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May 9, 2025 • 30 mins

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Speaker 1 (00:02):
It's that time, time, time, time, luck and load. The
Michael Very Show is on the air. The following feature
has been rated are it is intended for mature audiences.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
I just wanted to say to everyone out there, I
no longer mainlining acid or smoking PCP.

Speaker 3 (00:26):
It's official out You know the rest of the story, Joey,
you like movies about gladiators.

Speaker 2 (00:33):
What if your child get amollia fu shoes?

Speaker 1 (00:40):
Take me on, Take me on.

Speaker 2 (00:51):
Your mother was a humpster and your father's snake of laberry.
How much you want to make a bet? I can
throw a football over the mountain. The don't need food?
What are you kidding? We got some family here.

Speaker 4 (01:10):
H not ill.

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Well, so lovely until tonight, then one or more. Bye.
Victor Flaherty at plans for all seasons, and of course
we're open on Sunday. We never missed Sunday. Mother's Day
is one of our biggest days of the year. There

(01:42):
you haven't. He's only been in business in nineteen seventy two.
Think about it is When you meet Victor, you can't
imagine he's owned a business for fifty three years because
he body bills and he's such a health nut. And
all that you can't imagine. But I think he was
pretty young when he started. Still that makes him what
seventy two, seventy three years old? Pretty impressive, Pretty impressive.

(02:05):
Republic Boot Company. There's another good gift. I got a
message from Petru at eight forty five that he had
a fella call in. He said, just had a fella
call in. It's him and his wife mid seventies. He
decided her Mother's Day gift was going to be their

(02:26):
health together. She recently fell and realized she needs help
and balance, strength and bone density. I decided, listening to Michael,
that we would do it now, we'll work out with you.
It'll be one of his trainers. But yes, how about that?
So one of they're in New Waverley, So one of
his trainers will go into their home. However many days

(02:48):
a week they choose, and they will start to restore
their strength and balance. What a cool thing that is.
Seven one three nine nine nine one thousand. Seven one
three nine nine one thousand. There's nothing like a mother's
love for her child. It's true. I mean all the
adjectivits you can imagine. It's fierce, it's protective, it's unwavering,

(03:12):
it's unconditional. We found this snippet of a motivational speech
called the Love of a Mother a few years ago,
and this one always this one's a crowd pleaser. Well
it would be if somebody would push button. Yeah, it's

(03:34):
called the Love of a Mother motivational speech. So what
I was saying was what had happened was I had
called for the love of a mother motivational speech, and
then I pointed, And at that moment that I point,

(03:56):
usually the music or the particular audio clip will start right.
But this one now is as my nose is not.
It hadn't started found it, Okay, it's about to.

Speaker 5 (04:08):
When we think of a mother's love, we often associate
it with warm hugs, nurturing care, and comforting words. But
a mother's love is so much more than that. It's
a fierce and unwavering force that transcends time and space,
a love that endures through all of life's trials and tribulations.

(04:28):
Mothers are the backbone of our families, the pillars of
strength that hold everything together. They are the ones who
bear the weight of the world on their shoulders, who
sacrifice their own needs and desires to provide for their children.
They are the ones who show us what it means
to be resilient, to persevere in the face of adversity.

Speaker 2 (04:51):
A mother's love is a powerful thing.

Speaker 5 (04:54):
It is the foundation upon which we build our lives,
the rock that we can always turn to when everything
else is falling apart. It gives us the courage to
take risks, to pursue our dreams, to become the best
versions of ourselves. But being a mother is not just
about providing for our practical needs. It's also about teaching

(05:17):
us important life lessons, showing us how to be kind, compassionate,
and resilient. It's about being there for us when we
need a shoulder to cry on, a listening ear, or
a word of encouragement.

Speaker 2 (05:31):
The impact of a mother's love is immeasurable.

Speaker 5 (05:35):
It shapes the way we see ourselves, the way we
interact with others, and the way we approach the world.
It gives us a sense of purpose and belonging, a
deep sense of connection to something greater than ourselves. So
let us honor and celebrate the mothers in our lives.
Let us acknowledge the sacrifices they have made, the challenges

(05:57):
they have overcome and the unwavering love of they have given.

Speaker 2 (06:01):
Let us thank them for all.

