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December 13, 2024 • 33 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and lower.

Speaker 2 (00:11):
So Michael Berry Show is on the air. It's Charlie
from BlackBerry Smoke.

Speaker 3 (00:22):
I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving peer is viewed
by some as downright undemocratic.

Speaker 5 (00:32):
Two six packs, Shiner nine and nine, sid Putine Ladder,
Lucky's Track Center, fifth of patrol Us down, Eddie Lue Cooler,
take a.

Speaker 3 (00:47):
Guess at all to do? I can feel a good
one coming on home?

Speaker 5 (00:56):
Throw in Rey Wildly Hubbard single, long deck Mother, any
blues I had before or gold.

Speaker 3 (01:07):
Another working week is over?

Speaker 1 (01:10):
No cheer saying so I can.

Speaker 3 (01:14):
Feel a good one coming a. Yeah, we go.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
We gonna get to feeling ride.

Speaker 5 (01:24):
We gonna keep this spider rock until the break of dog.

Speaker 2 (01:30):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
I can feel a good woman coming all.

Speaker 2 (01:34):
I just gotta get him calling it one.

Speaker 6 (01:35):
I came.

Speaker 2 (01:36):
I put in a hard day's words, put in eleven
twelve hours a day, and they ain't getting you. Truck
in the last right, want to cleep beer?

Speaker 5 (01:45):
Three blocks in the rack top Mustang followed us.

Speaker 3 (01:49):
Down to the leaking.

Speaker 5 (01:51):
Didn't have to think about that too long, skinny dipping
in the bright moon out situation couldn't be more ride.
I can feel a good one coming on. Yeah, we
were gonna get to feel it right.

Speaker 3 (02:14):
We're gonna keep this party rock until the break gone. Yeah,
I can feel a good one. I feel like a
good one. I can feel a good one coming on.

Speaker 4 (02:30):
They're making it last where you can't drink when you
want to, can't you have to wear a seat belt
when you're driving.

Speaker 3 (02:38):
Ras it gonna become discountry who.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
For our Friday drive home show, Yeah, we gonna includes
music of weeeling BlackBerry Smoke. And for those of you
new to the show, you gotta tell your story. People
don't know it so years ago. I don't know how
long ago. It was ten twelve years ago. My now
late brother Chris, who had the same passion for music

(03:12):
I do. The difference is I don't listen to any
new music. And he continued to listen to new music,
and so one day he calls and he says, hey, man,
I got the song you got to use on your
Friday drive home. I've got it. It's gonna be good.

(03:34):
And I said, you handle being a cop and I'll
handle my show, and with all due respect to my
older brother, I don't need you picking the music for
my show.

Speaker 6 (03:48):
Man.

Speaker 2 (03:49):
It's good, man, it's good. And finally we hang up
and he says, he says, well, at least check it out.
At some point it's called good One coming on by
BlackBerry Smoke, and again thought, yeah, I'll handle the show.
You handle being a cop, but whatever. Well, you know,

(04:12):
sometimes we put up a bit of a dust up
and then later we go back and go, may well
check it out. So I did, and it's that song
you just heard. And in the process we got to
know BlackBerry Smoke because across the country they're on tour
two hundred and fifty days of the year. It's got

(04:35):
to be the hardest working band in America. Really. They
live on the road. And Charlie and the rest of
the band reached out to me at one point and said, hey,
we don't personally know you, but you've chosen to use
your show, and wherever we go in the country, from
Oregon to New York, down to Florida, over to la

(04:57):
and all parts in between, I'll come up and say
I discovered you from the Michael Berry Show, and I
love this I've come to love this band. They did
a show for us one time in the studio where
we packed about seven or eight of them into this
tiny little studio where we were. I mean, they're they're
so cramped in there. And they did the music throughout

(05:17):
the show, and then we talked and they cut me
that custom intro that you hear. Hey is Charlie listen
to Michael Berry show anyway? So our listeners have grown
to become fans of theirs over the years. And we
start it's voicemail time. I should probably tell you that,
and Nathan from hilton Head Island in South Carolina called

(05:42):
because he's going to see Black Ray Smoke.

