Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's that time, time, time, time, Luck and.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Load from Michael Verie Show is on the air.
Speaker 3 (00:14):
Socialism is Christianity and Judaism and Islam and Buddhism, because
all the great religions say essentially the same thing that
Mark said, which is that the rich man is not
supposed to come into the room and take nine slices
of the pie and leave the remaining slice for everybody
else to fight over. And that's what Jesus said, and
(00:37):
our founding fathers were very wary of the wealthy, and
they should know because they were wealthy themselves.
Speaker 4 (00:44):
This time, what the purpose is about this entire project.
(01:06):
It's not simply to raise class consciousness, but to win socialism,
and obviously raising class consciousness is the critical part of that,
but making sure that we have candidates that both understand
that and are willing to put that forward at every
which moment that they have, at every which opportunity that
they are given.
Speaker 2 (01:26):
From the.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
Stream water.
Speaker 5 (01:37):
This land.
Speaker 4 (01:41):
We have to continue to elect more socialists, and we
have to ensure that we are unapologetic about our socialism.
There are also other issues that we firmly believe in,
whether it's BDS right or whether it's the end goal
of season, the means of production.
Speaker 6 (02:00):
This uh.
Speaker 5 (02:09):
From the red postream hone, this landless name.
Speaker 6 (02:19):
You know, what he's modeling for democrats is a laser
like focus on power, on taking power from people who
have way too much, you know, like the landlords that
are screwing New York residents with with rents that are
way too high, and giving power to people who have
too little of it.
Speaker 7 (02:40):
It's when we talk about the show, what's in the news,
what we're interested.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
In, and the light.
Speaker 7 (03:03):
We keep going back to the pistol packing old black
lady who stopped traffic for five hours last week. And
each of us has a different area of focus or fascination,
but can you imagine she's sitting out in a lawn
chair in the middle of forty five the North Freeway,
(03:27):
in the middle of the afternoon.
Speaker 1 (03:31):
For five hours.
Speaker 7 (03:35):
I don't want to be outside for five minutes in
this heat, and that was a hot day. She's out
in the middle of all those lanes of traffic, just
sitting there with their pistol, like she's sitting on the
back porch. And we have tried to imagine every different angle.
Speaker 1 (03:58):
Of this story.
Speaker 7 (04:00):
The cops her the drivers, but there's something about her
that seemed familiar her her jest. She was only sixty four,
but she seemed much older.
Speaker 8 (04:21):
I think I'm go to cool Street's why you're able
to make them?
Speaker 1 (04:25):
How you turn around, walk towards our house.
Speaker 9 (04:29):
I refuse to take one step. You want to walk or.
Speaker 10 (04:35):
You want to link?
Speaker 9 (04:37):
If you keep hanging around here, you ain't going nowhere.
Speaker 1 (04:39):
Neither now sit here, madam. She reminded us of Daisy
May Moses.
Speaker 7 (04:58):
Daisy May Moses, known as Grannie on The Beverly Hillbillies,
was the mother in law of the patriarch Jed Clampett
in The Beverly Hillbillies. Jed, of course, was played by
Buddy Epsen, and Granny was played by Irene Ryan, who
was only five and a half years older than Epsen,
but looked a whole lot older. The character was named
in honor of the artist Grandma Moses, who had died
(05:21):
at the age of one hundred and one the previous year,
and only started her professional career as a painter in
her later years.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
We love We all love a feisty old lady.
Speaker 7 (05:34):
Whether it's in a Charlie Daniels song or in the
Beverly Hillbillies like Grannie or our own.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Ain'ty Mabel.
Speaker 8 (05:50):
Welcome this winding like a briskin angel, doyal city hate law,
I don't ask me why it's lived on my wig
and man beat his shoes, grab my purson, my pistols.
Speaker 1 (06:04):
Got nothing to lose. Traffic clacking up from the loop.
Speaker 10 (06:08):
To the door.
Speaker 8 (06:10):
But Hontie, Mabel, steam raising don't grow.
Speaker 5 (06:13):
You can hog, you can.
Speaker 2 (06:15):
Holler a bunch of best night stress because.
Speaker 5 (06:17):
Paddy, I'm here to put this flea. This'st this fast,
say it loud. I'm sixteen and forty five shouting frown,
that's this fast? Why are you the fresh?
Speaker 2 (06:32):
She got hot.
Speaker 8 (06:33):
Sauce and a person scripture in face.
