Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and load. The
Michael Berry Show is on the air.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Good morning, Michaelberry, gild morning, Michael Berry.
Speaker 1 (00:24):
Good morning, Michael, Good morning, Michael good mornings.
Speaker 3 (00:27):
Are good morning, Michael zave Sailing.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Good morning, Elsina, Good morning, Michael. Hello, Hello, are you there?
Good morning you, Michael Berry. How you learned that? Are
ready tomorrow? Money?
Speaker 4 (00:40):
Good more Texas.
Speaker 5 (00:43):
Listen to this.
Speaker 1 (00:45):
Good morning, Texas.
Speaker 4 (00:47):
Morning, your car Morning Texas is onesday.
Speaker 3 (00:53):
We're happy here to.
Speaker 1 (00:56):
Talk about everything. Good morning, We're not wearing day.
Speaker 4 (01:03):
Good morning, good lordy, goody, good morning. Week gone, let's speak.
Speaker 6 (01:19):
God damn.
Speaker 1 (01:27):
Good morning, Ramoni. You know what day it is?
Speaker 5 (01:30):
Yes, I know it's Wednesday. Of course it's Wednesday. That's
why we start with Captain Kangaroo. But you know, every
day is some day now, National Pizza Day, National ice
cream Day. It's just a marketing ployee to create a
spike in sales for that particular industry.
Speaker 1 (01:48):
But we're not mad.
Speaker 5 (01:50):
Today, as Luck would have it, is National Catfish Day,
where we celebrate the value of farm raised catfish.
Speaker 1 (01:59):
What a day you like catfish fromont No love a
good fried catfish? Ooh I love catfish.
Speaker 5 (02:10):
Well, apparently there's a good old boy in Orange Texas,
my beloved Orange Texas, who loves catfish Day.
Speaker 1 (02:18):
It's like a religious holiday for this guy.
Speaker 5 (02:22):
Too many Americans today is merely June twenty fifth, a
random Wednesday on their calendar. But to Kleatis clayborn from
Orange Texas, it's not only National Catfish Day. It's a
day of pure reverence.
Speaker 2 (02:38):
Listen, I'm not here to men's words. The city folk,
they think I'm crazy, But do you think it's just
a coincident that the powers that have been called today
June twenty fifth National Catfish Day. Let me see what
else big happens on the twenty fifth.
Speaker 1 (02:55):
I don't know, like the simber twenty fifth, the day
Jesus was born.
Speaker 2 (03:00):
Oh yeah, and let's check his resume on that fancy
indeed on the interweb. To me, like he was a fisherman.
Speaker 1 (03:07):
Today is a special day.
Speaker 2 (03:09):
While Kleidis is passionate about this day, there's a quiet
calmness these catfish bring.
Speaker 1 (03:15):
To his soul.
Speaker 2 (03:16):
Well, now, if you come down here, city boy, I
know you got your city shoes on, I'll show you
something special.
Speaker 3 (03:22):
I got two ponds, one for the feeding one for
the fishing.
Speaker 2 (03:27):
Now Here on the left is my little feeding pond.
Speaker 1 (03:30):
He's here, My little pets, come here.
Speaker 5 (03:31):
Little evil may look at it over there with those
cute little whiskers.
Speaker 1 (03:35):
Let me rub you a little belly. There you go.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
Now Here on the right is for fishing. I don't
build no relationship with these cats. This he is for dinner,
whether they're friends or a feast. Kleidas Clayborn has a
special bond with catfish, and he wants you to celebrate
the day too.
Speaker 1 (03:54):
You know, there's so many people claim.
Speaker 2 (03:56):
They love a steak food, a medium red whatnot. That's
all hogwash tells me they never enjoyed a catfish billet
so good in front of them, over the Grandma's corn,
New Frida in some fine tinut, or now you put
that on a plate.
Speaker 1 (04:11):
I don't care how ugly you are. You want to
find a mate.
Speaker 5 (04:18):
So I made the comment to Ramone that Kunda must
think we are really backward in Orange, Texas, and that
we have a slight South Carolina accent. But I'll leave
that aside for a moment. I said, what do y'all
think Orange is?
Speaker 1 (04:33):
And he said, well, all we know about Orange. Is
that's where the alligator ate the dude.
Speaker 7 (04:39):
So I looked, I'm trying so hard not to judge people,
and what.
