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November 4, 2024 • 33 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Michael, considering whether you should ship your tennis shoes to Scottsdale,
Arizona to be cleaned is the epitome.

Speaker 2 (00:08):
Of first world problems.

Speaker 3 (00:11):
Have a great tweek, Michael, Dragon.

Speaker 4 (00:14):
I did to try to maybe get some type of
intelligent talk back, but all I heard about was T
shirts and tennis shoes for a whole segment. So now
I have nothing, And between that and the commercials, wow,
what a waste of time.

Speaker 5 (00:32):
So you guys have a good day.

Speaker 4 (00:34):
I'm going to go ahead and check out as some
other broadcasts have.

Speaker 5 (00:41):
But part of me doesn't believe you. You're not still here.

Speaker 6 (00:45):
One I don't believe you, but two I don't care.
Uh Dragon, that were talking during the break. We spend
every week, every single day, six days a week, at
least I do. Dragon doesn't work on the sixth day,

(01:06):
six days a week. Dragon works, but doesn't work here
six days a week, talking incessantly about politics, the future
of the republic, international affairs, the culture, things that the
Democrat Party is doing to destroy this republic. We spend

(01:27):
all of this time doing it. There is not a
There is rarely a day that there's not some serious
thing that we talk about and we know unequivocally. And
this is why I say I don't care. We know
that people tune in to hear my astute analysis of

(01:51):
what's going on politically. If you don't, yourself get tired
of it occasionally and you want something else, you need
some help. I'm not talking about you in particular, mister talkback,
but if you allow politics to consume the entirety of

(02:13):
your life, which is one of the most important things
in your life, but it is not the most important thing.
You've got your own life. You have your own family,
I hope you have a family. You have your own

(02:34):
work situation. You have your friends, your relatives, your neighbors,
You've got all the relationships that you have.

Speaker 2 (02:40):
In your life.

Speaker 6 (02:43):
Those are much more important than this election. They don't
get me wrong. That's not saying this election is not important.
All of those things that I just described are important.

Speaker 5 (02:57):
It's the most important one in my lifetime. So I've
been told the past four elections.

Speaker 6 (03:01):
Yes, but if you if you have to consume this
constantly day in and day out, and you can't, and
again I don't know whether you're being serious or being sarcastic,
And which is why I saying I don't care, and
I mean that genuinely that I don't care, because everybody needs.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
To step back.

Speaker 6 (03:31):
Now we're less than twenty four hours from the polls opening.
What do you want to know? What do you want
to know? So here's what we're going to do. Mister
talkback because of you. If if you think that something
about this election that's not been said, that has not

(03:57):
even been analyzed, ripped apart, forty seven different autopsies, every
possible way by everybody, all across the political spectrum, is
not analyzed, and se me a text message and tell
me what that is, and I'll analyze it for you,
and I'll tell you what my But my perception or

(04:20):
my analysis is about that.

Speaker 4 (04:27):
Is.

Speaker 6 (04:28):
You may have thought you're being maybe you thought you
were being threatening and somehow I was going to capitulate,
or maybe you were being smart elik and thought that
I would cave. But now you've you've brought out the
passive aggressiveness in me, and now you're going to get
a theological lecture. And the theological lecture is if you

(04:51):
don't have a grounding in your relationships with your neighbors,
your family, your friends, the people you hang out with
the people you work with, you know. Dragon and I
both walked through the pit or walking around. While Dragon
didn't this hout because he was getting his breakfast, but

(05:13):
I walk around and I ran into two or three salespeople,
and we didn't talk about anything except I asked them
how they were doing. What was the weather like when
you got up this morning? How was your drive in
this morning? You know, because we were supposed to have snow,
we won't have anything out there, so it's kind of

(05:37):
the wet, first cold morning of the year. And so
one woman in particular that actually we've been exchanging some
emails about some other stuff. How have you been, what'd
you do this weekend? I didn't walk home and say
how are you going to vote? Have you voted yet?
Make sure you vote.

Speaker 2 (05:57):
No.

