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August 29, 2024 • 32 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, Time, Luck and load.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Michael Varry Show is on the air.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
When asked for a basic book to read to get
started in politics, I do not assign a book on politics.
I sign a book by Thomas Soul called Basic Economics.
And people are often surprised by that because they want
to hear about politics.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
Lee Atwater and.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Carl Carl Robe. Politics is gamesmanship. Politics is people playing
fantasy football who think that they own the players and
decide who plays and who doesn't and what they're worth.

Speaker 2 (01:11):
That's a silly game.

Speaker 1 (01:15):
The actual policy making, and while it's driven by politics,
it's the policy making we care about. And the absence
of a policy can sometimes be a policy. The fact
that our border is wide open, there are gonna be
ten different ways each side. Kamala Harris is now claiming

(01:38):
that she wants to build a wall. What you hated
the wall, that she's going to close the borders. She'll
do this and do this. That's how votes are gained
so that she can be in a position to leave
it wide open.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
Economics is.

Speaker 1 (01:58):
The allocation by government or an individual of scarce resources.
There are lots of different explanations for it, but that
really is at the end of the day. That is
the best definition I can give you. Thomas Soul in

(02:20):
his book Basic Economics, explains how this is the study
of everything culture, politics. If you say, Michael, I'm just
not a b reader, just never got into it. Not
going to now, all right, go to YouTube and put
Thomas Soul in there, and you'll see three minute bits

(02:41):
and you'll see this old black guy looking like a
professor because he is. And you will notice as he
starts talking that you start to get his groove, You
start to understand his language, you start to understand the
things he's talking about. And it's fascinating because you'll understand

(03:02):
that is the explanation for everything that's going on around us.
Tamas Soul was not a conservative as a young man,
quite the opposite. He was a student of Milton Friedman.
But he admits, even at the University of Chicago, the
most prestigious school for the study of economics in our country,

(03:27):
under the classroom tutelage of Milton Freedman, he did not
become a conservative. It wasn't until he went to work
for the Bureau of Labor, the federal government, kind of
one of those government jobs that young intellectuals would take
back then, and.

Speaker 2 (03:45):
He was assigned a project to work on.

Speaker 1 (03:50):
Wages and pricing, and the research showed that a government
mandated minimum wage where it was at the time, if
it was to be increased by federal fiot by dictate,

(04:11):
the data was very clear it was going to cost
a lot of jobs. People were going to get fired,
They're going to be laid off, and it was going
to reduce the workforce to such an extent that it
was going to create collective suffering, not increased prosperity.

Speaker 2 (04:29):
So he brought this up the chain.

Speaker 1 (04:33):
Hey guys, this is what the data shows. Now he
will tell you. He went into the project thinking everybody
should make more money. It would be good if everybody
makes more money. I want to help everybody make more money.
I want to create the report that the government uses
to say, well, just make people pay more money and

(04:53):
everything will be good. That's not how it worked. And
here is this left defiant of Milton Friedman's preachings on
this subject. Who comes to this conclusion. But that wasn't
the aha moment. That was just let's retreat and try again. Look,

(05:15):
it was when he went to the bureaucrats and the
Democrats with whom he talked, and he said, hey, let's
look for some other ways to make people's lives better,
because increasing the minimum wage is actually going to hurt
the people who were making minimum wage. And at that

(05:36):
moment they said, that's not the point. We're not here
to make their lives better. At that moment, he felt betrayed.
He felt duped, you know, like the people that took
eight Boosters because Fauci told him to. And then they

(05:58):
found out what she had really been doing, and they
found out what Big Farma had been doing, and they
found out why everybody's sold out, and they had believed it.
They had believed the lies. You see people who are
raised in a cult and they finally get out and
they find out, Oh my god, everything I thought I
knew was a lie. It's awful, it's horrible. You feel

(06:21):
bad for them, you see it. It's so painful, the
sense of betrayal. Well, Thomas Oll went on to be,
for my money, the greatest thinker alive today, the greatest
writer speaker. Isn't interesting The two greatest in the world
today both happen to be black men. Thomas ol and

(06:43):
Clarence Thomas. And yet they don't win any awards. They're
not held out as beacons of blackness.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
They are.

