Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time. Time, time, luck and load. The Michael
Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:39):
Maria Montell running for US Congress on November fourth as
a Republican in the seat long held by Sheila Jackson
Lee and in a tradition of great corruption, followed up
by Silvester Turner, both of whom died within about a
year in office, leaving an opening. Carmen, Maria Montiel US
(01:02):
Congress eighteen Congressional District Republican candidate. Carmen, tell me what
you learned from the last time you ran that you
will employ this time to win.
Speaker 3 (01:17):
Well this time.
Speaker 4 (01:18):
Thank god, the state of Texas is taking action and
in the way that people can vote and cast ballots.
And also you know, the current administration is also looking
over this. We have to understand that there's been great
views with by mail, not only in the city of
Houston by nationwide, but especially.
Speaker 3 (01:40):
In this district.
Speaker 4 (01:42):
We have to be watchful as I was last time
with my volunteers. You know in twenty twenty two. My
campaign as it is right now is all run by
volunteer people counting votes.
Speaker 3 (01:54):
We turn in our full file of.
Speaker 4 (01:56):
What we encounter during early early world voting an election
to back then King Ogg and nothing happens.
Speaker 3 (02:04):
So today, for this year, I just tell.
Speaker 4 (02:08):
The people we need to vote massively, massively, and you
know historically special elections have a lot turnout, but we
need to send a message and now that like I
told you, there is historically around three hundred and nine
thousand people vote in that district, but one hundred eighty
two thousand our independent.
Speaker 3 (02:27):
Swing voters this year.
Speaker 4 (02:29):
They have a reason to vote and we need to
activate them to go to vote. If we vote massively,
we can overcome all their tricks because as you know,
you know, there is a lot of tricks going on
in this city, in this county. I don't believe the
city of Houston as Harris County is completely blue.
Speaker 3 (02:50):
I believe the Ceoston and Harris County we have been.
Speaker 4 (02:54):
The victim of a lot of corruption, especially on election day.
I believe the families of this city and our county
were conservatives. We worry and we care about our families,
our children's education, about having better economical opportunities, and to
(03:15):
have a city that represents what we are the third
largest city in the country.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
But every day we look more and more like a
third world.
Speaker 4 (03:25):
Country because our politicians are doing nothing and they're like
I told you, there is billions of dollars that cannot
be allocated.
Speaker 3 (03:34):
In the meantime, the city is falling into ruins.
Speaker 4 (03:37):
So I just need to ask the people please support
my campaign. Go to Karmen for Congress Carmen number four
congress dot com, and please donate and sign up to
be volunteers. Let's be like an army on the ground
to make a difference.
Speaker 3 (03:56):
Especially on November fourth.
Speaker 4 (03:57):
You know, there is seventeen amendments, you know, constitutional amendments.
Speaker 3 (04:02):
For the state of Texas. They are going to be
in the ballot, and that's a great.
Speaker 4 (04:07):
Opportunity to be able to walk away with that victory
on November fourth without having to go to a Ronouf
in December.
Speaker 2 (04:18):
It is interesting. It's a bit of a quirk with
really nothing else on the ballot in terms of campaigns
that would pull Republicans away. It being a wide open election.
Rodney Ellis is going to generate his own interest in
his self in the candidate he picked. Jolanda Jones is
(04:40):
going to generate some interest. I saw Craig Washington has
endorsed her, but Republicans have a chance, which is rare
in this district, with a concerted effort to get folks out.
The challenge is going to be not who wins the
hearts and souls of one hundred percent of the people
of the eighteenth Congressional District. The challenge is going to
(05:01):
be who can get people to show up on a
day where there's not a presidential election. You quoted some
numbers on demographics in that district earlier, and I just
went to the Wikipedia page, and these could be outdated,
but they're close enough. Interestingly, that district is shown to
be ninety nine percent urban, not surprising, forty three and
(05:24):
a half percent Hispanic, thirty two percent Black, seventeen percent white,
five percent Asian. Less than one third of that district
is black, a district that was gerrymandered to be black,
which is quite interesting because it's also the case that
not every black person wants a raging Democrat, nor did
(05:44):
every black person want Sheila Jackson Lee. There were a
few challenges mounted against her, but they were within a
Democrat primary. You've got to get Republicans to go over
and vote in that seat in order to get there.
