Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It's that time time time time lucking loud.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
So Michael Berry Show is on the air. It's Charlie
from Blake Erry Smoke.
Speaker 3 (00:18):
I can feel a good one coming on. It's the
Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 4 (00:22):
Any attempt to restrict drinking and driving here it's viewed
by some that's downright fun.
Speaker 5 (00:26):
Democratic, two six packs, Shiner, ninety nine cent, putet Ladder,
Lucky strack Center.
Speaker 3 (00:33):
Fifth patrol.
Speaker 5 (00:37):
Us down at it, glue cooler, take a guess at
all to do? I can feel a.
Speaker 3 (00:44):
Good one coming off home.
Speaker 5 (00:48):
Throw in Ray Wiley Hubbard sing along the red Neck.
Speaker 3 (00:52):
And mother any blues. I had before gone.
Speaker 2 (00:58):
Another work and.
Speaker 5 (00:59):
We over no choice, And so I can feel a.
Speaker 3 (01:04):
Good one coming on.
Speaker 5 (01:08):
Yeah, we gonna roll out night, were gonna get to
feeling right.
Speaker 3 (01:13):
We gonna keep this party rock until the break. No, Yeah,
I can feel a good one coming on. I just
gotta getting calling it from a gat.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
I put in a hard day's words, put in eleven
felve hours a day.
Speaker 6 (01:27):
And ain't getting you drop in at least right warcon Beers,
three blocks.
Speaker 5 (01:33):
In the rack top Mustang followed us down to the
lake and didn't have to think about that too long,
skinny dipping in the right.
Speaker 3 (01:44):
Moon out situation couldn't be more right. I can feel
a good one coming on. Yeah, we are roll night.
Were gonna get to feeling ride. We gonna keep this
party right. I can deal a break and go.
Speaker 5 (02:03):
Yeah, I can feel a good one, feel like a
good one.
Speaker 3 (02:09):
I can feel a good one coming.
Speaker 2 (02:12):
They're making it law or you can't drink when you
want to?
Speaker 3 (02:16):
Can't you have to wear a seat belt when you're driving?
Speaker 4 (02:19):
Or is it going to become diss country who?
Speaker 2 (02:30):
I talk to my kids a lot. Yeah, we are
about things that I think matter that I can't. I
can't expect the schools or anyone else to teach them.
I have to do it myself. And we can't just
assume that the schools will teach our kids what we
want our kids to know. I mean, should the schools
(02:52):
teach your kids not to smack? Obviously they're not teaching
kids that, and some of you aren't either. Should the
schools teach your kid not to walk around in public
with your butt crack showing your pants are sag and
cauld you think it's cool? Should the schools teach your
kid not to ride around with the base going so
heavy that people driving down the road their car rocks
(03:13):
because of it. No, that's not a failure of the school.
It's a failure of the family. Most of those cases
not a father involved. It's a failure of the family
unit to raise a child. The school can teach certain things,
and maybe some of them you don't know. Maybe you
weren't good in algebra, geometry, calculus, physics, maybe your English
(03:35):
isn't the best. Okay, fine, But values, how the world
really works, how power works, how you interact, how you
greet people, your faith. Faith is a personal issue that
is generally addressed at the family unit. If you don't
(03:58):
talk about faith, if you don't talk about religion, then
you are creating a void. And in a void, the
most power in a vacuum, the most powerful element will penetrate.
And make no mistake, socialism is a cult. It is
a religion, and where there is not faith, it will
(04:19):
be filled by socialism or liberalism. So this is a clip.
I play it at least once a year. It's Milton
Friedman doing doing God's work. Really, he's using a pencil
to explain capitalism. Now I will get a lot of
emails from people who will say, hey, can you send
me that link? No, I can't. I get too many
(04:40):
emails to be able to respond to every email I
respond as to who a show sponsor was, especially because
this is so easy. Every show we do is podcasts,
and you can go to that podcast and listen to
it again. Or they got this thing now they have
these search engines you can put in Milton Friedman explaining capitalism.
You can find it for yourself and share it far
(05:01):
and wide, and I hope you do, because it's glorious.
This is Milton Friedman. You know a lot of people
think that really smart people talk in big words. Quite
the opposite. I learned in the law that a really
good courtroom lawyer can make a jury understand the case
by taking the complex and making it simple. That's what
(05:22):
Rush Limbaugh did. That was Rush Limbaugh's great contribution to
our nation in this movement is he made the difficult simple.
