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November 15, 2024 • 33 mins

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Episode Transcript

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time time, time, lucking load. The Michael
Verry Show is on the air.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
It's Charlie from BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good
one coming on. It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving here is viewed
by some as downright fun democratic.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
Two six packs, shinner, not a nancid putine.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Ladder, Lucky's track.

Speaker 4 (00:38):
Center, fifth of patrol, pass down, attig, glue cooler, take
a guess at all the door.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
I can feel a good one coming of.

Speaker 4 (00:55):
Throwing a Wildy Hubbard sing alone to red Mother.

Speaker 5 (01:01):
Any blues I had before gold Another working week is over,
no cheers and sober.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 6 (01:17):
Yeah, we.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Man, We're gonna get the feeling ride. We're gonna keep
this powder rock.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
Can feel the break of do.

Speaker 6 (01:30):
Yeah, I can feel a.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
Good one coming on.

Speaker 7 (01:34):
I gotta getting calming if when, but I can't put
in a hard day's work, put in eleven four hours
a day, and the.

Speaker 2 (01:39):
Ain't getting you truck in the least right want to
cleep beer? Three blongs in a wreck.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
Top Mustang followed us down to the leaking. Didn't have
to think about that too long, skinny dipping in the bride.

Speaker 2 (01:58):
Moon out situation couldn't be more Ride.

Speaker 4 (02:03):
I can feel a good one coming on, Yill.

Speaker 8 (02:08):
We are, We're gonna.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Get to feel it.

Speaker 3 (02:13):
Ride.

Speaker 4 (02:13):
We're gonna keep this potty rock until the break of nome.

Speaker 2 (02:19):
Yeah, I can feel a good one. I feel I
could good warm. I can feel a good one coming now.

Speaker 8 (02:30):
They're making it last where you can't drink when you
want to, can't.

Speaker 3 (02:34):
You have to wear a speat belt when you're driving.

Speaker 2 (02:38):
Christy, it will become this country.

Speaker 8 (02:40):
Whoo.

Speaker 2 (02:51):
Yeah, we are, We're gonna get to feel ride. We're
gonna keep this body rock.

Speaker 9 (03:00):
I can feel the break.

Speaker 10 (03:02):
Some of these voicemails are from right after the election,
including the night of.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
And ramoning I were talking about during the break.

Speaker 10 (03:15):
I think it's I'm glad we didn't play it right
then because the voicemail would have reflected exactly what everyone
was feeling.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
But now.

Speaker 10 (03:29):
Now that the new has worn off, and now that
the left has regathered themselves, and like Freddie fi Krueger,
they're coming back for more and people. Our people internalize
so much what the left does. It breaks my heart
to see, Wow, why no they're saying that Trump, Trump

(03:50):
did this, Why dot let's say Ana Matron to this.
And I think they actually think you got to give
up the notion that there's any truth and honor and
decency left, because there's not. And once you let go
of that, it's it's you have to suspend reality. The
reality now is a soap opera. It's nonsense. It's a

(04:12):
movie script. But they're gonna keep coming at you. They're
not ever going And this is what breaks my heart
that people don't seem to understand this. The Left is
never going to wake up one day because you seem
to think they are and go, you know what, I
never thought.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
I said, you guys are right, you guys are right.

Speaker 10 (04:34):
And this is why when a TOOLSI Gabbard comes over
or an RFK Junior comes over, this is why people
get so excited that maybe we can win them all over.
Well maybe, but do you realize part of what we're
doing is we're having to scrape the barnacles off our

(04:54):
hull this ship to.

Speaker 2 (04:56):
Get where it needs to go.

Speaker 10 (04:57):
We've got to cut the Liz Cheney's and the Dick
Chain and the bushes and the Kinsingers and the Rick Wilsons,
and the Jonah Goldbergs, and the Bill Crystals, and the
Anna Navarro's and the David Frenches.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
There's a lot of people that we had to.

Speaker 10 (05:12):
Out and push away, and now they've run over there
to make their living on the other side.

Speaker 2 (05:18):
Fine, don't follow them anymore.

