Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. Michael
Very Show is on the air. Trump can't handle strong
successful women.
Speaker 2 (00:18):
You can't handle women, particularly strong women.
Speaker 3 (00:21):
Trump.
Speaker 4 (00:21):
You never see him around strong intelligent women women.
Speaker 5 (00:26):
Here, we will undertake a large job and a large
duty that we have to fulfill that the American people
expect us to do by securing our border, to make
sure that our nation is a nation with borders or
we're no nation at all, and that we are making
(00:46):
sure that those criminal actors that are perpetuating violence in
our communities and in our in our cities and towns
and states, are removed.
Speaker 1 (00:54):
From this country.
Speaker 5 (00:54):
That there's consequences for breaking the law in our country. Again,
there has to be consequences, because when Americans the law,
there's consequences, and that will be the priority.
Speaker 6 (01:04):
And that is one of the.
Speaker 5 (01:04):
Reasons that today the American people have lost their trust.
President Trump will build it back and know that their
federal government is accountable to them.
Speaker 7 (01:14):
Long they got here right home, don't need any guns.
Speaker 8 (01:39):
Just The American people delivered quite an incredible mandate for
change in this election, with the popular vote in the
electoral vote overwhelmingly saying hey, we want Donald Trump as
president and we've had enough of the Harris Biden regime.
Of course, there's going to be resistance to change from
the swamp in Washington, and I think that's kind of
(02:01):
the point. The American people are saying, Hey, stop looking
at yourselves, Stop focusing on your own power, your own position,
your own bank accounts.
Speaker 1 (02:09):
How about we have.
Speaker 8 (02:10):
Leaders in Washington who are actually looking out for the
American people and on every issue across the board. That's
really what it comes down to with what President Trump
is trying to accomplish is we have to make sure
that our government puts the interests of the American people first.
Speaker 9 (02:24):
Jesus not long, not long, hide, and nine.
Speaker 1 (02:40):
Not long, don't gun.
Speaker 10 (02:47):
Long.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
I will fight every day to restore confidence and integrity
to the Department of Justice and each of its components.
The partisanship, the weaponization will be gone. America will have
one tier of justice.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Lady some call name Robert F. Kennedy, at his confirmation
hearings said something very interesting. He is President Trump's choice
to lead Health and Human Services, and he made a
(03:29):
statement about radical transparency. This is clip eight oh three ramoned.
Listen to this. By the way, I'm asked this every
time I play an RFK junior audio clip. He has
a condition where he has a degeneration of his vocal chords,
(03:50):
which are actually flaps, are not chords, but and it
creates a spasm. So what you're hearing is this sort
of spastic stress on his chords which do not respond proper, properly,
it's a dystrophe of part of those chords. But it
really doesn't matter because what he's saying is important enough
that we can listen through. But he's talking about this
(04:11):
idea of radical transparency. Listen, my approach to.
Speaker 11 (04:19):
Administration AHHS will be radical transparency. If members of this
committee or other members of Congress want information, the doors
are open. I've spent many years litigating against ANIH and
it's sub agencies, I mean it's HHS and it's sub
agencies nih C, C, FDA on FOY issues, trying to
(04:41):
get information that we the taxpayers paid for, and oftentimes
getting back redacted copies after a year or two years
of litigation.
Speaker 1 (04:50):
That should not be the case.
Speaker 11 (04:52):
And if Congress asks me for information, you will get
it immediately.
Speaker 1 (04:58):
So radical transparency fascinating notion, isn't it? Why do we
need that because everybody knows our government and our media
have been lying to us in that same vein. Matt
Taibi was an independent journalist who Elon brought in when
(05:18):
he bought Twitter, and he said, I want you to
go through all this data, the Twitter files again to
be known, and I want you to tell me all
the stories. I want you to write a report, an
independent report of how involved our FBI was in silencing
people like you and me who were raising questions about
Fauci and the COVID clot shot and a wu Han
lab and Hunter Biden's bribes. And he did well. Tucker
(05:40):
Carlson was talking to Matt Taibe and he said, tell
me the secrets you'd like to know as we enter
an age of disclosure. What do you want to know
who was president the last four years? That's an enormous question, Ji.
Speaker 12 (05:51):
Blink, I think it's really obvious that his statement dropping
out on.
