Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time luck and load. So Michael
Arry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:49):
Lord, I've been done to have too many babies, Honey,
who is my baby daddy?
Speaker 3 (00:55):
Girl?
Speaker 2 (00:56):
I'd be a millionaire if I could ever figure out
where I got jeep to Limbo, Cracker Jack, Aranja Lowe,
k Martina, Simonella Belveda, Genitala, Katsize, leroy At Coco Puffs
and Pluto Penelope Jack Daniels beautiful and lam Angelo who
is my baby daddy? Don't even two of these childrens
(01:17):
even look alike? Hallo Verra Mayple, Lene Ginger Vitis, bre
Cream Kruex ni Quill Gangster q and daffidial Ron Baccarty,
Captain Morgan d Moctorius and Delori and Gna Lo Trium
and Felicia Plamdia Champagne. Who named these children?
Speaker 4 (01:34):
And how many of them?
Speaker 5 (01:35):
Is?
Speaker 2 (01:36):
Why they always want to come live with me? Anyway?
Speaker 4 (01:40):
Ask him who their daddy is?
Speaker 2 (01:43):
Look over he under their gold Nova Scotia, Bubbalysius, Cupania, Gnaria,
Ice Bucket Buttugliar Bzene and Margharita Percolator, Terminator bell Crow
and Taekwondo Vera Cello chromosome, Steetri and shathid. That's an
ignorant one right there. Who is these baby dads? I
(02:04):
wish I knew that shell sumph some child support hat.
Speaker 1 (02:11):
Shoes to the twins, we go, did you have a
double mint? Twin ad for us? You spent the time
getting it go ahead.
Speaker 6 (02:20):
A double pressure is waiting for you, A double pressure,
A double taking you radio life double the one bo
double pressure.
Speaker 1 (02:41):
To choose a double pressure? Who is showing.
Speaker 6 (02:44):
You a double pressure?
Speaker 7 (02:47):
Who show?
Speaker 1 (02:50):
Let's go to Billy who says if it says Billy,
her grandma's in the is that Billy's a woman? Okay?
We just so we're clear going forward. This is my
wife hates when I set up systems. If it's a
name like Billy, Terry, Sammy, that can be a man
(03:10):
or a woman. Look at me if you'll do I e.
If it's a woman, and why if it's a man,
and we'll huh, well no, but I can't get the
calls in you. I can't do that if the names
you're putting up there, which sometimes are not even that close.
Sometimes their name is Bob and you've got it up
there as William, uh Billy your grandmother's in the Guinness
(03:34):
Book of World Records.
Speaker 8 (03:37):
Yeah, I heard her sisters. My grandmother was the oddball.
She didn't look like the other two. Ain't faith and
ain't charity? Look uh look identical. A lot of people
had trouble tell them of art, but I can always tell.
Speaker 1 (03:51):
Okay, But why are they in the Guinness Book of
World Records.
Speaker 8 (03:55):
They were. They're the oldest living triplets in the world.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Oh sorry, triplets is next week? Today's just twins?
Speaker 8 (04:07):
Well i'll call in next week.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
Yeah, but just in case you can't get back in.
How old are they still alive?
Speaker 8 (04:15):
No, the first one died in ninety four. She was
ninety five years old.
Speaker 1 (04:20):
And how old were her sisters?
Speaker 8 (04:25):
I'm not sure.
Speaker 1 (04:26):
I'm not What were their names first? What were they?
Speaker 8 (04:32):
Oh you mean when did they pass away?
Speaker 4 (04:34):
No?
Speaker 1 (04:34):
No, what what were there? I'm just kidding. What were
their names?
Speaker 8 (04:39):
Faith, hoping Charity?
Speaker 1 (04:41):
Oh yeah, we had a faith hoping charity in my family.
Speaker 8 (04:44):
They were yeah, uh yeah, they got The way they
got named is President Grover Cleveland. His wife heard about
it about six months eight months after they were born,
and she sent a letter to the family and said,
you know, if if they haven't been named, would you
con there this because you know it's the last of
which one is the first Corinthians or second Corinthians ends
(05:08):
up at you know, in the greatest of all his faith,
got faith, open charity, and of all his faith, and
she named them after that. It's like having three, like
I said, like having three grandmothers.