Speaker 1 (06:54):
I sure follow them, I sure respect them. Their message
is universe. Their message could help how many young black people.
But they will be starved of that knowledge because we
cannot expose you to the notion that you can climb
out of poverty without us the politician, without us the government.

(07:17):
And that's the moment when you realize that you are
keeping people enslaved in twenty twenty four.

Speaker 2 (07:26):
You don't need shackles and whips.

Speaker 1 (07:32):
You've done it through their schools and their churches, on
their television, on their screen. Now they've been enslaved without
even knowing it. So they don't even hope to get out. Wow,
that's sad.

Speaker 2 (07:51):
And I say all that.

Speaker 1 (07:54):
Because the study of economics, the study of some scarce resources,
will tell you that when there is a scarcity of
an item for which there is a demand, you drive
the price up. There is a terrible, terrible shortage in
this country. You see it all around you every day.

(08:18):
There is a shortage of this country and in this country,
and to their credit, the Democrats are insanely focused on it.
Republicans are not, but the Democrats are. There is an
incredible shortage of racism and a desperate, desperate need for

(08:40):
more of it, and so the Democrats have had to
take things into their own hands. I'll tell you about
that coming.

Speaker 3 (08:47):
Up, Michael Perry.

Speaker 1 (09:00):
You know, when doctor Spock was coming out with the
baby books, it was encouraged that women who read these
and learned about the basics of maternity, that they share
that with their neighbor, you know, like a tupperware party.

(09:20):
But you would share this book and say, hey, this
is one of the things we're learning. Breastfeeding is really
good for the baby, and let's encourage that. Let's talk
through things you can do for your baby that will
make your baby healthier that maybe you were not aware of.
Because it's not all known. You learn these things, we

(09:42):
have to teach our neighbors. So take the case of
what's going on in Aurora, Colorado. This Venezuelan gang has
taken over an apartment complex. I mean, it's a civil war.
You can't really believe this is happening, but it is.

(10:07):
And so people are losing their mind. Michael, what are
we gonna do? They're taking it over. What are we
gonna do? Sh you stand back and cheer, but don't
let anybody see it.

Speaker 2 (10:19):
What are you talking about?

Speaker 3 (10:20):
We can't have it?

Speaker 1 (10:21):
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah. Pause for just a moment.
You've been sending me emails for four years about how
bad things are in this country and nobody's paying attention.
Right right, You want everything that's gonna happen in the
next four years to happen in the next four weeks,

(10:42):
because once the election's over, it's too late. I don't
enjoy talking about this when there's nothing we can do
about it. I want it all to happen right now.
I didn't want them to shoot Trump the day after
the election. I wanted them to do it where people
could be so mad they could vote against that nonsense.
I don't want them to replace Joe Biden the day

(11:04):
after the election. I wanted the country to have to
see it, confront it, and live with it before they
get to vote. I don't want them to open the
border the day after the election, when it's too late.
I want it right now. I want the full on invasion.
I want the bullets to fly. I want everything that

(11:25):
we're going to have to deal with if the Democrats win,
I want all the people who are going well, I
don't know who I'll vote for. I might vote for Trump,
but I might not, you know, because sometimes you know,
how do I tell my daughter you know that the
president is talking like that. I just don't know what
I might. I just don't know if I can vote

(11:46):
for that.

Speaker 2 (11:47):
All right.

Speaker 1 (11:48):
I want those illegals to show up at that lady's house, Michael,
I do. I'm not. I'm not a shock job. I
don't say things.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
For a fact. I want those people.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
I want those Venezuelan gangs to come to that lady's neighborhood.
I want to walk down the street. I want to
walk out there and take her car. I want them
to march through her house. I want her to suffer
everything she's going to suffer because of her vote.

Speaker 2 (12:16):
Now, because people do not.

Speaker 1 (12:24):
Care about injustice until it happens to them, Charles Bukowski
said that I don't think it's important that you remember
Charles Bukowski's name.

Speaker 2 (12:36):
You either know who he is or you don't. It
is the power of those words.