Speaker 4 (05:55):
Twitter was issued before he knew the note explaining the pardons,
so it's just a coupe. And then what happened, and
when Biden suddenly came out and made Kamal of the
nominee of this sabotage of nord Stream. It will destroy
NATO COVID. There are documents that we know exist that
we're going to get now FBI communications between the Bureau
and a lot of these scientists, and it's going to tell.
Speaker 1 (06:18):
A crazy story.
Speaker 4 (06:19):
Next Russia, the FBI opened a probe into the sitting
president of the United States to ask the question of
whether he was working for a foreign power and what
evidence could they have possibly.
Speaker 12 (06:30):
Had the hacking of the DNC and the emails, And
then exactly at that moment, a DNC staffer was killed.
He was murdered for political reasons. A very high ranking
person the DNC told me that.
Speaker 4 (06:41):
The investigation of the Trump assassination incidents, an ex president
gets shot and the story's dead within forty eight hours.
The second one, the Ryan Ralph thing, that's not weird
at all.
Speaker 1 (06:52):
He has lived in Ukraine. What nine to eleven? How
was that going to that happen? And all the support
people living in our country cringing?
Speaker 4 (07:01):
What people are going to have their minds blown?
Speaker 12 (07:03):
Like the only way to stop disclosure at this point
would be with like a catastrophe that's so all encompassing
nine to eleven COVID that it just everything.
Speaker 1 (07:10):
Shuts down with the all transit progress. Stop that's that
critical race theory was not being taught in the schools.
Stop saying that, you crazy conspiracist. And it turns out
it was. President Trump is doing something about it here.
He was promising to get critical race theory out of
(07:31):
our schools. And we will get critical race theory and
transgender insanity the hell out of our schools. Taking measures
today with an executive order on that issue. So what
I'd like to do today We'll get to the news
of the day. But you didn't get that anywhere. You know,
(07:53):
we live in an era of supposed conspiracy theorists. You know,
we're these crazy conspiracy theorists. And it turns out that
the time between a conspiracy theory and that being confirmed
as true varies only by when it's no longer useful
to the left. We'll talk about what secrets you want
(08:14):
to know in this new era of transparency coming up.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
What these people have served years of jail and their
lives have been ruined and in many caves.
Speaker 11 (08:24):
Michael Barry, Joe, listen to me for a second step interrupting.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Carolyn Levitt is getting great reviews as president Trump's new
press secretary. She began by and by the way, we're
not going to be able to cover everything she does.
I'm assuming you'll get that information elsewhere. I'll just speak
generally to it. But this was a great example. You know,
(08:50):
Americas were panicked over what these drones were, and the
Biden administration wouldn't answer, and then they said they didn't know.
How can you not know? We have to protect the
airspace above America. And then Carolyn Levitt right off the
bat says, oh, yeah, yeah, we know, and they knew.
We know now and they knew.
Speaker 13 (09:11):
And before I turned to questions, I do have news
directly from the President of the United States that was
just shared with me in the Oval Office from President
Trump directly an update on the.
Speaker 6 (09:22):
New Jersey drones.
Speaker 13 (09:24):
After research and study, the drones that were flying over
New Jersey and large numbers were authorized to be flown
by the FAA for research and various other reasons. Many
of these drones were also hobbyists, recreational and private individuals
that enjoy flying jones in meantime, in time, it got
(09:45):
worse due to curiosity.
Speaker 6 (09:47):
This was not the enemy.
Speaker 1 (09:50):
That's all they had to do. People were payingicked it.
It was like an Orson Welles episode, or of the
world people were paying. Carolyn Levitt then took time to
welcome new additions to the Brady briefing Room. This is
the difference between Trump's first term and Trump two point zero.
(10:13):
He's no longer playing ball and trying to be nice
to the NBCABC, CBS's Mark Milli's Anthony Fauci's listen to this.
Speaker 13 (10:23):
This White House believes strongly in the First Amendment, so
it's why our team will work diligently to restore the
press passes of the four hundred and forty journalists whose
passes were wrongly revoked by the previous administration.
Speaker 6 (10:36):
We're also opening up this briefing room.
Speaker 13 (10:38):
To new media voices who produce news related content and
whose outlet is not already represented by one of the
seats in this room. We welcome independent journalists, podcasters, social
media influencers, and content creators to apply for credentials to
cover this White House, and you can apply now on
our new website white House dot gov.
Speaker 6 (11:01):
Slash new Media.
Speaker 13 (11:04):
Starting today, this seat in the front of the room,
which is usually occupied by the Press Secretary's.
