Hey, great to be with you live from Ice Station EIB in far northern New Hampshire.
We have Friday and Mr. Snerdley down in New York checking that the undocumented guest hosts do not get out of hand.
It is the week of guest hosts.
Rush will return live on Monday for full strength, excellence in broadcasting.
But the great Buck Sexton will be here tomorrow.
Eric Erickson in on Thursday.
And the return of Roger Hedgecock after a decade to the guest host roster.
That will be live for Open Line Friday.
Breaking news, courtesy of The Hill, the big Inside the Beltway newspaper.
Lindsey Graham hints at rotating first lady.
Lindsey Graham hints at quote rotating first lady.
No, no, no, no, no.
Lindsey Graham isn't isn't he's going to have a rotating first lady.
No, he's not.
No, no, no, no.
He's he was he was asked by the Daily Mail whether what he would do about First Lady, and he suggested, because he's a lifelong bachelor, he suggested that he would have a quote rotating first lady, whatever that means.
I don't know.
It's like rotating pies at the diner, isn't it?
I don't.
I had a dream last night about a rotating first lady, but when she was fully rotated, she turned out to be Caitlin Jenner.
I woke up with a terrible start and the pillow drenched in sweat.
It was awful.
But Lindsey Graham is hinting at a quote rotating first lady.
So that's breaking news on that.
These Marco Rubio traffic tickets are getting worse and worse.
He apparently, I'm looking at this story, and he apparently crashed the airport security guard and barreled past the guard at 35 miles an hour, refusing to stop Marco Rubio.
I mean, the Times is right.
The New York Times is right to be on top of this stuff because it's, oh, no, no, no, wait.
That wasn't Marco Rubio who crashed the airport security fence.
That was Hillary Clinton.
Back in 2001, if we're going to do stories about the driving records of the presidential candidates, New York Times, here's one that would make a great front-page story.
You don't have to throw in any of Bill's stories about his modes of transportation on the Lolita Express to Pedo Island or any of that.
You can just do this one, New York Times.
Hillary Clinton, she was being driven.
It was one of these driving Miss Hillary situations because she doesn't drive herself because she's a caring public servant, so she can't afford to buy a second-hand Toyota Corolla, so she has to be driven everywhere in a limousine.
So she's because she's such a devoted public servant, not like Marco Rubio.
And in 2001, Senator Clinton was being driven to the Westchester County Airport, which is where you go to get on a private plane.
And she was at the security checkpoint, and her driver decided to go through it at 35 miles an hour, injuring the county police officer, Ernest Diamond, in the process.
Officer Diamond said Clinton's car was going so fast, I didn't know if we had a terrorist.
The senator's limousine sped on for another hundred yards with Diamond banging on the window and door and shouting for the vehicle to stop.
And it only finally did when the Westchester County cop threw his shoulder into the door like a football lineman sustaining injuries that required emergency room treatment.
In the two weeks after that incident, not a single New York newspaper, not even the New York Times, which is so fascinated by traffic offenses by politicians in their motor vehicles.
Not a single newspaper covered this story.
The fact that Mrs. Clinton gate crashed a security barrier in her limousine, injuring Officer Ernest Diamond and requiring him to be taken to the emergency room.
But you know, Mrs. Rubio not coming to a complete stop at that stop sign.
That's front page news right there from the New York Times.
So let's go for it, New York Times.
Let's have all the traffic stories.
Let's have all the candidates' traffic stories.
This is actually the difference between the Clintons and other candidates, is that the Clintons lead the limousine life.
They're behind the tinted limousine windows.
They're behind the security entourage.
We were talking in the last hour about the safe space.
You know what the really safe space is?
Inside the Clinton security perimeter, where she's telling you that it's racist for Republicans to depress minority turnout by demanding voter ID.
But you can't get in to the event to hear her talk about how Republicans are racist for demanding voter ID, because to get into the event, you have to have ID.
So to have ID to vote is racist and transphobic, but you need ID to get inside the Clinton perimeter because that's the safest space on the planet.
She can't hear a word you're saying.
No one can get in there without ID.
If Caitlin Jenner turned up to a Clinton event because she adores Hillary Clinton and would love to hear what she has to say, and they would look at his old ID, which still says Bruce Jenner on it, and say, hey, lady, this isn't your ID.