Speaker 1 (12:40):
It matters. I guess the only time people think about
injustice is when it happens to them. See the people
in Aurora, Colorado right now, this gang has taken over
the apartment complex. This is like New Jack City as
a movie. It can't really be happening, but it is,

(13:02):
and I'm glad it is. I want to be clear.
I'm glad it is because people do not care about
injustice until it happens to them. And the people of Aurora, Colorado,
who probably some of them want wide open borders, they

(13:23):
just never thought wide open borders would end up on
their front doorstep. They didn't mind when it happened to Texans. Yeah, yeah,
you cowboys down there in Texas. Yeah, y'all can have
some illegal You're all hateful anyway. You're all just a
bunch of hateful rednecks. Enjoy You should be nicer to

(13:46):
these people. I like the illegal aliens. You should too.

Speaker 4 (13:50):
Well.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Here they are.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
Oh, I didn't think they were gonna get to Aurora, Colorado.
When Texas started busting the illegals into Chicago, their mayor,
who declared they were a sanctuary city, all of a
sudden said, oh, they roll up the welcome man. Remember
when they sent them to Martha's Vineyard. They paid them

(14:12):
to leave. They drove them out of it. They sent
the National Guard in. Oh no, the rich white liberals
can't have the illegals on their doorstep. Where do you
think they're going to end up? See, you don't mind
when they're on my doorstep. You don't mind when poor
working class Texas, Hispanics, white people, and black people are

(14:34):
having to defend for their lives. Their children are being raped,
their hospitals are overwhelmed, their schools are overwhelmed. We're being
smashed into them into on the roads, and they have
no insurance. They're stealing us blind, they're having gang wars.
You didn't mind that, But you don't want it on
your doorstep. Well, I want it on your doorstep. I

(14:58):
want it inside your house. I want it in your bedroom.
I want it in your kids' school. I want it
in your workplace. I want it on your roads. I
want you to have to confront the consequences of your
actions before you vote, and if you still vote for it,

(15:20):
I can live with that. I can live with that.
But I want you to have an opportunity. Not you, listener.
I hope you understand what I mean by that. I
hope they have an opportunity. I want them to confront now.

Speaker 2 (15:36):
I want it.

Speaker 1 (15:37):
I want it. I want it everywhere, all the time.
I want it in their schools. I want it in
their liberal sexual harassment meetings. I want it at their
their training conventions. I want it at their union hall.
I want it all. I want them armed.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
I want them going in there, storm into place.

Speaker 1 (15:53):
Hell, yes, get it all, get it, get you some.
I want you to have to see it for yourself.
I want to see you screen. I wanted to come
into your nightclubs. I want it in your university classrooms.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
I want it all over everywhere.

Speaker 1 (16:10):
I want everybody to see what it's going to be.
And let's see if that doesn't change your vote, because
they don't actually vote for it.

Speaker 2 (16:19):
When they're confronted with it.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Martha's Vineyard, when it showed up on their doorsteps and
no longer in South Texas or Houston, they said, wow,
get them out of here, bring the National Guard in here. Oh,
they didn't want it.

Speaker 2 (16:30):
Uh huh.

Speaker 1 (16:32):
They took down their signs that said they were a
sanctuary city. They didn't realize sanctuary city meant that it
would end up requiring them to provide sanctuary. They wanted
the rest of us to provide sanctuary.

Speaker 2 (16:46):
Well, bring it on, Aurora, all of it.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
I want it everywhere, all the time. The worst of
it right now, bizarre is on Will Dogs.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
This is the Michael Verry Show on this day in
nineteen ninety seven.

Speaker 1 (17:04):
Netflix was long as an internet DVD rental service.

Speaker 2 (17:08):
Do you remember pre Netflix what life was like?