Speaker 5 (06:03):
They have done and continue to do, and let us
never forget the powerful impact they have on our lives.
To all the mothers out there, know that your love
is a beacon of hope in a world that can
be challenging and chaotic. You are the ones who show
us what it means to be strong, to be resilient,
and to be compassionate. You are the ones who make

(06:26):
the world a better place, one child at a time.
Thank you for all that you do, and know that
your love and dedication are appreciated, admired, and cherished more
than words could ever express. So let's celebrate the power
of a mother's love. It is a force that can
move mountains, and it is something that will stay with

(06:49):
us forever.

Speaker 2 (06:52):
If your mother is still alive, right now is the
moment to call and say, Mom, I'm taking you to
Federal American Grill, or to Gringos or the Big City Wings,
or wherever it is y'all like to go. Clementine's. Maybe
today's their last day with the owner. I got that wrong.

(07:14):
He's not They're not closing, he's retiring. A lot of
emails from a lot of you, and I realized I
got that wrong. He's retiring, You're not closing anyway. Now
is the time to call mom and to plan at
the last minute, which maybe you hadn't. If she can't
leave the house, then you just plan to bring a
meal to her, or if you've got to work or

(07:37):
you've got something else, you just planned to come by
and have a cup of coffee. Yeah, it's interesting with
my parents. I called them every day, but I couldn't
see them. There were two hours each direction away. And
now I've got my dad very close to me, so
I pop in and see him on the way home,
and it's a delight. And sometimes I'm where my house

(07:57):
slippers do. So I'm in my house, slippers, my shore,
my raggedy shirt, and he just couldn't be happy. It
brought Michael Ta by to seehim this week. So make
plans to see mom if you got her, and if not,
make sure you take make sure the mother of your
children here is honor. The adopted the doc I was
watering and send a message that they're going to the

(08:20):
public boot company. He decided we inspired him. He's going
to buy or mama some boots and uh, I said,
you're not going to do any day drinking, are you. Well,
I'm kind of playing it on it because while they're
measuring you for your custom boots, they will apply you
with the bourbon er ten. Fireball bill is known as

(08:40):
fireball bill for a reason. Keith, you're on the Michael
Berry Show. Go ahead, sir, hell.

Speaker 6 (08:46):
Michael talk to you. Yes, sir, although I'd like to,
although I'd like to spend all this time to talk
about my mother, to talk about the most important person
in my lives, my wife, my teens glass. When we
first got married over twenty five years ago, we kind
of like, you know, like crazy to have a baby,
and we actually lost one, and that was so heartbreaking.

(09:10):
We decided to adopt, and we adopted three children from
birth four years and two years apart. And she has
spent every day in her life taking care of them
and raising them and making sure they live life right.
And of course I do my part too, as best
as I can. And she she was a nurse for

(09:32):
over twenty years and then she opened her own business
and she works every day and just as hard as
she can to support them, and of course they're all
in two of them are in college, and one of
them the phrasing animals for SSA, and she just works
like a dog, and she has just been the best
person in their lives. I don't know any other way

(09:55):
to put it.

Speaker 2 (09:56):
I think you just said it beautifully, Keith. I think
it just said it perfectly. You know, using the right
words is overrated. It is the emotion, the sentiment, the intention,
and I think it came through as as clear as possible. Chuck,
you're on the Michael Berry Show. What do you got?

(10:18):
May Michael.

Speaker 3 (10:19):
I My mother passed a few years ago, but I
have become of a funny story. I grew up Southern
Baptist like you, and as I got older, man, my buddies,
we all moved out to got an apartment. She called
one Saturday and she said, hey, cook and roast tomorrow.

(10:40):
I said, I know, mom, you always cook roast on Sundays.
And she goes, well, I said, Dad's not gonna take
you out for Mother's Day.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
She goes, no, I'm cooking. She goes.

Speaker 3 (10:50):
I said, what do you want want for Mother's Day?
She said, I want you and your two roommates to
come to church. I was like, oh okay, I said,
let me on that.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
She knew him real well.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
And we get up the next morning after we spent
all night at Silverado's, like everybody that was twenty one
did back then, and we went to the Baptist church here. Well,
I spotted mom and dad where they always sat, so
we went and sit down beside him, and I was
sitting right.

Speaker 2 (11:20):
Next to my mom.

