Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air. It's Charlie from
BlackBerry Smoke. I can feel a good one coming on.
Speaker 2 (00:24):
It's the Michael Berry Show. I've got an email earlier
weeks older.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
No cheer for milady, and so.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Women don't like you to be harsh. It's it okay
to criticize Hitler. So I'm not very nice about Hitler.
Either I'm stalin or so. They think you always need
to be nice. This is the nice neighbor syndrome, all right,
But you're not the one that talks to the young
(00:54):
boy who's now made it into adulthood and he got
his winger cut off and the people who should have
protected him didn't and he's mad about it. But it's
sweet ladies who talked him into cutting his wind were off.
But now his life is ruined? Should I it is
okay if I'm not very nice in those sweet ladies?
(01:14):
Would that be okay? I got to tell you, it's
so nice to have a press secretary in Carolyn Levitt,
who is fearless. See, I've come to understand that the
nice neighbor is part of the problem. What we need
(01:36):
are more people who are fearless, more bulls in the
China shop, more people who understand that bringing real change
back to America, restoring America means ruffling feathers. And if
you can't handle upsetting other people, then you're not part
of the solution. A lot of people will email and go, hey, hey,
(02:01):
won't you call out this? And I said, hey, what
you posted to social media? And I reap I couldn't
do it. Well, you might upset somebody. I'm okay, I'm
setting people. It's refreshing to have a press secretary who
is fearless and a president who is fearless and being
selected because you are fearless rather than checking off the
(02:24):
DEEI boxes.
Speaker 1 (02:26):
That makes me happy. So the nice neighbor lady she
emails me and says.
Speaker 3 (02:32):
Why do you always pick on Carin Jean Pierre and
call her the left handed lesbian immigrant. That's not very nice.
I'm not here to be nice, not my job. But
since you ask why I do that. The first thing
(02:52):
she said at her very first press briefing when she
started her job representing the White House to the nation
and the world.
Speaker 1 (03:05):
Here was the very first thing she said.
Speaker 4 (03:10):
I am obviously acutely aware that my presence at this
podium represents a few. First, I am a black, gay
immigrant woman, the first of all three of those who
hold this position. Say that again, Ramon, I am obviously
acutely aware that my presence at this podium represents a few. First,
(03:37):
I am a black, gay immigrant woman, the first of
all three of those who hold this position.
Speaker 3 (03:44):
She is acutely aware, and I suspect she would like
us to know that as well. I can see that
she's black. She'd not have to tell me that. I
suspect she's a woman, although you can't know if she
was born that way. She's a Democrat after all, but
I didn't need to know if she slept the girl
or boy didn't matter to me. By the way, she
(04:05):
was the person she was sleeping with also connected, and
now she sells her influence having worked for the Biden administration,
told lies on his behalf.
Speaker 1 (04:15):
I didn't know she was an immigrant? Why would I?
Why did I need to?
Speaker 3 (04:22):
Because you have to remember that when Joe Biden was
running for president in the primary, he basically said, look, Democrats,
I know y'all don't like white men, but I still
want to be president. So how about this, I'll go
get a black woman and she'll be my vice president
(04:44):
if you let me be president, which is what I've
always wanted my entire life. Been fifty years of lying,
cheating and stealing and doing this to get to be president.
If you will let me be president, I'll make sure
I'm the last white man to ever be president.
Speaker 1 (05:00):
That there are a lot of people in corporate America
who've made that deal. If you'll let.
Speaker 3 (05:05):
Me be the CEO, I'll make sure I'll surround myself
with all non white men so that after me, I'll
be the last one.
Speaker 1 (05:14):
But just can I just be This is.
Speaker 3 (05:17):
Going on all over corporate America and Joe Biden that
was the deal he cut, and he said, I commit
I will select a black woman from my vice president.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
And they said, well, who you got in mind? Nobody.
Speaker 3 (05:33):
I'll just tell you, out of over three hundred million
people in this country, I will I will cut out
ninety three percent of them. That's the non black is it?