But I would encourage anybody to put in eighteenth Congression
District of Texas into a map with Wikipedia and look
at how that map was drawn. And you want to
(06:06):
talk about a Jerrymander district, that's what you've got there.
That was a district designed to pick a certain type
of candidate, and that is as Unamerican as you can
possibly get. Carmen, I will ask you to close. You
have it to the break on what you need from people,
what you intend to do, what you stand for. I
think you've got about a minute and a half.
Speaker 3 (06:25):
Take it away, Thank you very much.
Speaker 4 (06:28):
What I need is to please really go to Carmen
for Congress Carmen number four, Congress dot com.
Speaker 3 (06:34):
Please donate to our campaign.
Speaker 4 (06:37):
I will promise you that because of my life experience
of losing a country falling into socialism, I will fight
for us not to follow the same task.
Speaker 3 (06:47):
Like I always said. You know, I lost a country and.
Speaker 4 (06:50):
I refuse to lose another one, especially because this is
the country, not on my country, but the country of
my children. As a mother, I will look for the
future of our children. I will make sure that every
penny we have in this city is used and is allocated,
and I promise that we will have an open book administration.
(07:12):
It is time that the city of Houston is cared for.
It is time that the city of Houston evolved. It
is time to end the political tricks and games of
a certain group the city of Houston that is completely
ruining us. That we are considered one of the most
socialist city in Texas. And it's incredible, but that people
(07:36):
don't know this, but it's because a certain group is
manipulating everything. Most of the Democratic candidates have held office
and they have done nothing for the city. And now
they're telling you just vote for me when I'm in Congress,
I'm going to do something.
Speaker 3 (07:50):
Well that's a lie.
Speaker 4 (07:52):
They have had the opportunity to do it and they
have not done.
Speaker 3 (07:55):
So lest I tell.
Speaker 2 (07:57):
You Ramon, did she cut off Ramon? Oh shit? Okay,
all right? How much times left in the segment? Oh
there you go? Okay, all right, Well, there you have it.
(08:17):
Carmen for Congress. If you would like to know more,
you can go to our website that are easy to
connect with her. Right there, very brigade.
Speaker 1 (08:24):
Activate the Michael Arry Show.
Speaker 2 (08:30):
And when did you remember the reality show the TV
show that did a segment on the guy eaten by
the alligator in Orange. It was called Famous last Words.
Speaker 5 (08:45):
Welcome back to Famous last Words only on CMT. On
today's episode The Famous Last Words, we take you to Urge, Texas,
where we meet old Tommy Woodward.
Speaker 2 (08:56):
How you think I could fit my whole fist in
my mouth?
Speaker 5 (08:58):
Tommy Woodword was a good old boy who is known
to jump off the dock near his house over now
and again and take a dip in the local balue.
I jump off the dock near my house every now
and again take a dip into bay.
Speaker 2 (09:09):
But this is gator country, and according to the locals.
Speaker 6 (09:12):
Here and Orange, there are at least a half a
million gators in the Tri County area alone.
Speaker 2 (09:18):
A local man even put up a sign that said
no swimming alligator. Huh, I wonder what that means.
Speaker 5 (09:25):
But whoever put up that sign must have forgot to
put a comment between the words swimming and alligator, because
it just said no swimming alligator in early one Sunday morning.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
After the hottest fourth of July in years.
Speaker 6 (09:37):
Tommy must not have seen that sign, or maybe he
just misread it and assumed the alligators didn't know how
to swim.
Speaker 2 (09:43):
Because that sign didn't detour Old Tommy. I do believe
I'm gonna go far swim. Feeling all loose and limber,
and possibly under.
Speaker 5 (09:50):
The effects of some alcohol, Tommy decided to take a dip.
Speaker 6 (09:52):
He took off his shirt and said he was going swimming.
And I told him, look out for them gatters, Tommy.
Speaker 5 (09:57):
And that's what Tommy said, his famous last one words,
the metal gators. And that's when Old Tommy Woodward became
(10:18):
another perfect candidate for famous last words.
Speaker 2 (10:21):
Tune in next week.
Speaker 5 (10:22):
We'll take you up north to Maine, where we'll meet
a man who decided to launch fireworks off the top
of his head right after he.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
Said, hold my deer and watch this he you're.