Speaker 1 (05:45):
Michael Berry. Nathan baths hilton Head Islands, South Carolina, BlackBerry Smoke.
I will be in rowe sheeat number seven. Found out
that they were going to be near to me only today,

(06:05):
and I made the best decision I've made a long time.
Instead of trying to take one of my buddies, I
grabbed me a ticket at the Johnny Mercer Theater. The
last time I was there, I was at the Donald
Trump rally September twenty fourth. Thank you for all that
you do for our country. I love you brother. I

(06:27):
only know this fan because of you. I can feel
a good one coming on. It's the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (06:34):
Well, thank you, Nathan. What a wonderful message. Next up,
we moved north to Albany, New York, where Taxi Steve
called in about the possibility of Joe Biden issuing preemptive pardons.
Happy holidays to Mike Kenner Ramone.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
This is Taxi Steve from small Bunny, New York.

Speaker 2 (07:00):
Just something really brief that I want to say. If
the Democrats weren't doing anything criminal, they wouldn't need all
those pardons. You know, he's right, But it's also the
case that they're talking about. Basically, say you talk about

(07:22):
above the law, a preemptive pardon to say anything these
guys may have done in the past, we're saying they're
never going to be held responsible for. Part of the
problem with that is that without the investigation and the

(07:47):
case being brought. You see, part of bringing a case
is making the case, arguing the case. We believe in
Western civilization that this should be done in open court
to an impartial audience, that the case should be stated

(08:08):
and reviewed and picked apart, and you get your defense
and if you cannot afford a defense, the taxpayers will
pay for one for you. They're trying to circumvent and
overrule all of that. But Michael Barry Shaw, you know,
I feel like we're in a good place in America.
The DEI programs are being shattered. That is good for

(08:31):
the country, sound, but it's good for the very people
it was designed to help and ended up hurting. It.
Really is what you want when you achieve something in
this country is you want people to say she's there
because she's good. That black guy is the vice president

(08:56):
of sales because he's good. And usually that is the truth.
But when you infect the workplace, the academy government with
this nonsense is silliness. You cast a shadow, you put

(09:19):
an asterisk beside everyone, and it is true. You leave
everyone wondering is that person there because they're good or
because they checked the box? Because if they're there because
they checked the box, there's somebody who was good who

(09:39):
isn't there. Right there's somebody who didn't get into school,
or didn't get the job, or didn't get this or
didn't get that, who worked hard to get it. And
you know who's mad right now? Asian Americans. oOoOO. They
studied hard, they came in first in their class, They

(10:03):
did the extra curriculars that they were told you got
to have to be a well rounded student to get
into the esteemed university, which has way too much power
in our society. They played by all the rules and
then they were told, yeah, you came in first, but
you stopped right here, removing the tape further down the track,
We're gonna let someone else win because you always win.

(10:26):
That doesn't work for people. That creates hatred, resentment. Let's
finish out our voicemail shall or I'll forget ramon. Jeff
called in about Pete Hegseth, and he said, it's time
for America to wake up.

Speaker 6 (10:47):
Hey, this is Jeff, first time caller, just hearing your show.
Very entertaining my point. You're talking about Pete Haggasi. My
question is America wake up. Who do you want a
proven combat soldier who's a door kicker or do you
want to man be bambdei guy, You make your choice.

(11:10):
We're either going to be the strongest nation in this
land or we're not. Have a great day.

Speaker 2 (11:17):
Very well said, very well set and true. At most workplaces,
you have a guy who gets results. Maybe he's the
top salesman, maybe he's the top operations guy. Maybe he's
just the best worker. And maybe he's rough around the edges.