Ninety percent of them? I'll cut out ninety percent of
the population. Anybody that's not black, I won't I won't
even consider to be president. Should I die, well, you're
(05:55):
old man. You might die any moment, doesn't matter. I
will limit my choice to ten percent of people, and
then I will cut that in half because we don't
need another dude with a dog. I got one already,
so will somebody that was born without a doll. We'll look,
we're going to the chromosome level, all right. So you're
choosing from about five percent of the population for who
(06:15):
would be the best choice.
Speaker 1 (06:16):
Yes. Wow, if I told you that you could only choose.
Speaker 3 (06:23):
Amongst five percent of the population to be the quarterback
of your team, your professional team. You got season tickets,
you paid good money for you, you wear the jersey, you
get stickers.
Speaker 1 (06:32):
On your truck.
Speaker 3 (06:33):
You go, I want the best. Not yet, No, that's
what we got. That's what Joe Biden committed to. Now
here's what's crazy. A lot of people don't remember this.
One of the choices before Kamala Harris was another Californian
who was more highly regarded. Karen Bass. Yeah, you know,
(06:56):
the dumb, dumb mayor of La She was on a
short list. The fact that she was part of a
group Vincent almost they called him.
Speaker 4 (07:06):
That was a.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
Castro youth group.
Speaker 3 (07:12):
That would have been okay, but we had audio of
her saying that Castro system was better than our system,
so she was shelved in favor of Kamala Harris Ramon,
did you just accidentally hit the music early? What kind
of lack of professionalism? Are you ready to go home
(07:36):
Friday night? You'd like to well, I didn't want to know.
It's a family program and I just put that over
Michael Barris Michael Barry's show. So yay.
Speaker 1 (07:50):
I have known a lot. Now I say a lot.
It feels like a lot.
Speaker 3 (07:56):
Of people who have either themselves fallen prey to Alzheimer's
or their parents have, or as my mother called it,
old timer's. Alzheimer is not an easy name to pronounce,
and in case wondering why we use a somewhat difficult
(08:19):
name unless you're German, I suppose to pronounce Alois. Alzheimer
was a psychiatrist German psychiatrist who lived in the second
half of the nineteenth century in the first half of
the twentieth, so late eighteen hundreds are late nineteen hundreds, and.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
He had the first published case.
Speaker 3 (08:43):
This is why scholarship is so important of something called
pre senile dementia, and it would later be named in
his honor. Now that's a great honor or not, but
the fact that he was able to label it and
identify it. If you can accurately identify a condition like
(09:07):
this in a set of a pattern of behaviors or symptoms,
you can now study, all right, what seems to work
and perhaps supply it. If we didn't know we had
the flu or the common cold, or any of a
(09:27):
number of different conditions, then doctors would not know that
there was a good likelihood we could treat it with
this or that. In the scientific world, being able to
tag and categorize and put things into a pigeonhole a
bundle is very, very helpful. So I have noticed that
(09:48):
there seems to be and Robert F. Kennedy's talked a
lot about this, and increase in the number of people
suffering from this condition. And it's painful to watch, very painful.
One of the things that makes it so painful. In
some ways, and I don't take this the wrong way,
I understand in some ways it might be easier for
(10:12):
the loved ones for a person to die than to
live but live as a shell that can't know who
you are. In some ways, that's a harder process. I'm
not saying not saying we put people to death, obviously not.
But I have often heard it said that Alzheimer's is
(10:34):
not hard on the patient.
Speaker 1 (10:35):
It's hard on everybody else.
Speaker 3 (10:38):
So many friends going for years and years, depends on
how long the mother or father lives with it.
Speaker 1 (10:45):
And you go see mom and she doesn't some day
she doesn't know.
