Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Verie Show is on the air. People every day tell
(00:34):
me what Ted Cruiz or Donald Trump ought to be
talking about, and it's usually the issue that's their personal
issue that they care deeply about. And I explained to them,
you don't understand this, but what matters to you is
not always the thing that matters most to other people.
(01:01):
You might like the color green more than the color yellow.
If given the choice in furniture carpet clothes, you may
always choose green or yellow. But if a presidential candidate
says I'll put green before yellow, You're not going to
run across hot coals to help that person get elected.
(01:21):
It's not the most important thing to you, and you
have to remember that many times. What's most important to
you and you should vote on that, is not what's
most important to other people. What is the border. This
is why we have to stay focused on the border.
The economy with inflation, and here is the one that
(01:44):
gets people that Republicans need to stay focused on. If
you will allow our girls to be beat up by
boys on the field and sexually assaulted by boys in
the girls' locker room, then we will never allow you
in a position of authority, and you can never tell
(02:06):
me that's okay. I will not. I don't care how progressive,
that's what. Never ever, Ever, So CNN had two rather
interesting polls recently. The first poll shows that there is
one issue that unifies a majority of Americans.
Speaker 2 (02:26):
Transgender sports is a twenty twenty four sleeper issue, going
as far as the suggests it could cost Democrats control
of Congress this year.
Speaker 1 (02:34):
The board pointing to.
Speaker 2 (02:35):
Republican backed ads across the country targeting Democrats, like this
one against Ohio Senator Sharon Brown.
Speaker 3 (02:42):
Brown back to Biden voting to let transgender biological men
participate in women's sports.
Speaker 2 (02:49):
For this one against Wisconsin Senator Tammy Baldwin as.
Speaker 4 (02:53):
The mom of a daughter and livid the boys are
now being allowed to compete in girls' sports. It's just wrong,
and I blame Tammy Baldwin she voted to let biological
men into women's sports.
Speaker 2 (03:05):
Or in Montana against Senator John Tester.
Speaker 3 (03:08):
Tester ignored parents who don't want biological men competing in girls' sports.
Speaker 1 (03:14):
Tester voted to let men compete against our girls in
their sports.
Speaker 2 (03:18):
Now my panels going to debate this in just a minute.
But first we did ask san as Harry Engin to
look at what Americans think of the issue.
Speaker 1 (03:25):
Harry, Hey, Laura.
Speaker 5 (03:27):
So the bottom line is Republicans are running on this
issue because it's a winning issue for them. In fact,
it's a rare issue that unites Republicans and divides Democrats.
To take a look here, thinks transgender athletes should only
plan teams that match their birth gender. Look at this,
forty eight percent of Democrats, the slight plurality, actually agree
with that idea forty seven.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Percent of post.
Speaker 5 (03:47):
Among Republicans, it's a blow at ninety three percent agree
with the idea versus just six percent of POSE.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
Now, an interesting thing is happening in Texas. Colin Old,
who is all wrong for Texas, has been voting against
bills that would prevent boys from playing against girls and
boys from going into girls locker rooms. But he now says,
I've never believed that boys should play against girls or
(04:19):
that boys should go into girls' locker rooms. Do you know?
On what basis? He says that that if a boy
thinks he's a girl, then he's a girl. So if
a boy has greater bone density and more muscle mass
than your daughter on the volleyball court, smashes the ball
(04:41):
into your daughter's face, as has happened and breaks half
the bones in her face. That wasn't a boy who
did that. That was a girl, you bigot, because he
says he's a girl. They know that if we stay
focused on legal immigration, the economy with inflation, crime and
(05:05):
their soft on crime policies and their creepy, creepy movement
of boys as girls, and they know they can't win.
This is why they keep screeching abortion because there are
some women who are scared to death of the democratic
nicition is. But they go, oh abortion, and they go
stupid on abortion. So this second poll that CNN had
(05:30):
shows Kamala Harris with a historically weak performance among black men.
Speaker 5 (05:42):
Young black men in particular. Sometimes there's a trend line.
You know, I look at the polls all the time,
and sometimes there's a trend line now I never noticed before,
and make me go, WHOA. This is one of them, right,
This is the democratic margin among black men under the
age of forty five and presidential elections. You'll go back
to November of twenty twelve. What do you see you
see Obama by eighty one, Clinton only won and by
(06:04):
sixty three.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
Then we're all the.