Beat it.
Get out of here.
And Caitlin Jenner would never get into the Hillary Clinton event because that's how transphobic she is.
That's how racist she is.
She's depressing turnout at her events from transgendered persons and minorities and all kinds of other things because of the way she demands ID for that.
And in this case, she doesn't even like other security perimeters.
If you tried to gate crash a Hillary Clinton event, they'd shoot you dead.
But she can ram this security barrier at Westchester Airport at 35 miles an hour.
Nobody cares.
Oh, good heavens.
It's not like Mrs. Rubio double parking, is it?
That's a big story from the New York Times.
We'll take some of your calls on that in the rest of this show.
I haven't talked about this, what's this town in Texas, McKinney?
McKinney, Texas.
Is it named after Cynthia McKinney?
I don't know.
I hope it is.
But I really don't, I really don't.
I find these kinds of stories too depressing to talk about, really.
But I will talk about – I will talk – I will talk about it if you want to, because the idea like the manicured, you know, the badicured lawns and the police and all the rest of it.
And again, this gets to the safe space.
This is a community pool, this swimming pool.
And that was supposed to be a safe space.
That was supposed to have a fence.
And it has these rules about you only have two persons from each household in the pool at the same time.
And it's supposed to be a birthday party.
and it got crashed by seven people.
And the usual people have descended on that place, including the, what is it, Father Flager, that Catholic guy who's a big pal of Obama, he was down there sounding like Al Sharpton.
He was doing the world's worst Al Sharpton impression there.
It's kind of embarrassing.
It's like Pat Boone singing Little Richard.
I don't know.
It's pathetic.
It's actually worse than Pat Boone singing Little Richard.
Pat Boone could just about do it.
It's like Andy Williams singing Snoop Dogg.
It was just embarrassing.
That is how bad this Father Flager thing was.
And I don't know where we – I find these – I'll tell you why I find these stories sad.
Because I think eventually it will be the Fergusonization of everything.
And there will be no safe spaces.
And I think one of the great tragedies is that essentially what we're arguing about here is these are questions about first world policing.
Because obviously when you look at what happened in this thing in McKinney, Texas, you wouldn't see anything happen like that if it was happening in New Zealand or if it was happening in Sweden or happening in Ireland or whatever.
And I mean, being serious about Ireland, the IRA did what Hillary Clinton did, and they crashed a security perimeter, and the British soldiers fired some shots into the back of the car.
And the IRA took the British government to the European Court of Human Rights by infringing on their human rights for shooting at them after they'd crashed the security perimeter.
That's what Hillary Clinton should have done with that punk Westchester County cop who had the impertinence to ram her limo as she's smashing through the security perimeter.
But this is really what it's about, is that everyone sees Ferguson.
Everyone understands that when people loot and burn, all that you're sending the message there is, if you've got property in Ferguson, get out now because your house that's worth $60,000 is going to be worth $30,000 next year after all the damage these guys are doing to your community.
And that thing in McKinney, Texas is interesting because in the end, you know, what it's saying, in the end, there will be no safe spaces and it'll all be Fergusonized.
And it's sad for me that there aren't – I don't think there are good guys on any side here.
And that's starting with the rap music that people – well, the White House briefing room is a safe space with what Josh Earnest is saying.
But it starts with, I agree, if I lived in a nice little manicured lawns thing like that, I wouldn't want filthy, obscene music being pumped out of the swimming pool.
Those guys are right to complain.
Those neighbors are right to complain.
Wait a minute.
The White House briefing room is being evacuated right now.
Oh, okay, pardon me.
Sorry, folks.
There's a coup.
The rebels have taken control of the presidential palace and seized Baghdad Bob.
So he can't give his briefing today.
The White House briefing room is being evacuated.
What is this?
Some other guy built a homemade drone and landed on the lawn?
What is this?
The White House, the Senate, the Senate went to hold a briefing on TSA security, and they've evacuated.
Now the White House briefing room is being evacuated.
There is no safe space anywhere in this country.
This entire continent is now in a...
Oh, it's a suspicious package.
A suspicious package.
That's nothing to do with Caitlin Jenner, is it?
Anyway, there's a suspicious package in the White House briefing room, and the whole place is said to be evacuated.
That's it.
Even the White House isn't a safe space.
Mark Stein in for Rush.
