Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time.
Speaker 2 (00:07):
Luck and load.
Speaker 1 (00:11):
So Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
What we've got here is failure, Milky. Most of the
people covering that campaign were not particularly knowledgeable about the past,
and didn't you know, may may not have even known that.
You know, America firsters pac Madison Square Garden in nineteen
(00:34):
thirty nine and a pro Nazi Germany rally.
Speaker 1 (00:39):
You said over the weekend referring to it, there's a
direct parallel to a big rally that.
Speaker 4 (00:43):
Happened in them in nineteen thirties, that Madison Square Garden.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
So I know what I saw, and I'll just leave
it at that.
Speaker 3 (00:48):
Do you think Donald Trump is a fascist?
Speaker 2 (00:50):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (00:50):
I do, Yes, I do. The races, sex, is homophobic, xenophobic, islamophobic,
you name it.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
The only garbage I see floating down there is his supporters,
his his his demonizational scene is unconscionable, and it's on American.
Speaker 3 (01:08):
You could put half of Trump's supporters into what I
call the basket of deplorable.
Speaker 5 (01:13):
Look at the thing with reading, look at the fear
with being, look at the life we leading away with
bow its done before.
Speaker 2 (01:28):
You know, that's a little bit old that chart that
charts a couple of months old. And if you want
to really see something that said, take a look at
what happened.
Speaker 1 (01:51):
The tillet.
Speaker 5 (02:01):
Hug.
Speaker 2 (02:11):
We bleed the same blood, we share the same home,
and we salute the same great American flag. We are
one people, one family, and one glorious nation under God.
So Jews and Muslims and Catholics and Evangelicals and Mormons,
(02:35):
and they're all joining our cores and large numbers, larger
than anyone has ever seen in this country before, larger
than they've ever seen in any country. And the Republican
Party has really become the Party of inclusion. And that's
something very nice about that.
Speaker 1 (03:09):
You know, I'm trying to think of a band that
emerged as late as GNR did that gets inside my
soul the way GNR does. So, you know, there's very
little music, certainly almost no rock music post say eighty
(03:34):
three eighty four that really really appeals to me. Now
I might like it, but that really appeals to me.
But GNR, G and R may be the top of
that list. So kind of classic rock two point zero,
and they have a very classic rock you know, the distortion,
(03:58):
the lyrics, the even the phrasing, and a lot of
that is to me kind of a very skinnered esque.
And I don't think you'd have G and R without skinnered.
But I'm trying to think of somebody later than them
who really appeals to me in that way. You know,
(04:20):
there's some there's some nineties music, your your music that
I like, like Kryptonite. I think that's a great song.
Some of the Weezer stuff, you know, it appeals to me.
I actually do like Oasis, but I will tell you
OAYSI is in a little sacrony. To me, it's a
little sacrine. It can, it can a little goes a
(04:41):
long way. I don't want to hear a lot of it,
that's for sure. All right, let's open the phone lines
back up. There are a couple of emails that I
pulled from the crowd I thought were good. Zor. I
don't understand why Christian churches don't just play the clip
of Kamala telling the guy who shouted Jesus is King.
I think he actually said Jesus's Lord, but either way,
(05:03):
and Kamalist said you're at the wrong rally. That was
a blatant display of her views that it should be
relevant to all Christians. Just playing it without comment would
be powerful. Thank you, Dan, Dan, thank you for your message.
I would use that as a launching point to say this.
(05:23):
Pastors know good and damn well, the difference between the
two parties and the difference between these two candidates. Pastors
know good and damn well, the difference between boys in girls'
locker rooms and saying no, we're not doing that. They
know who's for what. They know which party is for
(05:45):
transitioning children, which is child abuse of the worst order?
That should be.
Speaker 4 (05:52):
It?
Speaker 1 (05:52):
Should you should be incarcerated for that nonsense. They know
the difference between opening our borders and protecting our nation.
They understand all of this. They don't lack the knowledge
of it. They don't lack the knowledge of Kamala Harris's actions.
You know, there's this group, I forget what it was.
It's an anti Catholic group and they were at a
(06:14):
Dodger's game and it's drag queens who show up and
they mock they mock nuns, and they mock Catholicism with
billboards with everything they do and everything they say. And
Kamala Harris appeared with them in a rainbow jacket to
show solidarity with them. There's not a pastor in America
(06:35):
that does not know this, I assure you of that.