Speaker 5 (06:36):
That's this nest? Oh lord, yes, turn this traffic jam
into a Sunday back.
Speaker 1 (06:46):
The Shipley's mind was long, but my spirits.
Speaker 8 (06:49):
Stayed bed because I had son twenty.
Speaker 5 (06:52):
Three and a doughnut and red slad claws crawling and
a bus.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
B But I'm poll like most this hat that tide.
Speaker 5 (07:02):
I die grand babys in pearling press and apris homes,
final baptized boks using water holeses in home.
Speaker 1 (07:09):
The city runs on Bombo and grace, and.
Speaker 2 (07:13):
I still got enough to slap the devil in the.
Speaker 5 (07:17):
Let's see fast, I'm gonna do your from greens going
down to Buffa lo less fast baking flea. She got
corn bread, Prisoman coming the drains less the fast on't
said gas.
Speaker 10 (07:36):
If God loves Houston, heat loves hospital.
Speaker 1 (07:41):
I didn't come to start Trump. I came to stop
it just long enough to testify. So if you see
me sitting in traffic with the land and one you getting.
Speaker 5 (07:51):
A switch in the other to walk to say that
and ask the bless this mest save from six stand
a body pipe shouted found, let's say, mest.
Speaker 7 (08:06):
She got hot.
Speaker 5 (08:07):
Sauce and a versus crapcher and please let's messes turn
the serf chin into a Sunday.
Speaker 1 (08:20):
He will sleep because harry a superior water bit.
Speaker 8 (08:27):
How do you own it on it?
Speaker 2 (08:30):
Fred?
Speaker 6 (08:31):
How do you like it?
Speaker 1 (08:33):
I like it with the rise, must weed it. I
eat it all the time.
Speaker 8 (08:40):
Chicken, Chick and chicken. That's why pulled him to pop
chopt to said that they were closed.
Speaker 10 (08:47):
I pulled him to the window and asked for the manager.
Speaker 11 (08:50):
Joe tomater I explore from chicken and biscuits.
Speaker 1 (08:54):
I took the sport, go ready and the ravings and eyes.
My girl actually has some.
Speaker 9 (09:06):
Magg Gee.
Speaker 1 (09:10):
Come agree.
Speaker 8 (09:13):
How do you wove it?
Speaker 7 (09:16):
How do you like it? I like it?
Speaker 1 (09:19):
Listen to you dark meat or a white meat guy?
You're white meat? Joy, no flavor? Listen.
Speaker 7 (09:26):
This dark meat is found in the wings, thighs, and drumsticks,
and it's actually a different kind of muscle than the
white meat. The dark meat muscles get their fuel primarily
from fat, which provides a more sustainable energy for the
prolonged activity of standing, walking, and running than the glycogen.
(09:51):
Dark meat is made dark by two proteins involved in
the process of converting the fat into energy for the muscle.
Dark meat has a stronger and more game like flavor
as opposed to white meat. This is due to the
activity of those muscles and the various chemicals, proteins and
fats that actively builds in the muscle tissue. Because white meat,
(10:17):
because it is thinner, more tender, and more exposed to
the heat of the oven, the white breast meat usually
finishes cooking first. The more compact and sheltered dark meat
takes longer. One of the tried and true methods of
cooking a turkey is to start it upside down so
the breast is sheltered and the wings, thighs, and drumsticks
(10:41):
are exposed, and then turning it right side up part
way through cooking. Other methods include shielding the breast meat
with aluminum foil or barding it with strips of bacon
to keep it moist.
Speaker 1 (10:55):
What do you think about that? Ramon, what you think
about that? So somebody that I.
Speaker 7 (11:02):
Knew back at UH when we used to go to
Frenchies all the time, franchise right next door to UH.
What happened with Frenchies was the Crusoes franchised some stores
and the people to whom they franchised them didn't really
(11:24):
honor the Frenchist tradition very well. I think Aaron Glenn tried.
Aaron Glenn put was the franchisee or part of a
group that was the franchisee out at Prairieview, A and M.
In Prairieview, you would see it off of two ninety
right there when you were driving out. And then there's
(11:45):
one over on forty five not far from MAC.
Speaker 1 (11:48):
I don't know how that one is, but it's kind
of just jammed in the middle of a couple of
Rundown shops.
Speaker 4 (11:56):
Oh.
Speaker 7 (11:56):
Speaking of which, Ramona, I wanted to tell you something.