Speaker 5 (10:32):
Watching Famous last Words only on CMT.
Speaker 2 (10:37):
It is interesting that we have listeners in parts of
the country where they never see a gator. You can
just swim wherever you want. You never have to worry.
You don't have to have the ancient wisdom of how
to know whether a body of water has a gator
in it. Let me assure.
Speaker 7 (10:53):
You how you can say they got gitter in that
war for you.
Speaker 4 (10:57):
You go come on down, tom Dna Limo, come on down.
Speaker 2 (11:01):
To the water. You know, anybody of water.
Speaker 4 (11:03):
It don't matter which body of water it is.
Speaker 2 (11:05):
You just got to that body of water.
Speaker 8 (11:07):
This is how you go. Know, you grab that water
like that and you crick up something you do like that.
Speaker 4 (11:12):
If that water went, it's gotta get us in it.
Speaker 2 (11:16):
That's how you know they gotta get us in that water.
In Louisiana, the criminals in Harris County have now cotton
on to how it works. Popo catch a man who
was in the middle of breaking into a building on
the city's north side. The suspect reported to the popo,
(11:37):
this is my third time breaking in. I just came
for the TVs this time. Hurry up and let's go.
I'm ready for my PR bond and I'll be out
real quick. According to court documents, Devin Burgess was arrested
around eleven twenty eight pm on Sunday night after officers
responded to a burglary call. When officers arrived, Burgess reported
(12:00):
he told him, I can't believe y'all got here real quick.
How'd y'all know I was here? Y'all finally caught me.
This is my third time breaking in. I just came
for the TVs this time. Hurry up, let's go. I'm
ready for my PR bond and I'll be out real quick.
Records show that Burgess was charged with felony, criminal mischief,
(12:20):
and burglary of a building. His total bond was set
at twenty thousand dollars, and despite his comments, he was
not granted a PR bond. But he'll be back out
there tonight. I've said it before and i'll say it again.
We got murderers, rapists, thieves, burglars, vandals, carjackers, awful human
(12:41):
beings in our community, and idiots on the bench who
keep letting them out. Now, the way this would work
in a perfectly efficient market is the Chris Mortons and
all would be the victim of these people. Because I'll
tell you this, if these Democrats came up and knocked
(13:02):
the Democrat judges in the head, if they raped them
in their wives, if they carjacked them and their family members,
their mothers, their sisters, their wives, their daughters and them,
they wouldn't release them so fast. You remember what happened
a few years ago at the there's a high end
bowling alley downtown. I don't know if it's still there now.
(13:24):
But there were a group of rappers and thugs and
they were hanging out and one of the rappers got
shot by a thug. And the rapper was kind of famous,
and not Paul Wall famous, but he was famous ish.
He had little from his name. I'd say, I know,
he's famous, little something, little thug, little slim, slim little,
(13:48):
you know something. And he got shot and I think
he died, and so there was a lot of pressure
and something had to be done. So he was detained
in that poor bastard, he was like they threw the
book at him. Nobody had been prosecuted like that. I
tell you the other one that made a mistake. There
was a dude that broke into Bunbee's house and held
(14:10):
Bunby and his wife at gunpoint, and I mean it
was apparently it was a pretty nasty deal. I think
he pistol whipped the wife. He didn't apparently know who
this was that he was messing with. And I think
as he's leaving, maybe he steals their car. I think
as he's leaving, he steals their car, and Bunby comes
(14:30):
running out, comes out the front door and rips off
a few rounds into the vehicle. That guy got the
book thrown at him. You need to do a little
research before you go attacking people. You don't attack Bunbee
or rappers or famous Democrats. But if these judges had
(14:54):
to live with the consequences of their actions, if the
people they put back out, the Joscelyn Nungerai murderers, rapists, traffickers,
if those people, if those people visited them in their families,
if they had to live with the consequences, it would change.
(15:17):
Another test of Rodney Ellis's influence. Craig Washington, former congressman
who Sheila Jackson Lee defeated thirty years ago, has thrown
his support behind Jolanda Jones in the Democrat primary for
the eighteenth congressional district. This is going to get interesting
because Joelanda's a fighter. She replaced me on city council
when my terms were up and I left city council
(15:39):
to going radio full time. Jolanda Jones took my seat.
