AM Show Hr 3 | Unique Traits of Past Restaurant Owners

AM Show Hr 3 | Unique Traits of Past Restaurant Owners

December 19, 2024 • 34 min

Episode Description

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Episode Transcript

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

Speaker 2 (00:11):
Till Michael vari.

Speaker 3 (00:12):
Show is on the air, and now a totally random
week in review from the past. Take a guess when
this was.

Speaker 4 (00:27):
What I ought to do is stop reading emails. I
am too accessible. People will say, hey, today there was
a moment where for point eight seconds the audio cutout.
Did you miss something? You need to know that because
that's not good. And then what it makes me do
is just rage. I'm way too accessible because if I
were to say, I tell you what, don't listen to
the show. I love your show. It's the greatest show ever.

(00:48):
Will then stop picking at every detail because you wear
me out.

Speaker 5 (00:53):
The Democratic National Convention is officially underway. Planned Parenthood Mobile Clinic.
They have set one up just outside the United Center.
They're actually going to be offering free abortion medication, inflatable
IUDs and vasectomies. Activists are handing out abortion medication as
they run around dressed as little abortion pills.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
My goodness alive, I'm not exaggerating. It is a bigger
freak show than a nineteenth century circus. The bearded lady, Oh,
she's having an abortion on stage.

Speaker 5 (01:22):
What's really been fascinating is to watch the men of
the Democratic Party model a kind of masculinity that is
certainly twenty first century masculinity.

Speaker 4 (01:31):
Tim Walls Doug m.

Speaker 5 (01:33):
Hoff can speak to men out there who might not
be the sort of testosterone Leyden, you know, gun toting
kind of guy.

Speaker 4 (01:42):
There is an actual effort to emasculate men and make
women stronger and meaner in our society. It's real.

Speaker 6 (01:53):
Parley Davids is just the latest company to drop diversity,
equity and inclusion initiatives following a campaign by an activists.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
EI and Woke.

Speaker 7 (02:01):
Policies only exist as a byproduct of silence.

Speaker 1 (02:04):
People. Being silent allows customers to be fooled into thinking
these companies have knock one totally crazy.

Speaker 4 (02:10):
Like, oh, we won't do it anymore. How did you
allow the people into your business who did do it?
That's the problem. Fire all those people and never hire
them back.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Rain Jocks.

Speaker 4 (02:26):
They half of my vision that was August twenty third.
You can put yourself on the back if you've got
close enough to that. Bobby writes, I would like to
try Marias, but how can I be sure that it's
authentic Greek? And then he puts ha ha ha ha ha.
So true, isn't it. You know, there'll be these restaurants

(02:51):
that'll open. It's always in a strip center. It's god
a same deal, same build out, same look, same everything.
The website will say authentic, you know, Greek or different
things they'll do, but Greek is a big one for
that authentic Greek cuisine. And I'll throw some Greek words

(03:11):
in there, tatziki and peta and yero and and then
you go in and there's some kid from the local
junior college working an extra job, and he's like, uh,
y'all want you want some of this sauce on there?

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Sure?

Speaker 4 (03:27):
What is that sauce called? No idea? There's nothing wrong
with that, but you're not really getting what I enjoy,
which is the full on experience, like Maria is one
foot in Greece and one foot on five twenty nine
at athenis Greek kid, I mean I love that. I
love that experience. What was our Italian the other day,

(03:50):
Ricardo with two seas? Yeah, I mean we I A
group of us met over there that day and j D. Pettigo,
who owns Velocity Business Products. J D is an aggie
and a redneck and a great guy. And Ricardo would

(04:13):
come over and he would say, this is the one
from is the Rizon, go through the whole thing. And
j d would be sitting right next to me, Look
at you. I don't understand a word he said. And
Ricardo would hear him say that the funniest thing in
the world. And and uh, Angus Davis who owns Texas

(04:35):
State Rentals, who looks like Jock Ewing in Dallas, he
didn't understand a word either, but he didn't want to
admit it. So when Ricardo would start talking, he would,
you know, move his eyes from one to the other
because he was explaining where this particular wine was from
and how it was made and it was the tannins
and the acidity but made it beautiful and and and

