Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:10):
This is the Jesse Kelly Show. It is the Jesse
Kelly Show. Final hour of the Jesse Kelly Show on
a magnificent Friday. It's been an ass doctor Jesse Friday,
with all kinds of fantastic things happening out there. We
only have an hour left for all your questions, so
(00:30):
let's do it, hey, real American hero. That's why I
chose to read this email, Chris. I like when people
know how wonderful I am. I prefer to read those emails.
I try to cut out as much comy crap that
I purchase as I can, but I can't bring myself
to stop shopping at Target. Their deli is awesome. They
(00:51):
have the best selection of legos, and I don't feel
like I'm going to be stabbed at the one here
in Tuscaloosa as opposed to the Walmart. Does this make
me gay? Well one yes, but two, I've never ever
judged you for where you shop. We talk about where
we should spend and not spend our money. But I
(01:14):
am the I am the least qualified person to judge
you on the planet for spending money here or spending
money there.
Speaker 2 (01:24):
I have made, we have made as a family, huge.
Speaker 1 (01:28):
Efforts to try to stop funding communism. In our house,
we're going to cut this out and we're going to
stop that, and we're going to stop that. But if
you were to go through our books in our house
and look at our credit card statement, our bank statement,
it would not be difficult to say, well, wait a minute,
you just shopped there. That's a look at what their
(01:49):
CEO said, Wait a minute, you shop there. We try
not to. I try to make an effort if I
need something to look up. Is this a good company
or not? Remember we did that with that sock company
last week, where everyone rode in you got to try
these socks, and so you dug into it and you said,
oh my gosh, this company's a comedy crappy company. Don't
(02:10):
buy Okay, you think I even shopped at Target. That's
the only place we ever shopped when we first got married.
Walmart and Target. When we first got married, financial reasons
being what they are, we needed furniture. We got all
of our home furniture, at least a majority of it
(02:30):
at Target. Do you know how horrible that furniture is?
I remember we were just married and we needed a
new bedroom dresser. You know, for socks and hondies and
things like that, and we needed one of some size.
Speaker 2 (02:43):
It's got to be enough for me, enough for her.
Speaker 1 (02:46):
And we went down the target and got this big dresser.
It was one hundred and fifty dollars for the whole dresser.
Speaker 2 (02:53):
One hundred and.
Speaker 1 (02:54):
Fifty bucks is huge, Chris. And that's when I learned
a valuable lesson in life. When you buy something, a
huge indicator of the quality is how many pieces there
are you have to put together. The more of it
you have to put together, the crappier it's going to be,
(03:16):
because quality stuff is generally mostly put together by them.
I unpacked this treasure and I don't think there was
a single part of it where two different parts were together.
Speaker 2 (03:33):
Nothing.
Speaker 1 (03:34):
You've never seen this many little nails and screws and
nuts and washers and what Chris. What Chris said, Did
I get it together?
Speaker 2 (03:46):
Well?
Speaker 1 (03:48):
I got it together. We didn't keep it together, all right.
So I put together and put together this whole druss,
whole thing, Like I said, every single part this was
I bet this took me three or four hours, just
me sitting there following the instructions putting the thing together.
(04:12):
But it also the front of the drawer. The front
of the drawer was glued on, glued on. It had
these little these little woodscrews, and it had this glue
and I.
Speaker 2 (04:25):
Swear it was freaking Elmer's or something.
Speaker 1 (04:27):
It looked it smelled like, I know, it's terrible, And
I'm gluing on the face of the face of the drawer,
the front of the drawer. How long do you think
glues going to last on something that you're constantly pulling on?
And remember, remember the basic physics of this. The rail
(04:49):
system of the drawer, in the dresser, it's not exactly
top end, it's not high end. It's going to be
a little off. It's going to be a little So
you have a stiff rail system with a face of
a drawer that is held on by glue. Look, I
don't exactly have to I'll just go ahead and spoil
(05:10):
it for you. The face of the drawers kept coming off.