And yes, they could play that for their congregation. They
don't for a reason. Pastors today are mostly and those
that aren't this, you know, they're not this because they
(06:56):
actually preach the Gospel and they're bold enough to speak out.
Pastors today are afraid of losing a member. Pastors today
are looking at a room full of consumers donors they
(07:18):
don't see or they don't accept the calling to minister
to those people. Same pastors they're not they're not showing
up at the church. When my brother died, I was
in I was I had to go to the hospital
(07:40):
to my dad was in the hospital at the time,
and we were worried we were going to lose him
any day. Then my wife laughs, my wife joking and
said he's going to outlive us all anyway. My brother
was only fifty four, So that was that came as
a huge, huge shock to us, and my dad was
(08:00):
in the hospital and we were close to losing him
many times during that period. He's actually kind of come
out of right now doing much better. But so I
was sitting. I didn't want to do this in front
of him, so I went out to the lobby and
I'm planning my brother's funeral, Jordan Peterson says, And this
(08:23):
is one of a friend of mine, Jesse Kelly's dad
just died. I guess it was last week, two weeks ago,
died in his sleep, heart attack. And the only advice
I gave Jesse was the Jordan Peterson advice, be the
strongest man at your father's Funeral's that's the Bible commands
(08:45):
you that. Anyway, I called my old youth minister to
preach my brother's funeral, and it was like, that's kind
of church I grew up in. That's ministering. That's not
just preaching and getting rid with more of the Michael
Berry Show.
Speaker 5 (09:04):
She was a waitress at the Only joorted Town. She
had her reputation as a girl who been around down
Main Street after midnight, brand new fact six, a fresh
swine hanging from her lips, a bit.
Speaker 1 (09:20):
Between her then this is Robert Keine.
Speaker 4 (09:22):
The road goes on forever, and the party never ends.
When you're listening to the Michael Ferry Show.
Speaker 5 (09:28):
And the party never ends, even sunny and was blner
over than the rest. He was going in the navy,
but couldn't pass his hand, so he hung around town.
He sold a little pot to love up when the
(09:49):
sunny one day he got come when he was back
in the Mirros, when they set him free again. The
road goes on forever, and the party never.
Speaker 1 (10:04):
So I received an email from a woman. You said,
fifteen years ago you read this blog post about my
three year old granddaughter on air, and she included the
blog post and the audio clip of me reading the
(10:25):
blog post about her then three year old daughter. This
was fifteen years ago. The girl's calling Billy calling.
Speaker 3 (10:35):
Knows Billy baby.
Speaker 1 (10:40):
So I got an email from somebody that says, Michael,
you got to read this woman's blog because she puts
your She put a funny thing on here. The blog
is called Jackson and Presley. George says, this week in school,
Miss Kathy, Miss I'm sorry. This week in school, Miss Kathy,
Jackson and Presley's preschool teacher was teaching them about charity.
(11:06):
Every Tuesday they can bring a can good to chapel
and the food is donated to the food bank. Miss
Cathy was explaining that the food is for people who
don't have enough money to buy food for themselves. Miss
Cathy could tell that Presley was listening intently, Presley's blogger's daughter.
She said she could practically see the wheels turning in
(11:27):
her head, so she paused and waited for Presley to
say something. Then Presley raised her little three year old hand.
Miss Cathy said, yes, Presley, and this is when my
daughter became the youngest Republican in the county. Presley said,
if them don't have no money, then them just needs
to go get a jobs. Cathy said, she's the most
(11:49):
grown up three year old she's ever seen. I think
I should maybe stop making them listen to Sean Hannity
and Michael Berry in the car on the way home
from school. That's pretty funny right there. I don't care
who you are, Mickey in League City. So Brenda George
sends an email update on the youngest Republican in Bassouria County.
(12:09):
Fifteen years ago, you read this blog post about my
three year old granddaughter on air. I just wanted to
give you an update. That three year old you chuckled
about is now an eighteen year old attending the University
of Texas in the pre dental program, and this weekend
she voted in her first election. I didn't pry into
(12:29):
her private decision, but I feel quite certain based on
conversations we've had, she is still a Republican. Raise them upright.