Speaker 5 (04:44):
I seen with hold on, hold on, I went back
and looked at the story. I know it's been ten years.
It's been almost to the day, exactly ten years. The fellow,
the fellow was not from Orange that was eaten by
the alley gator. I want to be clear on that.
He was a worker at the plant, which is very common.
(05:06):
He was working a project. He was a contractor. I
think it's from Alabama, Mississippi. He had driven over to
work on the project. And he was on Adam's Vayu,
which is which is over kind of near the DuPont plant.
Speaker 1 (05:22):
And actually that neighborhood is known as Cove.
Speaker 5 (05:26):
It's called Orange, but West Orange was has has an
area called or Orange has West Orange, and then there's an.
Speaker 1 (05:33):
Area called the Cove.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
And he was over in the Cove and it's a
there's a little bait shop right there and and a
one a one boat ramp, and they've got like a
koa there excepted and his fancy has a koa. You
can you can put a trailer in there, and there
was talk of a gator, and everybody had seen the
(05:56):
gator in the water, and this guy, it's it's middle
of the night, I think it's what did they say,
four or no, So it's about one o'clock in the
morning and he's had a few pops and they're saying,
you know, be careful, you don't fall off into there.
Speaker 1 (06:11):
That gator's in there.
Speaker 5 (06:12):
And he decided that he was not afraid of any gator,
so he jumped in the water twenty eight years old,
drunk as a skunt, presumably to prove that he wasn't
afraid of the gator. Maybe the whip the gator, and
it did not turn out well for him. And that's
when Shirley Q Lickor began to judge.
Speaker 7 (06:32):
I've tried so hard not to judge people, and what
I've seen where it's pole, bastard and cold were being urged.
Speaker 6 (06:40):
Went out there at two third in the morning after
the bar closed and jumping there with the alligator.
Speaker 7 (06:45):
Got it and that's terrible. That's turn back way to go.
It is and.
Speaker 6 (06:51):
A lot of people have been talking about king and
ass idiot and didn't read the signs. This one in
the time I'm gonna have to jurge, not not be dirged, because, honey,
it is some things I had did coming out of
the club at two thirty in the morning. I praised God.
It was no alligators around. I praised the Lord. It
(07:12):
was no machine guns around. I praised especially was no
police around that, honey, because you know, we have all
did something that was edits and this poem made the
news bad.
Speaker 7 (07:25):
But I hope he had children because they could always
tell that story. About to nine, the grand had swam
in Adam style.
Speaker 1 (07:32):
You've had it, my alligator, my lord, but you know
that is alligator.
Speaker 3 (07:41):
Alligator.
Speaker 8 (07:41):
Please come home, alligator, alligator, leave me alone.
Speaker 5 (07:45):
All apparently it had been one hundred and seventy nine
years since Texas had reported an alligator killing a man. Well,
it will take a long time to run that one
back up one hundred seven nine years. And all you
had to do was not get in the water where
they just showed you there was an alligator. Car speakers,
(08:16):
smart devices. From Michael's brain to your ears, this is
the Michael Berry. Shall you know if you spend any
time in Colorado around Houstonians or anybody else, you will
(08:36):
find that all anybody wants to talk about is bears.
And I've come to the conclusion the reason they want
to talk about bears is they don't have any crime,
especially up in the mountains. So everybody needs something to
be scared of. So all you have to do is say, yeah,
I heard old Smith up the way had a bear.
Speaker 1 (08:58):
Got in his car.
Speaker 5 (09:00):
Oh well you guy next door to me, Yes, it's
on the carria And so everybody goes into the whole
bear thing. Well, we didn't have bears in Orange, so alligators,
that was the deal. There is a fascination with alligators.
That's why you hear Shirley cu lickor talk so much
about alligators.
Speaker 9 (09:18):
See, I know this was gonna happen because that lady
go over there every day. She pull all these men's
into that Alda cove over here, and she get them
in there and she.
Speaker 2 (09:26):
Do what she do.
Speaker 9 (09:28):
But the other night they had put out a stinger
on her, and they had the Popo all up in
the bushes down there and honeting them, lighting them. Sirens
went off, and she was caught just sitting there in
flog rolled flemented.
Speaker 7 (09:39):
Honey.