Speaker 3 (10:48):
Who you are. Well, that's wow. Where do we put
that in the box of things we process? Where do
we put that? That's tough man. So anyway, RFK Junior
was being questioned at his nomination hearing, and he was
(11:13):
talking about the fact that the National Institutes of Health
have funded over eight hundred studies on Alzheimer's, all based
on a hypothesis twenty years old. That is fraudulent. Now,
(11:36):
let me explain why this is evil if we were
trying to understand a condition. But the basis of the
condition was We've got these people who who play football
and they keep falling out, some of them die, some
of them writhe and some of them have rab domiosis
(12:00):
or where it is my kid had that. But no
matter what, nothing we're doing seems to work. We blow
in their face, we pat them on the back, we
talk nicely to them, Well, why aren't you giving them water? Well,
twenty years ago we learned that water is really really
bad for you before and during workouts. Oh okay, so
(12:27):
we're trying everything butt water, and what we're finding is cramping.
What we're finding is what we now know as dehydration.
But we try everything butt water because twenty years ago
it was told to us that water is very bad
before or during a workout or anything that hydrates you.
(12:49):
So we're gonna try. We're gonna spend billions of dollars
eight hundred studies on ways to improve these symptoms. And
here are the symptoms and all the symptoms of dehydration, right,
and advancing dehydration as it furthers in as you continued
to work out two a days. Let's say his point
(13:11):
was you lied to us. And by the way, it's
a lie. It's not an omission, because there are companies
who did this on purpose, and that's the evil they
don't want you knowing about.
Speaker 1 (13:27):
So listen to this. The gold standard.
Speaker 5 (13:33):
What means real scientific research with replication of studies, which
very rarely happens now at NIAH we should be giving
at least twenty percent of the NIH budgets to replication.
We should have to make sure that all the science
is published with the raw data. We should make sure
that the peer reviews are also published. We and you know,
(13:57):
And I'll give you a quick example. Years ago, Niage
Science has did a study on amyloid on Alzheimer's which
they said it was caused.
Speaker 1 (14:08):
By amyloid black.
Speaker 5 (14:10):
After that, Aniage shut down studies of any other hypothesis.
Twenty years later, we now know that those studies were fraudulent,
and i Age has funded eight hundred studies on a
fraudulent hypothesis, and we've launched twenty years and figuring out
how to cure for Alzheimer's. And that's just one example.
(14:31):
I could give you hundreds. We need to end that.
We need to end the old boys system. We need
to have replicatable science and be completely transparent about fraud data.
Speaker 1 (14:43):
Coffee dehydrates you.
Speaker 3 (14:45):
So what if coffee managed to do a study that
says water alone is terrible before and during a workout,
and so we studied everything else as to why these
people were falling out, and all the while we're pouring
more coffee down their throats.
Speaker 1 (14:59):
And by the way, it was your that was dying
for this.
Speaker 3 (15:03):
Michael Berry's show sort of just listing the executive orders
and reading them off. I've not been able to cover
all the amazing things our president has done, so in
time we will.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
That's why we're not a breaking news show.
Speaker 3 (15:19):
It'll still just be I'll still be just as important
next week when people have moved on to the next subject.
President Trump has signed a number of executive orders targeting
the military. We want the finest fighting force in the world,
and that's what he's working toward, including prohibiting gender radicalism
(15:43):
in the military, as he called it, eliminating diversity, equity
and inclusion programs, signing orders reinstating military members forced out
over the plot shot mandate. We keep hearing that we
don't have enough nurse says, we don't have enough doctors.
We don't have enough soldiers, we don't have enough marines,
(16:03):
we don't have enough sailors, we don't have enough airmen.
How many good ones, experienced ones, committed ones did you
send home to unemployment because they wouldn't take the clock shot. Well,
let's bring them back to start with and give them
(16:23):
back pay. Let's just start right there, his executive orders
that he's already signed. And I say this because we
haven't covered him yet and you may not know him.
Number one discharge service members who identify as transgender or
are receiving transgender treatments for failing to meet physical and
(16:44):
mental fitness requirements.
Speaker 1 (16:48):
Used to when you went into the military.