(04:56):
people that speak English as a second language from Europe
will often speak like Trump. They will use words that
most people don't use. You know that this thing is
beautiful or whatever. You're like, oh, that's an interesting thing
to call beautiful. But anyway, so Angus Jock Ewing would
just he would avert his eyes. He would pick up
his phone like, oh, he's getting a call or whatever,

(05:17):
because he was afraid somebody's gonna go which one? What
do you think, Angus? And he didn't want to admit
he didn't understand what he had said. Darla Christopher writes,
thank you for having Maria on your show. She truly
is a very special lady. She always greets us when
we come in, and more often than not she gives
us a free dessert. Her lemon cake is to die for.
We love Maria. She is such a hard working, strong lady. Yeah,

(05:43):
strong is a word there. You know. You say to
a woman like that, you sure do work hard, and
they're like, what is that? I said?

Speaker 5 (05:56):
What she did?

Speaker 4 (05:56):
I know you're proud of yourself. They're like me, work hard.
They know no other way. You wake up in the morning,
you go to the shop, You go home at night
to go to bed, and get back up and go
to the shop. And that's why they survived. That's why
of the Vietnamese who came here survived. That's one of
the Indians who come here survived. That's why the Greeks

(06:16):
in the restaurant business survived. And that that's my whole
point about supporting businesses like this, because you don't recreate them.
That thing you know she's been doing this. She say
seventy four fifty years she was eighteen years old. She
was a child bride. Scott Striback writes, Michael, I know

(06:39):
you and you enjoy an adult beverage with a cigar
on your patio in the evenings. I'm gonna tell you
how to get rid of flies, wasps, gnats, moths, mosquitoes
without using bug zappers. Although I have one or stinky
fly traps. I didn't ask for this, but okay, I'm in.
Firstly by a captivator to quurt stinky fly trap from

(07:00):
tractor supply, take the stinky bait and throw it away.
Then by a fifth of Taylor pork wine. Do not substitute,
pour most or all of the wine into the two
court container and hang it up in a location such
that the prevailing breeze will blow the scent of the wine,
which is imperceptible toward the insect population. Wah law. In

(07:25):
two to three weeks, rinse and repeat. You could reuse
the container, but I just used new ones. I just
buy new ones.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
He says.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
I'm somewhat of a high roller, you know. Sandy Peterson
was the first person to tell me to do that. Yeah,
she does. She does a little distraction, like a misdirection play.
You remember what was that quarterback at Oregon about fifteen

(07:56):
years ago, the black guy he had, He had massively
huge hands as chat. He'll know Oregon doesn't have black people.
They have black quarterbacks.

Speaker 3 (08:07):
He uh.

Speaker 4 (08:09):
He drops back and he palmed the ball the way
the way Michael Jordan would hold a basketball. He drops
back and the ball seemed very small in his hands,
really lanky, and he drops back and he goes to
fake a handoff, and when he does, he does he

(08:30):
doesn't have to. His arm is such that it appears
that he doesn't have a ball in his hand, and
he holds it behind his back and he waits an
interminable amount of time. I've watched this play one hundred times,
and they buy the fake. It's like a play action,
but it wasn't clash because then it's a planned quarterback draw.

(08:51):
And then he takes it around the left corner. That
was the misdirections. That's kind of what you're doing in
the Mosquitoes. We call the milky wine. Judy Rights Athenis
Greek Restaurant is wonderful. The rainbow trout almondine is my favorite.

(09:17):
You will recognize Maria as soon as you walk in,
and if you don't see her, you will definitely hear her.
All of the employees are very friendly and will make
you feel at home. Love your show, Judy Henry, you
know hearing her talk about the food. I used to
live next door to a guy named Aldo el Sharif

(09:38):
All though owned all those restaurant and it was a
little bitty restaurant. And although was half Greek I'm sorry,
half Egyptian and half Italian, and it was this rundown
old house. He was at two night ten West Timer.