So here is Milton Friedman explaining capitalism in two minutes
using a simple pencil. Look at this led pencil.
Speaker 6 (05:37):
There's not a single person in the world who could
make this pencil remarkable statement, not at all. The wood
from which it's made for all I know, comes from
a tree that was cut down in the state of Washington.
To cut down that tree, it took a song to
make the song. It took steel to make the steal.
It took iron arm. This black center, we call it lead,
(05:59):
but it's compressed graphite. I'm not sure where it comes from,
but I think it comes from some minds in South America.
This red top up here, the eraser bit of rubber,
probably comes from Malaya, where the rubber tree isn't even native.
Who was imported from South America by some businessmen with
the help of the British government. This brass feral I
(06:22):
haven't the slightest idea where it came from, or the
yellow paint, or the paint that made the black lines,
or the glue that holds it together. Literally, thousands of
people cooperated to make this pencil. People who don't speak
the same language, who practice different religions, who might hate
one another if they ever met. When you go down
(06:44):
the store and buy this pencil, you are in effect
treating a few minutes of your time, for a few
seconds of the time of all those thousands of people.
What brought them together and induced them to cooperate to
make this pencil. There was no commisar sending out orders
from some central office. It was the magic of the
price system, the impersonal operation of prices that brought them
(07:09):
together and got them to cooperate to make this pencil
so that you could have it for a trifling sum.
That is why the operation of the free market is
so essential, not only to promote productive efficiency, but even
more to foster harmony and peace among the people.
Speaker 2 (07:29):
She was twelve hours thirty, but.
Speaker 1 (07:30):
Anything, it was wonderful to tell you, mister President of.
Speaker 2 (07:38):
The Michael Barry Joe. I come across a lot of
things stood in reading and watching the news and commentary
of the world, and one of the themes I'm noticing is
the inflection point at which Europe finds itself as they've
(07:58):
been flooded with more US immigrants, mostly from the Middle East,
and they're at a point that it is overwhelming them
in the streets, in the neighborhoods and the schools, and
it's a cultural disconnect. If one person comes from Syria,
(08:21):
let's say, or any number of other countries into Germany
or Greece or London or Paris, they will assimilate into
the dominant culture. But when so many people come so fast,
back to back, they don't assimilate any longer. They just
recreate the culture and country they came from, often bringing
(08:46):
with them the very behaviors that they themselves don't want
to be around, but they replicate in their new country.
Also the case that you're typically getting people who are
unskilled in these migrants, legal or illegal. They're not university students,
(09:10):
they're not engineers, theyre not scientists. They're people with know
real skills, and that tends to burden your welfare state heavily.
Afroditi Latinapulu is a member of the European Parliament representing Greece,
and she addressed Parliament to let them know how they
(09:32):
have failed their countries by flooding them with Muslim migrants.
This is a story that media doesn't want you to hear,
but this is exactly what the globalists wanted.
Speaker 7 (09:46):
Illegal immigration is a well orchestrated business for the orchestrators
to make a fortune and to islamize Europe. You have
filled our countries with illegal migrants, with the blessing of
Germany and France. We pay Islam that hates us out
of our savings, to turn our cities into ghettos, to
rape and to murder before our eyes. In the name
(10:08):
of Allah, we are filled with Mohammed and Mahmud in
a Europe that has become unrecognizable. There are solutions strengthened.
Speaker 3 (10:17):
By all means.
Speaker 7 (10:17):
The countries that are the first entry points, such as Greece,
Italy and Spain. Those who enter European territory illegally, they
should receive no benefits, they should receive no asylum. They
should be arrested, they should have their mobile phones confiscated.
They should be taken to uninhabited islands, and then they
should be deported to their country or countries outside of
(10:39):
the European unions stop subsidized, subsidizing their accommodation and subsidize
their deportation. Are guiding light ought to be the policies
of Hungary and of.
Speaker 2 (10:57):
And Poland.
Speaker 7 (10:58):
It's quite clear that those who to violate our boardies,
our borders are entering their unwanted guests and they're destroying
our countries. So begin mass deportations immediately money exists, airports exist,
detention centers are there. Kick them out before Europe dies.
We want our countries, our identity and our values. And
(11:22):
if you saw called sensitive socialists, well why don't you
look at yourselves, because you are the biggest racists against Europe.
Speaker 2 (11:32):
These voices have to be heard. There have to be
people willing to stand up and speak to these sorts
of things. And this is one of the reasons closing
the border is one of the reasons that as CNN
and mind you, this is not me saying this. This
is CNN saying that the latest polls show that Donald
(11:56):
Trump is not a lame duck, He's a soaring eagle.