Speaker 10 (05:20):
Move on. Starve these people of oxygen and they'll go away.
As long as you're talking about the view, the view
will be around, and so you are inadvertently helping it,
promoting it. Trump understood this in twenty sixteen when he
ran in twenty sixteen. He knew CNN hated him, he

(05:41):
knew Jeffrey Zucker hated him, but he did the things
necessary to make it so they could not avoid covering him.

Speaker 2 (05:51):
And that's exactly what happened.

Speaker 10 (05:53):
He forced them to help him against their own wishes
and in so doing, in so doing, they improved their ratings.
So he made it so that if you did not
cover me, your ratings would suffer because people were going
to watch Trump, whether he was on seeing it or

(06:15):
somewhere else, because it was so new, it was so.

Speaker 2 (06:18):
Shocking, you remember.

Speaker 10 (06:21):
Anyway, The good thing about having waited, which was unintentional,
is that now I'm getting to remember how happy people
were right after the win. Brian Trann says he doesn't
usually call radio shows, but he had to call to
express his pride that President Trump is our president.

Speaker 6 (06:44):
This is Brian Trenn and I'm calling your radio station.
I don't call radio station.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
And I am.

Speaker 9 (06:53):
Proud to call my president Donald Trump. She's the savior
of our country. He is the one he's believes in God.
We are all as one nation. Now, amen, I.

Speaker 2 (07:12):
Have that one more time?

Speaker 10 (07:13):
Or Mom, just listen to the tone of his voice.
He's not gloating, he's comforted. Listen carefully.

Speaker 6 (07:22):
This is Brian Tran and I'm calling your radio station.
I don't call radio a radio station.

Speaker 9 (07:29):
And uh, I am proud to call my president Donald Trump.
He's the He's the savior of our country. He is
the one he's believes in God. We are all as
one nation.

Speaker 8 (07:45):
Now.

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Amen.

Speaker 10 (07:48):
You know I'm not for worshiping elected officials, but isn't
it nice that we can be proud of our president again.
I mean, they were telling us that at G seven
Joe Biden was, you know, the most respected man, and
none of.

Speaker 2 (08:02):
That was true. He was pooping his pants and everybody.

Speaker 10 (08:05):
Knew it, and we had to be embarrassed. Like when
your team is a cellar dweller, you got to go
to the games, you know people where the brown bags.
Your team is winless, and you don't want somebody like
that representing you.

Speaker 4 (08:21):
Likenight tight and you need to escape from the every
day escape to the Michael Very Show.

Speaker 10 (08:28):
If Trump does not have Corey come to his inauguration
and play this song, it's going to be a shame.

Speaker 2 (08:36):
I'm not gray deep.

Speaker 10 (08:37):
Back to the voice smells real quick. Jeremy says that
Trump will get this country back on course. You know,
that's what we all want. I think we all. I
think a lot of people felt maybe America wasn't great again,
or maybe sorry, maybe maybe America wasn't great any long.
Maybe our our better days were behind us, and the idea. No,

(09:02):
it's about decisions and personalities and actions. And isn't it
amazing how the world is falling into line the world?
The world wants America to lead by example.

Speaker 6 (09:17):
This is Jeremy.

Speaker 7 (09:18):
I was just calling because I'm a supporter of Trump.
I'm a welder, have been for twenty years now. Voted
for Trump in twenty sixteen and the next solution as well,
that one didn't matter, but price God that this one did,

(09:40):
and that Trump can get back on the right course.
And God bless you for everything that you do. Michael
Berry and russalem Mo would be proud. God bless his country.

Speaker 2 (09:58):
Amen.

Speaker 10 (10:00):
You know, I am proud of the kind of people
that are part of our tribe who meet here every day.
You know, if you are a DJ on a music station,
the people who are listening are there because they like

(10:20):
the format of the music you're playing, and you hope
to not drive them away if possible, and maybe even
some of them will stay around because they like you.
But a lot of the people are going to be
there because they like that format classic rock, alternative rock,
urban tropical, whatever, classic country, whatever.

Speaker 2 (10:41):
That may be.

Speaker 10 (10:43):
But when you do what we do, the people who
hang around, the people who come here every day are people.

Speaker 2 (10:50):
Who share your values. May not agree with.