Speaker 3 (16:52):
And you can ask your uncles who served in Vietnam
era if you had a mental health problem, they sent
you home. Another one banning the use of invented pronouns
in the military, So you can't identify as a dog,
even if.
Speaker 1 (17:10):
You roof or a sock or a giraffe.
Speaker 3 (17:16):
You must be a he or a she as assigned
at birth, Trust the science. Another one banning service members
from using bathrooms, changing rooms, or bedrooms of the opposite sex. Well,
I can tell you, not being a veteran, but no
(17:37):
one plenty myself. There's no man that's going to have
a problem if a pretty girl comes in the boy's bathroom.
But the women do not want men in their bathrooms,
and now they won't.
Speaker 1 (17:51):
He's protecting the women. Too bad more of them didn't
vote for him. Huh.
Speaker 3 (17:57):
Another one to end all exists and future DEI programs
in the military. Seems pretty simple. When the Chinese attack,
you want the strongest, toughest, most able bodied individuals we
have ready to defend our shores, not the person who
(18:19):
checked the box.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
Next, order an internal review.
Speaker 3 (18:26):
Of all discrimination in the military due to DEI. Let
me tell you something. This transparency leads to investigations. Investigations
lead to results, Results lead to solutions and punishment for
those who conducted this behavior. Another one prohibiting the DEI
(18:50):
and gender ideologies from being taught in military academies if
that's where our top officers are going to be trained,
which historically was the goal. Anyway, General Patton said he'd
rather what he said, a dozen aggies from Texas A
and M than fifty West Point graduates.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
I forget the numbers, but that'll do.
Speaker 3 (19:16):
The Corps of Cadets being something he honored and respected. Yes,
I'm pandering to Texas A and M University. I got
a lot of friends who went there and who served
in the corps. Another one restoring military members discharged for
refusing to take the clock shot COVID nineteen vaccine. God
(19:36):
bless you, Donald Trump. Those people need to go back
to work where they want to be, and finally mandating
the process to develop an American iron Dome. He's pretty simple,
doesn't it. Meanwhile, the types of people who hate what
he's doing CNN are suffering. I don't think I got
(20:02):
to this story because I keep rolling it over to
the next day seeing in laid off some two hundred
employees as their ratings continue to plummet. This ain't government Workfellas.
If you can't perform, you're out. The moment at which
our show cannot draw listeners and partner with companies who
(20:27):
want to be our partner in their conduct of business,
we're out. This is not a charity. I'm not behind
this microphone with the talented team I have because we
need more white males in media, I assure you, or
(20:48):
because I have a pretty voice, or anything else. We
are here because what we do draws a community of
which you are a part, and sponsors who want to
support what we're doing, and as a result, you support them.
Speaker 1 (21:09):
So when you need to buy something, whether that be.
Speaker 2 (21:12):
Gold or a roof or.
Speaker 3 (21:18):
Banking or whatever else, as long as you use the
people who support us and sponsor our show, people email
me every day who sponsors you for this? Then the
business model works and you get to listen to the
show for free, and we get.
Speaker 1 (21:33):
To eke out a lead litle bit of money.
Speaker 3 (21:37):
To take care of our families, and we get to
meet here every day and do what needs to be
done to say this country.
Speaker 1 (21:45):
When CNN, when their ratings.
Speaker 3 (21:49):
Took such a hit because they got that far out
of touch, and what happened.
Speaker 1 (21:57):
They got a disease Trump delusions syndrome.
Speaker 3 (22:01):
It caused them to say and do really stupid things.
That's why Jim Acosta's basically gone. That was their attempt
to say, we know he went too far. Remember he
would screaming at Donald Trump. He was screening at the
pressing like a child. It was sad to watch goodbye
(22:21):
Joe me.
Speaker 1 (22:22):
O, MYO.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
Let the door hit you on the way out. These
are good times, folks. If you can't find joy in
the good things that are happening right now, I suggest
you can't find joy because these are good times.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
And I want to be very clear.