I'm glad you were reminded me about mac. Let's see,
Mack told me that tomorrow, from seven to nine am,
Gallery Furniture is giving away one hundred and fifty mattresses
to veterans. He says veterans. You ever heard him say veterans?
(12:18):
Listen Whenever he says veterans, he doesn't say veterans. He
says veterans, listen to it to veterans and first responders
on Thursday morning from seven to nine am, in honor
of Independence Day, six thousand and six North Freeway location. Okay,
so I guess only at that location, not the gallery location,
(12:39):
and not the out west location. That's tomorrow morning, seven
to nine. I would tell you to get there early
because people tend to show up early, and I would
bring your military or first responder ID Gallery Furniture, six
thousand and six North Freeway between Tidwell and Parker. That's
tomorrow morning. And thank you very much for that, Matt.
(13:01):
That's fantastic. Speaking of giveaways, the month of June, which
is PTSD Awareness month. Gringo's text mex did a number
of things dedicated to raising money for Camp Hope, and
all you had to do was eat there. You know,
different things. There was kso for a cause. There's obviously
(13:22):
the Plateo Soldado goes on year round. They just wrote
a check for the month of June one hundred three
thousand dollars and some change to Camp Hope. That is
real money to help veterans, save the lives of veterans
because they run a pretty lean operation there. That is
absolutely fantastic. So back to Fried Chicken. I got an
(13:43):
email from friend of mine who knows I love French.
She's Fried Chicken and it's two women and it's like
a routine they're doing. They make it seem that it's natural,
but I think they've worked on this, and they're heavy
set girls. You got the hype girl in the back
and then you got Tamika in the front. Tomka goes
by the name Mika. So when you hear the woman
(14:03):
in the back say Mika Nika, you're gonna cringe because
you're gonna go, oh my god. They let no, she
doesn't say what you think she's saying. She calls her Mika.
We slowed it down, we analyzed the audio. So she
posted on Instagram a video of her with a big
old box of Frenchy's chicken, and I'm gonna tell you something.
Speaker 1 (14:24):
If you didn't want.
Speaker 7 (14:25):
Frenchie's chicken before this, you are gonna want it now.
This woman, what she's doing to this chicken. I mean
it's it's downright sexual.
Speaker 1 (14:32):
She's putting it. Oh my goodness, give it. Give it
a play. Ramonk co.
Speaker 9 (14:35):
What's up, y'all?
Speaker 1 (14:36):
What's up today? I got aping kids, bitch, we batter
go fit.
Speaker 9 (14:40):
In this corner.
Speaker 12 (14:41):
Gather.
Speaker 1 (14:41):
You have to get in the back of Mecca, because girl,
we really couldn't sit in there. She started to sit
in the front. Bitch, where you going squeeze back of
your girl? I play with your tang, old bitch, I
mean for inchischicky.
Speaker 12 (14:54):
Yeah, I say, my favorite chicken place in Houston, Texas.
Speaker 9 (14:57):
Let me get this.
Speaker 1 (14:58):
Lead, let me get this leg.
Speaker 9 (15:00):
Do I still got it?
Speaker 1 (15:00):
Let's see if you got it.
Speaker 9 (15:01):
Don't play with that time.
Speaker 1 (15:03):
Don't play with them. Mike mm hmm hmmm, Old beach
say bitch.
Speaker 12 (15:13):
So good.
Speaker 1 (15:17):
Mm hmmmm oh my boy, it's back there. Who is
back there cooking it up, making it happen?
Speaker 6 (15:26):
Oh?
Speaker 8 (15:26):
You cook dona playing some time?
Speaker 1 (15:30):
Now I'm introduce something they have.
Speaker 12 (15:32):
The things look like moon piles, not moon pile. You
gotta see what that's all about me cause let's see
the Jamaican pads Jamaican paan is they got new thing?
Speaker 3 (15:41):
Bitch?
Speaker 1 (15:41):
I'm what is hidden for me?
Speaker 6 (15:45):
What is hitten for me?
Speaker 1 (15:46):
What is hidden for Meka? Don't play with their time?
Oh everything coming out of my mouth.
Speaker 12 (15:49):
Away with what is it trying to set me up?
Speaker 1 (16:00):
I just thinking that, like Zip came out, You've got
the diddy verdicts in. Let'll tell you what those are
coming up?
Speaker 2 (16:14):
Live life, learn, doing it big on the Michael Berry Show's.