Speaker 10 (10:53):
Everything I say. In fact, I don't want people to
agree with everything I say. I want to call people
to question everything all the time, scientific method, constantly prune
in the tree, getting better, learning new things every single day.
I don't want somebody to read to me from a
list of bullet points that it sounds like they've read

(11:16):
every day for ten years in a row. That's not
interesting to me. I don't want to do that. I
want to challenge and provoke and engage and learn, because
when you're learning, those synopses are firing and you're alive.
The next one, Jim Mudd has our creative director loaded

(11:37):
and I have not heard this one, and he says
that Andy is a lady, but he's spelled it A
and d. Y. Why do you spell it A and d?
Why if it's she's a lady, I think it should
be A and D.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
I don't you. Okay, well here we go.

Speaker 8 (11:54):
Hey, it's the your friend Andy. So I'm just calling
to tell you about how everything went last night for
me when.

Speaker 11 (12:03):
I was watching the election results come in. So when
they announced that Trump had won, and even the news
reporters they were just in shock themselves and almost didn't
even want to say, you know, that he had won.

Speaker 8 (12:22):
And then they were like, no, okay, yes we can
say this.

Speaker 2 (12:24):
We're gonna be the first.

Speaker 12 (12:25):
Ones to say this.

Speaker 11 (12:26):
He won. And I just I, oh my gosh.

Speaker 8 (12:29):
I was just the huge surge of this energy, this energy.

Speaker 11 (12:35):
Of hope just suddenly it just entered me, and it
was just radiating, like I was so happy, so overjoyed,
and just full.

Speaker 2 (12:45):
Of hope for like the future.

Speaker 8 (12:48):
And then I realized something I had experienced, something so truly, truly,
truly significant, and it was and it was an experience
I had just been unburdened.

Speaker 10 (13:10):
Well played Andy, well played sweetheart, have some fun with it.
Next is Fletcher. Fletcher says Kamala left her supporters twisting
in the wind. You know, sorry, my printers a little loud.
The people who voted for Kamala, you almost have to

(13:33):
feel sorry for him because they have no self respect.
Kamala didn't come out and talk to them because she
had lost. They have to live with that. They knew
deep down that the only thing driving them was the
hatred of Republicans, not support for Kamala. Nobody wanted her

(13:57):
to win because of her, and they knew deep down
that everything she did was fake. She doesn't like them,
but then she basically said it, she showed it, she
proved it, and that makes them kind of Stockholm syndrome.
Can't walk away people. You won't leave your abuser. You

(14:24):
tolerate bad behaviors. You know, when somebody tells me how
awful their job is and yet they won't leave it,
I go, you know, maybe you're just a complainer. Find
another job. Anyway, here's what she's talking about.

Speaker 12 (14:40):
Oh my name is Fletcher Barnette. I think one of
the most interesting things that happened in the selection as
far as Kamala is concerned, is that she just abandoned
her supporters at the end of the at the end
of the night, she didn't even come out and bought
her to tell them thank you for your support. She
just left them twisting in the wind. And I can't
think of anything that makes a better statement of the

(15:00):
American made the right choice.

Speaker 10 (15:03):
Isn't that true? You know, companies, when they fire somebody,
they won't let them go back and take, you know,
anything from their desk. They don't give them time to
collect their stuff. What does that tell the people who
stay there? You don't really matter to us. You can
put any little happy face on the wall and say

(15:24):
our employees are our people. Yeah, But then when you
let somebody go and not for a crime, but because
there's a layoff and you just ask, it kind of
looks like maybe they're not so important.

Speaker 3 (15:37):
How hard is a pleasure that? Imagine a mother who's
making minimum ways try to feed children.

Speaker 2 (15:42):
The Michael Berry Show, how about my children? And I
don't they are killing us without killing you.

Speaker 10 (15:49):
Oh, very perfect that our Hank Junior Bump third segment,
second hour.

Speaker 2 (15:58):
Would air.

Speaker 10 (15:59):
And then from Alabama, Deborah from Alabama makes a very
good point about the media calling you, quote unquote uneducated. Well,
forget the words they use, because you can assign any
word to any sound and any it's what that word

(16:20):
comes to mean. People think that their dog understands English. No,
your dog understands tone. It's the tone they're listening to,
or the little the sounds, not that word itself. Well,
remember they're speaking in code when they talk about people

(16:42):
like you, because they still need you to watch.