Speaker 3 (22:40):
I love Donald Trump and I love the team he's
bringing in, but I loved you too, because if you
hadn't done what you've done, to get him elected.
Speaker 1 (22:50):
Then he'd be at Marlago playing golf right now. And
that's not what Idiots. Every credible picture. If you don't
like them, we'll reprint them or refund your money. No
matter who's father. It is the Michael Very Show.
Speaker 5 (23:06):
You haven't photo map, your photo matters.
Speaker 1 (23:10):
I know.
Speaker 3 (23:10):
If you've been with us for a while, be suburn
is our last segment on the Friday Drive fool Too,
And that's always kind of a bittersweet moment because it means,
you know, we get to go home to our families
like you're headed home to yours in most cases, sure,
and we love going home to our families, don't get
(23:32):
me wrong. Ramon, so that you know a little bit
about us, has two little boys, Oliver McCrae is youngest
and July Augustus is oldest.
Speaker 1 (23:44):
Who are now eight and nine.
Speaker 3 (23:47):
Is two little boys named as you probably know for
the characters in Lonesome Dove. And his wife Amy, who
is an IT professional. She's a computer good that's what
she does. And he's lucky enough that both his parents
are still alive. I have a lot of weekends. He
goes and sees them. He has a sister. He's very,
(24:09):
very close, kind of what you would expect of an
old fashioned Chicano Hispanic Texas family.
Speaker 1 (24:17):
They are all about family. Everything is family.
Speaker 3 (24:22):
And then we've got our creative director, Jim Mudd, his
lovely bride, Dusty. Yes, her full name, no joke is
Dusty mud Yep. Think about that for a moment. He's
got two daughters, in fact, one of whom I think
Danny had a birthday yesterday? Did I forget?
Speaker 1 (24:38):
Was yesterday? Day before?
Speaker 3 (24:38):
Jim, I'm sorry, I just realized I forgot to announce
Danny's birthday. So happy birthday to his sweet daughter, one
of his two, Chatta Coney Knakanishi, our executive director, is
married to a sweet woman named April, who is a
high powered attorney. And then he has two kids who
are teenagers. His oldest his daughter Amara Pelnika Nakanishi. These
(25:03):
are good Hawaiian names because he's a very proud Hawaiian
of originally Japanese and Portuguese descent.
Speaker 1 (25:10):
And his son.
Speaker 3 (25:12):
Kai Kai is a great Hawaiian named kaa I. And
then I go home to my bride. The former Secretary
of State of the Great State of Texas, originally from
India and a very smart lady now retired named Nandita
venkataswoman Barry, my bride of now thirty five years, and
(25:34):
my youngest son, Crockett, who's a junior in high school
and a wonderful, respectful, genuine young man, as well as
my older son who I don't get to go home
to every day, sadly, Michael T who is away at
the University of Texas where he is a freshman in
(25:54):
college right now. So yes, we too enjoy heading home
to our family. But this show is our therapy. It's
cathartic getting to do it with you. And people think
I'm crazy when I say this, but I feel like
I commune with our audience because I read so many
of your emails, and so I feel like when I
(26:16):
say something, I already know how you're going to respond
to things, because over a period of time, you get
a feel for our audience and what you like and
what you don't like.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
And it's a pretty cool deal, I must admit.
Speaker 3 (26:28):
I just want you to know we do enjoy receiving
your emails. I read every single one. I can't reply
to everyone. We send a blast every day out if
you can sign up for it. It's free. We'll never
share your email, we'll never sell your email. We send
it out once a day, five days a week in
between the morning show and this show. You can sign
up at Michael berryshow dot com. You can also buy
(26:50):
a Michael Berry Show gear there and you'll see where
it says send Michael an email and then you can.