(11:38):
Maybe he cusses too much, maybe he didn't go to
finishing school. Maybe he doesn't use the right fork, Maybe
he drinks too much, maybe he tells off color jokes.
But he gets the best results. And then you get
these people, effeminine men and women, not all women, but

(12:04):
some who don't understand that you should value results and
not the silly things that they have replaced results with
being polite, being nice, not being disagreeable. So these people

(12:27):
will destroy the best person in your organization. They'll drive
them out, and you'll be left with mediocrity. Oh but
it'll be mediocrity that uses the right fork, that follows
the right TikTok pages, that dresses the right way at
the right time, that watches the right TV shows. Happens

(12:50):
every day, happens in every kind of organization. Our next email,
actually this will be the last voicemail for the day
because I want to get to some other stuff. Is
from just north of Lubbock. Eric is his name, and
he connects the dots between defunding the police in New

(13:12):
York City and Jordan Neely. You see when you go
back and look at all the bad Democrat policies of
the last year, of the last twenty, you see these
situations that crop up that are the direct result if
you defund the police, if you handcuff the police, you

(13:35):
still have bad guys. You'll just have more of them
and they'll be more aggressive. And the rest of the
citizens are not simply going to stand by and say, well,
absent any police, we're going to let our women be raped,
We're going to let our elderly be beaten, and we're
going to give up everything we've earned for these turds. No,

(13:55):
that's not going to happen. What's going to happen is
the sheep dogs of society are simply going to say,
I'm going to step up and fill the breach. I'm
going to step up and protect if our police aren't
going to do it. And when that happens, the very

(14:16):
people who wanted you to defund the police and perpetuate
chaos and mayhem, they want to go after the Daniel Penney.
They want to go after the Pete Hegseeth they want
to go after the Donald Trump because they don't want
strong men. They don't want law and order and opportunity

(14:40):
and fairness. That's not what makes them happy. That's not
the drug to which these people are addicted. In any case,
Here's Eric from Lubbock with a great point.

Speaker 4 (14:52):
I'm Michael, Eric up north of Lubbock. You know these
guys up in New York City. So they defunded the police,
didn't they already put in their mental health programs? So
how can they scream victim when they've already or supposedly
they've established all these mental health programs instead of police action.

(15:15):
They've lost a lot of police officers. So that money
went somewhere, and I'm sure went into all their mental
health programs. So what does the family complain about. They
even said he was mentally challenged or having a hard
time or whatever. You mean to tell me that they
didn't take advantage of those programs. Interesting, have a nice

(15:39):
night there, Michael.

Speaker 2 (15:40):
I love your show. Thank you, Eric, Thank you very much.
Listening on k FYO out of Lubbock, Texas. You know,
the morale of law enforcement in this country had reached
epic lows, and that's not good. I think that will

(16:01):
be restored under Donald Trump. But you know, one of
the great challenges in this country is mental health, and
Jordan Neely did have a mental health problem. Now that
doesn't mean we should allow him to kill people while
he's having an episode, but it's a real challenges live, laugh, learn,
doing it big. On the Michael Berry Show, the Republican

(16:23):
Party will use its best efforts to eliminate daylight saving time,
which has a small but strong constituency, but should not.
Daylight saving time is inconvenient and very costly to our nation.

(16:43):
I used to run our AM stations in Houston. I
stepped down seventeen years ago to just focus on the show,
and that was the moment where I learned that the
proper terminology is not daylight savings time, which is what
I've always called it. I don't know if that's a

(17:04):
Southeast Texas thing, a Texas thing, or wherever you are
across the country. Do you say daylight saving or daylight savings?
We always said daylight savings time. The proper term is
daylight saving, but it's one of those terms that if
you say it right to me, it sounds weird. The
President in this case did state it properly, but I

(17:25):
don't like proper I like daylight savings and I kind
of feel like, if as a nation we can choose
whether we have it or not, we're ready to make
decisions like this, we can also choose what we're gonna
call it. And I like daylight savings time, so I'm
gonna call it daylight savings time for the rest of
this segment. Now you'll know that I know better and

(17:46):
I choose to be an idiot because it's just what
I do, and I'm gonna continue to do it. So
I'm in Houston, Texas, and before our show is over
at seven pm every weekday, it is dark outside. And

(18:06):
it goes back to when I was a kid. You
get out of school at three, you get home, you
jump on your bicycle. And I lived out in the country,
so I had to ride a while to find another kid.
You jump onto your bike. I'd have to ride a
couple of miles to get to Michael Stone or Damon
Mayfield or a Huckabee or you know, were at Toby