Speaker 5 (06:06):
Way down a Biden last time around by fifty three,
a tremendous drop already.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
And then you take a look.
Speaker 5 (06:12):
At the average of the most recent polls and Kamala
Harris is up by only forty one points. That is
about half the margin that Obama won them by back
in November of twenty twelve.
Speaker 1 (06:22):
And this, I think is, you know, when Barack.
Speaker 5 (06:23):
Obama goes in last week, when he was in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
it's essentially.
Speaker 1 (06:27):
Talking to young black men.
Speaker 5 (06:28):
He made it seem like it was a Kamala Harris
specific problem.
Speaker 1 (06:31):
Uh uh.
Speaker 5 (06:32):
This is part of a long standing trend of young
black men moving away from the Democratic Party, and Kamala
Harris is just the latest to face that magnitude of
younger black men going towards the Republic.
Speaker 6 (06:42):
That was most interesting here is the trend line and
where some of the biggest drops happened or already happened
in this case. How about black men overall? How about
black men overall? It's part of the same picture. You know,
we're looking once again, if.
Speaker 5 (06:54):
Younger black men looks like the worst Democratic performance since
nineteen hundred and sixties, since CHFK versus Rich Dixon. It's
the same thing among black men overall, again part of
a similar trend, but here actually the drop off isn't
as dramatic. Right, Barack Obama won them by eighty five.
Then you see seventy one with Clinton sixty nine Biden.
Basically the same thing holding study, but here again very
very weak, only a fifty four point margin.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Now again still winning them.
Speaker 5 (07:18):
By a large margin, but considerably lower than what we're
used to, certainly considerably lower what we had during the
Obama years. The bottom line is Kamala Harris with younger
black men and then black men overall, putting in historically
weak performance for a democratic.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
Is she getting any relief with black women? All right?
Speaker 5 (07:34):
So you know we're talking about the trend line, right
and black women. Look, she's doing better with black women
than she is doing among black men.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
But here there.
Speaker 5 (07:43):
Isn't a trend line almost until we get to Kamala Harris.
So again, this is a black margin among black women. Look,
Obama won them by ninety three, very large margin. Clinton
won them by ninety three, a very large margin. Biden
did a little bit worse at eighty five, but then
you look here and you get a seventy one point margin. No, again,
these are large margins. But the bottom line is, when
you're talking about the base of the Democratic Party, you
(08:06):
would think that Kamala Harris would do very well among
blacks women based upon history, and of course she would
be the first black woman president. But she's actually doing
the worst for a Democratic candidate among black women since
nineteen hundred and sixty.
Speaker 6 (08:16):
If this wholes and again when you look at the
numbers here, whenever you come in looking at the trends,
is probably the most important thing gone.
Speaker 2 (08:23):
Is today of everyone thinking they could actually live.
Speaker 1 (08:25):
The American True the Michael Barry Show, President Trump running
through the talking to the editor in chief of Bloomberg,
John Micklethwaite, and here is Mickelthwaite. This is six to
oh one roomon saying that Kamala was offered the opportunity
(08:51):
to come and talk about economic issues and they wouldn't
let her.
Speaker 7 (08:56):
The first is just for the record and for those
people on television. The Economic Club of Chicago and Bloomberg
both invited Vice President Harris to a similar interview about
her economic plans that she has declined so far.
Speaker 1 (09:12):
That's powerful, maybe not to you, maybe not to everybody,
but to the people who follow that, that tells you
a lot. But here is my favorite two minutes of
Donald Trump in a while. Here is him speaking directly
(09:33):
in an unadorned, unfancy plane, direct manner.
Speaker 8 (09:42):
This is.
Speaker 1 (09:44):
Solid, This hits hard.
Speaker 9 (09:46):
This is a party, the Republican Party of common sense.
I forget about conservative liberal. Let's say conservative, but we're
really a party of We need borders, we need fair elections.
We don't want men playing in women's sports. We don't
want transgender operations without parental concent you know, it's there's
(10:08):
so many things, but it's ninety nine point is common sense.
It really is common sense.
Speaker 1 (10:15):
And I like to say it.