Speaker 6 (11:09):
Staff, will be called the new media seat.
Speaker 13 (11:13):
My team will review the applications and give credentials to
new media applicants who meet our criteria in pass United
States Secret Service requirements to enter the White House complex.
Speaker 6 (11:24):
So, in light of these.
Speaker 13 (11:25):
Announcements, our first questions for today's briefing will go to
these new media members whose outlets, despite being some of
the most viewed news websites in the country, have not
been given seats in this room.
Speaker 1 (11:38):
Those podcasters, bloggers, social media influencers, talk show hosts, all
of them looking around the briefing room at the legacy media,
the old guard that was always there and kept the
gates closed so the new media couldn't get in. The outsiders,
the independents looking around like the Somali pirate. And Captain Phillips,
(12:00):
look at me, sure, look at me. Sure, I'm the captain.
Now look at me. I'm the captain. Now look at me, sure,
look at me. Sure, I'm the captain. Now you're the captain. Now, well, don't, oh, captain,
my captain, I know you you watched uh what's the
(12:20):
movie that that Dead Poet Society?
Speaker 9 (12:24):
Captain, my captain, say you god, mister Anderson, you hear
me set out.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
This is your final warning, Adison. How can you.
Speaker 6 (12:43):
People hear me?
Speaker 1 (12:45):
Okay, my captain, there's no street. I won't do freak out.
Speaker 13 (12:57):
He's the god, all of you.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
I would quite the scene, quite the movie on the
virtues of independent thought, challenging authority.
Speaker 2 (13:15):
You know.
Speaker 1 (13:18):
The idea that questioning things is healthy. You have to
suffer to do that. Right for those of us, and
that's many of you who dared question the COVID shot
when it came out. Well, doctor Fauci says, to take it.
(13:41):
The medical establishment says, to take it. Okay, they've been
wrong before. We're not bleeding people out with leeches to
get the poisons to remove to be removed from their
body anymore. Questioning things is healthy, Questioning things is good.
(14:04):
That's what makes America great is you can dare to
ask questions. And Trump is saying you're the captain now.
Elon Musk has said of Twitter, you're the media now.
And I'm gonna tell you something. The best journalism in
(14:27):
America today is being performed by people who are not
getting paid by the alphabet of news agencies. And they're
not people who went to a journalism school and They're
not people who have a mile long resume from the
New York Times of the Wall Street Journal or the
(14:49):
Washington Post or any other bureau desk or anything else.
You see, there are a lot of really smart people
who are asking good questions and reporting in good faith
on what they learn. You're gonna have, You're gonna have
(15:10):
somebody reporting on COVID that has no intellectual curiosity, no
medical background, no experience treating people. We've got doctors. We've
got doctor after doctor that has podcasts now telling stories
about what they're seeing, what they're learning, what they know
(15:32):
about how these particular drugs interact with each other, what
they know about how ivermectin makes a difference. Reporters didn't
want to hear that. The establishment doesn't want to hear that.
They want the experts. Trust the experts. I'm gonna tell
you something. You can be a good teacher without having
a teaching degree. You might just be a mommy homeschooling
(15:54):
your kid. Yeah, so I want to do something. We
did it this morning. I want to do it again
because I think it's very healthy to ask questions, to
be unafraid to ask questions. There are no stupid questions.
Tucker Carlson asked, Matt Tabe and I'm going to ask you, now,
what do you want to know? What secrets of our government?
(16:16):
You're the journalist, now you're the new media, you're the captain.
What secrets do you want to know? That we're gonna
ask It's healthy January twentieth, twenty twenty five is Liberation
Day show. Jesse asked who was paying for all the
(16:42):
illegals to come to America? You know, folks, we'll never
know the answer to most of these things, but just
understanding that none of these happened by accident. You know,
when you saw these these caravans of people walking from
Guatemala to the United States, I want you to imagine
(17:05):
pied Piper style that you're trying to gather. I'll make
it easy one hundred people to walk wherever you are. Okay,
So if you're one of our Los Angeles listeners and
you were to walk from I would make it easy.
You were just to walk from Los Angeles to Las Vegas.
And you didn't know these people before, you didn't have
(17:27):
any history with them. You were just supposedly with the
shared goal of ending up in the same place. I
want you to imagine the logistics of walking from Los
Angeles to Las Vegas and to Las Vegas. How much food, water,
(17:48):
shelter would be needed along the way. I mean, it'd
be a mess to coordinate. Think of the logistics in that,
tim Asks, I want to know what were g Gordon
Lyddy in company really after in the Watergate break in?