Speaker 1 (05:19):
How did Yeah, that's pretty cool. Wow, I didn't think
about it like that. How did Grover Cleveland? And I'm
an only child, how did Grover Cleveland find out about that?
Speaker 8 (05:31):
It was just big news back then, you know, it
was odd having three kids. They were born at home
in Elmont, Texas, and then they ended up out in
Roby up which is up above Sweetwater. They lived there
their whole life. My grandmother lived in Sweetwater except for
a few years in Big Spring during the depression where
my granddad found a job and then ain't charity and
(05:55):
lived in Sweetwater her whole life, and ain't Faith lived
in Roby her whole life, you know, And they weren't
you know, twenty miles, ten miles apart, fifteen miles apart.
Speaker 1 (06:05):
You sound like me reciting my grandmother's sister's name. When
you had ain't hope, ain't faith, ain't chirre. I had
ain't jewel, ain't ruby. You know something you said, I
never thought of I think of twins from the horizontal
level of them and their siblings. I never think about
(06:26):
the next generation and what that may be like. You
said it was like having three grandmothers. That never crossed
my mind. That's interesting.
Speaker 8 (06:34):
Yeah, they were really you know, I was the youngest one.
My aunt, my dad's sister, had had a child that
was mentally retarded and she passed away in California not
too long ago. They lived in California and she lived
in the Napa Valley and a group home. And they
(06:56):
were on CBS Morning News back in probably back in
the eighties of the nineties. Uh, people are always calling
to know, and they send them to Wardorf Historia, you know,
And they spent the night there and uh, it's funny.
My dad was kept trying to talk about these big,
huge buildings that were around, and all they could talk
about was the Cotton and Fisher County wondering if it
(07:17):
was making or not. And they got on TV and
after I guess it was after the show. They spent
the night there and the producer of the people there
at that Wardorf couldn't get them to answer the door. Well,
they God, Dad, they all slept in the same bed.
They all had individual rooms, but they stayed as one
(07:39):
in the same room that night. They were just always
that way.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
I'm processing. That's uh no. And you know what's Fun's interesting.
Speaker 8 (07:49):
What's funny, Mike is is they could You could try
to ask them a question and they could not hear lightning.
They couldn't and one of them would say something to
the other one and they would know what it was
in that answer, and they could carry on a conversation
with each other. But if you tried to talk to them,
I don't know if it was.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
Yeah, it was weird weirdness that is now.
Speaker 8 (08:12):
My granddad would call the house every now and then
and say, somebody's in the backyard interview interviewing your grandmother
and hope, can you get over here? So I'd write
her dad. You know. Tumbleweed Smith, I don't know if
you've ever heard of him, had a show called the
Sound of Texas. Uh he was there one time. And
then there was the I think the Japanese version of
(08:34):
People magazine. They came over and did an article about him.
It was Peter. It was really interesting growing up with them.
They had a huge birthday party. It would always be
after their birthday. They didn't want to jine it and
want to them and pass away before the birthday.
Speaker 9 (08:49):
People need to.
Speaker 8 (08:50):
Make informed decisions, and you're giving them the inter Michael
Varry because you're a public Paul Revere kind of ringing
the warning zone.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
Most of our tickets to October twelfth are gone, but
if you are interested in applying, there is no cost.
You will have to email. If you're interested in applying, please,
first of all, a couple of things. Emily has to
process a couple thousand emails. Don't add to the mess
(09:30):
because you just get blocked and then you wonder why
you can't ever win anything. Don't be that guy. Email
us through the website Michael Berryshow dot com or directly
Michael at Michael Berryshow dot com. You must use the
numbers in a row two nine two oh because it's
at twenty nine to twenty roadhouse. It will be October twelfth.
(09:52):
You will have to have a ticket, even though they're free.
It is a rally, not a concert. There will be music,
but if I mention it's a or anything like that.
I get worn out with suggestions, questions, and it'll be
a rally that will be talking. That's all you need
to know. Come have a good time. Put twenty nine
to twenty in the subject line and in the body.
That way it gets filtered and Emily can keep those
(10:16):
in one folder and respond to you better. Thank you
to Larry Ness of nest construction in Liberty County. No,
I'm sorry, not Liberty County, Dayton County. Very nice fella.