Speaker 6 (05:58):
I tried to relate to her on the human basis,
And I think we get so wrapped up in this,
and we get so wrapped up in it. It's like
even the stupid squirrel and raccoon story, or the story

(06:18):
about my granddaughter and her misunderstanding or lack of critical
thinking about a story that her teacher or somebody had
told her about the lieutenant Governor of North Carolina shows
that we spend so much time and there is so much,
such such a huge flow of information, that if that's

(06:42):
all you do all the time, then at some point
your brain just shuts down and you no longer try
to think critically, You no longer try to ascertain the
wheat from the weeds, and you just you just let
everything come in. And you shouldn't do that. You shouldn't
do that. When's the last time I happened to do this?

(07:06):
Yesterday for a little while. When's the last time you
sat down and put on some headphones or if you
have a stereo system, however you consume music, how many
of you have spent an hour, just an hour listening
to some of your favorite music, or maybe some exploring
some music that you not listened to. There was you

(07:31):
ought prompted me to do this. In doing some show
prep yesterday, I ran across the story about some of
the some of the acts, some of the bands they're
going to be playing at Red Rocks, and I went
I went through the list because I thought, you know what,
maybe there's something this year we go. The only thing

(07:53):
that I saw that even partially interested me was steam
and I'm I'm not a great Steam fan, but I
know who Stem is and music is good, but I'm
not a fan. I'm not a fanatic about Steam.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
But what what.

Speaker 6 (08:13):
Prompted my curiosity was the list of acts that are
going to perform at Red Rocks that they have listed
so far. And I would say that, and I don't
know what the number was. Let's say it was a
dozen a dozen acts they've listed. I knew one Steam,
the others I had no clue who they were. Oh,
I take that back, lord here, Lord Huron was.

Speaker 2 (08:35):
On the list.

Speaker 6 (08:36):
So that's quite frankly, Lord Huron has some music that
I really like. And that's what got me going down
the rabbit hole of oh, you know what, let's just
take some time off and put some put the headphones
on and let's just lay here on the couch for
a while and just listen to music. Reset your brain.

(09:00):
It changes your perspective. So if you tuned in, and
I know people tune in to hear my astute political analysis,
I know they tune in to hear that. But guess what,
I'm tired of it. I'm tired.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
What do you want me to?

Speaker 6 (09:18):
What do you want me to say, what do you
want to know? So here's what we're going to do.
And I'm I'm not joking about this.

Speaker 5 (09:25):
Not joking, man, it's not a joke.

Speaker 6 (09:27):
Yeah, not a joke man. Nine zero one six. I
just refreshed the text messages. Nine zero one six. Michael,
I was diagnosed with cancer yesterday. Politics moves way back
to the back of the bus. Now. The thing I
need to consider now is if the election interferes with

(09:47):
my Medicare and supplemental benefits. I want to lift past
sixty eight. There's a slap in the face.

Speaker 2 (09:57):
Yeah. So we got.

Speaker 6 (10:00):
Commercials on the TV right now, but I guarantee to
you when we get back to programming. Well, here comes
Fox News. They're coming back. Fox News Democracy twenty twenty four. Oh,
they're in Doyles in Pennsylvania. They're gonna talk about Pennsylvania. Now,
let's see. CNN is still trying to sell you an
AARP Medicare advantage program through United Healthcare, which I don't

(10:23):
know why you would do that, but anyway, AARP avoid
that someone in this audience just got diagnosed with cancer yesterday.
What do you think they're thinking about today? They might
enjoy the conversation about stupid candy bars or sneakers or

(10:44):
T shirts, sweatshirts, hoodies. Yeah, there's real life going on.
And again I want to emphasize that does not diminish
or minimize the importance of what's happening tomorrow. What's happening
to tomorrow is incredibly important to the future of this republic.

(11:06):
But that's all I've talked about for anf a year now,
if not longer. What more do you want? What more
do you want? Take a breath, Take a deep breath.
The other thing about tomorrow is, you know, a lot

(11:28):
of attorney baked him because a lot of those people
we talked about this at the very beginning of the
hour talking when talking about my granddaughter. If she had
been a voting age, if she had been in voting
age and was voting in the North Carolina elections, and
she had a choice between what's his name that's running

(11:49):
for governor, the black guy versus whoever's opponent is. I
don't know the because I don't keep up North Carolina politics.
She would she I hope she realize that she probably
shouldn't have cast her ballot earlier and would have should
have thought about who she was voting for. Now again,
she's not voting in North Carolina. But the story was

(12:12):
she had something completely wrong about something she had heard
at school about a candidate that she thought was already
the governor of North Carolina, which shows you just how
badly the teacher was describing that story to her forty

