Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:04):
It's that time time, time, time, luck and load.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
The Michael Verie Show is on the air, and now
a totally random weekend review from the past.
Speaker 1 (00:20):
Take a guess when this was.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
A big.
Speaker 2 (00:26):
Fall, so one of them was known as Big Balls.
The beauty of this is that then you had all
of these liberal news agencies having to save the name
on air on evening news broadcast. In order for people
to be as upset as they're supposed to be about
these kids who are do gooders saving the federal government
(00:47):
and saving the republic, they had to say the name.
Speaker 4 (00:54):
A licensed Houston Obama is wanted after investigators say she
cut off a man's private part before made him.
Speaker 1 (01:00):
She cut off his private part put it in his mouth.
Speaker 5 (01:02):
Records show mortuary staff had just learned the victim was a.
Speaker 1 (01:06):
Registered sex offender. Ethics is everything in this line of work.
Speaker 5 (01:09):
Jason Altieri runs Southeast Texas crematory.
Speaker 3 (01:12):
He says families should feel comfortable to ask questions.
Speaker 2 (01:15):
That y'all aren't one of those places, you know, I mean,
cut his winner off and stuff in his mouth.
Speaker 5 (01:21):
The Baytown managed charged with murder months after his fiance's
mysterious debt, but perhaps most disturbing of all what police say.
Speaker 6 (01:28):
He allegedly searched for on the Internet before the murder.
Speaker 2 (01:31):
One of his Google searches quote, can I kill an
illegal human? He googled if it was legal to kill
an illegal People's lack of basic knowledge astounds me.
Speaker 7 (01:42):
A plumbing problem at forty thousand feet, the toilets were clawed,
forcing the flight crew to turn around back to Chicago.
Speaker 3 (01:49):
Twelve eleven of the lavatories got plugged. Only one lavoratories
in the business plus was usable on the flight.
Speaker 2 (01:56):
One toilet for three hundred passengers.
Speaker 1 (01:58):
I drink a lot of water, pee a lot.
Speaker 2 (02:00):
I got to tell you, and you got to go,
and there is somebody in the toilet, and you wonder what.
Speaker 1 (02:05):
Are you doing in there? How long do you need it?
Speaker 2 (02:11):
So, if you' knew to the program last couple of weeks,
in last few weeks in December, we play a week
from earlier in the year, a week in review every
Friday during the drive home. Usually in the first segment.
Sometimes I'll forget and be a little later. Chad Knockanishi,
our executive producer, will pull together some different audio from
the week and do a week in review, and so
(02:35):
at the end of the year, just have a little fun.
We will play a week in review from at some
point earlier in the year, and you guess about when
that week would have been. This today's was from the
week of March fourteenth, and that means it's the week
before March fourteenth, because it aired on March fourteenth, So
(02:57):
you'll be mindful of that as we go forward through
the end of the year. So why was it important
in covering up the January sixth pipe bomber? Did he
be white? It's important that he be white because that
was part of the narrative. He needs to be a
white Maga Trump supporter. That's why I think he was
(03:21):
told to cover up every inch of his body. That's
why you couldn't see his skin. It turns out that
he wasn't white, that he was black.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
So why.
Speaker 2 (03:36):
Why did Jilani Cobb, Columbia professor on MSNBC with Mehdi Hassan.
Why did these two individuals say this was white domestic
terrorism without any any evidence to that fact.
Speaker 8 (03:51):
Jilani, you're a black man, I'm a Muslim. When you
consider how black criminals and Muslim terrorists are treated, both
by the legal system and.
Speaker 1 (04:00):
By the media.
Speaker 8 (04:01):
And yet the January sixth pipe bomber who laid explosives
in front of the RNC and DNC headquarters still walks free.
We just learned today that then Vice President Alex Harris
was inside the DNC when the bomb was found there.
We still don't take domestic terrorism of the far right
white variety.
Speaker 1 (04:18):
Seriously in this country, do we. No, we don't.
Speaker 4 (04:20):
We've seen this since the Obama administration, where they pointed
out that there was this rise of white nationalist terror,
and that was promptly squashed and jumped upon by the
Republicans in Congress, and so great cries of outrage in
response to that. And this has been what we've seen
since then, nowhere near the level of alarm that we've
(04:43):
had around the what was the phrase they used, Islamic
terror that they weren't trying to make Barack Obama say
all the time.
Speaker 8 (04:49):
Yeah, it's just so depressing, the double standards. I don't
know how many times you can draw attention to a
as a Muslim.