We would you'd go to grab the drawer and pull
it open and get some socks, and it would.
Speaker 2 (05:17):
Just pull right off. And it just got to be
a joke in the house. I'b it come down. Hey,
we need more glue. The drawer fell off. We need
more glue.
Speaker 1 (05:29):
You do get what you pay for in so many
and almost every part of life, you get what you
pay for. I've made that mistake so many times in
my life, especially when it comes to furniture and furnishings,
that look I got a deal. Look this one's good enough.
Look this costs half as much as that one costs.
(05:50):
Let's get this one. And every time I do that,
I end up hating myself for it after the fact.
Every single time I do it, I've done it with
uh noise canceling headphones. I wanted some noise canceling earbuds,
noise canceling headphones. I seriously think I've bought three or
(06:12):
four pair of cheap, garbage noise canceling headphones trying to
save some money. After the third or fourth pair broke
shorted out, I finally bought the bows.
Speaker 2 (06:26):
Everyone knows what Bo's is greatest thing I ever bought.
Speaker 1 (06:30):
I ended up spending three or four times in total
what I could have spent if I just bought the
nice one. It started anyway, long story, I get it
when you shop at Target, Man, and sometimes you got
to shop at those stores just for price necessity. Just
out of price necessity. People aren't made of money. And
(06:51):
now now that inflation, now that we're all twenty twenty
five percent poorer than we were before we shut down
an economy for a chest cold. Now some people just
it's a necessity to go to these big, soulless corporate
stores that have your training gear and the kids section,
because that's the place you can afford toilet paper, that's
(07:13):
the place you can afford peanut butter.
Speaker 2 (07:15):
And it's You're never.
Speaker 1 (07:16):
Gonna get me to sit there and tell you that
you need to have a lower standard of living for
political reasons. I can't do that, right would I have
to do that? Hey, Jesse, I'm a French Canadian living
in Quebec this summer. What Chris speak to people in
their native language? I visited West Virginia and discovered your
(07:37):
show on WWVA eleven seventy am. I love them, Gosh,
I love West Virginia.
Speaker 2 (07:42):
You know.
Speaker 1 (07:42):
I grew up in Ohio. Told you this, and we
used to go down to West Virginia for vacation because
it was right next door and you could just drive there.
It didn't cost much. Chris, they have these fascinating caverns there.
You would enjoy them. If we ever get back to
West Virginia, you would enjoy them. You're just you're going
deep into the heart of the man. You feel like
you're going to run into one of those Lord of
the Rings characters down there.
Speaker 2 (08:03):
It's amazing.
Speaker 1 (08:04):
Anyway, the guy says, I dreamed of visiting West Virginia
since I was very young. I'm a sixty year old
gay man, and I should feel guilty for laughing so
much listening to you, but I can't help it. Back
in Quebec, I listened to your show on iHeart. You
are right about communism. I can tell you've read Animal Farm.
I've spent a lot of time in Cuba, and I
(08:26):
know exactly what you mean. Best regards, he said, say
hello to my imaginary friend Chris. People think Chris is
imaginary and why they think that? Hey, Jesse, longtime listener,
First email, where's Antifa gone? They're still there. They're still there,
(08:47):
They're still active. But you know, we've talked about these
stories a couple of times, for about this university or
that university getting caught changing the name of its DEI
department or DEI director you know, you hired Shaniquius Tavifia,
and she was, of course the what Chris, She was
(09:08):
the DEI director at your college. But now that DEI
is on the outs and now that the Trump administration
is cracking down on it, Chaniquius still needs a job somewhere.
So instead of being the Diversity and Equity and Inclusion director,
now she's with the Office of Belonging. They didn't change
(09:30):
what Shaniquius's job is. Her job is still to make
sure white kids can't get into college.