(12:33):
four sixty seven, Michael, for me, I'm having hip Arthur's
scopic surgery on November nineteen, so I'm a bit absorbed
with doing all the things Christmas tree and outdoor light,
cleaned the house because I'm gonna be on crutches for
six weeks. See, life, life comes at me no matter

(13:00):
what we think about this election. And quite frankly, I've
even though I do believe that Trump is going to win,
I sincerely and genuinely believe that. I think he has
a momentum, and I think right now the cabal is
trying to convince you otherwise, and just watching how Trump

(13:22):
has acted and watching what they're doing, I think they
have a lot of internal polling that shows that things
are a lot better for them than the cabal wants
you to believe. But I've also prepared myself because you
would not believe the number of times that I have

(13:43):
sat trying to convince myself that Mitt Romney or John
McCay might actually win and we wouldn't have Barack Obama.
And if Kamala Harris wins, it's one more notch in
the destruction of this republic. But we will live to

(14:03):
fight another day. Seventy four hundred, My kind person, glad
that you're not talking about the election.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
I'm tired of it all.

Speaker 6 (14:14):
And who have just closed the app if you had
been talking about it, which is a great from I
want you to think about it from my perspective. Rush
used to say and I and I took him at

(14:34):
his word, and I took those words to heart. Rush
talked about what interested him, and I can remember him
talking about golf. I have not golfed since I was
in high school. To this day, people in this building

(14:55):
manage will come to me, eight, you want to go
golfing with this this weekend. No, I don't. Well, I mean,
they're shocked, and I tell them no, And occasionally they'll
ask me, well why not? Because I got better things
to do. Take the dogs, go for a walk, go hike.
I got a lot of things I'd rather do than
spend my weekend with my boss.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (15:20):
I don't dislike my boss, but keep that separate. And
there are a lot of other things.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
Look.

Speaker 6 (15:28):
Look, as much as this state sucks, there's still some
really wonderful things about this state. But let me get
back to Rachelle's text about She's glad. I'm not talking
about it because if I had, she would have closed
the app and gone on to something else. It goes
back to when Rush would talk about golf. I had

(15:50):
no interest in it. I still listened. Do you know
why I still listened Because somewhere in that story about
his golf out there would be some little nugget And
I'm not certainly not, in fact, I don't think I'm
very good at this at all, But there would be
some little nugget that Rush would throw in about his

(16:12):
golf outing. Where he would be. He may not tell
us who it was, but he might be with three
muggety MUCKs and so they're forcing would be out golfing,
and he would relate some story about the golf outing
that would be about something entirely other than politics. That
might be a really good insight into how those four

(16:35):
individuals who are out golfing having a good time, looked
upon life, and I'd learned from it. Whether you've tuned
in or tuned out, I mean when I say I
don't care, I don't care because I'm going to do
what I want to do.

Speaker 1 (16:52):
I had a very late night last night, so I
just got up and I hear about T shirts and
tennis shoes and squirrels and raccoon. Those are my four
favorite topics. Could you repeat all that?

Speaker 5 (17:04):
Well, thank you very much.

Speaker 7 (17:06):
Now I gotta pullish rig over and go ahead and
get me a rooven. Good job, jack wagging, good job,
keep it up what I have Lue.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
By the way, somebody says that Zades which was my
all time favorite Jewish deli, which used to be which
was over at First and oh I remember First and
Dayton they're somewhere over over on like near Cherry Creek,
north Over, next to a dependable cleaners and across the

(17:42):
street from a bank that area. They now say there's
a Zades at Leitsdale and Holly might have to check
that out today. Might just have to check that out.
Forty five eighteen Mike, does anybody make cookies from scratch?
At home anymore? Yep, I send six to seven dozen

(18:04):
to work with my hubby every.

Speaker 5 (18:06):
Week every week?

Speaker 2 (18:10):
What are we mince like?

Speaker 5 (18:11):
Wow?

Speaker 2 (18:13):
What about what about us?

Speaker 8 (18:14):
I have a question? Is it the same type of
cookie every time? So there's always chocolate chip? You throw
in some oatmeal raising, you do some sugar cookies, some snickerdoodles.
I need I need some details over here, man, I
haven't had any junk food.