Speaker 1 (16:26):
Been twenty years. Twenty years since Operation Red Wings, the
amazing story, and but for the fact that Marcus Strell
kept a diary, we wouldn't know about it, which makes
me stop and think, how many other things do we
(16:49):
not know about? How many other tragic, amazing, incredible, inspirational.
Speaker 10 (16:57):
Sad.
Speaker 1 (16:59):
Stories.
Speaker 7 (17:01):
How many men died on a battlefield, were ambushed, were
shot out of the air, and their story never told.
Stories of valor stories of who they were. I think
one of the things that really made Loan Survivor, especially
(17:26):
the movie. Peter Berg did an amazing job with that.
I think one of these that made it so powerful
was that before you got to the scenes where these
guys are being ambushed and it's bad, you got a
sense of who they were and where they were in
(17:46):
their lives, their young men, and you know, they've got
girlfriends and wives, and one wants to buy his wife
a horse, and another one, you know, wants to go
back and see his girlfriend.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
And you got a sense of.
Speaker 7 (18:01):
Who these people, who these guys were, and it made
you It made it much more emotional when the bullet
started flying. Marcus Latrell, when he came home, would write
that diary which would become a bestseller, which Peterberg would
then pick up and make into a movie, and the
(18:23):
casting just incredible, including both Latrell brothers, and then Marcus
would go on to create the Loan Survivor That Never
Quit brand. A Loan Survivor Foundation would be started in
his honor. He would speak around the country, including a
(18:45):
wonderful event at the RCC which was one of my
highlights to have the organization to have his roster of
folks there to speak. I'll never forget Chad Hoffman, who
was an army veteran who'd had both his legs and
of his arms blown off, and.
Speaker 1 (19:03):
He was just sweating.
Speaker 7 (19:05):
Bullets backstage, and I said, what can we do. We've
got the ac on. I knew it wasn't I knew
it wasn't hot. And he said, oh no, don't worry
about that. He said, what happens is my heart is
pumping blood to my extremities the same way yours is,
(19:25):
so your heart is calibrated to pump blood. It was
his right arm that was cut off above the elbow,
and he said, my heart is pumping blood hard enough
to get it over to my shoulder, down my arm,
pass my elbow, down to my fingertips, and then it
comes back and so it has to push it there,
(19:47):
and then it cools as it comes back. Mine is pumping,
and all of a sudden, there's a beaver dam right
there that stops the blood and.
Speaker 1 (19:55):
Sends it back because there's no arm there. But my
heart doesn't know that.
Speaker 7 (20:00):
So that blood that's coming back doesn't have a chance
to cool as it goes through the circuitout route, so
it's coming back hot and going back into that steam engine,
which is my heart. And so it's hint sending hot
blood throughout my body. And I never even considered, I
never even considered that that would be the case, that.
Speaker 1 (20:22):
Little things like that.
Speaker 7 (20:23):
I mean, you can imagine it's not easy to live
having lost a limb in his case three, but to
imagine all the other things that you're you're like a
what is it women go through ramone where they're hormonal menipause.
It's like these hot flashes, but he's having those all
(20:44):
the time. Just one of the many things that veterans
suffer through. Anyway, to get your mind right for Marcus
Attrel and our love of Marcus Attrell, imagine you're the
turds who are out in the country north of Hugheston
and you go up onto a guy's property and you
kill a dog and you don't realize that's Marcus Latrell's dog,
(21:10):
that's his best friend, that's his service dog. And Marcus
Latrell gives Chase and on the other end of the
line is a dispatcher because he doesn't want to have
to kill those guys and he knows he will. On
the other end of the line, it's the dispatcher telling him.
Speaker 1 (21:26):
Okay, sir, we've got it from here. You can abandon
the chase. We don't want you to get hurt. Ma'am.
I'm not the one gonna get hurt here. Your officers
are more likely to get hurt than I am. And
I can guarantee you those turds. And here's just a
clip of that call.
Speaker 7 (21:46):
Okay, well, I don't want you to drive one hundred
and ten miles an hour.
Speaker 10 (21:49):
Can you feel that it's murrying my dog?
Speaker 8 (21:52):
Okay, so well, I don't need you to keep up
with him.
Speaker 12 (21:54):
I don't want you to hurt yourself by record or anything.
Speaker 1 (21:59):
I'm a Navy seal, have been for two years.
Speaker 10 (22:00):
I'm not worrying about her. What's up?
Speaker 9 (22:02):
I know what I'm doing.
Speaker 10 (22:03):
You an't tell your boy sat right. That's them here
and three guys out here and me and another copy.