Mike Overstreet added to the conversation about gn R the
band Boston. Two problems with that. The band Boston is
(12:51):
earlier than the period I was talking about. Number two.
I don't even know if I say this Boston. Maybe
let me think about this before.
Speaker 4 (13:07):
I say it.
Speaker 1 (13:11):
Yeah, Boston's the most overrated band of all time. Yeah,
it doesn't mean they're a bad band if they come on.
The problem if you're listening to a Boston album is
I'm not really sure whether they're playing the same song
eight times or whether those are eight different songs with
(13:34):
the same exact tune, because that's what it sounds like
to me. Why is your head set off? Are you upset?
I don't know you were a big Boston guy. Well
that's just it. Well, then why are you invested? I
feel like Boston's one of those bands that everybody just
goes along with because they had that big sellouts and
they cool, cool album covers, greatest debut album of all time,
(14:00):
that's what you're saying. Okay, Well, look I don't want
to make people mad at the very time I'm trying
to get him to go vote. I don't want to
do that. I did, I was disturbed. So I go
into vote and there's an old man in there, and
I'm pretty sure he doesn't have full use of his faculties.
He's got, you know, he's kind of got that far
(14:21):
off look in his eye, and I mean, look, he's
really old. He's really really old. And the process had
already started when I walked in. But I'm an observer
of a lot of things, as you might have noticed,
and so I'm scanning the room. The audience is younger
(14:43):
than I expected it to be. And by younger, I
mean forties and fifties. There are fewer older people than
I expected. Every machine in the room, which was forty
maybe was being used, and there was an old man
(15:10):
who was behind me. So I had to crane my
neck to observe all this. But that doesn't stop me,
and I watched. Well, I first heard her say, now,
the newspaper doesn't endorse anyone in that race. They don't
have a candidate in that race, and it let me
(15:33):
give this woman the benefit of the doubt for a second.
For the sake of argument. He had told her she
was a helper. So she had a tag on it
that said some other something or another, and she was
a white woman. Maybe she was at that indeterminate age.
She could be fifty eight or she could be seventy.
(15:55):
And she's going through and she's it's like she's doing
this to defend herself, because you can't you know, she's
she's there as a helper. You can have an aid.
I don't know if she was assigned at the polling
place or if she I don't know how this came about,
(16:16):
but she says, the newspaper doesn't have a candidate there,
and the newspaper has a candidate there, that this candidate
right here, And best I can tell, because I've craned
my neck pretty hard. At this point, she's casting the
vote for him. Well, there's no oversight of her obviously,
so she might just be voting wherever she wants and
(16:37):
he's out of it, you know, So, I don't know.
It bothered me to think, first of all, did this
old man really trust the Houston Chronicle, which is what
the paper was too. Did he really trust their endorsements
because and if he did, did he trust their endorsement
(17:03):
because there was a time that That's what an informed
voter and citizen did you know? When I was growing up,
my dad, if you hadn't if he referenced a story
in the news and you hadn't read the paper, he'd
say it was in the paper, and you were a
bad citizen for not being informed. You should know that
Sheriff James Wade County Sheriff had been arrested for the
(17:29):
youth use of a methamphetamine pump methamphetamine I guess pump
that had been confiscated from the Orange Sheriff's Department, and
that he was selling drugs out of the Orange Sheriff's department,
and that the trial was in Sherman, Texas, and that
you know this was going to be You're supposed to
know those things. That's part of being an informed citizen.
He didn't go to college, but he believed you should
be informed. In the way you're informed is there's a
(17:51):
certain group of people we'll call them journalists, and they
don't work at DuPont and they don't teach in the school,
and they don't run the harding lawlor lumber Milly. They
go out and interview and research and they write it
down so the rest of us can know, so we
can cast good votes and things. And somewhere along the
(18:15):
way a lot of naive people. And they're not bad people,
but they are naive, especially some old, older people. They
don't realize that that job has been overtaken by absolute
zealots who propose policies that these old people would hate.
Cour speakers, smart devices from Michael's brain, every single one
(18:37):
of them.
Speaker 4 (18:38):
To your ears.
Speaker 1 (18:39):
This is the Michael Berry Show that exactly one guy
call up in defense of Boston. I mean an email
in defensive Boston. In fact, I don't even know if
it's a dude. The name is Ricky r I c
k I. If you spell Ricky with an eye, you
(19:02):
better be a girl or in transition, Zara. I can
take liking somebody that has different political opinions than me.