We'll take your calls straight ahead.
Lindsey Graham's plans to have a rotating First Lady make me think we need to dust off that trailer for Return to Saddlesaw Canyon that Rush did a few years ago.
Mark Stein, in for Rush on the EIB network.
In case you haven't heard, I just heard at the end of the last segment.
The White House is being the White House briefing room is being evacuated because of a suspicious package.
And I remarked somewhat mordantly, it's the rebels seizing the presidential palace and Baghdad Bob hustling himself out of there.
Because coming on the same day as the Senate is being evacuated, as it's holding a meeting on the failures of TSA security, this is where the big security state gets you.
This is the other side of the big security state.
We have the NSA that is monitoring everything.
Every single phone call, every single credit card transaction, every single tweet, every single email.
They've got everything.
They've universalized the problem, the security problem.
And they're tracking everything.
And when you track everything, you can't track anybody.
There used to be a cop show, terrific show, 50 years ago, 1950s, the first real big telecop show, The Naked City.
And it had a very famous first line.
There are 8 million stories in The Naked City.
This is one of them.
And these guys have universalized the approach.
That's the approach to policing.
You say, well, who are we looking for?
Well, we're looking for this.
We found this dead body, and we're looking for a guy who's between 5'8 and 5'11, and he has brownish, reddish hair, and he has a faint scar just on his left cheek and a slight limp.
And you say, okay, well, that narrows it down a bit.
We'll try and find that guy.
Here, we don't narrow it down because that would be profiling, and that will be insensitive.
So we monitor everybody.
We monitor everybody.
And as a result, you get a big, ineffective security state that is so busy monitoring everybody, it doesn't monitor the right people.
And we don't know what this suspicious package is in the White House, but I will tell you that when that unfortunate woman from Connecticut a year or two back, she made a wrong turn in one of the streets that's around the White House, that part of Washington, and then she tried to back up.
And I think it was no fewer than three different federal agencies thought this poor lady, poor confused lady from Connecticut, not used to driving in Washington, was some kind of terrorist.
They pumped all these bullets into that car, which they knew had a little baby kid in it, and they killed that woman.
They killed that woman.
And when Congress heard the woman was dead, the House of Representatives stood up and applauded the sterling work of the Capitol Police and the Secret Service and however many other federal agencies it took to kill her.
So they They kill her, they don't get any of the people who are landing drones on the White House, who are leaping over the gates, who are going to try to get in there.
As I said, we don't know what this package is.
We do know that the Secret Service, the money-no-object security detail for this president, couldn't did the usual thing where they fly him in Air Force One and they have the decoy Air Force One and all the rest of it.
They fly him to South Africa for Nelson Mandela's funeral.
They swarm the building.
They've all got the telephone cords and the reflector shades, telephone cords out there.
And they established that it's perfectly safe in the stadium to put the president of the United States next to a schizophrenic interpreter for the deaf, a violent schizophrenic who's been convicted of the crime of necklacing, which is putting a tire around somebody's head, so putting a tire full of gasoline around somebody's head, lighting it up, and burning them to death.
That's what our Secret Service did.
Secret Service down in Cartagena, they were having hookers, hookers in their hotel room all night long.
And the Secret Service, and how did Congress react?
They passed a law forbidding the Secret Service from having foreign nationals in their hotel rooms.
It's not that they're foreign nationals.
There's no problem, even with me.
There's no problem if a Secret Service guy has me in his hotel room.
It's not foreign nationals.
It's the fact that they're hookers.
So they've passed a new law now saying that if the Secret Service wants to have hookers in their room, they've got to be good old girl next door type American hookers doing one of the few jobs Americans will still do.
We can't have any of those foreign hookers taking our American hookers' jobs.
That's the way they reacted to the Cartagena hooker scandal.
And so when you have this big, ineffectual security state, when you have the 44-car motorcade approach to life, when at the G7 meeting that's just wrapped up in Germany, our guy had a longer motorcade than all the other six guys put together.
And we think that's good.
Hey, if you got it, flawn it, baby.
No, no, that doesn't work.
Because when you've got 48 cars in the motorcade, none of them are paying attention to security.
If you've got one car in front, one car behind, those guys will take a bullet for you and they're being alert to everything.