Speaker 2 (09:36):
But she changed the label.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
She changed the name ANTIFA, the Large International. Remember it's
not just National International, the Large International Communist network of
street animals. They didn't go away. They didn't stop being
street animals. They just may not call themselves ANTIFA anymore
because the Trump administration to turn that they're domestic terrorists.
(10:02):
Communists don't change their ways. They change their labels to
try to avoid scrutiny when one label is under threat.
That's how they do things, all right. The Save America Act.
Why don't Republicans want honest elections? How do they find
out where these ice agents are?
Speaker 2 (10:21):
And more?
Speaker 1 (10:22):
Next Truth Attitude Jesse Kelly. It is the Jesse Kelly
Show on a Friday. You can email the show Jesse
at Jesse kellyshow dot com.
Speaker 2 (10:39):
Here was Tom Holman, Who're going to.
Speaker 3 (10:40):
Create a database those people that are arrested for interference
in Penis. So we're gonna make them famous. We're gonna
put their face on TV. We're going to let their
employers in their neighborhoods, in their schools know who these
people are. Because, as you said, a lot of these people,
they say they're taking time off work to protest. I
bet your Lamercollins said, I bet a lot of other
(11:01):
employers don't know what they're doing. But we're gonna make
sure everybody knows who they are. Who're going to broadcast
They might to broadcast the ICE officer, those nearly killed
all over the internet. We're going to broadcast every one
of these people we.
Speaker 1 (11:13):
Arrest wise one how do the protesters find the information
as to when and where the ice station? Ice agents
will be operating. All technology, all of it throughout history.
It's used by not just your allies, it's used by
(11:33):
your enemies. Technology of any kind will be used for
good and it will be used for evil. I've argued
many times. And I believe this that for all the
evils of social media that is, it is in the
end going to end up being a huge net good
(11:55):
for society. And people will push back on that, understandably
because there's so much damage that it's done on social
media in so many different ways, which we'll get to
in a minute. But my argument is, darkness can never
withstand the light.
Speaker 2 (12:11):
It cannot.
Speaker 1 (12:13):
Communism can never withstand the truth. The truth is what
ends up defeating it all the time. That's why they censor,
that's why they smash alternate voices. Communism cannot survive if
the truth keeps shining through. Social media allows you not
just me the big radio platform. You can find truth.
(12:37):
You can put truth out there. You today possibly can
say something on Facebook or Twitter. It's you can say something.
Maybe somebody famous will repeat it, retweet it, maybe someone else,
maybe a million people will see what you say today.
It's powerful. It's powerful. That's the good. That's the good
(13:01):
part of it. The bad part of it is the
ability to organize groups of people. To recruit and organize
groups of people has always been a communist specialty. It
really really reveals itself when you read about communist regimes,
how much time they spent on recruitment. I would compare it.
(13:23):
I'd compare it to a college football coach. I would
you know these college football coaches, Yes, they have to
spend time on ax'es and o's and defense and things
like that. They spend so much of their life hunting
down the greatest high school football players in America, calling them,
(13:44):
texting them, showing up for a visit. So much of
your life as a college football coach is spent recruiting.
It has to consume you because without.
Speaker 2 (13:54):
The best players, you ain't winning a thing.
Speaker 1 (13:56):
Communists spend an equal amount of time recruiting. It's their everything.
They're always looking for the next scumbag to bring into
the fold. And social media. One of the many bad
things about social media is it puts those recruitment efforts
at their fingertips. You ask how they always find the
(14:20):
location of ice agents. Everybody with a cell phone now
can communicate the location of anybody, anybody. They haven't They
already created an app. They already created an app. So
communists democrats across the United States of America, when they
(14:42):
find the location of ICE, they upload it to the app. Well,
that that app, of course, is monitored by the communist
front groups in the United States of America, and it's
real time traffic.
Speaker 2 (14:56):
Think about this.
Speaker 1 (14:57):
Speaking of traffic, there are all these apps like, uh,
I think ways is one way. I don't have it,
but Ways is one. I think it's called Ways. Chris.