I would even be friends with Joe Biden. But I
cannot take somebody that can light the most overrated band
of all time, Guns n' Roses, and doesn't like Boston.
That makes you lower than Kamala Hillary and Tampon Tim
(19:24):
all put together. Have a great day. Keep up the
great work. I didn't see this where people get confused.
I didn't say I don't like Boston. I think they're overrated.
Let's say, let's say if I think, uh, let's say,
(19:49):
if I were to tell you that Magic Johnson is overrated,
I don't believe he is. But and well, I don't
know if he has full blowed he's got the HIV.
He's had the HIV for a long time really makes
you wonder, but especially because of when he got it right.
(20:13):
If I say he's overrated, it doesn't mean he's not
one of the fifty greatest ball players of all time.
It is to say he doesn't deserve the credit he gets.
I don't actually believe that I can't stand Magic Johnson.
I think he's a phenomenal player. And his rookie year,
when i'llbeit tall point guard or point forward, which is
(20:36):
more what he played, played the low post for Kareem
and played it well. That tells you how good that
dude really is. I don't even think Jordan could have
done that. But anyway, Mark writes are I'm actually five
years older than you and I'm a big eighties pop
fan and classic country fan. The reason I tell you
(20:57):
this is because I'm a huge fan of Collective Soul.
If you like GNR, I think you'll be impressed with them. Plus,
they are proudly Christian. While they don't perform Christian music,
their music is uplifting and has a great beat and
sound as as do there I'll say this, as do
their lyrics. It's not that I don't know who Collective
Soul is. They were one of the first bands that
played the RCC. Russell Levara is a huge fan of
(21:22):
Collective Soul and paid them. He was seventy five thousand
to do a show for us outside we had to
Plus he had to pay I think twenty five thousand
all in to have a stage brought in and all
of their right to accommodate their writer. Yeah, so I'm
very familiar with Collective Soul. They don't rock my world.
(21:46):
I think they're a good band. There are a lot
of bands that I don't dislike their music. I just
I don't put them up there with skinnerd Sharon Rights.
You are right. White pastors won't preach anymore, but Gary
Hamrick will preach with no reservations on who to vote for,
and there's a link to Cornerstone Chapel. Hey, listen. If
(22:09):
your pastor is challenging the congregation to vote and is
proudly talking about a biblical application of the precepts of
Christianity to how we vote and how we govern, bully
for him. Send him a note, say hey, Michael Barry
(22:32):
is saying that white preachers are afraid to talk about
politics and share their vision. And I realized I don't
go to a church with a pastor who's a coward.
I want to thank you for doing what you're doing
because I didn't realize how rare it is. So thank you, Pastor.
So and So. Kurt writes the thing they did with
(22:56):
the jail, that's an ultrasound. I just had it done
to me a week go. So does that mean I'm pregnant? Ramond,
It was an ultrasound. I forgot that's what Harun did.
Robbie writes. Neighbor across the dirt road moved here from
California three years ago. Retired mechanic right away. He put
up a Trump sign on his fence and he has
a Trump sticker on his truck. Born and raised in
(23:18):
Kelli and couldn't stand it any longer. Supposed to rain
on Tuesday. I had a listener tell me yesterday that
KPRC TV was reporting a forty percent chance. Ramone just
told me an eighty percent chance, and he said that
wherever he checked it, I forget where it was, and
I don't care. It was a lightning bolt at three am,
(23:40):
so I suppose that means thunderstorms. My hunting buddies tell
me that Tuesday is I guess Tuesday's not opening day.
Saturday is opening day, and the concern is that a
lot of the retiree hunters will head out on Saturday
(24:03):
and be out there for a week. You know, this
happens every year. Happens every election cycle. Somebody will email
me and they're out in the deer stand and they're
listening in there. They got a headset and they'll say,
I'm listening to you talk about it being election day,
and it crept up on me and I forgot to vote.
So you can vote through Friday. Go vote today if
(24:24):
it is to be, it's up to me, go vote today.
The lines have died down, so now's a great time
to go vote and Remember you can vote anywhere in
your county of residents, not where you were, where you
are right this minute, but the county where you are
registered to vote. Don't leave without casting a provisional vote.