She's a former collegiate athlete, she's a tough, tough lady,
and uh, she's going to make a run for this.
Speaker 7 (15:55):
You've got Cornpop was a bad dude the Michael Berry Show.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
When I ran our AM stations. We put Dennis Miller's
show on. I think it was ten to noon Ramon,
do you remember you were the program director? And that
was his theme song, his opening, and I thought it
was such a great opening for the vibe he created,
(16:23):
or that he wanted to create and did assume, and
I thought it was I thought it was an interesting
show because it was different. The problem was and he
talked about this later. We did a station event and
we talked off air about it is like Woopy Goldberg,
(16:46):
Like a number of people who've done stand up, you
don't realize how tough radio is because if you've Jim
Gaffigan once said, I said to him, you go on
stage and for forty five minutes, it's you, no piano,
no backing band, no lights, no sound, just you entertaining
(17:11):
your crowd. I can't imagine that. And he said, I'm
far more frightened of what you do. You do five
hours a day every day, and you have to change
that all day. Every day I get one set worked
out and for six months I deliver that set. I
think it was tough for Dennis to deliver when that
(17:35):
It's not that he couldn't do it. He's very quick
on his feet. It's that that was not what he
was accustomed to. He wasn't built for that at that
point in his career. I thought Dennis Miller's high point
more than Weekend Report. I thought his high point was
when he would go on to O'Reilly show as a guest,
(17:58):
and he would always have a clever line ready to go,
and I thought that was I thought that was absolutely fantastic,
fantastic television. Well, the fight over the private African art
collection that was secretly stored on Harris County grounds at
taxpayer expense by Rodney Ellis continues. Rodney spent three hundred
(18:21):
and twenty six thousand dollars transforming a county shed into
an art storage facility so that he could give private tours.
You know, that's like the old Well, can I write
this off as a well? If you call it this
(18:43):
now more details emrching some of that art is stolen.
In a court hearing yesterday, another man, well, this is
a story that just wanted. You've got some really bad
characters all working together here, and nobody can seem to
get their story straight. In a court hearing yesterday, another
(19:03):
man claimed he owned some of the art. KPRC TV
with the story.
Speaker 9 (19:10):
How fascinating is this case, Joe, It's perplexing.
Speaker 10 (19:14):
This is one way to describe it as the battle
to get arguably the most notorious private African art collection
and used and sold went before a Harris County civil judge.
Speaker 9 (19:23):
Of this one, they're sitting in a Harris County warehouse
paid by taxpayers and were told items in there.
Speaker 10 (19:32):
Back in February twenty twenty, we first exposed the collection
of more than one thousand pieces of African art being
secretly stored.
Speaker 2 (19:40):
Who has the keys to all of this?
Speaker 10 (19:41):
All of it under the control of Commissioner Rodney Ellis,
who showed off the private collection of family and others
providing private tours out of the public side. And when
we questioned Ellis about it, the Commissioner had no answers.
Speaker 2 (19:55):
So if you want to ask, I'm asking a tough question.
He will respind.
Speaker 10 (19:58):
Initially we were told out of the county there was
only one owner, Sam An Engineering, but we exposed there
may have been more and some of the art possibly stolen.
Speaker 2 (20:08):
There's no orders of papers in court this morning.
Speaker 10 (20:11):
Hearing scheduled about the auction of the art took a
turn when another man, garab Conte, claimed he owns two
hundred and twenty eight pieces of the African art.
Speaker 8 (20:22):
I've been retained to try to get his property from
the sixty four to sixty four A Savoy.
Speaker 10 (20:26):
Location attorney Joe Walker is frustrated. He says the art
should be sold on behalf of his client, Darlene jareded
because an engineering owes her more than one million dollars
and the sale of the art can cover it.
Speaker 2 (20:39):
But certainly disturbing.
Speaker 9 (20:42):
What's disturbing the fact that nothing was done to obtain
that art, that this stuff was stolen essentially, and then
we get a judgment and now somebody's making a claim. Now.
Speaker 10 (20:55):
One question many have asked, did the county ever make
a push for an engineery to repay them for all
the months he had the arts stored for free? After
all taxpayers had to pay.
Speaker 2 (21:04):
The bill on this one.
Speaker 10 (21:05):
At last check, the County Attorney's office told me no
attempts to collect were made. Another hearing is expected next
month to hopefully resolve all of this.