Nixon was a lot for that election, So why was
(18:09):
such a needless risk taken? Kim asks? What really happened
at the Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Las Vegas, Las Vegas
mass shooting. That's a good question. That question came out
from a lot of folks. I don't know if that's
Joe Anne or Joan. Joe Anne Joe Anne. He didn't
(18:29):
put an e at the end. I'm sorry, go ahead.
I wanted to know where Obama was really born? And
also is Michelle and Michael. You're the first person to
ask where Obama was really born? But of the emails
I've received today, Michelle's plumbing is an issue that has
(18:57):
come up. Probably it's certainly in the top ten of
topics that have been raised. A lot of UFO and
alien questions as well. David, what would you really like to.
Speaker 2 (19:10):
Know the truth about Marilyn Monroe and Dorothy kel Gallow's guests.
Speaker 1 (19:18):
Interesting, Okay, okay, Corey, what secret would you like answer?
I'll listen to you on my phone.
Speaker 2 (19:30):
On iHeart and Junior commercial breaks. Recently, we've been starting
to hear a lot of pure Spanish commercials alvogatobogatto, Why
did that.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
On the iHeartRadio app?
Speaker 2 (19:45):
Yes, sir, I'm going to be commercial breakthroughs that same
Alvogado commercial.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
Yeah, I would much prefer avocado to be uns with you.
But my suspicion on that is this, when when they
load spots, or a national company or the stream which
is all digital, that spot is loaded by someone by
(20:17):
an algorithm. They simply buy ten thousand spots across you know,
four hundred stations, and so they have not bought my
show per se. And that's why I tell people that,
because this question will come up a couple times a
year when you hear someone on our show wherever that
(20:42):
is saying buy my product by my service. They have
paid typically to be on our show. If it's on,
if it's on the broadcast, it's coming through the truck.
They've paid to be on the show and they want
our listeners because our listeners are the people you want
in your business. And I'm not just pandering. That's that's
a fact when you quote unquote advertise, if your advertising
(21:06):
is successful, then the people listening are going to come
to your business to do business with you. Well, if
you're advertising to an audience of people who are going
to eat three quarters of their meal and then claim
there's a hair in it and send it back and
then eat another one and then they're going to run
out before they pay the bill, then you probably don't
(21:29):
even need to be advertising for that. You know, years ago,
there was a phenomenon that came out called groupon, and
when it first came out, everybody in business is trying
to figure out how to monetize their spoiled inventory. So
sometimes a bagel shop or donut shop or some sort
(21:49):
of bakery. Inventory management is everything for bakeries because your
product in the morning is very valuable and fresh and delicious.
By the end of the evening it has zero value.
So the trick is to sell everything you can in
the morning and not make anything more than you want.
(22:09):
But you don't want to turn somebody away when they
come in. But you also don't want to waste the ingredient,
the cost of making a product that you're stuck with
at the end of the day. So some bakeries will
say at four o'clock in the evening, they'll go half priced.
And if you wanted a croissant at seven thirty in
the morning, you're not going to say, well, I wanted
(22:30):
it at seven thirty, but at four it's half off,
so I'll just wait. You want your croissant in the
morning with your coffee, that's fine. But some people who
will say, you know, it's four o'clock, I wouldn't really
want a croissant, but at half off, I would go
do it. And that way you get something for something
that you were going to get nothing for. It's like
airlines that ticket that gets really expensive because it's the
(22:53):
last ticket on the plane. If they don't sell it,
they go from three thousand dollars for that ticket to nothing.
So they have the revenue analysts and now it's all
AI has to be very very carefully programmed the algorithm
so you don't lose the ticket, and so it might
go from really high to at the last minute drop
down a little to try to lure somebody in. All right,
(23:16):
So what will end up happening is people will buy.
If they buy a radio station, they're buying our show
because you're the best customer, all right. But if on
the stream it's all digital, they may be buying spots
across all of radio. So they don't necessarily love Michael
Berry that's the Abogado guy, because that's not our listener.
(23:38):
That's why I tell people when you hear me say
a company's name, that is not advertising. That is an endorsement.