Speaker 2 (16:44):
Just listen to this.

Speaker 3 (16:47):
Hi, Michael Berry, my name is deborh and I just
had to get something off my chest. I live in Tuscaloosa, Alabama.
I am so absolutely tired of these broadcasters talking about
how only uneducated white women voted for Trump. I am

(17:12):
an educated white woman with two graduate degrees, and I
don't have to be a dumb hic to support and
vote for Trump, which is how I feel these people
are portraying Trump voters. You can be smart, educated, be

(17:36):
able to speak your mind and vote for the person
that you think will do the best job for this country.
And it absolutely was Donald J.

Speaker 11 (17:47):
Trump.

Speaker 12 (17:48):
Thank you, Michael.

Speaker 8 (17:52):
You know.

Speaker 2 (17:54):
I love that so much.

Speaker 10 (17:57):
I love But here's a woman with a deep South accent.
They used to have a show called something like Redneck
Rocket Scientists. Remember we had them on. They were in Huntsville, Alabama,
and what it was was it was guys with PhDs
in physics who were engineering in physics and mathematics, Wizards

(18:22):
and NASA. I don't know if they're still there, but
NASA had some sort of like that was where the
new technologies were coming from. Wasn't Houston, It was out
of this this place in uh I believe it was Huntsville, Alabama,
and these guys there was a TV show about them
because the juxtaposition of the folks that talt like. They

(18:45):
asked Ron Hayer and they've got you know, multiple one
the lead guy, I remember we had him on. He
had multiple PhDs and you could ask him the most
complex physics question that you found online and he knew
the answer that guy's whip smart, just smart as all
get out. And I have known so many people in

(19:07):
the course of my life who have what other people
want to assume is an uneducated which by which they
mean dumb accent. No, they're just different. We all speak
in different ways. But when you assume that everybody in Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Texas,

(19:30):
Arkansas is dumb, then the accent of that region becomes
the accent of the dumb. Because you don't need to
know anything, you don't need to see them, you don't
need to look at their life, you don't need to
look at their accomplishment. You manage to brand them as dumb.

(19:51):
And let me tell you that has affected movie careers,
political careers, professional careers, finance careers, because that was allowed
to perpetuate that this was the accent of the dumb.
Therefore it is a dumb accent. Oh, uneducated, they would

(20:15):
tell you. And that is on the basis of college degrees.
I will tell you right now, the biggest rift in
this country, the biggest split, is not men and women,
not Republicans and Democrats. It is people with college degrees

(20:36):
who think they're better than those without and a reckoning
is coming because you got a lot of people with
college degrees who are about to be made useless who
ai replaces. Look, we're gonna need plumbers, we're gonna need electricians,

(20:59):
we're gonna needs and we're going to need people who
can fix the machines that replace some of the people.
The idea of being educated is now antiquated. The very
concept that you would go to this institution and you

(21:20):
would enter with an open mind, ready to learn, and
you would leave a changed person.

Speaker 2 (21:28):
That is dead.

Speaker 10 (21:29):
That's not what that school does anymore. That school takes
one hundred and fifty thousand dollars from the parents for
the professors to never show up to class. You know,
a lot of these professors never went back after COVID
because they're lazy and they don't want to show up
and teach. They cancel classes on a whim. Ask your
college kids. They cancel classes on a whim. They do

(21:52):
the class on zoom. They don't care. And what they
do do is use it as their own radio program
or blog, and they mostly just talk about how much
they hate Trump and the kids parents, And so what
you have is a bunch of disaffected bitter liberal professors

(22:15):
being paid all this money that you saved for eighteen
years to send your beloved child in whom you've en trusted,
all this faith. You've put everything you happen to this kid.
You've taken them to every little league practice, every cheer practice,
every volleyball practice, every soccer practice, and now you hand
them over to be indoctrinated, but not educated, and certainly

(22:39):
not improved because of it. You look at the number
of degrees now for which there is no social need.
There is no compelling reason for gender studies and boys
who want to be girls, and girls who want to
be boys, and blacks who hate whites, and whites who
hate whites.

