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November 19, 2025 31 mins

Tune in here to this ​Wednesday edition of Breaking With Brett Jensen!

Breaking Brett Jensen kicks off the show by giving an update about the various protests that are occurring around the city of Charlotte during the ongoing Border Patrol operation. Jensen references a specific demonstration that he attended this morning, that took place at The Home Depot location on Wendover Road. He notes that the attendance for this particular protest consisted of roughly 115 people.

He also highlights that the people in attendance were holding signs saying "Honk for Migrants" and "Honk If You Hate ICE", among others. However, Jensen emphasizes that two things stood out to him about the demographic of the people who demonstrated - there weren't many people of color in attendance and most of them were older middle-class individuals.

Later, Jensen recaps Mecklenburg County ABC's "Barrel-Palooza" event that took place on Saturday. He notes that Meck ABC broke the all-time sales record for one store with over $350,000. Jensen then shares an interview that he did with Vice President of Logistics & Mixed Beverages Brian Peter shortly before the store opened on Saturday morning. In the interview, Peter talks about the lottery system he implemented, and is now getting a lot of praise for, as well as the gentleman who traveled from Apex, North Carolina to be first in line for what he described as a "once in a lifetime" opportunity.

Listen here for all of this and more on Breaking With Brett Jensen.

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Hi, Oh, let's go. Oh, let's go oh, Let's go.
News Talk eleven ten and ninety nine three WBT Brett
Jenson here with you on this Wednesday night edition of
Breaking with Brett Jensen. As we go up until seven

(00:42):
o'clock tonight, seven oh four five, seven eleven ten. That
is the telephone number in guys, make sure you follow
me on x at Brett Underscore Jensen for all the
lettuce and breaking news in and around the Charlotte area. Okay,
so obviously there's gonna be a lot of the things
that we're gonna get in today, but not everything is
going to be about illegal aliens or migration or protests

(01:05):
or CMS, not everything, but I do need to give
you updates on what's going on. At the end, we're
going to talk about something that actually happened on Saturday
that was really cool, and i'll play some of this
tonight and probably some of it tomorrow or Friday as well.
They had the big bourbon event that we talked about
last week, and one was the charity event that took

(01:28):
place Friday night that I attended with the Charlotte Bourbon Society,
and then the thing Saturday morning with the mech Abc
Bear of Palooza, and so I've got interviews, and I
think you're gonna really, even if you don't like bourbon,
even if you don't drink, you're going to find these
very very interesting. Because one of the people that I

(01:50):
interviewed Friday night lives here in North Carolina, lives done
in the Pinehurst area, lost a leg as a prosthetic,
was in black hawk Down, the movie Black hawk Down.
He was one of the ones that was injured in
black hawk Down. So and I interviewed him and it
was really cool. So we'll get into all that later

(02:11):
tonight and tomorrow and Friday. Right, so it's not gonna
be all immigration immigration, immigration, and also Friday, don't forget
be Panther Friday. They won five of their last seven.
Come on, now, last time the Panthers were in the
super Bowl. Super Bowl was in San Jose, California, right

(02:31):
outside of San Francisco. That's where it's at this year.
I'm just saying no, I'm not I'm not saying anything.
I promise. All right, all right, let's start off with
Let's start off with some stuff here. All right, Let's
start off with protests, so we know last night out

(02:51):
on in East Charlotte, off I think, off Central av
and all that way down in East Charlotte, in a
heavy Hispanic community, in an area I think where it
was like a Hispanic bakery, if I'm not mistaken. Impromptu
protests started happening, and a lot showed up. And if

(03:16):
anyone in this room knows of something different, don't hesitate
to step in. But as far as I know, no
violence occurred, no destruction occurred. The only thing that I thought,
I think that I heard was occurring where people doing
burnouts with their cars with tires, like just making noise
and creating smoke. But other than that, now they were

(03:37):
out there waving their home country's flag and everything else.
See that's the problem. That's the problem. Right there, when
they did that in Los Angeles several months ago, you
would have people out there waving their Mexican flag and
their Honduran flag and Guatemalan flag and El Savador flag
and everything else. Right. See, that's the problem. You're not

(04:00):
in Guatemala or else. You're in America. You chose to
come here illegally, But yet you want to say, hey,
look we're Mexico, We're no We're not Mexico. So there
was so much blowback that even the Democrats are going, hey,
quit waving your national flag. You're in America. You're not
helping your cause. If you like Guatemala so much, then