This is Harry Inton at CNN.
Speaker 8 (12:02):
I think there was this concern among some folks that
Donald Trump would come in for a second term and
kind of be a lame duck. He ain't no lame duck.
If anything, He's a soaring eagle. What am I talking
about here? Let's talk about Trump executive orders in twenty
twenty five. He's already signed one hundred and eleven so far.
That is the most at this point in a presidency
in at least one hundred years. In fact, it's the
(12:24):
most in any single year. More only in April since
Harry S Truman in the early nineteen fifties. The bottom
line is, whether you like Trump or you don't like him,
you can't say that he's comment and not try to
deliver on what he at least believes was his promises
on the campaign trail, and he's doing so in historic fashion.
Speaker 9 (12:44):
How are people reacting to and feel about Trump's approach?
Speaker 8 (12:48):
Yeah, okay, so Trump's approach here? What are we talking
about Trump's approach to presidential power? I think the American
people recognize what he's doing here is completely different. We're
talking to get this, eighty six percent of the American
public believes that Trump's approach to presidential power is completely
different from past presidents, compared to only.
Speaker 9 (13:07):
Fourteen percent who believe it is in.
Speaker 8 (13:09):
Line with president And we're talking about at least seventy
nine percent of Democrats, Independence and Republicans. So again, you
can agree or you can disagree with Donald Trump, but
what you can't disagree with is that he's doing things
very differently. I have used the Frank Sinatra quote before.
He is doing it quote unquote my way, and that
is what Donald Trump has done throughout both of his
(13:30):
presidential terms. And he's certainly doing that cape Bolbwin in
term number.
Speaker 2 (13:35):
Two, so completely differently.
Speaker 10 (13:38):
Clearly they agree, but is it taking a step further?
Speaker 9 (13:40):
Do that people think he has too much he's taken
too much power? Yeah, this I think is the real question.
Speaker 8 (13:45):
Right, you can believe that he's doing stuff completely differently,
but do you think that he has a little too
much power or not?
Speaker 2 (13:51):
And this is interesting.
Speaker 8 (13:52):
So Trump's presidential power is too much, the right.
Speaker 3 (13:55):
Amount, too little?
Speaker 9 (13:56):
Well, forty seven.
Speaker 8 (13:57):
Percent say too much, but then you get thirty six
ercent who say the right amount. Then you get seventeen
percent who say too little. So you're essentially dealing with
a majority of the American public fifty three percent who
do not say that Trump has too much power. They
either says he has too little power or the right
amount of power.
Speaker 9 (14:14):
So the idea of that argument that Donald.
Speaker 8 (14:16):
Trump is quote unquote a king that I don't think
holds with the American people does hold maybe with forty
seven percent, but with the majority of folks. They believe
Donald Trump's doing something completely differently, and they don't.
Speaker 9 (14:26):
Believe he has too much power.
Speaker 8 (14:27):
And the executive orders he signed certainly suggests he's no
lame duck he is, as I said at the beginning,
a soaring eagle.
Speaker 2 (14:35):
I mean, wow, what to say? That's I'm CNN. You know,
there are migrations of people throughout history, some for the better,
some for the worse. The idiots in this country, the
(14:59):
white liberal progress and their pets, the minorities who view
white people as their enemy, will say that the westward
exploration by Europeans to what's now the Americas was awful
and brought disease. You always bring disease anywhere you explore
(15:20):
because the immunities of the people there are unaccustomed to
what you have. Okay, that's just go drink the water
in Mexico. The water that the Mexicans can drink will
give you Maktezuma's revenge and you don't want it. That
westward expansion of people to the New World created the
greatest civilization on earth. This expansion of the Middle East
(15:43):
to Europe and America is killing us, and it's time
to say that. The Michael Barry Show conjunction junction?
Speaker 3 (15:51):
How's that function?
Speaker 2 (15:55):
In nations of great poverty, they don't have an MPa
in an Osha, they don't have lawsuit abuse, they don't
have all the things that we've tolerated in this country
that drive the cost of production up. People are willing
to do a lot more for a lot less than
we are here. Could Americans work harder? Yes? Could we
(16:16):
find ways to do more here? Yes? It should be
something of great concern to us, and we should find
ways to reduce the cost of doing business in this country.