(10:00):
We were at two twenty three West Timer, and sometimes
he would call and if I didn't answer, he'd call
my wife and he says, Michael around, see, yeah, he's downstairs.
I had my offices downstairs and we lived upstairs, this
old nineteen oh seven house. And she said, can he say,
can you please send him over? I need to see
him right now. Well, the first time this happened, I

(10:23):
was on city council, so people would always want me
to help them because there was a problem with the
city or an inspector or whatever else. And so I
go rushing over, although what's wrong. He's there by himself,
and he said, come in here, come here, takes me
into the kitchen. You have to understand when you pulled up,

(10:47):
although would park your card and send you in to
sit down. Take the keys, go inside, come to your table,
bring you very expensive wines. Pour your wine us tell
you what he was cooking tonight. Try to sell you
on what he was cooking already. Go in the back
and cook your food, serve your food to you, clear

(11:10):
your plates, and when you were ready to leave, escort
you out and put you in the car. It was
an experience, one man operation. There was a guy named
Lupie who was the wealthiest guy to come out of Enron.
He ended up being the largest landowner in Colorado. Is
very very very very very wealthy. And this was Lupi's

(11:32):
favorite restaurant in the world. And Lupie was always there,
although would tell me stories about So it would usually
only be a couple of tables that would be there,
but people would spend five ten thousand dollars they would
buy all these anxiety. Well, when he the first time
asked me to come over, it was very important but urgent.
He takes me to the kitchen and there is some

(11:54):
god awful fish that I've never seen. It's ugly. It's
a big fish in this big pot and it's laying
there and he hasn't started cooking it yet. And he
look at this, look at this with this thick, thick,
thick accent. Okay, what am I looking at all? Though?
You can't get this in the United States. Can't get it.

(12:18):
It's illegal. This fish is not allowed to be uh
exported from I might have been Japan or I think
it was Japan, and you're not allowed to get it
in the United States. And I got it, Okay. I
drove to Bush Airport. I got a guy that smuggles
his food in smuggles, you know, exotic things in and

(12:39):
I drove out there and he went out there for
like two or three of these fish and drove back
and there it was. And we were looking at it
like it was the Hope diamond, you know. And I
don't think I sufficiently appreciated it. But he was having
Loupai come that night and it was going to be

(13:01):
a very expensive evening and he wanted me to know
in hushed tones, did he tell me this that he
was going to carve off a piece of that fish.
And when Lupie was done for the evening and they left,
he was going to bring it over and he and
me and Andita were going to eat it. Well, the

(13:22):
problem is Lupie would stay until late in the night
and I had to be up early. But we played along,
so we come over. So he comes over and sits
down in our little We had a little bit tiny
apartment upstairs from my offices. I had apartments in the back.
My office is downstairs, and we lived in a little
tiny apartment upstairs. And we've never been happier. And we're

(13:44):
eating and all of a sudden there's some lights that
pull in next door to us, and he says, oh,
I have to go, and he rushes out and run downstairs.
When we look out the window and the casino in
Lake Charles had sent him a limo. So he was
an inveterate gambler. So at the end of a big night,
he would tell him, you know, pick me up at

(14:06):
eleven o'clock. He would fall into the back of the seat.
He'd sleep the whole way there, gamble all the next day,
and they would bring him back and he would arrive
back at whatever time ten o'clock in the morning, he'd
start cooking again, and that was that was a story.
It was such a such a fascinating character. He ended

(14:30):
up closing the restaurant years later. Many people think I'm
talking about the guy that owned what was the brunch
spot on West Timer, because that was owned by a
guy named No No, No. It was that same block.
It was a real popular brunch spot, and it was

(14:50):
owned by a guy named Aldough. He always had some
exotic Italian model girlfriend slash white wife. I can't remember
the name of the place. I'll mention it. Somebode will
send it to me in a minute and I'll mention it.
But everybody, it was a real hot, trendy, real hot

(15:13):
trendy brunch spot. It was on the north side of
West timor just west of Numbers, a little bit east
of Felix, which is now you know, there's cats right there,
and this little restaurant was right there. It burned down

(15:36):
at one point, and I can't remember. It was where
I first met Eddie Martini's wife Liz, because I called
Eddie and asked what he was doing that evening. It
was Wednesday evening. It was date night, and I said, oh, well,
can I have a drink with these? I mean it's
date night with me and my wife, you know, not
all our kids, but just just me and my wife.