Speaker 9 (10:17):
I don't know if anyone said it in the past,
but I say, we're really a party of common sense,
and we want to have great people in our country.
I want to have a lot of people come in
so that you have your choice and so that they
have choice. I want to you know, I have a
good heart. I have a heart where I want people
to be taken care of it. But I don't want
to take in people where they millions of people, twenty
(10:40):
one million people at the least have come in in
the last three and a half years, unvetted, unchecked. We
don't know anything about them. We don't know how about
this Gavin Newscomb, he's the governor of California.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
He signed Newscomb Michael.
Speaker 9 (10:58):
But if you think, oh he directed, he correctly is
there is the first time I've never.
Speaker 7 (11:04):
CEO is out here. If they said those sort of
things about a rival CEO, they'ld be signed to be signed,
do you think.
Speaker 9 (11:09):
But they don't have to presurvive like me. They don't
have to go through what I have to go through.
There has never been a president that's been treated like me,
So I have to fight my own way.
Speaker 7 (11:18):
Look, you made it, you made it, You made a
very good they made a very good Jopen.
Speaker 9 (11:24):
He signed a bill in California two days ago that
you don't even have the right to ask a person
for voter ID. And if you ask a person for
voter ID, of course you have to show voter ID.
The only reason you wouldn't do because they want to
achieve bill says you cannot. It's against the law for
(11:45):
you to ask a person, may I please see your
voter ID when he votes? What is our country coming to?
Speaker 1 (11:52):
And this is what I'm talking about. Did you notice
the editor in chief of Bloomberg, John Mickel? Did you
notice you can't say Gavin Newscombe, You can't call him
Newscomb instead of Newsom. No, I'll stop you there. A
CEO would be sacked for that. But what about all
(12:19):
the things that happen? What about sending billion dollars to Ukraine?
Would a CEO be sacked for that? What about leaving
our border wide open? What about allowing criminals to run
wild and roam and take over apartments here? Would a
CEO be sacked for that? You see, niceties are everything
(12:48):
to this crowd. This is why so many of the
corporate types are such weasels. Because they play nice. They
don't feel any responsibility to support office holders who do
the right thing. They spend their entire lives not rocking
(13:13):
the boat. And that is why an Elon Musk can
do in two years what American companies have been working
on for decades, and he accomplishes it and they don't.
That's why he can send a skyscraper into space and
(13:34):
bring it back and land it And what is NASA
worried about, whether the earth is, whether the air is
male or female, whether the dirt is being offended. I mean,
there are real consequences to this stuff, and you just
(13:57):
saw it right there. Unwillingness to let Donald Trump make
his point because oh, you misnamed him. You've you've almost
dead named him. This is this is the scathing indictment
of corporate America. Everything is the niceties. Everything is not
(14:25):
offending someone. Don't call them by the wrong name. That's
that's rude, Donald, That's that's very rude. We can't be
rude here. We can send your boys off to war
where they're slaughtered, that'll be fine, but we mustn't be rude.
Manners are everything style over substance. You can't call him
(14:51):
Gavin Newscomb. You realize his CEOs out here. They would
all be sacked if they said that. And this right here,
this right here is why the founder of Bluemburg, the billionaire.
This is why his campaign couldn't get off the ground.
This is why Jeb Bush was destroyed in twenty sixteen.
(15:16):
This is why Mitt Romney couldn't get elected. John McCain
couldn't get elected because when you do everything you can
to play by the rules and be proper and not
offend anyone, don't take any real positions. Trump understands the
(15:37):
common man out here. Look, you steal a guy's wife,
he's going to beat your ass. You come into a
guy's daughter's bathroom as a boy, he's going to beat
your ass. You come across the border, he's eventually going
to stop you. This is what those people don't understand
(15:58):
about why Trump's popular.
Speaker 10 (16:00):
They remain scared the death of you, and they remained
scared to.
Speaker 1 (16:03):
Death of Trump. To Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 10 (16:05):
You're not going anywhere even if Trump does, You're not.
If you're going to go back to that interview with Bloomberg. Now,
mind ju Kamlo would not do the interview with Bloomberg
because I guess you'd just have to say she was
born in the middle class and then she would cackle.
Speaker 1 (16:27):
But let's go through some of the things President Trump said.
This was at the Economic Club of Chicago. He was
asked if he would support a peaceful transfer of power.