And I want to say another gain. So when you're sorry,
kill my dogs to stay for it. Sorry, I don't
(22:24):
have it all I got I want to that's fine, Fee,
that's fine. I'll just backing you up there.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
You got another clipperm on.
Speaker 10 (22:35):
Yeah, I will throw it chase you you guys, I
want to just shot my dog?
Speaker 1 (22:39):
Okay, so you chasing him because he shot your dog?
Speaker 10 (22:45):
Yeah, that's right.
Speaker 8 (22:46):
You know who these people are?
Speaker 10 (22:48):
I have no idea.
Speaker 7 (22:49):
Okay, what kind of view wore they is?
Speaker 10 (22:51):
And it's a it's a burgundy.
Speaker 12 (22:53):
It looks like a toy the camera.
Speaker 7 (22:55):
Can you drive up to your house and chut your
dog and left?
Speaker 10 (22:58):
Yep, I've woke me up and then I came back.
And which way you headed?
Speaker 1 (23:03):
How call the railroad track?
Speaker 10 (23:05):
You're passing the railroad track?
Speaker 1 (23:08):
How fast are you traveling?
Speaker 10 (23:10):
Trowing eighty miles out? You read to get to my
because they got got I got one too, So listen,
go into a gunfight.
Speaker 7 (23:21):
I kind of wish he'd had an opportunity to deal
with it himself, but because I have a very good
idea how that would have turned out, A very good idea. Indeed,
State and federal prosecute he'll be our guest coming up
at ten o'clock. Twenty years since Operation Red Wings, State
and federal prosecutors have charged more than three hundred twenty
people and uncovered nearly fifteen billion dollars in false claims
(23:43):
in what they call the largest coordinated takedown of health
care fraud schemes and Department of Justice history. The scheme
involved people in Russia, Eastern Europe, Pakistan and other countries. Folks,
they are ripping off our country.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
Do you see this?
Speaker 7 (23:59):
Matthew Galleatti, Department of Justice Criminal Division. Here he is
detailing the fraud.
Speaker 11 (24:05):
Three hundred and twenty four defendants were charged criminally, including
ninety six licensed medical professionals twenty five excuse me, of
whom were doctors and charge for their alleged participation in
various fraud schemes targeting government and private health insurance programs.
(24:26):
Over fourteen billion dollars in alleged fraud was built to Medicare, Medicaid.
Speaker 1 (24:31):
And private insurance programs.
Speaker 11 (24:33):
Unfortunately, those numbers represent Americans impacted in every state. Behind
the numbers is a web of criminal activity that stretches
far beyond our borders. The FBI's Operation gold Rush resulted
in the largest amount of loss charged in a healthcare
fraud case brought.
Speaker 1 (24:54):
By the Department of Justice.
Speaker 11 (24:56):
More than twenty members of a criminal organization based in
Russia and elsewhere were charged for their roles in a
ten billion dollar Medicare fraud and international money on earn conspiracy.
Speaker 1 (25:08):
I'm well done.
Speaker 9 (25:08):
So this is the Michael Berry Showjohn.
Speaker 1 (25:20):
Was reported before I was even born. I don't know
why I love it so much. It's weird that I do. Really.
Sean Diddy Combs.
Speaker 7 (25:35):
Has been read the verdict not guilty of racketeering and
sex trafficking charges. He was found guilty of the two
charges of hiring a male escort to have sex with
him and his girlfriends at the So you probably understand this,
(26:02):
but let me try to.
Speaker 1 (26:03):
Break it down. When you have a case.
Speaker 7 (26:09):
Where you've watched stories and the stories are very salacious,
and you said, oh, he's a bad guy, and I
think he is a bad guy. I think he committed
I think he did far worse than Harvey Weinstein could
ever hoped to. I think he put people in situations
(26:29):
where it was close enough to rape through coercion.
Speaker 1 (26:36):
That he created a real dilemma. Now they have agency,
they're adults.
Speaker 7 (26:42):
They could have said, you know what, I am not
willing to let you butt rape me in exchange for
you making me a star.
Speaker 1 (26:51):
They could have done that as adults and didn't. But
the fact that they.
Speaker 7 (26:58):
Didn't does not absolve him from a moral condemnation as
an awful person. The Justin Bieber stuff is to me
a whole different story because Justin Bieber was a miner,
and I think there are other miners involved. What we
see here is a classic case of a public figure
(27:25):
and who got a lot of bad press, and people
generally know that he was doing some pretty nasty stuff.