He's going on our palm beach trips. You know they
went on our palm beach trip. Mind you. This was
last year, Private jets staying at Marlago meeting President Trump
(10:41):
and his wife said, you know, she just a country girl.
I mean my kind of person, saw to the earth.
And she said, you know, I've never even left the state.
Here she was flying private jets, stayed at Marlago visiting
with Donald Trump, and he invited us down to his
personal discotheque, hanging out with him and Malania down there,
and said, I never even left the state. How about that.
(11:03):
It's a beautiful thing. Email us on that. Don't double
check back if you haven't heard from Emily. You will
you're just adding to the emails when you do that,
and I have her automatically blocked that person because that's
a lack of respect for our time.
Speaker 9 (11:17):
All right.
Speaker 1 (11:17):
Michael at Michael Berryshow dot com put twenty nine to
twenty the numbers two nine two zero, and it's the
evening of October twelfth, seven one three nine nine nine
one thousand. Emily, what is your twin story?
Speaker 7 (11:30):
So I'm forty two and I am a fraternal twin.
So my twin sister is Anna, so we're not identical twins.
But I was listening to people talk and they were
mentioning You said you hadn't thought about the younger children
or the next generation of people who are twins. And
it made me think about the men period to twins.
(11:54):
So my husband is a very understanding person to be
married to twin sisters. He basically married two women.
Speaker 1 (12:03):
You know, people say that there are stories about similarities.
I worked with a guy that his kind of claim
to fame is he said he slept with twins in college.
And we asked him how he could tell him apart,
and he said, well, Karen usually wore a ponytail, and
Ken was a dude. Jerry, you're only Michael Berry show
(12:27):
go ahead.
Speaker 4 (12:31):
Staying alive with the bugs.
Speaker 1 (12:33):
Yes, sir, I.
Speaker 4 (12:36):
Am seventy seven years old and have a twin brother
in Adeline kicks as I'm in love.
Speaker 1 (12:41):
You're seventy seven, seventy seven. So I don't want to
ask a silly question because I really don't know, and
I'm not afraid to ask a dumb question. Do you
feel because I mean, I've heard different things and I
don't know how much of it is that person's own thing.
Do you feel y'all are kind of, uh, two bodies,
(13:01):
one soul. Do you feel like a part of you
is in Nashville? Or is that silly? I have no idea.
Speaker 4 (13:09):
Well, neither one of us are are in Nashville. I'm
in Lubbock and he's in the Abilene. Yeah yeah, yeah,
but but yeah we are. We are. We're very close.
Speaker 1 (13:25):
Well very close. Doesn't help me understand? Help me understand, okay?
Or am I trying to put more into this because
people tell me this?
Speaker 4 (13:33):
I don't know. We we think alike. We I can,
I can because you know, we we were, We were
dressed alive probably until we were in junior high school,
and then we started once we got jobs in high school,
work in the grocery store, able to buy our own clothes.
We both went in together and bought our first car
(13:53):
and and d're ran in it for a while to
we both could afford to buy our own cars. And
then I can I can remember when when we both
bought the same model chevrol And we both bought a
Chevrolet Alumina in the same year, different colors, but the
same car in the same.
Speaker 1 (14:13):
Year, so you both had poor taste. What do you
do for a living?
Speaker 4 (14:22):
I am a pastor of a Baptist church.
Speaker 1 (14:25):
And what does your brother do?
Speaker 4 (14:27):
He is a retired high school principal.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
Okay, I can see kind of similarities. That are your
personalities quite similar?
Speaker 4 (14:38):
Yes? In fact, in fact, my my my mother. I
could be talking to my mother on the telephone and
we'd be we'd be talking for several minutes, and she'd say,
now is this Larry or is this yeary? Because our
voice is haunted so much.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
Did that bother you?
Speaker 4 (14:57):
Yeah? I didn't bother me.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
So interesting ramon because it's something it's like Martians, you know,
I don't I don't know what their experience is I
don't know, you know, maybe it's something really deep and profound,
and maybe it's nothing, and I'm just looking for it
to be because I've heard that. I never really thought
much of it, but I've had people over the years,
especially in emails, where people feel very comfortable telling me
(15:24):
things talk about this deep bond and that it's unlike
anything they've had with anyone else, their own children, their
own spouse, or do you feel it to that level?
