6 5 26 The National Doughnut Day Disaster


🎙️ DaWack in da MorningFriday, June 5, 2026
Start your Friday with a fresh cup of coffee and a fresh batch of nonsense as Zack Da Wack serves up another jam-packed episode of DaWack in da Morning!
This week we're celebrating National Doughnut Day, National Cheese Day, World Environment Day, and somehow trying to balance doughnuts with Global Running Day. Good luck with that.
We'll run through celebrity birthdays featuring Mark Wahlberg, Mike McCready, Pete Wentz, Ron Livingston, and more. Then we'll remember some notable figures who left us on June 5th, including Ronald Reagan, Ray Bradbury, Conway Twitty, Dee Dee Ramone, and others.
In This Day in History, we revisit the eve of D-Day, the launch of the Marshall Plan, Elvis shocking America with his hips, the beginning of the Six-Day War, the first reported cases of AIDS, and the day Edward Snowden made everyone suddenly interested in privacy settings.
Then it's time for This Day in Music History, where Elvis causes a national panic, The Rolling Stones can't get no satisfaction, Bruce Springsteen is born in the U.S.A., and Prince reminds us why legends never really leave.
Plus:
🍩 National Doughnut Day
🧀 National Cheese Day
🌎 World Environment Day
🎂 Celebrity Birthdays
🕯️ Celebrity & Notable Deaths
📚 This Day in History
🎵 This Day in Music History
🔮 DaWack's Hilarious Friday Horoscopes
And this week's horoscope forecast includes:
• Aries battling a jar lid
• Taurus buying a decorative frog they don't need
• Gemini falling down an internet rabbit hole
• Leo becoming the center of attention for all the wrong reasons
• Sagittarius planning a tropical vacation that ends at a gas station slushie machine
Because the stars may guide you, but they can't stop you from making questionable decisions before noon.
Featured Quote of the Day:"History changes the world. Music changes the mood. Doughnuts make both easier to handle."
🎙️ DaWack in da Morning
The podcast where history is funny, news is weird, and the horoscopes are only slightly less reliable than the weather forecast.