(04:23):
why are you here illegally? Right? So that's when people
started waving the American flag at all these protests, the
Hispanics and everyone else. Right. So last night, though, I
did see a lot of foreign flags being you know,

(04:43):
I think I thought I think I saw a I
taught a tall puttycat. I think I saw a Dominican flag,
and a couple of flags being waved. So then that
takes us to this afternoon. This morning, at about nine o'clock,
eight thirty nine o'clock, words out that there's going to
be a protest at the Home Depot on Wendover. Okay,

(05:08):
all right, so I'll go out there. And I waited
until I got there at eleven because I wanted to
I didn't want to get there at exactly ten thirty
when I was supposed to start, because they may still
be trying to organize. I wanted to be up and
running when I got there. I didn't want it to
have to wait. So I got there at eleven started

(05:29):
at ten thirty. When they got there, they started walking
through the home depot, marching up and down the aiss
and home Depot's like, yeah, you need to leave, like
we're trying to run a business here, you need to leave.
So they left, didn't get into the parking lot, actually
stayed on the sidewalk. A couple of CMPDEE officers were
there making sure no one was getting hit by cars

(05:49):
or whatever because Wendover is a very busy highway, four lanes,
and I get there and a few things stand out.
There are signs that say honk for migrants, honk if

(06:10):
you hate ice, things like that, and so I just
recorded this sound real quick. So it sounds like a
lot of cars. It's just a normal just a normal highway,
like when I say it's just a normal street, like

(06:31):
it's not like there were thousands of cars like it
sort of sounds like there is, like everyone's honking, and
it's like whatever, Like, no, it was just a normal
Wednesday afternoon at ten thirty eleven o'clock in the morning traffic,
that's all. It was right on four lanes on Windover,
so it was but something stood out to me. I

(06:54):
did a head count and there were roughly about one
hundred and fifteen people there, okay, on four corners right
there by Latrobe, right there where like the kfc is
and the McDonald's and all that is right, that's where
all this was taking place. On one number and I

(07:14):
pull up and two things immediately smack me in the face.
And I'm talking to Mark Garrison live on the phone
as I'm pulling up, and I'm describing what I see,
and I went, well, Mark, I don't see any people
of color here. It's all white people protesting against ICE.

(07:35):
I saw one black gentleman had grayish hair, and maybe
you know ten, maybe max fifteen Hispanics. The rest were
white people. But of the white people, I made the

(07:59):
comment to another reporter, I said, we might be the
youngest people here, and I wasn't even like trying to Yes,
there were a couple of people younger than me, but
most of the people there were every bit of my age,
if not older. I put some photos on Twitter. Apparently

(08:21):
it's getting a lot of hits. Oh what twenty thirty thousand,
nineteen thousand, whatever it is, nineteen thousand, Thanks Trivers nineteen
thousand and I put up a couple photos and you
see who they are, Like, that's who was protesting. Those
are the same people that were protesting during No King's Day.

(08:42):
You had some people that were out there still holding
No King signs. But okay, great, at least you're getting
multi use out of your son. But my point is
these weren't Hispanics, These weren't people of color. These were
mostly middle to upper middle class to wealthy white people

(09:03):
that were old. Jennifer Roberts, the former mayor, extreme hard
left that refused the National Guard, that didn't want the
national Guard to come here during the riots, she had
a sign in her car that was like, you know,
I want to make sure I get it right. I
don't want to make sure I don't want to be

(09:23):
accused of saying anything inappropriate or or wrong. The sign
in her car said we stand with immigrants. She didn't
say you know, she didn't say illegal immigrants. She just
said immigrants. But she was the epitome, the microcosm of
what everyone there was. That sign was in her car,

(09:47):
her sign, her cars a tesla, Like that's so I'm
walking behind these two old women and I'm not even
trying to be funny. I'm just gonna describe to you
exactly as it happened, because as soon as I say
these things, you'll be able to put it in your
mind's eye. These two older women, and when I say older,

(10:08):
both seventy one, maybe even close to eighty, but they're
both in their seventies, and they're both wearing like cardigan sweaters,
and they're doing the old lady shuffle as they're walking,
you know what I mean, Like when they can barely
lift up their legs and they're just sort of scooting along,
shuffling along, right, the old lady, the old person walk.