(18:29):
Shuts or Ben Warning and Craig Hobbs by the time
I got there, because you had to be home by dark.
That was the rule. Dinners at dark by the time
I got there, and we just got ready to think
of what kind of havoc we were going to cause
you'd have to go man starting to get dark. We
didn't have a cell phone back then where Mom could

(18:49):
text you and go get your butt home, so you'd
have to turn around and go back. I mean that's
that might not sound like a big deal now, but
that was a big deal. You didn't have any lay
time when you got home was awful. And my wife,
who is not one for small talk, has taken to
saying at seven o'clock at night or on the weekends,

(19:14):
at you know, five thirty or six, you'll say, it
feels like it's nine o'clock at night, and I think, yep,
we've reached that age, sweetheart, where we talk about the
weather and the time in the darkness. Because I do
it too. I'm not criticizing her. I'm in on it too,
and I think, yeah, it does feel like nine o'clock.

(19:35):
It feels late now, and we'll say this. I struggle
to go to bed every night. I've always stroked. I
don't want the day to end, and I don't have
the good sense to know that if you go to bed,
you're better equipped the next morning to wake up and
attack the day. But I live every day like it's

(19:56):
my last. So I try to milk every last and
then I go to bed too. Well, I got to
tell you, I do at least go to bed a
little earlier because it's dark earlier. Do you we do too? No? Yeah,
you do? Okay. Anyway, I think this is a great
idea and I like it, and I like it a lot.

(20:16):
I wanted to Earlier, we talked about Christopher Ray, and
that was a big subject yesterday. A number of folks said,
I have not talked enough about Cash Bettel being the
FBI director, and you know what, that's fair. Earlier we
played Jesse Waters on Fox News talking about Christopher Ray
and the oddness of him stepping down just as the

(20:39):
report came out, saying that they planted a bunch of
their people inside the building and around the building on
January sixth. They tried to set up President Trump. And
I think Jesse had a great phrase. He said, they
criminalized the MAGA movement, so exactly what they did. They
weren't worried about Trump leaving office. They were worried about
Trump coming back into office. They knew they had cheated,

(21:02):
they knew he was popular, and they wanted to end
him right there. Well, all of that sliminess, And as
I said, we will play clips of other people saying
something that I could say myself. But if they say it, well,
they structure their argument, well, they communicate it well. We
like to amplify that message. And we don't need all

(21:23):
the credit. You know, it's amazing how much good you
can get done if you don't need to get credit
for everything, no pride of authorship. So here is Jesse
Waters talking about the sliminess of Christopher Ray and the FBI,
and that that is why President Trump is bringing in
a reformer, Cash Patel, to be the FBI director.

Speaker 7 (21:43):
This kind of sliminess is why Trump nominated Cash Patel.
I wonder what else Cash is going to find in
the Bureau when he looks under the hood as.

Speaker 8 (21:52):
A foreign federal prosecutor and a public defender who defended
a lot of these types of cases. What you need
to show is whether or not the the FBI and
government agents were using undercover operatives and informants. On the
day of January sixth, Once you prove that, then you
defeat the insurrection narrative with the.

Speaker 2 (22:09):
Fbis on documentation.

Speaker 7 (22:12):
And what does this report do to the January sixth defendants.
None of the confidential informants were arrested or charged. These
guys were right alongside everyone walking.

Speaker 3 (22:22):
Into the capitol.

Speaker 7 (22:24):
But you're in prison for years if you're a defense
attorney for a Gen sixer in this drops after the
case was decided.

Speaker 3 (22:31):
That could change everything.

Speaker 7 (22:34):
Constitutional law professor Jonathan Turley.

Speaker 2 (22:36):
Says this quote.

Speaker 3 (22:37):
There is a.

Speaker 7 (22:38):
Question of why the confidential human sources who entered the
capitol were not charged as part of an operation that
the Justice Department described as an effort to shock in awe,
targeting everyone involved that day. This report does not find
specific wrongdoing or direction from confidential human sources in the rioting. Congress, however,

(22:58):
is likely to seek more information on these sources and their.

Speaker 3 (23:02):
Conduct on the day.

Speaker 7 (23:04):
Are you allowed to commit crimes as a spy for
the FBI and not get charged Because they said this
was the greatest attack on democracy ever said it was
up there with nine to eleven traders. They said, seditionists,
they're off scott free.