(15:57):
And I said, well, how about I come by, I'll
meet your wife and I'll have a drink and then
i'll be gone. And three hours later we all part ways.
And he and she still tell that story, like this
guy weaseled his way into our lives and we've still
not gotten rid of him all these years later. No,

(16:19):
not Reeves. Look up brunch spots Montrose two thousands. I'm
surprised nobody has sent me a message with it. It was,
it was the hot spot. It was very trendy, very
very inside the loop, kind of crowdlestrata. So the guy

(16:43):
that owned Lostrada was named although so many people think
when I'm and he ran a good shot. They made
a lot more money than although ever did. But although
at one time was the finest of fine dining in Houston,
because he would, I mean, it was the whole experience.
I mean, one man, this one guy, and he had

(17:03):
a very expressive face. He had, he had dark skin,
he had he had kind of wash unwarsedt uh dark
skin and these very very expressive eyeballs. And even though
he was a wine expert, and he was an acclaimed
wine expert, he'd been on the front cover of Food

(17:24):
and Wine magazine. He uh, he was crazy and he
was my kind of crazy, right. I like that. So,
you know when you see that a new restaurant has
opened and that you know they're supposed to be from
this region of the world, and it's you know, kids
that looked like me serving it versus you know, Maria
or one of these experiences. It's just different.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
This is the Michael Berry Show show.

Speaker 4 (17:52):
Who's gonna finish?

Speaker 6 (17:53):
The story's a.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
Start where you ways do.

Speaker 2 (18:03):
When somebody knocks at the door?

Speaker 4 (18:06):
Jerry Muntalto writes, tzar, did you ever go to Athens
Grille around six' ten in the Ship?

Speaker 2 (18:12):
Channel?

Speaker 4 (18:13):
Now that was. Authentic it had a live band and
a belly. Dancer all the musicians in the band smoked
these really, long skinny. Cigarettes the inside of the restaurant
was decorated like you were in a. Cave, UNFORTUNATELY i
can't remember the, food BUT i do remember the. ATMOSPHERE

(18:33):
i find it funny when somebody, Says, hey that thing
over there that you just, did that's. Fine but this
over here THAT i know, about that is rually really the. Best,
okay but you hadn't been to this over. Here, no
but this over here THAT i, remember how was the?
FOOD i have no. IDEA i don't even. REMEMBER i
just remember the band smoked. Cigarettes it's all, day every.

(18:55):
Day the funniest. Thing it is the funniest. Thing how people.
Do they use to be a place in Downtown houston
Called Bubba's, barbecue and it was owned by An albanian
guy and he claimed his name Was. Bubba well his
name Wasn't. Bubba it might have Been, baba But bubba
sounded good and it was done. Up it kind of

(19:19):
reminded me Because albania was in the throes Of they
were in the clutches Of soviet. Communism albania was the
worst place in the world you wanted to. GO i
think It's tiara as the. Capitol you never meet anybody
that went To. Tiara when you just never meet anybody

(19:39):
that went To, albania you just didn't do. It the
country was absolutely suffocated by The, soviets and it was.
Corrupt communism of the worst. Order somehow he'd gotten out
and his head looked like a bowling, ball perched up
on top of his of his broad, shoulders and he

(20:01):
had this thick. Accent AND i enjoyed messing with, him
but him not KNOWING i was messing. With SO i
would go in AND i would ask him. Questions AND
i THINK i was the only person ever knew Where albania.
Was AND i would ask him questions BECAUSE i had
decided that he was a plant from The soviet. Government
AND i was practicing law at a big law. FIRM
i was, BORED i you, know try to kill an,

(20:22):
hour and SO i go over and mess with, this
with This bubba's. Barbecue but it was the funniest. Thing
it's like when An iranian Or pakistani buys a convenience
store and they put flags everywhere after nine. Eleven we Love.
America i'm not sure you, do but you sure do
have the rednecks con be, well you may you've been
over all these places over his, brother him And, mohammer

(20:44):
they got flags. Everywhere, well they Love. America they might
be pushing your. BUTTON i don't, know, maybe but, ANYWAY
i would goad him about Being albanian about the other,
countries and he would just cuss other country a barbecue
is not any Like albanians or famous for Barb and
it reminded me of this key and pill key and
pill skit THAT i think just nailed.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
It strove, Welcome well anybody like that's a good?

Speaker 4 (21:17):
Lady yes all, right first time that.

Speaker 7 (21:19):
First, time the first time for, time first time for,
you first?

Speaker 5 (21:23):
Time, yes ah, Right.

Speaker 2 (21:29):
So what's?

Speaker 1 (21:29):
GOOD i tell?

Speaker 4 (21:31):
You you have to?

Speaker 7 (21:32):
Have you puppy is what you're going to?

Speaker 5 (21:34):
Have?