Speaker 5 (18:26):
And over three weeks, six.

Speaker 2 (18:29):
To seven dozen at one time, you make six to
seven dozen cookies.

Speaker 5 (18:36):
I haink a normal bats.

Speaker 6 (18:37):
Seventy two to uh eighty four cookies every week and
send them to work with your husband.

Speaker 8 (18:47):
Even when I do a homemade scratch you know, chocolatecho cookies,
I think that's maybe two dozen. So you're doing double
or triple batches of cookies every week.

Speaker 6 (18:56):
And I want to be politically correct here too. Is
this your hub? Is your husband a man or a woman?
I mean you know, yeah, yeah, this is this? You know,
one of those couples or one of those couples, because
either way, huh, I might want to join one of
those couples, because sixty seven dozen cookies every week, you

(19:19):
and I could be back we could be fat asses again.

Speaker 8 (19:21):
Yeah, sounds like fun being back at three hundred and
fifty pounds.

Speaker 2 (19:24):
I would like oatmeal, but no raisins.

Speaker 8 (19:28):
Oatme raisin cookies. Where I have trust issues? Huh oatmeal
raisin cookies? Or why I have trust issues because you
look at a bowl of cookies from Afar and you go, oh,
those are chocolate chips. So you run over there very
quickly and you do the whole cookie munster thing. You
start just shoveling in your face hole and then you
notice that they're oatmeal raisin.

Speaker 5 (19:44):
You're like, that's this crap.

Speaker 6 (19:46):
Right there there. You have rotten grapes in your oatmeal cookie.
Rotten grapes. That's what a raisin is. They're greape that
fell on the ground and shriveled up by the sun,
and some squirrel didn't run by and eat it, and
so now you've got oatmeal raisin. Somebody mentioned earlier too
that the guy up in New York that where Peanut

(20:10):
and Fred were were murdered by government agents. He did
not have the proper license to run the sanctuary. Now
I'm not saying that's an excuse to kill, but again,
a little more facts come out claim to run that

(20:30):
you're Oh Patty has a recipe for homemade cherry mash Dragon,
My favorite special treat is a TwixT bar in a
mini can of coke.

Speaker 5 (20:40):
There's a lot of sugar right there.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
Sure, uh, twix is the best.

Speaker 6 (20:49):
I can't handle the sugar of cherry mashups, but a
twin being from Sioux City, Iowa, is the best.

Speaker 2 (20:57):
And see here this is.

Speaker 6 (20:59):
Why I ask you about if you could still eat
subway Michael and Dragon. I used to manage the subway
when I was in college around twenty twelve, and to
this day, I can't eat it. Even the bread spell
still makes me nauseous.

Speaker 2 (21:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 8 (21:11):
I never really smelled the bread because it had been
incorporated in my life since it was, you know, five
six years old, so I really didn't smell it. The
thing that got me is when we still had those
five gallon pickle buckets. You would crack one of those
bad boys open and drain the juice so that you
could set up for the the prep and whatnot. Just
that pickle smell on the restaurant filled it for days.

(21:33):
That was that's what got me, even though I like pickles,
but it was just yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:36):
I like pickles too.

Speaker 7 (21:37):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (21:37):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (21:39):
Uh Guba number thirty five eighty nine Mike, Yes on
the cherry Mash. I grew up in the town where
they were made, Chase Candy in Saint Joe, Missouri. Hard
to find cherry mash these days?

Speaker 3 (21:53):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (21:53):
What else were we good here? Um? Uh? Zero two
three eight Michael?

Speaker 6 (22:01):
Didn't you announce Friday that today was kind of going
to be a goof off day. I seem to recall
that we've kind of we've we've kind of hinted around
that we're sick of it. But uh, and this is
what I love about this audience. Where where did that go?

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Then?

Speaker 2 (22:18):
We have word finding this let's see.

Speaker 5 (22:22):
As a little search.

Speaker 2 (22:23):
Yeah, iapin here he goes yes, renumber two zero one eight. Michael.

Speaker 6 (22:30):
Can you talk about the twenty twenty eight election? What's
the trend? That's a great topic because you.

Speaker 5 (22:39):
Know jd Vance twenty twenty eight.