And that means lawsuit abuse, that means regulatory abuse. We
absolutely should. But it's also true that in the midst
(16:36):
of all that, other countries have made it harder for
us to make things that we send into their country
by imposing attacks a tariff in order for us to
get to use their market, to sell their market, to
sell our products in their marketplace. So the point of
the tariffs is to do the same thing to the
(16:56):
other countries as it should be. We should say to them,
at a minimum reciprocal tariffs. Why wouldn't we if you're
going to impose tariffs on our products coming into your country,
wouldn't you expect we're going to do the same to you?
(17:18):
And what's worse, why didn't we? How on earth did
our quote unquote leaders the Clintons and Bushes and Obama's
and Biden's How did they allow this to happen? How
did they allow us to get the short end of
the stick? Oh, well, tariffs are terrible for Americans. Well,
(17:42):
then why are other countries doing it within their own country?
If the tariffs are so bad, why didn't you call
on other countries to eliminate theirs because it's hurting their people.
You can't have it both ways. If the tariffs are
going to hurt Americans, we're sold they are, and shouldn't
they be hurting the countries where they're imposing them. Why
(18:05):
aren't they calling for an end to the tariffs? You know,
part of the problem is we were so good so
long that we tolerated losing here and there because we
were still so good so long. You know, if you're
fourteen and two at the end of the season and
you lose the last game of the season because you
(18:25):
didn't have your starters in, you don't think it's into
the team. You just go, let's get ready for the playoffs.
We were so dominant for so long that we lost
the competitive will to win, and so we the trend lines.
(18:46):
You always want to look at trend lines because you
see that a company is all right, it's a little
bit of company. They're never going to touch the big company.
IBM's got the lead. That little company will never But
if you look at their trend line, it's up and
the major company theres down. You'll see that those are
going to intersect. And the point at which they intersect
(19:08):
is not when you can solve the problem, because the
trend line is a run, it's a projection outward, and
those trend lines tend to continue. So that plane that's
taken off is going to soar and that one that's
in decline is going to crash, and if you don't
catch that early enough. But we didn't catch a lot
(19:29):
of things early enough. We allowed a lot of things
to get so bad that we may never get them back,
but there will still be an opportunity for us to
bring things back to the United States of America. And
the country that stands to lose the most is China,
because China has had an unmitigated run at the American marketplace,
(19:55):
and by the way that we've allowed this, they have
spied on this country. We know they're spying in this country.
We've caught them time and again. We don't know how
much they're spying. They have brought great harm on America
in so many ways. And do I need to remind
you about the Wuhan lab and what they did to
(20:16):
you and your parents and your loved ones, and how
many Americans died because of the Chinese. I don't think
their sufficient rage over what those bastards did. They created COVID,
then they dumped it. Do I need to remind you
that people had to go get a PPP loan to
even keep their business running. People had to run and
(20:38):
borrow money from the government to keep from going under.
Where is the outrage at the Chinese? Nobody wants to
speak out against them because everybody thinks, well, I might
make a buck off of them. Anyway. Here's White House
Deputy Chief of Staff Steven Miller calling the teriffs the
great on shoring, not offshoring, the great reshoring of American
(20:59):
job and well.
Speaker 11 (21:01):
The announcement today is the most significant action on global
trade policy that has taken place in our lifetimes.
Speaker 2 (21:10):
It's not even a close call.
Speaker 11 (21:12):
I mean, this is probably the biggest event that's happened
on global trade since the very ill fated decision that
we are now reversing of knocking down all of America's
trade tariffs and revenue policies that led to the offshoring
and outsourcing of all for industry. So this is the
(21:34):
great reversal of that great portrayal is how we look
at it. So in the twentieth century, success of American
presidents knocked down all of the policies that we had
to protect American industry, and they did insane things like
letting China into the World Trade Organization as an example,
and we watched all of our factories go overseas.
Speaker 2 (21:54):
This is the complete reversal of that.
Speaker 11 (21:57):
This is the great onshoing, the great reach sharing of
American jobs and wealth. So if you look at America today,
we're totally dependent on foreign countries for the supplies to
make this country run. For all of the essential goods, materials,
manufactured products that make it possible for us to live
our lives. Our cars are electronics, all the materials that
(22:21):
go into our homes, our buildings, our medical supplies, our
entire supply chains are completely embttered than foreign countries. So
if there's a national emergency of any kind in a
country shuts off an import or a foreign power embargoes
a sea lane, we are then left defenseless, helpless because
(22:44):
of the decisions that prior leaders made. That President Trump
is now reversing to let all of these industries leave
our country. And so what he's doing today is, for
the first time ever, he's saying that if you have
stolen our job and therefore threatens our national security, we
will apply a reciprocal tariff based on the degree of
(23:05):
your misconduct. So for countries like China, for example, they
will see a very high terriffrate because they engage in
the most egregious conduct threatens our national security. For countries
that have severe but not as severe misconduct, they'll see
a moderate but.