Speaker 4 (21:34):
Okay don't they serve that in the cafe across the.

Speaker 7 (21:37):
Street you cannot give the puppy at the cafe across The.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
What DID i say across the?

Speaker 3 (21:50):
Street you sat by this?

Speaker 6 (21:58):
Mask my, FRIENDS id like to apologize for the.

Speaker 7 (22:10):
Behavior of my. PASSION i just feel bad in my
brain for people to think that your mouths will have been.
Raped but the food that is serving a tea cell
painting and mother, beaches these mother, beaches sons of my
beach across the, street what they be serving IS suppi.

Speaker 8 (22:33):
And and what do you serve here with the kebabybaky.

Speaker 3 (22:49):
Look at mouth care.

Speaker 7 (22:54):
Bobby baby? Baby you knowing how you're getting.

Speaker 8 (22:59):
Them, finally what is the difference between kebappy and? Chebappy
BUT i don't.

Speaker 7 (23:10):
Know, OH i have to forgive them in a nicer
book for the bustard mother beaches over there that serving
the chevappi put in the grilled, meat, salt chopped red pepperdized, onion,

(23:31):
cream cash.

Speaker 4 (23:33):
Mak, ivar then the cottage.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
Cheese what do you?

Speaker 7 (23:42):
Serve we serve the kepuppi and we put in the cottage,
cheese the, ashwar the cash, mark the, cream you. Know
then it's the diced onions sounds exactly like.

Speaker 4 (23:56):
Than the grilled. Meat then the grilled, meat.

Speaker 7 (24:01):
And then we.

Speaker 4 (24:01):
Stuned and across the street they do mother.

Speaker 8 (24:06):
Bitches over the said thy sons.

Speaker 4 (24:09):
And mother mother sons are lie.

Speaker 7 (24:16):
Last one pcstle AND i am people, SAID.

Speaker 4 (24:25):
I show.

Speaker 5 (24:30):
They were here.

Speaker 4 (24:42):
Go these, season my.

Speaker 3 (24:44):
Friends now it is paring for you to try the.

Speaker 4 (24:49):
Real good, fool not what the son my bits serve
across the.

Speaker 3 (24:59):
MyD, Shir i'll.

Speaker 7 (25:00):
Make sure the fun they'll GIVE U city five start
AS i can.

Speaker 4 (25:02):
Gulp he and pill was so. GOOD i, mean just all,
right let's open the phone line for the last segment
of the day seven one, three, nine nine nine one,
thousand seven one three nine nine nine one, thousand pot
me the best piece letters to come a hubb Mitter Michael.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Berry well'll close your eyes and drink me and going

(25:49):
on a truth through. HISTORY i want to see society
and we'll go back when time's young and you learn
the tugger up gun.

Speaker 4 (26:01):
There he'd be sixteen on the way when the moutains
closed about a side and rivers hill mines.

Speaker 2 (26:09):
Crime it was a year forty nine e those, days
And i'm. Gone it didn't WISH i could see.

Speaker 4 (26:18):
Live finally from The.

Speaker 2 (26:21):
Cowboys And i'm on to go time traveler Through, Texas.
Whndy i'm on to go time traveling Through, Texas.

Speaker 4 (26:31):
WENDY i want to be the BREEDY i and see
ALL i can see in My texas time traveling. Sheep
the state Of texas is the greatest in The. Union
we're lucky to call it.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
Home for nine years it was its own, nation and
throughout history it's held a special place in the hearts
of All.

Speaker 3 (26:57):
Americans we're gonna sell Break texas great history. Today now
here's your, Host Michael.

Speaker 4 (27:05):
Barry tomorrow when The Morning show is. Over we're all
gonna head over To Gallery furniture as well wishers Of jim,
mckingveille who we very very well could have. LOST i,

(27:27):
mean he had so much. Blockage and when you go
in there and you start opening somebody up from anything
can go wrong and. Does. OFTEN i get so many
emails from people who, say you, KNOW i lost my
dad WHEN i was. Fourteen he went in for a

(27:49):
surgery and they lost him in the. SEARCH i, mean
it happens a. Lot and, ANYWAY i would love for
you to join. Us and if you're one of those,
people because there seem to be a lot of them who, says,
MAN i would have loved to come over, There i'll
go to the next. One and you've been doing that