Speaker 9 (09:39):
They said, she just raised her arms up. She surrendered,
but she forgot her wig was on backwards. What that
lady's name is? It's either miss Ronda or Sapphire. One
of them name was La Cream de co Cove. Then
they had Sasha.
Speaker 10 (09:55):
And do you.
Speaker 9 (09:55):
Remember that one ugly hole they used to have working
down here on Simon's Drive.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
What's her name?
Speaker 6 (10:01):
Oh my god, she was so ugly.
Speaker 7 (10:04):
Ooh her head, it hurts you to look at her.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
You're talking about alligator lady.
Speaker 7 (10:10):
That's right, that's who that was.
Speaker 9 (10:11):
She used to hang around with freight training.
Speaker 1 (10:13):
Now, oh lord, see.
Speaker 9 (10:15):
Y'all bring back all these memories up on her. It
really is a lot to go on and earns if
you keep your eyes open for it.
Speaker 7 (10:24):
You tell your mom and Emma asked how she.
Speaker 1 (10:26):
During o Wo smill soda water?
Speaker 9 (10:29):
Who you think I am? Your waitress of Dennis and
thensk Go forget it yourself.
Speaker 5 (10:36):
You probably know by now. But New York elected, well,
the first round of voting in New York has a
fellow named Zorn Mamma Danny as the projected next mayor
of New York City.
Speaker 1 (10:53):
And it's boroughs.
Speaker 5 (10:56):
And what I find fascinating, you get what you give
in Twitter. So if you're not on there, I'll just
tell you very simply, you don't need to be. I'll
tell you what's on there. Whatever you follow, the algorithm says, oh, okay,
so you like people who have these types of opinions,
(11:19):
and it'll kind of suggest them for you, and then
you get those people's opinions. So everybody is living in
something of an echo chamber because we self select what
we want to listen to. So I noticed last night
that conservatives from around the country, including a number of
friends of mine who've left New York, mostly for Florida,
(11:41):
they're all bemoaning this is the sadness that has become
New York. But what I found interesting is Zoron is
a confirmed Jew hater. He is an Into fodder supporter
in addition to being a socialist in an absolute nut
but this guy is a confirmed Jew hater. And what
(12:04):
I found was how many white liberals were bemoaning his victory.
Not that Andrew Cuomo is so great, but he was
the alternative. They were bemoaning his victory and finding common
ground with conservatives who were saying, yes, this is bad
(12:25):
for New York. And all I could think was it's
a certain reckoning. You know, sometimes you have to hit
rock bottom from bad behaviors. Sometimes you have to really
suffer that bad behavior. I've had friends who are parents
(12:45):
whose kids got into all sorts of trouble, and sometimes
they learned, you got to let that kid.
Speaker 1 (12:52):
Get in the worst kind of trouble.
Speaker 5 (12:53):
You got to let them suffer before you step in
and do something about it. Let them understand the point
of their the consequences of their actions.
Speaker 1 (13:06):
What we are.
Speaker 5 (13:07):
About to witness in New York worse than I think
we've probably seen so far.
Speaker 1 (13:13):
Same thing that's going on in.
Speaker 5 (13:14):
Chicago, where blacks are now showing up at town hall
meetings and yelling at Brandon Johnson, the black nationalist, white
hating communists. This Zoron is going to He's talking about
if Netanya who arrives in New York, he's going to
arrest him. Well, what ended up happening for a very
(13:39):
long time is white liberals played with fire. They couldn't
find a non white person that they didn't fall in
love with. They fall in love with every non white person,
especially if that person is Muslim.
Speaker 1 (13:55):
Or violent or hates white people.
Speaker 5 (14:00):
Can you be surprised how many Jews fall in love
with a non white person who's a Jew hater and
a Hamas lover, and they love this. It makes them
feel very righteous, and it's almost as if they expected
everybody else to bail them out. And it's not until
(14:22):
the consequences of their actions come home to roost.
Speaker 1 (14:26):
Okay, you wanted to play that game.
Speaker 5 (14:29):
You didn't want to keep counsel with the rest of
us because we're all heathens and you're so virtuous.
Speaker 1 (14:36):
Live in this environment.
Speaker 5 (14:39):
Get on the subway now for people in Houston who
we need to have a light rail and we need
to have this, and we need to have those jackasses
have never ridden public transportation.