Speaker 1 (17:13):
Yeah, you would. Well, I'll tell you what I would do.
You might not have done this. You would go to
Blockbuster and to be Friday evening and you'd be tired,
but you're gonna get a movie, sit with your girl
on the couch. So you'd go in there about seven o'clock.
You're already kind of tired, and in your mind you're

(17:35):
gonna go in there. There's gonna be the perfect movie.
You're gonna know you want it the minute you see it.
You're gonna see it. The minute you walk in. You're
gonna grab it. You're gonna march to the checkout. No
one's gonna be in between you and the dude except
some popcorn and a thing of two liter coke. Maybe

(17:57):
have a candy bar, gonna get you know, milk, because
if they've set it up so it feels like a
movie theater, but it's going to be a movie theater.
At home, you can do things you can't do at
the movie theater. So you're feeling pretty good about this.
Your girls at home, and you've imagined that she got
all dulled up for you, and you don't realize she
got her hair pull back and hadn't bathed all day
because she had a long day too. But it's all right,

(18:19):
let's play along. Got we got high hopes here, hope
springs eternal. But that's not what happens, is it. If
you're me, you go in and you start looking for
that movie and you're not even sure what section you're
going to be in. Because I like dramas. I got
to be in a mood to see a comedy. I

(18:41):
don't watch action movies at all. I think they're dumb.
But there are a couple of movies I like that
get put in the action genre or that part of town,
that that part of the store, And if I'm in
the right mood, I'll watch a comedy. But a lot
of the comedies are just silly and stupid, so I
don't like that. I like the John Candy stuff. I

(19:02):
like the Blues Brother stuff. But I'm probably gonna end
up being over in the Outlaw Josie Wells. But they
don't have an algorithm back then. They can't go, oh,
you like this kind of stuff, here's this. So I
start walking around for a while, and there's always that
person who stands too close to the shelf to look.

Speaker 2 (19:27):
So you're walking along.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
You got to keep looking to see if we're gonna
bump somebody, because people don't move back to give you
room to move ahead, but still be able to see things.

Speaker 2 (19:38):
And there you are no.

Speaker 1 (19:40):
Excuse me, all you excuse me, And you're doing that
on every aisle because that guy's and so you're at
it for a while and then you're just annoyed. You're
just annoyed by this process and you realize there's a
whole It's like when you first got TV, cable TV.

Speaker 2 (19:58):
Reality's station in find out they're all junk.

Speaker 1 (20:00):
They're on during Spanish or some Asian language or Arabic.
It's mostly just junk stuff that you watched in the
eighties because it's it's cheap. They it's like the Columbia House.
That's how they buy that stuff. You can buy these
ten thousand movies for one thousand dollars in the networks like, yeah,
we'll do it. We'll sell ads and play a bunch

(20:21):
of stuff from the eighties, Saint Elmo's Fire. I didn't
want to watch it when it was new. I certainly
don't want to watch it now. So maybe you get
a movie. A lot of times I would just leave
be too annoyed. And the reason was because if you
left for the movie, it's kind of like now, you know,
Hulu has a bon Jovi special. So my buddy Chance

(20:42):
mcclaim that you gotta watch it bonjo I love it,
bon Joe. I like bon Jovi. I don't love bun.
You gotta watch it, man, you gotta watch it. So me,
dumb me, I go. I go to check it out.
There's the bon Jovi Special and they say, yeah, well

(21:03):
you can watch it right now for a Hulu subscription
of six ninety nine a month. Six ninety nine is
the new nineteen ninety nine, six ninety nine a month.
I tell what I tell what I'm doing. Well right now,
I don't know how many years I have left. Time

(21:24):
is more important to me than money. When it's seven bucks,
how about I pay you seven bucks. We call it square.
You know you got to sign up, man. I see
a bunch of emails and needing to unsubscribe from stuff,
and you getting my credit card and stuff showing up
on my bills, and I got subscriptions and stuff. I

(21:46):
don't even know what it is anymore. I know I
hadn't seen it networks out of Peacock. I watched one
one football playoff game, and I'm getting Peacock bills.

Speaker 2 (21:58):
And don't even come at me because I know what
you're going to say. What the lawyer to do is
go on there and take it off.

Speaker 1 (22:02):
I can't figure out how to take it off. You
can't call the credit card company and say, hey, stop
letting Pecock gouge me every month. Stop doing it Like
those dolphins. I'll tell you about that story in a minute,
Like those like those dolphins raping people. You think I'm kidding.
That's the next segment in the show with that. It's
crazy anyway. And then Netflix came along. Now I know

(22:24):
we're mad at Netflix, and I know they're politics and
iways great, but let's let's also be let's also be
a little grateful. They do they do, put they put
Rogan's New Thing on there. They put Chappelle's New Thing
on there. Netflix not all bad. How much of your
life have you wasted with the significant other just trying

(22:45):
to figure out what to watch?