Speaker 3 (11:21):
Well, about halfway through the service, everybody, you can start
smelling smoke. The air conditioner hadn't caught on fire.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
Oh, I thought you a pope.

Speaker 3 (11:33):
Well no, So anyway, my mom gets to kiddling and
I'm like, why are you what happening?

Speaker 2 (11:41):
It's not funny, there's something on fire.

Speaker 3 (11:43):
She goes, I should have known not to ask all
three of you boys to come to church at one time.

Speaker 2 (11:49):
Y'all jed it. She had her good church and y'all
had jeazed it. Oh, I love it, she's she went on.

Speaker 7 (11:56):
And that was we were twenty I'm fifty six now,
and uh, anyway, she loved to tell that story ever Thanksgiving, Christmas,
anytime she was around all her friends, and she would
tell that story that we called the church on fire
because we all came to church at the same time.

Speaker 2 (12:14):
Stories like that tend to take on a life of
their own, don't they. It's amazing how that works. It
is absolutely amazing how that works. How about Chance McClain
and his birthday message to his sweet sweet mother, Becky,
who I know well.

Speaker 8 (12:32):
My name is Chance McLain and I'm the resident song
smith and architect of chaos on the world famous Michael
Berry Show. My mom is Miss Rebecca Hall. I'm going
to talk for just a sec about a pivotal point
in my life. I wish the world knew how strong
my mom was. Formal, her husband my dad bailed. When
I was in high school.

Speaker 2 (12:48):
We were listen to how formal. He's never this far.
I mean, I expected him be trump in Tom but
he's He's never this hollo. I'd like to talk to
you for a moment about my mother, Rebecca. By the way,
nobody's ever called her a ecka for fifty five years.
She's Becky anyway, start him over.

Speaker 8 (13:03):
My name is Chance McLean and I'm the resident song
smith and architect of chaos on the world famous Michael
Berry Show. My mom is Miss Rebecca Hall. I'm going
to talk for just a sec about a pivotal point
in my life. I wish the world knew how strong
my mom was and is her husband. My dad bailed
when I was in high school. We were penniless. House
got foreclosed, so almost for a little bit, just destitute.

(13:25):
Cars got repolled behind the scenes. It was an absolute
pitiful mess. But my mom didn't complain. She rolled up
her sleeves, she went back to work. Her devotion to
me and my brother made us feel normal despite all
the crap going on around us.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
She encouraged us.

Speaker 8 (13:40):
Never missed a game, never missed a play, never missed anything.

Speaker 2 (13:44):
Always there. She was always there, and she still is.

Speaker 8 (13:47):
She's the definition of supportive, no matter what mayhem I
throw at her. So from Disney World right now, I
want to wish you a very happy Mother's Day.

Speaker 6 (13:57):
Mom.

Speaker 8 (13:57):
I love you, and I can't wait for the next adventure.

Speaker 2 (14:02):
That boy loves. Is it Disney World him? Uncle Jerry.
I don't understand these adults that love Disney. I want
It's easy.

Speaker 4 (14:13):
What else do you want?

Speaker 1 (14:14):
Right?

Speaker 2 (14:14):
What do you want? You want?

Speaker 6 (14:17):
Michael Berry? Just to say the.

Speaker 3 (14:18):
Word and I'll throw a lasshole around it.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
Plug down, mister t and the Mother's Day song. Please
listen carefully before you respond. We have finalized the deal
for Palm Beach, but we don't have the contract signed.
I'm hoping to have that done when I get off

(14:41):
the air. Emily's coordinating everything and I don't know if
the contract came in or not. That is the mar
Lago portion of it. It's a lot harder. We've done
two of these already, and I can tell you it's
a lot harder now because you have external elements from
the Trump team that have to review things and approve things.