Speaker 3 (23:20):
You can try to overthrow the government. If you're an.

Speaker 7 (23:22):
FBI rat and just walk away, Congress has to find out.

Speaker 3 (23:27):
And what does this mean for pardons?

Speaker 7 (23:29):
I mean the Hunter Biden pardon already greased the runway
for Trump. But this reports all the amo Trump needs.
He told Time Magazine. It's going to start in the
first hour, maybe the first nine minutes. Now, if I
were president, I don't think I'd pardon J sixers who
were slugging cops.

Speaker 3 (23:47):
But if you were wandering around peacefully, come on.

Speaker 7 (23:50):
And it's not just cash buttel that's going to clean
house Tolsi's on deck.

Speaker 5 (23:55):
I've never call some persons here on the Being with
my colleagues is going to be a great d And
I at Director of National Intelligence is a really important job.

Speaker 2 (24:04):
It overseas all of our intelligence aation seats and its
need to reform. I think everybody would admit that. And
so we need to bring in a reform line.

Speaker 7 (24:11):
Now the deep state's never been this backed into a
corner ever.

Speaker 3 (24:15):
We have Trump.

Speaker 7 (24:16):
Assassination files that we want to release, jfk assassination files,
COVID files, Epstein, Diddy, What.

Speaker 3 (24:24):
About that pipe bomb? Is the FBI still working on
that one? Who planted that it's just another.

Speaker 7 (24:31):
Conspiracy theory that you were right about the lab leak,
the laptop and now Jan six, no wonder Biden's under
pressure to dish out more pardons.

Speaker 3 (24:41):
Who knows how high this thing goes?

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Bizarre is on well done stuff.

Speaker 7 (24:47):
This is the Michael Berry Show.

Speaker 2 (24:51):
That means, of course, today's show will be coming to
a close in just a moment.

Speaker 3 (25:03):
And we.

Speaker 2 (25:07):
Love doing what we do here at the Michael Berry Show.
We really do, and we couldn't do it unless you
supported us, so thank you very much. I also enjoy
so many elements of what we get to do, whether

(25:30):
it is talking about issues of the day, but also
promoting values that I think are important. Adoption, parenting, being
a good spouse, investing in your relationship with your spouse,
with your children, with your parents, with your employees, with
your country, civic duty. These are all things that I

(25:53):
get to hopefully increase the activism of in this country.
If we're any good at what we do, and that's
a real that's a ministry to me, it's a mission
to me. I also really enjoy promoting businesses. When I
started in radio nineteen years ago, I didn't use the

(26:15):
term advertising, I use the term sponsorship, and I view
it that a company who puts their name and their
money behind me, that I endorse as a service provider
or a provider of goods, that that relationship should matter.

(26:35):
It should be authentic, it should be legitimate, and that
hopefully we would increase their business because our listeners would
use their goods and services. But by the same token
that our listeners would feel like, hey, look, if I
need to hire someone in this field, Michael Berry's got
someone who can do that, and they're going to take

(26:58):
better care of me, and they're going to share my values.
Because every dollar you spend is like a vote you cast.
If if you want to keep Chevy in business by chevyes,
if you want to put Forward out of business by
Chevies and don't buy Fords, or if you want to
keep Forward in business by Fords and don't buy Cheves,
That's just how it works. If you want to keep

(27:18):
small businesses afloat, this is a time when people are
spending money don't normally because they're buying gifts. If you
want to keep small businesses in your local community afloat,
then you got to spend your dollars there people will
bemoan the Walmart coming in and driving the hardware the
local hardware store, sporting goods store, gun store, bike store

(27:43):
out of business. But Walmart doesn't drive them out of business.
The customer does. The customer doesn't vote for them. So
if you say I like to keep Old Bill's hardware
in business, but you go buy your stuff at Home
Deep or Walmart, then what are you thinks going to happen?
You can't hope Trump's president and vote for Biden. Doesn't

(28:06):
work that way. Another aspect of what we do is
I get to work with very talented people who create
this show, Jim Mudd, Chad Knockanishi, Ramon, Roeblis, Emily Bull,
and we've got some folks who contribute, Chance McLean, Rachel
Sandy who do so much, and so many of you