Speaker 2 (22:47):
The House of Cards?

Speaker 4 (22:48):
No?

Speaker 2 (22:49):
Oh, I heard damage, This is pretty good. No, I'm
not in the mood on watch Parks and w rec
I never seen stand by Me. Make up your mind?
Do you want to watch a movie or do you
want to.

Speaker 1 (22:55):
Watch a show?

Speaker 5 (22:56):
The movie? I think I hear it? In Netflix, we
know how you watch our programming after thirty minutes of
arguing with your significant other, which is why we've introduced
Netflix Settle, an option for couples that quickly choose the
title that neither person wants to watch.

Speaker 6 (23:11):
It used to take us a whole night of passive
aggressive bickering before we decided to watch two episodes of
Frasier that we've both already seen.

Speaker 2 (23:18):
This makes it so much faster.

Speaker 5 (23:19):
Netflix Settle understands your viewing habits. You want to watch
Orange is the New Black, your roommate wants to watch Chef,
You'll probably end up watching Serproco for some reason. Or
you want to watch Bob's Burgers and your husband wants
to watch Blackfish, you probably still end up watching Curproco.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
It loves Surproco.

Speaker 1 (23:37):
Well, I wanted to watch Freaks and Geeks, but she
wanted to watch Daredevil. Netflix Settle shows a documentary about mountains.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
It wasn't good, but we watched it.

Speaker 5 (23:46):
And sometimes the subtle option will turn off Netflix completely
because it knows that's what you would have eventually.

Speaker 2 (23:52):
Done before Netflix suttle.

Speaker 7 (23:53):
One of us was always disappointed with what we were watching,
but now we're both disappointed.

Speaker 2 (23:59):
This is the Michael Verie Show.

Speaker 1 (24:09):
I don't like to close the show on intense or
overly serious subjects. You may have noticed that because for
most people listening, unless you're a podcast listener or depending
on when our show airs in your market, for most listeners,
it's it's late in the day, it's it's the end

(24:30):
of your day. And some of our listeners actually set
their their watch around us, they set their their schedule
around us, and they listen to the end of the
show as one continuous program and then and then they
turn it off and go to bed, or turn it
off and go in and have dinner, or turn it
off and go out back and start working. On their

(24:52):
classic car, whatever it is they're doing, and so being
mindful of that, I try to end the show as
often as not with something a little more whimsical and
fun or weird or whatever. And I leave you today
with two stories of that nature. This one is from

(25:16):
SBS News in Australia.

Speaker 2 (25:20):
A sexually frustrated.

Speaker 1 (25:22):
Dolphin is being blamed for a series of attacks on
swimmers in Japan over the summer. It's not a joe.
I mean, it's funny, but it's true. Since July of
this year, eighteen people have been hurt in dolphin attacks

(25:43):
near the seaside time town of Mihama, with some requiring
dozens of stitches.

Speaker 7 (25:52):
What appears to be an idellic strip of coastline comes
with a cautionary tale. Beach goers in this Japanese cost
city are being warned about dolphin attacks, with reports of
two people bitten within forty eight hours and attacks increasing
in the area over the past three years. It's believed

(26:12):
just one lonesome dolphin could be causing the upset. Dolphins
can be dangerous in the wild, and there have been
reports of attacks in other countries like Brazil.

Speaker 6 (26:24):
It is not that common, but it is not unheard of.

Speaker 7 (26:28):
Most likely to attack if provoked, but dolphins can also
approach humans.

Speaker 6 (26:34):
If the dolphin is solitary, the dolphins might have some
sexual needs that are not addressed, and they might think
that humans in the water are their fellows.

Speaker 7 (26:45):
Bee ships measuring up to three meters and often weighing
more than two hundred kilograms, even playful behavior can cause
serious injuries.

Speaker 6 (26:55):
We tend to picture dolphins as very cute, et cetera,
and they can be, but if they in the waters,
they can be very very strong, and I would advise
not to play with them.