(15:04):
And the good news is we have a great relationship
there and they're happy that they're willing to speak for us.
But it still requires a lot more levels to get through.
We got everything verbal done verbally yesterday. We have will
hopefully be done by today and I will be able

(15:27):
to give you the date. If you are interested in
getting the details when we have finalized it, email me
and say I like to know the details when they're available.
It may not be today, it may be till Monday.
If you email in, you will not be left out.
You will be sent an email with the details and

(15:49):
it'll be a short fuse. Because my goal is to
not have to discuss it again on the air, open
the trip, close the trip. We've already got a couple
hundred people who have asked, and we can't accommodate anywhere
near that. I mean a small percentage of that. But anyway,
if you are interested in knowing more when we have details,

(16:09):
just send an email through the website Michael Berryshow dot
com and say I like details on Marlago when it's available,
and don't don't email back because that clogs up our email,
and we will, emily will respond to each and everyone,
and then you'll have an opportunity at that point to
decide whether you're in or out and we'll go from there. Okay,
but that is exciting news, very exciting news. In the past,

(16:34):
President has walked into our gathering and invited us down
to his discotheque with him and Millennia. But I am
very clear to say that was not offered before. We
had a feeling he was going to do it, and
he had hinted he was going to do it. But
if I offered it, then I'd have to hear about it.
So I don't. I don't. You may not even see
he might he may not even be around town while

(16:55):
we're there the mar A Lago portion of our trip,
he may not be there. Then you just I've had
dinner at the table next to him, and then sometimes
he's not there for half the time. With you just
never know. But good news, we have proceeded a pace
on that, and I'm very very happy to report that.

(17:15):
All right, let's go to Shirley, who is eighty five
years old. You can't leave a woman eighty five waiting
that long. Shirley's you're still there.

Speaker 4 (17:26):
I am still here. I'm driving, but I'm going to
do the best I can. I talked to you once before,
and then you called me back and you said, Charlie,
I'll come if you get almond milk. I got almond milk.
You didn't come because you had another previous engagement that
you forgot about. So I grew up hearing the depression.
I mean with my mother and dad. My mother stood

(17:49):
in line for hours for sugar and everything that we
needed to eat. So I do remember those days. I
was three or four years old, but I remember standing
in line with mother just to get sugar. Okay, that's
my mother's day. I loved my mother, and I love
my mother and dad. I can't even begin to tell you.

(18:11):
They don't make people like that anymore. Okay, I'm going
to do it as fast as I can because I
know who you are and I don't want to take
much time. First of all, I worked for Champions Golf Club.
I worked for Jimmy Themaric and Jack Bird for forty
five years. I only intended to work for them three months.
I loved those guys almost as much as my parents.
They were so good to me. Legend Clementines, my in Clementines.

(18:37):
I can't imagine it not being there because my kids
went there every day after school for Hamburgers. I'm sick
about it. I'm just sick about it.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
I think it's still going to be there. The owner
himself is return it is. I think it is his kids,
I know.

Speaker 4 (18:51):
But Elias, Elias is what made it, you know. But anyway,
that's okay, that's okay.

Speaker 2 (18:59):
He must be we're a special man. Because a lot
of people emailed in to tell me about experiences they
had there and how much it meant to them. He
must be a really really special man.

Speaker 4 (19:11):
He is a special man, and he took here. I
had to work. I didn't have a choice, and I
didn't intend to work for forty five years at Champion.
But I loved Jimmy Demarrit, I loved jack Burke. They
were the type of people that you know, they shook
your hands. I don't ever even remember signing contracts other

(19:35):
than for the Ryder Cup, and I was thrown in there.
I think I was twenty four years old. That's when
I went to work for them. And I was thrown
in with planning a big Ryder Cup dinner down at
the Houston Club downtown with Barry Goldwater. And I'm thinking,
who's very Goldwater? So that was my thrown in. I

(19:56):
learned the god business really quick. But anyway, over the years,
and I'm not just throwing names because they were wonderful.

Speaker 2 (20:02):
Oh no, we don't mind. Anytime you're mentioning JIMMYT. De
Merritt and Jackie Burke, know that you you could drop
all the names you want.

Speaker 4 (20:12):
Well, I worked for them for forty five years. That
was not what I intended to do in my life.
Because I was transferred here with a little known company
called Xerox Corporation.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
Oh there you go a.