Speaker 1 (04:54):
Keep drawing attention to it kills me. It is a
super power.
Speaker 4 (05:02):
To be.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
So diabolical and pathological. It's actually a superpower. You know,
remember Quincy the medical examiner. The opening scene, he pulls
(05:26):
the cover back and all the residents, you know, they
pass out fate. If you're going to be a medical examiner,
you're going to have to get comfortable with dead naked bodies.
Speaker 1 (05:41):
Same is true of a mortician.
Speaker 2 (05:44):
If you're gonna replace cell phone towers, you're gonna get
used to heights. If you're gonna serve in war, you're
gonna have to overcome your fear and have a killer instinct.
So it is a superpower to do what they do,
to be able to take any fact which cuts against
(06:06):
you and make that about white people, Conservatives, Trump, Maga.
It's a real superpower because otherwise you wouldn't be able
to show your face. And this is what makes you crazy.
You hear these people, You see these people say things
(06:28):
like this, and you know your eyes do not deceive
you just understand. That's their superpower. That's what they do.
They're never to be trusted, They're never to be believed.
You always know that whatever they're saying is a lie.
Speaker 1 (06:50):
Can you move on down the road?
Speaker 2 (06:52):
When they have no credibility, when nobody ever believes them.
Speaker 1 (06:57):
That's when they're bankrupt.
Speaker 2 (06:59):
Meanwhile, Ashley Allison of CNN had this strange thing to say.
Speaker 9 (07:05):
Maybe he put a ball at the DNC because he
was he believed the Democrats stole the election because Republicans
and conspiracy theorists pushed that, and he put the ball
at the RNC because the Vice president who was about to.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Be sworn in was going to ride by.
Speaker 9 (07:22):
That area.
Speaker 1 (07:22):
There are many.
Speaker 9 (07:23):
Scenarios that the prosecution will have.
Speaker 1 (07:25):
To play out this case. I'm just gonna I'm gonna say.
Speaker 9 (07:28):
The thing out loud that I think everyone is not
saying and is actually surprised, and why I think Jennine
Piero is actually saying it. I think the fact that
this man is a black man was surprising to people.
I think people thought this was going to be a
white man that did this.
Speaker 1 (07:40):
They were going to be able to say he was
a part of the progressive left.
Speaker 9 (07:43):
And the fact that there's a black man that is
saying I too was susceptible to conspiracy theorists that the
president and conservative podcasts were pushing.
Speaker 1 (07:51):
That this election was stolen. Is a fact that they
were not expecting.
Speaker 9 (07:56):
And now everyone is on their heels and they're trying
to spin it, and I think that might be also,
you think let's not believe that the story right now.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
I'm not sure what your question was, Michael Berry. I
lost the plot somewhere you did.
Speaker 2 (08:12):
Minnesota is big in the news, and I hope President
Trump will keep it in the news. What's happening in
Mogadishu used to be in Minneapolis. This level of fraud
and corruption that has been alleged. If this turns out
to be true, this is the rot that has destroyed
(08:35):
our country. The difference here is this rot comes from
without instead of from within. It is the same rot
that caused a slow decay and decline in once great
American cities like Detroit, Baltimore, Philadelphia, Atlanta.
Speaker 4 (08:57):
D C.
Speaker 2 (08:58):
New York, Saint Leuis, New Orleans. New Orleans was my
favorite American city. Heils still is, but it's not what
it once was. That's not the progress we wanted to see.
You know, we have some friends and they have a
(09:19):
son who's in eighth grade and brilliant kid, high emotional intelligence,
and I think that's very important.
Speaker 1 (09:29):
I think it's important to.
Speaker 2 (09:30):
Be able to look adults in the eye and shake
their hand, interact. That is as important as the academic work.
I was a nerdy student. I loved school. I loved
every I loved it. I took I think twenty one
hours my last semester of college, and I only needed
nine because I had scholarships to pay for it and
(09:51):
I wanted to take fun classes. I know that sounds dorky,
that's fine, but I loved it. I love to learn.
That's why I love getting to talk to you every day.
Because my excuse for why I'm always watching documentaries and
reading books and asking questions and quizzing people. People don't
mind me asking them a thousand questions questions because they go, well,
(10:12):
he's just preparing for his show. Okay, that's it. I'd
still be doing it. It's just it would be really
creepy if I didn't have a show. So what we're
witnessing is finally pulling back the covers and seeing what's.
Speaker 1 (10:29):
Going on in Mogadishu. And it's ugly. Oh it's ugly.