Speaker 1 (27:37):
You know, the baby oil becomes a big thing. Baby
oil is not a crime. There are a lot of
things people do.
Speaker 7 (27:45):
That becomes salacious, and you'll have daytime talk shows and
you'll have headlines and you'll have the shaking of heads
and much clucking. But you have to prove the elements
of the crime that you charge, and every crime has
elements to it. You have to prove one, two, three, four.
(28:10):
There are different elements depending on crimes, and those elements
can can raise a third degree to a second degree
to a first degree murder. Let's say, then you can
have aggravating factors. An aggravating factor is something that adds
to that. You didn't just go in and rob the store.
(28:30):
You went in and robbed the store with a gun.
That's an aggravating factor. The reason that's a worse crime
is it increases the likelihood that somebody's going to end
up seriously injured or dead. So we're going to punish
you more for creating greater danger. The two charges that
(28:52):
he is convicted of, the lesser charges. I don't know
what the sentencing will look like for that. I suspect
he won't do any jail time when certainly not even
and certainly not any prison time.
Speaker 1 (29:06):
I don't know. I don't know what the conditions are there.
Speaker 7 (29:10):
I will just say this, I don't know that this
is necessarily a breakdown of the criminal justice system. I
think this is a failure by overreach of a prosecutor.
When you have a prosecutor trying to make a name
for themselves with an overreach of the charges you bring,
(29:33):
you end up unable to prove those elements. And you
know this fellow was going to have good lawyers. And
when those lawyers start the case, which I'm sure they
did by saying, yeah, a lot of sex, I know
that they conceded, yeah, he knocked this woman around, But
knocking this woman around is not sex trafficking. He's not
(29:56):
charged with knocking her around. If that had been the case.
They could have gotten him for battery, they could have
gotten him for violence. There were plenty of elements of that.
They didn't choose to do that. So this is a
case where a good prosecutor could have won the case
and a bad prosecutor, driven by the wrong elements, managed
(30:20):
to lose the case.
Speaker 1 (30:22):
I lost interest in this case. I was interested in
it before because it proved that the world the.
Speaker 7 (30:28):
Obamas and the media and the rap stars in the
the world they live in, is a sick, twisted world.
And I think it's good for people to understand that.
So the next time they tell you who to vote for,
you understand who you're dealing with. But the actual case itself,
I don't find that anybody was very interested in it,
after all, did you ramon?
Speaker 1 (30:48):
Reminder?
Speaker 7 (30:49):
We'll have Mattress Mac come a MATTRESSMC. We'll have Marcus
Latrell coming up in our next segment. But before that,
a reminder to our first responders and veterans. Starting at
seven o'clock tomorrow morning, our show sponsor and friend, Mattress Mac,
will be giving away one hundred free mattresses at Gallery Furniture.
I would tell you to get there before that, because
there's usually a bustling crowd awaiting. And Shirley cue Lickor
(31:13):
was so moved by that gesture, so moved by that
gesture that she wanted to make sure she registered her
compliment to Mac.
Speaker 12 (31:24):
Hey you during this, Shirley Culick, I just want to
give a shout out to a man I have never
even met, mister Jim mcavalia. He's mostly known to y'all
as Mattress Mac. My god, if all of us was
as giving and loving and wonderful and smart as that
(31:46):
man is, what a beautiful world it could have been.
Speaker 4 (31:51):
Amen.
Speaker 1 (31:52):
Thank you, Mattress Max follow you have did first.
Speaker 12 (31:56):
I like him too, but I can't understand him. What else,
because you have to talk fast, ask somebody from the
radio community. You have to talk real, real fast, or
they cut your butt off the air. So and yes,
I do need a.
Speaker 1 (32:15):
New recliner, Watilsea.
Speaker 12 (32:18):
Yeah, the one you got busted. Well, yes, but Mattress
Mac probably have a recliner of some sort for a large, big,
beautiful black woman bwbb RB who tend to bust furniture.
(32:40):
So I'm gonna have to ask him behind that because
it's got to be something. He got his stock, you know,
he got to have something. Gonna help a lady out.
Speaker 1 (32:52):
Well, he always help everybody going.
Speaker 12 (32:55):
He really do, Yes, he do so, okay, just sit
to the Lord for consideration. Amen. Amen.
Speaker 7 (33:08):
Twenty years after Operation Red Wings, the loan survivor Marcus
Atrel will be our guests, come out.