Speaker 1 (14:54):
You know why.
Speaker 5 (14:55):
I know that because if they did, they wouldn't want
to be forced onto it. If you drive your vehicle
today every day, or if you drive to work every
day and there you sit in the air conditioning listening
to the music of your choice or not, and nobody's
peeing on you, pooping on you, beating you, stabbing you,
(15:16):
intimidating you, or stinking you out, then you think there's
something glorious.
Speaker 1 (15:22):
About New York is about to have a very very
bad life for a complete meltdown with more of the
Michael Berry Show. I regret that I.
Speaker 5 (15:36):
Have but one life to give for my country, the
famous Nathan Hale before being put to death, you think
of the great last lines before you go, and I
think you have to put in that category if that
(15:59):
gator which Tommy Woodward is said to have uttered prior
to jumping in the water and being killed by the alligator.
Denesh Desuza did an interview with an immam by the
name of Imam Tweedy, which we'll play this evening, and
he asks him why these immam's why the Muslim clerics
(16:25):
keep counsel with the American left, And he said, we
fear conservatives because they stand on principle. They cannot be swayed.
They have a backbone, they have conviction. We look at
the American left and right here he's talking about white liberals.
(16:46):
We look at the American left as having no principle.
They'll run after the trainees, they'll run after gays, they'll
run after the climate, they'll run after abortion. They get
washed around with the seas. There is no true north
(17:07):
for them. The latest cause is what they're in the
streets chanting for. They don't know what they stand for.
It changes day to day. That's why you get whiplash
trying to keep up with which flag they're marching in
the streets on they're marching in the streets. Down with Trump,
(17:31):
down with America, and if you listen carefully, down with
Jews and down with white people, down with Christians, Kill them,
torture them.
Speaker 1 (17:45):
Drive them out.
Speaker 5 (17:47):
And that ranges from the Mexican American or other Hispanics
saying this is our land, not yours, this is Mexico
not America.
Speaker 1 (17:56):
That's very common. And then there is the.
Speaker 5 (18:00):
Person who claims to speak for the Indian so named
because Columbus thought he was in India, but in fact
he was in what we came to call the Americas,
or you can call them Native Americans, which is intended
to suggest they were here at the very beginning, and
(18:24):
the rest of us are interlopers. So really it's first
in time their property. We're trespastors. Except when do you
start marking first in time? What is the moment at
which this tribe owns the land that they stole from
that tribe that stole the land from that tribe.
Speaker 1 (18:49):
How exactly will we trace that.
Speaker 5 (18:53):
And what will be the moment at which we do that,
and where should we put the people who are now
the trespastor since the land is being handed to some
other group five generations, hence, will we take back Ireland
for them or maybe Constantinople? Where will the nonsense end?
(19:16):
It's irrational, it's insane. It is as insane as cutting
a little boy's weenie off while he's two years old
because you've decided he's a girl, because you get so
much attention by having a boy who's a girl. And
look at me, I don't judge he's a girl. Y'all
(19:37):
call him a girl? And look how righteous I am.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
This mom points out.
Speaker 5 (19:46):
That the Muslims will not follow what the American left does.
The abortions, the homosexuality, the cross dressing, the weeny cutting,
all of it. They won't support any of it, but
they will support that people are doing it, because that's
how you create the downfall of a nation. That's how
(20:08):
you weaken a people. That is exactly how you weaken
a people.
Speaker 1 (20:15):
And he's very clear on that.
Speaker 5 (20:17):
He's very clear that they want a Muslim America that
can either scare you, you can be resigned to it.
You can say what's wrong with that, It's fine, but
let's have that conversation, because that is the intention. When
(20:39):
you see what has become of New York, or for
that matter, Chicago, when you.
Speaker 1 (20:47):
See these people.
Speaker 5 (20:50):
Who let's take Brandon Johnson in Chicago, he supports every group,
whether it's Palestinians, Hamas, has Bela, Iran, Mexico, illegal immigration.
You will notice a central theme to everything about these people,
(21:12):
a hatred of white people and a hatred of everything
that is American. And your approach to that can either
be to ignore it or to understand they're coming for you.
You want to know what looks Nazi. You want to
know what looks fascist. A central unifying, cohesive philosophy not
(21:40):
in favor of weenie cutting or parades, or Iran that's
a new one, or Mexico or illegal immigration, or homosexuality
or transgenderism or climate change that will change.