If they don't let you vote, they have to let
(24:46):
you cast a provisional vote. A provisional vote won't be
counted unless the race is close enough that the number
of provisional votes exceeds the margin. So if your candidate
loses by eight and there's fifteen provisional votes, then they
have to go into your vote and see why it's provisional. Well,
your ID didn't match up. But in many of those cases,
(25:09):
those provisional votes, some of them will be allowed because
you know there was some technicality that kept you from voting,
or you know, you press your case at that point.
At that point it goes to trial, and that's what
you want to do. You want that to go to trial.
You want your vote. You'd rather be a provisional vote
who is not needed. Then wish you had been a
(25:32):
provisional vote that was needed, but you didn't bother to
press your case. You know, I learned in law school
very early on that if you don't if you don't
pursue your rights. You don't press your rights, you lose them.
When it's always stuck with me. You don't have the
right to anything. You don't have the right to defend
yourself unless you exercise that right.
Speaker 2 (25:58):
Hey, this is Tracy Bird.
Speaker 5 (26:00):
Tip my hand to the keeper the stars and.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
Dis Jim Mudd submits as creative director for a future conversation.
Top three debut rock albums of all time Number one,
I'll start with number three, led Zeppelin, the album being
led Zeppelin, Number two, Guns n' Roses, Appetite for Destruction,
(26:29):
and at number one his favorite band, of course, Van
Halen with Van Halen. Interesting that two of his three
favorite or what he would declare greatest debut rock albums
of all time happened to be self named, right yeah,
(26:52):
Guns and Roses being the the the what's the one
that doesn't fit in?
Speaker 3 (27:00):
And the.
Speaker 1 (27:03):
Thing that doesn't.
Speaker 2 (27:04):
Prove the rule.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
Exception to the rule. Thank you. Ramon Jonathan writes that
three year old Republican that's now an eighteen year old
if she was three fifteen years ago, then likely her
folks were listening to you before she was born. Your
show now has listeners and grand listeners. If she's already eighteen,
(27:28):
you'll have great grand listeners before you know it. I
have had listeners. Few call because young people don't call,
but young people will email. I've had and if I'm
at an event, young people will show up at events,
and I've had them show up and say I'm a
(27:48):
Michael Barry baby or I'm a Barry baby the way
Rush had rush babies. And the first time I heard it,
I didn't know what it meant because it was a
cute young woman about twenty two years old, and I
didn't know if she was coming on to me ramon.
I didn't know what was happening. She said, I'm a
Berry baby and I said, okay, Well what do I
do now? Yeah, I mean I feel a child support
(28:12):
letter or something?
Speaker 4 (28:12):
And what is that like?
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Am I in trouble? What did Who was it? And
I said what does that mean? She said, well, remember
Rush had Rush babies. Well, when I was growing up,
I listened my parents. I was in the back and
I would listen to you and we'd listen to Rush,
and people in their twenties and thirties would say, you know, Rush,
I'm a Rush baby. And I realized I'm a Berry
(28:37):
baby because I've been listening to your show. I said, who,
my goodness, thank you. Uh so we we get that
now because we've been at this for nineteen years. So
interesting stuff, interesting stuff, Joel in Northern Utah, EU rop.
Speaker 4 (28:53):
Sir, well, brother Mike, yours are on us. It's an
honor to talk to you, yes, sir, glad to have you.
Are you Mormon? Yes, sir?
Speaker 1 (29:03):
Okay. You know how I knew?
Speaker 4 (29:05):
Oh huh Northern Utah? Did they gave it away?
Speaker 1 (29:09):
I just guessed, you know what, I didn't know Joel
when Romney was running in twenty twelve. And I like
to think I'm a student of things, but I did
not know this. I did not know how many Mormons
there are in Oregon and Arizona. And it became an
issue during the primary because Romney outperformed where he was doing.
(29:34):
And you know, of course he did well in Utah,
and of course he did well in Massachusetts where he'd
been the governor. But Romney did very well in Oregon
and Arizona. And I remember Chad Knockanishi, our executive producer,
telling me Romney's going to do very well in Oregon.
In Arizona in the primary, and that was a very
hotly contested primary. Remember there was Rick sent Taurum and
(29:56):
Perry was in that for low Walls a bad back
problem for anyway. So I said, well, why is he
going to do well?