(10:29):
Both of them. One lady says to someone, if you
support Ice, you support Nazis. And I follow them because
I was parting near them. They got in their black
Lexus SUV and drove away. That's who was protesting today,

(10:51):
Tesla's black Lexus SUVs. Old people that were truly My
mom just had her eightieth birthday a week and a
half ago about same agent. I'm not even trying to
be funny, So that's what the protest was today. So
all I did was put that out on Twitter with photos.

(11:11):
Some people think it's hysterical. Some people apparently are coming
after me like whatever. This is why I post things
on Twitter. You need to know if you ever reach
out to me on Twitter or send me messages on Twitter,
there's about a ninety five percent chance I won't see
it because I usually just do drive. Yes, I post
and don't come back. I post and don't go back.

(11:32):
That's just the way it is. I don't need to
see that. There's a lot of stuff on there. Welcome
back to Breaking with Brett Jensen on this Wednesday night edition.

(11:54):
All right, So seven four five, seven eleven ten is
the telephone number as well as the WBT text line,
which of course is driven by Liberty Buick and GMC. Okay,
so CMS, I reported all this stuff on CMS on Monday. Right,
they had four schools on Monday have students walk out

(12:14):
in protests? Okay, short periods of time, but like I
don't know, maybe thirty minutes, twenty minutes, fifteen, I don't
know how long they were, but it wasn't very long,
but enough where they long enough where they had to
literally stop school. And then they had five more schools yesterday.
Do it. I don't know about today, but you had

(12:35):
nine schools over the first too days. On Monday, you
had thirty thousand students not show up for school. On
Monday to yesterday, you had about twenty six thousand not
show up. You may ask yourself, why why are all
these students staying home? What you don't know about CMS

(12:59):
is the population and makeup of CMS. It's it's gonna
surprise you. I promise you. It will be something that
you're like, wait, what, How's that possible? And I again,
it's all about numbers and data and analytics, and I
love stuff like that, whether it's in politics, sports, whatever,

(13:21):
and it's I'm gonna I'm trying to get the numbers
for you at the exact moment. So anyways, so all right,
here we go, Here we go, Charlotte Mecklenburg schools. Two thirds,

(13:45):
almost exactly two thirds of the school the schools one
hundred and forty one thousand students. Okay, one hundred and
forty one thousand students almost exactly two thirds or black
cho brown Okay, thirty four percent are black, or the

(14:07):
students thirty one percent are Hispanic. That's sixty five percent
of your student population right there. Okay, twenty four percent
white seven percent Asian the Asian they really mean Indian.
Most people don't realize that India is considered you know, Asia, right,

(14:29):
west Asia, but that's Asia. So the people from India
or Pakistan or whatever, especially down in the Valentine, they
were heavily in the Ardrikl area, right, But people may
not realize that, Like, how is that possible? Because they
don't make up sixty five percent of Mecklenberg County, So

(14:51):
how do they have sixty five percent of the student population?
And it's very simple, it's very very simple because they
have more of an ability to do so, whether it's
having two parents making more money, whatever the case may be.

(15:13):
White kids in Mecklenbourre County either go to private school
because CMS is a disaster. What they try to do is,
we want to make all schools exactly the same, even
though reading levels may be different, grade let like, everything
may be different, learning aptitudes may be different, but they
want to do everything uniform. But white kids they either

(15:37):
go to private schools, charter schools, right, homeschooled, especially homeschooled,
especially when they're young, right, Like that's a big thing.
And then here's the other dirty little secret that they do.

(15:57):
Let's say you live down in Valentine, South Charlotte, or
let's say you live up near Davidson or Cornelis and
you can't afford private schools. So what do you do.
You rent an apartment in Irodale County, just over the
line in Mooresville, six hundred dollars a month, have the

(16:20):
electricity turned on, so you got the power bill and
you can show residency. Or you live in Valentine and
you ran a six hundred dollars a month apartment, just
a shack, or just the smallest apartment that you can
find in Fort Mill or in York County, Tika, Ka.
And have your kids go to schools there because they're
better schools than CMS. That's what parents are actually doing.