Speaker 1 (21:58):
You can't keep up with that.
Speaker 5 (22:01):
You will notice that the central cohesive, unifying force is
a hatred of you, and you ignore that to your peril.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
You allow these.
Speaker 5 (22:14):
People inside your organization at your peril. I'm going to
be completely honest, as monstrous as it sounds. It's how
I feel today. I'm going to watch as white liberals
are destroyed and driven out of New York. I'm going
to laugh because this is the consequence. You counted on
(22:36):
enough of us to live in your town, as you
marched for Hamas. Now you got one. You got a
Hamas lever as your mayor. You chanted the most awful things.
You hated the Jews, You've just driven them out. You
hated the white people. They're headed to Florida, the last
(22:59):
people left to turn out the lights. Oh, it's going
to be more violent than ever before. There will be
no marine on the subway to protect against the guy
who's beating people to death. There will be no one
to stop the people dropping their trousers and walking up
and down the subway stabbing. It will be exactly what
(23:23):
John Rocker said it was, and to an extent, always
has been because that kind of mayor.
Speaker 1 (23:31):
Wait till you see who he puts in as the
police chiefs.
Speaker 5 (23:35):
Wait till you see a public health crisis, Wait till
you see a nine to eleven, Wait till you see
the organized games.
Speaker 1 (23:42):
This is the consequence of the white liberal and it's
about to get out.
Speaker 2 (23:49):
What's the name to say, Michael Buddy.
Speaker 1 (23:53):
There is a special election being held for the.
Speaker 5 (24:00):
Fire term for the eighteenth Congression, all which was once
held originally held by Barbara Jordan. It was created for
her as part of the Civil Rights Act. Out of
the Department of Justice. They decided that we needed a
black congressman, and by god, they were going to draw
(24:20):
a district. And apparently the way you choose a black
congressman is you put enough black people in a district, because,
as it turns out, blacks will vote for a black candidate. Now,
when white people do that, it's a terrible thing, but
we can reliably count on black people to do that,
(24:44):
not the darnedest thing. And in fact, we encouraged it
because nothing says let's end racism like picking a district,
putting the oh no, don't put that neighborhood in there.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
Over here, No, no, over here.
Speaker 5 (24:56):
And so you jerrymanner districts to put enough black people
in a district to ensure that that district will in
fact be black. They also created a district for Ben Reyes,
but Jean Green beat him. That was meant to be
the Brown district. Didn't work out. Because it turns out
that brown people didn't like Ben Reyes. They preferred Jen Green.
(25:17):
He gave better constituent services, and that is true. Guy
actually was white Democrat was better than the Hispanic Democrat
at that particular thing. So the eighteen Congressional district was
upon Barbara Jordan's poor health, it became an open seat
that Mickey Leland was elected to. He died on a
(25:38):
relief mission over Ethiopia, and then there was a wide
open seat in one of the most interesting races in
modern Houston history that featured Craig Washington and the former
chief administrative Officer of the City of Houston came to
(25:58):
was longtime city councilman and what came to be a
very very brutal race Anthony Hall. Anthony Hall cause I
ken't leave. I actually know Anthony very well, and his
last name just escaped me. I think I'm at that age.
And Craig Washington wins that race in eighty nine when
I arrived in Houston, first race in Houston I watched,
(26:20):
and then Craig Washington holds that seat until ninety four
when then city Councilman Sheila Jackson Lee is elected and
holds that seat until her death. Do you remember Sheila
Jacksonally Ramonte prim little Sheila jackone for us.
Speaker 3 (26:35):
I am outraged in the city of Houston.
Speaker 8 (26:39):
How I don't know, unthinking can you be when you
close down city pools, pool the meager opportunity and recreation
that a child has.
Speaker 3 (26:51):
In inner city area or maybe a rural area. She
holds Ramon.
Speaker 5 (26:56):
Did she have any opinions on Germany? I can't recall
feel like she did.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
Yeah, she didn't have anything against Germany, not that I
have anything.
Speaker 8 (27:07):
It's I'm hurt, not that I have anything against Germany.
Speaker 5 (27:11):
So Sheila Jacksonally runs for mayor loses John Whitmyer. She
passes shortly after, and Rodney Ellis has made sure that
there's not a building in Houston not named after her.