They sponsor our show. They put their name behind our show,
and I endorse them. I am telling you I hate
the term read. When I start in radio sales, reps
would say here's the read for this company. I'm not
(23:59):
re you think somebody out there is going to listen
to me saying buy your tomatoes from Bob's Tomatoes. Bob's
Tomatoes at this number. Well, what's the difference between me
reading it and some professional voice guy reading it. If
I endorse something, then I'm telling you I believe this
to be a good product. If it's not, you send
(24:21):
me an email. I'll send it to the owner and
I'll ask them if it's possible if they can make
it right. So I've been doing that in Houston for
twenty years with a lot of our new listeners. They
don't know my system, but I don't have quote unquote advertisers.
That's the guy that goes Sunday Sunday Sunday install big
electronics store. Okay, fine, but I'm not endorsing that, or
(24:42):
nor the Abogado guy or whatever else. But if I
say to you, hey, you know us coins is where
you can buy your gold or top tax defenders will
fight the irs on your behalf. I know those people.
If you ever have a problem, you send me an email.
I'll ask the owner to make it right. I can't
always sometimes the customer's wrong, but it's like having your
(25:03):
own better business draw. That's the economic model I set
up for our show twenty years ago, and it turns
out it works. So I'm sorry you have to hear that.
I wish that wasn't the case, but there we are.
The Michael Verry Show. Chris, what secret would you like
(25:25):
to know?
Speaker 2 (25:28):
Michael?
Speaker 1 (25:28):
I want to know if the Earth is really flat
or around? Do you really doubt? I'm curious, I'm not.
There's no judgment I'm curious.
Speaker 2 (25:39):
Well, I mean, I've never seen the earth for myself.
Speaker 1 (25:44):
Enough. Look, I'm not criticizing your question. I'm curious. Sometimes
people will come up with what they consider a clever question,
but they don't actually genuinely wonder. And I wanted to
know if you genuinely wonder, and it sounds like you do, Linda,
what would you like to know? I'd like to know
who was really responsible for the divines. It's not killing
(26:05):
of Jeffrey Epstein. I've been reading my emails today and
I have to tell you that if you were to
do a search term, the number one most popped item
that would return would be Epstein and the number two,
believe it or not, would be Hillary Clinton. There is
(26:27):
the perception, and I suspect there is a great deal
of reality to it. But there is the perception that
the Clintons, particularly Hillary, have done unspeakable things. And you
do I give a great deal of credit for planting
that seed so that people would be willing to believe,
because we tend to believe that men are more evil
(26:50):
than women. Is Rush Limbo. Rush stayed on the subject,
and he very you know, he was called a misogynist
for Criticizing her as a woman's hard hard. It's hard
for some people to remember if you don't have good context.
When Hillary Clinton came out, she was the most power
even as the first lady, she was the most powerful
woman in America. And we didn't have a lot of
(27:12):
women in a position like that, especially devious women in
that way, And so criticizing a woman was was you know,
de class a. You couldn't do that, but he did
because you had to. Jim, what would you like to know?
Speaker 10 (27:27):
I would like to know what happened to that manateee
that was in the Houston Ship Channel about thirty years ago,
running up against the swim near the ships and everything.
And I understand the Texas Parks and Wildlife picked it
up and shipped off to San Antonio, But what they
do with it? What happened to that manatee? Came all
(27:48):
the way from Florida checking out New Territory and he
was taken out of the water.
Speaker 1 (27:54):
So that's my How long was.
Speaker 10 (27:59):
That was about thirty years ago?
Speaker 1 (28:01):
Okay, I don't know if you remember or not.
Speaker 10 (28:03):
It was in the news. They head on the news
showing that manito.
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Oh here it is nineteen ninety five. Look at this.
Speaker 10 (28:11):
Yeah, okay, oh you got it?
Speaker 1 (28:13):
Yeah, all right, you brought back a memory. I don't know.
Sorry for everybody else that's not in Houston, but let
me just tell the story. I'm gonna read it. Nineteen
ninety five, amenateee made its way up Buffalo by you.
Houstonians were enthralled. I have to tell you, if you're
outside of Houston, we're known as the Bayou City. So
our watershed is displaced out of Houston through a series
(28:36):
of bayous, so little little arteries that get the water
out of here. And when we have too much flooding,
it is because the Bayous cannot relieve the water and
get it to the deep water to the Gulf of
America fast enough, so the water will rise above the
Byu banks and flood the town, which is why we
have flooding. Anyway, nineteen ninety five, manite made its way
(28:57):
up Buffalo by you. Houstonians were enthralled. She was only
here for a little more than a week, but she
would have stayed longer if it wasn't for those dogged rescuers.