(16:44):
And then they'll drive their kids across county lines or
even across the state line into South Carolina or Gaston County,
Irodale County. That's what they're doing because they don't want
their kids to go to CMS. And I don't blame them,
and I promise you if if the black and brown
parents could do the same thing, they would. They don't
want their kids at CMS either. I've spoken to a

(17:07):
lot of them about the issues at CMS over the
last several years. So that's how it happens. That's why
sixty five percent of the student population are black and brown,
and that's why you have thirty thousand that aren't showing
up for school. Welcome back to Breaking with Brett Jensen

(17:35):
going up until seven o'clock tonight. Okay, So Customs and
Border Protection the completely different than ICE. So they obviously
in town made over two hundred and fifty arrests, and
then as you know, they're up in Raleigh the Triangle.

(17:58):
They also send a couple people to Lenore and apparently
a few to Blowing Rock as well. So you're only
going that far out of your way in the middle
of nowhere if you know that there's some very specific
target that you're going that you're trying to look at.
You're not going there to get the guy that's doing
the lawn or a construction crew guy that like has

(18:21):
never broken the law and he's just here whatever. Like,
they're not driving up there for that guy. They're driving
up there for the guy that has been arrested and
had a detainer put on him and everything else. That's
and that's what they're looking for, Like you're not driving
way out of your way to Lenore and blowing rock
for some guy that is just here illegally that hasn't

(18:42):
done anything wrong. So again, they're here on a specific mission.
And here's the other thing. I saw this this morning.
You know, the big protests that they were having out
on Central IV last night, right like right, And I
was like, I swear, it's ten o'clock at night. I
don't want to have to drive all the way out there.

(19:04):
But you know what, good on them for not riding,
being destructive, violent, whatever. And it was the Hispanic community.
It was mostly Hispanics. Yeah, there were some white people there,
but it was mostly Hispanics. But with that being said,
Tom Homan, the head of ICE, was doing an interview

(19:28):
and they asked him about the protests early this morning,
right that took place last night, And he said that's fine.
He said, but you do realize the more that you
protest and the more that you disrupt things, and the
more that you do things that you shouldn't, the more
you make us want to send even more agents to Charlotte.

(19:50):
I get it. If you're smart, And I'm not saying
there's a lot of brain cells out there, But if
you're smart, let them go away and just go about
your business. Do not draw attention to yourselves. Just don't, like,

(20:11):
just don't draw attention to yourselves. Like you literally do
not have a right to be here. If you are
here illegally, you literally don't have a right but to
act like you do. It's stupid. First of all, I mean,
it's just stupid, and I would love to know your education.

(20:35):
And second of all, if you are here illegally, do
not bring attention to yourself. Let me tell you something.
If I was here illegally, I promise you I am
stopping at every stop sign. I'm not doing what they
call a rolling stop where you almost come to a
stop but you don't quite come to a stop for
you get the guys to call that a rolling stop.
I am stopping at every single I am stopping at

(20:58):
every single stop sign and every single stop light. And
I'm not even running yellow lights. I am not trying
to bring attention to myself if I'm not even supposed
to be here, Like what are you doing? And I
know it was at night, and it was a you know,

(21:23):
at night and not a lot of street lights, and
I get all that and safety in numbers. They can't
arrest all thirty thousand of you, or three thousand of you,
or three hundred of you. However we were out there
maybe three hundred. Who knows. I know, they can't arrest
you all at once. I get it. But do you
know how many times in the middle of for instance,

(21:46):
riots ESPN did a great documentary on this thirty for
thirty when Vancouver lost to Stanley Cup Hockey for those
of you who don't know NHL, when Vancouver lost, there
were actual riots in the street of polite Vancouver, right.
It was all white people burning things, destroying things, whatever.

(22:11):
And you had all the TV cameras out there. Well,
you know what the police did for like the next
year and a half going through all the TV footage
and looking at the faces and putting out wanted posters
and identifying all these people from TV, right, and so
slowly but surely, over the course of six months, a year, whatever,

(22:34):
they arrested a ton of people just off of being
on television. You don't think they can do that to
you out there on the streets, especially now that it's
even way more advanced facial recognition. Facial recognition, if you
have a driver's license. Guess what. Facial recognition. Oh, you're

(22:55):
out there on one of the local TV stations way
having a fly and yelling and saying, you know, speaking
vulgarities to ice, and all you're doing is ticking them off.
Facial recognition. That's all you gotta do. Dude. You stay
at home from school, stay home from the protests. Just
stay home. Let the old white people do it like

(23:17):
at home depot today, Like what are you doing? What
are you doing? Anyways? I just I don't understand people.
So you literally have zero rights to be here, zero
and you act like you own it. What. Look, most

(23:42):
of you may contribute to society and be upstanding citizens.
I get it, but you're still not supposed to be here.
So just lay low, lay low man. I just okay,
all right, I just I don't get people. Sometimes. No

(24:03):
one's ever accused millennials or gen zs of being the intelligent.
Welcome back to Breaking with Brett Jensen, as we go
up until seven o'clock tonight, and then TJ Ritchie and
all his glory will be on from seven to nine.