Speaker 2 (22:59):
That's not an edgecation. That's not an improvement.

Speaker 10 (23:02):
You don't walk out of there with any skill that
you could apply to contribute to society. I'm not saying
everybody needs to be able to design a building. I'm
not saying everybody needs to be able to invent a
new car. But they've learned no skills, and they've certainly
not learned anything about people unlike themselves. It's an indoctrination

(23:29):
and a conformity clinic. That's what the campus has become
and all the people on the farms and out in
the woods are sending their children in in some desperate
attempt to improve their career prospects. You want to do that,
Send your kid to vocational school. Get your kid a
summer job from as early as they can. Have them

(23:52):
working in places that do things. They don't need to
be they don't even need to get paid. Have them
show that they can work next year, and they'll give
them a summer job for ten bucks an hour. Take
out the trash, clean Things, Show, you can do things,
Show you have a great attitude.

Speaker 1 (24:13):
Southern Pride, Southern Fride with Michael Barry show.

Speaker 10 (24:17):
Well it's called Sonic Branding, same time every week, all
the Friday segments, we play the same song.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
Gives you pacing through the show.

Speaker 10 (24:31):
Those sounds your mind associates with how far into the
show we are.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Help me. I'm like a late motif in a Broadway musical.

Speaker 10 (24:43):
This song signals that we are coming to a close,
not just for you, but for me.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
As I sit here and.

Speaker 10 (24:55):
Think about what else I want to make sure I
get in this week, this is the reminder.

Speaker 2 (25:00):
All right, you're wrapping up for the week and in so.

Speaker 10 (25:04):
Doing, I'm mindful that I always want to send you away,
hopefully not in a horrible mood, hopefully not more anxious,
your blood pressure higher, your heart beating faster.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
But rather with a sense of comfort.

Speaker 10 (25:21):
In the blessings you do have, whatever those may be,
even if it's just that you are alive, and also
a sense of hope that no matter how bad things
have been or are, they can get better. I am
an evangelical Christian. I believe truly and deeply, in an

(25:45):
abiding way in redemption.

Speaker 2 (25:50):
I believe in no.

Speaker 10 (25:52):
Matter how far we fall, no matter how bad things get,
we can make them better. And that's important for me
to know, and I hope in some way that sustains you.
I've talked to a lot of people who've gone to
prison over the years. You ask what was your mind space?
How'd you get through it? That every day was one

(26:15):
day closer, every day was putting one day behind when
I arrived and when I get out. People go through
traumatic things, and that's how they do it. Focus on
the good folks. We just had a big win. You
did your part.

Speaker 1 (26:31):
Be proud of that.

Speaker 2 (26:32):
There's no shame in that.

Speaker 10 (26:35):
People want to send me messages all day why we won,
But we can't get complacent. I don't think you're ever
going to get complacent. I also think you're going to
burn out. I watched a lot of kids grow up
playing sports, and their daddy, who desperately wished they could
have been a professional athlete, put their kid through too

(26:57):
many classes, too many practices, too many for too long,
and they burn their kid out. They lost the love
of the game, the passion for it, and once that's gone,
it's drudgery, and then it's not fun anymore. When it's

(27:17):
not fun anymore, you don't want to do it anymore.
So the kids were gone. They were going from the
sports by ninth grade, tenth grade, sometimes eighth grade, their
senior year, which should have been the capstone, they don't
even play. I think you have to keep some perspective
about it all. I've heard a lot of professional athletes
older after they leave sports say, you know, these parents today,

(27:43):
they're burning the kids out.

Speaker 2 (27:44):
It's not good for them.

Speaker 10 (27:46):
They're burning them out. They got them playing ball round
the clock, the same ball, especially baseball. That's the worst one.
But if your kids a quarterback, you probably guilty of
that too. Those kids need to be more well rounded,
have an escape from that. Sports should have been an escape.
You're so convinced to make them into a professional athlete.
I wish people were that focused in making their kids

(28:09):
into a plumber or electrician or welder, carpenter, roofer, because
that's the skills we need. That's the skills that are bankable.
That's the skills that make a difference. We've got a
great Saturday podcast for you. If you don't listen to
our show, if you don't podcast our show, or you
don't listen to podcast wherever you get your podcast, we