Speaker 6 (22:41):
Jd Vance twenty twenty eight, you know the jd Vance.
So Tam and I are watching this series on Netflix,
The Diplomat. Kerry Russell used to play in the Americans.
She's she's a great actress. She does she and the
guy that was the Nazi command in the man in

(23:01):
the High Castle. Anyway, they're married, they're both career foreign
service officers. She's been appointed as the ambassador to Great
Britain because the president wants her to become the vice president.
And there's a lot of pillow talk, and there's a
lot of talk about, you know, just among diplomats.

Speaker 2 (23:23):
And there was actually two.

Speaker 6 (23:28):
Things happened that proved my point about how and.

Speaker 2 (23:33):
I think this is human nature.

Speaker 6 (23:37):
When when they're talking about whether or not she wants
because she was kind of just asked as a career
foreign service officer to go stand in until they could
find someone to be the real the political ambassador to
the UK. They appointed her as a career foreign service officer,

(23:59):
which is not unusual. But in the course of one
of their conversations and I forget whether this was was
with the British Prime Minister or whom, but anyway, a
group of people are having a conversation and this line
was in the script. Look all around you, don't you

(24:20):
see that democracy is losing its popularity?

Speaker 8 (24:27):
Now.

Speaker 6 (24:27):
When I first heard that line, I thought, yes, this
is what I've been saying. That mankind has lived forever
in tyranny, and that the United States of America, which
I believe was divinely inspired, was this beacon of hope
that Reagan talks about the shining City on the hill

(24:48):
of proving to the world that we could self govern
and that we could live in individual liberty and individual freedom.
And I thought, yes, HBO or no, Netflix or whatever
the stupid show is on, they use my line. They
they they're pointing out that this is the history of
mankind of living in living in the darkness, and the

(25:09):
democracy is losing its popularity, that is, it's beginning to wane,
it's beginning to subside. And then I thought, but wait
a minute, what if this is actually Netflix trying to
send a subtle message that democracy is dying because Trump

(25:34):
could become president. You see how this brain works. I'm
all excited, and then I'm a despondent. I'm all excited
because I'm like, yes, yes, you see, I keep telling
you the tyranny is on the march all around the world,
and oh, wait a minute, it's Netflix. Netflix is trying

(25:56):
to tell its dumbass viewers me and Tam are included.

Speaker 2 (26:01):
I guess that.

Speaker 6 (26:02):
Look, you gotta be careful because democracy is dying, and
it's because of Donald trumpet is dying. You can't get
you cannot escape this stuff. You just cannot escape it.
So the other thing that occurred yesterday, which is one

(26:25):
of my things, is we went to see the movie Conclave,
and it was about all, you know, so the Pope dies. Now,
I remember, I'm not Catholic, so whatever I say about
the pope take with a grain of salt. But I
just don't get this whole pope thing. I understand, he's

(26:46):
the Vicar of Christ. I understand he's Christ's representative on earth.
But who chose him? Well, apparently these hundred plus cardinals
choose him. Well, who chose them? Well, the pope did.
It's this lord' that's just relationship. So that the Pope dies,
and now they're going to have the conclave and they're
all going to pick a new pope, and now it's

(27:08):
all about all of the machinations, all of the election
politics that go on within the Vatican as they're selecting
a new pope and how everybody you know, because you know,
everybody in that room wants to be pope.

Speaker 2 (27:24):
And there's a line in the.

Speaker 6 (27:25):
Movie where two cardinals the Dean of the Conclave, the
Dean of the Cardinals, and this other cardinal are having
a conversation. The other cardinal is really running and wants
to be Pope. But Ralph finds who's the dean of
the actor who's playing the Dean of the Conclave, the

(27:46):
Dean of the Cardinals. He is asked by what's the
guy's name?

Speaker 2 (27:51):
Tucci?

Speaker 6 (27:51):
I forget his first name. The other actor he turns
to Ralph finds and says, so, what do you want
to be called if you get elected Pope? You know,
want to be Pope John. We want to be Pope, Paul, Pope, whatever, Pope, pious.
They and he goes, I haven't thought about it, and

(28:12):
his retort is, yes, you have, because everybody in this.

Speaker 2 (28:18):
Building has thought about it.

