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July 21, 2025 33 mins
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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Happy Monday, Michael and Dragon.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Upon hearing my first news update of the day and
being informed of President Trump's opinions about the Washington Redskins
and the latest installment of Epstein, I have a simple request.

Speaker 3 (00:19):
Please give me a chance to miss you.

Speaker 1 (00:24):
I'm not quite sure what to take. Please give me
a chance to miss you. As you can tell, I don't.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
He's got the super sexy voice on it.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
I get the super sexy Hey, sweetheart, how are you today?

Speaker 3 (00:42):
Yeah? Yeah, what you mean?

Speaker 1 (00:47):
Don't don't talk about probably Harvard, don't talk about Epstein.

Speaker 4 (00:51):
Don't talk about the Redskins.

Speaker 3 (00:52):
Don't talk about the Redskins. I don't, I don't.

Speaker 4 (00:54):
I'm not entirely sure.

Speaker 1 (00:56):
All right, Well, but I am going to do this
because yesterday was Sunday, July twentieth. Six months, Donald Trump
has spent his first six months of a second term
appearing at least what appears to be the hardest working

(01:16):
president in American history. Now, I don't know how you
compare hard working from one president. Well, I guess you
could compare if you went, if you went to extremes,
you could compare, say Joe Biden to just about anybody.

Speaker 4 (01:34):
Definitely the most visible in the way.

Speaker 1 (01:37):
I just want you to know right now what you
can interrupt as much as you want to today, because
that just means less that I have to talk.

Speaker 4 (01:45):
I'd say definitely the most visible because he's been on
a news network. I wouldn't say every day because I
can't verify that, but almost every day since he took office.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
Yeah, he's always doing something.

Speaker 4 (02:02):
There's questions every time he's in front of a camera.

Speaker 1 (02:05):
Yeah, and even when they're traveling on Air Force one,
he walks back to the press cabin and and he'll
talk to them there. He is the energizer, bunny.

Speaker 4 (02:15):
It is a stark difference between the last presidency and
this presidency, where you wouldn't hear from the previous president
for days on end. But this guy, Orange man bad,
he can't shy away from, you know, the camera light.

Speaker 1 (02:30):
Then I I pulled up, Oh, maybe it's already left now,
but I pulled up the Drudge Report earlier this morning,
just again to kind of see what the headlines were,
and of course it mentions Epstein there was something out here.

(02:52):
Presidents ambitions can collide with Jeffrey and health concerns. The
health concerns are he has this venus venus whatever it is.

Speaker 4 (03:03):
He got fat feet, he's got.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Fat ankles because he has poor circulation in his feet,
something which the doc. You know, if you go read
the statement from the doctor, which was much more detailed
than any statement from any doctor ever looked at Biden,
he tells you here are here's my diagnosis. Here's my

(03:25):
take on the diagnosis. And it's it's it's typical for
someone of that of that age. And I'm sure there
well he already mentioned. I can say they probably treated
with the blood thinner, but he already takes baby aspirin,
so that you know that's to help. Then your hemocritic
or whatever that word is, your blood.

Speaker 4 (03:45):
They can't twenty fifth Amendment on him on this one.

Speaker 1 (03:47):
You think, not yet. Yeah, And then they are all
upset about the bruises on his hands. Well, he's shaking
hands with everybody all day long. And when you're that old,
and you are as you get older, your bruise easily.
Skin get a little thinner, right that, the skin does
get thinner. And so it just happened. But oh my god,
it's the end of civilization. So I thought it would

(04:08):
be fun just to you know, for it, maybe a
segment to think back through those six months.

Speaker 4 (04:15):
With the voices on the hand, could those be like
IV's or something. If he's doing some kind of treatment
for his his his you know, veins and his legs.
Is is that where ivs are done typically, I don't know.
I haven't had an ivy and I don't know how long, So.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
I mean I think sometimes they do him in the hands. Yeah,
last time I had an IV it was actually in
my arm up near my elbow. Sometimes it's like it's
wherever he's the elbow, it's where they yeah, where they
can find a good thing.