And this big security state where you universalize the problem, where everybody is suspicious, where the NSA monitors everybody and everything, because they're taking in all this data from everywhere, from everything.
And we have the Panty Bomber, and we have the Sarneyev guy, and we have the guy in Garland, Texas.
And they're not, as I said in the first hour, they're not lone wolves, they're known wolves.
They're in the system.
But because the system is also clogged up with Mrs. Scroggin's son taking her for the credit card receipt for him taking her for a $20 special at the all-you-can-eat buffet for Mother's Day, because all that is also clogging up the system, the system is not able to identify the real threats.
So we don't know why it is that the White House press briefing has had to be abandoned, but it shouldn't have happened, and it testifies to what happens when you have this big money-no-object security state that sees everything, but really sees nothing.
Yes, exciting things happening in Washington.
Apparently, the entire West Wing of the White House is being evacuated.
Initially, it was just the reporters.
Shannon Bream of Fox News, who's standing on the sidewalk, says there's lots of Secret Service out there.
I hope Shannon's right, and they're the Secret Service guys who are doing the job and not the Nelson Mandela interpreter type Secret Service and the Cartagena Hooker Secret type Secret Service.
But apparently they've now evacuated the entire West Wing of the White House.
Let us go to John in Crofton, Maryland, home of the next President of the United States, the Frontier.
Martin O'Malley.
Yeah, go, O'Malley.
O'Malley 26.
The mayor of Baltimore did a rotten job there, and then he had two terms as governor, and he raised over 40 taxes, fees, and tolls.
And we're repealed things.
Even a rapper.
He's the perfect candidate.
He did it to Baltimore.
And he'll do it to you.
That's the perfect campaign slot.
He just announced in Baltimore to a booing crowd that he was running for president a couple saturat.
But anyway, I'm watching Fox.
They evacuated the press room.
And I think the same person that called the scare into Capitol Hill is the same guy that called the White House.
So somebody's having a twofer day.
But the reason I called is our arrogant president went over and acted like he was still a great American president at the G7, and he had a press conference than what he has when he has a press conference here at home.
And he had a question concerning the soccer scandal, and he said he couldn't answer any questions on that because there was an ongoing investigation.
So you could understand that.
And then he was asked, or I guess he brought up Obamacare being deliberated at the Supreme Court.
We should find out this month on whether it's constitutional or not.
But he had no problem saying, well, it's just this one lousy sentence.
You know, the Congress could change that sentence and give me what I want.
And so I'm wondering what the Supreme Court's going to do.
I mean, this is their second bite at the Apple.
The last time they let us down, and the Chief Justice, who I call Chief Judas Roberts, might swing the vote again.
What do you think?
Yeah, you're right that he had no problem talking about this case.
Unlike the FIFA case, the FIFA case is just at an investigative stage, and it doesn't actually have anything particular to do with him.
It's not directly related to his policies or anything.
It's just the Department of Justice with a somewhat expansive view of its jurisdiction, sticking all these corrupt fellas from the World Soccer Organization in their headlights.
But the healthcare thing is to do with him.
It's specifically his healthcare.
There's a plan.
There's a co-equal branch of government.
It's known as Obamacare.
They're the Supreme Court judges, and it seemed to me that he was specifically trying to lean on them.
Now, they may have already written their final opinions.
They may already know what the decision is.
But it seems to me that along with all this new hashtag he has, ACA Works, that he is trying subtly to influence a co-equal branch of government.
He is applying pressure to them.
I don't think that's appropriate.
I mean, I'm not a big guy on Supreme Court justices.
I don't myself, I find, particularly as I'm being sued in the District of Columbia right now, and I was with one of the most pitiful and pathetic judges I've ever had the misfortune to appear before.
And that judge has removed herself from the case, and I'm now up before another judge.
But God almighty, when I was with, what was her name, Natalia Combs-Green of the District of Columbia Superior Court, I didn't understand the whole deference of people towards justices, judges, just because they got a black robe on.
I don't see it.
I don't get it.
I don't see the point of throwing off a king in a big coronation robe if you're just going to prostrate yourself before some judge in a black robe.
So, this whole Supreme Court fetishization thing, I'm not big on.
But at the same time, there is no doubt in my mind that what Obama did is not something, John, that George W. Bush would have done, that his father would have done, that Reagan would have done.