And here's what he had to say, only.
Speaker 7 (16:40):
Three weeks to go to the election, will you commit
now to respecting and encouraging a peaceful transfer of power.
Speaker 9 (16:46):
Well, you had a peaceful transfer of power.
Speaker 7 (16:48):
You had a peaceful transfer power, You had a peaceful Trump,
you had a piece, you had a peace You had
a peaceful transfer of power compared with Venezuela. But it
was by far the most the worst transfer a power
for a long time.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
Thank you.
Speaker 9 (17:03):
I appreciate that because this is, you know, what they
like to do.
Speaker 1 (17:07):
This is what they like to do.
Speaker 7 (17:10):
And question President Trump is would you respect Yeah?
Speaker 1 (17:14):
The decision.
Speaker 9 (17:15):
When I found out about this interview, I did a
little check. He's a man that has not been a
big Trump fan over the years.
Speaker 1 (17:21):
So I had a choice.
Speaker 9 (17:22):
Do I do this interview or not. I'm glad I
did it, But do I do this interview or do
I disappoint a lot of people? Because I know a
lot of people in the audience, but his view is
very different than mine.
Speaker 1 (17:34):
Let me just say I'm most trust room.
Speaker 9 (17:38):
We had a term peacefully and patriotically.
Speaker 1 (17:42):
These were people.
Speaker 9 (17:43):
If you think an election is crooked, and I do
one hundred percent. If you think the day it comes
when you can't protest, you take a look at the Democrats.
They protested twenty sixteen, they're still protesting it. Nobody talks
about them. But if we protest, we want to have
honest elections.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
You know this is very important as a point. It
is people will ask me all the time. Why does
Trump have to keep saying that the January sixth guys
were wrong, that the election was from Why can't he
just let that go? Well, let me ask you this.
(18:30):
If you were truly wronged, but you were asked to
say you did something wrong when you know you didn't
because your company wants to fire you. But guess what
will pay you out if you'll say you did something wrong?
What is your name worth to you? What is the
(18:52):
truth worth to you? And if you say I'd sell
out and take the money, then you'll never understand. But
not everybody does that. History is replete with people who
are heroes for fighting against a power larger than them.
(19:14):
I was watching on Amazon Prime. They have a series
called Things the British sold I mean sorry, Things the
British stole. And one of them is the stone from Scotland,
that is the sacred stone upon which their future leader
(19:37):
would touch. And it was stolen and it was put
in Westminster Abbey and they found a man who was
ninety six years old. He was the last of the
four boys who took that stone out of Westminster Abbey
and brought it back to Scotland as a young man.
And they didn't know who had stolen it. It was
(19:59):
a national shame in England. And they asked this man
at ninety six years old, do you regret it? You know,
it's the greatest accomplishment of my life. And he talked
about the fact. He talked about the fact that the
Scottish people had been wronged by their historical enemies, the English,
(20:26):
and that stone didn't belong to the English, and that
he put it back in its rightful place. And you
may not be able to understand that that may be
something that what does it matter? And a lot of
people make a compromise in that way, you know. I
remember the guy in Louisiana, I think it was Baton Rouge.
(20:50):
His son had been taken from him by his karate
instructor and he went on the run with him and
he was raping his son. His son was very young,
like twelve years old. This story has always hit me.
The guy's name was Gary Planchet. I think he died
(21:12):
a few years ago, Gary Planchet or Plochet, his son
I think was twelve years old. Son's name was Jody,
and Jody had been taken karate lessons from this guy
named Ducett. I forget Ducette's first name, and it later
(21:32):
emerges that Ducet had been sexually molesting this little boy
for over a year when he grabs a little boy
and goes on the run, and they went out to
California and for about a week, nobody knew where they were.
And he is raping this little boy and eventually the
(21:54):
boy places a collect call to his mom back in
Baton Rouge and they are able to get hold of
the location. They raid the room, they get the guy.
They bring the boy back and the boy gets home
first and they say yeah. He says, yeah, he raped
(22:15):
me for a week. The father is beside himself, so
he puts on a disguise and he's waiting at the
airport in Baton Rouge and when they walk do set
the rapist? The pedophile rapist passed him. He turns and
shoots him in the head and the detectives grab him.