Speaker 7 (27:05):
Local authorities in Japan have installed a sound device aiming
to deter the dolphin, but swimmers urge to just leave
it alone.

Speaker 1 (27:17):
So she would advise that you not play with the dolphin.
The dolphin does not know when to stop. The dolphin
is you know, you know when you were a kid,
before you realize the birds and the bees and some

(27:37):
dog would come up on you and then a little
red thing come poppy. Yeah, she would advise you to
sounds like what they need? What needs to be done.
The Democrats need to send these dolphins to sexual harassment seminars.
That's what they need to do that'll solve this problem. Meanwhile, Ramon,

(27:58):
have you seen Fast and Furious?

Speaker 5 (28:01):
Me?

Speaker 1 (28:01):
Neither. I don't watch action movies, never have been, never
have But apparently there is an actor in these movies
who is also a singer. And I hope I'm pronouncing
this correctly, but I'm not gonna worry if I'm not
named Tyrese Gibson. His mother has passed, which makes her
his late mother. But he now says, and she's not

(28:22):
here to defend herself, that his mother would take him
to the Social Security Office and she wanted to increase
the size of the handout that she got from her
fellow citizens through the government, So when she dragged him
to the Social Security office, she would make him pretend

(28:45):
to be retarded when he was eight years old, Ramon,
in your mind when you hear this story, how would
how I mean if your mother, if Mama Martha God lover,
sweet woman that she is, had brought you to the

(29:06):
Social Security office and said.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
Ramon, act retarded. Oh she did.

Speaker 1 (29:16):
Ramone informs me that his mother just brought him to
the Social Security office and at some point asked him
to leave the room.

Speaker 4 (29:21):
So maybe she did not tell you the act. I
love it very well played, Ramon. I love good self
deprecating humor. That's the best kind. You did poop behind
the TV. She did tell the story about you pooping
behind the TV.

Speaker 2 (29:35):
After she left.

Speaker 1 (29:37):
I list born.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
He was hiding behind the tving poop.

Speaker 1 (29:43):
That was Ramone's mother, Mama Martha, telling a story about him.
And that is probably the thing that our listeners most
remember about Ramon, which is crazy, but that's how it works.
This is Tyree Gibson talking about his mother taking him
to the Social Security office telling him to act retarded.

Speaker 4 (30:01):
My mama made us go to a Social Security building
and play retard. It give if you're seven and eighty
dollars straight up government.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
She acted. That was my first acting. Your mom was
the first director.

Speaker 1 (30:19):
See here your first movie dig your mom first otrect.
That's kind of true if you think about it.

Speaker 2 (30:25):
She was telling him to act.

Speaker 1 (30:27):
It's also interesting that government paychecks, which is taking money
from some citizens to give the others, how often they
are unwarranted. What starts out as a great idea ends
up being abused because some people decide that they want
things that are not rightfully theirs. They don't qualify. I

(30:52):
think most of us would agree. Hey, if we got
a special needs person in the community and we can
pass a hat and we all pitch in a few bucks,
will be glad to do it.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
That's what it'll take to get what we need.

Speaker 1 (31:02):
But we don't do we we are cursed to give
our money because if we don't, we go to jail.
I ask Wesley Snipes go to prison. So it's not charitable.
A lot of us would give charitably. I do you
do of our time and our money. But what we
resent is being made to give money because the people

(31:26):
were giving the money for are not the end recipients.
They're the voter who is keeping the politician who is
forcing us to pay more in office.

Speaker 2 (31:37):
So the politician gets all the.

Speaker 1 (31:39):
Power and through which they acquire wealth, and the welfare recipient,
in exchange for their vote, gets a pittance where they
get some of what we get and we lose. A
pretty crappy deal, isn't it. Well, don't focus on that,
I said, end on a positive note. Send me an email.

(32:01):
If you love the show or if you don't, where
you are how you found us, buy your gear, sign
up for our blast, and listen to our podcasts. We
do bonus podcasts every single day. In addition to this show,
we do a three hour show in the morning, and
then we do a bonus podcast. If you like this
show and want more of it, we're only getting a
small percentage of it. Check us out on the podcast.

(32:22):
You'll love it, or maybe you won't.
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