Ways is an app where real time you can find
out if there's a cop five miles ahead in a
speed trap. You can find out if there's something in
(15:20):
the road, somebody dropped the cone off the back of
a truck in two miles.
Speaker 2 (15:24):
It's real time uploaded.
Speaker 1 (15:26):
Now information is accessible in an instant in our society,
and there's a lot of good that comes with that,
and there's a lot of bad.
Speaker 2 (15:37):
That comes with that.
Speaker 1 (15:39):
Social media in a lot of ways, it's tailor made
for communists because communists recruit and what a fertile recruiting
ground they've found with the Internet. It's not just normal
people like you who use the Internet to check the
latest sports sports scores and laugh at an inappropriate meme
(16:01):
and look at a video of a puppy. There are
a lot of very miserable, lonely, violent people who spend
all their time on the Internet. Wrap your mind around this.
Heard a story about this the other day. It was
but a criminal doesn't matter. But of course they track
(16:23):
down the guy's media history, internet history, as all cops
will do, as any law enforcement agency will do. This
dude spent on average, on average, over sixteen hours a
day on the internet.
Speaker 2 (16:43):
What what.
Speaker 1 (16:47):
Over sixteen hours a day? There are people who are
broken and they're just ripe for recruitment.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
All right? More next, what's feeling a little stocky?
Speaker 1 (17:00):
I'll't like and subscribe on social at Jesse Kelly Show.
It is the Jesse Kelly Show on a wonderful Friday,
and ask doctor Jesse Friday. If you miss any part
of the show, you can download it iHeart, Spotify iTunes. Jesse,
I've been working fifty four years forty at the USPS.
(17:21):
How about that? I tell my wife it's time for me.
It's sixty eight years young to call it a career.
She says, okay, But what's next?
Speaker 2 (17:29):
I tell her?
Speaker 1 (17:30):
Volunteer to dog walk, senior softball, travel, cook something nice,
learn a new song on my guitar, maybe coach things
like that. Bottom line is to stay active. Isn't that reasonable?
As long as you have a plan to stay active.
People say retirement kills, and from what I've seen, that's
(17:51):
only applicable if you don't have something you want to
sink your teeth into. I have told you before that
I'm not going to do this forever. I don't think
it's healthy to do anything in show business forever. I've
seen too many people do this for long enough they
become just absolutely nightmarish human beings and lose who they are.
(18:16):
So I don't want to do this forever. As much
as I love it, I just love it. I'm not
going to be doing this when I'm seventy years old.
I think that's terrible. Freak and retire. Let someone else
have it. But I have grave concerns for myself about retirement.
I'm not going to be able to retire completely because
as Jewish producer, Chris always makes fun of me for
(18:37):
I don't really have hobbies. I have before you email in,
please keep in mind that's not a choice. I have
always wanted something, a hobby that I am super passionate about.
What Chris said, I am super passionate about history, that
(19:02):
maybe there's something there, and maybe there is something there,
you know, maybe maybe when I retire from this someday,
maybe sit down once a week and just do a
history thing something like that, something I can nerd out on.
But if you maybe you have a hobby, and you
probably do because most people do whatever it is, maybe
(19:23):
you're I was talking to harmeat Dealing the other day
with the Justice Department. She knits, she does knitting, she
does quilting. Obviously that's not going to be my thing,
but she loves it. I was so jealous. I'm generally
not a jealous person, but I want a hobby like that.
(19:43):
Maybe you do model airplanes, you golf, or you fish,
And I'm not talking about something you do because I golf, right,
I fish. I do that stuff. But I don't think
how about how sad this is. I'm not asking you
to feel bad for me. But it's Friday right now.
When we get off work here, I'm going to go home,
(20:06):
probably have maybe dinner with ob maybe we'll watch a
show or something like that. But this weekend, I don't
know if we have any kids, sports things. I don't
have a hobby this weekend that I'm looking forward to,
not one. I'm forty four years old and I have
(20:29):
spent all forty four years of my life wanting one,
and I don't have one. And that's ad I want one,
I don't have one. I don't know if I'll ever
be able to retire now I will probably die young.