(28:10):
for ten. Years BECAUSE i recognize the name. Patterns this
would be a good time to head. Over lunch will be.
Served it's really just an opportunity to take a break
from the humdrum of, life from the routine of. Life
there are certain people who IF i, go, hey let's
go right now to do this, thing they'll go done

(28:33):
and they'll drop it and Go and then there are
a lot of people who would like to go but
spontaneity scares. Them it's an anxiety. Thing it's a paralysis
by analysis. THING i can't change you if that's how you,
are BUT i would just tell you're missing out on

(28:54):
a lot of. Life is that will be TOMORROW tix
thousand and, SIX i forty five. North but you know
that already Between parker And, Tidwell tidwell And. Parker and
if PEOPLE i won't be able to stay, Long i'm
gonna come. Over, well, OKAY i was really worried that

(29:18):
you be able to stay a long. Period just. Relax
one of the THINGS i have found is our people
who are called by our name are good people pay their,
taxes show up to, work raise their. Kids but there

(29:39):
is almost this all, consuming paralyzing concern and inability to
just relax when you look at cultural. DIFFERENCES i can't, dance, can't, won't.

(30:00):
Don't but you'll see some guy and he'll be walking
down the street and you, know flashy, clothes he may
or may not have a, job he, doesn't and some
music will turn on as a car goes. By he
will go into the most natural dance and it like

(30:27):
he feels. It he lives in that. Moment and it
might just be that thing That snoop does where he
just he doesn't really kind of, move just let's let's
some music wash over. Him trump supporters don't do. THAT
i don't do. That it is it's in the, wiring
it's in the, culture it's in the it's a but

(30:51):
by the same, token the guy who can do that
is often the guy who isn't in any way involved
in the raising of his, kids and he didn't worried about,
it isn't in any way worried about having a job
or paying his bills or what could. HAPPEN i got
a buddy who's a ski instructor and we've been friends
for almost twenty. Years and we got to be friends

(31:14):
because he taught my kid as their ski. Instructor and
he's my exact same, age and he's a ski instructor
during the winter and mountain bike instructor during the, summer
and my kids he's he's like their older. Brother he's
so close to. Them they're so close to, him and
even though he's my, age he's more like a. Kid
AND i always, say you, know his name Is. Howie He's,

(31:36):
canadian AND i always Say, HOWIE i WISH i could
be like. You you just you don't you JUST i can't.
RELAX i will never be a good skier or downhill
mountain biker Because i'm white and. Knuckling i'm too worried
about what could go. Wrong and he he just flows through.

(31:57):
Him it's it's it's. Operatic it's like In Boondock, saints
When Willem, dafoe you, know the opera plays and he's
figuring out what the crime is and he kind of
flutters through The it is very natural to. Him and
then he, says, WELL i WISH i could be like,
you Because i've got enough money to survive for a,

(32:19):
week BUT i have nothing IF i break my, leg
to have no, assets no, savings and you think about
everything that go. WRONG i guess there's a balance between the, two,
RIGHT i don't. Know my friend The Aggie plumber, WRITES
i had to take a moment and send you an.

(32:40):
Email have you ever Caught wino one of those fly
traps like that guy was talking. ABOUT i wouldn't waste
your time telling you if this wasn't serious. BUSINESS i
was so devastated by. One one TIME i looked up
what it was made of and it's so. Awful they
listed as quote putrefied egg solids. Verbatim i'm not making this.

(33:06):
Up you will remember that smell for the rest of your.
LIFE i got so many emails to that. EFFECT i think.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
That.

Speaker 4 (33:16):
PEOPLE i think that old boy was playing with. ME
i think he was trying to send me skype hunting or.
Something all, right we'd love to see you tomorrow At Gallery.
Furniture we're going to get there as soon as the
show's over to. Eleven we will head over and wish
macwell and meet other. Listeners we might have an informal

(33:37):
impromptu singles thing. Too you, know maybe the singles people
will notice the other singles people be walking around. Looking
you got something on your left. FINGER a REMINDER i
love to hear from. You if you are buying something For,
christmas if you're getting ready for your new, year you
need a NEW. Cpa we just finalized all our estate
planning With Christine. Weavers she still makes house. CALLS i

(33:59):
love of. It getting all your medical in order for
your new, year getting your your, jewelry your gifts For.
Christmas email. ME i will connect you with the owner,
directly AND i love to do it

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