Speaker 4 (30:02):
And we were on k.
Speaker 1 (30:04):
EX eleven ninety in Portland at the time, and I
had made some Mormon jokes because I like to make jokes,
and some Mormons had gotten upset with me, and I said,
why are these Mormons? Why are there Mormons in Oregon? Anyway?
And Chad's wife was raised, April was raised Mormon, and
he said, oh, there's a huge Mormon population in Oregon
and also in Arizona.
Speaker 4 (30:25):
Anyway.
Speaker 1 (30:26):
You probably knew all those things. I didn't, But go ahead,
my man.
Speaker 4 (30:30):
So yeah, I'm not a huge Romni fan. Of course,
people around here they're not so much fan of them
anymore either, which is why he's not running for reelection.
I have had him on my airplane. I guess we're
getting off subject. I can say he was polite and respectful,
unlike you know, I love a lot of other elected officials.
But are you a pilot not a real h Yeah?
Speaker 1 (30:52):
Okay, what kind of plane do you fly.
Speaker 4 (30:56):
Flying e won seventy five and tell me about that plane.
It's built by Mbrer. It's a real popular in the
regional business, regional airline business. A lot of airlines like
using that aircraft because it has a lot of creature comforts.
It's not like the CRJ you know, where you feel
(31:17):
so cramped. It's a larger diameter fuselage, state of the art,
you know, fly by wire. It's got a lot of
bills and whistles to it.
Speaker 1 (31:24):
You like saw that plane or that's just what you've
been put on.
Speaker 4 (31:30):
I enjoy flying it. That being said, before flying this plane,
I was flying a thirty seat turbo prop. I flew
that for about fifteen years and that plane was just
a whot. Had a lot of fun flying that, and
I'd probably still beyond that if they hadn't retired it.
But I've been flying this current plane for just shy
ten years now.
Speaker 1 (31:51):
In that category of plane, if you know, obviously not
the most expensive or the least expensive. But if you
were to say bang for the buck, what would you
say in that category that the Chevy Tahoe of that
category of plane, what would you say that that would be?
What maker in model.
Speaker 4 (32:12):
So which category is that you're talking about?
Speaker 1 (32:14):
Well, the plane that you fly that category, I'm assuming
that's eight plus a jump and I don't know three
four million dollar plane. I don't know what would it.
Speaker 4 (32:21):
Be in terms of category. Well, these planes are probably
around forty fifty million. Oh wow, it's seventy six seats,
it's got twelve.
Speaker 1 (32:36):
Oh okay, all right, I assumed. Okay, let me start
all over. Okay, that is that is not your average plane.
Is this a private plane or you you're flying commercial?
Speaker 4 (32:48):
This is a commercial okay? All right, very different?
Speaker 1 (32:52):
Okay? Interesting? And where did you get your training? Were
you a military guy or what was your uh?
Speaker 4 (32:59):
I did through a university, okay, and.
Speaker 1 (33:02):
Then how did you get out into the commercial airlines,
because that's hard to do.
Speaker 4 (33:07):
After college. I built up a few hours actually flying
for a Brian shrimp company off the Great Salt Lake,
and then I went and flew air ambulance down off
the U in southeastern Utah and flying off of the
Navajo Reservation. We'd be hauling people from you know, small towns,
a little dirt strip, you know, take them into flag
Staff or Phoenix or Tuson or Albuquerque for medical treatment.
(33:34):
Oh yeah, yeah, it's funny.
Speaker 1 (33:37):
I only have forty five seconds. I want I want
to let you get your pointing because if something about Boston,
go ahead and say that real quick.
Speaker 4 (33:44):
Okay. So, uh, when you look at total album cells,
you know Boston isn't much behind guns n' Roses, And
I think that just accounts where guns n' Roses that
sold maybe ten million more albums in the US, but worldwide.
Speaker 1 (34:00):
I think you're a great guy. I would love you
to be my pilot. But Paco Bell was named by
a nationwide online response. Taco Bell was named the top
tex Mex restaurant in America. So look there, just because
a lot of people are idiots doesn't mean they're any
(34:21):
less idiots. So album selves is a terrible, terrible standard.
Go vote today, folks. Poles are open until nine in
Harris County.