Speaker 4 (20:22):
Long about the time of IBM I thought, so, yeah, right,
So I was. I was transferred here with Xerox. The
buildings weren't open, weren't ready yet. So I helped those
guys out who were in the country could not get
anyone to work for them. A friend of a friend

(20:43):
of a friend called Shirley, you could really help these guys.
Would you go out there? And I said, I can't.
I've got to go to I've got to be at
Xerox in three months. So anyway, in long story short,
I never went back to Xerox. I hated I would
have been a multi millionaire because I was on the
ground floor. Okay. Then I opened a in Creek in Austin,
Texas with Bob Hope. I was too young to really

(21:07):
know what I was doing, because now I look back
on it and I shake thinking the things that I
did that I didn't know I was doing. As far
as being around these guys. Okay, but I guess probably
the main thing I'm calling you that I can't afford
to advertise. I called the office. I wish I could.
I'd get anything if I could, but I can't. I

(21:31):
will say this, and I have to say it because
if it wasn't for ritch Down. I wouldn't be there today.
Who you advertise? These people are not come along as
I've had them for fifteen years. I use uptown the plants.
I'm just going to put those things in. You may
not care for them. But I got the nicest letter yesterday.
I know I'm talking fast. I don't want to take

(21:53):
your time.

Speaker 2 (21:53):
No, you just remind me so much of my mother.
Hold on just a moment. She would call and say,
I know you don't want to hear about this, but
I'm going to tell you anyway. And then of course
I was going to hear about it. Lifeless black eyes
take a dollar. All right, let's go.

Speaker 4 (22:15):
Here.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
Do you want to advertise?

Speaker 4 (22:18):
Okay, well I would like My lease is uh with
tree in Vintage Park. I'm right across from lt INFO.
I told you that before. And it's a beautiful center.
It's not a strip center that the you know, the
lease it the lease is just awful. I mean it's

(22:41):
just awful. I don't think I can renew my lease.
I would love to. I do work with Bill, the
owner of Vintage Park in Dallas. He's been very kind
to me. He will give me a year lease. My
lease is at the end of the year, and I
really was killing it until COVID and it's kind of
in downhill from there and then with Okay, I'm going

(23:04):
to get a little political with the Biden administration. I
my e my eggs, trupple my everything. I use triple,
I don't use diyes. I've never used eyes. I turned
down a lot of business because I do everything from scratch.
There's nothing we heard.

Speaker 2 (23:19):
We heard, we heard what is your business?

Speaker 4 (23:24):
Treat going a cupcakes? And I deliver a thousand cupcakes
to David mallsby a bunk.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
Oh oh, I did not realize that was you. He
sends me an email every day on all look at
you being a sweetheart. My goodness. Okay, okay, so hold on,
hold on, let's let's get this problem. We're gonna get
this problem. So all right, now, where do you want
to be in the Champions areas? This is like me
and my mother both Trump shadows.

Speaker 4 (23:55):
Okay, my friends, my friends from Champions Golf Club apport me.
I think I have to stay there.

Speaker 6 (24:03):
It would you know?

Speaker 4 (24:04):
I've got like fifteen refrigerators, I've got two stoves, I've
got so much equipment. I can't afford to move. I
would love to move, but I can't. I've got a
beautiful shop. It's not a qute tea shop. It's and
I know you don't want sugar. I'm not crazy about you. WHOA,
you can do it.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
This is definitely my mother. I love sugar. You're just
hurling you. See. She's got she jab jab uppercut like
she got you on your heels at all time. I
love sugar. I try to eat less sugar. Surely you're
killing me here. Okay, So what is your lisa?

Speaker 4 (24:37):
Okay, it's up at the end of the year.

Speaker 2 (24:42):
Okay, So what do we need to do. We're just
trying to find you a new space. Are we just
some cupcakes?

Speaker 4 (24:47):
No, I can't move. I've got eight hundred square feet.
It's really big. My new lease is six thousand a month.
Do you know how many cupcakes I have to make
for six thousand?

Speaker 5 (25:01):
Am I?

Speaker 2 (25:02):
I get it. We're gonna get you figured out. But
hold on a second. So, first of all, you got
something that looks like a banana pudding. It's like a
it's yellow, it looks like it might be it could
be a lemon, but it looks like it's a banana
pudding and then it has a crumble in the bottom.
And I love that you serve them in these jars.

Speaker 4 (25:20):
I do those are cheesecakes.

Speaker 2 (25:22):
Well, it's a cheesecake, okay. And then you've got another
one that's a pecan that is just chock full of pecan.
It looks like it might be like a pecan pie,
but in that little glass, you know, like a little
small ball jar.

Speaker 4 (25:37):
Yeah, okay. But what I do want to tell you
is is that just in the last month, I have
to be honest about this, I've never brought in anything
from anywhere, but I don't want to get in trouble
with them. But it's a very that it's the best
bakery in town that they have allowed me just because

(25:59):
a time cansooming those particular things. It's an incredible bakery.
But I'm not sure they would want me to use
their name. We bring in two products from them.