Speaker 4 (04:42):
So he may have just been getting a B twelve
IV who knows.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
Right, In fact, I'm scheduled to give blood I think
one day next week. And they always say which arm,
and I say, wherever you can find a good one exactly. Yeah,
I don't care. Just here, let me just roll up
my sleeves and find a good one. And in fact,
the last time they did, they actually did it down
fairly low. So who knows. So the claim that the

(05:07):
hardest working president in American history, I mean every president
again with the exception of the last one, because I'm
not really sure he did anything.

Speaker 3 (05:17):
They all work hard, and I tell you.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
That because I've I've watched one for almost six years
up close and personal, and he worked hard. So the
claim is obviously it's dramatic, kind of like my voice today.
It's dramatic, and it might even seem hyperbolic at first blush.
But if if we try to make a judgment, and

(05:44):
we tried to exclude histrionics or even just habit, but
instead just look at the actual observable results of what
he's been doing, then the proposition that he is the
hardest working resident in American history becomes not just plausible,

(06:05):
it may actually be true. But whether it is or not,
I'm not in the business today of comparison of comparing
Trump to anybody else. I just think it's, you know,
it's it's time to just do a little inventory and
see what's happened. If if productivity, strategic clarity three or

(06:34):
forty chess, political courage, and then actual results are the
measure of how much energy a president is putting out,
then Trump has to be described as a whirlwind return
to the White House after a four year vacation, and
it has been consequential whether it's the most consequential. We'll

(06:58):
leave that to historians, but it's clearly been consequential to
the point that I don't know if they ever told
you this before or not. But you know, I watched Bush,
particularly after nine to eleven, or I would watch Bush
after we would be in a disaster area or at

(07:20):
ground zero, and I could tell that he was mentally
and physically exhausted. And he's much younger than Trump, and
he's inn incredible physical condition. You know, he bikes and
works out and just trains all the time. But I

(07:42):
would see Bush get tired, and he's what, you know,
twenty years younger or something than Trump is. I don't
know what the age of difference is, but I think
we just leave it to history. But I do think
it's worthwhile taking a look back and just see what
it's like. I know, and I know this is true

(08:06):
in my life. I think it's probably true in your
life as we get older. Every you know, time just
seems to fly by the older you get. And these
six months have flown by like crazy, and everything that
he's done over the past six months, I think we

(08:29):
need to jump beyond that six months to get the
proper perspective, because you think about what Trump inherited the
federal government. Can you tell me what the federal government
was doing. Well, Ice wasn't doing anything, CVP wasn't doing anything.
TSA was doing what it had always done, which was

(08:50):
just KOBOOKI theater. Nobody was really doing anything. The whole
federal apparatus seemed to be disoriented. Policy was essentially nonexistent.
Law enforcement and not just at the federal level. I
think law enforcement at all levels, and to some degree,
there's still places where I think law enforcement agencies are

(09:14):
still demoralized. We had staggering inflation. So Tam and I
went to one of our favorite places for our anniversary.

Speaker 4 (09:25):
And oh, happy anniversary.

Speaker 3 (09:28):
Yeah, we haven't gotten your gift yet.

Speaker 4 (09:31):
I didn't know it was until a few minutes ago.
Congratulations to no Actually more you knew more than two minutes.
You knew more than two minutes ago. Twenty minutes ago, Yeah,
twenty minutes right, it takes a minute for Amazon to
deliver that quickly.

Speaker 1 (09:48):
But I think what I think what amazed me about
eating out over the weekend was for whatever reason, I
paid because we went to some really key places and
we went to this really expensive place relative to speaking.
It's not New York expensive, but it's, you know it,

(10:08):
it could be depending on what your order. Everything has
gone up in price, and things really haven't dropped in price.
The only time I've played payd now. The Jeep uses
regular gas. The Grand Cherokee. The Beamer obviously uses premium unleaded.
So I took the Jeep when I was doing the

(10:30):
traveling over the past weekend and the time before that,
because I just took the dogs with me and they
don't fit very well in a Beamer. Regular unleaded gasoline
I found for the first time at Sam's over on
Quebec off four seventy below three dollars a gallon. I

(10:52):
forget what it was, but it was a blow three
dollars a gallon, and I thought, I haven't seen that.
Even driving down to Oklahoma or the undisclosed location wherever
I might be going, I rarely ran into gas less
than three dollars a gallon. Eating up, I looked at
I don't remember what the particular entree was, but I
remember looking at the bill and the different entrees in