(28:29):
who send emails with a funny joke, a clever take
a perspective. Many times, if I'm talking about regulations in
the oil patch, I don't work in the oil patch.
And when you share how that's affecting your business, or
how the healthcare regulations are affecting you as a patient
or you as a doctor, that helps me. And that's

(28:50):
why so many of you get emails back from me, Hey,
tell me more about that. Explain that to me. Where
does that come from, what's the source? How many years
have you done this? Why is that the case which
you tell me about. I do love to hear from you,
and I am a work in progress as we all are.
I'm trying to learn about new things all day, every day,

(29:10):
just as you are. And I view it as We've
got this massive audience that is really a massive opportunity
for me to have a lot of people to help
me prepare this show, in addition to the talented team
we have who build this show. And that's why I

(29:32):
read every email, because I hear from people across the country,
across the socioeconomic spectrum, across every spectrum. Sometimes I'll get
an email from a black lady who says, hey, you
know you took this position on this, but did you
ever consider this? Oh interesting, And we might go back

(29:53):
and forth. Or I might hear from an Asian immigrant
or a Cuban refugee, or a former communist party official
has happened in Eastern Europe who says, hey, this was
what we did and why we did it. Oh, tell
me more and I developed my wife last because I
developed these relationships with people I'm never going to meet.

(30:15):
I don't even know what they look like, and we
email back and forth, and I get a chance to
ask questions that I wouldn't otherwise be able to ask.
Because you can google anything. Of course you can ai it,
but the perspective of a person with experience can sometimes
help give you texture in understanding an issue. All that

(30:38):
by way of saying that when you take the time
to send me an email through our website Michael Berryshow
dot com, I take the time to read it. I
can't possibly respond to everyone because if you think of
just hitting the response and then how long it takes
to compose a response and then it hit sin, it
would mean that I couldn't read every email, and reading
every email is something that still matters to me. Maybe
one day I won't be able to do that, but

(30:59):
for now I can. It's also why I tell people
who send me try to send me every joke or
forward this or hey what about this? I do one
per day and not anymore because if I get fifteen
hundred emails a day and every one of them adds
just one, that's three thousand and now, the system collapses.
The system works when people are respectful of my time

(31:21):
the way I try to be respectful of yours. You
can while you're on our website, you can check out
our merch store. Proceeds go to our team. You can
also sign up for something we send every afternoon that's
in between our morning show and our evening show, two
different shows, where it tells what we're talking about. If
I'm linking, if I talk about an article I read,

(31:43):
we'll link the article there. If I tell you about
a video I saw, we'll link the video there. We
put some silly memes in there, because come on, who
doesn't want to fill the world with silly memes? Right?
It gets you through your day, especially guys. Dudes love memes,
you know, in the middle. I don't care if you're
in the old patch or construction or selling cars or

(32:04):
whatever you're doing all day, nursing, whatever you're doing all day,
you get a funny meme. It just kind of I
don't know, It just gives you a little little bump,
a little get to you. I can get through this.
And finally, I'm on Facebook, I'm on Twitter, and I'm
on Instagram. Although I'm not very good with Instagram, and

(32:25):
I do post a lot of things on Facebook. I
post a lot of personal stuff. You know, today I
commented I waxed eloquent about the issue of earwax. And
sometimes I'll talk about breeds of dogs, or somewhere I've eaten,
or some dish I tried, or some trend of kids

(32:45):
doing this now or kids doing that. It's stuff that
may not be worthy of being on the show, but
it's stuff that I and then we get to interact
and create a conversation going on there, and I have
some fun with it. I hope you have a wonderful
I hope you make the most of it. And making
the most of it may not necessarily mean cleaning out
the garage or mowing the grass, or getting all of

(33:07):
your projects done, the rearranging done, or the furniture built
or whatever that means. Making the most of it might
mean sitting on your bum and watching football and just relaxing.
And sometimes yeah, you need that too. We'll see you
back on Monday. We do, as a reminder, a Saturday
bonus podcast, so if you follow on the podcast, you'll

(33:28):
get one tomorrow.
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