Not trying to be morbid, but the Kelly men do
(20:50):
not live very long. My dad outlasted most of the
men in his family, if not all that I know of,
and he didn't make seventy. He was a few weeks
I believe, shy of seventy when he died last year.
That's probably going to be my life. I may have
to work until I die, But if you have hobbies,
(21:16):
retire when you're done. Man, I don't have to freak
and chase that grind every day all day.
Speaker 2 (21:23):
Go spend some Go.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Spend your life with your husband or your wife or
your kids, or if you're single, do that. Travel like
you've always wanted to travel, play golf. Chris brought up
a very good point. That is a great time to
sync your teeth into local government. Doesn't mean you have
to retire at sixty eight years old and go run
for senate or something like that. But man, that's a
(21:47):
great time to get on the water board. That's a
great time to get on the city council. It's a
great time to dig into that kind of stuff. My mom,
who's obviously retired widow now love what she does. She
has this group of friends, all these little old ladies.
Speaker 2 (22:04):
They're listening right now. I didn't mean to call you
old ladies. Love you.
Speaker 1 (22:08):
She has her group of friends, all these little old ladies,
and they do politics. That's what they do. Meaning I'm
talking about the foot soldier type. On a Saturday, they meet,
they want to get the exercise.
Speaker 2 (22:19):
They're out knocking on doors.
Speaker 1 (22:20):
They get together at night, and of course they bring
probably gross old lady food and they sit down and
they'll they'll send letters out on behalf of candidates and campaigns.
Speaker 2 (22:31):
It's a great time if.
Speaker 1 (22:33):
It interests you, if you're passionate about it, because you
have more time now to sink your time and your
energy into local politics.
Speaker 2 (22:42):
And at the end of the day, if your.
Speaker 1 (22:45):
Need's bothering you, it's just because you haven't taken your
relief factor.
Speaker 2 (22:48):
That's the only what, Chris. It's the only reason.
Speaker 1 (22:52):
You're in pain, because you're inflamed. I'm not talking about
the Lindsey Graham type. You are in pain because whatever hurts,
there's information there. Your body's already fighting it. Your body
needs help. That's why it still hurts. That's why your
back hurts, That's why your foot hurts. Why don't you
(23:14):
try a supplement instead of reaching for a pill bottle
or a wine bottle or ignoring it. Why don't you
try a supplement. Relief Factor is one hundred percent drug
free natural ingredients. They sell three week quick starts of
it for nineteen dollars in ninety five cents. Just try
(23:36):
it every day for three weeks.
Speaker 2 (23:38):
Just try it.
Speaker 1 (23:39):
Call one eight hundred the number four relief or go
to relief Factor dot com. Jesse it feels like Trump
really messed up with this Iran business red lines and
then tells them to keep protesting help is on the way,
then holding off.
Speaker 2 (23:56):
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (23:57):
He's all over the place and a lot of people.
I know there are a million things going on behind
the scenes. It's really complicated. But making public posts that
are inconsistent with action looks bad in a situation like this.
Speaker 2 (24:10):
Do you know what's going on?
Speaker 1 (24:13):
No? I don't know what's going on, and I'm going
to say something that's going to make me sound like
a terrible person, understandably, so I am cheering for the
Iranian people. I don't want anyone anywhere in the globe
to live under some horrible Islamist regime where women are
beaten and abused and all that. I know that that's horrible, man,
(24:34):
that's a horrible place. However, I can't bring myself to
care about things anyran when we have hostile foreign city
states trying to murder ice agents for deporting foreigners here.
My focus has been and will continue to be on
(24:57):
the communist revolution that is currently being fought inside the
borders of the United States of America. Now, yes, Donald
Trump said something publicly, Hey don't hurt these protesters, Hey, protesters,
help is on the way. And then we didn't bomb anything.