(11:14):
thinking I think four five years ago, maybe at the
beginning of COVID that entree was probably half what it
is today. Half it's actually doubled in the past four
or five years. Then we had all the foreign conflicts
that were just spiraling beyond our influence. We really had

(11:38):
zero influence in the world. Chijin Ping, Vladimir Putin, all
of the Molas in Iran, Maduro, in Venezuela, and then
our allies too. They all looked at Joe Biden as
completely out of touch. Georgia Malaney when they were at

(12:01):
that G seven or whatever it was in Europe and
or maybe it was a D Day celebration, but she
has to go pull Biden back around. They all knew.
They all knew, and if they deny it their line,
they knew. And then we had an open border that

(12:22):
literally mocked our notion of sovereignty. The government was bloated,
it was misaligned, it was incoherent, We were disrespected, and
into that morass became a Phoenix, a guy that had
and I don't want to get to I'm not really
trying to be cultish here, but a guy that spent

(12:47):
his first four years in office fighting something that I
talked about on the Saturday program, which we all mentioned
again today which we now find out, which we knew,
but now we have the receipts that the Russia Russia
Russia hoax was indeed a hoax, but it went beyond
just being a hoax. It went back to the point
that they actually would take the Presidential Daily Brief, looked

(13:10):
at it, and Obama and his team said, and Jay
Uh Jim Comey said no, no, no, no, we can't
do that. Go back and change it, falsify the Presidential
Daily Brief. That's bad. But my point is that means
that Trump spent the first four years fighting that we

(13:33):
forget about Bob Muller, we forget about the impeachment. I mean,
he was still able to get the tax cuts through
in his first term. He started the whole deregulatory process.
But think about how much more he could have done
but for everything the Democrats were throwing up in front
of him, law fair, trying to impeach him everything. It's

(13:56):
a wonder he got anything done and then, and while
I would not have preferred to have Biden for four years,
maybe you know, history will show that that was a
blessing and that allowed Trump to get re elected with
an increased sense of urgency and increase vigor, and he

(14:20):
was going to by down, I don't have four years.
I've got two years to get everything I can, and
then if we can, if we can turn the historical
tide of what normally happens in the midterms, then in
the second two years of a four year term, I
can keep going. I really do think that's his attitude.

(14:42):
I think he and Susie Wils and JD Vance and
Stephen Miller and the others in that inner circle of
sat down and said, we're going to do everything we
can to start as much as we can for the
first two years.

Speaker 3 (14:56):
Then we're going to.

Speaker 1 (14:57):
Focus on maintaining our margins or increase seeing our margins
in the midterms, and then we're going to take five
seconds to just have, you know, drink a jug of water,
and then we're going to start the sprint again. So
that was what he stepped into. He came with a mandate,

(15:19):
not for ceremony and not for cosmetic things, but for action,
for action that actually affects the government. Now, I will
tell you, quite honestly that some of the stuff that
he started I questioned whether it's sustainable or not, because

(15:40):
government is such a self driving force. It's like a tesla.
It's like, you know, I saw a picture of a
weimo I assume was in San Francisco that because some
fire trucks were trying to get around it. The weimo
was just stuck. It couldn't figure out what to do.

(16:00):
And so now the firefighters are getting out of the
trucks and they finally I think they just push it
out of the way to keep going because it's frozen. Well,
I think right now the government is frozen because they
they they're in shop, they got these fire trucks around them.
But they will try to at some point fight back.
Now we're seeing that obviously with Ice, We're seeing it

(16:23):
with some of the NGOs. We're seeing it with Harvard,
you mentioned Harvard. We're seeing it where they're all fighting back.
But I don't think we ought to be dissuaded by
that or discouraged by that. That's just the natural reaction
of government. That's the natural reaction of any organization that
is accustomed to getting you know, every single year we

(16:43):
get a grant for you know, five million dollars, and
it increases every year by two or three million dollars.
And now suddenly it's gone, Yes, we should expect that
kind of reaction. So they roll out the OBQ, the
larger tax cut in US history, but the legislative triumph.