(24:25):
Good old TJ. Richie. All right, Oh, I'm sure he
won't have anything to say about the last three days. Uh,
real quick, TJ didn't have a show last night, Diddy
Lonnie yep, So he didn't have a show last night.
He only had an hour on Monday night? Correct? Do
you know how much pent up frustration TJ is going
to have to unload tonight like it will be must

(24:47):
listen radio. He's got three He's got not only that,
now you also got to include Saturday and Sunday. So
he's got four days. Well if you include today, because
it shows that he's got five days of pent up
frustration that about to explode tonight at seven o'clock. It
is going to be Musclessen Radio. Absolutely okay. So on Saturday,

(25:08):
Arkward Transition on Saturday Saturday Morning Barrel Palooza, Mech ABC
Store where they do their big bourbon reveals and hard
to get bourbons and allocated bourbons and bourbons that are
extremely hard to get. And Brian Peter, who's in studio
with me, last week when he announced where and when
on Thursday night, it was a really cool thing. And

(25:29):
you know, hundreds and hundreds of they broke the all
time record, like three hundred and fifty six thousand dollars
in sales at one store on one day, Like that's
how we people were driving in from all over because
there are so many great bourbons there that are so
hard to find. Well, Brian switched it up at the
very very beginning, and he's getting a lot of praise

(25:50):
for what he did. And what he did was, all right,
we're going to do a lottery. You know what. I know,
you've been here for four or five days camping out,
but not everyone can camp for four or five days
because people have jobs. And the people who are camping
up for four or five days, though, they do is
buy it and immediately sell it on eBay and try
to make a profit as opposed to like actually drinking it.

(26:11):
So he said, you know what we're gonna do. We're
gonna hand out a bunch of lottery tickets and we're
just going to call out the first fifty numbers, so
if you're a lottery number one, you get to go
in line first, even though you maybe only got here
forty five minutes ago. And a lot of people really
like that. So after the lottery that he did the lottery,
but just before the store opened at nine am, I

(26:31):
talked to Brian Peter real quick. So you changed things
up a little bit. Was it a spur of the
moment thing or something you'd decided to do that you
were going to raffle off the first fifty places as
opposed to people getting in line and waiting, you know,
several days. So what was up with that one today?

Speaker 2 (26:46):
So we had been talking about for a while at
the last couple of barup loses. When I was on
the air with you the other night, I did say,
we reserve the right to have a lottery if we
see fit.

Speaker 3 (26:55):
I talked to some people on the phone this week.

Speaker 2 (26:56):
I got an email er too this week and uh,
and the last barrel pl lose, I got some emails
about doing it the right way and not the right way.
I shouldn't say the right way, but changing it up
a little bit. And so we decided that this was
a good time to change it up. So we went
from first come, first serving line to the top fifty
or the first fifty tickets picked. They come in first,
and then we start the line after that at fifty one.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
How many lottery tickets did you hand out?

Speaker 2 (27:20):
We handed out over a little over five hundred, which
I'm surprised that I thought there'd be more people. We
printed out a thousand thinking there'd be more people, but
a little over five hundred we handed out.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
So is this one different than the this is my
third one? Is this one different than the first two?
Or is it pretty much everything the same? Because I
think you've been through a ton of these, But is
this one of maybe a little bit different or anything
like that.

Speaker 2 (27:41):
I think it's different because it's the only second time
we've done a lottery where we, you know, we actually
did the lottery. We had been talking about it for
a while and we finally, you know, did the lottery.
Besides that, I think it's all the same. We're up,
we're here at four o'clock. We had it set up,
we had it ready to roll. We were able to
get up on the roof this time, which was great
because everyone could hear us, so we didn't have the
announcement and then announcement didn't change every fifty feet.