Speaker 2 (21:15):
Well, let's be very clear, Rodney Ellis has placed his
people in the District Attorney's office, in the Harris County
Attorney's office in every position, So of course no, they're
not going to make him repay any of it. Let's
rewind there is a county facility. There is value to
(21:41):
that county facility as storage space. There was African art
being stored in that county facility. The county was not
being paid for the storage of that art. And we're
talking a huge warehouse. Some of you out there rent
(22:02):
warehouse space for the storage of your equipment, for instance,
you pay pretty good money for that if you were
going to deal in African art. And it appears to
be the case that Rodney Ellis does. He makes many
trips to Africa because I guess that's representing his district.
(22:22):
He has well placed contacts in rich circles in Africa.
He travels there, back and forth. He's got art in
a county facility that was not known about, that was discovered,
(22:44):
and he hadn't been paying for the storage of it.
That's illegal. The FBI got involved. There was a grand
jury convened by kim Ogg, which is why he set
out to destroy her, because she believed a crime had
been committed. But he managed to get off of that
(23:09):
I'll tell you at the time because they're all gone now.
There were high ranking officials at the Houston Police Department
who told me they were working with the FBI on
the investigation into Rodney Ellis, and I was assured that
(23:29):
they had Rodney that at a minimum he would have
to resign from his office and plead guilty to this crime.
Something happened. The case just went away. It was the
Biden administration, the same Biden administration where Rodney's able to
(23:51):
get the Colemandante private meetings with Joe Biden. But it
continues because the unsavoried characters he's involved in the African
art deal with keep having their own problems, which keeps
dragging this back out into the public domain. Thanks Team Reminders.
(24:13):
Our bumper sticker giveaway continues while supplies last. It is
free to you. Go to Michael Berryshow dot com. Don't
send me an email. There is a box. It's a
new box, has a yellow boundary around it, and it
says sign up for your Michael Berry's Show bumper sticker.
(24:34):
You'll also get a gift card from Gringo's mail to
you no cost to you. When you go into there.
It's the same platform we use as if you are
buying something, fill out the information as to where the
bumper stickers are mailed to you, and when you get
to the end, it'll show that you don't owe anything,
(24:57):
so it'll look like you're making a purchase, but you're not.
The platform was already built. It's just easier for Brian Hackel,
our webmaster, to use that. So you'll fill in your information.
You'll you'll go through and make the purchase and it'll
show that you owe nothing, so it's it's free. I
promise you won't be charged anything, and that will be
mailed to you. They're mailed in batches of two thousand
(25:20):
at a time, so it may not arrive in the
next two days. Every two thousand requests they go through
Blenda Fults out at my printer Houston dot com and
her team of Jim and the whole crew. They do
them all at once, so at the economy of scale,
it makes sense to batch them and so you'll you'll
get it in short order. Speaking of gringos, yesterday, Texas
(25:44):
Roadhouse donated ten percent of all sales at their restaurants
to Camp Hope PTSD Foundation of America. The Gringos in
Tumball at two ninety nine opened yesterday and of course
is open today on the twenty seventh, which is Friday.
(26:08):
It's Keso for a cause. So if you go to
that or any other Gringoes location, all kso proceeds go
to Camp Hope. You can buy Russell Lebarro's book in Chilada.
Entrepreneur profits go to Camp Hope. And if you eat
the Plto soldado, two dollars from every plate goes to
(26:30):
Camp Hope. And believe it or not, that adds up
to be a lot of money per year. Between those
three things, it's been well over a million dollars, which
is a lot of money at Camp Hope to help
veterans save the lives of other veterans. So if you're
a person who can't make a big contribution financially to
Camp Hope, but you've wanted to help, all you have
(26:50):
to do is today, or if you go on Friday,
all you have to do is order a caso, order
the Plato soldado, and you've just made a nice donation
to Camp Hope or Bringos has in your honor and
you ate some good food and you supported a great
cause that is all that's at every Gringos location. But
if you haven't tried the new location, which just opened yesterday,
(27:12):
I hope you will. That's at ninety ninety nine, that's
what they call there, Tomball Location, and it is a
beautiful location. You will be blown away how pretty that
building is inside, what a great space that is. It's
absolutely it's it's incredible. It's absolutely incredible. KPRC TV. Oh,
(27:32):
by the way, the Freedom Burger at another of our sponsors,
Federal American Grill, a donation is made to Camp Hope
for every Freedom Burger that is ordered, and I can
personally attest they are fantastic. I like to eat a
burger at at a high end restaurant. You know, I
have my water burger mood, you know, where you want
a thin burger, quick cheese. But then I also like
(27:55):
to have a beer or a glass of wine with
a burger. It's a whole different burger experience. That's the
place you can do that. KPRC TV reports there have
been three shootings quote in or around the Galleria Mall
over the last month. They spoke to a man who
shot the now viral video of the shoplifting suspect who
(28:16):
decides to steal sunglasses, runs from the cops, jumps from
the second story onto the ice rink, where he broke
both his legs. I love this story so much, Ramon,
do you have the audio of him breaking his legs again?