We closed the airspace one night and everyone thought the
bombs were coming, but then the bombs didn't come. And
(25:18):
I don't know what deals, what agreements were struck behind
the scenes. I don't know that. I know nothing. Sometimes
things don't look good, I know.
Speaker 2 (25:29):
I just.
Speaker 1 (25:31):
I can't make my self care about Russia Ukraine.
Speaker 2 (25:34):
I can't.
Speaker 1 (25:36):
I can't make myself care about Gaza. I can't make
myself care about Iran. The Venezuelan military operation was really cool,
and I understand why we're doing what we're doing. I
get it, and I get it. I can't make myself
care Greenland, Greenland. I'm happy if we get it. I
(26:00):
understand why Trump wants it. I don't talk about it
a ton because I can't make myself be super passionate
about it when we have a communist revolution happening inside
our borders.
Speaker 2 (26:14):
I am the.
Speaker 1 (26:15):
Ugliest of ugly Americans who has ever lived in It's Oh,
I'm only getting uglier with age. I care very much
about my country, the United States of America, and I'm
sickened at the thought that there's a chance it might
go to a bunch of savages to tear it apart
(26:35):
in the future. That is my passion as far as
Iran goes. Remember that the Mulahs, whether we drop bombs
on them or not, they already have a tough, tough
road ahead, a very very tough road ahead, because economically
they can no longer provide for their people in that
(26:57):
more than anything more than bombs that gear and tease
the end of a regime.
Speaker 2 (27:02):
All right, all right, we only have one segment left.
Speaker 1 (27:06):
We have to talk about everything from restaurants to the
Save America Act, everything else, all right?
Speaker 2 (27:11):
And do they know they're communists? All that's coming up next,
Jesse Kelly Vaccian.
Speaker 1 (27:21):
It is the Jesse Kelly Show. Final segment of the
Jesse Kelly Show on a magnificent Friday, and ask doctor
Jesse Friday. We shall return on Monday. Don't worry for
medal of honor Monday. You can still email the show
Jesse at Jesse kellyshow dot com. I can't believe these
(27:42):
people are in Congress.
Speaker 2 (27:43):
This is beyond reform. ICE is totally out of control,
and this week I intend to introduce a bill to
abolish ICE.
Speaker 3 (27:56):
You will go to penk or Tellis. Now there is
new Mahara Yat and again the Palace has the power
of the dark flight it is dead. Please kill my.
Speaker 2 (28:09):
People's dangerous stuff.
Speaker 1 (28:12):
Hello, Jesse, do you believe it's common for someone to
not even know they are a communist? If asked, they
can become quite offended. Despite President Trump, and they seem
to believe socialism is simply a better way. My husband
and I enjoy listening to your radio show on eleven
ninety k ex. Yeah, we're senior citizens, Christian conservative Republicans.
(28:34):
Hang the American flag. We love your family, stories about
your lovely wife, two sons, and beloved dog Fred. God
bless you. Fred's an idiot, all right, Remember I told
you we had to take a work trip recently. I'm
I'm embarrassed at what I'm about to tell you. All right, Fred,
(28:55):
Fred is in a constant state of anxiety and or
depress unless every member of the family is physically present
inside the house and at least one member of the
family is giving.
Speaker 2 (29:12):
Him love and affection.
Speaker 1 (29:14):
I know, Chris, it's I've never had a dog that
needs to be on xanax before, but we've seriously considered
looking into it. Otherwise he's upset. There is nothing that
puts Fred into a deep, dark depression faster than suitcases,
because now he knows the second the suitcases come out,
(29:38):
someone maybe everyone is leaving, and of course that means
they're leaving forever and life is over and it's a disaster.
This this has resulted in our house.
Speaker 2 (29:53):
Gosh, I'm so embarrassed.
Speaker 1 (29:56):
We sometimes put Fred in the mud room in closed
the door so we can transfer the suitcases from one
bedroom to the other bedroom so Fred won't see the suitcases.
