I'm seventy five.
Speaker 1 (28:56):
I get the world. The world's better off without you
on the road, Are right, Joan?
Speaker 6 (29:01):
Absolutely? Absolutely? But I love Florida. I can't wait to
get back my granddaughter, Vaccine Ray is beautiful, and the kids.
Speaker 1 (29:13):
I'm happy for you. I just I just want to
I want to anoint her. You know, a conservative, you know,
in the name of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Spirit. Is that okay?
Speaker 6 (29:24):
Amen? I won't.
Speaker 8 (29:29):
Wow.
Speaker 1 (29:31):
I just tanitized your granddaughters. All right, Mo. I don't
know why I like you, but I like you all
these years You've been calling me You're the best.
Speaker 6 (29:40):
Now absolutely the best.
Speaker 1 (29:42):
All right, we appreciate you. Mo the Live from New York.
From Brooklyn. You're about to elect Andrew Clombo, the mayor.
Speaker 4 (29:50):
Got to help you, son, don't you think that?
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Mo?
Speaker 4 (29:53):
The liberal sounds like Colombo? Do you remember Columbo?
Speaker 8 (29:57):
The show?
Speaker 1 (29:58):
Of course I remember Colombo the show.
Speaker 6 (30:00):
Family.
Speaker 1 (30:01):
What are you going to bring up Perry Mason? And
not one young person will know what you're talking about.
Speaker 5 (30:06):
I don't know what Perry Mason is, but my parents
watch Colombo and I thought it was hysterical.
Speaker 4 (30:11):
Anyways, uh uh.
Speaker 1 (30:13):
Most of the liberals sounds like the quintessential Brooklyn New
York liberal.
Speaker 5 (30:17):
No, but his voice, like the scratchiness of it, he
just cracks me up.
Speaker 4 (30:21):
Anyways, he loves you, so he's a sweetie.
Speaker 1 (30:23):
I mean New York. You watch all these seventy five
year old people can barely walk in the freezing cold
in the middle of winter. I'm like, what's wrong with
you PEOPLEO isn't there are other places to live. And
when you die, they're not going to take ten more
percent of your wealth that you already paid. You know
a federal and state taxes on already and and and
hit you twice. Hey, when you need to reach your parents,
(30:46):
turn to one of our new sponsors, rapid Radios dot
Com industrial strength walkie talkies that go nationwide. Now, Rapid
Radio keeps you connected with your family and friends during
an emergency. It's one touch, the touch of a button.
You pull them out of the box, you press a button,
you start talking to family and friends anywhere anytime. That
(31:07):
is truly one touch connection. Go to rapid radios dot
com right now. That's rapid radios dot Com. Now there's
no subscription or monthly fee. Ever. Think walkie talkies with
industrial strength and the technology of today. Get prepared now
before bad weather arrives now. Springtime is tornado season. Do
not be caught off guard. One hundred percent private, they're
(31:28):
ready to go right out of the box. Go to
rapid radios dot com right now. That's rapid Radios dot com.
For a limited times you'll get sixty percent off. You
get free ups shipping from Michigan. If you had the
promo code Radio twenty five, you get an extra twenty
five bucks off and a free EMP protection back.