Speaker 2 (10:35):
The mayor there, Jacob Fry, who had a real scare
from a Somali immigrant who ran against him. He cannot
suck up to the Somali community fast enough. He and
Tim Walls will hand our country over to foreigners if
they could. That's what makes white liberals so dangerous. So
(10:58):
here is Mayor Jacob Rye, the mayor of Mogadishue, on
MSNBC with that great talker and journalist Al Sharpton.
Speaker 10 (11:08):
I wanted to give you a take on the fraud
case that has created political shockwaves in your state. Federal
prosecutors have charged dozens of people in connection with an
alleged scheme to steal money from a food charity for children.
According to The New York Times, some of them are
linked to the Democratic Party and others are members of
(11:30):
the Somali community. The administration is seizing on the controversy
to question the credibility of prominent lawmakers in the state,
including Governor Tim Wallas. What's your reaction to what's been
coming out.
Speaker 5 (11:44):
The fraud that occurred is real at this point, It's
not just alleged. People have indeed been convicted. They were
stealing money from kids that were supposed to go to
food that would feed them. People were stealing money that
should have gone towards how stabilization. And when that happens,
you prosecute, you charge, you hold the person accountable. And
(12:07):
yet they go to jail as individuals.
Speaker 1 (12:11):
They go to jail as individuals because you should rise.
Speaker 5 (12:15):
Based on your own merit, you should fall based on
your own flaws. The entire community of Somali's or any
other community, should not be held accountable. You know, Reverend,
I'm Jewish, but when Bernie Madoff got in big trouble
for financial crimes, a Jew himself, nobody held me accountable
for that. Ted Kaczynski, you know, the unibomb or Polish,
(12:39):
but nobody held all the Polish people in the United
States accountable for what he did. And so in America again,
you have the freedom of choice, you make decisions. When
those decisions are against the law, you get count held
accountable as an individual. The whole community, however, does not.
Speaker 2 (13:01):
When in the middle of your comments to Al Sharpton,
you say, well, Reverend, imagine this. You've got a pandering,
self proclaimed Jew who's the mayor of Mogadishu, who has
(13:21):
handed the city over to Somali's, where where fraud is
rampant and the city is bankrupt, going on a network
that's had to change their name because they were so
irrelevant on a show anchored by Al Sharpton, who you
(13:46):
are calling, Reverend twenty twenty five in America. So my
friend's son, I was telling you about such a smart kid.
He's going for a treatment called neurotherapy, and as I
understand it, it's an alternative to riddling or adderall or whatever.
The designer drug of the day is to get little
(14:07):
boys to focus. Whatever you may think of that fun.
But there is a treatment now that is being applied.
I can't tell you.
Speaker 1 (14:16):
That it works. I don't know that it works.
Speaker 2 (14:19):
But what they do is they have these kids watch
a television show and if their brain starts racing forward
or getting distracted, the television goes off, and the idea
is that their brain will rewire itself. Again, I don't
know that it works. I'm just telling you what the
(14:39):
child told me. And it's a smart kid. As I mentioned,
he understands what's going on here. And so the idea
is now, we do know some families who had their
kids in this neurotherapy, and the kids swear by it.
One kid stating he didn't say it saved my educational status,
(15:01):
he said it's saved my life. I don't know if
if ADHD or OCD or whatever he had was making
him suice. I don't know, but he swears by the
kids in college today and you know, pretty pretty grounded kid.
So anyway, the program that the kid is watching that
(15:22):
he wants to see till the end, so when his
brain starts racing, he has to train his brain to change.
It is the Jetsons, the other ones, the Flints, Clintons.
And I said to this kid, you know, when I
was a little kid, we thought twenty twenty five.
Speaker 1 (15:36):
Would be the Jetsons.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
Instead, it's Jacob Frye, the mayor of Mogadishu on the
Al Sharpton.
Speaker 1 (15:41):
Show, All Greek Cities. In between.
Speaker 2 (15:46):
Michael Berry Show is Nichwide. We will talk about the
Texas primaries. I know some of you around the country
want to know what's going on in Texas. Today's a
filing day. It's just too fresh. I need an overnight
to review and be certain.
Speaker 1 (16:01):
We do know that.
Speaker 2 (16:02):
Jasmine Crockett, well you know the news. But for today,
I think it's important that we give proper focus to
the Somali fraud scandal.
Speaker 1 (16:15):
Here is here is the Attorney.