Speaker 4 (15:34):
Yes? I did. Okay, we we both were fortunate enough
to live together in the same town. Later on in
our lives. I was pastoring at the first Baptist church
in Bounder, Texas, and he came to be our high
school principal there for several years, and so we get
to we got to serve together and live together in
the in the same community, and there was there was
a fantastic time because we got to be together and
(15:56):
share share a lot with that with our families.
Speaker 1 (15:59):
So in that way, is he like your best friend
on steroids? I mean, you look at it's not just family,
but it's the guy you want to hang out with.
Speaker 4 (16:08):
Yeah, okay, we you know, we we we live, so
we live, not not close enough together there to be
to a do like together in thank I'm i'm I'm
traveling today on my way to Appling to visit with him.
Speaker 1 (16:23):
You're not preaching at the Church of Christ there, are you?
Speaker 4 (16:27):
Uh No, I'm a I'm a I'm a I'm a
Baptist preacher.
Speaker 1 (16:31):
I know. But they need some Church of Christ in
there because they can't have anything. I know, I know,
you know that's the thing. I don't want you to
have a frosted tip song leader and the plastic plexiglass
with the drum in the back and the guitar and projected.
He wants you to sing out of the old hymnal.
But he does want you to have a little bit
(16:51):
you know, piano, and maybe you have it in an
organ as well. But that's about it. There you are, hmmm.
Speaker 4 (17:00):
Very teen James version.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Tell me about your church, South.
Speaker 4 (17:06):
Park Baptist Church in Lubbock, Texas.
Speaker 1 (17:08):
Would I be welcome if I come?
Speaker 4 (17:11):
Absolutely? Where are he beats in the jeans?
Speaker 8 (17:14):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (17:14):
I would love that very much. I would love that
very much. Well, Pastor Jerry, would you close the segment
with the word.
Speaker 4 (17:25):
Amen, little prayer?
Speaker 1 (17:27):
All right? Take us to you'll hear the moment start,
but just go ahead on through, go ahead with Lord.
Speaker 4 (17:33):
We just thank you for a great day to get
into Sonny sharing on the outside, and yeah, blessed us
in so many ways. I thank you for brother Michael,
and I pray that you will continue to share your
blessings upon him. In Jesus' name.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Amen, and never known a pastor. To cut it short,
that's impressive. You know what, he probably gets people home
the cowboys.
Speaker 4 (17:52):
Again, beat the messages to the camp's carrier.
Speaker 1 (17:57):
You know, he sounds like Paul Baker, our probably best,
just like.
Speaker 8 (18:02):
The worst president, the worst vice president in the history
of our country. Mit the Michael Berry.
Speaker 1 (18:09):
We can't afford four more years of this home. How
many special.
Speaker 6 (18:18):
People change how man lives and lived strange?
Speaker 1 (18:23):
Well, we you while we.
Speaker 6 (18:25):
Were getting hide slowly walking down the hall ad faster
than the kind of bark.
Speaker 1 (18:35):
Well, everything we said about twins loving each other, these
boys shut high. They got issues some day. Well we're
talking Eminem and his mom level stuff high and a
shine painsip and over in the sky. I don't understand
why people hate.
Speaker 6 (18:55):
Me.
Speaker 9 (18:56):
I don't.
Speaker 1 (18:57):
I mean, it's very little from the nineties. I give
a damn about But it's when I was in England
and you do. All the buskers were playing and I
actually like it something appealing. It's like Redhigh Chili peppers.
I don't know all the stories. I mean, there's a
heroin addiction in there somewhere, but it's just it's it's
pleasing to my ear. I don't I don't suggest it's deep. Hey,
(19:19):
I didn't ruse we had I mean I did, it
didn't come to my mind. We got twins that are
show sponsors. Sam Upchurch is a twin. Yeah, Texas Renters
dot com. I don't know what his twins doing. Probably
another company. Sam Upchurch of Texas Renters dot Com is
a twin. And Lamont Brothers is two twins. Mail and
(19:42):
Jerry and I knew that I emailed all the time.