Speaker 10 (28:32):
Stop right there, in the name of the law, just
you try and catch me, Coppa.
Speaker 2 (28:45):
I swear I just assumed he was some turn from
the third ward, but his accent doesn't. Can you play
that again? I need to figure out where he's from.
Stop right there, in the name of the law. Just
you try and catch me, Coopa. Yeah, he's from somewhere
(29:08):
up north Aldan or Kingwood. Maybe Willis He sounded like
one of the trail boys. One more time, let me
hear one more time. Stop right there, in the name
of the law, Just you try and catch me, Koppa.
So KPRCTV. That story is so good. You know how
(29:31):
you know a story is good. It takes on a
life of its own, and news stations will continue to
find reasons to go back to that story like we
have they have now put on television the guy who
filmed the guy breaking both his legs. That's how you
(29:52):
know this story is resonating a good news director says,
get me more angles on that. Find me the broken
leg punks that turn Grandma, how'd you feel when you
saw little turn Tyrone when he busted his legs on
the ice. See if you can find the zamboni driver
and see if he was in any way tempted to
run him over or maybe maybe tow him to the edge.
(30:16):
See if you can find the officer and his reaction
when he ran up to the edge and the guy
had jumped over. See if you get oh, oh, hold on,
Oh okay, we've got the camera man, the guy who
recorded him, have it. Yeah, let's put him on. Here's
the story.
Speaker 8 (30:33):
I've seen the zamboni coming out to clear the ice
and then I see somebody fall.
Speaker 2 (30:38):
But this was no accident.
Speaker 7 (30:39):
The guy laying on the ice skating rink here at
the Galleria Mall meant to jump down here.
Speaker 2 (30:44):
It's all part of his ice coat getaway planning.
Speaker 7 (30:47):
Houston police say he just stole from a store on
the Mall around two in the afternoon on Sunday. At
some point, while being chased by police, the suspect jumping
over this glass barrier and onto the ice skating rink
down below, breaking both of his legs.
Speaker 8 (31:00):
As soon as he fell, He's tried to get up,
and uh, I guess he notices that his laser broke
and he scream my laser broke.
Speaker 2 (31:06):
And I'm like, he screamed that.
Speaker 8 (31:08):
He screamed like my laser broke, and I'm like, well,
the obviously right.
Speaker 2 (31:15):
I don't know why he thought he was gonna make
that land and whatsoever.
Speaker 7 (31:18):
This is just the latest crime in the Galleria area
in the recent weeks. That's including three different shootings in
or around the mall over the last month or so.
Speaker 2 (31:27):
I think it's about like what you do when you outside.
If you go to that bad area, bad things gonna happen.
Speaker 8 (31:33):
I mean, the gallery is a place like I don't
necessarily feel the safest when I come. I would not
bring my kids over here.
Speaker 7 (31:39):
Houston police got that guy from the ice and took
him to the hospital.
Speaker 2 (31:41):
With serious injuries.
Speaker 7 (31:43):
They do have charges penning both for fact and for
evading police.
Speaker 2 (31:46):
It's only after.
Speaker 7 (31:47):
Those charges are formally filed you have.
Speaker 2 (31:49):
To release his name. I like how they interview people
about this thug in the Galleria and you expect him
to say why yes. I was at the Gucci store
and its says, it's like, yeah, it's crazy over here, man,
these crazy streets of over the galleria, the halls of
the galleria mans
Speaker 1 (32:10):
Mm hm