Speaker 2 (16:19):
General, Keith Ellison, the man who should be reviewing such
things and he says, let's.
Speaker 1 (16:28):
Don't politicize it.
Speaker 2 (16:31):
Of course he has politicized it by refusing to ever
investigate and prosecute, so that when you prosecute, he says.
Speaker 11 (16:45):
You have politicized. That's what they do. Well, let me
just say this. We all want to protect the tough dollar.
Speaker 12 (16:54):
We want to prosecute people who engage in fraud. We
are up for that, but we can't do it on
a partisan basis.
Speaker 1 (17:02):
We got to do it together.
Speaker 12 (17:04):
We can't use incidents like this to score a political point.
We got to come in as a state and say
you will not steal money intended for poor people, but
prosecute them. That's what That's how we protect the resources.
Speaker 1 (17:17):
Of the state of Minnesota.
Speaker 2 (17:21):
Resources of the state of Minnesota. I think what he
really means, he's honest, is we want to keep that
federal spigot of funds coming through Mogadishue. And maybe I
don't know this to be the case, maybe some of
(17:41):
that money ends up in the back pocket of elected
officials like Timmy Walls or him or ilhan Omar. I
do find it odd that ilhan Omar has racked up
such an impressive net worth in such a short period
of time on a salary of around two hundred thousand,
(18:02):
She's got more money than the ten richest people you
know combined.
Speaker 1 (18:05):
How did that happen?
Speaker 2 (18:08):
Doctor Oz was the administrator of the Sinners for Medicare
and Medicaid Services, talking about how the Minnesota government looked
the other way while Somali residents stole over one billion dollars.
Think of doctor Evil, pinky finger in hand, but this
(18:31):
time it's a B, not an M.
Speaker 1 (18:34):
It's true.
Speaker 3 (18:35):
A Somali fraud ring in Minnesota stole over a billion
dollars for medicaid.
Speaker 1 (18:40):
How did this happen?
Speaker 3 (18:41):
Well, Medicaid programs are run by the states, which in
Minnesota means the Tim Wallas administration, Governor Walls and the states.
Other Democrats rely on Somali votes to get elected. So
they decided to look the other way because they were
afraid of quote unquote political backlash.
Speaker 1 (18:58):
Don't take my word for it.
Speaker 3 (18:59):
That's what a Somali American fraud investigator told The New
York Times. When these scammers realized that nobody was guarding
the cash register, they went gangbusters. One program designed to
provide housing stabilization assistance to patients. Ballooned to one hundred
and four million dollars when four years ago it was
projected to cost only two point six million. Some of
(19:21):
these taxpayer funds may have even ended up in the
hands of a Somalian terrorist group.
Speaker 1 (19:26):
Scary stuff.
Speaker 3 (19:27):
When CMS became aware of the housing program situation, Minnesota
insisted it could clean up its own mess. A few
months ago, it admitted it could not, so we stepped
in the shutdown the fraud infested housing Initiative. Today, we're
taking action on more than a dozen other programs, which
I've outlined in the post below.
Speaker 1 (19:47):
Our message to Wallts is clear.
Speaker 3 (19:49):
Either fix this in sixty days or start looking under
your cash for spare change, because we are done footing
the bill for your incompetence. This administration will never stop
fighting to protect the vulnerable Americans rely on these programs
and the taxpayers who fund them.
Speaker 6 (20:04):
We're going to crush waste, fraud, and abuse. Pretty good,
Pretty solid, I'd say. Then we turned to Stephen Miller,
the biggest brain in the White House, the real driving force,
the engine of policy of this administration. His official title
(20:27):
is White House Deputy Chief of Staff. But make no mistake,
this guy has President Trump's ear.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
This guy is.
Speaker 2 (20:38):
The one who is framing this building that is the
Trump administration. Here he is on Fox News talking about
the ilhan Omar welfare ring in Minnesota being the biggest
theft of taxpayer money in American history, and he is
a student of history. I don't think he intends this
(20:59):
to be hyperbole.
Speaker 1 (21:02):
We have found so far, we believe.
Speaker 7 (21:03):
That the Somali fraud operation in Minnesota is the single
greatest theft of taxpayer dollars through welfare fraud in American history.
We believe that we have only scratched the very top
of the surface.
Speaker 1 (21:17):
Of how deep this goes.
Speaker 7 (21:19):
And you're familiar with all the scams, with pretending that
children have autism who are not in fact autistic, with
pretending to enroll people in food programs when in fact
nobody was ever enrolled, and engaging in massive fraud, lying
and theft and grift on a scale we've never seen
before in American history.