Speaker 2 (23:23):
Not as high teriff Fright.
Speaker 11 (23:25):
The effect, though, of those global tariffs will be that
companies will have to move their production back into the
United States. So the factories will leave, whether it be
Mexico or Canada, or Vietnam or Cambodia or China or
the European Union, they will come back to the United
States to produce their products, to make their goods, and
(23:46):
in so doing, yes, it will create jobs, Yes it
will increase revenues. But most importantly, it will restore our
national security so that we will not be dependent on
anyone else to survive and thrive us a nation. That's
it's the significance we're talking about today, the most important
economic of that.
Speaker 2 (24:03):
I'm I'm not sure what your question was, Michael Berry.
I lost the plot somewhere, did you did? Interesting things
happening in Poland. They have a presidential election in a month,
and we're seeing European countries who are at an inflection point.
(24:30):
Either they take back their country in a nationalist populist
movement the way we have in this country, or it
will be so far gone that it will be impossible
to get it back. Last night, the conservative candidate for
president walked across the debate stage beginning of the debate.
(24:52):
It looked very similar to a debate here presidential debate,
same setup, just the white on top of the read
under the bottom of the colors of the Polish flag.
He walks across, He puts the Polish flag on his lectern,
(25:13):
and he takes the rainbow flag and walks it over
to his opponent and says, here, here is your flag,
making the point that you are not serving the people
of Poland. You are serving the politics of progressivism. You're
(25:35):
seeing this in Germany, you're seeing it in the UK.
The Irish Prime Minister was walking on a street in
Dublin over the weekend and a crowd of people randomly
as he came out of a back alley, started screaming
(25:56):
at him that Muslims are killing our children, They're overrunning
our country. This is horrible and I'm not for accosting
people in public, but nobody got up in his space.
They simply booed him the way you boo Tim Walls
when you see it. For so long, people were afraid
(26:21):
to speak out in defense of nationalism for a number
of different reasons. Progressives are very effective at using shame
and guilt and actual clubbings. They get people fired, but
they're very rarely the one doing the firing. They're getting
someone to fire some I can't tell you how many
(26:43):
people over the years have done the wrong thing by
giving in to the progressive mob, knowing it was the
wrong thing. But what they want to do is keep
the heat off of themselves, kick the can down the street.
And if that continues in Europe. So we went to
(27:06):
Japan at Christmas and the folks there were telling me
that Japan has had an absolute boom of tourism. And
when you drill down, you find out that the thing
that they hear from people is we used to go
to Europe, now we come here, or they're coming for
(27:29):
the first time, and it's prohibitively distant. It's a brutal flight.
I was surprised I posted about being there, and I
was surprised how many of our listeners email me that
they go to Japan more than once a year. There
were people who go every other week. I my wife
(27:52):
just got back from India and for ten days she
was jetlak. For ten days, she was not herself, trying
to get back on the system. Today's her birthday, so
she's fifty seven today. There is no doubt that adjusting
to jet lag at fifty seven is much harder than
(28:14):
it will us when we were in our twenties. There's
a lot of things like that, hangovers, workouts, a long wall.
I mean, there's a lot of things fit into that.
Your body doesn't respond the way it used to. But
the reason people are going to Japan is that the
crime rate is so insanely low, insanely low. In addition
(28:39):
to cleanliness. And part of the reason is Japan does
not feel guilt at how poor and broken and violent
and inbred some other countries are, and they don't feel
the need to bring those problems to their country. But
(29:01):
England does, Denmark does, Ireland does, Germany does, France does.
And if you haven't been to Europe in the last
few years, and you ever went before, you're going to
be shocked. That is an overused word. Not in this case,
(29:27):
you're going to be gobsmacked. You're going to want to leave.