(17:06):
I was I thought they might pull it over the line,
but I wasn't fully convinced of it, and I certainly
wasn't convinced they would get it done by July fourth,
which they did. That in of itself, shows that as
much as we might look at Mike Johnson as being
on the outside a little bit of a whimp, on

(17:27):
the inside, he clearly knows how to whip his caucus,
and Trump, I think has learned something that Bush never
liked dealing with Congress. I think Trump has no reservations
whatsoever about going up to Capitol Hill, or working the
phones or making, you know, doing whatever he needs to do,
having people in for lunch, bringing people into the White House,

(17:50):
because there's nothing more impressive and persuasive than getting a
call from the White House that says the President wants
to see you. And all you can say when they
when when the White House calls and the President wants
to see you, is you say when? Or sometimes I'll
call and say, uh, we need you at the White

(18:12):
House when that happened to me all the time, Hey,
President needs you. I didn't ask about what or anything.
I just got in the car and went over and
walked in, having no idea what I was walking into.
That's very powerful, that's very persuasive. And for members of
Congress five hundred and thirty five yahoos that all whether

(18:34):
they they're they're lying if they tell you otherwise. Want
FaceTime with the president. He knows how to work a room.

Speaker 3 (18:43):
Ronnie, what horse are we gonna beat this week?

Speaker 4 (18:51):
You know what?

Speaker 3 (18:52):
Don't make me laugh? You know what?

Speaker 1 (18:54):
I really like to beat dragon him. I'd like to
just take him out with the before and just beat
the snot out of him. Not because I don't like him, right, Yeah,
because I love the guy. I've never met him. I
wouldn't know if he was walking to this studio, but
just because of him being just he's too much like me.

(19:15):
I just want to take him out and just beat
the crap out of him.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
And he probably thinks the same of you.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
I know he does.

Speaker 1 (19:20):
So just give us each the two before about what
four feet long, just enough so we have to get
kind of close to each other and we'll just knock
the snot out of each other. If you'll make a
great viral video, it'll be like the couple on the
Jaybo trauma at the Coldplay concert. Can I just can
I talk about that for one second before I get back.

Speaker 4 (19:38):
To Trump, if you must.

Speaker 3 (19:41):
I'm so sick of that.

Speaker 1 (19:41):
I could scream. First. I don't care if they were
having an affair, but when you talk about you were
just there for a private moment, you were at a
freaking concert with what thirty four thousand at least other people,

(20:05):
and the cameras are going to be going here. There
is zero expectation of privacy in a stadium filled with
thirty four thousand people.

Speaker 3 (20:14):
True.

Speaker 1 (20:16):
Then the second thing, the second point I'd like to make,
and let me be cautious. HR departments are worthless, absolutely worthless.
I mean, she was the what the HR director of
that startup?

Speaker 4 (20:33):
I don't even really know the full story, but yeah,
I think.

Speaker 1 (20:36):
He's the CEO, she's the HR. And let me just
give you some fatherly advice. Don't have affairs at work.

Speaker 3 (20:48):
I can't.

Speaker 1 (20:49):
Like. I sometimes run into people that they are they're
a married couple, but they work together. They have their
own business. I are that because I think camerl I
would kill each other if we worked together.

Speaker 4 (21:05):
We had a couple here that no longer work here.
They worked very well together.

Speaker 1 (21:17):
Oh yeah, well, but you're right, they worked well together, but.

Speaker 4 (21:21):
They've worked in different departments for the departments. They did
work together quite frequently too.

Speaker 1 (21:26):
Because because she was because she was promotions, so they
would end up doing stuff together. You're right, right, Yeah,
that's probably the exception. I'm just saying that you've got
two bullheaded people.

Speaker 4 (21:37):
They were both single when they met each other working here. Yes,
so there was no conflict of company, you know, or
you know, one boss over the other or something.

Speaker 3 (21:48):
Do we do?

Speaker 1 (21:49):
You know what the rules are about dating anybody here
in the building.

Speaker 3 (21:54):
I have no clue. I mean, honestly, I have no clue.

Speaker 4 (21:57):
If I had to guess, I would say, you probably
have to notify HR at some point.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
So if you if you and I start dating, your God,
we've got to we gotta let Tepper know you're not
gonna start dating. Is that is that the rule?

Speaker 4 (22:09):
Something like that? Only if if one of the people
is in a position of power.

Speaker 3 (22:13):
Well, clearly that's me.

Speaker 1 (22:15):
I am the talent and so clearly I'm the one
that exercises the power over this program.