They're both Marines, you know.
Speaker 6 (19:50):
Some of you.
Speaker 1 (19:50):
I may have told this story on the air before.
I don't know if I did. It seems like I did,
but I've thought about it, believe it or not. There
are details I don't tell about people. If I worry
that I'm saying things that I shouldn't say, but I
think I'm okay on this one. So years ago, several
years ago, I find out from Meil or Jerry, I
(20:14):
forget which one. Oh, I don't know about it. Mus
have been about a year and a half ago. They
had a they do promotional gear, so like a big
engineering firm here in town just spent several million dollars
renewing their gear for their employees that go out on
Hasmat sites and go out on platforms and things like that.
(20:37):
They got to have fire retardant to you know, has
Matt and anyway, they do all that and then they
put your name on it. And so they put people's
names on everything. That's what they do. But the difference
is they don't send it to China. They do it
all right here. Big deal. It's a really big deal.
So they outgrew their space because let's be honest, we've
(20:58):
sent them a lot of business from them. So they
were buying a building down in Galveston and they were
clearing everything out, and he sent me a photo and
I knew they were veterans. I knew they were Marines.
I knew they had served overseas, but I believe it
was mail in two thousand and five, he's coming back
(21:21):
from I think Iraq, I'm mnna screw this story up,
so I might get this details wrong, but I think
one of them was a disabled veteran. And what I
used to do is go out to the plains when
they would land, and I would go out and shake
hands with the guys, and I would invite them to
city Hall, and whoever came down, I would present them
(21:41):
with the plaque. Because I don't know if I told
you more, I used to be the mayor pro tema
city of Houston. I would bring them before city Hall
and in front of city Council and God and everybody,
and I would give them a plaque with their name
and the date and where they had served and things
like that, because I felt like, these guys are going
over and serving in wars and they come home and
(22:06):
you know, the town doesn't give a damn. Rockets win
the championship, we go crazy, Astros, we go crazy, Martin
Luther King, we go crazy, you know everything. And these
guys are coming home alive, and there they are, you know,
carrying their bags that they've that they've lived with, and
they're all green coming off the coming off at C
one thirty. I'm gonna tell you something that is, uh,
(22:29):
that is something to behold and to watch their families,
and especially when they have little kids and the little
kid daddy, Oh my goodness, it'll rip your heart out.
So he had kept that all these years. Well he
had been a show sponsor at this point, how has
he been with a five years? They had never told
(22:50):
me about that? So I'm going, well, why didn't you?
But they didn't That just kind of guys. They are Marie,
You're a twin Marie, Marie of Lake Marie Fame. That's
old John Prime story right there. It's probably not Marie,
(23:12):
it's probably Surerie. She's gonna sit there. She called back, Marie,
if you got a three sixty one number? Oh and
my own Oh, people tickle me. I guess we'll go
to Brook, leave Marie up in case she comes out
of the drift or whatever. Brooke, Hi, Hi, Brooke.
Speaker 10 (23:40):
I'm a twins and my twins actually here working.
Speaker 5 (23:43):
We both work from home, and she's working at my
house with me today.
Speaker 1 (23:47):
What are y'all doing?
Speaker 5 (23:50):
We I'm a broker.
Speaker 10 (23:52):
Natural gas and electricity in Houston, and she works for
a supplier electricity supplier.
Speaker 1 (23:58):
Oh, is she there with you right now? She is here,
she is well, hold on, harmon No, No, I want
to see how well y'all harmonized, because I've heard about
blood harmonies and I want I want y'all to harmonize.
And I want you to say, what's her name? Come on,
come on hello, Brittany Courtney. But y'all don't even have names.
Speaker 5 (24:17):
No, Brook and Brittany.
Speaker 1 (24:19):
Brook and Brittany. Well, why'd you say Courtney?
Speaker 6 (24:21):
Oh?
Speaker 1 (24:21):
I got it wrong? Okay, all right, hold Maria out there.
Can you say I'm Brooke and I'm Brittany, and then
y'all harmonize and you're listening to the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 5 (24:32):
I'm broke and I'm Brittany and you're listening to the
Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (24:36):
Okay, one of you came in late. Let's try that again.