Speaker 2 (26:10):
Of course they would, oh yeah, yeah, Well.

Speaker 4 (26:14):
I don't know. It's it's I don't want to get
in trouble. It's Kenny and Ziggy.

Speaker 2 (26:18):
Oh yes, Ziggy Gruber would would love look the fact
that you think enough or as he says, Ziggy Gouba.
If you that you would think enough of their product
to carry it in your store, because that's putting your
name behind it. Ziggy would have loved that. Ziggi's a listener.
He might have heard you say that, and he'll be

(26:38):
very happy that you said. Have you been to his
new bakery there at Perstoke in San Franzo? Oh my good?
You know he moved right?

Speaker 6 (26:48):
No, I don't know that.

Speaker 2 (26:49):
So surely about a block let's see, that would be north.

Speaker 4 (26:55):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (26:55):
He moved out of that center where Mattress Mac is
and he moved down to the corner where the lubies
used to be. All right, okay, okay, so what do
we do do We just need to find you some space?

Speaker 4 (27:09):
No, no, no, this is the reason I'm calling. Okay.
The last time I talked to you, I think it
was a couple of years ago, and then you even
called me back and you said, truly, I'm going to
come see you. And you said, do you have all
my milk? And I said no, but I'll get it
for you if you want to come. We're all so excited.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
You already told this. You are my mother. This is
the one bad story you got about, you started with it.
Now you're telling it again. What do you need from you?

Speaker 4 (27:35):
And I'll do it twice. I'll have to tell you
twice so my son will get my message. Okay. So
what I'm telling you is just give me a plug
once in a while, because when I talked to you before,
I was crazy busy for a week, a crazy busy,
and they said, you're making me crazy because you haven't

(27:59):
I know, I know, I am.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
I have not felt like I have spoken to my
mother directly since September nineteenth. Boy, I sure do now.
I mean you got everything cutting me off, you got
me on my heels, you get my blood pressure boiling.

Speaker 4 (28:14):
Okay, so I want the biggest Okay, I just want
to tell you this. My biggest worry is I've got
great employees that's been with me and stayed with me
for fifteen years.

Speaker 6 (28:25):
I have.

Speaker 4 (28:26):
But my biggest joy twice a month is pulling up
in my little green tree car and the guys meet
me at my car. The only reason I don't want
to give up my leaves is because I don't want
to lose my friends at Camp Hope.

Speaker 2 (28:45):
Surely this cherry baked pie are you making that yourself.

Speaker 4 (28:50):
Those yes, those are my mother's old fashioned fried pie.

Speaker 2 (28:54):
Oh my god, Ramon, go there and look in the
front that you buried the lead, sweetheart, that fried pie.
If you ever had that fright, They come like in
the baker's uh you get them in uh Froberg used
to do one. Several people do them and and it's
it's basically like a turnover, and it's oh, it's a
fried it's a fried uh of? How would you describe this.

(29:18):
It's got the cherry base, it's got the cherry inside,
and it's all fried around there. It looks like you
took a piece of bread and turned it on its side.

Speaker 4 (29:26):
Oh right now, my mother only made apricot. Don't ask
me what I well, I don't either.

Speaker 2 (29:37):
I'll eat that cherry baked pie. I'll take ten of them. Cherry.
You can't make any money on a four dollar cherry
baked pie.

Speaker 4 (29:44):
I can't listen. I don't want to raise my price
because I have so many young families that come in there,
and I can't charge them six dollars a cupcake. Six
dollars is the going price at Sprinkle at a Crave.
And by the way, my good friends on crave and

(30:05):
they sell me my vanilla n nounce so I don't
have to pay two hundred and ninety five dollars a
gallon for it because I only use matic, Askola.

Speaker 2 (30:12):
Are you talking about Power and his wife today?

Speaker 4 (30:16):
Yes, I only use the best ingredients and I'm not
going to change. I'm going to change. I'll close before
I do so. If you have to have something tweet,
I just want you to know, take me two hours
to make lemon curts, I could buy it.

Speaker 2 (30:32):
You're an ultimate compliment. You remind me so much of
my mother and like I get off the phone her
I got a headache.
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