(28:31):
have a Michael Berry Show podcast, and you can go
to that podcast and hear anything we do after the
show is over. So if you didn't get the name
of a book, or you didn't get the name of
the person, or you didn't get the name of a
phone number, or you didn't get the phone number some
other detail, it's much easier for you to just go

(28:51):
to the podcast, fast forward to that moment, catch it,
capture it, write it down, move it on. Our show
has grown to the extent it has rapidly because folks
who listen tell their friends, whether that's the live broadcast
on the air, whether that's our podcast. So we were
getting the request over and over and over again. I

(29:14):
wish you were on on the weekend, so we added
to what we do to create content for the weekend
of a Saturday podcast. This Saturday, we chose with Robert F.
Kennedy Junior being named the HHS Secretary or He'll be nominated,
you have to be approved, an interview he did with

(29:35):
John Stossel after he dropped out of the presidential election.

Speaker 2 (29:40):
And I think you will.

Speaker 10 (29:41):
Find this to be a very very interesting and illuminating
interview with him. And now I will close because Ramon
told me I would forget and he won't remind me.

Speaker 2 (29:51):
But he told me I would forget and I didn't.

Speaker 10 (29:53):
I will close with what I should have started the
show with but I didn't, And that is that courtesy
of executive producer chat A Cony Knakanishi, the finest executive
ducer in all the land.

Speaker 2 (30:04):
Your week in review.

Speaker 10 (30:13):
The line in Smoking the Bandit where Jackie Gleason talking
a little food shoots out and it hits Burt Reynolds,
and Burt Renolds flicks it off.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
He's got a permission, And that's how's that behind.

Speaker 10 (30:27):
You got be thinking that I haven't heard anybody mention
having indigestion in a long time. Somehow, some way, there's
got to be an answer to that quick.

Speaker 5 (30:39):
Long time Republican leader Rich McConnell is stepping down, and
Senator John Cordy is one of three front runners to
replace it.

Speaker 10 (30:45):
John Cornyon is now lobbying his own party for a promotion.

Speaker 2 (30:49):
New Senate majority of leader.

Speaker 9 (30:50):
Senator John Fuhne came down to Fune and Corny and
and Fune won by a vote of twenty nine to
twenty four.

Speaker 2 (30:57):
What has John Cornyn done wrong? Yeah, he sell us
down the river.

Speaker 10 (31:00):
He ensures that Obamacare and bad bills Green New Deal
get passed.

Speaker 11 (31:06):
Willis ISD is asking voters to approve a proposed sixty
eight million dollars football stadium for its lone high school
in the Distorters.

Speaker 10 (31:12):
And Willis isdv'te down a sixty nine million dollar bond
for am new high school football stadium. You can't possibly
think it's a good idea for these school districts to
keep floating bonds to build massive football staff.

Speaker 2 (31:23):
Oh I do, Michael, I love my Friday night football.
Good pay for it.

Speaker 8 (31:33):
Houston getting some world class recognition after six restaurants were
awarded with Michelin Stars.

Speaker 10 (31:39):
I think it's much ado about nothing pretentious.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
BS.

Speaker 10 (31:42):
Please start talking about Michael Berry Show Award kind of
the anti Micheline Awards.

Speaker 2 (31:46):
And that is a food that you eat and love.
That is the opposite of.

Speaker 10 (31:51):
Highway hamburgers, lane butt, greeny peanut butters.

Speaker 5 (31:53):
Hotted cheese with great fans on top of bob.

Speaker 10 (31:56):
To cheese catch up white bread for my wife would
be cucumber sandwich.

Speaker 2 (31:59):
For Ramone, it's a potato salad sandwich. Is there anywhere
in town that makes a potato salad sandwich?

Speaker 10 (32:04):
Probably?

Speaker 2 (32:29):
I should probably tell those who were moving the show
for whom we are.

Speaker 12 (32:33):
New to you.

Speaker 10 (32:34):
Chattaconi Nakanishi are executive producers from Hawaii. So he works
spam into anything and everything he possibly can, sometimes discreetly
and sometimes just moldly like that because he loves, genuinely
loves still to this day, loves spam.

Speaker 2 (33:00):
Thank you and good night,
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