Speaker 4 (22:20):
And then I think at that point they might have
to move, you know, one of the people into a
different department. If they were in the same department, then
they may need to be moved.

Speaker 1 (22:29):
So if I wanted to get rid of you, I
can just go to Tepper and say, you know.

Speaker 3 (22:34):
Dragon and I are kind of a thing now.

Speaker 4 (22:37):
With that voice. If I had to guess, that's what
I would say. That if we're if we're in the
same department, they probably need to be separated. And the
So here's what I want to know. They can't one
one cannot report to the other.

Speaker 1 (22:54):
All right, here's what I want to know. And I'll
never look up your phone number. We will. I wouldn't
even give your number out. I won't even give out
your goober number. But if you've had an affair at work,
send us a text message three three one zero three
keyword micro Michael, and tell us how it worked out.

(23:17):
Maybe you're married, and you've been married for forty years
and you got twenty kids.

Speaker 4 (23:20):
I know according to this Texter thirty six oh two, Michael,
she was the chief chief people officer, Oh so she.

Speaker 1 (23:28):
Was the the human capital manager of the HR manager.

Speaker 4 (23:32):
That's the title chief People. Yeah, yeah, that's the thing.

Speaker 3 (23:36):
That's the thing. Now, that's the thing. Okay, yeah yeah.

Speaker 4 (23:39):
What does a chief people officer do?

Speaker 1 (23:43):
What most HR people do just make up rules and
then send you things like you and I have to
have filled out by what at the end of this week.

Speaker 4 (23:53):
You didn't do it yet yet a whole weekend. All
you had was just this little bit of an anniversary
with Tamra.

Speaker 1 (23:58):
That chief I was too busy over we can takeing
phone calls from people over yes, yes, so back to
Trump as we do our retrospective after six months. So
you think about and I think this is true in

(24:20):
almost any profession. For example, if if I went back
to practicing law again, I kind of understand the pitfalls.
I understand, you know, the ups and downs of it.
I understand a lot better than I, obviously than I
did when I was a baby lawyer, kind of what
it's like to run a firm like you know, like capitalists.

(24:44):
I often think about Dan and how successful he's been
and the amount of energy and effort that it takes
to not just win your case, but you've got to manage.
You're not only a lawyer, but you're also a manager,
and you've got to manage the firm, and you've got to,
you know, worry about the overhead in addition to everything else.

(25:07):
And so Trump in lots of that ways did that
took a enforced leave of absence, if you will, and
he came back as a seasoned, veteran president, something that
we've only experienced one other time in the history of
the country. No longer learning about how the power worked,

(25:31):
but now understanding it better seized it. And I think
having a bullet whiz by your brain on national television,
I think that changes your perspective too. So within days
of taking office, they roll out the OBQBE, which turns
out to be simply amazing and regardless of what anybody

(25:57):
tells you, that bill slashes taxes for working Americans and
will increase take home pay by as much as thirteen thousand,
three hundred dollars per household, depending on what brackets you
are in, and it is taking off it hasn't yet
fulle been implemented, but will take off one point four

(26:21):
million illegal aliens from the welfare roles.

Speaker 3 (26:25):
That is humongous and I.

Speaker 1 (26:28):
Think it's worth a short just whatever you're doing right now,
just look up to the sky, you know, whether you
worship you know, the signor you worship God or whatever,
and just say thank you, thank you, And then you
could kind of encapsulate this second term as whatever Biden

(26:48):
was trying to grow, Trump amputated. One of the things
that I spent four years really bitching about was all
of the subsidies for the Green Deal, the scam, all
of that crap, and holy cow, they're just unwinding all
of it like crazy. Now some as I've told you

(27:09):
before when I did the really the as well as
I could deconstruction of the OBQBE, some of those subsidies
are going to stay in place and they're going to
be phased out. Well, I understand that legislatively, you've got
to do that, but at least we're on the right track.
Hell's bells, we weren't even on the right right highway before.

(27:31):
At least now we've got on the right interstate.

Speaker 3 (27:34):
And then.

Speaker 1 (27:36):
The economy, despite all the naysayers, really is mirroring the
discipline of the executive. Prices have fallen not as much
as I'd like for them too, I'm not sure they
ever will, as much as I want them to. Wholesale
egg prices have dropped by an average of fifty three percent.