You walk to Chacelyse tomorrow, and you are not in
Paris any longer. You are in a different country with
different behaviors. It is the charm of London is lost
(29:51):
to me now, and it only gets worse. It only
gets worse because you brought in in these two cases,
you brought in Middle Eastern cultures where you've brought in
so many people in such a short period of time
that there's no assimilation. So the dominant home culture, which
(30:17):
would normally kind of enforce itself, is lost. So now
you're basically just relocating broken countries in London and Paris
and Berlin and now Dublin. And that doesn't work. It
doesn't work here. You look at Mogodi Isshue in Minnesota
(30:40):
used to be Minneapolis. There are parts of Mogadi issue
that are more Somalia than they are the United States.
And all the problems you had in Somalia are brought here.
Speaker 12 (30:56):
Now.
Speaker 2 (30:56):
Nobody wants to say that because we don't want to
believe people are different? Okay? Can can we agree that
people speak different languages? Okay? All right, we can. Let's
start there. All right, we've found common ground. All right,
so we can agree that people from this region speak
a different language and people from Kentucky. Okay, we're going
(31:20):
to agree to people from Louisiana speak different than people
from Yes, we can agree with that.
Speaker 3 (31:25):
Okay.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Can we agree that people may have different religious practices? Okay,
but I'm feeling uncomfortable. Can we agree let's make a
leap that won't be as offensive but is undeniably truth.
Can we agree that different cultures have different views on
how women are to be treated in public? For instance,
(31:51):
whether women can go out in public without their head covered,
whether women can drive, whether women can hold positions, can
can work, whether men can cat call wit minute? These
are social it's very hard to write laws for these
(32:12):
suss but culture is maintained very loosely, but definitely by
these sorts of by the dominant culture say no, no,
we don't do that. So people would come to this
country or Europe and they'd say, oh, when I'm here,
I have to act this way. They don't have to
(32:33):
do that. Goody, thank you, and good night. You got
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(32:54):
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Speaker 4 (33:14):
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before it starts.
Speaker 1 (33:29):
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locations nationwide.
Speaker 2 (33:44):
I get a report from the car pro whenever you
all go to carpro dot com because you're looking at
buying a new vehicle, truck, van, car, suburban, whatever, all
makes all models and if you go on there and
then they say you know how to you know about us?
I'll be honest, it always helps me when you tell people.
I'm a Michael Berrischell listener. I heard him talking about y'all.
(34:06):
But you choose how you want to shop, and apparently
about eighty percent of people choose to shop by what's
called certified car pros. And then you get your VIP
pass and you get a good deal and you get
treated well and you get treated with respect, and then
I get feedback on that. Hey, you know, we had
a guy come in today and this was his experience,
and he's very happy with what he said because that's
(34:29):
how the experience is supposed to go. So whatever make,
whatever model, whatever kind of vehicle you're buying, go to
carpro dot com, carpro dot com, or you can email
me and I'll forward it to them and make sure
that the owner of the company, Tom Haynes, takes care
of you. Carpro dot com.
Speaker 4 (34:46):
ATRH Traffic is powered by the Generator Supercenter dot Com
Traffic Center.
Speaker 10 (34:51):
This report is sponsored by the Danny Did Foundation. The
Danny Did Foundation closes the Gaps in Epilepsy care in
memory of Danny Stanton who has lost his set unexpected
death at epilepsy. Or sud app if you are so.
This is US Radio seven forty kt RH Houston.
Speaker 9 (35:10):
Crive Everywhere with now the latest news, weather and traffic.
Speaker 4 (35:16):
From the gallery furniture of Main in America Studios.
Speaker 9 (35:19):
Trump gives Ukraine and Russia timeline a Mondoree Parard on
News Radio seven forty e k t RH with traffic
and weather together. Here's Katie London.
Speaker 12 (35:28):
We are heading into a holiday weekend, so we've got
fewer roadwork projects taking place, but still planned for some
additional time through our long term spots like the North
Beltway between Imperial Valley and Aldine Westfield and I ten
between forty five and Studemont. We do have a couple
of lane closures scheduled on the south WET'ST Freeway at
the Beltway, including some of the entrants and exit ramps,
(35:50):
and then Iten E's Freeway alternating lane closures between Mercury
and Market beginning at nine o'clock. I'm Katie London and
the Generator Supercenter, dot Com Traffic Center.
Speaker 9 (35:59):
And the forecast at the KTRH Top Tax Devenders twenty
four our weather Center. The increasing storm chances this weekend
and for just about every day next week. It's kind
of a pattern change, starting Easter Sunday continuing all the
way through next week. A daily dose of thunderstorms in
the forecast.
Speaker 4 (36:15):
Seventy three degrees overnight Saturday, cloudy, wendy, high eighty three,
thunderstorm Sunday eighty one