I forgot to do that during this last business trip
that we took. I just wasn't thinking. I went and
(30:19):
got the suitcases. And as I wheel the suitcase into
the bedroom, Fred is staring at me, and then he
will not leave my side no matter what, as soon
as he saw the suitcase. Desperate to keep me inside
of the house. He was never more than six inches
(30:41):
away from me at all times. And I bring this
up to ab and she starts yelling at me, what
did you do to him? And I said, I grabbed
the suitcase. She said, you know you can't show him
those things. Gosh, Fred. Anyway, as far as people knowing
their Communists, no, you're liberally and Peggy has no idea
that she's communist, most most of them, some of them
(31:04):
know that's what they are. You know, you have the
Black Lives Matter people coming out saying we're trained Marxists.
Many of the elites, certainly the people who run the
communist street animal groups, they know their Communists. They're trying
to be Communists, that's their deep desire. But the average
run of the Bill Democrat, they don't know their communists.
(31:27):
They'll push forward every single evil communist policy. They'll talk
about destroying rich people, tearing this town, handing this out
to this undeserving person. They'll talk about things equity, but
they won't ever realize that's truly what they are because communists, remember,
for communists are very careful with their words, you know
(31:49):
how they lie about everything all the time. Communists are
aware that communism, after one hundred million dead bodies kind
of hash maybe not the best reputation globally, and so
they don't call themselves that. They call themselves. I'm a liberal,
I'm a progressive. I'm a democrat. No, I'm not a communist.
(32:14):
I'm just a democrat who thinks that white people shouldn't
be able to own homes. What are you talking about?
Just a democrat, just a progressive. No, they don't know
their communists, and they were taught by communists who oftentimes
also don't know their communists. It is important, however, that
we use that term for them, not just because it
(32:34):
lets us know what we're dealing with. There's a chance
it finally gets through to some of them. That's what
they are, and that's what they are. Dear menu, whisper.
Long time, first time. My wife and I are traveling
to Texas Gulf Coast soon will be spending just one
night in the Houston area. As a fellow foodie, I'm
(32:55):
hoping you can point us to the best spot for
a great local meal, preferably on the sete outside. We
like the mom and pop hole in the wall places,
not the hoity toity foo foo stuff. Chris eats. God
bless you and your family. We love the show, says
I can say his name. His name is Justin all right,
(33:15):
So I'm gonna say something. You want a hole in
the wall. You're going to the Texas Gulf Coast, go
to a gas station, Chris, let me finish.
Speaker 2 (33:30):
You know what, Am I wrong? I'm not wrong.
Speaker 1 (33:34):
There are gas stations all over Texas is very unique
that serve food. Now stop, stop everybody, maybe you're doing
this right now. I have gas stations that serve food.
You know, we have wah wah, we have quick trip.
No no, no, no, no.
Speaker 2 (33:49):
You know what.
Speaker 1 (33:49):
I'm not talking about big commercial ones that have a
kitchen and they'll cook you up a pizza and some
mazzarella sticks. I'm not talking about that in Texas. They
have gas stations, this is very common, and they have
little kitchens in the back, and they rent those kitchens
out to Mexicans. And you'll have these what Chris, You'll
(34:11):
have these little Mexicans back there, these little Mexican ladies.
Speaker 2 (34:14):
And you walk into this gas station.
Speaker 1 (34:16):
Are you just trying to get some chips or a
beefstick or something for the road, And you'll see these
little Mexican ladies whipping up food in the back. Maybe
you're thinking, oh, that's garbage. You're probably about to eat
the best Mexican meal you've ever eaten in your life.
Go get a couple of tacos at a Texas gas station.
They're all over the place. I don't even have to
(34:37):
give you a name. That's good living right there. All right,
You put your phone down if you've been too stressed out,
and enjoy your weekend. Our problems will be here on Monday,
that's all.