Speaker 1 (21:39):
The total bill, the total.
Speaker 7 (21:41):
Tab for this is going to be far beyond the numbers.
Speaker 1 (21:43):
We've already seen reported. We believe the.
Speaker 7 (21:45):
State government is fully complicit in this scheme, and we
believe that what we are going to uncover is going
to shock the American people. Based on the records that
we already have, this is a significant undercount. By the way,
nobody five percent of the Somali population in Minnesota is
on welfare, but that's likely a significant undercount of just
(22:08):
how much of a financial burden the Somali refigee population
is imposing.
Speaker 1 (22:13):
Well in this.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
Country, if that is true, hell, if half that is true,
we should pause any immigration from that country or any
other country for whom more than three percent of the
people are on welfare or food stamps or any of
(22:36):
the other.
Speaker 1 (22:39):
And so the.
Speaker 2 (22:40):
Immediate reaction is, oh, but that's not nice to these people.
Let me tell you some for once, in modern America,
think about Americans. We are the only country I know
where the leadership of the country thinks of outsiders. First,
(23:01):
Americans are struggling, Americans are sacrificing, Americans are working hard.
And I'm tired of the argument always being made, well,
we need to help all these people from around the world.
Now we need to help our own people by getting
out of their back pocket with taxes, lowering their taxes
(23:25):
and lowering the burden and the enjoyment. Frankly, we don't
talk about this en of living in this country. We
need to stop bringing people into this country who are
pedophiles and traffickers and monsters. That's not racist, that's not xenophobic.
And if anyone thinks it is, stop and ponder for
(23:48):
a moment what they're actually saying. If I say I
don't want any more fraud in this country, I don't
want people. I don't want people cheating welfare. I don't
want cheating food stamps. And if they're immediate reaction is
that I am targeting immigrants or minorities. What would make
them think that?
Speaker 1 (24:11):
That says a lot, doesn't it.
Speaker 6 (24:17):
This segment exclusively produced my Hawaiian Chad mcnishi Aloha bro
Ha Michael Very Show.
Speaker 2 (24:27):
Did I notice a woman named Merrill Kennedy today from
the Kennedy Rice Mill.
Speaker 1 (24:34):
She met with President Trump earlier today? I don't know.
Speaker 2 (24:38):
It must have been about noon or one o'clock Central,
And I keep different TV stations on in the background,
and I flip around and just see what headlines are.
But I look and she was staggeringly attractive in the
most natural way. I don't think she's had any work done.
(24:58):
She has kind of a girl next door pretty that
you know, nothing looked to be altered on her face.
Speaker 1 (25:09):
Ramon, tell me if you agree with this.
Speaker 2 (25:15):
I think that what happened, and I wonder how much
of this was the Kardashians, although I think women. I
think what happened is that women started getting plastic surgery
and other women saw it and they thought, oh, well,
Denise got plastic surgery.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
I want plastic surgery. And so what ended up happening.
Speaker 2 (25:41):
Is, well, DENISESE got surgery because she got divorced, and
now Angela wants surgery, and she tells her husband.
Speaker 1 (25:50):
Denise got surgery. I don't want surgery. So it becomes
this competition. And I don't know.
Speaker 2 (25:59):
I'm sure there's somebody that has studied this and written
about it. It'd be a fascinating read. It's one of
those things that I'm interested in the answer, but I
don't have an answer. And maybe some ladies out there
could explain this to me if you ever got caught
up in this, and that is this, why can't women
(26:22):
figure out where to stop on the surgeries? Now, I
know what you're going to say, Well, that's just you
being an arrogant man. We don't want to stop, Okay,
but I'm going to go ahead and tell you what
everybody else is thinking. When your top lip is coming
off your mouth so much so that you look like
(26:43):
a cartoon sketch character from the Simpsons. That is, your
top lipt can never attach to your lower lip because
it has it's can't delevered out with an upward trajectory
like a plane getting ready.
Speaker 1 (26:59):
To go off.
Speaker 2 (27:00):
That's too much filler or plumper or whatever they call it.
Speaker 1 (27:04):
It's too much.
Speaker 2 (27:06):
The other thing that these women don't seem to understand
is that after enough surgeries, all women look the same,
which is like a cat, and it's not pretty. It's
not attractive. Now, one other thing. There is a certain
(27:30):
beauty who did I see that said this. It's the
famous actress now they were famous person, older woman, and
she said, I earned these lines.