Speaker 1 (27:20):
She's apparently the greatest Houstonian of all times. She has
more buildings named.
Speaker 5 (27:23):
For her than Earl Campbell, bum Phillips, Dan Pasterini, Nolan Ryan,
all of them combined. She was apparently a great Houstonian.
If you were to drive through town, you'd say, don't
know who Shela Jackson Lee was. But apparently she's something
of a superstar.
Speaker 1 (27:38):
In this town.
Speaker 5 (27:39):
And then she was replaced by Sylvester Turner and he
died shortly thereafter, occasioning an open seat, and that seat
is considered a Democrat's seat, but that doesn't mean that
a Republican cannot run. And conceivably, when Carmen Maria Montiel
(27:59):
is our guests is a candidate running as a Republican
in that race, Carmen, give us the one minute spiel
on who you are?
Speaker 1 (28:07):
Ramon will time you well?
Speaker 10 (28:11):
Thank you Michael for having me with you. I am
a legal immigrant. I came to the United States in
nineteen eighty a as a student, and because of the
situation of Venezuela.
Speaker 3 (28:21):
I was not able to return.
Speaker 10 (28:23):
I moved to Houston in nineteen ninety one. I raised
my family here. I develop a medical practice. I was
the uncle woman for Telemundo. My children are grown with
Master law school, my little one finishing a chemical engineer
in Virginia Tech. Today, I'm a commercial broker, real estate broker,
and I've been active in politics. I've seen this country,
(28:46):
you know, taking the path very similar of what happened
in Venezuela.
Speaker 3 (28:50):
I'm a business woman.
Speaker 10 (28:52):
I ran against Shila Jacksonline. In twenty twenty two, I
was able to take almost forty one thousand votes. As
I know the needs of the district. The district has
been neglected for thirty years.
Speaker 3 (29:04):
There is a.
Speaker 10 (29:05):
Council cluster in Cashmere Garden that has been overlooked.
Speaker 3 (29:09):
Talk about it, but overlooked.
Speaker 10 (29:11):
There is difficult access for health care in the district.
The district is very diverse. We have million dollars home
to the poorest of the poor. And now the district
is forty eight percent Latino.
Speaker 3 (29:24):
Is no longer what the people thought that it was
mostly a black district.
Speaker 10 (29:29):
In fact, the district represents the population of the city
of Houston, forty eight percent Latino and twenty percent of
the new area.
Speaker 3 (29:39):
After the census.
Speaker 10 (29:40):
You know, this district was remapped after the twenty twenty census.
Used to belong to district too, which is a Republican district.
And historically in the last twenty years, every election, the
constituents of the district more more Republican than Democratic and
one hundred and eighty two thousand avidens of the district
(30:04):
are independent on Swim voters. The thing is just give
you know a reason to the voters to vote differently.
Speaker 3 (30:13):
I believe, you know, there is a very.
Speaker 10 (30:15):
Low turnout in the district for voting because they feel
they don't you know, they don't have a choice. But
this year, in this special election, they have a choice.
And as you know, mainstream media is completing it is
being ignoring me completely. They only talk about Democratic candidates
and they're not showing to the voters that there is
(30:36):
an alternative. There is a conservative alternative.
Speaker 3 (30:39):
For this district.
Speaker 10 (30:41):
As you know, there's been billions of dollars federal money
allocated to the district, and the district is in the
city of Houston, then nobody knows where it is.
Speaker 3 (30:51):
Michael, this is something that we need.
Speaker 10 (30:53):
That would be my first order of business in COVID
is to introduce a bill that is ready to go
to audit the city to see where is the money.
Speaker 5 (31:08):
Interesting, I'm looking at this district on a map. Let
me ask you first, when is the special election? Is
it in November?
Speaker 3 (31:19):
November fourth? Is the special election? Is what is called?
Speaker 10 (31:22):
And this is a jungle race. There is no primary.
All the candidates were going to be in the same ballot.
So far, I believe twenty one has filed FYC. That
doesn't mean they're going to be in the ballot, but
we'll see probably not being ten of us or fifteen
of us. But the people knows me. Like I said,
(31:45):
I have a name identity because I run in twenty
twenty two and I did pretty well.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Hold on just a moment, Carmen