Why did you do this? We had him, We were
(22:36):
going to you either understand what went through his mind,
or you don't. A jury refused to charge him because
a father should not have to deal with that. You know,
there's two types of people. You either understand why Trump
(22:57):
says that twenty twenty election was rigged, or you don't,
because studies have shown a number of people who believe
it was rigged also believe we shouldn't talk about it. Well,
I hope you enjoy your overlords. I hope you enjoy
(23:19):
the gruel that you get, because if you don't stand
up for what you believe, and you compromise that because
you don't want to upset them, then it only gets worse.
Our government should fear us. That's why we have a
Second Amendment. When they say you don't need this, you
(23:42):
don't need to own an AR fifteen to hunt deer.
The Second Amendment was not guaranteeing the right to a
gun to hunt deer. It was guaranteeing the right to
a gun to fight against an evil government. Make this clear.
(24:04):
You may not like that. You may not like to
hear it. It might upset your university professors or your
nonprofit CEOs. It might upset the Tim Waltz looking dudes
in society. But that's the fact. Real men are going
to have to stand up and take back this country
(24:28):
from the weak need, from the left wing, from the pedophiles,
from the angry liberals, and if we don't, we'll be
left with the nation of Doug m hawks and jazz
hand walls.
Speaker 7 (24:47):
Timponk What is he got, top country?
Speaker 1 (24:53):
We think sweets tea. We don't think socialists, Koda. This
next story is just fun. You got to end on
a high note. In Hanson, Massachusetts, a man projects onto
the town water tower a twenty twenty four sign, So
(25:18):
he's using the lights to project it up onto the
town water tower every night. The town officials are losing
their minds. Oh my, they're wringing their hands and gnashing
their teeth. And now they're using taxpayer manpower and resources
(25:38):
to counter the projection by setting up a spotlight on
the tower to reduce visibility of his sign. Because you see,
when it's dark and he shoots the light up on
the tower, you see Trump twenty twenty four, and it's
a glorious thing. So they've put a spotlight. They're holding
(26:01):
the spotlight to the tower because when they do that,
there's no contrast with what he's projecting, and he's having
a ball with this. They're also threatening him with one
hundred dollars a day. Fine, do you realize how many
people would pay that for him? I love these stories.
(26:23):
I don't know if you saw the story the other day.
There's a guy who runs around trying to embarrass Trump
and he read rules for radicals and he learned this
little rule, and that is that you tie your opponent
to some shameful thing as if you but you do
it as their supporter. So this guy shows up. This
(26:43):
guy hands out Nazi materials at Trump rallies and says,
we love Trump, hands out Nazi stuff. So they have
a Nazi flag a swastika on his boat, and they
get themselves into the Trump boat parade. And this boat
realizes what they're doing. They turn these massive Evan Rudes
and splash water. I don't know if it was Evanruds Ormorrow.
(27:05):
I just like Evan rud. I've got a buddy named
Skip Hartley in Houston. He owns a company called Thunderboat
Motors and Transmissions. And he sent me an email today
and he said people that were holding back on spending
money now believe Trump's going to win, and they're spending
(27:25):
money to get out ahead of the fact that everybody
else is going to be spending money because if Trump wins,
people that are holding back on projects, the minute he wins,
they're going to start ordering product, supplies, projects, manpower. But
at that point everybody's doing it. It's a run on
(27:48):
the market. So what they're trying to do is get
ahead of it now and go I think he's going
to win, so I'm going to spend money anyway. So
my buddy Skip Hartley is a boat motor guy. If
you go into his office, he's got a big wall
and he has old boat motors mounted on the wall,
and you can point to one and HUGO, that's a
(28:09):
sixty eight Evan Rude. That's a seventy three Johnson. That's
a seventy eight Mercury. I don't know, I just find
it interesting anyway. So back to Hanson, Massachusetts. So the
dumb dumb town administrator says that this could result in
significant cost to taxpayers, including legal fees in highway department
(28:32):
over time. Why don't you stop worrying about the fact
that the guy's projecting something onto the wall. Oh no,
we can't do that. This is the NBC affiliate in Boston.
Speaker 3 (28:43):
Well, the municipal water tower in Hanson has become quite
a focal point when it comes to political expression.
Speaker 1 (28:49):
I mean you can see why right here.