Speaker 1 (27:41):
I'm not having them removed.
Speaker 9 (27:43):
You know.
Speaker 1 (27:43):
I've come to the conclusion that what looks so.
Speaker 2 (27:48):
Odd about a lot of plastic surgery on women as
they get older, when they have it done when they're older,
is not that the work is bad. It's that the
work is good, and it's unnatural not to have any lines.
No one believes it, and so there's a loss of authenticity. Ramon,
(28:09):
would you ever have plastic surgery done? What would you
have done?
Speaker 1 (28:14):
A tummy tuck?
Speaker 2 (28:15):
Actually, you probably could use a tummy tuck. You've lost
so much weight.
Speaker 4 (28:19):
You know.
Speaker 2 (28:20):
What people don't realize is when you lose as much
weight as Ramona has one hundred and sixty pounds, you
end up with skin you don't lose. So a lot
of people do go in and have the skin tightened
up that I wouldn't fault you for that.
Speaker 1 (28:33):
What else would you have done? Would you ever do
hair plugs? You would?
Speaker 2 (28:37):
I had a buddy call me this morning. Wanted to
know my hair plug company, my hair plug sponsor. He said,
my wife is too beautiful to have to walk around
with a dude who's losing all his hair. I said, well,
a lot of guys go bald now, but if you
want hair, here's who to call, and I connected him.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
What else would you have done? That's it?
Speaker 2 (29:00):
You do some hair and it tell me, huh, you'd
be perfect at that point. You know, I've thought about
that if I start doing more video. We turned down video.
I turned down a lot of video podcasts, and uh,
I resisted doing a lot of TV interviews, but I've
(29:22):
thought about doing more video. Just as I'm driving, put
my phone down and comment on issues of the day.
And the reason for that is not, you know, I'm
not the guy who they're begging me to run for president.
The reason for that is people do ask, hey, why
don't you do any videos? And I'll tell you the
(29:44):
honest truth is people will nitpick you, and I hate it. Hey,
you need to stand up straight, you need to go
jump in a lake and hopefully forget how to swim.
Why would you tell someone that and then you you
look at their picture and you're like, you look hideous?
What are you doing telling me or anyone else? I'm
(30:08):
not some project for you. So that's the reason I
haven't done it. But I have thought. I've thought about this. Okay,
once you know your crows feet and all that get
really bad, would you ever have face the face surgery done?
And I decided I would not. But I also don't
(30:31):
blame people who do because that's their own thing, especially women,
because look, men are vain. We say we're not, but
we are, but nothing like women, nothing like women, And
being thought to be attractive is wired into women, and
(30:54):
you know, you look in the bird family. In the
bird family, the peacock's is the best example. But the
cardinal of the blue jay, the more beautiful of the
species is the male because kind of like in the
inner city, the women chase the men, and so they peacock.
You know, that became a verb. Well, women are chased
(31:18):
by men in our species mostly, and it is understandable
that a woman wants to be thought attractive and if
she feels like she needs a little bump to get there.
I don't have a problem. Many women don't, and they
say they don't.
Speaker 1 (31:37):
My wife, A.
Speaker 2 (31:38):
Lot of people consider it brave and bold that she
doesn't dye her hair, and so her hair is grown,
has gone almost entirely gray.
Speaker 1 (31:49):
And it's kind of funny because.
Speaker 2 (31:51):
When we're out in public, it's very striking because she's
a beautiful woman. She's fifty eight, she's a beautiful woman.
She takes incredible care of herself. She works out like
a maniac, she she eats very healthy, she doesn't drink,
and so you don't expect that you see the gray,
hairy spporth with the older woman, and people think it's
(32:12):
some big statement known she's allergic to hair dye. Most
Indians dye their hair because they prematurely gray because their
hair is so dark. But anyway, that's not what I
was going to talk about this last segment, but I
think it's nice to.
Speaker 1 (32:24):
Have a few, you know, personal discussions. I will also tell.
Speaker 2 (32:28):
You that I do love to hear from you, and
so if you get a stray moment you're bored, go
to Michael berryshow dot com. It says in Michael an
email that comes directly to me, I read every single
one of them, every single one of them, and I
enjoy it. Now, if you write a Dostovski novel, I'm
not going to read the whole email, and I can't
respond to everyone, but I will promise you this, I
(32:50):
literally read everyone. Or hard to believe, but I do
because I enjoy it.
Speaker 1 (33:00):
Thank you and good night.
Speaker 2 (33:05):
Yeah,