Speaker 5 (24:41):
Yes, I'm broke and I'm Brittany and we're listening to
the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (24:46):
That's good, but it has to be and you're listening.
Isn't it funny? They both got it wrong? Oh this
is so interesting. Okay, try it again. From the top.
Speaker 5 (24:54):
I'm broke and I'm Brittany, and you're listening to the
Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (24:58):
Not you are listening. Just you're listening. Okay, punched that hard. Okay,
here we go, try it again.
Speaker 5 (25:03):
Okay. I'm Brooke and I'm Brittany and you're listening to
the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
That was good. All right, Take seven, this one's going
to be perfect. Here we go.
Speaker 3 (25:15):
Again.
Speaker 6 (25:17):
All right.
Speaker 5 (25:18):
I'm Brooke and I'm Britney and you're listening to the
Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 1 (25:23):
They're very coachable. Ramon, you notice that we played sport.
Speaker 6 (25:29):
You what.
Speaker 3 (25:30):
We played sport?
Speaker 1 (25:32):
Yeah? I mean good night. Y'all are just like Boom.
Y'all went from laughing to doing your lines. Hold on,
I want to talk to y'all.
Speaker 9 (25:38):
We are going to the border.
Speaker 4 (25:39):
We've been to the border.
Speaker 9 (25:40):
You haven't been the Michael Berry Show, and I haven't
been to Europe.
Speaker 1 (25:47):
All right, Brook and Brittany are our twins who are
on with us now, and we looked them up on Facebook, fellas,
because this is how fellas think. They're as cute as
you would imagine, absolutely adorable. Absolutely, they each have little
sons that are little blonde headed, little toe headed boys
that are as adorable as possible. Were y'all blonde when
(26:07):
you were young? No, Brittany, I saw your husband he
was blonde when he was young. Yeah, yep, hmm, So
how old are y'all?
Speaker 3 (26:21):
Thirty six?
Speaker 1 (26:22):
Thirty six? When people? So, if you've been listening to
the show and you hear my questions about this bond
that twins have, would you where would you? How would
you explain that to me?
Speaker 3 (26:35):
I would completely agree.
Speaker 10 (26:37):
It's a friendship beyond anyone we've ever had. You always
have someone there for you, and no matter what it is,
the bond is very very deep.
Speaker 1 (26:50):
Okay, well let me help me understand this. Do you
think that is because of nature, because you know you
come from one, or do you think that is because
when you spend that much time with somebody exactly your
age from the beginning, and you're seeing a mirror reflection
of yourself that that builds it. Do you know do
(27:11):
you have a sense of that?
Speaker 10 (27:14):
I think for us it is natural. I think it
is comes because we spend so much time together. But
I know sets of twins that don't have the same
friends don't hang out all the time. So I think
it's just something that you know, when you feel that connection,
you have a friendship for life. And if you don't
take advantage of that.
Speaker 3 (27:35):
That's crazy to me.
Speaker 1 (27:39):
I guess. So how early did you understand that?
Speaker 10 (27:43):
Well? I guess ever since we were kids, because we
just we always have the same friends, but me and
Brittany were always the closest out of all of our friends.
Speaker 1 (27:52):
When you graduated high school, what did you both do?
Speaker 5 (27:58):
We both went to A and M Texas A and M.
Speaker 1 (28:01):
So you went you chose to go there together?
Speaker 3 (28:04):
Yep?
Speaker 1 (28:04):
Do you live together?
Speaker 3 (28:07):
We did?
Speaker 1 (28:07):
I love that. I don't know what I'll be.
Speaker 4 (28:09):
I love that.
Speaker 1 (28:10):
I love everything about that.
Speaker 4 (28:11):
Brook.
Speaker 1 (28:11):
Thank you, sweetheart. I want to get these other people in.
You guys are great, Marie. Let's see if Marie answers
this time? Yes, Well, what were you doing earlier when
I went to you?
Speaker 9 (28:22):
Oh?
Speaker 3 (28:23):
I was trying to get my phone connected in my
house and I have lind spots that my phone won't work.
Speaker 1 (28:31):
Oh, I got you.
Speaker 3 (28:31):
Are you a twins, yes, sir, and I'm an identical What.
Speaker 1 (28:38):
Is your twins name? Shari?