Speaker 6 (28:21):
Everybody in this building has dreamed at some time of
being Pope. And Ralph Fine is trying to say, no,
I really have not thought about it, and the other actor,
Tucci whatever his name is, keeps pushing him. I know
you have looked. Look in your heart, look deep in
your heart. I know you've thought about it, and Fine
finally just gives up and says John in essence, confessing

(28:43):
that yeah, I've thought about it too. Now, I will
warn you that if you go see this movie, Conclave,
expect a stupid, in your face twist, a plot twist
at the end that is so so stupid, like a plot.

(29:08):
Why we took it earlier last time, so this time
I get to go late. I didn't think you.

Speaker 2 (29:14):
Cared anymore, Michael.

Speaker 7 (29:16):
When I was a kid that same time you were,
we used to throw our grungey sneakers into the washing machine.

Speaker 2 (29:21):
What's wrong doing it now? Well?

Speaker 6 (29:26):
Uh, they some of them are not canvas, some of
them are leather.

Speaker 2 (29:36):
He's not going to throw leather sneakers into a washing machine.
So there's that.

Speaker 5 (29:43):
And then somebody with the hose like you did when
you were a kid.

Speaker 2 (29:46):
Right, just holds it down well, and think if you.

Speaker 6 (29:49):
Had a nozzle on your hose, right, you could really
get everything off of that.

Speaker 8 (29:53):
And you're just banging on the curve of the sidewalk
get all the mud out.

Speaker 6 (29:57):
Yeah, well, how about every I just come over this
weekend and we'll just settle out out of my curb
and we'll all just clean my.

Speaker 5 (30:05):
Sneakers Michael, shoe cleaning party.

Speaker 6 (30:07):
Yeah, somebody wanted to know what the most money was
I'd spent on sneakers.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Let's kind of a personal.

Speaker 5 (30:13):
Question, all right, sure, yeah, but i'd be.

Speaker 6 (30:17):
Curious what your guess is. I'd like to know what
pee Yes, I'd like to know what people think the
most is I've ever spent on a pair of sneakers.

Speaker 8 (30:26):
I mean, the sad thing is now most good pairs
of sneakers are one hundred and twenty or more. So
it's hard to say because you get something that's eighty bucks.
Oh congratulations. Still last year on month?

Speaker 2 (30:38):
Do you want a little humor today?

Speaker 5 (30:41):
Do we have to?

Speaker 6 (30:43):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (30:43):
You know, people are some.

Speaker 6 (30:45):
People are pissed off that we're not talking about politics.
Some people are very happy we're not talking about politics.
So I'm your trying to satisfy both sides. You know,
I want to please everybody, because once I please everybody,
I'll please nobody. Right, perfect, And I know this joke,
it's not a joke. It's not a joke, man, joke,
not a joke. I'm serious. The vice president's wife, I

(31:09):
mean the vice president's husband, Doug im Hoff, was giving
a speech and he and he said this, Pam and.

Speaker 9 (31:18):
Dad, what comma always does?

Speaker 5 (31:20):
She just put her head down and she went to work.

Speaker 9 (31:24):
And Dad, what comma always does?

Speaker 5 (31:27):
She just put her head down and she went to work.
Sometimes jokes just right themselves.

Speaker 6 (31:37):
Sometimes you just you know, during the break, you're just
kind of digging around, trying to look for something to
you know, blow off some air, and well, doug him off?

Speaker 2 (31:47):
Does it for Youma?

Speaker 9 (31:50):
Dad, what comma always does? She just put her head
down and she went to work.

Speaker 6 (31:56):
Man wonder if he was reading from the tele prompt
reduct And just to show too that I am trying
to please everybody.

Speaker 5 (32:10):
Maybe you gotta speaking.

Speaker 9 (32:12):
For this yagging.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
Its sure pleas night.

Speaker 3 (32:15):
My name is Roy deve Mercer. I got a bone
to pick with you. My boy Raymond was down there
about a month ago. He had a senior in high school,
and he wanted to sign up for the knavery and
you told him he's too scrawny and needed to get
too scrunning. He come home, he charged up about two
hundred dollars worth of dumbbell and about one hundred dollars

(32:38):
worth of protein powder. And that ain't the worst though.
He's in there trying to get them dumbbells put together.
And his little pet hamster Liverachi got loosing, was fine
on the floor, and it ain't funny he dropped a
twenty pound weight on him, squirting squish it. Beth Lever rocky,

(33:02):
I ain't trying to.

Speaker 8 (33:06):
Rock.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
If only the path had been named Pena
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