It was a new stage, I think, in Obama's view of himself as the sole legitimate source of power.
People talk about banana republics.
The thing about banana republics is the president matters and nobody else does.
And that's how Obama thinks of himself.
He thinks that he's the president.
He's the guy everybody knows.
None of these other people, these legislators in the House of Representatives, they're not household names.
They're not the big guy like him.
They're not the guy with the 40-car motorcade.
These judges, these nine guys, sure, a few wacky conservatives, they like Scalia and Clarence Thomas, but nobody else, no real people know who these people are.
He's the star.
It's the Barack Obama show.
He makes the running.
That's why he can stand up there and he decides we're going to amnesty 30 million illegal immigrants.
I'm the president.
I woke up this morning and decided that's what I'm going to do.
I'm going to, well, he didn't even issue an executive order.
It was done apparently through some kind of executive memo.
He sent an executive email about it.
It wasn't even, as I said, not even an executive order.
He regards himself as president as the sole source of authority because he can get away with it.
And generally speaking, Republicans have let him get away with it.
All the time before last November, we were told, well, wait a minute, we just control one house of Congress.
We can't do anything.
We can't block anything.
We've got to win the Senate.
We've got to win the Senate.
So they win the Senate.
And all these people who tell us that his actions on the amnesty, on the DREAM Act, on letting illegal immigrants who bust into this country, which was supposed to be a safe space, and they broke into the safe space and decided they were going to stay, he had the right to change that law unilaterally.
And all the Republicans who said it was unconstitutional suddenly decided after the November election that no, it would all get them a bit of bad press if they were to complain about that.
So they let that slide.
They weren't going to do anything about that.
He decides which parts of Obamacare are valid on any given day or not.
He decides whether it's going to apply to businesses on the 1st of September 2013 or he's going to wait until the 1st of September 2016 or whatever.
He decides unilaterally, one of the articles of indictment that the revolutionary colonists prepared against King George III was that bills had passed and he refused to sign them.
Because in a monarchy, a bill doesn't become law until it's given royal assent.
That's how it is in Canada.
That's how it is in Australia.
That's how it is in Jamaica.
It's not law until it gets royal assent.
And what George III was doing was the colonists were passing laws and he was refusing to sign them into law.
And that's one of the reasons they got mad with him.
And that's the situation we're now living in.
It's taken whatever it is, two and a third centuries to come full circle, where U.S. immigration law, it's a law.
It was passed into law as a, and it's a law, and it was signed into law.
And he's now saying, no, I'm withdrawing my royal signature from that.
It no longer applies.
Obamacare is his law.
It was passed on his terms by his court eunuchs who passed it into law the way he wanted it.
And he now says, oh, no, this paragraph is causing me political difficulties, and that one's causing me political difficulties.
So they don't apply anymore.
We now have creative use of Title IX where a law was passed that was thought to mean one thing and it is now used to prosecute people for using their First Amendment rights.
And so essentially we are – the definition of – it's unfair perhaps to call him monarchical because this is beyond that.
The definition of a dictatorship is that it is capricious and whimsical.
Tyranny is whimsical.
You live at 27 Elm Street and they might not get you, but they'll get the guy at 25 Elm Street who's doing nothing different from you.
But they decide to go after him and everybody else all along Elm Street gets the message.
Don't do that.
Don't do that.
Keep quiet.
Keep quiet.
And that's what they're doing with these selected prosecutions.
They decide, we're going to go for Denny Hastett, but we're not going to go for this guy.
We're going to prosecute these people for talking about guns on internet websites, and that'll warn off all these other people, too.
We're going to have this subpoena to get the identities of commenters at internet websites at reason.com, and then all the other internet websites will stay quiet.
And that's the definition of a tyranny, that it might not happen to you.
If you keep your head down and you don't do anything and you just stay quiet and you don't catch their eye, you'll be okay.
But the guy across the street, he made the mistake of catching their eye and he's not okay.
And that's why these things, the corruption at the heart of the Republic, is a serious business.
There's no reason why anybody who made the mistake of emigrating lawfully to this country and has got jerked around by all the immigration procedures and you go to see the Homeland Security Office to renew your green card and they say, oh, no, you've got three copies of the pink form.
You need four copies of the blue form.
You should just laugh in your face.
The President of the United States has told us that this chunk of U.S. immigration law doesn't apply.