Speaker 3 (27:53):
Gas prices.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
Yes, they've returned to inflation adjusted lows that we haven't
seen in two decades. Still high, but adjusting for inflation,
lord they've been in two decades, and inflation core inflation
has settled in at around two point one percent, meeting
and sometimes in some sectors of the economy exceeding economists predictions.

(28:18):
Monthly job growth averaged average and above expectation. And for once,
and I know we got We've mentioned this before, but
we tend to just you know, we're moving again so
quickly through so many things that we oftentimes don't take
time to let some of these factoids settle in our
brain and take hold. For monthly job growth averaged above expectations,

(28:46):
and for once, it was not illegal aliens or foreign
born workers, two separate things that were capturing those gains.
It was native born Americans that it can counted for
the entirety of the net increase in job growth. Now,

(29:06):
I can't take credit for this line, but I think
it sums it up. If Ronald Reagan was mourning in America.
Trump is the working lunch. Reagan woke us up. We
had morning, we had kind of a rough morning, and
we've gathered back again and now we're having a working lunch.

(29:32):
I think that's good for the country. Look at the border,
do you realize it was just a few months ago
that we had tens of thousands. We had Bill Mallusion,
Remember Bill Mallusion from Fox News was down at the
border and it was just they were flying drones. There
were so many people of just this flow, this literal

(29:54):
invasion of people coming across the border because we were
feeding straight cats.

Speaker 3 (30:02):
Zero.

Speaker 1 (30:04):
Now I don't believe zero, but I think practically it
was zero. Illegal aliens were released into the United States
in June. There had to be some sneaked across somewhere,
but we also had some sneaking back out trying to
get out too. More than one hundred thousand illegal criminals

(30:25):
were arrested in six months, including I know this comes
as a shock to Mike Johnston or Mike Kaufman in
Aurora and Denver, but more than one hundred thousand illegal
alien criminals were arrested in six months, including two thousand
and seven hundred members of TDA Trendo arragua, and this

(30:48):
stuff is not superficial. Now, I know that people are beginning.
You know, there was is it on that drug?

Speaker 3 (30:55):
You know? I I want.

Speaker 1 (30:58):
To make sure you understand why I refer to Drudge,
not because I use Drudge. Well, I do use Drudge
as a source, but I recognize that Drudge is left leaning.
So it's a good when I'm doing something like this.
It's nice to look up a Drudge and see because
I can usually find something that counters exactly what I'm
talking about.

Speaker 4 (31:17):
It's also nice to take a break on time.

Speaker 3 (31:19):
Oh good grief.

Speaker 1 (31:20):
Yes, but even though we have reduced illegal aliens, we've
sealed the border. Nonetheless, there are some stories out there
that Americans are like, oh, oh, maybe we're being too tough.
Shut up and sit down.

Speaker 4 (31:39):
I had an affair with a dispatcher at work. She
wasn't my dispatcher before. She was a cutie.

Speaker 1 (31:47):
Yeah, and you know what, I bet she dispatched you
after one date. She was a dispatcher, all right, she
dispatched your ass right.

Speaker 3 (31:58):
Out of there. This is I'll finish Trump in a minute. Again.

Speaker 1 (32:04):
I'm not gonna get the phone number. Michael, here's an
interesting one. Back in the nineteen seventies, my dad and
I worked at the same place. I thought the receptionist
was kind of hot, so I decided to ask her out.
Well damned if I didn't find out she was dating
the old man. But at least I was able to

(32:25):
discuss it with him, and that slowed it down. Oh
my god, can you imagine finding out that Jerry Springer
stuff right there? That's total j That's a Jerry Springers
episode right there. Bring mom and dad out and son
and the receptionist. Let Jerry. You know, remember they had
They always had the big beefy guys. You know, we

(32:46):
got the fights and everything. Oh my god, Jerry. Or
there's this as the opposite, michae I had an affair
with a woman who I worked with for years. We
were married before we started working together, and still are
fifty two years later. But you're still married to the
woman you had the affair with.

Speaker 4 (33:05):
Right, I'm a little poet.

Speaker 1 (33:06):
You're still married to the you're both still married to
the same people you were married to. Just be careful
at work, and then I can I say that when
I look around here, I just don't know that I
have any interest
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