News last week that Molly the manatee was spotted in
Galveston Bay jogged memories from twenty three years ago when
another manateee decided to mosey on up Buffalo by you
(29:19):
and vacation in Houston. Not since JFK and sixty three
had a visitor electrified the city. Okay, that may be
stretching it, but news coverage of the mammal known as
Macario Hugh then once it was realized Amenitee was a
she selena and Sweetpea was extensive. Workers in a city
(29:39):
wastewater plant near sixty ninth and Wayside first spotted her
November twenty eighth, nineteen ninety five. Manatees can typically be
found in warmer waters like Mexico's Yucatan or around Florida,
so the sighting here was a very rare occurrence. Why
it didn't go further and stopped by Allen's landing was
likely because it was attracted to the warm water out
(30:00):
of the treatment plan. That's how you always get good fishing,
you know, near a water treatment plant, because that water
is just pertly love that temperature. I like to sit
right in front of a heater when it's cold, So
I guess it's the same thing Ramon when you were
growing up did your grandmother have one of those ceramic
heaters in the bathroom in the wall that would be turned.
(30:22):
I mean they stopped doing those. Those were wondering. I
know they were a fire hazard and all, but those
were wonderful. Wildlife officials hoped the visitor would find its
way back into the gulf, and were encouraged when it
was spotted ten miles downstream on December fourth by several
crews navigating the ship channel. But she apparently liked that
(30:42):
little spot in Buffalo by You too much and was
soon seen back near the treatment plant. Hundreds would turn
out to get a glimpse of the sea cow. Wildlife
officials and onlookers laid out a buffet of lettuce and
other veggies for the manatee to satisfy its voracious appetite,
but low water temperatures and a lack of natural vegetation
in the bayou left rescuers with no other option but
(31:03):
to capture her. After eluding rescuers once about twenty, wildlife
workers got it right the second time when they managed
to snag her. See they're not telling you how they
did it, because the weenies will get all upset. How
they had to do it. About one hundred spectators cheered
as it became apparent the animal had been corralled and
was being pulled in. The Chronicle reported in its December
(31:24):
eighth editions, sweet Pea was sent off via a gallery
furniture truck to SeaWorld san and Tone. While there, she
threw up a plastic produce bag. Eventually she was flown
to a wildlife habitat where she likely lived out her days.
Just how positive, how popular was sweet Pea during her
time here. Apparently she pulled in a bigger crowd than
(31:46):
those at a keep the oilers rally held around the
same time outside city Hall. Well that's because they probably
didn't cover it as well. We'd rather have the manateee
here than but Adams, said Dana Frosch, as reported by
Chronicle column is Tom Marshall. You can quote me on that.
See that's a good story right there. We love a
good story like that, Like remember baby was it baby Jessica?
(32:09):
Remember that little girl that fell in the hole, and
how the whole nation was and then remember the coal miners.
Do you remember the Chilean coal miners? They were down
there for forty nine days, I think, and I don't
know if you remember this from one but one of
the guys, yes, you remember it. One of the they're
down there in this hole and their family is up
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up up at the top waiting on them. Hopefully they're
gonna be able to get them out of there and
they won't die. And it turns out that one dude
had was married and then he had a whole separate
woman on the side. Well that woman the side piece,
she shows up and she's bawling for Pedro and oh,
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my Pedro. She's praying the rosary for Pedro. And some
other woman says, well, my man's name Pedro too, and
he's the only Pedro man on this crew. Well, my
Pedro's fifty eight and he's he's from outside Santiago. Look
my Pedro fifty eight doing and he's from out saying yeah,
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but my Pedro is a big fan of English SLocker.
He likes Manchester. You none, that's some bit, that's my Pedro.
You can't be here from my Pedro. Can you imagine
that poor guy? They're pulling him out one by one.
Who's next? And this Pedro finds out what's going on
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and he's like, I think I'd rather stay down in here.
I got a whole lot more problems when I get
up there than I do down in this dangerous mind?
Can you imagine coming out and he's wore a slap
out black at night, Black is the underside of a
skillet because all that cold dust all over him. And
he's got two women in his ear, one in each year,
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screaming at him, and he's saying, can I just get
some rest? Can y'all just yell at me tomorrow? Or
pedro