Speaker 3 (28:03):
But no, I think it's run smooth right now as
far as I know.

Speaker 1 (28:06):
So I interviewed the guy that got the number one
lottery ticket, and he came down from Apex, North Carolina,
which is a hike and he said that he's truly shaking,
that he's never spent that much money on bourbon because
he knew immediately what he was going to get the
mc nurse twelve or twenty year twenty year. He said
he was actually shaking because he didn't know what he

(28:26):
was going to do this. So I said, are you
going to sell it? He goes, oh no, no, he goes,
this is going on the top of my shelf. I
promise you I'll be drinking this, he said, because I'll
never have another chance to get this. So when you
hear things like that, does it make it more worthwhile
that you people aren't buying these and trying to immediately
sell them.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
So I'm a firm believer in it's meant to be shared,
it's meant to be drank. Some people that want to
flip it, I mean what they do after they buy it.
I can't control that.

Speaker 1 (28:50):
They do what they have to do.

Speaker 2 (28:51):
But I'm a big advocate for opening up, sharing it
with people, sharing it with family, you know, Thanksgivings coming up,
shared a Thanksgiving table. I'm glad he won. You know
a lot of people want me to control this. Tougg
just Mecklmber counting people.

Speaker 3 (29:04):
But I mean.

Speaker 2 (29:07):
He probably comes here all the time. He said, this
is I talked to him outside. This was his sixth
one he's been to and he said he was ecstatic.
He said he was nervous, but he was ecstatic. I
tried to get him to spend more money, but he wouldn't.

Speaker 1 (29:19):
Did you did you get much sleep last night? Or
let me ask you this, what time did you get
here this morning? The door's open at nine am? What
time did you get here this morning? And did you
get much sleep last night? Knowing that you've got the
big event?

Speaker 2 (29:29):
I got here at four o'clock in the morning, started
setting up about four thirty. We had a little bit
trouble with the lights because they're an automatic timer. I
went to bed probably about ten thirty eleven, slept good
for about three hours, and then you know, I was
nervous and I was up and down, and then I
just finally got up.

Speaker 1 (29:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (29:47):
I mean, but I'm.

Speaker 2 (29:48):
Always like that for prefer these like I wanted to
go off without a hitch. You know, everyone tells me, Brian,
you can't be perfect up, but so yeah, but I'll
sleep good tonight.

Speaker 3 (29:55):
I know that well, but you're like.

Speaker 1 (29:57):
You like sports just like I do. This is almost
like an opening.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
Day exactly, absolutely, absolutely, just like opening day or just
like the Super Bowl.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
Right right.

Speaker 1 (30:05):
I mean you've been through a lot of these, but
you know, the first game of every year, no matter
if you've been doing it ten years, you know, you
get the butterflies and everything else like that, or you know,
anxiety or nervousness. So so are you happy the way
things have gone? Everything's set up? You know? I ask
you this every time. Are you happy the way things
are going and the way things have already started?

Speaker 3 (30:23):
I'm ecstatic.

Speaker 2 (30:24):
Actually, it's going really smooth for the lottery and for
us not doing it in a long time. Since reopened
and reopen store six and went very smooth. A lot
of people were happy. We were set up and ready
to roll by seven thirty. So that's why were able
to get out there, get tickets, get all that stuff
done and then get up on the roof and start
and start calling off.

Speaker 3 (30:41):
Tickets ticket numbers.

Speaker 1 (30:42):
Bright. I appreciate it, buddy, Thank you, brother. All right,
So that is Brian Peter of the Mecklburg ABC and
who's in charge of all the Barrel Poal loses again
thanks to them. Great run. It was completely ran perfectly.
They did everything right, smooth everyone. Everyone is in favor
of the way they did the lot of system, except
for the people that we're camping out for many, many nights.

(31:03):
And by the way, it's always the exact same people
trying to camp out every single night so they can
buy the bottles and then immediately sell them. All right,
but we're gonna have more stuff like later on in
the week that I promise you you're going to be
highly fascinated by. All Right, that's gonna do it for
us tonight and again coming up now. Two must listen
two hours of TJ Ritchie three. Four straight days, five

(31:24):
straight days of pent up frustration is getting ready to
be unleashed upon the shared Charlotte airwaves. My name is
Brett Jenson, and you've been listening to Breaking with Brett Jensen.
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