You can do that, and I will say I thoroughly
appreciate you supporting the sponsors of our show. If you
hear me talk about somebody, they are a sponsor of
(27:11):
our show, and I appreciate you using them. If you
need something that you hear that they provide a good
or service, You're always.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
Welcome to email me. I'll connect you with the owners
of the company. I'm happy to do it.
Speaker 3 (27:25):
If I don't have a sponsor in that category in
your town, then hey support the people who support our show.
So if you hear somebody advertising during our show on
the station in your town, that means they want you
as listeners.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
That means they want to promote our type of talk.
Speaker 3 (27:47):
If I could speak for every company that supports our
values and does a great job, I would. Every day
I get an email from somebody say, hey, this is
a field we're in.
Speaker 1 (27:56):
Can you be our partner?
Speaker 3 (27:57):
And where I can I do because I want to
help comp what does it share our values and are
good at what they do.
Speaker 1 (28:03):
And take care of our listeners.
Speaker 3 (28:05):
Now, we will close the show today because Ramone said
we have a little ongoing bat that I would forget,
that I would forget to play the week in review.
And this is a long standing tradition of ours. Chatticoney Knockanesia,
our executive producer, puts this together. It's basically just a
wrap up on what happened this week, and we love
(28:28):
to go through this because it's a remind of Oh,
my goodness, that happened.
Speaker 1 (28:32):
That happened. Now, let me tell you something.
Speaker 3 (28:34):
The exciting thing about the Trump era is I'm not
tired of winning, and I know you're not either, But man,
I got my head on a swivel. I feel like
Lucy and Athel at the Chocolate Factor. I can't keep up.
He's just banging out one great thing after another great
thing after another great thing. Mister President, keep it going
because we have got your back. We love it. Please
(28:56):
keep it going. And now, without further ado courtesy the
greatest executive producer and all the land, Chatticone Naganishi.
Speaker 2 (29:04):
You we can do.
Speaker 4 (29:07):
You hear about sexual harassment on TV and it makes
the headlines and newspapers. As an employee, what do you
need to know about it?
Speaker 3 (29:15):
You know, the whole sexual harassment craze and all that.
And by the way, there were some people still are
who don't know when to stop. There's certain things you
just don't do. And some guys don't know any better.
They need to be kicked in the nuts period into story.
Oh and that stuff would stop.
Speaker 4 (29:31):
To introduce to you the forty fifth and the forty
seventh President of the United States of America.
Speaker 5 (29:38):
Donald John Trump, who solemnly sware and I will faithfully
execute the office of President of the United States.
Speaker 3 (29:45):
President Trump's escalating crackdown on your legal immigration re.
Speaker 4 (29:49):
And stating military members previously discharged for refusing COVID nineteen vaccines.
Speaker 3 (29:53):
Programs related to DEI, the Green New Deal, and foreign
aid assistance. I didn't believe was do what he's doing
in the first year, and he's done it in the
first week.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
My goodness, this is the most glorious thing.
Speaker 4 (30:08):
A Detroit rapper denied a lift from lift.
Speaker 1 (30:12):
She says it's due to her size. There's no way
she's cleaning all those effective driver said his tires could
not handle her weight.
Speaker 3 (30:25):
She's on the two fattist trunks. You've ever seen big
old battle? Well, you remember maps like you can hold it,
like looking where you're gonna go, what streak.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
You're going on?
Speaker 3 (30:34):
These days we get turned by turn directions on GPS
navigation systems, on.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
Our smartphone, pump pages.
Speaker 1 (30:41):
And dress people still use map quests.
Speaker 3 (30:44):
You remember map quest came out, so you would put
address one, and then you would put address to and
like magic, it would say it's twenty eight miles, it's
gonna take forty five minutes, and here's your directions, and
you would print it out.
Speaker 2 (31:09):
This is a man's.
Speaker 3 (31:14):
This is the mans.
Speaker 2 (31:20):
But it wouldn't be nothing nothing without a woman. All
you good, You leave.
Speaker 4 (31:37):
Made me the calm.
Speaker 2 (31:54):
As nice. Thank you, good night,