friends at p and g and low s. perfect day 46th and sixth avenue. maybe visiting from wanetca; 69 degrees going for a high of 88. it s going to be hot today. ainsley: but it s friday. steve: three hours away from saturday for us. brian: sometimes we have bands on they don t sound exactly like they do on the album. jimmie allen, that s exactly how he sounds through his rehearsal sounds exactly like you just heard him on his video with the perfect studio recording. what a voice he has. ainsley: you have an ear for music. you can tell the difference. brian: everyone in my family does except for me. i was asked to quit. ainsley: your parents were honest with you. some of those parents on american idol. brian: my dad, i used to play the clarinet. my dad would say what song are you trying to play? ainsley: mary had a little lamb. brian: bad enough my brother was a better athlete but when he was better at music i almost quit, gift the world. steve: did you want
is all over that district s website to create a consciousness of social justice. so what the pledge is great. i m glad we got it back. we should say under god. of course that s what we are founded on. this is like a teeny teeny tiny win when you considering the fact that fargo, north dakota and school districts across the country quietly pushing critical race theory and critical gender theory through the fake terms of diversity, equity and inclusion, fargo no exception. parents shouldn t be blowing up the phone lines about the pledge, which they should. they should be doing it across the board and oh by the way johnny can t read either. steve: exactly. nobody knows this issue better than you, pete because you wrote a new york times number one best seller. meanwhile, will, at the top of the heap over there in our triple column, you just, what, yesterday the day before yesterday, you sent your kids to school down in texas and everybody is worried about what the kids are going to be l