Speaker 4 (28:52):
For at least two nights, a resident has been projecting
this political image that reads Trump twenty twenty four on
the tower.
Speaker 6 (28:58):
Now the town has stepped in and the man responsible,
good face fines.
Speaker 3 (29:03):
No sign of the political sign on this town tower,
residents say. Once town officials put these lights here Friday
night to blur the image all weekend, it's been clear
from bright and bold to blurry this town of handsome
municipal water tower on Hushtreets become the talk of the town.
Speaker 8 (29:20):
He has a right to do it, but at the
same point, it's got to be respectful.
Speaker 1 (29:24):
Paul Riley lives right near the tower.
Speaker 3 (29:26):
He says he became a little bothered once the town
started using their resources Friday night to blur the Trump
twenty twenty four image.
Speaker 5 (29:33):
You shouldn't tie a police and other resources for something
like that.
Speaker 3 (29:37):
We tried to talk to the man who has the
projector on his property to display the image. We just
wanted to know what we could talk to you about
the tower. He shook his head inside the door, saying no.
Speaker 1 (29:46):
handsOn.
Speaker 3 (29:46):
Officials say displaying this image violates the town's bylaws and
misleads the public to believe this activity is condoned. They
do not allow any political endorsements on municipal property, but
they do respect free speech rights of all residents.
Speaker 8 (30:00):
They should just let him put his sign up, not
spend money on a generator and feeding fuel to the generator.
Speaker 3 (30:06):
The town says, a lot of taxpayer dollars may be spent,
including attorney fees and paying workers over time to turn
this spotlight on and off each day.
Speaker 7 (30:16):
I just feel like everyone gets so upset over everything today,
and you know, some things he's just gotta let go.
Speaker 3 (30:21):
Others who didn't want to be identified say, displaying your
political views on your own property is more than enough.
Speaker 5 (30:27):
Anything that's going to write it to the AUSSI that's
I mean, he has a right to do it.
Speaker 1 (30:32):
The town says.
Speaker 3 (30:33):
The resident could be fined one hundred dollars per day
if it continues.
Speaker 8 (30:37):
If the town's eligible to find him one hundred dollars
a day, then he's gonna have to pay one hundred
dollars a day, and if the guy can pay it,
he can pay it.
Speaker 3 (30:45):
Residents wonder how long the town will keep these lights here,
and if the man will put the image back up
once they're removed.
Speaker 1 (30:53):
We had a very popular district attorney law and order
guy handlebar or mustache. His name was Johnny Holmes, no
relation to who you're thinking of from the Blue Movies,
and he had a saying that if the legislature passes
(31:16):
a bad law, don't ignore it. Enforce it to the fullest,
because that will make people realize how stupid it is.
If the legislature has a bad law on the books,
enforce that law. Don't look the other way, and force
people to confront how stupid that law was, rather than
(31:41):
leaving it on the books to be arbitrarily and capriciously
selectively enforced here and there. It's brilliant, Well what they're
doing in Hanson, Massachusetts, and that person saying, well, if
they say he got to pay a hundred dollars, he
got us pay one hundred dollars. That's not my Massachusetts accent.
(32:04):
That's my guy who just it was pretty close. I agree,
that is my guy who says, well, if the government
says you got to do it, you got to do it. Well,
what if the government is corrupt, which increasingly they are. Well.
We close the show today by offering you the opportunity
(32:27):
to reach out to us wherever you are in the
country through our website Michael Berryshow dot com. I personally
read every single email that comes through. You can buy
our merch there with our stuff all over it. If
you're so inclined, you can sign up for our daily
blast that comes in the afternoon. Our creative director, Jim
(32:48):
Mudd sends it every day. It's a link to different stuff.
We do multiple shows that links to that we do.
If you are not yet a podcast listener, you miss something,
you can always hear it on our podcast, which is
free on all the platforms that are out there, iTunes, iHeart, Spotify,
all of them. We do extra bonus podcasts on the weekend,
(33:08):
so if you want a little Michael Berry Show on
the weekend when we're not typically on, you can get
it there. We go into the archives on some of
our old stuff and we replay those on occasion because
someone has asked for it and we decide to share
it with everybody and otherwise. It's a real honor to
get to do what we do and talk to you
wherever you are in the country today and we'll see
(33:31):
you back tomorrow