So why should anybody else's parts of the immigration law apply?
This guy has no more right to redraw American immigration law than I do.
He has no more right to redraw American immigration law than you do.
But he regards himself as all three branches of government.
So he feels he can do it.
And that's why, to go back to John's point, that's why he had no interest in talking about FIFA.
He didn't want, he didn't thought it would look funny, might upset some of the foreigners who've discovered that America, which has never had any interest in soccer, only gets interested in soccer when it's going to jail the guy, all the foreigners running it for 47 years.
It's a classic case.
No interest in the subject until we decided to put a lot of foreign soccer officials in jail for 300 years.
So he's not going to talk about that, but he's quite happy to slap down John Roberts and eight other guys in black robes and say, as I said earlier, nice little Supreme Court you got there.
Nice little gig you got there.
You get to wear a black robe.
You get invited to all the state of the union.
You get great seats and everything.
Nice little Supreme Court you got there.
Shame if anything were to happen to it.
That's the meaning of his remarks.
Mark Stein in for Rush.
We'll take your call straight ahead.
Mark Stein in for Rush.
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And I'm looking at this.
This White House pressroom briefing thing is now very weird.
They've evacuated the whole West Wing.
One of the odd things about it is that they've covered the cameras.
There are fixed cameras that all the networks have at the briefing room that basically show the secretary from one side, and then there's a camera behind the secretary that shows the fellas sitting in the seats and asking their questions.
The briefing has just resumed.
The interesting thing about it is they had staffers going in and covering up those cameras with newspapers, oddly enough.
You'd think they'd have something more substantial than that to throw over those cameras.
And nobody quite knows why.
I mean, if it's dangerous in there and they think there's something ready to blow, why send a White House staffer in there?
If you've had to evacuate the room, why shouldn't you be sending a guy in the full robo-cob?
Shouldn't you be sending the sniffer dogs?
But no, they sent in just regular White House staffers to cover the cameras with newspapers before everybody has been admitted.
And the word is that this may be a hoax, that the same person who apparently hoaxed the Senate and called in a fake security thing or who may have done the same to the White House.
Or it may be that there's a suspicious package there, in which case it would be a serious breach because you have to get through not one but several layers of security to penetrate through to the White House briefing room.
So if there was a dangerous package that got in there, that would be a suspicious thing.
But if it's just somebody calling in these fake things, that's a great thing for the G Had.
You don't have to bother actually planting the bomb or getting somebody on the plane anymore.
You can just do what they actually, the IRA did this in the late phase of their campaign.
They just make selective calls to London Underground and bring the entire transport system of London to a halt.
Just fake joke calls, and everyone would be stuck at the bottom of the underground in a tunnel for hours until they determined it was safe to bring them up to the surface.
And if the GHA boys can do that and shut down, again, I'm talking about the IRA here.
They never succeeded in shutting down 10 Downing Street or Buckingham Palace, but some guy has just shut down the United States Senate and the White House within the space of a couple of hours.
The TSA hearing will not resume today, so they get to live another day before anyone gets to throw those tough questions at him.
The big security state in this country is not working.
And that is the lesson of these two things today.
Someone on the same day has just managed to get the Senate and the White House shut down.
That is an appalling reflection on American security.
Yes, Mr. Snerdley, what's that?
Oh, Mr. Snerdley's having difficulty remembering the name of my book.
It's, I can't remember it, Mr. Snerdley.
I'll have to do that after the break.
We'll be back in a moment.
Don't worry.
Don't worry, folks.
Everybody's safe.
Marco Rubio used his luxury speedboat to evacuate everybody out of the Senate.
They're just like speeding off down the Potomac now.
It's an inspiring sight.
That luxury speedboat, it can carry all 100 senators plus their staffers.
It's an amazing thing.
You should take a look at it.
This has been great fun for me, as it always is.
Don't forget to join Buck Sexton tomorrow.
Mr. Sturdley was reminding me to mention the name of my.
It's a book on climate change.
I always have terrible difficulty remembering the name, but it's actually called Climate Change the Facts.
It's available at all good retail outlets, and I will be talking about it, in fact, at the Heartland Institute's Climate Change Conference this Friday morning.
And I believe that is going to be live-streamed and simultaneously broadcast on C-SPAN or whatever on Friday morning live.