Speaker 3 (28:41):
No, it's not. It's Marcy. And she does not live
anywhere near me.
Speaker 1 (28:46):
And are you when you say that? Y'all are insanely
close the way twins are?
Speaker 4 (28:51):
Yes?
Speaker 1 (28:52):
Why do you think that is.
Speaker 3 (28:56):
Well? And this may sound strange, but we buy when
we live alone, when we lived apart, we buy things
that are the same. And then I'll go to her
house and go, oh, I have that, or we have
I can see if she's talking about a color of
(29:17):
something that she painted.
Speaker 9 (29:19):
I can see it.
Speaker 1 (29:22):
So let me give you the closest experience I have
to that. And maybe this is off base, but this
is where I feel. So I don't buy clothes. I
just I wear the same thing every day to do
the show, same shorts, same shirt, and these house slippers
which I take off when we get here, and I
(29:43):
do the show barefoot. I like to be barefoot. I'm
always barefoot. My mom was the same way. My brother said.
If I do have to buy something, and we're at
the store and I'm in a mood that okay, I'll buy.
Speaker 4 (29:56):
I need.
Speaker 1 (29:57):
I need some item, and I buy it and I
come home. And my wife's practices when I bring it home,
it goes in the washer and then it gets hung
up before we put it on. And I'll bring it
in and she'll say, Michael, you have three of those already,
And and I don't know if I'm you know, pre
(30:18):
Joe Biden or what. But I think part of it
is we like what we like and that is and
that doesn't change. And so I'm just affirming that, Yeah,
that's that's the color and style that I like. I
guess I guess that just so that's that's really who
you are, and she is who you are, and in
some way you are like this same person. I don't know.
(30:40):
Maybe that's more talk on that than people want to hear,
but there is something really existential, deep about that to
me that I find I find most interesting.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
Sure, well, you know we share the same DNA.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
Yeah, yeah, And and I guess, you know, because I've
always been interested in the nature of versus nurture. My
brother and I were so similar in so many ways
and so dissimilar in so many ways, and so I've
always thought, well, how much of that is because the
(31:16):
nurture we had the exact same nurture and very similar nature.
So how does it go that way? And yet twins,
you know, you don't see twins that are that are
so different. They're they're and even when they're apart, like
you're talking about, all right, let's get these other two
on so where we get everybody on for the show. Evan,
you're up, go ahead, yes, sir.
Speaker 9 (31:36):
So mistaken identity as a twin. I've had it several
times where or my brother and I and we've been
mistaken in from parts of the country where somebody knows
us and where we live and we live in different towns,
but for whatever reason, we've known different people and they've
(31:57):
mistaken us across in different parts.
Speaker 6 (31:59):
Of the.
Speaker 1 (32:03):
There is a TV show, sorry, there's a Netflix documentary
might be Prime, but I think it's Netflix on three brothers.
You can look it up. And they were doing a
social experiment on them. They didn't tell them, and they
separated them at birth and they sent them. They sent
them to three different communities, one rich, one poor, one
(32:25):
middle class, and it wasn't discovered until they were eighteen
years old. One of them went to might be Rutgers
somewhere in New Jersey and someone said, hey, Bud, how
are you good to see you back? And it's sorry,
I'm I'm a freshman. Come on, dude, And they go
through this whole thing and he's no, I'm afraid, no,
(32:46):
you were here last year. Okay, you were my roommate's
you're weirdo, No, I swear. So he goes, I got
a picture of us together, and he goes and they
look at it and he says, that's my twin. Well,
once they discovered each other, then they find out that
these stories of a doppelganger that they've been hearing about
someone who looked just like them, and it turns out
(33:07):
the three of them. And then they go and do
the study. And it was a pretty nasty thing what
was done. These kids were used as a social experiment
by there again white liberals. It happens, It happens. You know,
I've been reading a lot about and getting very excited about.
We're going to talk about this on the Evening Show.
The Make America Healthy Again portion of the Trump campaign
(33:30):
and Robert F. Kennedy's involvement in that. It makes me
very excited. I have had kind of a transformative moment
in my life where I have focused more on my
health and fitness and those sorts of things, from petru
and my diet to all of that, and it just
makes me excited for our country.